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England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Masri v Consolidated Contractors International Company SAL & Anor [2008] EWHC 1159 (Comm) (23 May 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2008/1159.html Cite as: [2008] 1 CLC 878, [2008] EWHC 1159 (Comm), [2008] 1 All ER 305 |
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2004 FOLIO 831 |
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Royal Courts of Justice Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
MUNIB MASRI |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) CONSOLIDATED CONTRACTORS INTERNATIONAL COMPANY SAL (2) CONSOLIDATED CONTRACTORS (OIL and GAS) COMPANY SAL |
Defendant |
____________________
Alexander Layton Q.C. & Ben Olbourne (instructed by Olswang) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 19th May 2008
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice David Steel :
"136. Nothing in the expert evidence as to Lebanese law, produced by the Defendants after the hearing, suggests that (absent insolvency or impending insolvency) a director of a judgment debtor would be in breach of his duty to that company in procuring it to comply with its obligations under the judgment or other orders of a foreign court that satisfied the requirements necessary for a Lebanese court to recognise the judgment, namely: (i) the judgment must have been rendered by a competent court according to the laws of the issuing state and not the result of jurisdiction fraud, ie forum shopping; (ii) the right of the Defendant to defend the claim must have been respected; (iii) the judge must have been issued by a country that give reciprocal recognition to Lebanese judgments without revising them; and (iv) the judgment must not be contrary to public order.
137. Necessarily, in the circumstances where all avenues of appeal have been exhausted, this court proceeds on the assumption that those conditions are satisfied.
138. It is difficult, therefore, to see what possible double jeopardy could arise so far as the individual directors are concerned, by naming them in the orders to provide documents or information to the receiver, or by confirming to third parties the receiver's entitlement to receive the oil revenues. As I have said previously, the orders are made against CCOG, and only against the individual directors insofar as CCOG acts through or by them as its officers. Thus, they are not being asked in their individual capacities to provide documents or information or confirmation to third parties; thus whether they, as directors or shareholders, for example, have personal rights to have access to the company's documents or information (which is the issue addressed in the expert evidence) is simply not in point; the company clearly has access to its own documents and information, and, as a judgment debtor in substantive proceedings where the English court has jurisdiction, it is obliged to provide relevant information if the court so directs."
"19. Nothing in this order shall, in respect of assets located outside England and Wales require the Defendants and/or their directors to disobey the order of any foreign court of competent jurisdiction. For the avoidance of doubt, the Defendants and/or their directors shall be at liberty to apply to a court of a foreign country for declaratory or other relief as to the scope of their obligation under the law applicable within that country so far as these may be affected by the order."
In the course of the hearing, it was agreed that the second sentence should not be adopted: the first sentence became paragraph 15.
"Your Ladyship has concluded that the expert evidence of Lebanese Law does not state with sufficient clarity that compliance with the receivership order would be a breach of Lebanese law: see the draft judgment at paragraphs 135 - 137.Nevertheless, there was no evidence from the Claimants to the effect that compliance with the receivership order would not be a breach. The Court "proceed[ed] on the assumption that" "where all avenues of appeal have been exhausted" the criteria for recognition of an English judgment under Lebanese law would be satisfied. However, this may not be germane in respect of the receivership order, which is the relevant order for the purposes of double jeopardy, but against which no avenue of appeal has yet been exhausted. In the circumstances, it cannot be safely said that there is no prospect of double jeopardy in Lebanon, and indeed your Ladyship's draft judgment does not say this. Further, the possibility of double jeopardy in other jurisdictions has not been addressed. In the circumstances, if a receivership order is made, it is appropriate that it be qualified by a provision dealing with the possibility of double jeopardy. It is limited to the situation where a foreign court has positively ordered that the Defendants shall not comply with the receivership order. Such a limitation is plainly appropriate. It would be wrong, as a matter of comity and discretion, for this court to grant extra-territorial enforcement measures backed by contempt sanctions and require a party to comply with them even if he has been ordered not to by his local court."
"7. That from the date hereof until further order, CC (Oil & Gas) and its directors or officers including Fouad Asfour and Samir Nayef Khoury, shall co-operate with the receiver in the following ways:
(a) Providing within a reasonable time such information and documents falling within the following categories as the receiver may reasonably require:(i) the whereabouts at any time of the Oil Revenues or any assets representing the proceeds of the same;(ii) the arrangements, whether contractual or based on instructions given from time to time, in place at any time for the sale of the oil referred to in paragraph 1 above and realisation of the proceeds of the same;(iii) the identities of (and any other details concerning) all entities involved in the sale of the said oil and realisation of the proceeds of the same;(iv) the amounts due to CC (Oil & Gas) in respect of Oil Revenues from time to time.(b) Providing within a reasonable time such written confirmation to third parties anywhere in the world as the receiver may reasonably require of the receiver's rights under this order to act on behalf of CC (Oil & Gas) for the purpose of carrying out his functions as set out above, and of his rights under this order to receive the Oil Revenues in that capacity, and providing to the receiver copies of such confirmations.(c) Within three days of making any agreement for the sale of oil, or any sale of oil, providing to the receiver the following information in relation to such an agreement or sale, namely:i. If it is in writing, a copy of such agreement, if it is not in writing, a written description of its terms and conditions.ii. The identity of the purchaser under such agreement or sale including the purchaser's name, registered office address and contact details of the office of the purchaser involved in the purchase.iii. If an agent acted for CC(Oil & Gas) in making such agreement or sale, the agent's name, registered office address and the address and telephone and fax numbers (if any) of the office of the agent involved in making such agreement or sale.iv. The details of the bank account to which any monies due to CC (Oil & Gas) SAL have been or are to be remitted in connection with such agreement or sale, including the name of the bank, the address of the branch involved, the name of the account and the number of the account.8. The receiver shall hold any information provided under paragraph 7 above on a confidential basis and shall not disclose that information to any person other than himself and his staff without order of the court, save insofar as is necessary for the proper performance of his functions under this order.9. If the receiver shall make a request in relation to paragraph 7 above which the recipients believe is unreasonable, CC (Oil & Gas) shall have the right to apply to the court for directions in respect thereof before being obliged to comply."
"…We are obliged by order of the High Court of England & Wales to inform you that a receiver has been appointed by the court to collect any oil revenue owed to CC (Oil & Gas). The term 'oil revenues' includes any revenues derived from the sale of CC (Oil & Gas)'s share of oil produced from the oil concession in Yemen known as Block 14 or the Masila Block; in particular, it includes the purchase price to be paid under the Oil Sale Agreement referred to above….
We hereby instruct you to pay any amounts due to CC (Oil & Gas) or its nominee under the Oil Sale Agreement to Mr Manning as receiver on our behalf. Please pay these amounts into the bank account of the receiver: we will confirm the details of this account as soon as possible. We hereby unconditionally and irrevocably confirm that we will consider payment of amounts due under this agreement to Mr Manning to constitute satisfaction of your company's obligations to pay such amounts under the Oil Sale Agreement. In the event that any director, employee or agent of CC (Oil & Gas) informs you of anything contrary to what is stated in this letter, please inform the receiver without delay. No person has the authority of CC (Oil & Gas) to override the instructions in this letter."
"And as it appears from the mentioned Article that third persons are not entitled to obtain directly the information contained in the documents enumerated in the Article 197 of the Code of Commerce. However, that in case there was any litigation between the third persons and the company, the court examining the litigation can ask the company to produce any documents it finds necessary to settle the conflict and it can require the company to produce it during the trial, and the court can also assign an expert to obtain the required information. And if the legal decision were issued form a non-Lebanese court, it shall be necessary that it be coupled with the exequatur from the competent Lebanese judicial authority in case the decision included any compulsory measure to guarantee its execution.
And as both decisions issued by the British magistrate are practically investigation decision that aim at obtaining evidence present in the seat of the Lebanese company in Lebanon, meaning that both mentioned decisions shall be executed practically in Lebanon without passing through the Lebanese legal authorities. And that the party benefiting from them replaced the exequatur by the compulsory measure that guarantees the practical execution, which constitutes a fraudulent circumvention of the Lebanese law and a breach of the principle of judicial sovereignty of the Lebanese government on its territories.
i) Paragraph 15 is concerned with assets located outside England and Wales and ensures that the courts of the relevant jurisdiction (i.e. the courts of the jurisdiction where the asset is located) have priority in relation to any issues of title to, or any seizure of, that asset.
ii) Such a construction is supported by the fact that (i) there is no equivalent to paragraph 15 in the order requiring the judgment debtors to make affidavits of assets and (ii) the second sentence of paragraph 15 as proposed by CCOG was excluded as being unecessary.
iii) The order made by the Lebanese court was not a ruling on the status or disposition of any asset.
i) The Lebanese court has competent jurisdiction over CCOG (this is common ground).
ii) CCOG are the owners of various assets including the concession in the Yemen and relevant oil revenues.
iii) The order of the court was to the effect that CCOG was forbidden from giving any information about CCOG "in execution of three British decisions".
iv) The receivership order required the provision of information relating to assets located outside England and Wales in the form of oil revenues.
v) It follows that provision of the information would involve disobedience to the order of the Lebanese Court.
i) It is more in accord with the ordinary and natural meaning of paragraph 15.
ii) In contrast, under paragraph 14 which also concerns assets outside England and Wales, it is made expressly clear that a third party is entitled to comply with any obligation under the laws of the country "in which those assets are situated" (together with the orders of a court of such country subject to notice of any application).
iii) The background to the inclusion of paragraph 15, as explained above, was the content of advice obtained by CCOG regarding the limitations on access to company information under Lebanese law.