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England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Entico Corporation Ltd v United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Association (UNESCO) [2008] EWHC 531 (Comm) (18 March 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2008/531.html Cite as: [2008] 1 CLC 524, [2008] 1 Lloyd's Rep 673, [2008] EWHC 531 (Comm), [2008] 2 All ER (Comm) 97 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
ENTICO CORPORATION LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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UNITED NATIONS EDUCATIONAL SCIENTIFIC AND CULTURAL ASSOCIATION |
Defendant |
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- and - |
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR FOREIGN AND COMMONWEALTH AFFAIRS |
Intervener |
____________________
Christopher Greenwood QC and Jemima Stratford
(instructed by The Treasury Solicitor) for the Intervener
The Defendant did not appear and was not represented
Hearing date: 29 February 2008
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Tomlinson:
Introduction
"The specialised agencies, their property and assets, wherever located and by whomsoever held, shall enjoy immunity from every form of legal process except in so far as in any particular case they have expressly waived their immunity. It is, however, understood that no waiver of immunity shall extend to any measure of execution."
In addition, Article III, Section 5, provides that—
"The premises of the specialised agencies shall be inviolable. The property and assets of the specialised agencies, wherever located and by whomsoever held, shall be immune from search, requisition, confiscation, expropriation and any other form of interference, whether by executive, administrative, judicial or legislative action."
These provisions apply to UNESCO under Annex IV of the 1947 Convention, to which the United Kingdom has notified its acceptance as a member of UNESCO, in accordance with Article XI, Section 43 of the 1947 Convention.
The underlying dispute
"3. By a contract, whose initial/draft terms were set out by Entico in writing (as set out in paragraph 4 below) and which terms were accepted by the subsequent conduct of UNESCO (as set out in paragraphs 6-7 below), made in or around late September-early October 2005 ('the Contract'), Entico and UNESCO agreed that Entico would provide a calendar for the year 2006 for UNESCO and in this context, and in particular to assist Entico in raising funds sufficient to pay the estimated £150,000-£180,000 cost to Entico of the production and distribution of the calendar, UNESCO gave permission to Entico to use the 'UNESCO' name and logo in the said calendar. These were the core terms of the relationship between the parties. The contract was made as follows:
3.1 By an email dated 20 September 2005 Mr Ramsey wrote to Ms Tanaka stating, 'Thank you for making it possible for us to put together a calendar for UNESCO. Attached is the contract agreed between Entico and UN/ISDR [UN International Strategy for Disaster reduction]. It could form the basis of a contract between our organisations as well. I am keen to begin finding sponsors as soon as possible and as soon as we agree the contract I will send you a PDF of the proposal we send to sponsors for our approval.'
3.2 Ms Tanaka replied later the same day, stating 'The terms of the agreement seem to us correct. UNESCO will make small modifications to the terms in order to fit out [sic] own legal standards (please note that it is basically a matter of wording and not contents). Our legal service will prepare a draft which will be forwarded to you within this week.'
Copies of the emails and the Entico/ISDR Contract ('the Draft Contract') are attached as annexure 1 hereto.
4. The following were, among others, express terms of the Contract, as set out in the Draft Contract (substituting 'UNESCO' in the place of 'ISDR/ISDR Secretariat', '2006' in the place of '2005' and '£150,000-£180,000' in the place of '£200,000'):
'THE 2005 CALENDAR…
1. In accordance with the terms and conditions of this Licensing Agreement, the Parties shall produce the 2005 Calendar. The 2005 Calendar comprised [sic] of the following elements (the '2005 Calendar'), are information products aimed at raising public awareness.
LICENSE
2. The ISDR Secretariat permits ENRICO [sic] the limited right to use its name and logo solely in connection with the production and distribution of the 2005 Calendar.
3. Pursuant to the license granted by the ISDR Secretariat as set forth in paragraph 2 above, ENTICO is permitted to use the ISDR Secretariat name and logo to raise funds sufficient to pay the estimated GBP£200,000 cost to ENTICO for the production and distribution of the 2005 Calendar.
…
SETTLEMENT OF DISPUTES
[6]. Any matter for which no provision is made in this Licensing Agreement or any controversy between the ISDR Secretariat and ENTICO shall be settled by negotiation between the parties. Any controversy or claim arising out of or in connection with this Licensing Agreement shall, if attempts at settlement by negotiation have failed, be submitted to one single arbitrator agreed upon by both parties in accordance with the United Nations Commission on International Trade Law Arbitration Rules (UNCITRAL Rules) arbitration in Geneva by the single arbitrator agreed upon by all parties. The decision rendered in the arbitration. Including [sic] any division or allocation of costs, shall constitute the final adjudication of the dispute.
NON-WAIVER OF IMMUNITY
7. Nothing in this agreement shall signify, express or imply, a waiver of the immunity and privileges enjoyed by the United Nations pursuant to the 1946 Convention on Privileges and Immunities of the UN.
ENTRY INTO FORCE, MODIFICATIONS AND TERMINATION
8. This Licensing Agreement shall enter into force upon signature by authorized officials representing the ISDR Secretariat and ENTICO, and shall continue in full force and effect until the expiration of all rights and obligations arising hereunder or its termination in accordance with the terms hereof.'
5. After 20 September 2005, Entico and UNESCO began the practical implementation of the Contract terms. Thus,
5.1 On 5 October Mr Ramsey sent Ms Tanaka a draft of the promotional letter that Entico wished to send out to potential sponsors of the calendar. Ms Tanaka replied on 7 October.
5.2 Thereafter, at a point in time shortly after 10 October 2005, Mr Ramsey spoke to Ms Tanaka, by telephone. In this conversation Ms Tanaka agreed that Entico could start work on the calendar.
5.3 Entico started work in earnest on the calendar on or around 10 October 2005.
6. UNESCO did not, as was mentioned in Ms Tanaka's email of 20 September 2005, avail itself of the opportunity to revert to Entico with a re-drafted contract. In the premises, it is to be inferred from UNESCO's conduct, as particularised above in paragraph 5, that it (a) unilaterally waived the possibility of re-drafting the Draft Contract and (b) was satisfied to proceed on the basis of the Draft Contract as emailed by Mr Ramsey to Ms Tanaka (and with the substitutions set out above in paragraph 4).
7. Entico and UNESCO did not sign the Contract. It is to be inferred from the parties' conduct, as particularised above in paragraph 5, that they mutually waived that part of Clause 8 which required the parties' signature before the Contract could enter into force."
"9. Pursuant to the Contract/Agreement, and from 10 October 2005 onwards, Entico carried out the work required to design, produce and distribute the calendar, including researching and contacting potential sponsors, negotiating terms with them, undertaking graphic design work, researching photographs, compiling a database for the mailing/distribution and organising and booking the printing.
10. In the premises, and pursuant to the Contract/Agreement, UNESCO was obliged to permit Entico to use the 'UNESCO' name and logo to raise funds sufficient to pay the cost to ENTICO for the production and distribution of the 2006 Calendar. UNESCO has failed and/or refused to do so (see paragraph 18 below)."
"If within 30 days after receipt by a party of a proposal made in accordance with paragraph 1 the parties have not reached agreement on the choice of a sole arbitrator, the sole arbitrator shall be appointed by the appointing authority agreed upon by the parties. If no appointing authority has been agreed upon by the parties, or if the appointing authority agreed upon refuses to act or fails to appoint the arbitrator within 60 days of the receipt of a party's request therefore, either party may request the Secretary-General of the Permanent Court of Arbitration at The Hague to designate an appointing authority."
"1. The arbitral tribunal shall have the power to rule on objections that it has no jurisdiction, including any objections with respect to the existence or validity of the arbitration clause or of the separate arbitration agreement.
2. The arbitral tribunal shall have the power to determine the existence or the validity of the contract of which an arbitration clause forms a part. For the purposes of [this article], an arbitration clause which forms part of a contract and which provides for arbitration under these Rules shall be treated as an agreement independent of the other terms of the contract. A decision by the arbitral tribunal that the contract is null and void shall not entail ipso jure the invalidity of the arbitration clause."
"Consequently, if Entico truly believes that it has a valid contract with UNESCO, then Entico could unilaterally invoke the UNCITRAL procedure to have an arbitrator appointed.
UNESCO has no objection to Entico doing so, but UNESCO reserves it right to raise in that context its strongly-held view that there is no contractual relationship between Entico and UNESCO."
UNESCO has in fact on more than one occasion since Entico issued these proceedings stated that it "has no objection" if Entico wishes to have recourse to arbitration under the UNCITRAL Rules. It could of course have no such objection. Finally and perhaps more relevantly UNESCO has also confirmed, by letter of 8 October 2007 to Entico's solicitors, "that should an arbitral tribunal (scilicet, constituted pursuant to the UNCITRAL Rules) make[s] an award against UNESCO, the latter would always respect and comply with such an award, whatever may be the case concerned." I must naturally proceed upon the basis that this organisation, of which the UK is a member, will act in good faith and indeed comply with the terms of an award ordering the payment of damages or compensation to Entico. If UNESCO participated in an arbitration under protest, it would be likely to comply with any direction of the tribunal as to documentary disclosure. If it did not so participate it may be an open question to what extent it would comply with such a direction made prior to determination that a contract, including an agreement to arbitrate, was indeed concluded. It is also an open question to what extent Entico could obtain assistance from the supervisory court of the forum, i.e. the Swiss Court. This and other issues are discussed in an article by Professors Emmanuel Gaillard and Isabelle Pingel-Lenuzza at [2002] 51 ICLQ pages 1-15, in which the learned authors bemoan the conservative approach of the European Court of Human Rights, hereinafter "ECt.HR" and criticise a regime which accords to international organisations an immunity which goes beyond that habitually accorded to States.
"Alternatively, insofar as the Contract was not agreed between the parties as pleaded above, the Claimant avers that an agreement ('the Agreement') was reached between the parties with the core terms being those pleaded above at paragraph 3. The Agreement was concluded partly orally, partly in writing and partly be the conduct of the parties: as is evident from the facts pleaded herein."
Although UNESCO stated that it did not object to this amendment, there is a case for disallowing it on the grounds that it is inconceivable that there could be spelled out of the e-mail exchanges, oral exchanges and conduct pleaded an agreement as alleged. I must record my view that I do indeed regard such an outcome as inconceivable. It seems to me that, on the basis of the case as pleaded, either there was a contract which included the "Settlement of Disputes" clause or there was no contract at all. That is the form of contract which Entico proposed. That proposal would have been understood by UNESCO as made with an eye to the immunity enjoyed by it and comparable organisations. Indeed I would think it right to impute to both parties, if they so conducted themselves as evincing to the other an intention to be bound, an intention to do so on terms which included the Settlement of Disputes provision. It is both reasonable and necessary to impute such an intention since without it the parties must necessarily have been intending to conclude an arrangement which they either knew or ought to have known would be unenforceable. Because of UNESCO's immunity, in order to be enforceable an agreement had to include the arbitration provision. For all these reasons a conclusion that the parties reached an enforceable agreement which did not include the proffered arbitration clause does not seem to me possible.
UNESCO's immunity
"Each specialised agency shall make provision for appropriate modes of settlement of:
(a) Disputes arising out of contracts or other disputes of private character to which the specialised agency is a party;
(b) Disputes involving any official of a specialised agency who by reason of his official position enjoys immunity, if immunity has not been waived in accordance with the provisions of section 22."
It necessarily follows that an "appropriate" mode of settlement does not include within it submission to the process of execution. A specialised agency cannot waive its immunity in that regard. There is nothing in the Convention to make enjoyment of the privileges and immunities conferred by Sections 4 and 5 dependent upon compliance with section 31. Section 31 itself offers no criteria pursuant to which the appropriateness of a mode of settlement is to be judged. Importantly, section 31 does not say that the mode of settlement for which provision is made must be effective. It would be wholly inimical to the international scheme envisaged if individual States party arrogated to themselves the power to determine whether the provision made by each specialised agency for the settlement of disputes is adequate, whether considered generally or by reference to the facts of a particular case.
"There shall be taken into account, together with the context:
(c) any relevant rules of international law applicable in the relations between the parties."
As was pointed out by the ECt.HR in Bankovic v. Belgium 123 ILR 94 at paragraph 57 of the judgment, the ECHR is itself an instrument which must be construed in the light of this article. Moreover Article 30.4(b) of the Vienna Convention has the effect that the need to comply with the requirements of the ECHR does not excuse compliance with an earlier convention to which more states are party than are party to the ECHR. As Mr Greenwood QC, for the Secretary of State, submitted, it is in the highest degree implausible that when the states party drafted and acceded to the ECHR they intended thereby to place themselves in violation of their existing international obligations. Their existing international obligations, owed to many more states than were or are party to the ECHR, required them to recognise and to give effect to a broad and unqualified jurisdictional immunity enjoyed by each specialised agency. It would therefore be surprising if Article 6 of the ECHR was intended to render this regime non-compliant, thereby plunging all states party to both the ECHR and the 1947 Convention into a position in which their obligations conflicted.
"(1) This section shall apply to any organisation declared by Order in Council to be an organisation of which—
(a) the United Kingdom, or Her Majesty's Government in the United Kingdom, and
(b) any other sovereign Power or the Government of any other sovereign Power
are members.
(2) Subject to subsection (6) of this section, Her Majesty may by Order in Council made under this subsection specify an organisation to which this section applies and make any one or more of the following provisions in respect of the organisation so specified (in the following provisions of this section referred to as 'the organisation'), that is to say-
(a) confer on the organisation the capacities of a body corporate;
(b) provide that the organisation shall, to such extent as may be specified in the Order, have the privileges and immunities set out in Part I of Schedule 1 to this Act;
…"
Part I, Section 1 of Schedule 1 includes "immunity from suit and legal process" among the privileges and immunities which may be accorded by Order in Council. Section 1(6) of the Act provides that:
"Any Order in Council made under subsection (2) or subsection (5) of this section shall be so framed as to secure—
(a) that the privileges and immunities conferred by the Order are not greater in extent than those which, at the time when the Order takes effect, are required to be conferred in accordance with any agreement to which the United Kingdom or Her Majesty's Government in the United Kingdom is then a party (whether made with any other sovereign Power or Government or made with one or more organisations such as are mentioned in subsection (1) of this section);
…"
"Except in so far as in any particular case it has expressly waived its immunity, the Organisation shall have immunity from suit and legal process. No waiver of immunity shall be deemed to extend to any measure of execution."
The Specialised Agencies of the United Nations (Immunities and Privileges of UNESCO) Order, SI 2001/2560, states that "UNESCO is an organisation of which the United Kingdom and other sovereign powers are members" (Section 2) and that "the Specialised Agencies of the United Nations (Immunities and Privileges) Order 1974 shall apply to UNESCO … in accordance with its terms" (Section 3).
"The Court must first examine whether the limitation pursued a legitimate aim. It notes in this connection that sovereign immunity is a concept of international law, developed out of the principle par in parem non habet imperium, by virtue of which one State shall not be subject to the jurisdiction of another State. The Court considers that the grant of sovereign immunity to a state in civil proceedings pursues the legitimate aim of complying with international law to promote comity and good relations between States through the respect of another State's sovereignty.
The Court must next assess whether the restriction was proportionate to the aim pursued. It recalls that the Convention has to be interpreted in the light of the rules set out in the Vienna Convention of 23 May 1969 on the Law of Treaties, and that Article 31(3)(c) of that treaty indicates that account is to be taken of 'any relevant rules of international law applicable in the relations between the parties.' The Convention, including Article 6, cannot be interpreted in a vacuum. The Court must be mindful of the Convention's special character as a human rights treaty, and it must also take the relevant rules of international law into account. The Convention should so far as possible be interpreted in harmony with other rules of international law of which it forms part, including those relating to the grant of State immunity.
It follows that measures taken by a High Contracting Party which reflect generally recognised rules of public international law on State immunity cannot in principle be regarded as imposing a disproportionate restriction on the right of access to a court as embodied in Article 6 section 1. Just as the right of access to a court is an inherent part of the fair trial guarantee in that Article, so some restrictions on access must likewise be regarded as inherent, an example being those limitations generally accepted by the community of nations as part of the doctrine of State immunity."
It follows in my judgment that compliance with obligations owed in international law is of itself pursuit of a legitimate aim. Furthermore, insofar as the 1974 Order reflects generally recognised rules of public international law on organisational immunity, which in my judgment it does, it cannot in principle be regarded as imposing a disproportionate restriction on the right of access to court as embodied in Article 6(1).
"Like the Commission, the Court points out that the attribution of privileges and immunities to international organisations is an essential means of ensuring the proper functioning of such organisations free from unilateral interference by individual governments.
The immunity from jurisdiction commonly accorded by States to international organisations under the organisations' constituent instruments or supplementary agreements is a long-standing practice established in the interest of the good working of these organisations. The importance of this practice is enhanced by a trend towards extending and strengthening international co-operation in all domains of modern society.
Against this background, the Court finds that the rule of immunity from jurisdiction, which the German courts applied to ESA in the present case, has a legitimate objective."
One can understand why in that case there was an argument for the applicability of Article 6, which was of course conceded. By contrast I can find no justification for reading a convention concluded some years before the ECHR, the majority of whose parties are not bound by that later Convention, in the light of the later principles espoused by only a small sub-set of the parties to the earlier convention.