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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 >> Highland Crusader Offshore Partners LP & Ors v Deutsche Bank AG & Anor [2009] EWCA Civ 725 (13 July 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2009/725.html Cite as: [2009] 2 All ER (Comm) 987, [2009] CP Rep 45, [2009] EWCA Civ 725, [2009] 2 CLC 45, [2009] 2 Lloyd's Rep 617, [2010] 1 WLR 1023 |
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A3/2009/0875, A3/2009/0875(A) |
COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE, COMMERCIAL COURT
Tomlinson J & Burton J
2008 Folio 1156
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE TOULSON
and
LORD JUSTICE GOLDRING
____________________
(1) HIGHLAND CRUSADER OFFSHORE PARTNERS L.P. (2) HIGHLAND CREDIT STRATEGIES MASTER FUND L.P. (3) HIGHLAND CREDIT OPPORTUNITIES CDO L.P. |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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(1) DEUTSCHE BANK AG (2) DEUTSCHE BANK SECURITIES INC |
Respondents |
____________________
WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7404 1424
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr Richard Handyside QC (instructed by Allen & Overy LLP) for the Respondents
Hearing date: 9 June 2009
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Toulson :
Introduction
"Governing Law
This Agreement shall be governed by and construed in accordance with the laws of England. Buyer and Seller hereby irrevocably submit for all purposes of or in connection with this Agreement and each Transaction to the jurisdiction of the Courts of England.
Party A [DB] hereby appoints the person identified in Annex 1 hereto as its agent to receive on its behalf service of process in such courts. If such agent ceases to be its agent, Party A shall promptly appoint, and notify Party B [Highland] of the identity of, a new agent in England.
Party B hereby appoints the person identified in Annex 1 hereto as its agent to receive on its behalf service of process in such courts. If such agent ceases to be its agent, Party B shall promptly appoint, and notify Party A of the identity of, a new agent in England.
Each party shall deliver to the other, within 30 days of the date of this Agreement in the case of the appointment of a person identified in Annex 1 or of the date of appointment of the relevant agent in any other case, evidence of the acceptance by the agent appointed by it pursuant to this paragraph of such appointment.
Nothing in this paragraph shall limit the right of any party to take proceedings in the courts of any other country of competent jurisdiction."
"The following additional supplemental terms and conditions shall apply to Transactions with respect to which Party B has dealt with an officer of Deutsche Bank Securities Inc ("DBSI"), an affiliate of Party A ("Applicable Transactions"):
…
(b) DBSI is acting in connection with Applicable Transactions solely in its capacity as agent pursuant to instructions from Party A and Party B. DBSI shall have no responsibility or liability to Party A or Party B arising from a failure by Party A or Party B to pay or perform any obligation under the Agreement, and is not acting as guarantor of either Party A or Party B in connection with any obligation under the Agreement. Each of Party A and Party B agrees to proceed solely against the other to collect or recover any amounts owing to it or to enforce any of its rights in connection with or as a result of Applicable Transactions under the Agreement."
"Paragraph 17 of the GMRA shall apply to this Agreement as if that paragraph were expressly set out herein."
Margin Calls
Litigation in Texas and England
1. DB and DBSI, through Mr Newell, induced Highland to agree to buy a portfolio of securities by fraudulent or negligent misrepresentations
(i) that DB and DBSI did not intend to hold Highland to the terms of the GMRA but were willing to replace it with a mutually acceptable form of agreement soon thereafter, and
(ii) only limited due diligence was needed on the part of Highland because the securities were credit enhanced and backed by triple A rated names with well-known managers, so the transaction was very low risk;
2. DB and DBSI improperly manipulated the valuations of the underlying collateral so as to enable them to make a number of margin calls;
3. DB and DBSI, through Mr Newell, induced Highland to make a margin payment of US $18 million on or about 24 September 2008 by falsely pretending that they were willing to extend the financing for 1 year at terms and spread levels that were acceptable to Highland, but only a week later made another improper margin call.
DB and DBSI's motion to dismiss or stay the Texas proceedings
"This is fascinating. I understand the competing interests, and I particularly am swayed in many personal respects by what Mr Hackney [counsel for DB and DBSI] has just said [about the Texas court not wishing to be known for allowing international forum shopping]. Given that, I'm denying the motions."
1 England would be a more convenient forum for witnesses, because most of DB's witnesses were in England and none of its witnesses were in Texas. In particular, the traders who priced, negotiated and effected the trades at issue were in London.
2. The actions by DB that formed the basis of the law suit were effected by London based DB personnel.
3. Numerous DB documents relevant to the action were located in England and none was in Texas.
4. The transaction was governed by English law.
5. Any judgment obtained by either party in England would be fully enforceable in Texas and Bermuda, but a Texas judgment against a Bermuda based Highland entity (Highland Crusader) could not be enforced in Bermuda by being registered in the same way as could a judgment of the English court.
1. Highland had 10 -12 witnesses with knowledge of the facts, all of whom were in Dallas.
2. DB's personnel who negotiated the contracts lived in the USA.
3. During the period of negotiation of the GMRAs there was no communication between Highland and anyone employed by DB in England.
4. The bulk of the documentary evidence was in Dallas.
5. Two of the three Highland companies had their principal place of business in Dallas and all investment decisions of the Highland companies were made in Dallas.
6. The representations on which Highland relied were received in Dallas.
7. The repurchase agreements were executed in Dallas.
8. The effect of the DB parties' alleged fraud was felt in Dallas.
9. The conduct of the DB entities violated Texas law and was not merely a breach of contract under English law.
"…Defendants have failed to carry their burden with regard to the forum non conveniens analysis and all of the private and public interest factors set forth in Gulf Oil confirm that Dallas is a far more convenient forum for the parties. Defendants cannot demonstrate, and have presented minimal evidence, that the private or public interest factors weigh in favor of dismissing this case based on forum non conveniens. Plaintiffs have, on the other hand, demonstrated that the Gulf Oil factors weigh in favour of retaining the case in Texas. Moreover, Plaintiffs filed this law suit first, Texas law applies to the majority, if not all, of Plaintiffs' claims, and the slight burden to Defendants in defending this lawsuit in Dallas is outweighed by the burden the Plaintiffs will suffer if their claims are dismissed and they are forced to prosecute their claims in an English court. As such, it is clear that Plaintiffs' choice of forum, Dallas, should not be disturbed."
Joinder of DBSI in the English action
Decision to grant an anti-suit injunction to halt the Texas action
"Immediate relief is required because Plaintiffs' counsel in London indicated this afternoon that the Court in London will rule tomorrow, April 3, 2009, before the courts open in Texas and has indicated that it will likely grant an anti-suit injunction against Plaintiffs."
I read that application as intended to protect the Texas jurisdiction. On 2 April 2009 the Texas Court issued a temporary injunction enjoining DB from proceeding with its application to enjoin Highland's action before the Texas Court. This attempt to forestall the grant of anti-suit injunction by Burton J proved to be ineffective.
1. Because paragraph 17 was not an exclusive jurisdiction clause, there was no breach of contract if either contracting party took proceedings elsewhere.
2. However, the question then arose as to what should happen if that occurred and there were then parallel proceedings, one in the nominated jurisdiction and the other in a "non-contractual, but otherwise competent jurisdiction". As to that, the policy of the law must be to favour the litigation of issues once only, in the most appropriate forum (applying words of Bingham LJ in Du Pont v Agnew [1987] 2 Lloyds Rep 585, 589).
3. Mr Handyside had submitted that in that situation, absent special circumstances, the party which had commenced proceedings in the "non-contractual jurisdiction" must desist, such implied term being imported by virtue of commercial good sense. However, it was unnecessary to decide whether there was such an implied term.
4. The approach in Texas to parallel proceedings appeared to give considerable, if not conclusive, significance to the "first filed rule". This was not the approach of the English courts where there is a jurisdiction clause.
5. The approach of the English courts is that an anti-suit injunction can be granted if required by the "ends of justice" (Donohue v Armco Inc [2001] UKHL 64, [2002] 1 Lloyds Rep 425, 431). Generally speaking, such an injunction will only be granted if pursuit of proceedings in a foreign court would be vexatious or oppressive, but in applying that test the words of Bingham LJ in Du Pont v Agnew provide important guidance.
6. Where there is a contractual non-exclusive jurisdiction clause, a party will ordinarily act vexatiously and oppressively in pursuing proceedings in the non-contractual jurisdiction in parallel with proceedings in the contractual jurisdiction, unless there are exceptional reasons, not foreseeable at the time when the contractual jurisdiction was agreed. This test was derived from a line of authorities, particularly, British Aerospace plc v Dee Howard & Co [1993] I Lloyds Rep 368, Mercury Telecommunications Limited v Communication Telesystems International [1999] 2 All E R (Comm) 33, Sabah Shipyard (Pakistan) Limited v Islamic Republic of Pakistan [2003] 2 Lloyds Rep 571, BP plc v National Union Fire Insurance Co [2004] EWHC 1132 (Comm), Antec International Limited v Biosafety USA Inc [2006] EWHC 47 (Comm) and HIT Entertainment Limited v Gaffney International Licensing Pty Limited [2007] EWHC 1282.
7. No unforeseeable change since the conclusion of the contract had been suggested in the present case.
8. The balance of convenience or availability of juridical advantages to Highland from suing in Texas were irrelevant considerations where there was an English jurisdiction clause and no unforeseeable change of circumstances.
9. There was no "derogation from comity" in the judge granting an anti-suit injunction against Highland, because Judge Molberg had applied Texas law and the judge had to apply English law which involved a different test.
10. There was no good reason why the injunction granted against DB should not apply equally to DBSI and include an injunction against pursuing the claims made against Mr Newell as a servant or agent.
Arguments on the appeal
Anti-suit injunctions and forum non conveniens – key principles
1. Under English law the court may restrain a defendant over whom it has personal jurisdiction from instituting or continuing proceedings in a foreign court when it is necessary in the interests of justice to do.
2. It is too narrow to say that such an injunction may be granted only on grounds of vexation or oppression, but, where a matter is justiciable in an English and a foreign court, the party seeking an anti-suit injunction must generally show that proceeding before the foreign court is or would be vexatious or oppressive.
3. The courts have refrained from attempting a comprehensive definition of vexation or oppression, but in order to establish that proceeding in a foreign court is or would be vexatious or oppressive on grounds of forum non conveniens, it is generally necessary to show that
(a) England is clearly the more appropriate forum ("the natural forum"), and
(b) justice requires that the claimant in the foreign court should be restrained from proceeding there.
4. If the English court considers England to be the natural forum and can see no legitimate personal or juridical advantage in the claimant in the foreign proceedings being allowed to pursue them, it does not automatically follow that an anti-suit injunction should be granted. For that would be to overlook the important restraining influence of considerations of comity.
5. An anti-suit injunction always requires caution because by definition it involves interference with the process or potential process of a foreign court. An injunction to enforce an exclusive jurisdiction clause governed by English law is not regarded as a breach of comity, because it merely requires a party to honour his contract. In other cases, the principle of comity requires the court to recognise that, in deciding questions of weight to be attached to different factors, different judges operating under different legal systems with different legal polices may legitimately arrive at different answers, without occasioning a breach of customary international law or manifest injustice, and that in such circumstances it is not for an English court to arrogate to itself the decision how a foreign court should determine the matter. The stronger the connection of the foreign court with the parties and the subject matter of the dispute, the stronger the argument against intervention.
6. The prosecution of parallel proceedings in different jurisdictions is undesirable but not necessarily vexatious or oppressive.
7. A non-exclusive jurisdiction agreement precludes either party from later arguing that the forum identified is not an appropriate forum on grounds foreseeable at the time of the agreement, for the parties must be taken to have been aware of such matters at the time of the agreement. For that reason an application to stay on forum non conveniens grounds an action brought in England pursuant to an English non-exclusive jurisdiction clause will ordinarily fail unless the factors relied upon were unforeseeable at the time of the agreement. It does not follow that an alternative forum is necessarily inappropriate or inferior. (I will come to the question whether there is a presumption that parallel proceedings in an alternative jurisdiction are vexatious or oppressive).
8. The decision whether or not to grant an anti-suit injunction involves an exercise of discretion and the principles governing it contain an element of flexibility.
Propositions 1 to 3
Propositions 4 and 5
"As a general rule, before an anti-suit injunction can properly be granted by an English court to restrain a person from pursing proceedings in a foreign jurisdiction in cases of the kind under consideration in the present case [an alternative forum case], comity requires that the English forum should have a sufficient interest in, or connection with, the matter in question to justify the indirect interference with the foreign court which an anti-suit injunction entails.
In an alternative forum case, this will involve consideration of the question whether the English court is the natural forum for the resolution of the dispute."
"If, applying the principles relating to forum non conveniens…, the foreign court could reasonably have concluded that there was no alternative forum that was clearly more appropriate, the domestic court should respect that decision and the application should be dismissed. Where there is a genuine disagreement between the courts of our country and another, the courts of this country should not arrogate to themselves the decision for both jurisdictions…In a case in which the domestic court concludes that the foreign court assumed jurisdiction on a basis that is inconsistent with principles relation to forum non conveniens and that the foreign court's conclusion could not reasonably have been reached had it applied those principles, it must then go on to the second step of the [Aerospatiale] test [i.e. whether to grant an injunction on the ground that the ends of justice require it]."
Proposition 6
Proposition 7
Proposition 8
Anti-suit injunctions and non-exclusive jurisdiction clauses
Cannon Screen
"If they are being improperly or unjustly sued in California, why should they not look to their own courts to protect them rather than to the English courts? In English and private international law there can be no objection to the Californian court exercising both its procedural and it substantive jurisdiction over them."
Amoco v TGTL
Credit Suisse
Sabah
"In the instant case, on any view, the GOP agreed to submit to the jurisdiction of the English court. Furthermore, it appointed agents for the purpose of service in England, and it agreed to waive any objection that any action brought in England was being brought in an inconvenient forum. It seems to me that it cannot have been the intention of the parties that if proceedings were commenced in England, parallel proceedings could be pursued elsewhere unless there was some exceptional reason for doing so."
"This may go too far. If this reasoning was adopted in relation to non-exclusive jurisdiction clauses in general, it would mean that non-exclusive clauses could be converted into something close to an exclusive jurisdiction clause by the simple expedient of commencing parallel proceedings in England soon after the commencement of the foreign proceedings. So it is submitted that this aspect of Sabah should be read as specific to the unusual facts of the case, where the foreign proceedings included a claim for an anti-suit injunction to restrain proceedings in the chosen forum."
"Where the agreement provides for the non-exclusive jurisdiction of the English courts there is no breach of agreement in bringing proceedings abroad and therefore an injunction will not be granted on the basis of breach of an agreement. However, if one party (A) by way of a pre-emptive strike seeks an injunction abroad whereby the other party (B) will be permanently restrained from making any demand under a contract (containing a non-exclusive English jurisdiction clause) in the hope of preventing B from starting proceedings in England, this is a breach of contract and vexatious. An injunction restraining A from continuing the proceedings abroad will then be granted on the basis of vexation or oppression. Moreover, the nature of the jurisdiction clause may be such that, although not exclusive, it does not contemplate parallel proceedings and pursuing proceedings abroad would be vexatious and oppressive. Normally, though, a non-exclusive jurisdiction agreement will contemplate the possibility of simultaneous trials in England and abroad and, if trial is pursed abroad, there will not only be no breach of agreement but also no vexatious or oppressive conduct."
RBC v Rabobank
Other authorities which influenced the judge
"i) If a contract contains a non-exclusive jurisdiction clause the parties are taken mutually to have agreed that the country in which jurisdiction may be exercised pursuant to the clause is a convenient forum.
ii) Only in exceptional circumstances unforeseeable when the contract was made would it be open to one party to ignore such a jurisdiction clause and to start proceedings for negative relief elsewhere on the basis of a balance of convenience.
iii) The commencement in a forum other than that to which the jurisdiction clause refers of proceedings for negative or any relief before the commencement by the other party of proceedings in the agreed forum can normally contribute nothing to ascertaining such balance of convenience, which has to be tested on the assumption that neither party had yet started proceedings in any forum.
iv) In cases where it cannot be said that there are any exceptional circumstances unforeseeable at the time when the agreement was made which render an unagreed form materially more convenient than the agreed forum, subject to (v) below, it will be procedurally oppressive for one party to commence proceedings in an unagreed forum either before or after the other party has commenced proceedings in the agreed forum.
v) There may be exceptional cases where, in spite of there being no unforeseen circumstances giving rise to a balance of convenience in favour of some other forum, the justice of the case and the interests of all parties so strongly point to the desirability of a trial in an unagreed forum that they outweigh what would otherwise be the oppressive character of a party's conduct in ignoring the agreed forum."
Conclusion
"where a non-exclusive jurisdiction clause does not clearly indicate whether prior or subsequent parallel proceedings in a non-selected forum are permitted or prohibited, the best interpretation will usually be that, by contracting for non-exclusive jurisdiction, the parties have anticipated and accepted the possibility of some parallel proceedings, and as a result, only foreign proceedings which are vexatious and oppressive for some reason independent of the mere presence of the non-exclusive clause will be restrained by injunction."
"…absent some unforeseeable change since the contract, none of which is suggested here, in my judgment, when it comes to deciding whether it is vexatious or oppressive to continue two sets of proceedings in parallel, it is vexatious and oppressive, in the absence of any such exceptional unforeseeable circumstances, for a party to pursue proceedings in non-contractual forum."
Disposal
Lord Justice Goldring:
Lord Justice Carnwath:
"One of the curses of the common law method in the 21st century is unlimited accessibility to authorities, reported and unreported, and apparently unlimited resources for copying them. (See the Practice Direction on Citation of Authorities [2001] 1 WLR 2001) On the other hand, one of the blessings is the availability of up to date and authoritative textbooks on almost every relevant subject, in which the material cases have been sorted out and digested. For my part, at least where I am concerned with common law rather than statute, I find it most helpful to start by looking for a succinct statement of the relevant principle: either in a recent binding decision of the higher courts, if there is one; or, if not, in a leading textbook (or, where available, a Law Commission report). Of course, that is only the starting point. Authorities may be needed to qualify, expand, or merely illustrate the basic principle. However, it is important to be clear for which of those purposes any case is being advanced. Furthermore, where the purpose is to qualify or expand, it is not enough simply to cite an authority, without being able to articulate with reasonable precision the proposition which it is said to support.
Occasionally, and exceptionally, the uncertainty of the law in a particular area may require a detailed examination of cases going back over a long period. In such cases, for my part, I welcome all the help I can get. In most disputed areas of the law, it is possible to identify a recent, informed academic treatment of the subject by a recognised authority, with a full discussion of the relevant cases. Proliferation of academic articles is no more welcome than proliferation of authorities. However, an objective academic review can often provide the best framework for the discussion in court, and a useful corrective to the necessarily partisan viewpoint of counsel."