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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Vedatech Corporation & Anor v Crystal Decisions (UK) Ltd & Ors [2005] EWCA Civ 865 (07 July 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2005/865.html Cite as: [2005] EWCA Civ 865 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM HIGH COURT (CHANCERY DIVISION)
Mr Justice Pumfrey
HC03C01553
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE SEDLEY
and
LORD JUSTICE JONATHAN PARKER
____________________
VEDATECH CORPORATION MANI SUBRAMANIAN |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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CRYSTAL DECISIONS (UK) LIMITED & ORS |
Respondent |
____________________
Mr Robert Hildyard QC (instructed by Messrs Freshfields) for the Respondent
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Jonathan Parker :
"Each Representative in signing this agreement is deemed to be agreeing to the provisions of this agreement on behalf of the Party he/she represents and all other persons present on that Party/s behalf at the Mediation."
"This agreement shall be governed by, construed and take effect in accordance with English law. The courts of England shall have exclusive jurisdiction to settle any claim, dispute of matter of difference which may arise out of or in connection with the mediation."
"(A) The Claimant and the Defendants (the Parties) wish to agree terms to settle all claims outstanding between them and their related parties, including but not limited to those claims arising between the Claimant and the Defendants in [the action brought by Vedatech against Crystal UK] and
(B) The Parties have agreed to enter into this agreement in consideration of the mutual covenants and other valuable consideration set out below."
" 'Claimant'/'Defendants' includes any … directors, officers, employees, agents, … of either party, including for the avoidance of doubt in their personal capacities.
'Party' or 'Parties' means a party or parties to this Agreement who is/are listed of referred to at the head of this Agreement."
"This Agreement shall be governed by and interpreted in accordance with the laws of England and Wales. The Parties agree that the Courts of England and Wales have exclusive jurisdiction to settle any dispute that may arise with the validity, effect, interpretation or performance of or the legal relationships established by this Agreement or otherwise in connection with this Agreement."
"It is clear that any failure to perform by [Crystal] has been the consequence of Mr Subramanian's failure properly to communicate the bank account details according to the terms of the agreement and, subject to that, they cannot be said to be guilty of any repudiatory conduct."
"20. The second defendant was ultimately served with these proceedings in October 2003 pursuant to an order of Master Bowman of 24 October 2003 permitting service out of the jurisdiction on both defendants and alternative service on Mr Subramanian, as attempts to serve the first defendant through formal diplomatic channels have failed, I understand, because there was no company known at the address stated. The service of Mr Subramanian was effected pursuant to the order of Master Bowman which permitted alternative service by email to Mr Subramanian and by post on lawyers who assist him in this jurisdiction and in others. Mr Subramanian has also been served under the Hague Convention at his home in Seattle, and in person at the Law Courts on 5 December 2003. Crystal also sought to serve the first defendant in this way, but no leave for substituted service by service on Mr Subramanian was obtained, and that service is accordingly ineffective.
21. Since leave to serve the first defendant out of the jurisdiction has been obtained, it seems to me that service by post under the provisions of the Hague Convention is sufficient: see CPR 6.24(1). Neither the United States nor Japan has opted out of the provisions of the Hague Convention permitting service by post. As will appear, I have no doubt that grounds existed for the service of process on both defendants out of the jurisdiction, and I have no doubt that Master Bowman's order is not vitiated by material non-disclosure.
22. Finally on this aspect of the case, it should be remembered that Vedatech was a company under the control of Mr Subramanian and there is no doubt whatever that Mr Subramanian, its controlling intelligence, has been well aware of these proceedings at all material times. Nonetheless, service of the claim form in accordance with the rules must be established and I am satisfied that it has been established in the present case."
"[T]he legal basis for Master Bowman's order permitting service out of the jurisdiction is, it seems to me, entirely sound. This really cannot be disputed."
"29. In the present case, the presence of the exclusive jurisdiction clauses determines the issue of forum conveniens. The parties have agreed on the suitability of England as a forum for the dispute. The Mediation Agreement contains an exclusive jurisdiction clause entered into before any alleged misrepresentation and that, in itself, is strong evidence of the appropriateness of the English jurisdiction. So, too, is the fact that the underlying proceedings resolved in favour of Vedatech by Jacob J are English proceedings. All the events of which complaint is made took place in England before English mediators. Of course the parties are not English, with the exception of the English claimant, but nor are they particularly concerned with any other jurisdiction. Mr Subramanian is based in Seattle; Vedatech Corporation is a Japanese company. The claimants are English, Delaware and Japanese companies. This is no doubt a bald summary, but the factors in favour of the English jurisdiction are, in my judgment, very strong.
30. I must consider whether there is an arguable case that the Californian proceedings are a breach of the English jurisdiction clauses. With the exception of the Unfair Competition claim they manifestly are a breach. The clauses are drafted in wide terms. In my judgment, they are plainly wide enough as a matter of words to cover claims properly characterised as tortious, that is, any claim arising out of or in connection with the mediation, and any dispute that may arise otherwise in connection with this Agreement, having a sufficiently close connection with the mediation and the Agreement. The non-statutory Californian claims are immediately recognisable as common law fraud and negligent misrepresentation claims and the conspiracy allegation adds nothing relevant to the characterisation of the dispute.
31. In any event I should be extremely unwilling to place a narrow construction on a clause of this description unless I were left no alternative by its terms. The modern tendency is in favour of resolution of all disputes associated with a particular transaction in one jurisdiction, if that is possible, without doing violence to the words of the clause: see the remarks of Leggatt LJ in Aggeliki Charis Compania Maritima SA v. Pagnan SpA (The Angelic Grace) [1995] 1 Lloyd's Rep 87 at 91, no violence is necessary in the present case. So I conclude on this aspect of the case that there is here a properly triable allegation of breach of the exclusive jurisdiction clause."
"34. The final question that needs to be resolved is whether the claim for unfair competition has any bearing on the issues I have to decide. As I have indicated, there are no other contra indications to the grant of an injunction in this case. In my judgment, it clearly does not. First, it arises out of the same facts, all of which took place in London, as do the other claims. Secondly, it is plainly justiciable in this jurisdiction as a breach of statutory duty imposed by Californian law. Thirdly, it seems not to result in any pecuniary remedy, although I do not found my decision on this ground, having examined a vast quantity of material adduced on this cause of action. I feel no confidence in coming to a view without the assistance of experts.
35. Fourthly, the other circumstances in the case strongly suggest that this claim should be litigated here. The threshold facts for the claim must be litigated here, and it would be to permit the tail to wag the dog if an injunction were refused because of the existence of this claim where the remainder of the dispute is so firmly fixed in this jurisdiction. I do not accept, therefore, that the position is in any way affected by the presence of this claim in the Californian proceedings."
Lord Justice Sedley:
Lord Justice Auld: