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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 >> Mad Atelier International BV v Manes [2020] EWHC 1014 (Comm) (28 April 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2020/1014.html Cite as: [2020] 3 WLR 631, [2020] QB 971, [2020] WLR(D) 258, [2020] 1 WLR 4762, [2020] EWHC 1014 (Comm), [2020] WLR 4762 |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF
ENGLAND AND WALES
COMMERCIAL COURT (QBD)
Rolls Building, Fetter Lane London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
MAD ATELIER INTERNATIONAL B.V. | Claimant | |
-and- | ||
MR AXEL MANES | Defendant |
____________________
(instructed by Mishcon de Reya LLP) for the Claimant
Graham Chapman QC (instructed by Herbert Smith Freehills LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 10 and 11 March 2020
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE BRYAN:
A Introduction.
A.1 The Applications
(1) An order striking out MAD International's Claim Form and Particulars of Claim (dated 11 April 2019 and 10 April 2019 respectively) in whole or in part pursuant to CPR 3.4(2)(a) and/or (b), on the ground that they are an abuse of process because the facts and matters on which MAD International relies have already been heard before, and determined by, the Paris Commercial Court. Mr Manès contends that the abuse of process arises from the fact that the Paris Judgment gives rise to issue estoppels which preclude the pursuit of these proceedings (essentially, a res judicata issue); alternatively, if there is no issue estoppel, the English Proceedings are an abuse of process in the wider sense. This is referred to as the "Abuse Application".
(2) An order summarily dismissing the claims or some of the claims against Mr Manès pursuant to CPR 3.4(2)(a) and/or CPR 24.2 (the "Strike Out / Summary Judgment Application"):
(a) on the basis that MAD International has no real prospect of succeeding on those claims and there is no other compelling reason why the case should be disposed of at trial. This is on the basis that the Paris Commercial Court has already determined the facts and matters on which MAD International relies.
(b) Alternatively, if any of the claims are found not to be abusive, to strike out and/or summarily dismiss those claims.
(3) In the event that the claims are not struck out in their entirety and/or summary judgment is not given on the claims in their entirety:
(a) For a stay of these proceedings pending the final determination of the French Civil Proceedings (the "Case Management Stay Application").
(b) Alternatively, an extension of the deadline for filing the Defence until 28 days following the hearing and determination of the Applications. I understand that this is not controversial between the parties.
A.2 The Background Facts
(1) The Joint Venture
(1) Mr Manès caused MAD International to be incorporated on 26 June 2015 to be the vehicle for the Joint Venture. On incorporation, MAD International was wholly owned by Ragnar Investments Limited ("Ragnar"), a Maltese company wholly owned by Mr Manès at the time.
(2) Marc Padberg ("Mr Padberg"), a senior employee within the Dogus Group, was appointed as statutory director.
(3) On 1 July 2015, MA Développement transferred its shares in MAD Atelier to MAD International for approximately €7.5m.
(1) On 6 July 2015, Dream acquired 60% of the shares in MAD International from Ragnar for approximately €14.3m based on an enterprise value of approximately €27m.
(2) On the same day, MAD International entered into the JVA with Mr Manès, Dream and Ragnar which set out the terms for, amongst other matters, the ownership and operation of the Paris Restaurant. The JVA is governed by English law, and provides for the courts of England to have exclusive jurisdiction in relation to disputes arising out of or in connection with it.
(1) MAD International's case is that, during the first year, the Paris Restaurant performed well and there were no issues between the parties. The first time that any issues were raised was in an email dated 30 September 2016 from Mr Manès to Mr Akdag (a senior employee of the Dogus Group and a member of the Supervisory Committee appointed by Dream under the JVA).
(2) Mr Manès claims that the Joint Venture ran into difficulties and relations between Mr Manès and the Dogus Group deteriorated.
(2) The 3 August 2016 Meeting
(1) A share transfer agreement between MAD International and MA Développement dated 3 August 2016, for the transfer of the Shares from MAD International to MA Développement for a consideration of €3,086,698;
(2) A share transfer order dated 3 August 2016 transferring the Shares to MA Développement, and the corresponding CERFA form;
(3) The minutes of the extraordinary general meeting on 3 August 2016 approving the transfer of the Shares to MA Développement; and
(4) A valuation report valuing the Shares at €3,086,698 as at 30 June 2016.
(1) MAD International claims that, in a telephone call in mid-July 2016 between Mr Manès, Mr Padberg, Mr Beylik (Head of Audit at the Dogus Group) and Mr Akdag, Mr Manès informed Mr Padberg that, notwithstanding that he had already signed the AGM minutes, it was necessary under French law for him to be physically present in Paris to approve the 2015 Annual Accounts in the presence of MAD Atelier's statutory auditor.
(2) Mr Manès claims that, as a result of the breakdown of the joint venture relationship, the parties had agreed that MA Développement would purchase the Shares and the 3 August Meeting was convened for the purpose of executing the necessary documents to give effect to this transfer. Mr Watts, in his second witness statement on behalf of Mr Manès, states that negotiations took place by telephone between Mr Manès and Mr Padberg in June 2015. The existence of such negotiations, and such alleged agreement, is very much in issue between the parties.
(1) MAD International had purchased the Shares from MA Développement for €7.5m only just over a year earlier on 1 July 2015.
(2) On 6 July 2015 Dream had paid €14.3m for a 60% shareholding in MAD International when MAD International's only valuable asset was the Shares.
(3) Nothing had occurred in the intervening period to justify any significant reduction in price.
(3) The French Civil Proceedings
(1) In summary, MAD International alleged that Mr Padberg had not given valid consent for MAD International to enter into the Share Transfer Documents because he had been fraudulently induced to sign those documents on 3 August 2016.
(2) MAD International sought the following relief: a declaration that the share transfer on 3 August 2016 was void, an order for the return of the Shares, compensation for losses arising from the fraudulent transfer of the Shares, and an interim order for sequestration of the Shares and appointment of a provisional administrator over MAD Atelier's assets.
(3) It is disputed between the parties whether MAD Atelier or MA Développement made any counterclaims.
(1) MAD International alleged that Mr Manès misled Mr Padberg as to the true purpose of the 3 August Meeting, by (a) telling Mr Padberg that the AGM had had to be re-scheduled for 3 August 2016, and that at this meeting Mr Padberg would be asked to approve the 2015 Annual Accounts again which was necessary under French law; and (b) by two telephone calls taking place between Mr Manès and Mr Akdag and Mr Beylik and Mr Padberg, in which Mr Manès stated that the purpose of the 3 August Meeting was to approve the 2015 Accounts.
(2) MAD International alleged that Mr Manès misled Mr Padberg as to the nature of the documents he was asked to sign: (a) Mr Padberg believed that the documents he was being asked to sign were the 2015 Annual Accounts, and did not realise that they were the Share Transfer Documents, (b) Mr Padberg did not understand the documents because he did not speak French.
"The court ruling […] denies [MAD International] its request for the annulment of the Share Purchase Agreement, with regard to the sales of the shares of MAD Atelier of 3 August 2016 […]
Denies the parties their other, broader or contrary requests […] Dismisses the other, broader or contrary, requests of the parties"
(1) The evidence provided by MAD International failed to discharge its burden of proof in establishing that Mr Manès committed fraud. In particular:
(a) The evidence provided by MAD International failed to discharge its burden of proof and was not sufficient for the Paris Commercial Court to find that Mr Manès had misled Mr Padberg about the true purpose of the 3 August Meeting; and
(b) The evidence provided by MAD International failed to discharge its burden of proof and was not sufficient for the Paris Commercial Court to find that Mr Padberg was unaware of the nature of the documents which he signed on 3 August 2016 because he did not speak French; and
(c) The evidence in relation to events after 3 August 2016 was not strictly speaking capable of proving the fraud alleged by MAD International, but it was more consistent with MA Développement's and MAD Atelier's case that an agreement had been reached on 3 August 2016.
(4) The English Proceedings
"J. MAD International's Claims
37. In breach of clause 2.8 of the JVA, Mr Manès failed to use his reasonable endeavours to promote and develop the business of the JV Group to [its] best advantage by: […]
37.2 Causing , directly or indirectly, Mad International to agree to sell the Shares to MA Développement for only €3,086,698 in the circumstances described at paragraph 37.1 above [where Mr Manès knew or ought reasonably to have known that it was not in MAD International's or the JV Group's best interests or advantage to sell the shares at that price, which represented a substantial undervalue] and without any or any meaningful prior negotiation regarding the price of the Shares or the terms of the sale […]
37.4 Failing to give the Board and/or Supervisory Committee of MAD International any or any adequate opportunity to be involved in any negotiations in order to increase the proposed sale price of the Shares and/or to obtain their own independent valuation of the Shares prior to the meeting on 3 August 2016.
38. Further or alternatively, in breach of clause 5.1 and/or Schedule 3 of the JVA, Mr Manès failed to procure or take all reasonable steps to ensure that the approval of the Board was sought and obtained prior to the approval and/or implementation by MAD International of a Reserved Matter, namely the sale of the Shares to MA Développement.
39. Further or alternatively, in breach of clause 5.3 and/or Schedule 3 of the JVA, Mr Manès failed to share details of a proposed matter or action which constituted a Reserved Matter, namely the sale of the Shares to MA Développement, of which he became aware promptly with the Supervisory Committee.
40. Further or alternatively, in breach of the Implied Term [that Mr Manès and the other parties to the JVA would at all times act in good faith in relation to the Joint Venture and co-operate with each other in the best interests of MAD International and the JV Group], Mr Manès failed to act in good faith in relation to the JVA and/or to cooperate with Dream in the best interests of MAD International by:
40.1 Failing to inform Dream and/or the Board and/or the Supervisory Committee and/or Mr Padberg of the true purpose of the meeting on 3 August 2016, namely to agree and/or execute a proposed sale of the Shares to MA Développement;
40.2 Failing to inform Dream and/or the Board and/or the Supervisory Committee in advance of the meeting on 3 August 2016 that MA Développement intended to offer and/or had offered to purchase the shares for €3,086,698;
40.3 Failing to give Dream and/or the Board and/or the Supervisory Committee any or any adequate opportunity to be involved in any negotiation regarding the proposed sale price of the Shares and/or to obtain their own independent valuation […]
40.4 Causing or permitting MA Développement to offer to buy the Shares at an undervalue […] without the knowledge or approval of Dream or the Board or the Supervisory Committee as set out in paragraph 37 above […]
41. Further or alternatively, in breach of clause 9.1 of the JVA, Mr Manès failed […] to produce a first draft of the Initial Business Plan […]
42. Further or alternatively, in breach of clause 14.2 of the JVA, Mr Manès transferred his legal interest in his entire shareholding in Ragnar to Mr Alcan […] without the prior knowledge or written consent of Dream".
"44. MAD International is entitled to be put back in the position it would have been in if Mr Manès had complied with his obligations under the JVA. If Mr Manès had informed Dream and/or the Board and/or the Supervisory Committee and/or Mr Padberg of the true purpose of the meeting on 3 August 2016, Mr Padberg would not have attended the meeting and/or would not have signed the Share Transfer Documents; or alternatively, he would not have done so without first notifying Dream and/or the Supervisory Committee, and obtaining approval from the Board for his attendance. MAD International will rely, inter alia, on the contents of Mr Padberg's letter dated 20 December 2016 in this regard.
45. Further or alternatively, if Mr Manès had complied with his obligations under the JVA, Dream and/or the Supervisory Committee and/or the Board would have been notified of the proposed transfer of the Shares; the Board would not have approved the sale of the Shares to MA Développement for €3,086,986 or at all, and Mr Padberg would have acted in accordance with the Board's wishes […] Alternatively, if the Board would have agreed to a sale of the Shares to MA Développement, [they] would have been able to obtain their own independent valuation of the Shares and ensured that any sale of the Shares was for their full market value."
(1) That Mr Manès misled Mr Padberg as to the true purpose of the 3 August Meeting, and that Mr Manès did so at some point during the course of a telephone conversation in mid-July 2016. This is relevant to MAD International's allegations of breach in Paragraphs 37.2 and 40.5: that Mr Manès caused, directly or indirectly, MAD International to sell the shares to MA Développement.
(2) That Mr Padberg did not read or understand the Share Transfer Documents. This is relevant to MAD International's plea as one of several alternative factual scenarios in which Mr Manès' breaches of the JVA caused its loss (in that the Share Transfer Agreement would not have been signed, but for Mr Manès' breaches). There was some confusion over whether MAD International allege this in the English Proceedings. However as addressed in due course below, I am satisfied that MAD International does so.
(3) That events occurring after 3 August 2016 are more consistent with Mr Padberg not realising that a share transfer had taken place, rather than Mr Padberg knowing the true nature of the documents that he had signed (Paragraphs 28-34 PoC), which is part of the factual background to the claim.
B. The Applicable Legal Principles
B.1 Summary Judgment – CPR r.24.2
"(1) The Court must consider whether the defendant has a 'realistic' as opposed to a 'fanciful' prospect of success, see Swain v Hillman [2001] 2 All ER 91, 92. A claim is 'fanciful' if it is entirely without substance, see Lord Hope in Three Rivers District Council v Bank of England [2001] UKHL 16 at [95].
(2) A 'realistic' prospect of success is one that carries some degree of conviction and not one that is merely arguable, see ED & F Man Liquid Products v. Patel [2003] EWCA Civ 472.
(3) The court must avoid conducting a 'mini-trial' without disclosure and oral evidence: Swain v Hillman (above) at p.95. As Lord Hope observed in the Three Rivers case, the object of the rule is to deal with cases that are not fit for trial at all.
(4) This does not mean that the Court must take everything that a party says in his witness statement at face value and without analysis. In some cases, it may be clear that there is no real substance in factual assertions which are made, particularly if they are contradicted by contemporaneous documents, see ED & F Man Liquid Products v. Patel (above) at [10]. Contemporary activity or lack of activity may similarly cast doubt on the substance of factual assertions.
(5) However, the Court should avoid being drawn into an attempt to resolve those conflicts of fact which are normally resolved by a trial process, see Doncaster Pharmaceuticals Group Ltd v. Bolton Pharmaceutical Co 100 Ltd [2006] EWCA Civ 661, Mummery LJ at [17].
(6) In reaching its conclusion, the court must take into account not only the evidence actually placed before it on the application for summary judgment, but the evidence that can reasonably be expected to be available at trial: Royal Brompton Hospital NHS Trust v Hammond (No. 5) [2001] EWCA Civ 550, [19].
(7) Allegations of fraud may pose particular problems in summary disposal, since they often depend, not simply on facts, but inferences which can properly be drawn from the relevant facts, the surrounding circumstances and a view of the state of mind of the participants, see for example JD Wetherspoon v Harris [2013] EWHC 1088, Sir Terence Etherton Ch at [14].
(8) Some disputes on the law or the construction of a document are suitable for summary determination, since (if it is bad in law) the sooner it is determined the better, see the Easyair case. On the other hand, the Court should heed the warning of Lord Collins in AK Investment CJSC v Kyrgyz Mobil Tel Ltd [2012] 1 WLR 1804 at [84] that it may not be appropriate to decide difficult questions of law on an interlocutory application where the facts may determine how those legal issues will present themselves for determination and/or the legal issues are in an area that requires detailed argument and mature consideration, see also at [116].
[…]
(10) So far as Part 24.2(b) is concerned, there will be a compelling reason for trial where 'there are circumstances that ought to be investigated', see Miles v Bull [1969] 1 QB 258 at 266A. In that case Megarry J was satisfied that there were reasons for scrutinising what appeared on its face to be a legitimate transaction; see also Global Marine Drillships Limited v Landmark Solicitors LLP [2011] EWHC 2685 (Ch), Henderson J at [55]-[56]."
B.2 Abuse of Process – CPR r.3.4(2)(b)
"(2) The court may strike out a statement of case if it appears to the court—
(b) that the statement of case is an abuse of the court's process or is otherwise likely to obstruct the just disposal of the proceedings;"
B.3 Issue Estoppel
"res judicata is a portmanteau term which is used to describe a number of different legal principles […] Fourth, there is the principle that even where the cause of action is not the same in the later action as it was in the earlier one, some issue which is necessarily common to both was decided on the earlier occasion and is binding on the parties […] "Issue estoppel" was the expression devised to describe this principle […] adopted by Diplock LJ in Thoday v Thoday [1964] P 181, 197-198"
(1) Final and Conclusive / On the Merits
(1) Mr Manès contends that only the foreign judgment must be final and conclusive, as a matter of foreign law: then, English law is used to determine whether the particular issues that the court decided ought to bind the privies.
(2) MAD International contends that the foreign legal system must regard the particular issues relied upon as forming the English legal estoppel as having preclusive effect. On MAD International's case, that foreign legal system must therefore either have a doctrine of issue estoppel which covers the issues raised, or have a doctrine which has precisely the same underlying basis and operation (i.e. refusing to re-hear a factual issue on account of the preclusive effect of a previous judgment).
(3) This dispute arose because it appeared to be common ground (in oral submissions) that France did not have a doctrine of "issue estoppel", as only the operative parts of judgments constituted "res judicata".
(1) At p. 919, Lord Reid stated:
"When we come to issue estoppel I think that, by parity of reasoning, we should have to be satisfied that the issues in question cannot be relitigated in the foreign country. In other words, it would have to be proved in this case that the courts of the German Federal Republic would not allow the re-opening in any new case between the same parties of the issues decided by the Supreme Court in 1960, which are now said to found an estoppel here. There would seem to be no authority of any kind on this matter, but it seems to me to verge on absurdity that we should regard as conclusive something in a German judgment which the German courts themselves would not regard as conclusive. It is quite true that estoppel is a matter for the lex fori but the lex fori ought to be developed in a manner consistent with good sense.
The need to prove whether West German law would permit these issues to be re-opened there appears to have escaped the notice of the appellants' advisers and your Lordships are left in considerable difficulty. On the one hand, there is always a presumption that the foreign law on any particular question is the same as English law unless the contrary is proved. On the other hand, it would be remarkable if German law had reached precisely the same stage of development on issue estoppel as the law of England has, and there are some indications in the German judgments that it has not. I have had an opportunity of reading the views of my noble and learned friend, Lord Wilberforce, on this matter. I do not dissent from them."
(emphasis added)
This indicates that the relevant comparison for the purposes of finality is the foreign law's view on preclusion regarding the issues decided by the German Democratic Republic's Supreme Court, not the judgment of the Supreme Court itself. In contrast, on Mr Manès' contention, an English court would give a finding of fact in a foreign judgment preclusive effect, even where that finding would have no such preclusive effect in the foreign legal system – this is the very "absurdity" that Lord Reid was referring to.
(2) Lord Wilberforce agreed with Lord Reid (albeit that he disagreed on other issues as to the identity of parties):
"The textbooks are in agreement in stating that for a foreign judgment to be set up as a bar in this country it must be res judicata in the country in which it is given (see Dicey, Conflict of Laws, 7th ed., p. 1036; Cheshire Private International Law, 7th ed., p. 562). The chief authority cited for this is Nouvion v. Freeman. Generally, it would seem unacceptable to give to a foreign judgment a more conclusive force in this country than it has where it was given.
If the Stiftung represented by the Council of Gera were to attempt to commence another action in West Germany against the same defendants as were parties to the action they would, by the force of the previous judgment, be prevented from proceeding with it. Moreover, I think that it is for the defendant, who sets up the bar, to establish the conclusive character of the judgment."
(emphasis added)
Here, Lord Wilberforce is making a similar point to Lord Reid: a foreign judgment should not be given more conclusive force in this country than in its country of origin.
(3) Lord Hodson stated as follows at p. 927C-E:
"It is for the defendants to show the estoppel and, to prove it, they must establish as a matter of German law that the judgment is final and conclusive. This they have failed to do by express evidence and, as my noble and learned friend, Lord Wilberforce, points out in his opinion, there are passages in the evidence which at least suggest the possibility of want of authority being relitigated in the German courts."
Here, Lord Hodson commented specifically on the possibility of want of authority (i.e. the issue in respect of which the issue estoppel was being presented) being relitigated in the German courts, rather than the judgement as a whole being subject to re-litigation or reopening.
"The requirements of issue estoppel still remain (1) that the same question has been decided; (2) that the judicial decision which is said to create the estoppel was final and (3) the proceedings in which the estoppel is raised or their privies. I have for the moment postponed the question whether issue estoppel, if valid in relation to an English judgment, applies to a foreign judgment. There is little doubt that the same question was incidentally decided in the West German action as arises in the present summons, namely, whether the Council of Gera have authority to raise the action in the name of the Carl-Zeiss-Stiftung.
I turn, therefore, at once to the question of finality. This is understood to mean " final and conclusive on the merits " of the cause (Dicey, Conflict of Laws, 7th ed., r. 196, p. 1052). The decision upon which the issue estoppel arises must itself be final in this sense. In other words, the cause of action must be extinguished by the decision which is said to create the estoppel (see Nouvion v. Freeman, Lord Herschell: " It puts an end to and absolutely concludes that particular action." […]
Another aspect of finality relates to the requirement that the decision relied upon as estoppel must itself be res judicata in the country in which it is made. This is made clear in Nouvion v.Freeman (See also Cheshire, Private International Law, 7th ed (1965) p. 562; Dicey' Conflict of Laws 7th ed. p.1036) It would, indeed, be illogical if the decision were to be res judicata in England, if it were not also res judicata in the foreign jurisdiction. I am not satisfied that the respondents have discharged the burden of proof upon them of establishing that the West German judgment is res judicata in West Germany. I would, accordingly, hold that the West German judgment is not final and conclusive and for these reasons does not create an estoppel."
(emphasis added)
"To make available an issue estoppel to a defendant to an action brought against him in an English court upon a cause of action to which the plaintiff alleges a particular set of facts give rise, the defendant must be able to show: (1) that the same set of facts has previously been relied upon as constituting a cause of action in proceedings brought by that plaintiff against that defendant in a foreign court of competent Jurisdiction; and (2) that a final judgment has been given by that foreign court in those proceedings.
It is often said that the final judgment of the foreign court must be "on the merits." The moral overtones which this expression tends to conjure up may make it misleading. What it means in the context of judgments delivered by courts of justice is that the court has held that it has Jurisdiction to adjudicate upon an issue raised in the cause of action to which the particular set of facts give rise; and that its judgment on that cause of action is one that cannot be varied, re-opened or set aside by the court that delivered it or any other court of co-ordinate Jurisdiction although it may be subject to appeal to a court of higher Jurisdiction."
"In the first place, we are not familiar with modes of procedure in many foreign countries, and it may not be easy to be sure that a particular issue has been decided or that its decision was a basis of the foreign judgment and not merely collateral or obiter. Secondly, I have already alluded to the practical difficulties of a defendant in deciding whether, even in this country, he should incur the trouble and expense of deploying his full case in a trivial case: it might be most unjust to hold that a litigant here should be estopped from putting forward his case because it was impracticable for him to do so in an earlier case of a trivial character abroad, with the result that the decision in that case went against him."
(1) In that case, Sales J refused an application for summary judgment in which a claimant sought to invoke issue estoppel to rely on a Canadian summary judgment on the ownership of copyright to certain films. He concluded that the defendant had a good arguable case that the judgment would not be treated as res judicata under Canadian law.
(2) At [43], Sales J held as follows:
"It is common ground that in order for an issue estoppel to arise in the courts in England by reference to a judgment of a court in a foreign jurisdiction (here, the Ontario Judgment), it is necessary to show not only that the requirements to establish an issue estoppel according to the law of the lex fori (England) are satisfied, but also that the issue in question would be treated as res judicata according to the law of that foreign jurisdiction: see Carl Zeiss [1967] 1 AC 853 , 919A-C (Lord Reid), 927C-D (Lord Hodson), 936A-B (Lord Guest), 949C-D (Lord Upjohn) and 969G-970A (Lord Wilberforce)." (emphasis added)
(3) Of course, in that case there was no question as to whether a finding of fact could give rise to an issue estoppel as a matter of principle (as Canada clearly had an issue estoppel jurisdiction). However, importantly in my view, the court supported the use of expert evidence in determining how the principles of issue estoppel would be applied to the particular facts of the case by the foreign court. I consider this supports the conclusion that the English court should have regard to how a foreign legal system would treat the particular issue.
(1) That case concerned whether a contractual clause, providing for a surveyor determining parties' disputes, was validly invoked. The University of Notre Dame ("UND") issued proceedings before a US District Court, and sought pre-judgment relief roughly akin to a freezing order. The District Court's order ("the Memorandum and Order") confirmed the surveyor's determination and ordered an attachment. The Claimant, ZVI Construction Co LLP ("ZVI") issued proceedings in England. UND contended, amongst other matters, that an issue estoppel arose in relation to the matters raised before the US Courts, which extended to the proper construction of the Dispute Resolution Procedure clause.
(2) Stephen Furst QC decided that the District Court's order was not "final", for the following reasons:
"97. Following the decision in Carl-Zeiss (No. 2) the question is whether the courts in the United States would regard the confirmation order as final. This is a question which will be decided by the First Circuit Court of Appeals since ZVI has issued an appeal and the Court of Appeals has ordered ZVI to either move for voluntary dismissal of the appeal or show cause as to why the appeal should not be dismissed for lack of jurisdiction. It appears that the latter question turns on whether the District Court's decision is indeed final.
98. It would seem to me that whilst Mr Larson is probably right, namely that there is no real possibility of the District Court re-considering the confirmation order or the arguments leading to the making of that order, United States law would not regard the Memorandum and Order, let alone the confirmatory part of the Order, as final. Thus, in this respect, there is a real difference in United States law, between an order and a judgement and that, coupled with the fact that the Judge refused to enter judgement, strongly suggests that the District Court remains seized of all issues. The fact that the District Court is highly unlikely to alter its existing order, is not to the point. Issue estoppel is not just a question of substance; it is also a question of form. It is a serious and important doctrine which, potentially, deprives a party of an important right: to advance a point to support its position in any subsequent proceedings. The burden rests on the party seeking to set up the issue estoppel, UND, and for the reasons set out above, I find that that burden has not been discharged by UND. Accordingly, no issue estoppel arises"
(2) Privity of Interest
(1) Sir Robert Megarry VC formulated the test for privity in Gleeson at p. 515:
"Second, it seems to me that the substratum of the doctrine is that a man ought not to be allowed to litigate a second time what has already been decided between himself and the other party to the litigation. […] I do not say that one must be the alter ego of the other: but it does seem to me that, having due regard to the subject matter of the dispute, there must be a sufficient degree of identification between the two to make it just to hold that the decision to which one was party should be binding in proceedings to which the other is party. […]"
(2) In this regard, and as identified by the Court of Appeal in Resolution Chemicals Ltd. v. Lundbeck [2013] EWCA Civ 924 at [32], consideration is given to (a) the extent to which the new party had an interest in the subject matter of the previous action; (b) the extent to which the new party can be said to be, in reality, the party to the original proceedings by reason of his relationship with that party; and (c) against this background, whether it is just that the new party should be bound by the outcome of the previous litigation.
(3) The question of whether there is privity of interest also "cannot be conditional upon the character of the decision" i.e., it must take effect whether the relevant party wins or loses: Gleeson v. J Wippell & Co [1977] 1 W.L.R. 510, at 516A-B.
(4) Privity of interest is a "somewhat narrow" doctrine: Gleeson at p.515A.
"The first [argument] was that the rule in Henderson v Henderson did not apply to Mr Johnson since he had not been the plaintiff in the first action against GW. In my judgment this argument was rightly rejected. A formulaic approach to application of the rule would be mistaken. WWH was the corporate embodiment of Mr Johnson. He made decisions and gave instructions on its behalf. If he had wished to include his personal claim in the company's action, or to issue proceedings in tandem with those of the company, he had power to do so."
(emphasis added)
"But Mr Johnson and the company are different legal persons, each with its own creditors, and that is a fact of critical significance. Mr Johnson's personal claims raised difficult issues not present in the company's action […] It was not in the company's interest for his personal claims to be joined with its own much simpler claim, or for its case to be delayed until Mr Johnson's own case was ready for trial"
(emphasis added)
"[25] […] The focus in Johnson v Gore-Wood was inevitably on abuse of process because the parties to the two actions were different, and neither issue estoppel nor cause of action estoppel could therefore run (Mr Johnson's counsel conceded that he and his company were privies, but Lord Millett seems to have doubted the correctness of the concession at p 60D–E, and so do I)."
(emphasis added)
(1) Standard Chartered (Hong Kong) Ltd v. Independent Power Tanzania Ltd [2015] 2 Lloyd's Rep. 183, [2016] 2 Lloyds Rep 25 C.A. ("SCB") concerned proceedings against SCBHK (a subsidiary of SCB) in England, pursuant to non-exclusive jurisdiction clauses. SCB had previously been sued by the same claimants in New York. A question as to whether issue estoppel in England could arise from those proceedings fell to be determined.
(a) At first instance Flaux J endorsed the test in Resolution Chemicals, and then found at [145] that:
"[145]: the corporate relationship and financial interest alleged cannot on any view be sufficient to establish privity of interest. The contrary conclusion would effectively drive a coach and horses through the doctrine of separate corporate personality and lead to piercing of the corporate veil, something which is not to be encouraged given the limited scope ascribed to the doctrine of piercing the corporate veil by the Supreme Court in Prest v Petrodel Resources Ltd [2013] 2 AC 415; [2013] 3 WLR 1."
(b) This conclusion was endorsed by the Court of Appeal. Longmore LJ stated at [30]:
"It may be that SCBHK and SCBMB had a general commercial interest in the outcome of the New York proceedings but that, on its own, is insufficient to make them privies to SCB."
(2) The fact that the party to the original litigation and the party to the present litigation are part of a group of companies under common control does not make them privies: Resolution Chemicals, at [50].
(1) In SCB, Flaux J noted that SCBHK could not be "in reality a party to the New York Proceedings" because there was no jurisdiction to join them there as a defendant (at [145]). That conclusion was endorsed by the Court of Appeal: SCBHK were "not available to be sued in New York" (at [31]).
(2) Even in Johnson v Gore-Wood, the reason that Mr Johnson's control made him W's privy was that if he had wished to issue his own proceedings in tandem with the company's, he could have done so. This was repeated by Lord Millett (albeit he doubted the correctness of the concession): "He was in a position to decide when to pursue the two claims and whether to pursue them together or separately, and that is enough for present purposes" (60D).
"Particular care, however, needs to be taken where the plaintiff in the second action is not the same as the plaintiff in the first, but his privy. Such situations are many and various, and it would be unwise to lay down any general rule. The principle is, no doubt, capable in theory of applying to a privy; but it is likely in practice to be easier for him to rebut the charge that his proceedings are oppressive or constitute an abuse of process than it would be for the original plaintiff to do so."
(3) Clear Determination of the Issues by the Foreign Court
(4) Same Issues Determined in both courts
B.4 Abuse of Process: Collateral Attack / Henderson v Henderson
(1) Collateral Attack
(1) In cases where there is no res judicata or issue estoppel, the power to strike out a claim for abuse of process is founded on two interests: the private interest of a party not to be vexed twice for the same reason and the public interest of the state in not having issues repeatedly litigated; Michael Wilson & Partners Ltd. v. Sinclair [2017] EWCA Civ 3, at [48(1)].
(2) If the parties to the later civil proceedings were not parties or privies to the earlier proceedings, there can still be an abuse of process. There may be such an abuse if the court must challenge the factual findings in the earlier action and: (i) it would be manifestly unfair to a party to the later proceedings that the same issues should be re-litigated; or (ii) to permit such re-litigation would bring the administration of justice into disrepute: Secretary of State for Trade and Industry v. Bairstow [2004] 1 Ch. 1 at [38]; Michael Wilson [48(4)]
(3) It will be a rare case where the litigation of an issue which has previously been decided, but not between the same parties or their privies, will amount to an abuse of process (In re Norris, [26]; Michael Wilson v Sinclair, [48(5)]; cf. Laing v Taylor Walton, [25]). This indicates that there must be a "special reason" (or "positive reason") contributing to the conclusion that there has been an abuse of process (Bragg v Oceanus Mutual Underwriting Association (Bermuda) Ltd. [1982] 2 Lloyd's Rep. 132).
(4) Particular caution is required where the party to the second action is not only different to the party in the first action, but the party in the first action was involuntarily involved in that action as a defendant, not as a claimant: SCB, Flaux J at [147].
(5) There is no general rule preventing a party inviting the court to arrive at a decision inconsistent with that arrived at in an earlier case: Michael Wilson, supra, at [48(2)] and [94].
(6) The burden is on the party alleging the existence of abuse of process to establish such abuse and the threshold which engages the court's duty to act to prevent abuse of its process is a high one: Michael Wilson. at [87], [100]. There must be some "special reason" why the facts of the case make the determination in the current proceedings of the issue which has been determined in earlier proceedings an abuse of process, and the contention that the issue had been the subject of lengthy evidence and argument cannot amount to such "special reason": Bragg v. Oceanus, at pp 138 – 139.
"A number of considerations may be taken into account in order to determine whether there is such manifest unfairness or the allowance of the case to be run would bring the administration of justice into disrepute. Such considerations are not closed and include: a) Whether the person wishing to advance the allegation had a reasonable opportunity to deal with the allegation in the earlier proceedings (Hunter; Bragg v Oceanus; In re Norris, para. 26; St Vincent v Robinson; Ablyazov, para. 48, 51). This consideration will arise especially if the person wishing to advance the allegation again was a party to the earlier proceedings (Laing v Taylor Walton; Arts & Antiques v Richards; St Vincent v Robinson). b) Whether the party advancing the allegation in the later proceedings was also the party advancing the allegation in the earlier proceedings (Laing v Taylor v Walton; Arts & Antiques v Richards; cf. Conlon v Simms, para. 146). … e) Whether the earlier proceedings were before the most appropriate tribunal or between the most appropriate parties for the determination of the issue (Bragg v Oceanus). f) Whether the purpose of the party wishing to have the matter determined afresh was not the genuine purpose of obtaining the relief sought in the second action, but some collateral purpose (Hunter; Bragg v Oceanus). … h) Whether the party now making the relevant allegation provided assistance, or funding, to one of the parties to the earlier proceedings."
(2) Henderson v Henderson
(3) Abuse of Process in the absence of issue estoppel
(1) In SCB, at [164] Flaux J rejected the existence of a general principle that there could be an abuse of process by collateral attack on a foreign court's decision where there was no issue estoppel from the decision of that foreign court. He did so as he considered that such a principle would extend the conclusory effect of the decisions of foreign courts beyond the scope of issue estoppel in an impermissible manner:
"163. That brings me on to the third reason why there is no abuse of process. There is an obvious question mark as to whether, in the absence of an issue estoppel, it can be said that a collateral attack on the decision of a foreign court (even if the current proceedings were such a collateral attack, which they are not) is an abuse of process of this court or can be said to bring the administration of justice in this jurisdiction into disrepute.
164 […]. Any such general principle would be far reaching and would extend the conclusory effect of decisions of foreign courts beyond the scope of the principles of res judicata estoppel in an impermissible manner. In my judgment, unless an issue estoppel can be established (which it cannot in the present case) the pursuit of proceedings in England, even if they involve some form of collateral attack on the decision of a foreign court, cannot amount to an abuse of the process of this court."
(emphasis added)
(2) The Court of Appeal in SCB endorsed the views expressed by Flaux J at [29] and [40], and gave further guidance about abuse of process at [41]:-
"Abuse of process
29. Flaux J decided that there was no abuse of process in SCBHK instituting proceedings because there was no estoppel arising from the New York proceedings begun by VIP and because, in the absence of an estoppel binding on SCBHK preventing it from suing in England, there was no applicable abuse in the English proceedings. There was no estoppel because SCB in New York was not the same party as SCBHK or SCBMB who were litigating in London nor were SCBHK or SCBMB to be treated as the privies of SCB for the purpose of any issue estoppel; in any event the issue litigated in New York (which country was the appropriate forum for VIP's claim in tort against SCB?) was not the same issue as that arising in England (which country was the appropriate forum for SCBHK's and SCBMB's contractual claim against VIP under the Shareholder Support Deed and Charge of Shares?). The judge was in my opinion correct on both matters and was also right to hold that, in the absence of an estoppel, there was no abuse.
30. The requirements for issue estoppel are set out in The Sennar (No. 2) [1985] 1 WLR 490, 499
[…]
(c) Collateral attack on judgment of Marrero J?
40. If there is no issue estoppel, I cannot see that there is any question of an impermissible attack on the judgment of Marrero J [the relevant foreign proceedings]. The issue which he was considering is just not the same as the issue of where SCBHK's claim can be brought.
41. For much the same reasons, the submission that the judge failed to stand back from the detailed facts and ask himself the general question whether SCBHK's claim was abusive cannot be accepted. Of course, there can be abuse in circumstances in which there is no issue estoppel but such cases will, in general, be rare and any decision that a litigant is not entitled to have its dispute in the courts of the country permitted by the terms of the contract will be rarer still. The further one stands back from the detailed facts of this case, the less abusive it looks."
(emphasis added)
B.5 Case Management Stays
(1) The court has a discretion to stay an action pending the resolution of a claim pending in another forum, but a stay should only be granted in "rare and compelling circumstances": Reichhold Norway ASA v. Goldman Sachs [2000] 1 WLR 173 at 186 (C.A.).
(2) "Exceptionally strong grounds" are required to justify a stay on case management grounds where the parties have conferred exclusive jurisdiction on the English court: Mazur Media Ltd v. Mazur Media GmbH [2004] 1 WLR 2966 at [69]-[70] (Lawrence Collins J); Jefferies International Ltd v Landsbanki Islands HF [2009] EWHC 894 (Comm) at [26]. The danger of inconsistent judgments is not a legitimate consideration amounting to exceptional circumstances and does not justify a stay in a case where the court has jurisdiction under the Brussels I Regulation Recast ("BIR"), especially exclusive jurisdiction: Mazur, supra, at [71].
(3) The court's power to stay proceedings cannot be used in a manner which is inconsistent with the Judgments Regulation: Mazur, supra, at [69]; Jefferies, supra, at [26]. A defendant should not be permitted "under the guise of case management, [to] achieve by the back door a result against which the ECJ has locked the front door": Skype Technologies SA v. Joltid Ltd [2009] EWHC 2783 (Ch) at [22] (Lewison J).
(4) A stay will not, at least in general, be appropriate if the other proceedings will not bind the parties to the action stayed or finally resolve all the issues in the case to be stayed, or the parties are not the same: Klöckner Holdings GmbH v. Klöckner Beteiligungs GmbH [2005] EWHC 1453 (Comm) at [21] (Gloster J).
B.6 The BIR
"Article 29
[…]
Article 30
C. Application of the Legal Principles to the Facts
(1) In section C.1: whether an issue estoppel arises from the matters found in the Paris Judgment in relation to these proceedings.
(2) In section C.2: whether MAD International's claims in these proceedings constitute an abuse of process.
(3) In section C.3: whether either the Allegedly Overlapping Claims or the Remaining Claims should be determined summarily on the basis that they do not disclose a real prospect of success on their merits.
(4) In section C.4: whether MAD International's claims should be struck out.
(5) In section C.5: whether, in the absence of any strike out, MAD International's claims should be stayed on case management grounds.
C.1 Issue Estoppel in relation to Allegedly Overlapping Claims
(1) That Mr Manès (acting for and on behalf of MA Développement and MAD Atelier, and himself), misled Mr Padberg as to the true purpose of the 3 August Meeting and the true nature of the documents that Mr Padberg was asked to sign.
(2) That Mr Padberg did not understand the documents that he was asked to sign at the 3 August Meeting.
(3) That the events following the 3 August Meeting assist in proving the existence of the fraud.
(1) The decision of the Paris Commercial Court on the above points is not final or conclusive;
(2) The parties to both proceedings are not privies;
(3) The issues set out above by Mr Manès were not issues concluded by the court, but comments on the state of the evidence; and
(4) The issues in the English Proceedings are significantly broader than the issues in the French Civil Proceedings.
Each of these conclusions, in of itself, means that no issue estoppel arises from the Paris Judgment. I address each of these matters below.
(1) Finality of the Paris Commercial Court Judgment
"Article 1355 (formerly Article 1351) of the French Civil Code:
"The authority of res judicata applies only with respect to the what was the object of a judgment. It is necessary that the thing claimed must be the same; that the claim be based on the same cause; that the claim be between the same parties and brought by them and against them acting in the same qualities."
Article 480 Code of Civil Procedure:
"The judgment which decides in its operative part the whole or part of the main issue, or one which rules upon the procedural plea, a plea seeking a plea of non-admissibility or any other interlocutory application, will, from the time of its pronouncement, become res judicata with regard to the dispute which it determines"
(1) The evidence of Professor Lagarde in Lagarde-1 is that res judicata attaches only to the operative part of the decision ([43]), and that there can be no "implied operative part of the judgment" or res judicata "implicitly decided" ([45]). References to the court's findings in the body of the judgment are only allowed to enlighten the scope of the operative part of the judgment – they are not relevant if the operative part of the judgment is clear ([47]). The operative part of the Paris Judgment makes no mention of the court's findings in relation to any of the issues, and is perfectly clear ([53]). Therefore, if MAD International were to bring a new civil claim in France against the parties to the French Civil Proceedings claiming a different remedy or based on a different cause of action, MAD International would not be prevented from re-litigating any of the issues in the new proceedings. Further, Professor Lagarde's evidence is that there is no principle of "issue estoppel" in the sense that the party must bring all its claims for remedies on the same factual/legal basis in the same proceedings.
(2) In Boucobza-1, Professor Boucobza does not seek to contend that parts of the judgment which are in the conclusory section are in fact "negative res judicata" (i.e. the above principle), though he does mention that they are a "necessary basis" or a "logical precondition" for the operative part of the judgment. In his second report Professor Lagarde rejects this as irrelevant (at [23]).
(3) In the event, Mr Chapman accepted, during the course of his oral submissions, that issue estoppel does not exist, as a doctrine, in France.
(4) Insofar as there was any disagreement between the experts on the scope of res judicata in French law (which in any event was not maintained on behalf of Mr Manès in oral legal submissions), I prefer the evidence of Professor Lagarde that no doctrine equivalent to issue estoppel exists. Professor Boucobza in his first report made submissions on the Cesareo case, and on what he referred to as "positive res judicata" (at [78]). However, Professor Lagarde (in Lagarde-2) strongly, and in my view rightly on the evidence before me, considered the existence of positive res judicata as a "largely theoretical concept only" which does not reflect the state of French law as it currently stands ([26]-[30] Lagarde-2).
"Article 101
If there is such a connection between cases brought before two separate courts that it is in the interests of good justice to have them heard and judged together, one of the courts may be asked to decline jurisdiction and to transfer knowledge of the case to the other court as it stands."
(emphasis added)
(1) The discretion to decline jurisdiction (as explained by Professor Boucobza) is based on factual connection between the two proceedings: it is not based upon the preclusive effect of a particular judgment.
(2) Article 101 only confers a discretion on the court: it does not automatically prevent a court from reconsidering the issue. For the reasons set out above in the ZVI Construction case, even where there is no real possibility of the foreign court reconsidering the factual matters determined or the arguments in the order, those factual matters may still not be regarded as having been "finally decided" for the purposes of issue estoppel. Issue estoppel is as much a question of form as it is of substance, being an important doctrine which potentially deprives a party of an important right. At its highest, Professor Boucobza's view is that as a matter of practice, French courts would always use their discretion under Article 100-102 CPC to stay proceedings on any claims based on the same factual allegations but with different remedies on connectedness grounds, awaiting the determination of the first court on those facts (i.e. the Court of Appeal). However, the very fact that this is a discretion means that the court does not consider itself bound by the previous factual findings – it can stay its present determination of the factual findings in order to achieve certain aims in the proper administration of justice, but it can also go ahead.
(2) Privity of Parties
(1) Mr Manès' involvement in the French Civil Proceedings is not surprising: it is his purportedly fraudulent conduct which was in issue, so he had all the relevant knowledge to instruct French counsel and/or to give relevant witness statements. A similar factor was rejected in SCB by the Court of Appeal at [32] for the same reason.
(2) There was some dispute over whether Mr Manès made oral submissions in the French Civil Proceedings. The Paris Commercial Court mentioned a certain fact in its motifs as "stated by Mr Axel MANÈS during the oral hearing". Mr Manès' counsel relied on this during the hearing to show that Mr Manès appeared before the Paris Court and/or gave written witness evidence. I understand that Mr Manès did not give oral evidence or make any oral submissions to the Paris Commercial Court: he also did not provide a written witness statement. The above reference in the motifs is to the fact that at the hearing on the merits, the Paris Commercial Court asked a question to which Mr Manès responded personally. I do not consider this to be of any relevance. As already noted, the giving of evidence, the making submissions, or the giving of instructions to the relevant legal representatives at the French Civil Proceedings would not have made Mr Manès the privy of MA Développement or MAD Atelier.
(3) As to the fraud allegations made against Mr Manès: the fact that those allegations were made against him does not give him some sort of heightened interest in the proceedings that he would not have had if the allegations made had been merely of breach of contract or negligence. It is not uncommon for fraud to be alleged against witnesses who are not party to the proceedings (e.g. fraud alleged against the director of a company).
(4) Finally, I do not consider that the fact that separate criminal proceedings are under way in France against Mr Manès makes Mr Manès a privy. It is true that there is a criminal complaint against Mr Manès concurrently with the civil proceedings, and that MAD International were joined to those proceedings. However, the criminal and civil claims are not substantively linked, and there is no evidence before me that a determination in the French criminal proceedings will have an effect on the appeal process in the French Civil Proceedings.
(3) Matters relied upon were not the subject of a clear decision on the relevant factual issues
"MAD Atelier SAS requested the court in its latest iteration of its claims to:
On the merits of the claims
- FINDING that the sale of the shares in MAD Atelier SAS on 3 August 2016 took place in full observation of provisions of the Articles of Association of MAD Atelier SAS
- FINDING that MAD Atelier International BV has given its consent to the sale of the shares in MAD Atelier SAS on 3 August 2016.
Therefore,
- DENY all claims, objectives and assumptions of MAD Atelier International BV […]"
(1) The court makes some comments on events transpiring after 3 August 2016, but it also clearly states that those facts are "by their very nature unfit to prove the alleged fraud", and can only "enlighten the Court on the circumstances of the dispute". The comments that follow are clearly not an essential part of the court's reasoning.
(2) I do not consider that the French court's decision to exclude the evidence of Mr Akdag, Mr Beylik and Ms. Ipenburg-Westerman leads to the conclusion they are totally unreliable. The Paris Commercial Court excluded the witnesses because they were "closely linked in a professional or personal capacity to the Claimant; whereas they thus do not offer sufficient guarantee of independence and objectivity that can be taken into account". It did not hear the evidence at all, and it did not make any specific conclusions about their credibility beyond their status as "closely linked" to the Claimant. An English court would not exclude factual witness evidence simply on the basis of a lack of independence as a matter of status: this does not go to a matter which would be considered by the English courts in a trial of the English action.
(1) McClelland concerned an issue estoppel arising from French civil proceedings as to whether parallel English proceedings constituted an abuse of process.
(2) MAD International submit that Hobhouse LJ concluded that the motifs section was merely collateral at [85]-[86], and that this was merely an observation by him on an issue not for determination. Mr Manès submits that Hobhouse LJ was in fact in the minority on this, and that Dillon LJ and Stuart-Smith LJ came to the opposite conclusion (that the motifs section of such a judgment were part of the "ratio" and were not collateral comments). I was referred, in particular, to the following paragraphs in the judgment: Dillion LJ at [32]-[33] and [40] and the concurring judgment of Stuart-Smith LJ at [42]-[43], [46] and [51]-[53].
(a) At p 212, Dillon LJ stated:
"32. the French court would never take on itself to decide that the commencement of proceedings in the English court or the making an application in the English court was an abuse of process of the English court.
33. But to consider whether the French Civil Proceedings were an abuse of process, the French court necessarily had to consider the underlying question. The underlying question on whether the claim that Maccorp had been trading unfairly by misusing, for its own ends, confidential information as to the Paris properties was a genuine claim, or a spurious claim.
[…]
[40] It follows that I would allow this appeal and would hold that the respondents are precluded by issue estoppel […] from maintaining to the full the case that has been put forward in the statement of contentions"
(b) At pp 216-217, Stuart-Smith LJ turned to the judgment of the French court, and sets out an extract that it appears came from the motifs section, and concluded from this that the French court decided that both the proceedings in England and France were an attempt to stifle the unlawful competition in France, based on malice and a lack of bona fide belief.
(c) At p 225, Hobhouse LJ stated:
"[85] But, to adopt the approach of my Lord Dillon LJ, to the judgment of Wright J [a judgment in the English proceedings]. I consider that those statements by the French Court were observations upon the state of the evidence not the determination of issues. It is trite to say that issue estoppel only arises from the determination of an issue by a court, not from observations made about evidence or other collateral matters.
86 […] I prefer the view that […] the observations in the Paris court about what happened in London were merely observations which were relevant but not the determination of any issue which was actually before the Paris Court"
(emphasis added)
(3) It does not appear from the judgment that the Court of Appeal considered (or were asked to consider) whether findings in the motifs section of the judgment could ever constitute anything more than collateral comments as a matter of French law. None of the judges refer to any expert evidence on French law. Indeed, all three judges adopted what might be regarded as a distinctly English approach to analysing the French court's judgment, examining whether particular factual findings were "necessary" to the determination in the dispositif, rather than looking at the content of the dispositif itself. Most clearly, at [85], Hobhouse LJ applied the same approach to the French judgment as did Dillon LJ "to the judgment of Wright J".
(4) In any event, I do not consider that this decision takes the issues before me any further. Ultimately foreign law is a question of fact, and is to be determined in accordance with the expert evidence before the court.
(4) Same Issues
Conclusion on Issue Estoppel
C.2 Abuse of Process in relation to Allegedly Overlapping Claims
(1) Parties' Contentions
(1) The Claimant brought multiple proceedings in two jurisdictions in respect of the same subject-matter: namely, claims which rely on the same core factual allegations, which both require the same factual enquiry into the events leading to, and of, 3 August 2016.
(2) The claims in France have been dismissed and MAD International was not there deprived of an opportunity to advance its case.
(3) If MAD International's French appeal proceedings succeed, the majority of the claims in England fall away, and there would at least be a significant impact on damages in England if the Share Transfer Agreement were unwound.
(4) Mr Manès also submitted that the procedural conduct of MAD International in these proceedings was abusive.
(1) There can be no collateral attack on the Paris Judgment, because there was no issue estoppel from that foreign judgment in relation to the claims advanced in its Particulars of Claim.
(2) The issues contained in the Particulars of Claim are much broader than the issues before or determined by the Paris Commercial Court.
(3) Most of the claims for breach of contract do not fall away if the appeal in the French Civil Proceedings succeeds.
(4) Mr Manès is not privy to the French Civil Proceedings, which is a strong factor militating against any finding of abuse of process.
(5) There is no general rule against apparently inconsistent judgments on the facts as amounting to an abuse of process (Michael Wilson at [42]).
(6) The exclusive jurisdiction agreement in favour of England means that proceedings in this country were clearly contemplated by the contracting parties (and as such are not abusive).
(7) As to Henderson v Henderson type abuse, MAD International could not have brought these allegations in the French Civil Proceedings due to the exclusive jurisdiction clause in the JVA, and the absence of identity of interest is a powerful factor against a finding of abuse of process.
Discussion
(1) The French Civil Proceedings Do Not Give Rise to Issue Estoppel
(1) If the English proceedings involve some form of collateral attack on the decision of a foreign court, but there is no issue estoppel from that foreign court's judgment, this will generally not amount to an abuse of process: see SCB Flaux J at [164], and the Court of Appeal at [40].
(2) Even if there can be an abuse of process in the absence of an issue estoppel on the facts of a particular case, this will be rare as recognised by Longmore LJ in SCB at [41]: "of course there can be abuse in circumstances in which there is no issue estoppel, but such cases will, in general, be rare and any decision that a litigant is not entitled to have its dispute in the courts of the country permitted by the terms of the contract will be rarer still". For the reasons set out below I do not consider that Mr Manès has established that these proceedings are to be regarded as an abuse.
(2) Issues in English Proceedings Broader than French Civil Proceedings
(1) The misleading and misunderstanding allegations help establish breach in relation to two of MAD International's breach allegations:
(a) Breach of clause 2.8 JVA (failing to use reasonable endeavours to promote and develop the business of the JV Group, at [37] PoC). These allegations are relevant to how Mr Padberg "caused" MAD International to agree to sell the shares without any meaningful prior negotiations ([37.2]).
(b) Possible breach of the obligation to act in good faith at [40] PoC. This is a "mixed" breach, in that some of the sub-paragraphs are affected by the allegations ([40.1], [40.5] and tangentially [40.6]) but the others are not.
(2) Mr Manès' alleged breaches of clauses 5.1 and 5.3 JVA have nothing to do with Mr Manès misleading Mr Padberg as to the purpose of the 3 August Meeting. They relate to a failure to inform persons other than Mr Padberg of the (proposed/envisaged) sale: namely, the Board and the Supervisory Committee and such breaches precede the events of 3 August 2016.
(3) Further, there is an independent breach in [47] POC: that one of the foregoing breaches caused the JVA to be terminated automatically, or (failing that) Mr Manès after 3 August 2016 failed to devote all his time and attention to the Business in breach of Clause 7.3 JVA, in repudiatory breach of the JVA. Again, this has nothing to do with the purported misleading of Mr Padberg.
(4) There are two more breaches (of clauses 9.1 and 14.2) which Mr Manès accepts are independent at the breach stage, though he claims that they produce no independent head of loss.
(1) MAD International will rely on the allegation that Mr Padberg did not understand the documents that he was signing, as I have noted. However, this is in order to prove one of its causation theories at [44] PoC: "if Mr Manès had informed Dream/the Supervisory Committee/the Board and/or Mr Padberg of the true purpose of the meeting, [then] Mr Padberg would not have attended the meeting and/or would not have signed the Share Transfer Document". This particular theory of causation does not require Mr Padberg to have misunderstood the documents in order for loss to be established. Some of the factual scenarios pleaded by MAD International have nothing to do with Mr Padberg's understanding. For example, if Mr Manès had informed Dream/the Board/the Supervisory Committee about the true purpose of the meeting then it is MAD International's case that Mr Padberg would not have attended the meeting, or he would not have signed the transfer documents because Dream/the Board/the Supervisory Committee would not have allowed him to attend (as, for the reasons set out below), they would not have approved of the share sale.
(2) In this regard, MAD International are running another case on causation at [45] PoC: that if Mr Manès had complied with his positive obligation to inform Dream, the Supervisory Committee or the Board of the upcoming sale, they would not have approved the sale of the shares, or the Board would not have agreed to the shares at an undervalue. Again, none of this requires MAD International to establish that Mr Manès misled Mr Padberg about the purpose of the meeting.
(3) The majority of the claim does not fall away on the resolution of the appeal in the French Civil Proceedings
(1) In France, the claim is for the transfer of the shares back, and damages flowing from that. Whether the transaction was at an undervalue may also be the subject of the appeal court's enquiry, if it decides that the share transfer is fraudulent. If MAD International succeeds in its French appeal, the share transfer will be unwound, and it may receive damages.
(2) In England, there are several independent claims for breach, which do not rely on proving that Mr Manès misled Mr Padberg, or that Mr Padberg did not understand the documents.
(3) The majority of MAD International's losses in the English Proceedings will not be affected by the unwinding of the Share Transfer Agreement by the Paris Appeal Court:
(a) The independent breach in [47] PoC relates to the termination and/or repudiation of the JVA. It comes with a separate form of loss (namely, the lost opportunity to develop the joint venture business). The extent of this loss has not yet been determined, but MAD International's case is that its loss is in the region of at least €10 million.
(b) The breaches which relate to the 3 August Meeting allegations lead to a different head of loss: sale of the shares at an undervalue which is set out at [45] and [46] PoC. This loss is quantified as "at least around €4.4 million" in [46] PoC. This is the loss that could be affected by an unwinding of the share transaction in France.
(4) Mr Manès is not privy to the French Civil Proceedings
(5) Exclusive Jurisdiction clause in the JVA
(6) No prima facie presumption that proceedings with overlapping factual issues are an abuse
(7) No Henderson v Henderson Abuse of Process
Conclusion
C.3 Summary Judgment on the Merits
(1) that the Allegedly Overlapping Claims have no real prospect of success on account of issue estoppel arising from the French Civil Proceedings (considered and rejected above) or because they fail due to a lack of causation;
(2) the "Remaining Claims" should be summarily dismissed for want of causation. The Remaining Claims are that Mr Manès breached clause 9.1 JVA by failing to produce a first draft of the Initial Business Plan; and clause 14.2 JVA by transferring his legal interest in his entire shareholding in Ragnar to Mr Alcan without the prior knowledge or written consent of Dream.
(1) The Allegedly Overlapping Claims
(1) Mr Manès contended that MAD International did not make any allegations in the present proceedings that Mr Padberg failed to understand the documents, so their claims stood no prospect of success because they would inevitably fail on causation.
(2) However, it is clear that MAD International are contending in the English Proceedings that Mr Padberg did not understand the documents, notwithstanding the errors in Mr Rimmington's witness statement. One of the allegations in [44] PoC is that if Mr Manès had informed Mr Padberg of the true purpose of the meeting, Mr Padberg would not have signed the Share Transfer Documents. This contains the common-sense proposition that Mr Padberg did not understand the Share Transfer Documents that he did sign. In particular, the pleadings at [44] refer to the contents of the letter of 20 December 2019, in which Mr Padberg explains that he did not understand the signed documents. Mr Manès contended that whilst the pleadings did set out the contents of this letter earlier at [33], they did not mention what Mr Padberg alleges now about his own mistaken belief. However, the PoC at [44] clearly plead reliance on the contents of that letter, not just its outline in the PoC. Mr Manès submits that he is entitled to rely on the statement of Mr Rimmington. However, I am satisfied that what was stated there was stated in error, and did not accurately reflect MAD International's pleaded case (supported by a Statement of Truth). Ultimately it is to the statements of case that regard is to be had in circumstances where the evidence before me is that Mr Rimmington made an error in his witness statement.
(3) In any event it is well arguable that MAD International's case on breach of contract would not fail as a matter of causation if they did not allege that Mr Padberg failed to understand the documents. As already addressed, there are independent, and prior, breaches of contract alleged (in failing to notify the Board etc) with their own potential causative potency.
(2) The Remaining Claims
(1) As to breach of Clause 9: failure to draft the Initial Business Plan is relevant to and evidence of Mr Manès' failure to use reasonable endeavours to promote and develop the JV Group business under Clause 2.8 and/or the implied term of good faith. Further, the lack of an Initial Business Plan prevented MAD International from being able fully to develop the JV Group business to the extent envisaged by the JVA. These breaches all result in losses that contribute to the overall loss of MAD International's opportunity to develop the joint venture (set out at [48] PoC).
(2) As to the breach of Clause 14.2: Mr Manès' failure to retain his shareholding is also part of the obligation to promote and develop the joint venture in the best interests of MAD International and the JV Group. This is part of, and relevant to, his obligations under Clause 2.8, and the implied term of good faith. These breaches all contributed to the overall loss of MAD International's opportunity to develop this joint venture (set out at [48] PoC).
(3) Precisely what flows from what breach of contract (in terms of "lost development opportunity") will ultimately be a matter for determination at trial.
(1) In claims for breach of contract, nominal damages are still available even if no substantial damages are claimed, or if substantial damages are claimed, but not proved at trial. All that needs to be pleaded is a viable breach of contract – see Chitty on Contracts at 26-010.
(2) It is well-established (contrast the position in tort) that loss is not an essential ingredient of a cause of action for breach of contract. Each of the allegations of breach of contract is properly arguable. The fact that damages may be small or nominal is not itself enough to strike out a claim or to grant summary judgment in respect of it – see Shaw v Leigh Day [2017] EWHC 825 (QB) at [36], [42] and [45]-[47].
(3) Other Alleged Grounds for Summary Judgment
"(3) The application notice or the evidence contained or referred to in it or served with it must –
(a) identify concisely any point of law or provision in a document on which the applicant relies, and/or
(b) state that it is made because the applicant believes that on the evidence the respondent has no real prospect of succeeding on the claim or issue or (as the case may be) of successfully defending the claim or issue to which the application relates"
C.4 Conclusion on Application to Strike Out the Allegedly Overlapping Claims on the basis of Summary Judgment or Abuse of Process
C.5 Case Management Stay in relation to Allegedly Overlapping Claims
(1) Parties should generally be held to their contractual bargain that England is the only jurisdiction to hear the claims: Standard Chartered Bank and National Westminster Bank v Utrecht-America Finance [2001] Lloyd's Rep Bank 285, endorsed in SCB by Flaux J at [129] and [131]. Both of those cases concerned non-exclusive jurisdiction clauses in favour of England: the argument against granting a stay is even stronger in the present case, as the JVA contains an exclusive jurisdiction clause, so the contracting parties do not even contemplate any proceedings outside England under the JVA.
(2) A case management stay should not be used to undermine the effect of Article 25 BIR in giving the English court jurisdiction. This argument relates to Mr Manès' contention that he should not face the increased costs and danger of inconsistent judgments which he contends exist because he is facing the same factual allegations in two separate jurisdictions. These are factors that one could rely on to displace an exclusive jurisdiction clause in a forum non conveniens context: such factors cannot be relied upon where (as here) Article 25 designates England as having jurisdiction: doing so would amount to using the court's inherent power to stay proceedings on case management grounds inconsistently with the BIR: see Mazur Media, at p.2983 ([69]-[70]), Lawrence Collins J. In any event, Mr Manès makes no application to challenge the English court's jurisdiction pursuant to the relevant Articles: he has accepted that he cannot (because of Article 25) challenge jurisdiction established by an English choice of court clause on forum non conveniens grounds. I do not consider that the very same grounds would justify a case management stay.
D. Conclusion