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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 >> Bank St Petersburg & Anor v Arkhangelsky & Ors [2014] EWHC 574 (Ch) (05 March 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2014/574.html Cite as: [2014] EWHC 574 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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BANK ST PETERSBURG ALEXANDER SAVELYEV |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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VITALY ARKHANGELSKY JULIA ARKHANGELSKAYA -and- OSLO MARINE PORTS LLC |
Defendants Part 20 Claimant |
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The Defendants appeared by their McKenzie friend, Mr Pavel Stroilov
Hearing dates: 17 January 2014 and 6-7 February 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Hildyard :
Scope of this judgment
(1) whether in dealing with (a) a life insurance policy governed by French law ("the Policy") which would not, under that law, be available to creditors in any enforcement proceedings in France, and (b) monies held in the account of a Bulgarian company ("Petrograd") said to be owned by her, the Second Defendant (whom with no disrespect I shall refer to individually as "Mrs A") was in breach of the worldwide freezing order made by this Court on 15 March 2012, as continued on 29 March 2012 ("the Freezing Order");
(2) if so, whether, although the Claimants have not sought to establish contempt nor the sanction of committal, I should (a) make a declaration of breach and (b) further tighten the Freezing Order to prevent the use by the Defendants of any remaining proceeds of the Policy until the Defendants have properly complied with the disclosure orders in the Freezing Order on the basis that (so the Claimants allege) there is reason to suppose that the Defendants have other undisclosed sources of funds and should look to them first;
(3) whether the Claimants should be permitted to make certain amendments to their Particulars of Claim and their Reply against the opposition of the Defendants;
(4) whether the Defendants' claims in their Counterclaim alleging that the Claimants had subjected their bank ("the V-Bank") and its senior managers to intimidation "by the officers of the Russian political secret police" and thereby persuaded the V-Bank to decline further assistance in the proceedings brought by the Defendants in the BVI (which collapsed in consequence) should be disallowed or struck out as disclosing no identifiable cause of action and/or as vexatious and embarrassing;
(5) whether the Defendants' claims in their Counterclaim to the effect that the Claimants' claims in this action are brought as part of a campaign of unlawful and politically-motivated persecution of the Defendants in Russia with the backing of senior figures in the government of the Russian Federation, and also as part of an unlawful takeover, with the assistance of the Russian authorities, of the OMG group previously owned and controlled by the Defendants, should be disallowed or struck out as being non-justiciable by this Court and in any event vexatious;
(6) whether the scope of expert evidence on Russian banking practice should extend to a variety of matters relating to (a) the terms on which loans are usually made; (b) Russian practice of loan restructuring; (c) Russian banking procedures upon any default; and (d) Russian auction and other practices for the realisation of a debtor's assets on default;
(7) whether the present directions for exchange of evidence should be amended.
Alleged breaches of Freezing Order
Should the court entertain the application, there being no application for committal?
Should the court grant a declaration of breach?
Should the court vary and tighten the Freezing Order?
"no evidence whatsoever was placed before the court concerning any other assets of the defendants making the application; [and] it was not therefore possible for the court to assess whether any other assets of these defendants were available to pay the costs or, if they were so available, why the defendants were seeking to make use of the assets which were subject to the Mareva injunction for this purpose."
"7. I confirm that the proceeds of the Life Insurance Policy are the only asset from which it is presently possible to fund our ongoing living and reasonable legal expenses. No other assets are available that can be used for that purpose. We have no undisclosed assets whatsoever.
8. Before the surrender of the Policy, our living and legal expenses were covered by our earnings from the work we both did for our Russian company, the Vyborg Port. We no longer receive that income. We had been ordered to disclose that income by Mr Justice Hildyard, and did so in July 2012, subject to the Claimants' undertaking not to use that information for any purpose except those of the Freezing Order. Since then:
8.1 The Russian Tax authorities carried out an investigation against Vyborg Port in connection with those payments;
8.2 A 50% charge was attached to any payments of my fees by Vyborg Port as part of the Bank's enforcement of the Russian judgments against me;
8.3 Mrs Arkhangelsky has lost access to her V-Bank account in Russia (which she previously had through a debit card), apparently also as a result of the Russian enforcement proceedings.
9. As a result of those developments, there is no longer any practical way for us to be paid by Vyborg Port. It is extremely difficult under the Russian banking rules to pay salary or fees to a foreign bank account."
The scope of the Freezing Order
"to all of the Respondent's assets whether or not they are in his own name and whether they are solely or jointly owned…For the purpose of this Order the Respondent's assets include any asset which he has the power, directly or indirectly, to dispose of or deal with as if it were his own. The Respondent is to be regarded as having such power if a third party holds or controls the asset in accordance with his direct or indirect instructions."
Was the Policy within the scope of the Freezing Order such that its surrender was a breach?
(1) On about 12 July 2013 Messrs Baker & McKenzie received notice from Barclays Bank (which it had served with a copy of the Freezing Order) that the Defendants were seeking to realise the Policy, being an asset which the Second Defendant had disclosed pursuant to the disclosure obligations contained in the Freezing Order.
(2) On 12 July 2013 Messrs Baker & McKenzie wrote to the Defendants stating that any attempt to realise the Policy was a breach of the Freezing Order and reminding them of their obligations under the Freezing Order. It was made clear that if proper notice were given, to include the surrender value of the Policy, consent to the Defendants' dealing with the Policy might be forthcoming, but that absent consent no disposal was permitted.
(3) On 17 July 2013 Mr Pavel Stroilov replied on behalf of the Defendants denying that the Policy was caught by the Freezing Order. He did so notwithstanding that the Policy had been one of the assets disclosed by Mrs A and that he has subsequently accepted that the proceeds of surrender of the Policy were caught by the Freezing Order (transcript of the hearing of 14 November 2013, Tab 33 at page 63 line 11). Mr Stroilov alleged that the Defendants' intention was to cash in the Policy to meet urgent, outstanding payments due, and to use the proceeds to pay €100,000 to BEA Avocats to cover part of the Defendants' debts on legal expenses in various jurisdictions.
(4) On 24 July 2013 Messrs Baker & McKenzie replied to Mr Stroilov making the Bank's position again clear, that the Policy was an asset falling within the Freezing Order and that the Bank did not at that time (i.e. absent proper notification and a proper explanation of the proposed application of the proceeds of any realisation of the Policy) consent to any dealing with the Policy.
(5) Notwithstanding the terms of this letter and the fact that no further notification of the Defendants' intention to deal with the Policy, or to apply the proceeds, was received, on 14 November 2013 Mr Stroilov indicated, during the course of a hearing before this Court, that the Policy had been realised. He accepted, on that occasion, that the proceeds of the Policy upon its surrender constituted an asset falling within the scope of the Freezing Order, indicated the Defendants' intention to use the proceeds of the Policy to meet legal expenses, and acknowledged that if the Claimants disputed the reasonableness of the level of legal expenses, the Court's determination would be required. Prior to Mr Stroilov's indication that the Policy had in fact been realised, the Court indicated that its permission might be required if the Policy were to be surrendered, because it would need to be satisfied that surrendering the Policy was not itself a dissipation. It was not possible to take the matter any further on that occasion.
(6) On 18 November 2013 the First Defendant sent an email to Messrs Baker & McKenzie stating that "…EURO 116,000 will shortly be transferred to lawyers to cover the Defendants' legal expenses in various jurisdictions. The money have been generated by the termination of Mrs Arkhangelsky's life insurance contract with Barclays – see Mr Stroilov's email of 17 July 2013".
(7) On 20 November 2013 Messrs Baker & McKenzie replied to this email requesting that the Defendants urgently provide information in relation to their dealing with the Policy, including full details of the surrender value of the Policy, confirmation of the account into which the proceeds were paid, and details of the precise amounts intended to be paid to each law firm and the work in respect of which such payment was to be made.
(8) On 21 November Mr Stroilov acknowledged receipt of this letter and indicated that he would respond in due course. In fact, no response was received until his letter of 16 December 2013 (received 17 December 2013). Mr Stroilov then indicated that the Policy had been realised after threat of legal action against Barclays Bank in the sum of €256,866, and that, of the proceeds, €116,000 had already been spent "to cover the outstanding fees and expenses of [Mr Arkhangelsky's] French lawyers, translators, UK experts, and my own expenses". Mr Stroilov repeated his earlier position that the Policy was not an asset falling within the scope of the Freezing Order, and claimed that the notification provided by his email of 17 July 2013 was sufficient notice of the Defendants' dealing with the Policy. He declined to identify the account to which the proceeds had been paid, stating instead that "The Defendants are also prepared to identify the bank account, subject to your clients' specific undertaking not to use that information for any purposes other than the enforcement of a potential English judgment".
(9) In the above circumstances, on 19 December 2013 it issued an urgent application for orders, among other things, requiring the Defendants to identify the account into which the proceeds of the Policy were paid and to provide details of any payments made.
(10) On 20 December 2013 this Court considered that application, made it clear that the proceeds were caught by the Freezing Order and ordered that the Defendants disclose the account in which the proceeds were held. Additionally, the Defendants were ordered to serve any evidence in answer to the Claimant Bank's application by 7 January 2013.
(11) Pursuant to this order, by email of Mr A sent on 23 December 2013 the Defendants disclosed that the proceeds of EUR 256,866 were paid into their joint account with Société Générale.
(12) In addition, on 7 January 2014 the Defendants provided details of the payments made from the proceeds to their various lawyers and legal representatives and served the report of Professor Chilstein. They did not disclose a copy of the Policy (though they subsequently provided an incomplete copy) and I remain unclear as to the precise nature of the right to surrender the Policy and the calculation of its surrender value.
(1) The Policy was not an 'asset' within the meaning of the Freezing Order, since to be within the scope of the Freezing Order it must be an asset against which a potential judgment can be enforced (see JSC BTA Bank v Ablyazov [2012] EWHC 1819 (Comm) and Gee on Commercial Injunctions at 3.015), and it cannot be so enforced under the French law. In this context the Defendants rely on (a) an expert report of Professor Chilstein and (b) a second expert report of Professor Chilstein. On this basis, the Defendants contend that the 'asset' only came within the scope of the Freezing Order in the form of cash after the policy was realised.
(2) Further or in alternative, the application of the Freezing Order to the Policy is an ambiguity in the terms of the order and must be interpreted in favour of the Defendants: see, for example, Federal Bank of the Middle East v Hadkison [2000] 2 All ER 395; Witham v Holloway [1995] 69 A.L.J.R. 847.
(3) Alternatively, even if it was an 'asset' and even if there was no ambiguity, none of the Defendants' actions amount to the breach of the Order – all these actions fall squarely within the exception for reasonable living and legal expenditure in para 11(1).
(4) In further alternative to (3) above, the Claimants have in principle accepted that the Policy fell within that exception, and it is an abuse of process to allege contempt on the basis of a contrary interpretation (alternatively, they are estopped).
(5) In further alternative, even if there was a breach, it was de minimis and purely technical; the Defendants did not offend the purposes of the Freezing Order (on the contrary, the potential enforcement is at any rate much easier against cash than against a life insurance policy); and no prejudice has been caused to the Claimants. Moreover, the dispute over interpretation arose as early as in July 2013; the Claimants had every opportunity to seek a clarification from the Court; the onus was upon the Claimants to ensure clarity of the order (see Gee at 3.016, last para); yet they did not do so until the alleged breach.
Was the Petrograd account within the scope of the Freezing Order such that the payment out of Petrograd's account constituted a breach?
(1) there is a plain distinction in law between (a) ownership of the shares in a limited company, even if that is of 100% of such shares, and (b) ownership and control of the asset of that company; for the reasons I sought to set out in Group Seven Ltd v Allied Investment Corporation Ltd & Ors [2013] EWHC 1509 (Ch) I do not consider that the Freezing Order captures the assets of Petrograd unless such assets are in reality and fact within the beneficial ownership of Mrs A;
(2) With little notice of the Claimants' application for this further declaration, and with little time to prepare his submissions in a difficult area, Mr Stroilov submitted initially that indeed Mrs A did beneficially own the assets; and though he subsequently rowed back from this potentially dangerous position, I suspect that this is her mindset;
(3) the basis for that mindset, and of Mr Stroilov's initial submission, is (as it seems to me) that 100% of the shares brings 100% control, which connotes beneficial ownership: that may be wrong in law, but it is readily understandable as matter of business;
(4) the corollary of that approach is that in carving out from the Freezing Order Mrs A's 100% shareholding in Petrograd the assets of Petrograd were likewise carved out: and that is indeed what the Defendants appear to have thought;
(5) it follows, to my mind, that either (a) the bank account, being an asset of Petrograd, is not to be treated as an asset of Mrs A within the scope of the Freezing Order or (b) the assets of Petrograd, including its bank account, are to be treated as indistinguishable from her 100% shareholding (the shareholding being in a sense the wallet for the assets), and as such carved out from the English Freezing Order;
(6) at any rate, the extent of the carve out is ambiguous; and any ambiguity is to be resolved for the purposes in favour of Mrs A.
Disposition of application
Claimants' application to amend their Particulars of Claim and Reply
(1) as to paragraph 6.1 of the Reply: (a) to plead that of the three guarantees alleged to have been signed by Mr A, only two (and not as previously pleaded, all three) were signed by him in the presence of Ms Blinova and (b) to delete any reference to a Ms Prokhor as having been present also, and thus reduce to one the number of alleged witnesses to those signatures;
(2) as to paragraph 7.1 of the Reply: (a) to delete reference to Ms Blinova as having been the employee of the Bank who compared the signatures contained in the executed documents with those in Mr A's passport and in signature cards the Bank held; and (b) to substitute "and/or" in place of "or" as to whether the comparator signatures were in the passport or/and/or signature cards;
(3) to insert into the Particulars of Claim, as paragraph 57A, the Claimants' alternative case as already pleaded in paragraph 7 of its Reply to the effect that if, for whatever reason, Mr A did not himself sign the documents he induced the Bank to believe that he had done so by his conduct;
(4) to insert into the Particulars of Claim, as paragraph 57B, a new claim alleging unjust enrichment and claiming restitution under Article 1102 of the Russian Civil Code, based on the same facts (apart from evidence required of that Article 1102).
(1) "These amendments change just a few words in the pleadings; yet the proposed alteration of the Claimants' substantive case is fundamental. Just before the forensic experts are to exchange their reports, the Claimants appear to retreat from their primary case that the guarantees are genuine. It is reduced almost to the vanishing point, where only two out of 28 signatures are said to have been witnessed by the Bank's employee(s).
(2) Instead, the Bank proposes to rely on the alternative case pleaded in para 7.1 of the Reply. However, the alternative case (especially as presently amended) is not adequately pleaded:
a) It is evident that the Claimants are not in a position to support the alternative case with any evidence. It is only pleaded with this extraordinary qualification: "if, which is denied, for whatever reason unknown to the Bank, Mr. Arkhangelsky did not sign" any of the Disputed Documents. A party cannot aver and deny the very same matter in their pleadings; not even in alternatives.b) Further, it is pleaded that some documents, not clearly identified, were received from Mr. Arkhangelsky's company by courier. The Bank initially hoped that a witness, Ms. Blinova, would confirm that; it is now clear that she will not. The circumstances of receipt are now pleaded very vaguely. It is also known from the Bank's own evidence (first statement of Mr. Balandin) that the alleged e-mails will not be exhibited. There is clearly no evidence at all to substantiate the averments in para 7.1.c) The 'alternative case' is an allegation of a very elaborate fraud (forging one's own signature to induce the Bank to give loans to third parties); as such, it is not adequately particularised. Even the documents he allegedly forged are not identified; even the dates of alleged receipt of those documents are not given. Mr. Arkhangelsky needs to know the case he has to answer.d) A very good reason is needed to permit such a fundamental alteration of the Claimants' case at such a late stage. The present directions to trial are based on the assumption that the exchange of forensic handwriting evidence in February would significantly clarify the ultimate issue. Now it seems that the forensic handwriting evidence hardly matters at all, since the Claimants seek to plead a completely new case. Such a late amendment is not justified and would be fatal for the trial date."
(1) the question as to whether one or two employees of the Bank witnessed two or three documents is a matter to be resolved at trial: any weakening of the Claimants' case is not such as to justify it being (in effect) struck out;
(2) the Bank's alternative case has been in the Reply for some time: it seems to me to raise a triable issue; again it will be tested as to its evidential support at trial;
(3) subject to what follows, I do not regard the amendments as a fundamental alteration of the Claimants' case or as likely to destabilise the trial date.
(1) I am assuming that any expert evidence of Russian law in relation to the new plea of unjust enrichment and restitution under the Russian Civil Code can be provided within the existing time-table, as Mr Marshall assured me (without demur from Mr Stroilov): my permission in respect of new paragraph 57B is conditional on that, and if the assumption is incorrect I shall reconsider whether or not to permit that new claim to go forward.
(2) As mentioned in the course of the hearing on 7 February 2014, it seems to me that, as a condition of my permission, the Claimants must identify or clarify, and plead, in paragraph 6.1 of the Amended Reply
a) whether any of the Bank's staff is alleged to have witnessed Mr A signing a guarantee in respect of the last of the three loans pleaded;b) whether it is alleged that anyone else of the Bank's staff, apart from Ms Blinova, witnessed Mr A signing a guarantee in respect of the first two pleaded loans, and if so, who that was.
Defendants' allegations of intimidation: should they be struck out?
"The allegation in paras 191-202 is, in itself, very straightforward. Mr. and Mrs. Arkhangelsky and OMG Ports brought the claim (identical with this counterclaim) against the Bank, Mr. Savelyev and others in BVI Court. They served the claim on the defendants in Russia. The next thing they knew was that the funder of that claim, Russian V-Bank, came under enormous pressure from the Russian authorities to stop funding their BVI claim, and was eventually intimidated into doing so….
It is apparent that the Claimants' objections are not against the form of the pleadings or such facts as are pleaded, but rather to the legitimacy/arguability of the inference invited from those facts that it was the Bank and Mr. Savelyev who caused that pressure being applied to V-Bank. That inference is invited from the following facts (in summary):
(a) the V-Bank was previously committed to funding the litigation and an abrupt change of mind at the crucial moment calls for an explanation;
(b) there is evidence that the Russian authorities did intimidate the V-Bank in December 2011;
(c) Crucially, the Claimants were the only people who (i) knew about the BVI litigation and that V-Bank funded it; (ii) had an interest in intimidating V-Bank to withdraw funding; (iii) had the ability to intimidate the V-Bank through the Russian authorities. The latter is inferred from their corrupt connections pleaded elsewhere.
(d) The Claimants had resorted to similar intimidation, pressure and threats in the past, e.g. against Mr. Arkhangelsky himself as pleaded in para 116; against Mr. Vinarsky and Mr. Erokhin as pleaded in para 165(e) and (g); against Federal Arbitrazh Court of Russia as pleaded in para 165(f); against Mr. Korchagin as pleaded in para 1(c); and other 'similar facts' evidence."
(1) the content of Article 1064 of the Russian Civil Code would need to be, but are not, properly pleaded; and the legal basis of the claim under the Russian law, are not sufficiently pleaded;
(2) the pleading does not explain how it is that BVI law may be applicable, nor are the ingredients of that law pleaded (though I accept they may well be the same as those applicable to the tort under English law);
(3) it is not pleaded how it is that the Claimants are responsible for acts that they are not alleged to have carried out;
(4) none of the individuals alleged to have carried out the intimidation are properly identified (apart from a generic description) nor are the individuals alleged to have been intimidated identified either;
(5) the allegation against Mr Savelyev in paragraph 198 is not adequately particularised; and no 'similar facts' alleged to establish a propensity on his behalf to resort to intimidation and threats of violence are identified; so that
(6) the claim is based merely on an inference drawn from unpleaded alleged similar fact evidence and connections to unidentified corrupt individuals.
Are the Defendants' allegations that these proceedings are abusive as being brought by the Claimants in association with and to assist the Russian authorities to persecute the Defendants non-justiciable and vexatious?
"This campaign or persecution was organised as part of a conspiracy. Without prejudice to the generality of the foregoing, it was calculated to prevent the Defendants from proceeding with their claims against the Claimants, and to jeopardise their work to defend themselves in numerous ill-conceived legal actions brought against them in Russia, Bulgaria, France and the UK by the Claimants and those connected with them. The close and improper relations between the Bank and the Russian authorities involved in this persecution are apparent, inter alia, even on the Bank's own evidence in the BVI claim."
(1) The aspect of the doctrine invoked by the Claimants is not that concerned with sovereign immunity (neither the state nor any person on its behalf being a party) but that which stems from the reluctance of English and American Courts, as a matter of judicial restraint, from entertaining litigation that turns on the validity of the public acts of a foreign state (and see per Lord Phillips of Worth Matravers in R v Bow Street Metropolitan Stipendiary Magistrate, Ex p Pinochet Ugarte (No 3) [2000] 1 AC 147 at 286);
(2) That reluctance is not absolute, and it is subject to various limitations or exceptions, including public policy (and see Yukos Capital Sarl v OJSC Rosneft Oil CO (No 2) [2012] EWCA Civ 855, "the Yukos case", at pages 1354 to 1368);
(3) Whilst the US and English Courts will ordinarily not sit in judgment on the official acts of a foreign sovereign performed within its own territory, they do not show the same restraint in considering the acts of persons within that state, done deploying or threatening the use of powers available to them by virtue of their position, but which are not official acts, nor openly done in the purported exercise of sovereign authority: and see Sharon v Time Inc (1984) 599 F Supp 538 and WS Kirkpatrick & Co inc v Environmental Tectonics Corpn International (1990) 493 US 400 ("the Kirkpatrick case"), followed in two cases in the English Courts, in A Ltd v B Bank (Bank of X intervening) [1997] IL Pr 586 (CA) and Berezovsky v Abramovich [2011] 1 WLR 2290;
(4) Judicial restraint is not based on fear of embarrassing foreign governments (though if the executive were advised that intervention would cause embarrassment in this country's foreign relations, that would increase judicial caution, see Kuwait Airways Corpn v Iraqi Airways Co (Nos 4 and 5) [2002] 2 AC 883 at para 319); nor indeed is embarrassment a ground for declining to adjudicate on controversies; it "merely requires that, in the process of deciding, the acts of sovereign taken within their own jurisdictions shall be deemed valid" (see per Scalia J in the US Supreme Court in the Kirkpatrick case);
(5) In the Yukos case, the Court of Appeal made plain that the Kirkpatrick case, and the others cited, were confined to the context where it was not alleged that any act of or on behalf of the state was ineffective or invalid, nor any remedy claimed in respect of such an act:
"110. …What the Kirkpatrick case is ultimately about…is the distinction between referring to acts of state (or proving them if their occurrence is disputed) as an existential matter, and on the other hand asking the court to inquire into them for the purpose of adjudicating upon their legal effectiveness, including for those purposes their legal effectiveness as recognised in the country of the forum…112. …Clearly, by "declare invalid" Scalia J meant the same as to find wrongful or unlawful and on that ground ineffective."(6) However, as it seems to me, some open act in exercise of the sovereign power of the state must be sought to be found to be invalid albeit in that wider sense.
(7) Where the essential issue in a claim is the validity or effectiveness (in that wider sense) of an act of an organ of the state in the exercise of sovereign powers in its own territory, the claim is likely to be found to be non-justiciable (subject to exceptions such as public policy).
(8) Thus, in JSC BTA Bank v Ablyazov [2011] EWHC 202 (Comm), Teare J decided to grant a stay on the basis that the claims were in substance "inviting the court to decide whether the nationalisation of the Bank in Kazakhstan was illegal and invalid."
(9) However, the fact that an organ of the state is the actor does not mean that the act is a sovereign act; and, for example, there is a clear exception in relation to acts by a state (or state enterprise) which are not governmental, but commercial: there is neither immunity for such acts, nor are they non- justiciable: see, for example, Empresa Exportada de Azucar v Industria Azucarera Nacional SA (The Playa Larga) [1983] 2 Ll Rep 171 (where breaches of contract by a Cuban state enterprise induced by the Cuban government were held not to be immune) and Korea National Insurance Corpn v Allianz Global Corporate & Specialty AG [2008] 2 CLC 837, where the Court of Appeal confirmed that there is no reason for the court to exercise restraint
"where in a commercial context allegations are made against the state, not in relation to some sovereign act carried out in its own jurisdiction, but in relation to acts which affect the rights of a party under a commercial contract";(10) Furthermore, "judicial acts will not be regarded as acts of state for the purposes of the act of state doctrine" (see the Yukos case at [73 and 87]); and that includes acts where the state is operating "under the colour" of its legal system (including by instituting processes and assessments "designed to operate according to law and to be subject to legal and indeed judicial rulings" (see ibid at [133]));
(11) Thus, in the Yukos case, the claimant sought in England to set aside decisions by the Russian Court to annul arbitration awards made in favour of the claimants by an ICC tribunal. These awards were based on a refusal to recognise or give effect to tax assessments that had been upheld by the Russian Courts, on the ground that the Russian Court was partial and dependent, and had in effect been dictated to by the Russian state, which owned and controlled the defendant, and which had conceived the tax assessments as a means of acquiring the claimant at a huge undervalue. The defendant sought to invoke the doctrine of act of state to prevent adjudication of the claimant's allegations of conspiracy on the part of the Russian state to steal the assets of the private group to which the claimant originally belonged, and ultimately to purloin the group itself, by forcing it into bankruptcy by unlawful tax demands and/or buying its assets in rigged auctions, all with the assistance of the Russian Court (as allegedly directed by the state). It was submitted by the defendant that these issues raised issues about the executive or administrative acts of a foreign sovereign within its own territory upon which the Courts of England should not adjudicate. The Court of Appeal concluded that the doctrine did not bar any part of the claim. The essential issue in the case was whether the decision of the Russian Court to annul the awards should be recognised. That was a judicial question in respect of judicial acts. Even if the tax demands had probably to be regarded as executive or administrative acts, they functioned, not by the exercise of state decree or promulgation, but within an existing tax code designed to operate according to law and to be subject to legal and indeed judicial rulings (see para 133). The state had sought to use its judicial system to achieve its objectives and operated under the colour of that system rather than by reference to sovereign power. There was no bar to adjudicating upon the activities of the state in the judicial, as opposed to the executive, sphere.
(12) Two further limitations or exceptions to the doctrine may be noted, both fact- sensitive and in some ways of uncertain extent: one is where the act in question constitutes a breach of clearly established rules of international law or contrary to English principles of public policy (though particularly in the latter context, especial caution is required, and see paras 69 to 72 of the Yukos case); the other is breach of fundamental human rights or discrimination (see ibid, also at para 137) though again especial caution appears to be required.
a) The Defendants must state who it is who is alleged to have heard Mr Piotrovsky saying what it is alleged he said, and when, and in what context and in whose presence; similarly, the gist of the words used by Mr Piotrovsky as to his willingness to abuse his power, and to whom he spoke, in what context, and in whose presence and when must be identified.
b) Any facts relied on by the Defendants in support of (i) the allegation that Mr Romanov ordered the termination of the criminal investigations (including the person to whom the order as directed and the form of and stated justification for the order) and (ii) the allegation that the Claimants and their co-conspirators exerted influence and pressure to the same effect (including who were these co-conspirators, and when and in what form, and upon whom, such influence or pressure was brought to bear) must be identified.
c) Who effected the forcible entry to Western Terminal's premises, and in whose presence, and all steps taken to facilitate it by St Petersburg police and OMON (naming any persons known) must be identified.
d) The terms of Articles 38 and 161 and the basis for their application must be set out and explained with evidence.
e) The terms of each threat allegedly made by Lt Col Levitzakaya, and when and where, and in whose presence (other than Mr Vinarsky and Mr Erokhin) it was made must be identified.
f) The manner of the personal order allegedly given by Mrs Matviyenko to the Federal Court, and the persons to whom it was given, and the manner, date and terms on which it was given, must be identified.
g) The "highly suspect valuation report" referred to in paragraph g. and the person(s) who presented it, must be identified.
Scope of expert evidence on Russian banking practice
"Expert evidence is admissible under section 3 of the Civil Evidence Act 1972 in any case where the court accepts that there exists a recognised expertise governed by recognised standards and rules of conduct capable of influencing the court's decision on any of the issues it has to decide…Evidence meeting this test can still be excluded by the court if the court takes the view that calling it will not be helpful to the court in resolving any issue in the case justly. Such evidence will not be helpful where the issue to be decided is one of law or is otherwise one on which the court is able to come to a fully informed decision without hearing such evidence."
a) how cogent the evidence will be;
b) how helpful it will be in resolving any of the issues in the case; and
c) how much it will cost and the relationship of that cost to the sums at stake.
Exchange of evidence
Conclusion