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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 >> Public Institution for Social Security v Ruimy & Anor [2023] EWHC 177 (Comm) (31 January 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2023/177.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 177 (Comm) |
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(consolidated with CL-2020-000866 and CL-2021-000656) |
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 :
____________________
THE PUBLIC INSTITUTION FOR SOCIAL SECURITY |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) MR ELY MICHEL RUIMY (2) AERIUM FINANCE LIMITED |
Defendants |
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Adam Kramer KC, Ian Higgins, and Sophia Dzwig (instructed by Latham & Watkins LLP) for the Defendants (Mr Ruimy and Aerium Finance Ltd)
Hearing date: Monday 16th January 2023
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE JACOBS :
A: Introduction and background
The application
PIFSS' claim
Procedural background to the present applications
(i) January 2021 (London, disputed by Mr Ruimy);
(ii) June 2021 (Morocco, disputed by Mr Ruimy); and
(iii) November 2021 (London). Here, the fact of service is admitted, but Mr Ruimy alleges that it fell outside the period of validity of the claim form, if an order extending it made by Bryan J were to be set aside.
"1.1 Whether the English court is the appropriate forum to hear the claims against AFL and Mr Ruimy in connection with each of the First and Second Claims. For the avoidance of doubt, this issue will not include consideration or determination of any disputed issue: (i) as to the validity of service of the First Claim on Mr. Ruimy; (ii) arising out of the Claimant's application to serve the First Claim on Mr. Ruimy out of the jurisdiction or its application to extend time for service of the First Claim.
1.2 Whether the First Claim should be stayed on the basis of Art. 34 Brussels Recast Regulation ("Brussels Recast")."
B: The Swiss proceedings
Commandements de payer
"Compensation resulting from the debtor's involvement in complex, hidden structures put in place in order to channel towards Fahad Al-Rajaan, the former Director General of the creditor, and to his wife certain undue benefits granted in exchange for investments between 1994 and 2015 having a countervalue of CHF 228 million originating in particular from the Mirabaud Group."
"Art. 78 Objection to the payment order
Effects
The objection to the payment order will lead to the suspension of the debt enforcement proceedings.
If the debtor only objects to part of the claim, the debt enforcement may be continued for the undisputed amount.
Art. 79 Setting aside of the objection to the payment order
In civil or administrative proceedings
A creditor against whose debt enforcement an objection to the payment order has been made, must assert their claim in civil or administrative proceedings. They may only obtain the continuation of debt enforcement on the basis of an enforceable decision which expressly sets aside the objection to the payment order."
i) may be issued by a claimant who seeks payment (whether or not there is a written and signed acknowledgment of debt).
ii) have the effect of restarting the applicable limitation period (as do ordinary civil proceedings), even if the process is not pursued or an objection is sustained.
iii) if following service the recipient does not object (within a period), the applicant can request the Debt Collection Office to move to enforcement.
iv) if the recipient objects, enforcement by the Debt Collection Office (who, as set out below, enforce all money claims) is suspended pending the result of either (i) ordinary civil proceedings or administrative proceedings or (ii) or mainlevιe provisoire / definitive. The latter is a summary proceeding where (in the case of a written and signed acknowledgment of debt or pre-existing judgment) the objection to the commandement de payer may be lifted by the court (allowing the Debt Collection Office to proceed to enforcement).
i) are entities existing in each Swiss canton whose existence is mandated by Swiss Federal Law. They may fall within the judicial branch or the wider administrative branch (this varies between cantons: in Vaud they are within the judicial branch, whereas in Geneva they fall under the Department of Finances and Human Resources), but as a matter of Swiss law, are not "courts" and are not staffed by "judges".
ii) are subject to duties of et altera pars audiatur and impartiality.
iii) are responsible for all enforcement of monetary debts by the Swiss State, including (but not limited to) those following a conventional court decision on the merits after ordinary civil proceedings.
Contribution proceedings
Proceedings by PIFSS against the Mirabaud parties
C: Forum non conveniens - the parties' arguments
AFL/Mr Ruimy's submissions
PIFSS' submissions
D: Forum conveniens - discussion
(1) The relevance of the existing proceedings in England
"Fragmentation of disputes leads to increased time and cost, increased demands on parties and witnesses, the risk of different fora proceeding on the basis of different evidence, and the key danger of inconsistent outcomes".
"28. I do not accept that the second proposition can be taken as a rule. It fails to distinguish the case in which the anchor defendant is the chief protagonist from the case where he is a minor player. A decision that permission should be granted to serve the protagonist out of the jurisdiction because the minor player is domiciled within the jurisdiction would indeed allow the tail to wag the dog. But if the anchor defendant is the protagonist a decision to allow a minor player to be served outside the jurisdiction may be entirely appropriate. That would be, to continue the metaphor, to allow the dog to wag the tail. Just as it may make little sense to have the venue determined by where the claim against the most insignificant player will be heard, so it may make little sense to have the venue where the most significant will be sued passed over in favour of another jurisdiction to whose jurisdiction a lesser player is subject. I do not mean thereby to suggest that whether or not jurisdiction should be exercised against a foreign defendant is necessarily determined by whether the anchor defendant, or the defendant sought to be joined, fits into some particular descriptive category ("major/minor"; "principal/secondary"); only that a decision as to appropriate forum must necessarily take account of the relative importance in the case of different defendants and particularly those against whom proceedings in England are practically bound to continue."
"In cases where the court has found that, in practice, the claimants will in any event continue against the anchor defendant in England, the avoidance of irreconcilable judgments has frequently been found to be decisive in favour of England as the proper place, even in cases where all the other connecting factors appeared to favour a foreign jurisdiction".
"the similar fact pattern of Secret Commissions as pleaded in relation to and evidenced by the other Schemes pleaded herein".
"In what circumstances, for what reason or purpose, pursuant to what communications, arrangements or agreements (and with whose knowledge, approval, instructions or advice) were payments made by Aerium/Mr Ruimy (or at his / their direction) to Mr Al Rajaan or companies or accounts nominated by him or on his behalf?"
Disclosure on such approved issues will be given on 31 May 2023. Having made such progress, it is in my view desirable that AFL/Mr Ruimy are added to the English litigation rather than PIFSS having to sue them afresh in Switzerland.
(2) Factual connections of the events to England
(3) Defendants' connections to England
(4) Place of the torts/wrongs
(5) Switzerland as the centre of gravity of the dispute
(6) The Swiss proceedings
(7) Swiss law restrictions on the use of evidence
(8) Swiss law
(9) Conclusion
E: Other issues
"1. Where jurisdiction is based on Article 4 or on Articles 7, 8 or 9 and an action is pending before a court of a third State at the time when a court in a Member State is seised of an action which is related to the action in the court of the third State, the court of the Member State may stay the proceedings if:
(a) it is expedient to hear and determine the related actions together to avoid the risk of irreconcilable judgments resulting from separate proceedings;
(b) it is expected that the court of the third State will give a judgment capable of recognition and, where applicable, of enforcement in that Member State; and
(c) the court of the Member State is satisfied that a stay is necessary for the proper administration of justice.
2. The court of the Member State may continue the proceedings at any time if:
(a) it appears to the court of the Member State that there is no longer a risk of irreconcilable judgments;
(b) the proceedings in the court of the third State are themselves stayed or discontinued;
(c) it appears to the court of the Member State that the proceedings in the court of the third State are unlikely to be concluded within a reasonable time; or
(d) the continuation of the proceedings is required for the proper administration of justice."
"The action in the third state must be pending before the third state court when the member state court becomes seised of the action".
Conclusion