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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> A v B [2020] EWHC 952 (Comm) (22 April 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2020/952.html Cite as: [2020] EWHC 952 (Comm), [2020] 1 Lloyd's Rep 553 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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A |
Claimant |
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- and – |
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B |
Defendant |
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Richard Power (instructed by Carter-Ruck Solicitors) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 31 March 2020
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Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Moulder :
Evidence
Background
"under sections 101(2) and 66(1) of the Arbitration Act 1996 to enforce the operative part of the Award".
Award
"2 .1 The Respondent will pay the Claimant:
2.1.1 The sum of USD$34,632,475.62 (the "Principal Sum");
2.1.2 Accrued interest on the Principal Sum, being USD$10,229,128.56 as at the Execution Date (the "Accrued Interest"), subject to clause 3.10 of this Award.
…
2.3 Payment must be paid to the bank account of any of the Claimant's companies and/or payment agents as may be nominated by the Claimant in writing prior to payment. Nomination shall be capable of change by the Claimant 10 business days prior to payment.
3.1 The Respondent must make a payment of USD $2 million on or before 31 December 2018, in partial discharge of the sum referred to in clause 2.1.1 above…
3.2 Thereafter, and subject to clauses 3.3 to 3.5 below, the Respondent must make a payment of USD $1.25 million every quarter, payable on or before 1 January, 1 April, 1 July and 1 October of each calendar year (the "Instalments"), until payment in full of the Principal Sum ("the Final Settlement Date").
3.3 In the event that the Respondent fails to pay… the Instalments or any part thereof on or before the requisite date, the sums referred to in clauses 2.1.1 and 2.1.2 above …will become due and owing in full and payable immediately."
Set Aside Application
i) the application for leave to enforce the Award was made in the alternative under section 101(2) and section 66(1) of the Arbitration Act 1996 (the "Act") but the Award was made in the United Kingdom and therefore is not within the definition of a "New York Convention Award" set out in section 100 of the Act;
ii) there is no power under section 66(1) to order judgment in the terms made;
iii) the court should exercise its discretion under section 66 and refuse leave to enforce the Award.
Relevant law
"(1) A New York Convention award shall be recognised as binding on the persons as between whom it was made, and may accordingly be relied on by those persons by way of defence, set-off or otherwise in any legal proceedings in England and Wales or Northern Ireland.
(2) A New York Convention award may, by leave of the court, be enforced in the same manner as a judgment or order of the court to the same effect."
"an award made, in pursuance of an arbitration agreement, in the territory of a state (other than the United Kingdom) which is a party to the New York Convention." [emphasis added]
"(1) An award made by the tribunal pursuant to an arbitration agreement may, by leave of the court, be enforced in the same manner as a judgment or order of the court to the same effect."
Submissions
i) although the claimant now accepts that it is not within the scope of section 101 as the Award was made in the United Kingdom, the claimant cannot merely excise the reference in the October Order to section 101 and the October Order should be set aside;
ii) an order pursuant to section 66(1) can only be to enforce rights which the judgment or award has established (West Tankers Inc v Allianz Spa [2012] EWCA Civ 27 at [36]) and the circumstances (i.e. the acceleration of the debt pursuant to clause 3.3 of the Award) have not been established in the Award;
iii) the court has to determine whether to exercise its discretion under section 66 and make a judicial determination whether it is appropriate to enter judgment (West Tankers at [38]).
i) the application for leave to enforce was properly made pursuant to section 66 and there was no need to refer to section 101 in the claim form;
ii) there was no need for a determination by the court as to whether the circumstances under clause 3.3 had arisen; it was common ground that the defendant had failed to pay the October instalment on 1 October 2019;
iii) there was no basis to refuse enforcement of the Award: no agreement had been reached at the meeting on 4 October 2019 that the claimant would not accelerate the payment – any alleged oral agreement was uncertain, lacked consideration and was not intended to create legal relations; the defendant could not found an estoppel in light of the fact that he had received the letter of 8 October 2019 from the claimant's solicitors.
Discussion
Application for leave to enforce under section 101 of the Act
"The claimant applies for orders (in terms of the draft appended hereto):
1 Pursuant to section 101(1), (2) and/or 66 (1) of the Arbitration Act 1996.… for leave to enforce an agreed arbitration award dated 4 December 2018 (the "Award")… The seat of the arbitration is London. The United Kingdom is a signatory to the New York Convention and the claimant seeks recognition and enforcement of the award as a New York Convention Award.
2 The Award is an agreed award and is binding on the parties and none of the grounds for resisting recognition or enforcement under section 103 of the Arbitration Act 1996 exist…" [emphasis added]
"none of the grounds for resisting enforcement under section 103 of the Arbitration Act 1996 exist".
Scope of Section 66 of the Act
"to enforce the operative part of the Award, namely that the Defendant shall pay to the Claimant the sum currently outstanding of USD $39,111,604.18." [emphasis added]
"35. The question is whether the phrase "enforced in the same manner as a judgment to the same effect" is confined to enforcement by one of the normal forms of execution of a judgment which are provided under the rules or whether it may include other means of giving judicial force to the award on the same footing as a judgment.
36. The broader interpretation is closer to the purpose of the Act and makes better sense in the context of the way in which arbitration works. Ultimately the efficacy of any award by an arbitral body depends on the assistance of the judicial system, as Lord Hobhouse observed. Judges may give force to an arbitral award by a number of means, including by applying the doctrine of issue estoppel. The argument that in such cases the court is not enforcing an award but only the rights determined by an award is an over subtle and unconvincing distinction and sits on a shaky foundation. For the enforcement of any judgment or award is the enforcement of the rights which the judgment or award has established. As with any judgment or award, so in the case of a monetary judgment or award its enforcement is the enforcement of the right (a right to payment) which the award has established. In the present case, as in AEGIS v European Re, the owners want to enforce the award through res judicata, and for that purpose they seek to have the award entered as a judgment.
37. At common law a party to an arbitration who has obtained a declaratory award in his favour could bring an action on the award and the court, if it thought appropriate, could itself make a declaration in the same terms. The purpose of section 66 is to provide a simpler alternative route to bringing an action on the award, although the latter possibility is expressly preserved by section 66 (4) . I cannot see why in an appropriate case the court may not give leave for an arbitral award to be enforced in the same manner as might be achieved by an action on the award and so give leave for judgment to be entered in the terms of the award." [emphasis added]
"the defendant shall pay to the claimant the sum currently outstanding of USD $39,111,604.18."
However this does not reflect the terms of the Award. In my view the arbitrator has not decided the point i.e. whether clause 3.3 has been triggered and the principal sum accelerated.
Resolution of s66 Application
"46. Given that the court has the power under CPR Part 62 to give appropriate directions to enable issues of fact to be determined, there is no obvious reason why the enforcing party should be compelled to start proceedings all over again by commencing an action on the award, thereby potentially wasting both time and costs. S.66 is meant to deal with enforcement generally and there is nothing in s.66 itself or in the CPR which requires an alternative mode of procedure to be adopted in the event of the application being challenged on the facts. Consistent with the Overriding Objective the priority must be to progress matters sensibly and cost effectively rather than to waste time and costs for formalistic reasons….
48. For all these reasons I consider that the court does have the power to direct that there be a determination of disputed issues of fact under s.66 and that there is no necessity for this to be done by way of action on the award. No doubt there will be cases where it will still be appropriate for the proceedings to continue as if it was an action, particularly where the dispute is one of some complexity. However, in a case such as the present which involves relatively straightforward issues of fact such as are commonly determined on a s.67 application, I consider it is appropriate for the issues to be dealt with under s.66 and for appropriate directions to be given under CPR Part 62.7 .
49. Alternatively, if that be wrong, I would have ordered that the proceedings should continue as if they had been begun by a claim form in an action on the award and would have given the same directions as I am going to give in respect of the determination of the s.66 application so that the end procedural result would be the same."
"68. On an application to enforce an award issues may arise, such as those which arose in Sovarex SA v Romero Alvarez SA [2011] EWHC 1661 (Comm) in which it is necessary for the court to decide an issue based on disclosure and cross-examination of evidence. However, in my judgment, the court should be cautious about taking that approach and will generally be able to come to a decision on whether the grounds are made out without the necessity for holding a full hearing but will be able to deal with them on the basis of the usual test on summary judgment that is whether there is a real prospect of successfully establishing a ground under s.103 or whether there is some compelling reason why the issue should be disposed of at a trial." [emphasis added]
i) the parties would not have entered into a binding oral agreement: the claimant relied on the inclusion of "no oral variation" clauses in the 2015 and 2018 Settlement Agreement;
ii) subsequent correspondence from the defendant's representatives in December 2019 referred to a "default" having occurred and thus the defendant acknowledged there was no oral agreement (paragraph 11 of the second witness statement of Ms Duncan);
iii) as a matter of law on the authorities, there was no (or no good) consideration for any oral agreement; the "exploration" of alternative security did not amount to consideration;
iv) the payment had already been accelerated by the missed payment on 1 October before the meeting on 4 October;
v) there could be no reliance on any waiver at the meeting of 4 October once the letter of 8 October had been sent;
vi) the payment of the October instalment should have been made to an account of which the defendant was already aware; there was no agreement that the claimant would not insist on payment on the due date of the instalment where late payment was the result of KYC procedures with the bank through which payment was being made.
i) the claimant relies on the "no oral variation" clauses in the 2018 Settlement Agreement to assert that there was no oral agreement and submitted that it was "compelling evidence" that negative an intention to create legal relations. These clauses may well form part of the factual context but in my view cannot be said to dispose of this issue at this stage;
ii) as to the December correspondence, the particular correspondence is not contemporaneous to the agreement alleged to have been reached in October, the alleged estoppel and its interpretation and relevance is a matter for trial;
iii) as to whether there was good consideration for any oral agreement, I accept that, whilst criticised, the law is as stated by the House of Lords in Foakes v Beer (1884) 9 App Cas 605 namely that "Payment of a lesser sum on the day in satisfaction of a greater sum cannot be any satisfaction for the whole"; however there needs to be a fuller investigation than is possible on the current evidence as to the consideration which is said to have been given, which according to the evidence of C was not only the acceleration of the existing payments but also the provision of alternative security;
iv) in relation to the alleged estoppel, the evidence of C is that the claimant "agreed not to take any action over the delay" (paragraph 16 of his witness statement) and the claimant agreed he would not enforce his rights (paragraph 21 of his witness statement). The letter of 8 October from the claimant's solicitors is relevant to the issue but having regard to its terms and in particular the statement that the claimant was "reserving its rights" (as opposed to demanding immediate payment), does not render the defence of estoppel "fanciful";
v) as to whether the claimant was in breach of the requirement to give payment instructions and the legal effect of any such breach on the obligation to pay the instalment on 1 October, the interpretation of clause 2.3 is a matter of construction considering both the factual context (including the prior conduct) and the literal meaning of the words. There will need to be full submissions on the construction and the evidence of the factual context.