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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Transfield Shipping Inc v Chiping Xinfa Huayu Alumina Co Ltd [2009] EWHC 3629 (QB) (22 December 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2009/3629.html Cite as: [2009] EWHC 3629 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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TRANSFIELD SHIPPING INC |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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CHIPING XINFA HUAYU ALUMINA CO LTD |
Defendant |
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appeared on behalf of the Claimant
MR SEAN O'SULLIVAN (instructed by Richards Butler)
appeared on behalf of the Defendant
Hearing dates: Tuesday 22nd December 2009
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE CHRISTOPHER CLARKE:
Background
29 July
"MANY THANKS FOR YOUR EFFORTS SO FAR. WE WOULD LIKE TO MAKE THE FOLLOWING RECAP."
In the email, Transfield indicated that it was also providing the recap by fax and invited Chiping, if the recap was agreeable, to give a confirmation by return by signing and stamping the fax and sending it back to Transfield's Beijing office.
1 August
4 August
6 August
7 August
"3. Per our telcon, we maintain London. Therefore, charter party is all clean."
Posting of the charterparty and Mr Zang's return
Late August
"Faced with the tremendous pressure of production costs in a poor market for oxidised aluminium, we are forced to request to cancel the Contract of Carriage by Sea signed on 1 August 2008 for the shipment of India bauxite. We detail our request below
[He then set out the problems that had arisen in the aluminium market].
Based on the reasons above, we request to cancel the India Contract of Carriage by Sea entered into with you. We hope that you will understand our difficulties and that we are under tremendous pressure to survive. We look forward to your understanding and support. We hope to keep a good working relationship with you."
"Dear Mr Liu,
In the circumstances that the economy of China is entering an adjustment period and that the domestic market for oxidised aluminium is down, we understand that you are facing tremendous pressure on your production costs. However, an obligation under a contract is strict. We cannot accept your suggestion of terminating the India Contract of Carriage by Sea. Our replies are as follows:
1. Both parties have already officially confirmed the contents and terms of the contract on 7 August 2008. The contract has officially taken effect. We have begun our work of co-ordinating and organising capacity ...
Cancelling the contract will definitely cause us significant loss and unforeseeable consequences which we could not accept. At the same time, we also understand the market pressure faced by you. In line with our win-win business concept, we hope that both parties can find a more constructive way in this difficult situation."
"Dear Mr Yu,
Based on the present freight market and alumina market, we are really not in the position to proceed with the contract you mention below. Please kindly support us and give us your precious understanding."
"After examination, it shows that although the Plaintiff and the Defendant have signed a chartering contract confirmation, the two parties have not reached a consensus on the clauses of the chartering contract. Given that the plaintiff's litigation demand is a demand that requests the Court to rule that the contract between the Plaintiff and the Defendant does not exist, so there exist no arbitration clauses or arbitration agreements between the two parties.
The Court considers that since the evidence included in the objection over the jurisdiction the Defendant submitted does not contain clear arbitration clauses or arbitration agreements which the plaintiff has acknowledged by signing, whether the transportation contract between the Plaintiff and the Defendant is valid and whether effective arbitration clauses exist shall be determined by a hearing."
"Although matters concerning the agreement of arbitration clauses were involved in negotiations, the two parties did not sign for acknowledgement. In accordance with the reply and opinion titled …… of the Supreme People's Court, the arbitration clauses the two parties negotiated on were void because there was no written acknowledgement. As the case relates to disputes arising from contracts for sea transportation of goods and the two parties have only agreed in the chartering contract confirmation that the loading port is a major port in Shandong, China, the Qingdao Maritime Court shall have jurisdiction over the case. The court does not support the appealing reasons of the Appellant."
Breach of agreement
(1) Unless there is a good reason to the contrary, the English court will hold parties to a bargain which they have reached with regard to the jurisdiction in which any disputes between them are to be litigated or determined: see The Angelic Grace [1995] 1 Lloyd's Rep 87 and Akai Pty Ltd v People's Insurance Co Ltd [1998] 1 Lloyd's Rep 90
(2) The rejection by a foreign court of a jurisdiction challenge is irrelevant to the question of whether or not an anti-suit injunction will issue, unless the foreign court is bound to apply the same principles as the English court and has applied those principles in coming to its decision: see Akai and Schiffahrtsgesellschaft Detlef von Appen GmbH v Voest Alpine Intertrading GmbH (The Jay Bola) [1997] 1 Lloyd's Rep 179).
(3) Where there is a dispute as to whether or not there is a contract at all containing an arbitration agreement, it may be sufficient for the parties seeking anti-suit relief to demonstrate a good arguable case as to the existence of the agreement: see Youell v Kara Mara Shipping Co Ltd [2000] 2 Lloyd's Rep 102). Even if the test is higher an applicant is required to show no more than that there is a high probability that he is right: see Bankers Trust Co v PT Jakarta International Hotels & Development [1999] 1 Lloyd's Rep 910).
(4) The stage which the foreign proceedings have reached is a material consideration to be taken into account when considering whether or not an injunction should issue. However, it remains the case that where there is a clear breach of a jurisdiction clause, whilst an injunction will not issue as a matter of course, it will usually be granted unless some good reason is shown as to why it should not be : see Akai.
(5) The present application is not too late. The rejection by the Chinese courts of Transfield's challenge has only lately occurred. The date for the fixture of the trial has also only recently occurred. Only comparatively recently has it become apparent that there will be a trial of the issue as to whether there was a contract in China before the arbitrators rule on their jurisdiction. The balance of convenience is strongly in favour of restraining Chiping from further progressing the Chinese proceedings until the arbitrators have ruled on their own jurisdiction.
(i) falls well short of the standard required for the granting of an anti-suit injunction, there being, as it claims, a very significant factual dispute as to whether there was an arbitration clause which bound the parties.
(ii) has been made far too late in circumstances where Transfield has been making applications and pursuing appeals of its own in the proceedings in China.
(iii) would, if granted, in effect derail a trial which has been listed to begin on 28 December such that the practical effect of the order sought, far from holding the ring, involves aborting the trial at the very last moment.
The test
"6. There is no difference in principle between an injunction to restrain proceedings in breach of an arbitration clause and one to restrain proceedings in breach of an exclusive jurisdiction clause. The justification for the grant of the injunction in both cases is that without it the claimant will be deprived of its contractual rights in a situation in which damages are manifestly an inadequate remedy (see The Angelic Grace, [1995] 1 Lloyds Rep 87 at 96, Millett LJ.)
7. It would be inappropriate to grant an interlocutory injunction to restrain foreign proceedings at a time when it is no more than arguable that they were brought in breach of contract, because it could not be said that such proceedings were vexatious or oppressive (see Clarke LJ in National Westminster Bank v Utrecht-America Finance Company [2001] 2 All ER (Comm) 7 ).
8. On an application to restrain foreign proceedings brought in (alleged) breach of an arbitration agreement alleged to be governed by English law, the applicant must show to a high degree of probability that its case is right and that it is entitled as of right to restrain the foreign proceedings (see Coleman J in Bankers Trust Co v PT Mayora Indah (20 January 1999, unreported) and Cresswell J in Bankers Trust Co v PT Jakarta International Hotels and Development [1999] All ER (Comm) 785 )."
"This is a case where an anti-suit injunction is sought at the interlocutory stage of proceedings. However, if the injunction is granted its effect is likely to be final because it will end the Tunisian proceedings and enable the arbitration proceedings to be completed. In such circumstances this court has required the applicant for an anti-suit injunction to establish 'a high degree of probability' that its case against the respondent is right and that it is indeed entitled as of right to restrain the respondent from taking proceedings abroad."
"The court is not therefore able to reach the conclusion that Midgulf has established 'a high degree of probability' that its case against GCT, that the July contract included a London arbitration clause, is right and that it is therefore entitled as of right to restrain GCT from taking proceedings in Tunisia. I accept that Midgulf has a strongly arguable case to that effect but that is not sufficient in the present context for the reasons stated in Bankers Trust v Jakarta and American International Speciality Lines Insurance v Abbott Laboratories. That would suggest that the anti-suit injunction granted ex parte on notice by Burton J must be refused."
"I would respectfully suggest that it is in the interests of the chartering business that the courts should recognise the efficacy of the maritime variant of the well known 'subject to contract'. The expression 'subject to details' enables owners and charterers to know where they are in negotiations and to regulate their business accordingly. It is a device which tends to avoid disputes and the assumption of those in the shipping trade that it is effective to make clear that there is no binding agreement at that stage ought to be respected."
Delay
"In The Angelic Grace Millet LJ said that the English court need feel no diffidence in granting an anti-suit injunction 'provided that it is sought promptly and before the foreign proceedings are too far advanced'. The importance of proceeding without delay was emphasised by Mance J in Toepfer v Molino Boschi [1996] 1 Lloyd's Rep 510. That was perhaps an extreme case where there had been a delay of seven years in seeking an anti-suit injunction during which time the parties had exchanged exhaustive memoranda under Italian law and procedure regarding jurisdiction, arbitration and the merits. But Mance J's comments illustrate that a party who wishes to enforce a jurisdiction clause should apply promptly once he is aware of a breach of the arbitration clause."
"For my part, I do not contemplate that an Italian judge would regard it as an interference with comity if the English courts, having ruled on the scope of the English arbitration clause, then seek to enforce it by restraining the charterers by injunction from trying their luck in duplicated proceedings in the Italian court. I can think of nothing more patronising than for the English court to adopt the attitude that if the Italian court declines jurisdiction, that would meet with the approval of the English court, whereas if the Italian court assumed jurisdiction, the English court would then consider whether at that stage to intervene by injunction. That would be not only invidious but the reverse of comity.
The judge was not deterred from rejecting the approach by The Golden Anne [1984] 2 Lloyd's Rep 489 and in my judgment he was right not to be deterred."