BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Seven Licensing Company Sarl & Anor v FFG-Platinum SA & Ors [2011] EWHC 2967 (Comm) (16 November 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2011/2967.html Cite as: [2011] EWHC 2967 (Comm), [2012] ILPr 7 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
(1) Seven Licensing Company Sarl (2) Seven Limited |
Claimants/ Respondents |
|
- and – |
||
(1) FFG-Platinum SA FFG-Platinum IP Rights Limited FFG-Platinum Designer Holdings Ltd |
Defendants/ Applicants |
____________________
Jeffrey Chapman Esq, QC (instructed by K&L Gates LLP) for the Defendant/Applicants
Hearing date: 8 July 2011
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Gloster:
Introduction
Parties
Factual and procedural background
The Greek Proceedings
The English Proceedings
The relevant jurisdictions, proper law and other clauses
The Licence dated 3 September 2003
"18.8 Governing Law. This agreement shall be governed by, and construed in accordance with, the laws of London, England without regard to conflict of laws provisions.
18.9 Dispute Resolution. The Parties expressly agree that all disputes arising out [sic] or in connection with this Agreement shall be submitted to the Courts of London, England."
I refer to these provisions together as "the English Governing Law and Jurisdiction Agreements".
The MOA dated 22 June 2007
The Side Agreement
"It is agreed that FFG-IP may and hereby does designate FFG-DH as its nominee to effect, on its behalf, for its benefit and account, (a) the payment and delivery to SLC of any one or more of the instalment payments of the Purchase Price required to be paid to SLC or its nominee pursuant to the MOA, and (b) the issuance and delivery to SLC (or its nominee) of one or more of the BG's (hereinafter defined) required to be paid to SLC or its nominee pursuant to the MOA. All payments made and BG's delivered by FFG-DH shall be treated as if made/delivered by FFG-IP pursuant to the MOA."
The Bank Guarantees
The Settlement Agreement dated 4 February 2009
"Amendment: No amendment, modification or alteration of this Agreement shall be valid unless it shall be in writing and signed by all parties hereto. No course of conduct or method of doing business shall modify or amend the terms hereof."
The Legal Test
"(1) Where related actions are pending in the courts of different Member States, any court other than the court first seised may stay its proceedings.
(2) Where these actions are pending at first instance, any court other than the court first seised may also, on the application of one of the parties, decline jurisdiction if the court first seised has jurisdiction over the actions in question and its law permits the consolidation thereof.
(3) For the purposes of this article, actions are deemed to be related where they are so closely connected that it is expedient to hear and determine them together to avoid the risk of irreconcilable judgements resulting from separate proceedings."
"75. The decision required in the context of article 22 of the Convention is a discretionary decision. It goes without saying that the circumstances of each individual case are particularly important here. The national courts must bear in mind that … the aim of this provision is 'to prevent parallel proceedings before the courts of different contracting states and to avoid conflicts between decisions which might arise therefrom.' It would therefore be appropriate in case of doubt for a national court to decide to stay its proceedings under article 22: see in this regard the judgment of the High Court (Ognall J) of 31 January 1990 in Virgin Aviation Services Ltd v CAD Aviation Services [1991] ILPR 79 in which the court held that there was a strong presumption in favour of allowing an application for a stay (see at page 88: 'Commentary on the Jenard Report on article 22 signifies the strong presumption where an application is made for a stay, lies in favour of the applicant.')
76. Furthermore, there are three factors which may be relevant to the exercise of the discretion vested in national courts by virtue of article 22, but this does not mean that other considerations may not also be important. Those three factors are (1) the extent of the relatedness and the risk of mutually irreconcilable decisions; (2) the stage reached in each set of proceedings; and (3) the proximity of the courts to the subject matter of the case.
77. Clearly, the closer the connection between the proceedings in question, the more necessary it would appear for the court second seised to stay its proceedings. If other factors are of some relevance to the proceedings pending before the court first seised, it may be appropriate for the court second seised not to stay its proceedings …. The more the proceedings are related, however, and the greater the risk of the courts arriving at irreconcilable decisions, the more likely it will be that the court second seised should stay it proceedings in accordance with article 22.
78. … it is also legitimate for the court second seised to have regard, when reaching its decision regarding a possible stay, to the stage reached in the parallel proceedings. The proceedings before the court first seised should of course have reached a more advanced stage than the proceedings before the court subsequently seised of a related action. Where this is not the case, however, and where there is no prospect of a decision in the first set of proceedings, there is nothing to prevent the court subsequently seised from taking account of this when arriving at its discretionary decision. (emphasis added)
79. Finally, it goes without saying that in the exercise of such discretion regard may be had to the question of which court is in the best position to decide a given question …." (emphasis added).
"The essential debate between the parties is whether the actions are related, and the debate is concentrated on whether there is a risk of irreconcilable judgments relating from the two sets of proceedings…" and
There should be a broad commonsense approach to the question whether the actions in question are related, bearing in mind the objective of the article … and refraining from an over-sophisticated analysis of the matter".
"[i]ts effect [i.e. of article 28] is not entirely mechanical. It requires an assessment of the degree of connection, and then a value judgment as to the expediency of hearing the two actions together (assuming they could be so heard) in order to avoid the risk of inconsistent judgments. It does not say that any possibility of inconsistent judgments means that they are inevitably related. It seems to us that the Article leaves it open to a court to acknowledge a connection, or a risk of inconsistent judgments, but to say that the connection is not sufficiently close or the risk is not sufficiently great, to make the action related for the purposes of the Article. Mechanics do not, for once, provide a complete answer.
This was applied by Mummery LJ in the recent case of Stribog Limited v FKI Engineering Limited, FKI Limited[2011] EWCA Civ 622 at paragraph 48, where he said:
'Article 28, under which a stay is discretionary, looks to the current position and to matters that post-date the onset of the proceedings to consider the relationship between actions that are pending to see if they are related and if there is a risk of irreconcilable judgments. Actions are compared to see if they are related rather than claims compared to see if they are the same. See Research in Motion UK Ltd v Visto Corporation [2008[ EWCA Civ, [2008] 2 All ER (Comm) 560 at ]35] [36] and [40].'"
"54 The only substantive argument of Mr Rabinowitz which needs to be addressed is his submission that the judge was wrong to take into account the time when a decision was likely to be reached, in considering the stage which the proceedings had reached at the time of the application to the English court. He submitted that the judge was impliedly criticising the Italian court system by saying that it was unlikely a decision would be reached until September 2012. (In fact we now know that the next hearing in the appeal on the outright dismissal of the claim will not occur until January 2014).
55 But there is no such implied criticism. The fact that it may take different periods of time for similar proceedings to come to a conclusion in different jurisdictions, for whatever reasons, is not a criticism; it is merely a fact of life to which a judge cannot be expected to close his eyes.
56 The judge could, moreover, have referred to authority in addition to that of Advocate General Lenz in Owens Bank Ltd v Bracco . At an earlier stage in Owens Bank Ltd v Bracco Ms Barbara Dohmann QC made a similar submission to the Court of Appeal to that which Mr Rabinowitz made to us. In the judgment of the court delivered by Parker LJ it was said that the judge had been entitled to take into account the fact that a decision was not imminent, see [1992] AC 443, 474. In the Centro case moreover Rix J took into account the fact that a decision in an Italian action might well not be heard before a decision would be reached in England, [1997] CLC at page 893D."
The Defendants' defence to the Claimants' claim for payment
Defendants' submissions on the application
i) The English Proceedings and the Greek Proceedings are related;ii) There is a risk of conflicting decisions if the English Proceedings go ahead;
iii) As a matter of discretion, the appropriate order would be for the English Proceedings to be stayed pending the outcome of the Greek Proceedings due to be tried in November 2012.
Discussion and determination
".. with respect to the payment schedule, as of now it is still not clear what exactly FFG has in mind, and nothing has been or will be agreed until we understand the request..the fact that we have indicated a willingness to consider a request to extend the payment deadline..should not be understood in any way as a willingness to agree either concept- which as of today we do not..".
i) the degree of connection between the both sets of proceedings was limited; andii) the risk of mutually irreconcilable decisions was remote, given the fact that:
a) the Greek court would have to apply English law to determine the Defendants' obligations under the MOA;b) the limited issues in play in the current Greek Proceedings; andc) the stage reached in the Greek Proceedings; andiii) the English court is clearly in the best position to decide the issues raised in the English Proceedings and so far as they overlap and/or are based on English law, the issues raised in the Greek Proceedings.
Conclusion