BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> IMS SA & Ors v Capital Oil And Gas Industries Ltd [2016] EWHC 1956 (Comm) (28 July 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2016/1956.html Cite as: [2016] 4 WLR 163, [2016] EWHC 1956 (Comm), [2016] WLR(D) 492 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Buy ICLR report: [2016] 4 WLR 163] [View ICLR summary: [2016] WLR(D) 492] [Help]
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
(1) IMS S.A. (2) ROFOS NAVIGATION LIMITED (3) XIFIAS NAVIGATION LIMITED (4) HELI NAVIGATION LIMITED (5) TUTBURY NAVIGATION LIMITED |
Claimants |
|
- and – |
||
CAPITAL OIL AND GAS INDUSTRIES LIMITED |
Defendant |
____________________
Mr J Cutress (instructed by Ascendo Consulting Ltd) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 15 July 2016
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
The Hon. Mr Justice Popplewell :
Introduction
(1) Capital's application dated 8 April 2016 challenging jurisdiction on forum non conveniens grounds;
(2) the Claimants' application dated 6 May 2016 for summary judgment under part 24 of the Civil Procedure Rules.
Narrative
"Capital hereby confirms that Deji Holloway, in-house solicitor of Capital, without prejudice to the rights of Capital on jurisdiction, such rights being fully reserved, has been irrevocably instructed to accept service in London at Lower Ground Floor, 63 Grosvenor Street, Mayfair London W1K 3JG ….of any further proceedings issued by the Owners to enforce the Settlement Agreement dated 24 January 2013 or any subsequent agreement…."
"3. By no later than 4pm on 4 March 2016, the 2nd - 5th Claimants ("the Owners") shall serve on the Defendant a draft amended Claim Form and Particulars of Claim, showing the striking out of IMS's claim and any consequential amendments.
4. The Defendant is to serve a further acknowledgment of service by 4pm on 11 March 2016.
5. Any application by the Defendant to strike out the rest of the Claim Form, i.e. the Owners' claims, shall be issued by no later than 4pm on 18 March 2016.
6. If no such application is made by that time, IMS is to be joined as a party to the action with effect from 4pm on 18 March. In that event, IMS's claim in the Claim Form is to be treated as having been restored and the Court will exercise jurisdiction in respect of it."
(1) IMS was treated as joined as a party to the action;
(2) IMS' claim in the Claim Form was treated as having been restored.
(1) the LOIs were invalid; and
(2) all sums due under the previous transactions between the parties had been paid in full; and
(3) the Settlement Deed document dated 13 January 2013 had been drawn up in the context of talks about expanding cooperation between the parties including plans to purchase vessels and manage them jointly. The US$6 million represented inflows from anticipated business in the future and was not intended to represent a payment obligation in relation to the previous dealing between the parties. It had been drawn up for IMS to show to its bank because IMS said it was experiencing problems with the bank threatening to sell the houses of Captain Gialozoglou, IMS' CEO. It was for that reason that the deed was unexecuted. In other words the Settlement Deed was a sham, designed to deceive IMS' bank.
The Issues
(1) the Court should not exercise its jurisdiction because the Nigerian Court is clearly the natural forum for the dispute, and Capital has the better of the argument that the jurisdiction clause relied on in the Settlement Deed is inapplicable because the Settlement Deed was not executed; alternatively
(2) if the jurisdiction application fails, the Court should not hear the summary judgment application before Capital is afforded the opportunity to consider whether to allow judgment to go by default or contest the claim on its merits, and if the latter to put in further evidence; alternatively
(3) if the Court hears the summary judgment application it should dismiss it because there is an arguable defence that the Settlement Deed was not executed.
(1) the jurisdiction application should be dismissed for each of two procedural reasons:
i. the effect of Blair J's Order and the further acknowledgment of service by Capital on 11 March 2016 is that Capital is treated as having accepted that the Court has jurisdiction to try the claim by reason of CPR Rule 11(7)(b) and 11(8); and the application is out of time under Rule 11(4)(a);
ii. the application is an abuse of process, raising grounds which could and should have been advanced as part of the first jurisdiction challenge;
(2) alternatively the jurisdiction application should be dismissed on its merits because:
i. the Claimants have the better of the argument that the Settlement Deed, containing an exclusive English jurisdiction clause, is a relevant agreement on jurisdiction falling within Article 25 of the recast Brussels 1 Regulation; accordingly the Court is bound to give effect to the clause;
ii. alternatively, Nigeria is not clearly the more appropriate forum for resolution of the dispute;
(3) summary judgment should be granted because Capital has no defence with a real prospect of success.
The jurisdiction application
Procedural points
"11.1
(1) A defendant who wishes to-
(a) dispute the court's jurisdiction to try the claim; or
(b) argue that the court should not exercise its jurisdiction,
may apply to the court for an order declaring that it has no such jurisdiction or should not exercise any jurisdiction which it may have.
(2) A defendant who wishes to make such an application must first file an acknowledgment of service in accordance with Part 10.
(3) A defendant who files an acknowledgment of service does not, by doing so, lose any right that he may have to dispute the court's jurisdiction.
(4) An application under this rule must-
(a) be made within 14 days after filing an acknowledgment of service; and
(b) be supported by evidence.
(5) If the defendant-
(a) files an acknowledgment of service; and
(b) does not make such an application within the period specified in paragraph (4), he is to be treated as having accepted that the court has jurisdiction to try the claim.
(6) An order containing a declaration that the court has no jurisdiction or will not exercise its jurisdiction may also make further provision including-
(a) setting aside the claim form;
(b) setting aside service of the claim form;
(c) discharging any order made before the claim was commenced or before the claim form was served; and
(d) staying (GL) the proceedings.
(7) If on an application under this rule the court does not make a declaration-
(a) the acknowledgment of service shall cease to have effect;
(b) the defendant may file a further acknowledgment of service within 14 days or such other period as the court may direct; and
(c) the court shall give directions as to the filing and service of the defence in a claim under Part 7 or the filing of evidence in a claim under Part 8 in the event that a further acknowledgment of service is filed.
(8) If the defendant files a further acknowledgment of service in accordance with paragraph (7)(b) he shall be treated as having accepted that the court has jurisdiction to try the claim."
Merits of the jurisdiction application: jurisdiction agreement?
"1. If the parties, regardless of their domicile, have agreed that a court or the courts of a member state are to have jurisdiction to settle any disputes which have arisen or which may arise in connection with a particular legal relationship, that court or those courts shall have jurisdiction….. Such jurisdiction shall be exclusive unless the parties have agreed otherwise. Such an agreement conferring jurisdiction shall be either: (a) in writing or evidenced in writing…"
"Secondly, written consensus may exist in the absence of a binding contract: see Fentiman, International Commercial Litigation (2010), para 2.40, giving a non-binding memorandum and an unsigned version of a contract which requires signature as examples."
The passage in Fentiman is in the following terms:
"It is possible that written consensus may exist even in the absence of a binding contract. The test is procedural, not contractual. The enquiry concerns the existence of consensus-in-fact, not of a legally binding agreement. Consensus in writing might therefore exist if a jurisdiction agreement is embodied in a non-binding memorandum, or in the final but unsigned version of a contract. In such cases, however, any dispute would not lie in contract."
(1) the Claimants executed the Settlement Deed in counterparts, as alleged in Mr Hicks' third witness statement; or
(2) the Settlement Deed was in any event executed by Capital such that:
i. Capital is bound by it because the executor of a deed is bound irrespective of execution by a beneficiary, relying on Lady Naas v Westminster Bank Ltd [1940] AC 366; or
ii. the signature by Capital was a unilateral manifestation of consent even if the agreement was not binding, and so fell within the principles adverted to by Beatson LJ in the Antonio Gramsci case and Aikens LJ in Aeroflot v Berezowski.
Merits of the jurisdiction application: forum non conveniens?
(1) Capital is a Nigerian oil company carrying on business from Nigeria.
(2) The Settlement Deed was drawn up and executed in Lagos, where the disputed events took place;
(3) Capital's key witness is Mr Ubah who is resident in Nigeria, as is Mr Osigwe, the Nigerian lawyer said to be at the relevant meeting.
(4) The Settlement Deed arises out of the claim by a Nigerian bank, Access Bank, following the arrest of two vessels in Nigeria;
(5) apart from the English jurisdiction clause the dispute has no real connection with England; and that is of no significance because Capital has the better of the arguments that the Settlement Deed was not executed and is not binding.
(1) Capital does not have the better of the arguments as to whether the Settlement Deed was executed by the Claimants. Its putative proper law is English law. The English Court is best placed to decide disputed questions of English law (for example as to the applicability of the Lady Naas decision).
(2) The nationality and location of the parties is at best neutral. The Owners are Liberian companies managed by IMS carrying on business in Greece. They were represented at the time and now by English solicitors. Capital is a Nigerian company carrying on business in Nigeria but represented at the time, in part, by an English solicitor practising in London.
(3) The location of the witnesses is also fairly evenly balanced. The only aspect of the claim which Capital has currently identified as giving rise to a factual dispute is as to the execution of the Settlement Deed. On that issue, the potential witnesses who may give oral evidence are Mr Ubah and Mr Osigwe who are in Nigeria, and perhaps also Mr Usoro, who is also in Nigeria; Mr Holloway and Mr Hicks who are in London; and Captain Gialozoglou who is in Greece.
(4) Relevant documents are likely to be in London (with Mr Hicks and Mr Holloway) in Greece (with the Claimants) and in Nigeria (with the Defendant).
(5) The location of events surrounding signing of the Deed is not significant in the assessment of where the dispute can most conveniently be tried. As to the background, it includes the Access Bank proceedings in the Commercial Court in London as well as arrests in Nigeria and Durban. It is not significantly centred on Nigeria in a way which points to Nigeria as a more appropriate forum.
The Summary Judgment Application