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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 >> Emailgen Systems Corp v Exclaimer Ltd & Anor [2013] EWHC 167 (Comm) (07 February 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2013/167.html Cite as: [2013] EWHC 167 (Comm), [2013] 1 WLR 2132, [2013] WLR 2132 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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EMAILGEN SYSTEMS CORPORATION |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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EXCLAIMER LIMITED ANDREW MILLINGTON |
Respondents |
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Lance Ashworth QC (instructed by Wragge & Co) for the Defendants
Hearing date: 1 February 2013
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr. Justice Teare :
The facts
"Strictly on the basis that your client will agree to an immediate release of paragraph 5 of the injunction order, our client will instruct us to hold the £520,000 on the undertaking set out below and will await the 1 June return date at which they will then challenge (and in our view discharge) the injunction application (and will then of course also seek their costs and an order on the cross undertaking).
Our undertaking is that we shall hold the sum of £520,000 on deposit and not return it to our clients or either of them or otherwise pay out that sum before 6pm on Friday 1 June except in accordance with either any terms agreed between you and us, or any Court Order made before then, dealing with payment of those funds. After 6.00pm on Friday 1 June, barring further Court Order otherwise, we shall release those funds in their entirety to and/or at the instruction of our clients or either of them."
"Subject to the agreement of an appropriate form of Consent Order …; in order to avoid costs on a contested application in England at this stage, and to allow the dispute between the parties to be pushed on expeditiously to a resolution in Canada …the cross-undertakings as to damages and the undertaking to deposit/hold funds that both parties and their solicitors have given to each other be extended pending further/final agreement between the parties or further order of the Court; with the injunction order then to be discharged."
"However, the Respondents [Exclaimer] have sought to adopt a pragmatic view of leaving in place the security of £520,000 which they have provided in return for Emailgen leaving the security of £150,000 in respect of the cross-undertaking in place until after the determination of the Canadian proceedings. The Respondents are confident of success in the Canadian proceedings and therefore ultimately establishing before this Court that the Freezing Order should not have been granted, leaving them to pursue their remedies under the cross-undertaking as to loss."
"…to hold the sum of £520,000 in the client account of their solicitors, Wragge & Co. LLP, as security against any damages or any other award made in favour of [Emailgen] in its Canadian proceedings...until agreement between the parties or further order of the Court."
"1. The Application be stayed with each party to have liberty to apply to restore upon 14 days' notice in writing served on the other party's solicitors as set out below.
2. Costs reserved."
The issue
Discussion
"Care must be taken if a defendant consents to give undertakings but wishes to preserve his right to apply to be released from them at a later date. Where a defendant chooses not to seek an adjournment of an application for an interim injunction, but instead accepts that it should be dealt with there and then by his offering undertakings until trial or further order, there must be good grounds before he can apply to modify or change them."
a. The application referred to in paragraph 1 of the Consent Order is the entirety of the proceedings in this court, namely, the application for an injunction pursuant to section 25 of the Civil Jurisdiction and Judgments Act.
b. The Consent Order provided that that application was stayed. A stay is not the same as an adjournment. An adjournment means that the application remains alive to be dealt with at a later date. A stay means that there will be no further proceedings, unless the application is restored. Thus, unless the application is restored, the application is no longer alive. The liberty to restore ensures that the court will be able to deal with ancillary matters such as costs. It cannot have been intended to enable the court to deal with the subject matter of the application, namely, the injunction, because there was no longer any need for the injunction in the light of the undertaking to provide security.
c. The undertaking to provide security was expressed to be until agreement or further order of the court.
i. In the context of the substantive proceedings being in Canada the provision that the security is "until agreement" envisages that once the substantive proceedings have been determined in Canada the parties may agree that the security undertaking is no longer required or may be reduced in amount.
ii. The reference to "or further order of the Court" has the same meaning which it has when the undertaking is until trial or further order, namely, that it is open to the defendant to apply for release of the undertaking if good cause can be shown, typically a significant change of circumstances.
Good cause
"The normal procedure would be for the party, who had given the undertaking, to apply to the court, to which he had given the undertaking, on a specific ground, usually changed circumstances making the continuation of the undertaking unnecessary, oppressive or unjust."
Conclusion