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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 >> Celestial Aviation Services LTD v UniCredit Bank AG, London Branch [2023] EWHC 1071 (Comm) (05 May 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2023/1071.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 1071 (Comm) |
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Claim No. CL-2022-000216 |
KING'S BENCH DIVISION
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
COMMERCIAL COURT
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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CELESTIAL AVIATION SERVICES LIMITED |
Claim No. CL-2022-000135 Part 8 Claimant |
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- and - |
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UNICREDIT BANK AG, LONDON BRANCH |
Part 8 Defendant |
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AND BETWEEN |
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(1) CONSTITUTION AIRCRAFT LEASING (IRELAND) 3 LIMITED (2) CONSTITUTION AIRCRAFT LEASING (IRELAND) 5 LIMITED |
Claim No. CL-2022-000216 Part 8 Claimants |
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- and - |
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UNICREDIT BANK AG, LONDON BRANCH |
Part 8 Defendant |
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Akhil Shah KC and Leonora Sagan (instructed by Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan UK LLP) for the Constitution Claimants
James McWilliams (instructed by Reynolds Porter Chamberlain LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: Friday 21 April 2023
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Crown Copyright ©
Christopher Hancock KC :
Introduction.
(1) Whether UniCredit has established an entitlement to rely on section 44 of the Sanctions and Anti Money-Laundering Act 2018 ("SAMLA").
(2) If so, what the relevance of that fact is to:
(a) Interest; and
(b) Costs.
(3) What rate of interest is applicable, if any, and for what period such interest is payable.
(4) What the basis of assessment of costs should be.
(5) What the amount of any interim payment should be.
Section 44 of SAMLA.
(1) UniCredit's decision not to make payment under the Letters of Credit was taken because it believed that Regulation 28 of the Russia (Sanctions) (EU Exit) (Amendment) (No. 3) Regulations ("Regulation 28") prohibited it from doing so; and
(2) that belief was a reasonable one.
(1) First, she says that the effect of the Lease Agreements was to make the aircraft available to the lessees, who were connected with Russia.
(2) Secondly, the payment under the Letters of Credit would be providing financial services in connection with those arrangements because the Letters of Credit, regardless of legal form, in substance provided security for the obligations of the lessees. By making payment under the Letters of Credit, UniCredit would therefore be providing funds in connection with an arrangement which had the object and effect of making the aircraft available to the lessees. In that regard, she noted that all the demands stated that they were served because the lessees had failed to comply with their obligations under the lease, and because the AAL Letters of Credit provided that they were provided in connection with the Lease Agreements.
"Assessing all the circumstances, UniCredit's belief that payment is prohibited by the UK Regulations is clearly reasonable. Those circumstances include:
1.1. The breadth of the statutory language of the prohibitions;
1.2. The issue of a licence in May 2022 by the Bundesbank permitting payments under EU law notwithstanding Article 3c, which is materially similar to Regulation 28 of the UK Regulations. The fact that the Bundesbank considered a licence was required to enable lawful payment under EU law reinforces the reasonableness of UniCredit's belief as to the scope of Regulation 28;
1.3. The information from the Claimants that other confirming banks had similarly taken the view that payments could not be made unless licenced;
1.4. The conduct of the UK licensing authorities in respect of the Licence Applications, including latterly, ECJU's issue of a licence on 22.09.22 and the communication from OFSI on 23.09.22 demonstrates that UniCredit was and continues to be reasonable in its belief;
1.5. The regulatory guidance, which makes clear that OFSI "interprets prohibitions widely";
1.6. The use of the low test of "reasonable cause to suspect" in the relevant offence-creating provisions. In Regulation 28 this test is used in the statutory defence; in Regulations 11 and 13 it is the mental element of the offence. In both cases, suspicion is a low test, namely where one considers there is a possibility, which is more than fanciful, that the relevant facts exist. Moreover, as in these cases, an offence which may be committed where a person has "reasonable cause to suspect" is of even wider scope and includes those who objectively assessed had reasonable cause to suspect that the relevant facts exist even where they do not themselves have actual (subjective) suspicion;
1.7. The extent of the criminal and civil penalties for breaches of the prohibitions. A breach of Regulation 28 is an indictable offence punishable with a maximum sentence of 10 years' imprisonment or a fine or both. A breach of Regulations 11 and 13 is an indictable offence punishable with up to 7 years' imprisonment or a fine or both. In both cases, criminal liability extends to officers of corporate bodies which commit offences with the consent or connivance of such officer or where the offending is attributable to any neglect on the part of such person. The regulatory guidance makes clear that breaches of the sanctions regime may result in enforcement actions for serious offences; and
1.8. The extent of civil liability (monetary penalties) for breaches and the recent amendment to establish this as strict liability. The Standard Chartered Bank penalty, both in value and its facts, underscores the serious consequences for breaches arising from honest mistakes as to the scope of Russia sanctions prohibitions."
(1) Licences were issued by the ECJU and OFSI in response to UniCredit's applications.
(2) As soon as UniCredit received the licenses that it considered enabled it to make payment under the Letters of Credit, it made arrangements to do so. Materially, and contrary to the (always) baseless suggestion made by Constitution and Celestial, UniCredit made this payment without receiving payment from Sberbank. Indeed, even now UniCredit is still to be paid by Sberbank and does not know when it will be paid.
(1) UniCredit is a major international bank and must therefore be familiar with the principle of autonomy in the field of international commerce.
(2) UniCredit's concern seemed in fact to be to protect its cash flow, by making sure that it did not have to pay out under its confirmation before it was put in funds by Sberbank. The Claimants submitted that this was clear from the manner in which the licence requests were phrased, tying payment out to receipt of the funds from Sberbank. They further submitted that the payment was not made until UniCredit obtained the licence in relation to receipt of Sberbank monies, as is apparent from the covering letter from OFSI to which I have made reference, which said nothing about the payment to the beneficiaries from funds other than those received from Sberbank. Finally, in this regard, the Claimants made reference to an attendance note of a meeting between RPC, UniCredit and OFSI in which the UniCredit representative said that if the Court were to order UniCredit to make payment to the beneficiaries and UniCredit was unable to recover these funds from Sberbank due to the sanctions, UniCredit would be left out of pocket whilst Sberbank would be better off, which would not be in accord with the sanctions.
(3) As regards the reliance placed on the OFSI licences, I was not shown these licences, but I was shown the covering letter from OFSI. That letter made clear that OFSI was not purporting to decide whether a licence was necessary to make payment to the beneficiaries under the confirmed letter of credit (which was the subject matter of the claim before me), but was instead licensing receipt of monies from Sberbank, although the licence would also enable the funds received to be used to make payment under the confirmations. In fact, as UniCredit has itself argued, it has funded the payments made, or some of them, itself, and is still chasing Sberbank, for reimbursement of certain of the payments.
(4) The effect of holding that Regulation 28 prevented compliance with obligations undertaken in the past would be to make it retrospective, which is not a reasonable conclusion.
(5) It was unreasonable to conclude that Regulation 28 covered a payment by a German entity to an Irish entity.
(6) Finally, it was only Regulation 28 which was of relevance in this regard. No reliance was placed on Regulations 11 or 13 or US law.
Interest.
(1) The default interest rate for US$ awards in the Commercial Court going forward shall be US Prime, irrespective of whether the claimant has a US place of operations or not and irrespective of whether the claim is a maritime claim or not: see [14].
(2) US Prime is the rate offered by US banks to their most creditworthy business customers. There is no default rule that there will always be an uplift over and above US Prime in an interest award: see [16].
(3) In some cases, even without evidence, it will be obvious from the general characteristics of the claimant that it would have to pay a higher rate to borrow US$ than a bank's most creditworthy customers. In such cases, the Court may well be persuaded to order interest at US Prime plus 1% or US Prime plus 2% for certain types of claimant. Any higher uplift will, however, likely require evidence to justify them: see [16].
(4) Where it is not obvious from the general characteristics of the claimant that it would have to pay interest at a higher rate than US Prime to borrow US$ the claimant will require evidence to justify a higher rate: see [16]-[17].
(1) The default position is that interest should be awarded at the US Prime Rate as UniCredit has proposed.
(2) There is nothing in the general characteristics of either Celestial or Constitution that suggests that they are likely to face a borrowing rate higher than US Prime. On the contrary, one would expect them to pay interest at or below that rate in circumstances where:
(a) as Celestial described itself in these proceedings, it is "a wholly-owned subsidiary of AerCap Holdings N.B. ("AerCap"), a Dutch company which is the world's largest aircraft leasing company";
(b) Constitution described itself in these proceedings as a wholly-owned subsidiary of Aircastle Limited, "an aircraft lessor which acquires, leases and sells commercial jet aircraft to airlines around the world" and which has a "a portfolio of over 260 aircraft, servicing approximately 80 customers in over 40 countries".
(3) Neither Celestial nor Constitution have adduced any evidence to show that they have to pay interest at a rate higher than US Prime on their US$ borrowings.
(1) Celestial rely on the judgment of Cockerill J in AerCap Ireland v Hainan Airlines Holding Co Ltd [2020] EWHC 2025 (Comm) in which Mrs Justice Cockerill granted post-judgment interest at the US Prime Rate +2%". Celestial argues that "[t]he 2% uplift applied in AerCap was applied to a claimant in the same corporate group as our client and that fairly approximates our client's likely cost of borrowing". This was a case decided before Lonestar, and I do not read it as laying down any general principle.
(2) Constitution argue that the rate claimed was "in accordance with the Commercial Court's practice in respect of USD denominated judgment debt", citing Pisante v Logothetis [2022] EWHC 2575 (Comm). However, Pisante again laid down no new principle, but simply reflected the task of the Court, namely "to choose an interest rate it considers will be a realistic reflection of the cost of borrowing for [the] claimant".
Costs