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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 >> Skype Technologies SA v Joltid Ltd v Kasesalu & Ors [2009] EWHC 2783 (Ch) (06 November 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2009/2783.html Cite as: [2009] EWHC 2783 (Ch), [2009] Info TLR 104, [2010] CLY 371, [2011] ILPr 8 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Skype Technologies SA |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Joltid Ltd -and- (1) Priit Kasesalu (2) Ahti Heinla (3) Jaan Tallinn (4) Toivo Annus (5) Bluemoon Interactive Ou |
Defendant Third Parties |
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Neil Calver QC and Benet Brandreth (instructed by Harbottle and Lewis LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 3rd November
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Lewison :
"Governing Law and Jurisdiction. Any claim arising under or relating to this Agreement shall be governed by the internal substantive laws of England and Wales and the parties submit to the exclusive jurisdiction of the English courts."
"1. If the parties, one or more of who is domiciled in a Member State, 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."
i) In so far as the US proceedings concern Skype Technologies, do they fall within the scope of the exclusive jurisdiction agreement;
ii) If they do, how does that affect the court's willingness to grant an anti-suit injunction?
"Ordinary businessmen would be surprised at the nice distinctions drawn in the cases and the time taken up by argument in debating whether a particular case falls within one set of words or another very similar set of words. If businessmen go to the trouble of agreeing that their disputes be heard in the courts of a particular country or by a tribunal of their choice they do not expect (at any rate when they are making the contract in the first place) that time and expense will be taken in lengthy argument about the nature of particular causes of action and whether any particular cause of action comes within the meaning of the particular phrase they have chosen in their arbitration clause."
"As it seems to us any jurisdiction or arbitration clause in an international commercial contract should be liberally construed. The words "arising out of" should cover "every dispute except a dispute as to whether there was ever a contract at all"…"
"In my opinion the construction of an arbitration clause should start from the assumption that the parties, as rational businessmen, are likely to have intended any dispute arising out of the relationship into which they have entered or purported to enter to be decided by the same tribunal. The clause should be construed in accordance with this presumption unless the language makes it clear that certain questions were intended to be excluded from the arbitrator's jurisdiction."
"[Had] the UK litigation been concluded in Joltid's favour before the commencement of the US proceedings, could [Skype Technologies] claim that Joltid's US copyright infringement claims relating to acts done after the termination of the Agreement arose under or were related to the Agreement? The answer must be: plainly not."
i) This court has exclusive jurisdiction under article 23 of the Judgments Regulation;ii) The ECJ has said that where a court has exclusive jurisdiction under the Regulation it must not decline to exercise it, and accordingly there is no question of Skype Technologies' proceedings in this court being stayed in favour of the US proceedings;
iii) The test for staying domestic proceedings and granting an anti-suit injunction are the same: they are simply two sides of the same coin;
iv) It follows therefore that if the court cannot stay its own proceedings, it must grant an anti-suit injunction.
"A prohibition imposed by a court, backed by a penalty, restraining a party from commencing or continuing proceedings before a foreign court undermines the latter court's jurisdiction to determine the dispute. Any injunction prohibiting a claimant from bringing such an action must be seen as constituting interference with the jurisdiction of the foreign court which, as such, is incompatible with the system of the Convention."
"that an anti-suit injunction, such as that in the main proceedings, is contrary to the general principle which emerges from the case law of the Court of Justice on the Brussels Convention, that every court seised itself determines, under the rules applicable to it, whether it has jurisdiction to resolve the dispute before it."
"My Lords, if there had been a negative covenant, I apprehend, according to well-settled practice, a Court of Equity would have had no discretion to exercise. If parties, for valuable consideration, with their eyes open, contract that a particular thing shall not be done, all that a Court of Equity has to do is to say, by way of injunction, that which the parties have already said by way of covenant, that the thing shall not be done; and in such case the injunction does nothing more than give the sanction of the process of the Court to that which already is the contract between the parties. It is not then a question of the balance of convenience or inconvenience, or of the amount of damage or of injury—it is the specific performance, by the Court, of that negative bargain which the parties have made, with their eyes open, between themselves."
i) Neither Skype Technologies not Joltid has any obvious connection with England and Wales. Consequently they must be taken to have deliberately chosen a neutral forum for the determination of their disputes;ii) The licence to use the software was a world-wide licence. Consequently the parties must be taken to have contemplated that a breach of the terms of the licence might take place anywhere in the world, yet they still chose to have their disputes decided in England and Wales;
iii) A breach of the terms of the licence might well involve the infringement of local copyright law in a foreign jurisdiction, yet the dispute was to be determined in England and Wales;
iv) Following on from the last point, the parties must have contemplated that the persons who might be needed to give evidence relevant to a dispute might be resident anywhere in the world, and that the necessary documents might be located anywhere in the world.
i) Joltid's breach of US copyright claims in California arise under US federal law for which the appropriate forum is the US District Court;ii) The US District Court for the Northern District of California has personal jurisdiction over each of the named Defendants to the US action;
iii) The claims in the US proceedings relate to activities carried out in the United States;
iv) The majority of the documentary evidence relating to the alleged infringements of copyright, as well as the operational control of Skype and the availability of the Skype services and the advertising and promotion of the Skype services is located in the USA;
v) The majority of the witnesses of fact who will be giving evidence in the US proceedings are resident in the United States;
vi) Expert witnesses are also likely to be resident in, or operating in the US.
i) Joltid undertakes to the English Court in the High Court, Chancery Division proceedings (Claim Number HC09C00756) ("the UK proceedings") that in the US proceedings it agrees to be bound, as against Skype Technologies, by the final decision of the English Courts in the UK proceedings as to (i) whether Joltid's notices of breach and notice of termination are valid/invalid and (ii) whether the License Agreement has been terminated and (iii) whether Skype Technologies acted in breach of the License Agreement and/or infringed Joltid's copyright as it subsists in the UK and Estonia.ii) In turn, Skype Technologies should be required to undertake to be bound as against Joltid by the final decision of the English Courts in the UK proceedings for the purposes of the US proceedings.
iii) Joltid undertakes that it will not seek to recover damages or any other remedy in the US proceedings against Skype Technologies for any alleged breach of copyright occurring prior to the date on which Joltid maintains that the License Agreement was terminated, namely 12 March 2009.
"shall not commence or pursue or procure or assist in the commencement or pursuit of any further proceedings against [Skype Technologies] arising under or relating to the Joltid Global Index Software License Agreement … before any court or tribunal other than the High Court of Justice of England and Wales …"