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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Speed Investments Ltd & Anor v Formula One Holdings Ltd & Ors [2004] EWHC 1827 (Ch) (20 July 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2004/1827.html Cite as: [2004] ILPr 46, [2004] EWHC 1827 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Royal Courts of Justice The Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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(1) SPEED INVESTMENTS LIMITED | ||
(2) SLEC HOLDINGS LIMITED | Claimant | |
-v- | ||
(1) FORMULA ONE HOLDINGS LIMITED | ||
(2) BAMBINO HOLDINGS LIMITED | ||
(3) LUC ARGAND | ||
(4) EMMANUELE ARGAND | Defendant |
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Smith Bernal WordWave Limited
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel: 020 7404 1400 Fax: 020 7404 1424
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR M ROSEN QC and MR N PARFITT (instructed by Lovells) appeared on behalf of the Defendant
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Crown Copyright ©
"(A) The holders of a majority in nominal value of the A shares should be permitted to appoint a director to each of the subsidiaries, the ("A subsidiary directors");
"(B) The holders of a majority in nominal value of the B shares should be permitted to appoint two directors of each of the subsidiaries, the ("B subsidiary directors"); and.
"(C) The subsidiary directors are sent at the same time as the other directors of the relevant subsidiary notice of any meeting of the directors of such subsidiary and a copy of all papers sent to such directors."
"1. A claim for declarations as to the identity of the directors of the first defendant.
"2. A claim for rectification of invalid entries in the register of directors of the first defendant.
"3. A claim for a declaration as to the validity of a written resolution of the board of directors of the first defendant."
"32. On 7th October 2002, Bambino purported to appoint Monsieur Argand and Madame Argand-Rey as B-directors of FOH pursuant to Article 14 (A) of the new FOH articles.
"33.1. In connection with the purchase of Speed by EM.TV and the acquisition of shares in SLEC by Speed in accordance with the master agreement, the directors of FOH appointed prior to 12th May 2000 were agreed by SLEC, FOH, Bambino and Speed to be designated A-directors and B-directors respectively in accordance with the new FOH articles adopted on the same day, as evidenced by the description of such persons as A-directors and B-directors in schedule 1, part 2 of the SLEC Shareholders Agreement.
"33.2. Further or alternatively, by including schedule 1, part 2 of the SLEC Shareholders Agreement, each of the parties to the SLEC Shareholders Agreement represented to the others that they would treat the persons set out in the said schedule as A and B-directors respectively as having been appointed A and B-directors in accordance with the new FOH articles.
"33.3. Further or alternatively, by the SLEC Shareholders Agreement, Bambino contracted with Speed, SLEC and FOH that the persons described as B-directors off FOH in schedule 1, part 2 of the SLEC Shareholders Agreement should be deemed to be appointed as such B-directors of FOH in accordance with the new FOH articles. The claimants will refer to clause 4 (A) of the SLEC Shareholders Agreement.
"33.4. Further or alternatively, SLEC and Bambino have thereafter conducted themselves on the basis that and in reliance on the representation pleaded in paragraph 33.2 above, that the persons set out in schedule 1, part 2 of the SLEC Shareholders Agreement as A and B-directors respectively were appointed as A-directors by Speed and as B-directors by Bambino respectively. Paragraph 27 above is repeated.
"34. In the premises, Monsieur Argand and Madame Argand-Rey have not been appointed as directors of FOH."
"On 11th November 2002, SLEC as sole shareholder in FOH appointed Mr Diederichs and Mr Mann as directors of FOH, not being A-directors or B-directors. Bambino and the secretary of FOH have refused to recognise the appointment of Mr Diederichs and Mr Mann on the basis that there were no vacancies of the board of directors because Bambino and the secretary of FOH contend that Monsieur Argand and Madame Argand-Rey were validly appointed."
"41. A dispute as arisen between FOH, SLEC, Speed and Bambino as to who are the directors of FOH. The register of directors maintained by FOH pursuant to Section 288 of the Companies Act 1985 records Monsieur Argand and Madame Argand-Rey as directors of FOH and does not record Mr Diederichs and Mr Mann as directors of FOH. The entry of the names of Monsieur Argand and Madame Argand-Rey in the said register is invalid and FOH is obliged to include particulars of Mr Diederichs and Mr Mann in the said register.
"42. The accounts of FOH for the year ended 31st December 2002 were due to be filed at Companies House by 31st October 2003. By reason of the dispute between FOH, SLEC, Speed and Bambino as to the identity of the directors of FOH, substantial difficulties were encountered in approving and filing the said accounts. It was not possible to call a meeting of the board of directors because of the dispute as to who had been validly appointed directors of FOH."
"If the defendant is not domiciled in a member state, the jurisdiction of the courts of each member state shall, subject to Articles 22 and 23, be determined by the law of that member state."
"The following court shall have exclusive jurisdiction regardless of domicile.
"2. In proceedings which have as their object the validity of the constitution, the nullity or the dissolution of companies or other legal persons or associations of natural or legal persons, or of the validity of the decisions of their organs, the courts of the member state in which the company, legal person or association has its seat. In order to determine that seat, the court shall apply its rules of private international law.
"3. In proceedings which have as their object the validity of entries in public registers, the courts of the member state in which the register is kept."
"Where proceedings involving the same cause of action and between the same parties are brought in the courts of different contracting states, any court other than the court first seised shall of its own notion stay its proceedings until such time as the jurisdiction of the court first seised is established. Where the jurisdiction of the court first seised is established, any court other than the court first seised shall decline jurisdiction in favour of that court."
"The paragraphs of Article 16 constitute a series of exceptions to the basic jurisdictional rules established by the Convention. The objective of Article 16(2) is to confer exclusive jurisdiction to decide questions concerning the constitution and internal management of a company on the courts of a contracting state in which the company has its seat. It is generally accepted as a matter of private international law that the law of the place of incorporation determines the capacity of the company, the composition and powers of the various organs of the company, the formalities and procedures laid down for them, the extent of an individual member's liability for the debts and liabilities of the company, and other matters of that kind. The objective of Article 16(2) is to confer exclusive jurisdiction to determine all such questions on the courts of the state where the company has its seat. The other paragraphs of the Article follow a similar logic. The appellants submit that Article 16(2) governs all questions which are concerned with the internal management of the company and that this extends to all disputes which arise out of the relationship between a company and its officers or shareholders or between its shareholders and officers, possibly even between its shareholders inter se. This submission is far too wide. Whether an action falls within Article 16(2) depends upon its subject matter the nature of the dispute, not upon the relationship between the parties. A claim by an officer of a company for wrongful dismissal, for example, does not fall within the Article, although a claim that the decision to dismiss him had been taken by a meeting of the board which was inquorate would do so."
"It is obvious that there are at least three different meanings which can be applied to the words public register: a register kept by a public official by not open to inspection by the public, as until recently the Land Registry, a register kept by a public official and open to inspection by the public, a register kept by a private body but open to inspection by the public, either by compulsion of law or perhaps voluntarily kept open to inspection by the public. There appears to be no way one can elucidate the matter and the argument upon it has been very short, but in the end it seems to me that in considering the words public register, the emphasis must be upon a register to which the public has access. To my mind it is, as Professor Kay says, natural that the courts of a country where a register is kept should be the courts in control of applications for access to that register."
"The jurisdiction ratione materiae of a court must necessarily be ascertained in the light of the subject matter of the claim as defined in the originating application without looking at its purpose."
"The Brussels and Lugano Conventions are for present purposes in identical language. The Brussels contracting states that members of the European Union and questions of the interpretation of the Convention may be referred to the European Court of Justice. The Lugano Convention includes non-members and the European Court as no jurisdiction over it. Nevertheless, as the two Conventions are intended to establish a single system for the allocation of jurisdiction of non-contracting states, and the mutual recognition of their judgments, decisions of the European Court on the Brussels Convention are obviously of great authority for the interpretation of the parallel provisions of the Lugano Convention. As the two Convention defendants in this case are domiciled in Switzerland, the Lugano Convention is the one engaged."
"Where a court of a contracting state is seised of a claim which is principally concerned with a matter over which the courts of another contracting state have exclusive jurisdiction by virtue of Article 16, it shall declare of its own notion that it has no jurisdiction."
"Moreover, a judgment should not be recognised if it conflicts with the provisions of section 3, 4 or 5 of title 2, or in a case provided for in Article 59."
"However, what of the situation in which the second seised court itself has exclusive jurisdiction under the Convention, whereas the foreign first seised court did not, and yet decided to continue with its proceedings either incorrectly because in a case where the parties had conferred exclusive jurisdiction upon the second seised court under Article 17, the defendant had nonetheless entered an appearance to the action in the first seised court for the purposes of Article 18, thereby conferring jurisdiction upon the latter, or because where the second seised court's jurisdiction is exclusive under Article 16, the first seised court simply contravened its duty to decline jurisdiction under Article 19 or did not consider itself to be obliged to do so, because, for example, contrary to the view of the second seised court, the former regarded the seat of a company as being situated within its own territory for purposes of exclusive jurisdiction under Article 16(2) and not in that of the second seised court.
"In the present view (i), where the second seised court has exclusive jurisdiction under Article 16 and the first seised court non-exclusive jurisdiction, then according to the spirit and policy of the Convention, Article 21 in inapplicable in the second seised court and the latter need not therefore decline to adjudicate. This is firstly because the first seised court's judgment will not be entitled to recognition in other contracting states, or at least in the second seised state in any event by virtue of Article 28, paragraph 1 as contravening title to section 5, and consequently, community-wide recognition will not be required to be given to two possibly conflicting judgments, and secondly the fact that the first seised court did not decline jurisdiction under Article 19, as it should have done, even if the defendant entered an appearance, since Article 18 is expressly subject to Article 16, indicates a failure, indeed contravention, of the Convention system in view of which just as Article 28, paragraph 1 requires exceptional jurisdictional review and refusal of recognition in such circumstances, so the same situation demands that Article 21 be held to be inapplicable. Article 21, paragraph 1, does not expressly except this application in these cases precisely because they are not supposed to occur. Courts ought to comply with Article 19."
"Accordingly, where Article 21 applies, the English court must decline jurisdiction if it is not the court first seised and the jurisdiction of the other court is not challenged, or is established after it is challenged. The court which is seised second must not itself normally investigate the jurisdiction of the court first seised. In Overseas Union Insurance Limited v New Hampshire Insurance Company, it was held that in such a case the court could only stay its proceedings until the court first seised had ruled on its own jurisdiction. But the European Court left open the question whether the answer was the same if the court seised second had conclusive jurisdiction, in particular under Article 16.
"As a result, the scope of this possible exception to the application of Article 21 remains uncertain. There are three points to be made. First, Article 21 should be inapplicable where the court seised second has exclusive jurisdiction under Article 16, for a judgment given by the court seised first in violation of Article 16 will be refused recognition in all contracting states and there is no sensible purpose in deferring to a court whose judgment will be a nullity in England. Secondly, although the European Court has reiterated that the court seised second has no general right to review the jurisdiction of the court seised first, this reasoning would justify extending the exception to those cases in which jurisdictional error by the court seised first means that its judgment will not be recognised."
"If two courts have exclusive jurisdiction, Article 29 applies a first come first serve rule to these, but the court seised second may look at the claims made and conclude that it alone has exclusive jurisdiction. In such cases, according to the decision in Overseas Union Insurance Limited, the court seised second may not be obliged to decline jurisdiction. The answer given by the court in that case was expressed to be without prejudice to the case, where the court seised second has exclusive jurisdiction under the Convention and, in particular, under Article 16 thereof.
"If the court seised second believes that it has jurisdiction under what is now Article 22, it may be that it must proceed to exercise it, unless the court seised first also has Article 22 exclusive jurisdiction. In such a case, Article 29 will apply."
"It cannot be said for certain for the decision was without prejudice to this case, which therefore technically remains open, but as there would be an obligation to deny recognition, Article 35, to the judgment of a court which violated Article 22, it ought to follow that the court seised second may proceed to hear the case."
"The Commission, like the Italian government, considers that the derogation under which the court second seised has jurisdiction on the ground that it enjoys exclusive jurisdiction under Article 16 of the Brussels Convention cannot be extended to a court designated under a choice of court clause."
"The Commission justified a derogation from the rule laid down in Article 21 in the event of recourse to Article 16 by reference to the first paragraph of Article 28 of the Brussels Convention, according to which decisions given in the state of the court first seised in disregard of the exclusive jurisdiction of the court second seised based on Article 16 of the Convention, cannot be recognised in any contracting state. It would therefore be inconsistent to require under Article 21 of the Convention that the second court, which alone has jurisdiction, should stay proceedings and decline jurisdiction in favour of a court which has no jurisdiction. Such a course of action would result in parties obtaining a decision from a court lacking jurisdiction which could not take effect in the contracting state where it was given. In such circumstances, the aim of the Brussels Convention, which is to improve legal protection and for that purpose to ensure the cross-border recognition and enforcement of judgment in civil matters, would not be attained."