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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 >> AMT Futures Ltd v Marzillier, Dr Meier & Dr Guntner Rechtsanwaltsgesellschaft mbH [2014] EWHC 1085 (Comm) (11 April 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2014/1085.html Cite as: [2015] ILPr 18, [2014] WLR(D) 182, [2014] 1 CLC 531, [2015] 2 WLR 187, [2015] 1 All ER (Comm) 374, [2014] CTLC 190, [2014] 2 Lloyd's Rep 349, [2014] EWHC 1085 (Comm) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
7 Rolls Building, Fetter Lane London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
AMT FUTURES LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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MARZILLIER, DR MEIER & DR GUNTNER RECHTSANWALTSGESELLSCHAFT mbH |
Defendant |
____________________
Pierre Janusz (instructed by Zimmers Solicitors) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 4 April 2014
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
The Hon. Mr Justice Popplewell:
Introduction
The Claim
"33.1 This Agreement and all rights and obligations arising in respect of your Account shall be governed by, performed and construed in accordance with the laws of England and … you irrevocably submit to the exclusive jurisdiction of the English courts in relation to such dispute, without prejudice to our right to seek enforcement of any arbitration award or judgment in any other jurisdiction."
"12.1 These terms shall be governed by and construed in accordance with, the laws of England and Wales.
12.2 With respect to any Proceedings each Party irrevocably (i) agrees that the courts of England shall have exclusive jurisdiction to determine any Proceedings and irrevocably submits to the jurisdiction of the English courts…"
The term "Proceedings" is defined under clause 13.1 of the Netting Agreement as
"Any suit, action, or other proceedings relating to this agreement".
(1) The sums paid to clients by AMT in settlement. The net settlement amounts comprise the equivalent of almost £1.5 million (net after associated recovery from the German introductory brokers), and this forms much the largest element of the claim. These sums were paid in Euros by AMT's German lawyers from an account in Germany to the claimants in Germany. The funding came from AMT's bank account in London.
(2) Legal and investigatory costs incurred by AMT as a result of the claims being brought in Germany. The German legal costs paid to German lawyers together with court fees, translation costs and expert witness costs, amount to the equivalent of approximately £550,000. The legal costs were incurred in Germany, and insofar as they constituted disbursements in court fees and other expenses, were paid by AMT's German lawyers in Germany. Again the funding came from AMT's bank account in London, although it is unclear the extent to which the funding occurred before the expenses were incurred or discharged or the fees incurred. There is also a claim for legal costs paid to UK solicitors and counsel, and UK expert witness costs, amounting to £85,000, which were presumably paid in England. There is additionally a claim for sums paid to corporate investigators of some £66,000.
(3) There is an unquantified claim that as a result of the German claims AMT has lost significant management time in having to respond to them.
(4) There is an unquantified claim that by reason of the German claims, AMT has ceased to undertake business with clients introduced or to be introduced by German introductory brokers and has thereby lost profit.
The Article 5(3) issue
"Subject to this Regulation, persons domiciled in a Member State shall, whatever their nationality, be sued in the courts of that Member State."
"A person domiciled in a Member State may, in another Member State, be sued:
…
(3) In matters relating to tort, delict or quasi-delict, in the courts for the place where the harmful event occurred or may occur."
(1) The relevant damage occurred at the place where it was deprived of the contractual benefit to which it was entitled as a result of MMGR's wrongful inducement. That was in England because the wrongful conduct by MMGR has denied AMT the contractual benefit for which it contracted with its former clients, namely the determination of disputes in England, in accordance with English law. The obligation whose breach has been induced was the obligation of each former client to sue AMT, if at all, in England under English law.
(2) The immediate financial consequences of MMGR's wrongdoing were felt by AMT in England because that was where it had to provide funds to finance the costs of the proceedings and the settlement of the claims, and where it has suffered the loss of management time and loss of profit in its business.
The jurisprudence on Article 5(3)
"15. As regards this, it is well to point out that the place of the event giving rise to the damage no less than the place where the damage occurred can, depending on the case, constitute a significant connecting factor from the point of view of jurisdiction.
16. Liability in tort, delict or quasi-delict can only arise provided that a causal connection can be established between the damage and the event in which that damage originates.
17. Taking into account the close connection between the component parts of every sort of liability, it does not appear appropriate to opt for one of the two connecting factors mentioned to the exclusion of the other, since each of them can, depending on the circumstances, be particularly helpful from the point of view of the evidence and of the conduct of the proceedings.
18. To exclude one option appears all the more undesirable in that, by its comprehensive form of words, article 5 (3) of the Convention covers a wide diversity of kinds of liability.
19. Thus the meaning of the expression "place where the harmful event occurred" in article 5 (3) must be established in such a way as to acknowledge that the plaintiff has an option to commence proceedings either at the place where the damage occurred or the place of the event giving rise to it."
"19. With respect to the second part of the question, it must be observed, as already indicated above, that the 'special jurisdictions' enumerated in Articles 5 and 6 of the Convention constitute derogations from the principle that jurisdiction is vested in the courts of the State where the defendant is domiciled and as such must be interpreted restrictively. It must therefore be recognized that a court which has jurisdiction under Article 5 (3) over an action in so far as it is based on tort or delict does not have jurisdiction over that action in so far as it is not so based."
"[16] On this point the Convention, in laying down the system for conferring jurisdiction in Title II, sets out the general rule in Article 2 that the courts of the State of the defendant's domicile shall have jurisdiction. In addition the Convention shows that it is not in favour of the courts of the plaintiff's domicile having jurisdiction by stating, in Article 3(2), that national provisions to that effect shall not apply as against defendants domiciled in the territory of a contracting State.
[17] Only by way of exception to the general rule that the courts of the State of the defendant's domicile have jurisdiction does Section 2 of Title II provide for a number of special jurisdictions, which include that of Article 5(3). As the Court has already held, these special jurisdictions, which can be chosen at the plaintiff's option, are based on the existence of a particularly close connection between the dispute and courts other than those of the defendant's domicile, which justifies conferring jurisdiction on those courts on grounds of the efficient administration of justice and proper organisation of the action.
[18] To achieve this object, which is of fundamental importance in a convention which should promote the recognition and enforcement of judgments outside the State in which they are made, it is essential to avoid the multiplication of competent courts, which increases the risk of irreconcilable judgments, which is a ground for refusing recognition or enforcement pursuant to Article 27(3) of the Convention.
[19] Furthermore this object precludes any interpretation of the Convention which, apart from the cases expressly provided for, could lead to recognising the jurisdiction of the courts of the plaintiff's domicile and which would thus enable the plaintiff to determine the competent court by choosing his own domicile.
[20] It follows from what has been said that although, according to the Court's case law, the phrase 'the place where the harmful event occurred' in Article 5(3) of the Convention may refer to the place where the damage occurred, the latter should be taken to mean only the place where the causal event, giving rise to delictual or quasi-delictual liability, directly produced the harmful effects in relation to the person who is the immediate victim.
[21] In addition, the place where the original damage was manifested normally has a close connection with the other elements creating liability, which is generally not the case with regard to the domicile of the indirect victim."
"14. Whilst it is thus recognised that the term "place where the harmful event occurred" within the meaning of article 5(3) of the Convention may cover both the place where the damage occurred and the place of the event giving rise to it, that term cannot, however, be construed so extensively as to encompass any place where the adverse consequences of an event that has already caused actual damage elsewhere can be felt.
15. Consequently, that term cannot be construed as including the place where, as in the present case, the victim claims to have suffered financial damage consequential on initial damage arising and suffered by him in another contracting state."
….
19. There is no basis for interpreting article 5(3) of the Convention by reference to the applicable rules on non-contractual civil liability, as proposed by the German Government. That interpretation is also incompatible with the objective of the Convention, which is to provide for a clear and certain attribution of jurisdiction: see Röslier v. Rottwinkel (Case 241/83) [1986] QB 33, 59. para. 23, and Jacob Handte et Cie. G.m.b.H. v. Traitements mécano-chimiques des surfaces S.A. (TMCS) (Case C-26/91) [1992] E.C.R. 1-3967, 3995, para. 19. The delimitation of jurisdiction would then in fact depend on uncertain factors such as the place where the victim's assets suffered subsequent damage and the applicable rules on civil liability.
20. Finally, as regards the argument as to the relevance of the location of the assets when the obligation to redress the damage arose, it must be pointed out that the proposed interpretation might confer jurisdiction on a court which had no connection at all with the subject matter of the dispute, whereas it is such a connection which justifies the special jurisdiction provided for in article 5(3) of the Convention. It would be possible that the expenses and losses of profit incurred as a result of the initial harmful event might be established elsewhere and that, therefore, as far as effective taking of evidence is concerned, that court would be entirely inappropriate."
"26, That case [Bier] concerned a complex situation in which the causal event and the harmful consequences occurred, from the outset, in two different contracting states. Here, by contrast, as is rightly pointed out by the United Kingdom Government, both the causal event (namely the conduct imputed to the employees of Lloyds Bank) and the initial damage, (sequestration of the promissory notes and imprisonment) occurred in the United Kingdom. Only the alleged consequential damage (financial losses) could have been suffered in Italy.
27. We are thus dealing with a particular situation in which the causal event and the direct harmful consequences are located in a single territory and that initial damage adversely affected the victim's assets in another contracting state.
28. Although the court has not been called on to settle such a question directly, the basis for an answer is undeniably to be found in its judgments cited above since we are merely faced once more with the distinction which is of essential importance for the purpose of determining jurisdiction between the place where the damage arises and the place where it is suffered.
29. The court regarded as relevant to the determination of the court of competent jurisdiction, in the first of its judgments on the issue, only the damage that had occurred. More clearly still, in Dumez [19901 ECR 1-49 it displayed its hostility, it seems to me, to the taking into consideration of later financial consequences, by referring, at p. 80, para. 21, to "the place where the initial damage manifested itself," that is to say, the place where the damage occurred.
30. Now, to confer jurisdiction on the court in the place where the financial losses were ascertained would be tantamount to disregarding the specificity of the place of occurrence as the criterion for the conferment of jurisdiction by placing it on the same footing as the place where the damage is suffered.
31. That broader approach would thus uphold the forum actoris, since a victim generally suffers harm at the place where he is domiciled. Such a result would be manifestly contrary to article 5 of the Convention, which, as the court held, is intended to meet the requirements of the proper administration of justice."
"The question referred
11 By its question, the national court is essentially asking whether Art. 5(3) of the Convention should be interpreted as meaning that the expression "place where the harmful event occurred" may cover the place where the claimant is domiciled and where "his assets are concentrated" by reason only of the fact that the claimant has suffered financial damage there resulting in the loss of part of his assets which arose and was incurred in another Contracting State.
12 It should be noted at the outset that the system of common rules of conferment of jurisdiction laid down in Title II of the Convention is based on the general rule, set out in the first paragraph of Art.2, that persons domiciled in a Contracting State are to be sued in the courts of that State, irrespective of the nationality of the parties.
13 It is only by way of derogation from that fundamental principle attributing jurisdiction to the courts of the defendant's domicile that s.2 of Title II of the Convention makes provision for certain special jurisdictional rules, such as that laid down in Art.5(3) of the Convention.
14 Those special jurisdictional rules must be restrictively interpreted and cannot give rise to an interpretation going beyond the cases expressly envisaged by the Convention.
15 According to settled case law, the rule laid down in Art. 5(3) of the Convention is based on the existence of a particularly close connecting factor between a dispute and courts other than those for the place where the defendant is domiciled, which justifies the attribution of jurisdiction to those courts for reasons relating to the sound administration of justice and the efficacious conduct of proceedings.
16 The Court has also held that where the place in which the event which may give rise to liability in tort, delict or quasi-delict occurs and the place where that event results in damage are not identical, the expression "place where the harmful event occurred" in Art.5(3) of the Convention must be understood as being intended to cover both the place where the damage occurred and the place of the event giving rise to it, so that the defendant may be sued, at the option of the claimant, in the courts for either of those places.
17 It is clear from the order for reference that the Oberster Gerichtshof takes the view that, in the case in the main proceedings, the place where the damage occurred and the place of the event giving rise to it were both in Germany. The distinguishing feature of this case lies in the fact that the financial damage allegedly suffered by the claimant in another Contracting State is said to have affected the whole of his assets simultaneously.
18 As the Advocate General rightly noted at point 46 of his Opinion, there is nothing in such a situation to justify conferring jurisdiction to the courts of a Contracting State other than that on whose territory the event which resulted in the damage occurred and the damage was sustained, that is to say all of the elements which give rise to liability. To confer jurisdiction in that way would not meet any objective need as regards evidence or the conduct of the proceedings.
19 As the Court has held (in Marinari), the term "place where the harmful event occurred" cannot be construed so extensively as to encompass any place where the adverse consequences can be felt of an event which has already caused damage actually arising elsewhere.
20 In a situation such as that in the main proceedings, such an interpretation would mean that the determination of the court having jurisdiction would depend on matters that were uncertain, such as the place where the victim's "assets are concentrated" and would thus run counter to the strengthening of the legal protection of persons established in the Community which, by enabling the claimant to identify easily the court in which he may sue and the defendant reasonably to foresee in which court he may be sued, is one of the objectives of the Convention. Furthermore, it would be liable in most cases to give jurisdiction to the courts of the place in which the claimant was domiciled. As the Court found at para.[14] of this judgment, the Convention does not favour that solution except in cases where it expressly so provides.
21 In view of the foregoing considerations, the answer to the question referred must be that Art.5(3) of the Convention must be interpreted as meaning that the expression "place where the harmful event occurred" does not refer to the place where the claimant is domiciled or where "his assets are concentrated" by reason only of the fact that he has suffered financial damage there resulting from the loss of part of his assets which arose and was incurred in another Contracting State."
'It is by reference to the loss of those goods that the damages are in my view primarily pleaded ... even if there is also an alternative plea ... in terms of the unpaid price (a plea which in any event may have been intended for the claim in breach of contract). In truth, even though Domicrest would have suffered no loss if Swiss Bank Corporation, or Interglobal had paid the price of those goods, nevertheless it has to be remembered that the remedy in negligent mis-statement is not, as it is in contract, to be put in the same position as if the contract had been performed but depends on the answer to the question: what would have happened if the negligent mis-statement had not been made? In that case, the goods would not have been released before payment and this lost to Domicrest. The essence of the complaint is in any event that the goods were released prior to payment on the strength of Swiss Bank Corporation's representations and contrary to Domicrest's trading policy. It seems to me that this is consistent with the decision in Marinari v Lloyds Bank plc [1995] ECR 1-2719; [1996] QB 217.'"
"48. In my opinion, the abovementioned case-law shows that, in order to determine the "place where the damage occurred", it is essential to define the relevant "damage". "Damage" means any harm to the property or person of the plaintiff, where it relates to the event giving rise to the damage, that is to say to the illegal behaviour attributed to the defendant by a direct and causal link, to the exclusion of indirect, more remote damage or damage which is suffered by an indirect victim. Consequently, "the place where the damage occurred" is that where the event giving rise to the damage caused injury, within the above meaning, to the plaintiff.
49. The above case-law provides sufficient elements to determine the "place where the damage occurred" in the case where the damage occurs in the course of international carriage of good, as in the present case.
50. First of all, it must be observed that the basic obligation imposed on every carrier is to load the goods at a given point and to deliver them intact at another point. As a result, carriers are, in principle, liable for any damage caused to the goods between the departure and the arrival points of the voyage that is to say for the entire duration of the voyage."
"33. As the Advocate General emphasises in points 54-56 of his Opinion, in an international transport operation of the kind at issue in the main proceedings the place where the event giving rise to the damage occurred may be difficult or indeed impossible to determine. In such circumstances, it will be for the consignee of the damaged goods to bring the actual maritime carrier before the courts for the place where the damage occurred. It must be pointed out in that regard that, in an international transport operation of the kind at issue in the main proceedings, the place where the damage occurred cannot be either the place of final delivery, which, as the Commission rightly pointed out, can be changed in mid-voyage, or the place where the damage was ascertained.
34. To allow the consignee to bring the actual maritime carrier before the courts for the place of final delivery or before those for the place where the damage was ascertained would in most cases mean attributing jurisdiction to the courts for the place of the plaintiff's domicile, whereas the authors of the Convention demonstrated their opposition to such attribution of jurisdiction otherwise than in the cases for which it expressly provides (see, to that effect, Dumez France and Tracoba, cited above, paragraphs 16 and 19, and Case C-89/91 Shearson Lehman Hutton v TVB (Case C-89/91) [1993] ECR 1-139, paragraph 17). Furthermore, such an interpretation of the Convention would make the determination of the competent court depend on uncertain factors, which would be incompatible with the objective of the Convention which is to provide for a clear and certain attribution of jurisdiction: see, to that effect. Marinari, paragraph 19, and Handte (Case C-26/9l), paragraph 19, both cited above).
35. In those circumstances, the place where the damage arose in the case of an international transport operation of the kind at issue in the main proceedings can only be the place where the actual maritime carrier was to deliver the goods.
36. That place meets the requirements of foreseeability and certainty imposed by the Convention and displays a particularly close connecting factor with the dispute in the main proceedings, so that the attribution of jurisdiction to the courts for that place is justified by reasons relating to the sound administration of justice and the efficacious conduct of proceedings."
"56. Accordingly there is, as it seems to me, a well arguable case that, under the terms and conditions, the underwriters were bound to procure that the sums recovered directly from the Club were paid in the first instance to Dolphin. I do not regard Dolphin as precluded from relying on clause 11.8 by reason of the contents of the Claim Form. That pleads, in para. 4, that the underwriters were obliged to ensure that any payment in settlement of any cargo claim was paid direct to the Claimants.
57. In those circumstances, the arguments on behalf of Dolphin are, in my judgment, to be preferred. Dolphin's essential complaint is that it suffered harm because it did not receive the $8.5 million into its bank account which it should have done because, despite knowledge that this would involve a breach of the underwriters' contract with Dolphin, the Club paid it to their accounts in Turkey. I recognise that the matter must be looked at through European spectacles. But there is nothing insular in recognising that the contract (which is governed and must be interpreted by English law) calls in terms for 'Recoveries and quasi-Recoveries (i.e. sums which would otherwise comprise 'Recoveries') to be received direct by Dolphin and that the complaint in tort is that the Club wrongfully brought about a breach of that obligation.
58. When, in those circumstances, I ask myself 'where the damage to the direct victim occurred' (Dumez: Advocate General para. 52) or 'where the event giving rise to the damage, and entailing tortious liability, directly produced its harmful effects upon the person who is the immediate victim of that event' (Dumez (ECJ) para. 20) or 'where the event giving rise to the damage caused injury' (Reunion), the answer appears to me that it is in this country, where Dolphin did not receive the money which, if the contract had been performed, it should have received.
59. Further, if I ask myself what would have been the position if the tort complained of had not taken place, the answer is that payment would have been made to Dolphin in England: and the essence of Dolphin's complaint is that that did not occur. Mr Thomas submitted that an inquiry as to what would have happened if the tort was not committed was no guide to the question - where did the damage occur? If there was no tort, there would have been no damage. In some cases, e.g. in cases of damage to goods or persons, the question may have no great utility. But in others where the claimant has failed to obtain some property or money which he would otherwise have received the answer to the question may be a guide to identifying where the harm in the particular case occurred.
60. I do not ignore the danger of conflating the place where the damage occurred with the place where the loss was suffered. There is, however, a difference between a case in which the claimant complains that he has lost his money or goods (as in Domicrest or The Seaward Quest) and a case in which the claimant complains that he has not received a sum which he should have received. In the former case the harm may be regarded as occurring in the place where the goods were lost (Domicrest) or the place from or to which the moneys were paid (The Seaward Quest), although the loss may be said to have been suffered in the claimant's domicile. In the latter case the harm lies in the non receipt of the money at the place where it ought to have been received, and the damage to him is likely to have occurred in the place where he should have received it. That place may well be the place of his domicile and, therefore, also the place where he has suffered loss. An analogy may be drawn with the non delivery of cargo at the destination port: see Reunion Europeenne.
61. There is, in my view, nothing inconsistent with the scheme of the Regulation in that result. In those circumstances the place where the benefit should have been received provides a sufficiently 'close connecting factor with the courts of a Member State other than that in which the defendant is domiciled which satisfies the need for certainty and justifies the attribution of jurisdiction to those courts for reasons relating to the sound administration of justice', particularly where, as here, the contract between Dolphin and the Club was subject to English law and arbitration, and where Dolphin was a provider of services in England (as well as elsewhere).
62. Accordingly, Dolphin's tortious claims fall, in my judgment, within Article 5(3) of the Regulation. Whilst the argument centred round the claim for inducing breach of contract, I did not understand it to be suggested that, if the inducement claim fell within that Article the claim in conspiracy might not.
63. I would have reached a similar conclusion if I had held that there was no obligation under the terms to procure that the $8.5 million was paid to Dolphin in England. On that footing the relevant breaches would be the breaches of clause 6.5. constituted by the underwriters negotiating and settling with the Club directly in the discussions that led to the agreement of 14 May and the further meeting on or around 21 May at which the underwriters must have confirmed their instruction for payment direct to their own bank accounts and called on the Club to remit the settlement monies accordingly. In addition the underwriters will have been in breach of the notification provisions of clause 6.1. by reason of the underwriters' failure to inform Dolphin about the progress of the settlement negotiations, although the extent of that breach is in issue.
64. On this analysis the relevant breaches occurred, so far as clause 6.1. (failure to inform) is concerned, in England and, so far as clause 5 (direct negotiation) is concerned, in Greece or Turkey. The harmful events therefore occurred in one or other of those countries. But the relevant question remains: where did Dolphin suffer the harmful consequences of those events? The harmful consequence to Dolphin of these breaches was not that the agreement was made but that under it Dolphin was not paid direct. The effect was to deprive Dolphin of the rights that would have accrued to it under clause 6.8. if Dolphin had made the Recovery. If the underwriters had complied with their obligations the claim would have been settled with Dolphin's involvement and on terms that the monies would be paid into Dolphin's bank account. In the event Dolphin was deprived of the right to have payment made to it in England under what would probably have been an agreement which like the 14 May settlement agreement provided for English law and jurisdiction."
"I agree with the commission that the financial damage for which Mr Melzer claims compensation, namely the loss of a portion of the capital he invested, appears to me to have occurred in London and not in Berlin. The contested funds were put in an account with the brokerage house in London, and that is where they were lost, since performance of the option contract, or expiry of the option period, resulted in the sums repaid to that account being less than the sums invested."
(1) Article 2 contains the general and fundamental principle of the Judgment Regulation which is that subject to certain exceptions, civil actions are to be brought against individuals or companies in the courts of the place where they are domiciled; the "special jurisdiction" found in Article 5(3) is a derogation from the fundamental principle set out in Article 2, and as such must be restrictively interpreted: Kalfelis at [19], Dumez at [17], and Kronhofer at [12]-[14].
(2) This special jurisdiction is only justified because of the existence of a particularly close connecting factor between a particular dispute and the courts of the member state other than that in which the defendant is domiciled, which satisfies the need for certainty, and justifies the attribution of jurisdiction to those courts for reasons relating to the sound administration of justice: Dumez at [17]; Kronhofer at [15]; Reunion Europeenne at [35]-[36].
(3) The justification for treating the place where the damage occurred as one of the two grounds for founding jurisdiction in cases of tort, delict and quasi-delict is that damage having a causal connection with the harmful event is a necessary component of liability and so provides the necessary close connecting factor to the dispute (Bier at [16]-[17]).
(4) In cases of economic loss, the search is for the place where the harmful event directly had its effect on the immediate victim and where the original damage is manifested: Dumez at [20]-[21]. The damage occurs where the direct harmful consequences are suffered, not at the place where indirect or more remote damage occurs or consequential financial damage is felt which has arisen out of an event which has already caused initial and actual damage elsewhere: Marinari at [14]-[15] (and A-G's Opinion at [26]-[27]); Kronhofer at [19],[21]; Reunion Europeenne A-G's Opinion at [48].
(5) These formulations give effect to two important aspects of the search:
(a) The task is so far as possible to identify a single place for the occurrence of damage. The search is for the place where the damage occurred. This reflects the fundamental objective of certainty.
(b) The search will be for the element of damage which is closest in causal proximity to the harmful event. This is because it is this causal connection which justifies attribution of jurisdiction to the courts of the place where damage occurs (see Bier at [16]-[17] and Dumez at [20]).
(6) There is a difference between a case in which the claimant complains that he has lost his money or goods (as in Marinari or Domicrest) and a case in which the claimant complains that he has not received money or goods which he should have received. In the former case the harm may be regarded as occurring in the place where the money or goods were lost, although the loss may be said to have been consequentially felt in the claimant's domicile. In the latter case the harm lies in the non-receipt of the money or goods at the place where they ought to have been received, and the damage to him is likely to have occurred in the place where he should have received them: Dolphin at [60] and Reunion Europeenne at [35]-[36].
(7) It may assist in identifying the place where damage occurred to ask what would have happened if the tort or delict had not been committed: Domicrest at 568E-F, Dolphin at [59]. That is not, however, always an answer to where the damage has occurred. That question engages the issues of which damage is direct, immediate and initial and which merely indirect or consequential.
(8) The fundamental objective of the Judgments Regulation militates against an interpretation of the Regulation, otherwise than in the cases expressly provided for, which might lead to recognition of the jurisdiction of the courts of the claimant's domicile and which would enable the claimant to determine the competent court by his choice of domicile: Dumez at [16]-[19]; the Opinion of the Advocate General in Marinari at [30]-[31]; Kronhofer at [20]. Nevertheless if a proper application of Article 5(3) entitles the claimant to commence proceedings in the courts of his domicile, he is not to be precluded from doing so because the court in question is a court of that domicile: see Custom Made Commercial Limited v Stawa Metallbau GmbH (Case C-288/92) [1994] ECR I-2913.
(9) It will rarely, if ever, be sufficient for the claimant to establish that the financial loss has been suffered at the place of his domicile merely to show that that is where his accounts are held and where the loss is ultimately felt: Kronhofer. That would be likely to confer jurisdiction on a court which has no connection at all with the subject matter of the dispute, whereas it is such connection which justifies the special jurisdiction provided for in Article 5(3), and would be to found jurisdiction on uncertain factors such as where the claimant's assets are located: Marinari at [19]-[20]. It would also be to accord jurisdiction in almost every case to the place of domicile of a claimant, thereby offending the fundamental objective militating against enabling the claimant to determine the competent court by his choice of domicile.
Application
(1) Deprivation of contractual benefit in England
(2) Payments from England
Merits threshold
Conclusion