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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 >> Cuccolini S.R.L v Elcan Industries Inc [2013] EWHC 2994 (QB) (08 October 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2013/2994.html Cite as: [2013] EWHC 2994 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Cuccolini S.R.L |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Elcan Industries Inc. |
Defendant |
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Alexander Milner (instructed by Osborne Clarke) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 25 September 2013
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Stuart-Smith:
Introduction
Factual Background
"28 GOVERNING LAW AND JURISDICTION
28.1 This Agreement and any dispute or claim arising out of it or in connection with it or its subject matter shall be governed by and construed in accordance with the laws of England and Wales.
28.2 The parties irrevocably agree that the courts of the England and Wales shall have the necessary jurisdiction to settle any dispute or claim that arises out of or in connection with this Agreement or its subject matter.
28.3 The parties shall nonetheless retain the right within their discretion to institute proceedings in any court having jurisdiction or, upon the written agreement of the parties, to resolve any disputes in accordance with alternative dispute resolutions such as mediation or arbitration."
The Issues
i) Does the Court have a discretion to stay the proceedings?ii) If the Court has a discretion to stay the proceedings, has Elcan satisfied the requirements to persuade the Court to do so?
iii) Did Cuccolini give full and frank disclosure to Master Roberts and, if not, should his order be set aside and jurisdiction declined for that reason?
Summary
Issue 1: Does the Court have a Discretion to Stay the Proceedings?
"If the parties, one or more of whom is domiciled in a Member State, have agreed that a court or the courts of a Member State are to have jurisdiction to settle any disputes which have arisen or which may arise in connection with a particular legal relationship, that court or those courts shall have jurisdiction."
"Subject to the provisions of this Convention, persons domiciled in a contracting state shall, whatever their nationality, be sued in the courts of that state."
Issue 2: If the Court Has a Discretion to Stay the Proceedings, Has Elcan Satisfied the Requirements to Persuade the Court to Do So?
The Applicable Principles
"i) The fact that the parties have freely negotiated a contract providing for the non-exclusive jurisdiction of the English courts and English law, creates a strong prima facie case that the English jurisdiction is the correct one. In such circumstances it is appropriate to approach the matter as though the claimant has founded jurisdiction here as of right, even though the clause is non-exclusive [ ]
ii) Although, in the exercise of its discretion, the court is entitled to have regard to all the circumstances of the case, the general rule is that the parties will be held to their contractual choice of English jurisdiction unless there are overwhelming, or at least very strong, reasons for departing from this rule [ ]
iii) Such overwhelming or very strong reasons do not include factors of convenience that were foreseeable at the time that the contract was entered into (save in exceptional circumstances involving the interests of justice); and it is not appropriate to embark upon a standard Spiliada balancing exercise. The defendant has to point to some factor which it could not have foreseen at the time the contract was concluded. Even if there is an unforeseeable factor or a party can point to some other reason which, in the interests of justice, points to another forum, this does not automatically lead to the conclusion that the court should exercise its discretion to release a party from its contractual bargain [ ] In particular, the fact that the defendant has, or is about, to institute proceedings in another jurisdiction, not contemplated by the non-exclusive jurisdiction clause, is not a strong or compelling reason to relieve a party from his bargain, notwithstanding the undesirability of parallel proceedings. Otherwise a party to a non-exclusive jurisdiction clause could avoid its agreement at will by commencing proceedings in another jurisdiction [ ]"
i) In the first sentence of (i), Gloster J should not have said that the fact that the parties had freely negotiated a contract providing for the non-exclusive jurisdiction of the English courts and English law created a strong prima facie case that the English jurisdiction is the correct one, but should merely have said that it created a strong prima facie case that the English jurisdiction is a correct one;ii) Gloster J went too far in the first sentence of (ii) in referring to overwhelming, or at least very strong, reasons for departing from the rule, and should instead have said that there needed to be strong reasons for departing from it.
"Although a non-exclusive English jurisdiction clause leaves the parties free to bring proceedings elsewhere without thereby committing any breach of contract, it has generally been regarded as a powerful factor in favour of allowing proceedings brought in this country to continue. There are, it seems to me, two reasons why that should be so. In the first place, as Mr. Berry submitted, a clause of that kind involves a contract by each party to submit to the jurisdiction of the English courts if the other chooses to bring proceedings in this country. Although neither party binds itself to bring any action here, each of them does agree to submit to the jurisdiction if an action is brought against it. Secondly, as part and parcel of agreeing to submit to the jurisdiction each party must be taken to have recognised that this country would be an appropriate forum for the trial of the action. In British Aerospace Plc v Dee Howard Co Waller J. recognised both of these factors. The contract before him in that case contained on its true construction an exclusive jurisdiction clause in favour of the courts of this country, but he also considered what the position would be if the jurisdiction clause were non-exclusive. Having considered the decisions of Hobhouse J. in S & W Berisford Plc v New Hampshire Insurance Co. [1990] 1 Lloyd's Rep.454 and Hirst J. in The Standard Steamship Owners' Protection and Indemnity Association v Gann [1992] 2 Lloyd's Rep. 528 he said (page 375 col.1):
"It seems to me on the language of the clause that I am considering here, it simply should not be open to DHC to start arguing about the relative merits of fighting an action in London, where the factors relied on would have been eminently foreseeable at the time that they entered into the contract. Furthermore, to rely before the English Court on the factor that they have commenced proceedings in Texas and therefore that there will be two sets of proceedings unless the English Court stops the English action should as I see it simply be impermissible, at least where jurisdiction in those proceedings has been immediately challenged. If the clause means what I suggest it means they are not entitled to resist the English jurisdiction if an action is commenced in England, it is DHC who have brought upon themselves the risk of two sets of proceedings if as is likely to happen BAe commence proceedings in England. Surely they must point to some factor which they could not have foreseen on which they can rely for displaying the bargain which they made i.e. that they would not object to the jurisdiction of the English Court.
Adopting that approach it seems to me that the inconvenience for witnesses, the location of documents, the timing of a trial and all such like matters are aspects which they are simply precluded from raising. Furthermore, commencing an action in Texas, albeit that may not be a breach of the clause, cannot give them a factor on which they can rely, unless of course the action has continued without protest from BAe."
As Waller J. subsequently made clear, he considered that the inclusion in the contract of a non-exclusive jurisdiction clause made it appropriate to approach the issue of forum conveniens as if the plaintiff had founded jurisdiction here as of right (see page 376 col.2). To that extent his comments relate directly to the position in the present case.
In principle I would respectfully agree with that approach. Although I think that the court is entitled to have regard to all the circumstances of the case, particular weight should in my view attach to the fact that the defendant has freely agreed as part of his bargain to submit to the jurisdiction. In principle he should be held to that bargain unless there are overwhelming reasons to the contrary. I would not go so far as to say that the court will never grant a stay unless circumstances have arisen which could not have been foreseen at the time the contract was made, but the cases in which it will do so are likely to be rare."
"If CTS is to obtain a stay of these proceedings, therefore, it can only be on the grounds that there are concurrent proceedings in California in which the same issues will be litigated. Mr. Ivory submitted that that is a powerful factor of itself and one which is "neutral" in the sense that CTS cannot be criticised for having begun proceedings there. However, there would be more force in the argument if CTS had not expressly agreed to submit to the jurisdiction of the courts of this country. As Waller J. pointed out in British Aerospace v Dee Howard Co, it is the defendant, in this case CTS, who has brought upon itself the risk of two sets of proceedings since it must have been aware when it started its own action that Mercury might well bring proceedings here to recover the amounts which it alleged still to be outstanding. If the court were generally to stay proceedings here simply on the grounds that the defendant had already commenced proceedings in another jurisdiction, it would effectively deny the plaintiff the benefit of the defendant's submission to the jurisdiction and encourage other parties who have had second thoughts about their contracts to rush to begin proceedings in another forum. The proceedings in California are still in their early stages and Mercury has not acquiesced in their continuation. The fact that its challenge to the jurisdiction has now been heard and dismissed does not seem to me to take the matter any further since whenever this application was heard the court would have had to take account of the possibility that the proceedings there would continue. In the circumstances of the present case I do not think that the existence of those proceedings provides sufficient grounds for staying this action."
"I am satisfied that it would require very strong grounds to override a choice of English jurisdiction, and that the normal forum conveniens factors have little or no role to play, especially where it could be inferred from the lack of other connections with England that the parties had chosen the English forum as a neutral forum."
"The authorities show that the English court may well decline to grant an injunction or a stay, as the case may be, where the interests of parties other than the parties bound by the exclusive jurisdiction clause are involved or grounds of claim not the subject of the clause are part of the relevant dispute so that there is a risk of parallel proceedings and inconsistent decisions. These decisions are instructive. In Evans Marshall & Co Ltd v Bertola SA [1973] 1 WLR 349 there was a tripartite dispute but only two of the parties were bound by a clause conferring exclusive jurisdiction on the court in Barcelona. Kerr J at first instance was impressed by the undesirability of there being two actions, one in London and the other in Barcelona (pp. 363364). The Court of Appeal took a similar view (pp. 377, 385). Sachs LJ thought separate trials particularly inappropriate where a conspiracy claim was in issue (p. 377). In Aratra Potato Co Ltd v Egyptian Navigation Co ('The El Amria') [1981] 2 Ll Rep 119 the primary dispute was between cargo interests and the owner of the vessel, both parties being bound by a clause in the bill of lading conferring exclusive jurisdiction on the courts of Egypt. But the cargo interests had also issued proceedings against the Mersey Docks and Harbour Co, which was not bound by the clause. The Court of Appeal upheld the judge's decision refusing a stay. In the course of his leading judgment in the Court of Appeal Brandon LJ said (at p. 128):
'I agree entirely with the judge's view on that matter, but would go rather further than he did in the passage from his judgment quoted above. By that I mean that I do not regard it merely as convenient that the two actions, in which many of the same issues fall to be determined, should be tried together; rather that I regard it as a potential disaster from a legal point of view if they were not, because of the risk inherent in separate trials, one in Egypt and the other in England, that the same issues might be determined differently in the two countries. See as to this Halifax Overseas Freighters Ltd v Rasno Export ("The Pine Hill") [1958] 2 Ll Rep 146 and Taunton-Collins v Cromie [1964] 1 WLR 633.'
Citi-March Ltd v Neptune Orient Lines Ltd [1996] 1 WLR 1367 also involved third party interests and raised the possibility of inconsistent decisions. Colman J regarded separate trials in England and Singapore as not only inconvenient but also a potential source of injustice and made an order intended to achieve a composite trial in London despite a Singaporean exclusive jurisdiction clause: see at pp 13751376. Mahavir Minerals Ltd v Cho Yang Shipping Co Ltd (The M C Pearl) [1997] CLC 794 again involved third parties and raised the possibility of inconsistent findings. Despite a clause conferring exclusive jurisdiction on the courts of Seoul, Rix J refused to stay proceedings in England. He regarded the case as on all fours with Citi-March (see p. 805) and at p. 798 observed:
'It seems to me that so far the plaintiffs have shown strong cause why the jurisdiction clause should not be enforced. This is indeed a paradigm case for the concentration of all the relevant parties' disputes in a single jurisdiction. If in such a case a host of different jurisdiction clauses were to be observed, the casualty at the root of the action would become virtually untriable. The action would fragment and reduplicate, at vast cost '
A similar approach is discernible in Ultisol Transport Contractors Ltd v Bouygues Offshore SA ('The Bos 400') [1998] CLC 1526, in which the disputes involved four parties only two of whom were bound by an English exclusive jurisdiction clause. Although the effect of the clause was described by Evans LJ as 'near-conclusive' (para. 29), an injunction to restrain proceedings in South Africa was refused. In para. 27 of his judgment Evans LJ said:
'In my judgment, two questions arise, one a matter of principle. First, should the court, when deciding whether or not to enforce the exclusive jurisdiction clause by means of an injunction which prevents Bouygues from continuing with its proceedings against Ultisol in South Africa, take into account the effects of such an injunction on persons who are not parties or entitled to enforce the contract containing the jurisdiction clause, Portnet and Caspian here, but who are both necessary and proper parties to the litigation wherever it is held? In my judgment, the clear answer to this question is "yes". Clarke J did so in his judgment and the contrary has not been argued before us. The relevance of the potential effects on third parties has been recognised in other authorities '
Sir John Knox also held that proceedings should be allowed to continue in South Africa because, among other reasons (see p. 1537),
'this is the only way in which to minimise, if not avoid altogether, the risk of inconsistent decisions in different jurisdictions.'"
"To a considerable extent the principles to be applied in an application in the context of a jurisdiction clause in a contract between the parties are the same whether a court is considering an application for a stay or an application for an anti-suit injunction; the principles generally differ only where the different nature of the relief sought renders a particular principle inapplicable to the form of relief." [Emphasis added]
More fundamentally, his statement is inconsistent with the clear statement by Lord Bingham at [24] of Donohue that:
"I am mindful that the principles governing the grant of injunctions and stays are not the same [as those governing the grant of anti-suit injunctions] . Considerations of comity arise in the one case but not in the other."
Application of the principles to the facts of the present case
i) First, the parties have agreed by Clause 28(1) that the Agreement and any dispute or claim arising out of "or in connection with it or its subject matter" shall be governed by and construed in accordance with the laws of England and Wales and by Clause 28(2) have irrevocably conferred jurisdiction upon the courts of England and Wales to settle any such dispute. It is therefore difficult to see how it can be unjust for the Courts of England and Wales to exercise jurisdiction in relation to the claims directly arising under the contract and the broader claims involving the third parties, all of which arise in connection with its subject matter;ii) As Elcan realistically accepted, the requirements for joining the third parties in the English litigation appear readily to be satisfied;
iii) Even if Peters and Mr Ramsay were to ignore the English proceedings and then to resist enforcement, which is not to be assumed as certain, that is a consequence of the agreement that the parties freely concluded;
iv) While obtaining the assistance of the US courts in support of the English litigation may be cumbersome, that too is a consequence of the parties' agreement;
v) Difficulties in relation to compulsion and the conduct of the litigation in England may be seen as the price (which was evidently considered to be acceptable when concluding the Agreement) to be paid by the parties for the advantages of England's provision of a neutral forum.
Issue 3: Material Non-Disclosure
The Applicable Principles
"On an application without notice the duty of the applicant is to make a full and fair disclosure of all the material facts, i e those which it is material (in the objective sense) for the judge to know in dealing with the application as made... But an applicant does not have a duty to disclose points against him which have not been raised by the other side and in respect of which there is no reason to anticipate that the other side would raise such points if it were present.
... it has been held that it would not be reasonable to expect an applicant for permission to serve out to anticipate all the arguments or points which might be raised against his case... A failure to refer to arguments on the merits which the defendant might raise at trial should not generally be characterised as a "failure to make full and fair disclosure", unless they are of such weight that their omission may mislead the court in exercising its jurisdiction under the rule and its discretion whether or not to grant permission..."
He then adopted with approval the dictum of Kerr J in BP Exploration v Hunt [1976] 3 All ER 879, at 894:
"the court should not consider the supporting affidavit as though it were marking an examination paper, deciding one way or the other merely on the basis of the extent to which the affidavit could have been improved. The primary question should be whether in all the circumstances the effect of the affidavit is such as to mislead the court in any material respect concerning its jurisdiction and the discretion under the rule."
"Materiality therefore depends in every case on the nature of the application and the matters relevant to be known by the judge when hearing it. I was referred to a number of statements on the duty of disclosure in the context of applications for freezing injunctions. In such cases the court is being asked to make an order of an exceptional kind, prohibiting or restricting a defendant's use of its own assets before any adjudication has been made against it. Because of its draconian nature, it is a jurisdiction which requires great caution and a wide range of factors may have a bearing on the court's decision.
An application for permission to serve out of the jurisdiction is of a very different nature. The general principles about disclosure on without notice applications still apply, but the context is different. The focus of the inquiry is on whether the court should assume jurisdiction over a dispute. The court needs to be satisfied that there is a dispute properly to be heard (i.e. that there is a serious issue to be tried); that there is a good arguable case that the court has jurisdiction to hear it; and that England is clearly the appropriate forum. Beyond that, the court is not concerned with the merits of the case."
"The existence of overlapping proceedings in a foreign jurisdiction between the same or related parties (whether pending or prospective) is likely to be a particularly relevant matter which in normal circumstances must be disclosed, and the non-disclosure of which may well of itself lead to the order for permission being set aside." [Emphasis added by Elcan]
Application of the principles to the facts of the present case
i) If it had been Cuccolini's perception that issuing the English proceedings before proceedings were issued elsewhere would gain it an advantage in the context of a forum non conveniens dispute, that perception would have been mistaken. Accordingly, it could not have influenced the Master's decision whether to give permission to serve out and was immaterial;ii) The fact that the proceedings were being issued "for declaratory relief only" did not mean that the proceedings were insubstantial, vexatious or improper. A declaratory judgment would have the effect of establishing that Cuccolini's termination of the Agreement was lawful and would therefore dispose of Elcan's arguments that it was unlawful because of the existence of a conspiracy. It would be enforceable in the United Kingdom and in Cuccolini's home country, Italy; and Elcan confirmed that it does not submit that it would be unenforceable in New York. These are substantial benefits to be derived from the litigation. Nor can it be said that the proceedings are vexatious or improper when Elcan does not dispute the validity of Clause 28 or that it provides a proper basis for an application for permission to serve out of the jurisdiction;
iii) The mere fact that Cuccolini may have contemplated that proceedings might be brought by Elcan in another jurisdiction does not mean that there were "pending or prospective" proceedings within the meaning of Lawrence Collins J's observation in the Ophthalmic case and, even if it did, does not render that fact material. Foreign proceedings may always be contemplated in a case founded on a non-exclusive jurisdiction clause but that does not of itself render the possibility material. Ms Hill referred expressly to the jurisdiction clause in her witness statement in support and exhibited the Agreement: she therefore made full disclosure of the basis upon which jurisdiction was founded.
Conclusion