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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 >> Blue Sky One Ltd & Ors v Mahan Air & Anor (Rev 1) [2010] EWHC 631 (Comm) (25 March 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2010/631.html Cite as: [2010] EWHC 631 (Comm) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
33 Bull Street, Birmingham B4 6DS |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
(1) BLUE SKY ONE LIMITED (2) BLUE SKY TWO LIMITED (3) BLUE SKY THREE LIMITED |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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(2) MAHAN AIR (3) BLUE SKY AVIATION CO. FZE |
Defendants |
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-and- |
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(1) BALLI GROUP PLC (2) CRYPTON LIMITED (3) BLUE SKY SIX LIMITED (4) BLUE SKY FOUR LIMITED (5) BLUE SKY FIVE LIMITED |
Third Parties |
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And Between : |
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PK AIRFINANCE US INC |
Claimant |
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-and- |
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(1) BLUE SKY TWO LIMITED (2) BLUE SKY THREE LIMITED (3) BALLI GROUP PLC (4) MAHAN AIR (5) BLUE SKY AVIATION CO. FZE |
Defendants |
____________________
for the Balli Parties
MR H. MALEK QC, MR J. KIMBELL and MISS G. MORGAN (instructed by Piper Smith Watton LLP) for the Defendants
MR S. MORIARTY QC and MR J. PASSMORE (instructed by Clifford Chance LLP)
for PK Airfinance
Hearing dates: 1-5, 8-12 February 2010
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
1. Introduction | 1 |
2. The decision on contempt | 5 |
3. The evidence | |
a) Factual evidence | 6 |
b) Expert evidence | 7 |
4. Procedural issues | 14 |
5. Findings of fact | |
a) Introduction | 15 |
b) The background | 16 |
c) Location of the second aircraft on 21 December 2006 | 20 |
d) The risk of intervention by the United States authorities | 35 |
e) The agreement to provide funding to repay PK's loan | 37 |
f) Effect of the TDO on the funding agreement | 42 |
g) The market value of the aircraft | 43 |
h) The effect of the Option Agreement | 45 |
i) Lease rates | 52 |
j) Mesne profits/User damages | 57 |
k) Consequential loss | 60 |
l) Quantum in respect of the agreement to provide funding | 66 |
6. Findings as to foreign law | |
a) Introduction | 71 |
b) English, Armenian and Dutch law | 73 |
c) Iranian law | 74 |
7. Discussion | |
a) Quantum (1): The market value of the aircraft or nominal damages? | 97 |
b) Quantum (2): Mesne profits/User damages | 133 |
c) Quantum (3): Consequential loss in respect of the Package 1 aircraft | 136 |
d) The obligation to provide funds to pay off PK's loan | 137 |
e) Frustration | 138 |
f) The Balli parties' failure to obtain a loan from another lender | 144 |
g) Set-off against the Mahan parties' counterclaim | 149 |
h) PK's direct claim - The private international law issues | 151 |
8. The sanction for the contempt of the Mahan parties | 186 |
9. Conclusions | 194 |
Mr Justice Beatson:
1. Introduction:
2. The decision on contempt:
3. The evidence:
(a) Factual evidence:
(b) Expert evidence:
4. Procedural issues:
5. Findings of fact:
(a) Introduction:
(b) The background:
(c) Location of the second Aircraft on 21 December 2006:
"As per our record, flight BLM8305, B747; registration no. EK74783 Departed at time 0348z from Fujairah destination THR. This may be treated as official confirmation of the requested information."
It does not, however, give the date of the aircraft's departure. A further email from Mr Amini to Mr Moattar referred to a negotiation with a Mr Ashraf of Fujairah airport operation. Mr Amini stated that the airport will not issue any official letterhead type certificate of the aircraft's departure.
"ref yr request thu fax as per our record 17 December 2006 call sign BLM 8305 reg EK74783 B747 ATD OMF JO348Z dest THR".
(d) The risk of intervention by the United States authorities:
(e) The agreement to provide funding to repay PK's loan:
(f) Effect of the TDO on the funding agreement:
(g) The market value of the aircraft:
(h) The effect of the Option Agreement:
"In my opinion, the effect of these clauses in the Option Agreement was to render the aircraft virtually unsellable during the option validity period as Mahan has the right to purchase the aircraft for €1 and in any event has the right to prevent any sale to a third party. … In the event that a buyer was interested in the aircraft despite these restrictions, the value of the aircraft would be derived from their likely market value in 2020 discounted by (a) the cost of parking and storage maintenance until 2020, and (b) the likelihood that Mahan's purchase option would be exercised." (¶ 6)
"The aircraft shall not be sold, leased, pledged or otherwise encumbered or transferred without the prior written consent of Mahan."
Mr Seymour said (Day 5, pages 99-100) that he would want to take that into account as he would the fact that the aircraft had been transferred to the Iranian register and were not under a maintenance programme that he fully understood. He agreed with Mr Malek's suggestion that "at best it would reduce the purchase price significantly".
(i) Lease rates:
(j) Mesne profits/User damages:
(k) Consequential loss:
(l) Quantum in respect of the agreement to provide funding:
6. Findings as to foreign Law:
(a) Introduction:
(b) English, Armenian, and Dutch law:
(c) Iranian law:
"Article 10 – Private contracts shall be binding on the contracting parties provided they are not contrary to the express provisions of the law.
…
Article 21 – Ships, large and small, boats, mills and bathouses set up on rivers or seas which are capable of movement …. shall be considered moveable but the attachment of some of the aforesaid may, due to their importance, be made according to special arrangement.
…
Article 772 – The mortgaged property must be given to the possession of the mortgagee, or to the possession of a person appointed by the parties; but it is not a condition of the validity of the transaction that the property should continue in the possession of mortgagee.
…
Article 966 – Possession, ownership and other rights over movable or immovable properties are subject to the laws of the country in which they are situate. Nevertheless, the transfer of a movable property from one country to another may not affect the rights that persons may have acquired over that property in accordance with the laws of the country in which the property was first situated.
…
Article 968 – Obligations arising out of contracts are subject to the laws of the place where the contract was concluded, except where the contracting parties are foreign nationals and have expressly or impliedly subjected the contract to another law.
Article 973 – Where the foreign law which must be observed … in accordance with the foregoing Articles, has made reference to another law, the court is not bound to observe such reference unless the reference is made to the laws of Iran."
"if the contract has the effect of creating property rights (such as sale or mortgages) the non-contracting parties who take possession of such property may also be affected by the property rights that were created. Thus, at no time would the Iranian court apply Iranian domestic law to establish the effectiveness of the deed of mortgage." (Report, ¶24)
"Usurpation is the assumption of another's right by force. Laying hands on another person's property without authority is also considered usurpation."
" If a person to whom some property has been lent or with whom the same is deposited or who holds a property under similar titles should deny the same, he is considered a usurper as from the date of denial."
"apply where someone with legal permission holds a property in his possession for whatever reasons but continues his possession after the legal permission has expired."
Dr Emami suggests that Article 310 of the Civil Code has a similar effect.
7. Discussion:
(a) Quantum(1): The market value of the aircraft or nominal damages?
"in point of legal analysis, the grant of an option… is an irrevocable offer (being supported by consideration so that it cannot be revoked). In order to be turned into a binding contract, the offer must be accepted in exact compliance with its terms." (at 80-81)
Mr Malek also relied on the analysis in Anson's Law of Contract (28th ed) at 137 that there is "an immediate unilateral obligation" and thus "a contract from the start imposing a unilateral obligation from which one party cannot withdraw; but no binding contract… binding on both parties, comes into existence until the condition is fulfilled."
(b) Quantum (2): Mesne profits/User damages
(c) Quantum (3) Consequential loss in respect of the Package 1 aircraft:
(d) The obligation to provide funds to pay off PK's loan:
(e) Frustration:
"Frustration of a contract takes place when there supervenes an event (without default of either party and for which the contract makes no sufficient provision) which so significantly changes the nature (not merely the expense or onerousness) of the outstanding contractual rights and/or obligations from what the parties can reasonably have contemplated at the time of its execution that it would be unjust to hold them to the literal sense of its stipulations in the new circumstances; in such a case the law declares both parties to be discharged from further performance."
Although the precise mechanisms taken by the United States authorities to enforce their sanctions laws may not have been foreseen by the parties, that there would be a reaction by the United States authorities was foreseeable. Boeing withdrew its support because the US government informed it that the aircraft were being operated for Mahan's benefit. Given the US Government's letters to Boeing there was a high degree of foreseeability that the government would take steps to enforce its sanctions laws. Moreover, see [35] – [36], that there would be a reaction by the United States authorities was in fact foreseen by both parties in the summer of 2007. They discussed the letters from Boeing at the meeting in Düsseldorf on 20 July 2007 and the interest of the US authorities was also discussed at a meeting on 29 July. This was before the August meetings in Düsseldorf when the parties affirmed the Mahan parties' obligation to finance the transaction and the agreements were re-signed.
"The significance of foreseen or of unforeseen but foreseeable events is in my judgment well, if briefly, summarised in Chitty on Contracts, 29th ed, 2004 at paras 23-057/8. Paragraph 23-057 which deals with foreseen events can be seen to make the point that there is no rule of exclusion, at best some prima facie indications. Thus –
"While an unforeseen event will not necessarily lead to the frustration of a contract, a foreseen event will generally exclude the operation of the doctrine. The inference that a foreseen event is not a frustrating event is only a prima facie one and so can be excluded by evidence of contrary intention."
"will support the inference of risk-assumption only where the supervening event is one which any person of ordinary intelligence would regard as likely to occur, or…the contingency must be 'one which the parties could reasonably be thought to have foreseen as a real possibility".
In this case the kind of event was not only foreseeable but foreseen, and to the extent that the precise mechanism was not foreseen, it was highly foreseeable that the United States authorities would take steps to interfere with or prevent the operation of the aircraft by Mahan or for its benefit.
(f) The Balli parties' failure to obtain a loan from another lender:
"in measuring the damages it must be assumed that when the company applied elsewhere for an advance it still remained a company with ordinary credit. If by reason of circumstances, the company had fallen into disrepute and bad financial odour, the defendant was not responsible for that."
Moreover, it is clear from The South African Territories Ltd. v Wallington that the burden of proving the amount of the loss sustained rests on the intended borrower. In that case it was not discharged because the intended borrower adduced no such evidence.
(g) Set-off against the Mahan parties' counterclaim:
(h) PK's direct claim ? The private international law issues:
"It has not been applied in contract or other commercial situations. It has often been criticised, and it is probably right to describe it as largely discredited. It owes its origin to a laudable endeavour to ensure that like cases should be decided alike wherever they are decided, but it should now be recognised that this cannot be achieved by judicial mental gymnastics but only by international conventions." (at 1008)
"A decision by an English court, based on English principles of the conflict of laws, that a question should be determined by the application of the rules of a foreign law is also based on considerations of legal policy, albeit at a higher level of abstraction. It involves a policy decision, at the higher level, that the policy which has been adopted, at the lower level, by English law should not be applied because the considerations which led to its adoption in the domestic law are not relevant in the particular circumstances of the case; and to a policy decision … that the policy which has been adopted … by the foreign law should be applied in its stead."
He concluded that there is or ought to be no scope for applying the doctrine of renvoi in determining priority between the competing claims in that case to the shares. An appeal against his conclusion on this point was abandoned: see [1996] 1 WLR 387, at 405.
"If the rationale of the English lex situs rule is a policy decision by English law that the policy adopted by the foreign law should prevail, so then in any given case it would in my judgment be unwise to describe in advance that part of the foreign law which is to be applied, because in so doing the English court may adopt distinctions or characterisations unknown to the relevant foreign law. Put differently, one should not answer the question in advance in such a manner as may, inadvertently, preclude application of the policy adopted by the foreign law." ([2009] 2 Lloyds Rep 191 at [89])
8. The sanction for the contempt of the Mahan parties:
9. Conclusions:
The claims by the Blue Sky SPV companies:
PK's direct claim:
a) In the absence of proof of any other law, English law applies and the mortgage is valid: see [152].
b) The value of the second aircraft on 6 April 2009 was US$ 30.7 million and, subject to the position in relation to double recovery, if it is not delivered up, PK is entitled to judgment in that sum: see [130]
c) If the second aircraft is delivered up within the time specified in the order what I have said about the Balli parties claim applies in relation to any diminution in their value since 6 April 2009: see [132].
Note 1 See also PJ at [203], and, on Eagle’s involvement in Package 1, see PJ [55]. [Back] Note 2 Foresworn in order to avoid infinite regression or acircularis inexticabilis: see Casdagli v Casdagli [1918] P 89 (per Scrutton LJ); [1919] AC 145 and Re Ross [1930] 1 Ch. 377, 389 per Luxmoore J. [Back]