BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Strategic Technologies Pte Ltd v Procurement Bureau of the Republic of China Ministry of National Defence [2020] EWHC 362 (QB) (21 February 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2020/362.html Cite as: [2020] EWHC 362 (QB), [2020] WLR(D) 127, [2020] 1 WLR 3388, [2020] WLR 3388 |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Buy ICLR report: [2020] 1 WLR 3388] [View ICLR summary: [2020] WLR(D) 127] [Help]
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
STRATEGIC TECHNOLOGIES PTE LTD |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
||
PROCUREMENT BUREAU OF THE REPUBLIC OF CHINA MINISTRY OF NATIONAL DEFENCE |
Defendant |
____________________
MR JONATHAN MARK PHILLIPS (instructed by Dechert LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 28, 29, 30 January and 4 February 2020
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MRS JUSTICE CARR:
Introduction
i) For the MND: witness statements of Li-Chiang Yuan dated 4 February and 4 April 2019;
ii) For ST: a witness statement of Damian Prentice dated 6 March 2019.
i) On Cayman law: from Marc Kish for the MND and Andrew Woodcock for ST;
ii) On Taiwan law: from Professor Yao-ming Hsu for the MND and Hsin-lan Hsu for ST.
The Facts
The original contract between the parties
The proceedings in Singapore
"…The basis is that there is an arbitration clause which deals with any dispute between the parties. As can be seen from the above, the dispute actually deals with the carrying out of the Contractual duties of each party. The issues are therefore covered by the arbitration clause. In this regard, the [MND's] solicitors' letter to [ST's] solicitors dated 7 August 1998, exhibited herewith…, will confirm that [the MND] are ready and willing for an arbitration to take place." (emphasis added)
"…. In the premises, we give notice on our clients' behalf that our clients are ready and willing to refer the dispute to arbitration in Taipei, Republic of China. As such, kindly let us have your clients [sic] immediate confirmation that they will agree to stay all present proceedings in Singapore and proceed to arbitration in Taipei as soon as possible…" (emphasis added)
The First English Proceedings
The proceedings in the Cayman Islands
"Court of Competent Jurisdiction
9. The Plaintiff issued proceedings upon a contract against the Defendant in the High Court of Singapore. A Memorandum of Appearance was submitted on behalf of the Defendant by Messrs Azman Soh and Murugaiyan dated 8th July 1998. There is now produced and shown to me as Exhibit "JS3" a true copy of the Memorandum of Appearance. At no time did the Defendant make any application to challenge the jurisdiction of the Singapore Courts. In addition, the Defendant took steps within the proceedings by applying to the Singaporean High Court to stay the proceedings on the grounds of forum non conveniens and an arbitration clause in the contract. On 27th October 1998 the Singaporean High Court granted the Defendant's application for a stay based on the arbitration clause in the contract.
10. In my opinion, it is obvious from the steps that the Defendant took in the Singaporean proceedings that it voluntarily submitted to the jurisdiction of the Singaporean High Court in respect of this matter and accordingly the Court was properly seized of the matter and was a Court of competent jurisdiction….
13. ...I would advise the Court that in accordance with Section 12 of the United Kingdom, State Immunity Act 1978…the Judgment has been duly served on the Defendant on 17th June 2004 through the Foreign and Commonwealth Office, as part of the process of registering the Judgment in the High Court of Justice, Queen's Bench Division….
15. I am not aware of any defence which the Defendant may be able to raise to the Writ of Summons brought in these proceedings……."
"IT IS HEREBY ORDERED:-
1. That the interest of the Defendant in the asset specified in the schedule hereto stand charged with the payment of US$3,246,571.35 and SGD$27,741.70 (Singapore Dollars), the amounts due from the Defendant to the Plaintiff, inclusive of costs and interest, on a judgment dated the 30th June 2009…."
"UPON the filing of the Plaintiff/Judgment Creditor's summons dated 13th day of May 2014
IT IS HEREBY ORDERED BY CONSENT:
1. That paragraph 1 of the Order of Quin J, dated 2 August 2013, charging the Defendant's beneficial interest in the asset specified in the schedule thereto be varied to the extent that the said interest of the Defendant stand charged with the payment of US$3,523,198.00 an SGD$28,240.90 (Singapore Dollars), the amounts due from the Defendant to the Plaintiff, inclusive of costs and interest, on a judgment dated 30th June 2009.
2. That paragraph 1(1) of the Injunction Order granted in this action on 30 December 2008 ("the Injunction Order") and continued by order of Quin J dated 25 June 2009 be varied to restrain the Defendant and/or any third party on notice of the Injunction Order, whether by themselves, their servants or agents or otherwise, howsoever from removing from the Cayman Islands or in any way disposing of or deal[ing] with or diminish[ing] the value of any of the Defendant's assets which are in the Cayman Islands whether in their own names or not and whether solely or jointly owned, up to the value of US$40million.
3. That the Defendant shall within 14 days comply with paragraph 2 of the Injunction Order.
4. Costs are reserved."
The Second English Proceedings
"...For the purpose of this application, reference to the Order made on 16 May 2014 is to confirm that effectively the Default Judgment made in 2009 was refreshed so there is no longer a limitation issue as at the date of this application."
"1. In response to the attested letter served by your firm on April 29th, 2016.
2. Regarding the copy of Order of the UK High Court of Justice that was forwarded by your firm on behalf of Strategic Technologies Ptd Ltd, a Singaporean entity, we hereby declare that the procedure of service was illegal; therefore, we return said Order."
"have liberty to apply to discharge and/or vary the terms of this Order, such application to be made within 14 days of service of the Order on them."
The Article 53 certificate was issued on 11 November 2016.
i) Central Bank of China (Taiwan) ("CBC"), 7 – 11 Moorgate, London EC2;
ii) Bank of Taiwan London Branch ("BOT"), Level 17, 99 Bishopsgate, London EC2;
iii) The TRO in the UK, 50 Grosvenor Gardens, London SW1.
The AJA and the Civil Jurisdiction and Judgments Act 1982 ("the CJJA")
"9 Enforcement in the United Kingdom of judgments obtained in superior courts in other British dominions.
(1) Where a judgment has been obtained in a superior court in any part of His Majesty's dominions outside the United Kingdom to which this Part of this Act extends, the judgment creditor may apply to the High Court in England or … , at any time within twelve months after the date of the judgment, or such longer period as may be allowed by the court, to have the judgment registered in the court, and on any such application the court may, if in all the circumstances of the case they think it just and convenient that the judgment should be enforced in the United Kingdom, and subject to the provisions of this section, order the judgment to be registered accordingly.
(2) No judgment shall be ordered to be registered under this section if—
(a) the original court acted without jurisdiction; or
(b) the judgment debtor, being a person who was neither carrying on business nor ordinarily resident within the jurisdiction of the original court, did not voluntarily appear or otherwise submit or agree to submit to the jurisdiction of that court; or
(c) the judgment debtor, being the defendant in the proceedings, was not duly served with the process of the original court and did not appear, notwithstanding that he was ordinarily resident or was carrying on business within the jurisdiction of that court or agreed to submit to the jurisdiction of that court; or
(d) the judgment was obtained by fraud; or
(e) the judgment debtor satisfies the registering court either that an appeal is pending, or that he is entitled and intends to appeal, against the judgment; or
(f) the judgment was in respect of a cause of action which for reasons of public policy or for some other similar reason could not have been entertained by the registering court.
(3) Where a judgment is registered under this section—
(a) the judgment shall, as from the date of registration, be of the same force and effect, and proceedings may be taken thereon, as if it had been a judgment originally obtained or entered up on the date of registration in the registering court;
(b) the registering court shall have the same control and jurisdiction over the judgment as it has over similar judgments given by itself, but in so far only as relates to execution under this section;
(c) the reasonable costs of and incidental to the registration of the judgment (including the costs of obtaining a certified copy thereof from the original court and of the application for registration) shall be recoverable in like manner as if they were sums payable under the judgment.
(4) Rules of court shall provide
(a) for service on the judgment debtor of notice of the registration of a judgment under this section; and
(b) for enabling the registering court on an application by the judgment debtor to set aside the registration of a judgment under this section on such terms as the court thinks fit; and
(c) for suspending the execution of a judgment registered under this section until the expiration of the period during which the judgment debtor may apply to have the registration set aside."
"The expression "judgment" means any judgment or order given or made by a court in any civil proceedings, whether before or after the passing of this Act, whereby any sum of money is made payable, and includes an award in proceedings on an arbitration if the award has, in pursuance of the law in force in the place where it was made, become enforceable in the same manner as a judgment given by a court in that place."
"32. Overseas judgments given in proceedings brought in breach of agreement for settlement of disputes.
(1) Subject to the following provisions of this section, a judgment given by a court of an overseas country in any proceedings shall not be recognised or enforced in the United Kingdom if—
(a) the bringing of those proceedings in that court was contrary to an agreement under which the dispute in question was to be settled otherwise than by proceedings in the courts of that country; and
(b) those proceedings were not brought in that court by, or with the agreement of, the person against whom the judgment was given; and
(c) that person did not counterclaim in the proceedings or otherwise submit to the jurisdiction of that court….
33. Certain steps not to amount to submission to jurisdiction of overseas court.
(1) For the purposes of determining whether a judgment given by a court of an overseas country should be recognised or enforced in England and Wales or Northern Ireland, the person against whom the judgment was given shall not be regarded as having submitted to the jurisdiction of the court by reason only of the fact that he appeared (conditionally or otherwise) in the proceedings for all or any one or more of the following purposes, namely—
(a) to contest the jurisdiction of the court;
(b) to ask the court to dismiss or stay the proceedings on the ground that the dispute in question should be submitted to arbitration or to the determination of the courts of another country;
(c) to protect, or obtain the release of, property seized or threatened with seizure in the proceedings."
The Issues in overview
i) Was the Second English Registered Judgment served properly on the MND in April 2016?
ii) If so, should the MND have permission to apply to set it aside out of time? If not, should service be retrospectively validated and what effect does that have on the ability of MND to advance this application?
iii) If the application to set aside by MND proceeds substantively:
a) Was ST's application in February 2016 to register the Cayman Default Judgment statute-barred by virtue of s. 24 of the Limitation Act 1980?
b) If not, does the AJA apply at all?
c) If so, did the Cayman Default Judgment meet the criteria for registration under s. 9 of the AJA:
- Did the Cayman Grand Court act without jurisdiction?
- Was the MND carrying on business or ordinarily resident within the jurisdiction of the Cayman Grand Court and, if not, did the MND voluntarily appear in the Cayman Grand Court in relation to the action brought to obtain the Cayman Default Judgment or did it otherwise submit or agree to submit to the jurisdiction in relation to such proceedings?
d) Were there grounds to allow the Second English Registered Judgment to be registered outside the period of 12 months provided for by s. 9?
e) Was it just and convenient for it the Cayman Default Judgment to enforced in the United Kingdom?
f) Should the Second English Registered Judgment be set aside because of non-disclosure (or misrepresentation) on the part of ST?
i) Article 53 does not apply to the Second English Registered Judgment which is based on a default judgment from a non-EU member state in turn based on a default judgment from another non-EU member state;
ii) ST made material non-disclosures and/or misrepresentation for the purpose of securing the Article 53 certificate.
i) For material non-disclosure by ST at the time of obtaining the writ;
ii) Because it was not appropriate for the Writ of Control to be issued in all the circumstances.
i) At common law the English courts will recognise a common law action and register the judgment of a foreign court in certain circumstances. A prominent feature will be that the foreign court should be a court of competent jurisdiction (see Rule 43 in Dicey Morris & Collins 15th Edition ("Dicey"));
ii) It is a matter for the enforcing court as to whether or not the foreign court was of competent jurisdiction. Local procedural rules are not determinative but what is done is to be assessed in the context of what local conditions require;
iii) The English courts will not allow a party to participate and then attempt to escape. It will form a view if, in the absence of any other connection with the jurisdiction, a party had in reality participated or submitted in the proceedings in a way that makes it right for the judgment to be enforced here by action or statutory procedure;
iv) The question of whether there has been a decision on the merits engages whether the court in question is a court which had or should have had the substantive merits before it. Withdrawal by a party does not deprive the foreign court of jurisdiction.
Application to set aside the Second English Registered Judgment
Was the Second English Registered Judgment served validly on the MND in April 2016?
"(1) An order granting permission to register a judgement ("registration order") must be drawn up by the judgment creditor and served on the judgment debtor –
(a) by delivering it to the judgment debtor personally;
(b) by any methods of service permitted under the Companies Act 2006; or
(c) in such other manner as the court may direct.
(2) Permission is not required to serve a registration order out of the jurisdiction, and rules 6.40, 6.42, 6.43 and 6.46 apply to such an order as they apply to a claim form."
"(1) This rule contains general provisions about the method of service of a claim form or other document on a party out of the jurisdiction……
Where service is to be effected on a party out of the United Kingdom
(3) Where a party wishes to serve a claim form or other document on a party out of the United Kingdom, it may be served –
(a) by any method provided for by –
(i) rule 6.41 (service in accordance with Service Regulation);
(ii) rule 6.42 (service through foreign governments, judicial authorities and British Consular authorities); or
(iii) rule 6.44 (service of claim form or other document on a State);
(b) by any other method permitted by a Civil Procedure Convention or Treaty; or
(c) by any other method permitted by the law of the country in which it is to be served.
(4) Nothing in paragraph (3) or in any court order authorises or requires any person to do anything which is contrary to the law of the country where the claim form or other document is to be served…"
"The claimant accepts that it would be inappropriate to rely on service in accordance with a code which plainly could not apply to this kind of case (e.g. if it applied only to matrimonial or criminal proceedings). I accept that CPR 6.24(1)(a) [predecessor to CPR 6.40(3)(c)] has to be applied with a reasonable degree of flexibility when applied to foreign systems of law, but it is plain that where it is common ground that the claimant has not complied with the service provisions of the basic code of the CPC, and seeks to rely instead on the rules relating to a specialist jurisdiction such as the APC, the onus is on the claimant to show, by expert evidence, that the rules of that specialist jurisdiction would have applied to the proceedings had they been proceedings in the foreign country."
"27. The evidence before Cooke J from Mr. Salih [the expert witness for the claimant] was that it would not be possible to serve the claim form in a manner expressly permitted by the law of Sudan because the law of Sudan requires service of process to be affected by the Sudanese Court and a Sudanese Court would not recognise their request to serve process issued out of an English Court on a Sudanese Defendant. On the other hand, Mr. Salih reported that the method of service Cooke J was asked to and did permit was not contrary to the law of Sudan. The Court has a broad discretion to allow service by any alternative method where service would otherwise be impractical or would involve very extensive delay, see Marconi Communications v PT Pan Indonesia Bank [2004] 1 Lloyd's Rep 594 at 601-602. Plainly, service of the originating process through diplomatic channels in this case was both impractical and subject to very extensive delay…."
Should service of the Second English Registered Judgment be validated retrospectively?
"(1) Where it appears to the court that there is a good reason to authorise service by a method ….. not otherwise permitted by this Part, the court may make an order permitting service by an alternative method….."
CPR 6.27 provides that CPR 6.15 applies to the service of any documents in proceedings.
Was ST's application in February 2016 to register the Cayman Default Judgment statute-barred by virtue of s. 24 of the Limitation Act 1980?
"(5)….where any right of action has accrued to recover
a) Any debt or other liquidated pecuniary claim;…..
and the person liable or accountable for the claim acknowledges the claim or makes any payment in respect of it the right shall be treated as having accrued on and not before the date of the acknowledgment or payment."
"UPON the filing of the Plaintiff/Judgment Creditor's summons dated 13th day of May 2014
IT IS HEREBY ORDERED BY CONSENT:
1. That paragraph 1 of the Order of Quin J, dated 2 August 2013, charging the Defendant's beneficial interest in the asset specified in the schedule thereto be varied to the extent that the said interest of the Defendant stand charged with the payment of US$3,523,198.00 an SGD$28,240.90 (Singapore Dollars), the amounts due from the Defendant to the Plaintiff, inclusive of costs and interest, on a judgment dated 30th June 2009.
2. That paragraph 1(1) of the Injunction Order granted in this action on 30 December 2008 ("the Injunction Order") and continued by order of Quin J dated 25 June 2009 be varied to restrain the Defendant and/or any third party on notice of the Injunction Order, whether by themselves, their servants or agents or otherwise, howsoever from removing from the Cayman Islands or in any way disposing of or deal[ing] with or diminish[ing] the value of any of the Defendant's assets which are in the Cayman Islands whether in their own names or not and whether solely or jointly owned, up to the value of US$40million.
3. That the Defendant shall within 14 days comply with paragraph 2 of the Injunction Order.
4. Costs are reserved."
i) In 2012 ST obtained a charging order nisi over funds held in the MND's favour in the Wang proceedings with payment of the sums due under the Cayman Default Judgment. It then issued notice to show cause why the order should not be made absolute;
ii) The MND instructed solicitors, Diamond Law, to represent it. Those solicitors sought adjournments of the notice to show cause in order to consider the MND's position. There was no challenge at any stage to the Cayman Default (or the Singapore) Judgments;
iii) On 30 April 2013 Quin J made an order relating to arrangements involving the Director of Public Prosecutions of the Cayman Islands ("the DPP"). Materially, the order recorded that at the hearing, attended counsel for ST, the MND and the DPP, Quin J was informed that a "Sharing Agreement" was close to being finalised with the DPP, which agreement would contain "express provision for the payment of the Judgment Debt due to [ST] together with costs and interest from the share of the funds to be distributed";
iv) On 2 August 2013, following a hearing again attended by counsel for ST and the MND, Quin J ordered the MND's beneficial interest in the sum of approximately US$48,000,000 held in court in the Wang proceedings to stand charged with payments "due from [the MND] to [ST] …on a judgment dated 30th June 2009".
Does the AJA apply at all?
"The principle upon which I think our enforcement of judgments proceed is this: that in a Court of competent jurisdiction, where according to its established procedure the whole merits of the case were open, at all events, to the parties, however much they may have failed take advantage of them, or may have waived any of their rights, a final adjudication has been given that a debt or obligation exists which cannot thereafter in that Court be disputed, and can only be questioned in an appeal to a higher tribunal."
"It is not said that it excludes a "judgment on a foreign judgment", though it seems reasonable to suppose that it does."
Did the Cayman Default Judgment meet the criteria for registration under s. 9 of the AJA?
The expert evidence on Cayman law
i) That whether a defendant in the foreign proceedings had submitted to the jurisdiction of the Singapore Court, was a matter to be decided by the Grand Court applying Cayman law;
ii) The Grand Court follows English law, unless there is good reason not to;
iii) There is no statute in Cayman that is equivalent to ss. 32 and 33 of the Civil CJJA.
"8…..At common law the court will enforce the judgment of a foreign court in a claim in personam provided that the foreign court had jurisdiction over the judgment debtor in accordance with the rules of private international law, i.e. in one of the following four cases:
a) If the judgment debtor was, at the time the proceedings were instituted, present in the foreign country;
b) if the judgment debtor was the plaintiff or counter-claimant in the proceedings in the foreign court;
c) if the judgment debtor was the defendant and submitted to the jurisdiction of the foreign court by voluntarily appearing in the proceedings and contesting them on the merits; or
d) if the judgment debtor was the defendant and, before the commencement of the proceedings, agreed in respect of the subject matter of the proceedings to submit to the jurisdiction of the foreign court.
The foreign judgment must also not be procured by fraud given in breach of natural justice or otherwise contrary to Cayman public policy.
9. The above reflects Rule 36 in Dicey & Morris, 1 The Conflict of Laws, 13th ed., at 487 (2000) for the recognition and enforcement of foreign judgments."
"The English court is regarded as a matter of Cayman law as a court of competent jurisdiction because CCIC submitted and contested the actions on their merits…"
"It is not a question of investigating the propriety of the foreign courts but rather whether the Cayman Grand Court under its rules would find that the matter had been adjudicated on its merits or whether it was purely a question of submission to the jurisdiction.",
citing as support for this, a passage in Desert Sun Loan Corp. v. Hill ([1996] 2 All ER 847 at 862) in which Roch LJ said:
"As I understand these principles, voluntary appearance in the foreign proceedings in a way accepted by English law as amounting to a voluntary appearance has to be shown. To show that there was a voluntary appearance in the proceedings in the eyes of the court of the foreign country whose judgment the English court is being asked to enforce is not sufficient, unless it amounts to a voluntary submission according to our rules."
Analysis and findings
"Taking this view of the decided cases which bind this court, it seems to us that they justify at least the following three propositions: (1) The English courts will not enforce the judgment of a foreign court against a defendant who does not reside within the jurisdiction of that court, even though that court by its own local law has jurisdiction over him. (2) English courts will not enforce the judgment of a foreign court against a defendant who, although he does not reside within the jurisdiction of that court, has assets within that jurisdiction and appears before that court solely to preserve those assets which have been seized by that court. (3) The English courts will enforce the judgment of a foreign court against a defendant over whom that court has jurisdiction by its own local law (even though it does not possess such jurisdiction according to the English rules of conflict of laws) if that defendant voluntarily appears before that foreign court to invite that court in its discretion not to exercise the jurisdiction which it has under its own local law."
He also addressed in terms the argument that submission required a submission of the merits to the foreign court:
"For our part, we think that where any issues arise for decision at any stage of the proceedings in the foreign court and that court is invited by the defendant as well as by the plaintiff to decide those issues, "the merits" are voluntarily submitted to that court for decision so that that submission subsequently binds both parties in respect of the dispute as whole, even if both would not have been so bound in the absence of that voluntary submission." (749G)
i) The MND entered an unqualified memorandum of appearance on 8 July 1998;
ii) The MND did not then challenge jurisdiction by the deadline (of 22 July 1998) for challenging jurisdiction under RSC Order 12 rule 7(1). By RSC Order 12 rule 7(6):
"Except where the defendant makes an application in accordance with paragraph (1), the appearance by a defendant shall, unless the appearance is withdrawn by leave of the Court…., be treated as a submission by the defendant to the jurisdiction of the Court in the proceedings."
Mr Kish agreed that, although a failure to apply in time for a declaration that the court had no jurisdiction was not determinative, the failure to do so is relevant to the factual matrix overall. I regard this omission as highly material to the objective assessment of the question of submission, bearing in mind the comments of Thomas J (as he then was) in Akai Pty Ltd. v People's Insurance Company Ltd [1978] 1 Lloyd's Rep 90, at 97:
"The court must consider the matter objectively; it must have regard to the general framework of its own procedural rules, but also to the domestic law of the court where the steps were taken. This is because the significance of those steps can only be understood by reference to that law. If a step taken by a person in a foreign jurisdiction, such as making a counterclaim, might well be regarded by English law as amounting to a submission to the jurisdiction, but would not be regarded by that foreign court as a submission to its jurisdiction, an English court will take into account the position under foreign law.";
iii) On 7 August 1998 the MND applied by summons for orders not only for a stay pending arbitration or on the ground of forum non conveniens but also for an extension of time for service of a defence and for discharge of the injunction that had been obtained by ST and an enquiry as to damages. The application to discharge could be seen as an application to protect property, as Mr. Kish contended, but the application for an enquiry as to damages could not be. It is also significant that at no stage did the MND dispute the jurisdiction that the Singapore Court had jurisdiction;
iv) On 12 August 1998 the MND filed a lengthy affidavit in support of its summons of 7 August 1998, which included evidence going to the substantive merits of ST's claim;
v) The MND was partially successful in its applications, being granted the stay it sought pending arbitration. Its applications for discharge of the injunction and an enquiry as to damages appear to have been refused on the merits;
vi) On 29 January 1999, the MND's solicitors gave notice that they had ceased to act, giving an alternative address for service. It is hard to see how providing an address for service of proceedings or applications is consistent with disputing the jurisdiction of the Singapore Court at that stage.
i) On 23 October 2012 the MND applied for an adjournment of ST's application for a freezing order, on the basis that it had appointed a new firm of solicitors to represent it in place of the firm previously appointed (whose instructions were withdrawn because of a conflict of interest). The grounds asserted for the adjournment did not include any challenge to the jurisdiction;
ii) The 2014 Consent Order considered in further detail above, in which the MND acknowledged that the amounts were due from the MND to ST pursuant to the Cayman Default Judgment, reciting the Singapore Default Judgment.
Were there grounds to allow the Second English Registered Judgment to be registered outside the period of 12 months provided for by s. 9 and was it just and convenient for it the Cayman Default Judgment to enforced in the United Kingdom?
9 December 2002 Singapore Judgment 23 July 2003 ST appoints Commercial Intelligence S.E Asia PTE Ltd ("CISEA") to recover judgment debt 22 September 2003 ST applies to register Singapore Judgment in UK 16 December 2004 English Judgment registering Singapore Judgment 24 October 2005 Interim Third-Party debt order in UK for £1,281,743 against China Trust Commercial Bank November 2005 ST registers Singapore Judgment in USA. ST files complaint seeking to enforce Singapore Judgment in District Court of Columbia USA 17 October 2006 Affidavit of Sreenivasan explaining why Singapore Judgments were properly entered and enforceable judgments of Singapore High Court 10 May 2007 Decision of District Court of Columbia in USA dismissing ST's complaint in November 2005 seeking to enforce Singapore Judgment 2007-2009 ST registers Singapore Judgment in Belgium for enforcement against military equipment owned by the MND 29 December 2008 ST commences new proceedings in Cayman based on the unpaid Singapore Judgment 25 June 2009 Cayman Default Judgment 27 July 2009 ST files exequatur proceedings in France to enforce Singapore Judgment. 9 September 2010 French Court declares exequatur proceedings invalid for non-compliance with service under Article 684 of French Code of Civil Procedure 30 March 2011 Paris Court of Appeal dismisses ST's appeal against decision declaring exequatur proceedings invalid for non-compliance with service under Article 684 of French Code of Civil Procedure 2 August 2013 Charging Order made by Quin J in Cayman Proceedings charging the MND's beneficial interests in funds of US$48,000.000 with payments due under Cayman Default Judgment 19 March 2014 French Cour de Cassation dismisses ST's appeal against decision declaring exequatur proceedings invalid for non-compliance with service under Article 684 of French Code of Civil Procedure 16 May 2014 Consent Order in Cayman proceedings 13 April 2015 Final Costs Certificate in Wang proceedings in Cayman Islands of costs payable by ST 4 April 2016 Second English Registered Judgment 7 November 2016 ST obtains the Article 53 Order 11 November 2016 Article 53 certificate 12 October 2017 Article 53 certificate served on the MND via Italy 12 October 2017-June 2018 ST attempts to attach hull of vessel in Italy with Article 53 certificate 2018 ST attempts to attach Matra Arbitral award to the MND in respect of a missile contract in France 10 January 2019 Notice of Enforcement for £3,968,787.14 served
Article 53 Order attached11 January 2019 Writ of Control
i) On delay, that the enforcement history provided by ST is patchy. This is on any view an attempt to enforce an extraordinarily stale judgment obtained by default more than 20 years ago. ST has not explained its failure to enforce the First English Registered Judgment;
ii) that it is neither just nor convenient to enforce the Cayman Default Judgment:
a) the proceedings are pursued purely as a speculative investment by those who have acquired ST;
b) there has never been an adjudication on the merits against the MND, or any substantive decision against them. Rather there has been a consistent rejection by the courts of ST's attempts to enforce;
c) from an English law point of view there was no submission by the MND to the Singapore High Court (see ss. 32 and 33 of the CJJA). The making of an application for an extension of time to serve a defence would not amount to submission to the jurisdiction: see Carona Holdings Pte Ltd and others v Go Go Delicacy Pte Ltd [2008] SGCA 34;
d) as matter of Cayman law, the MND did not submit to the jurisdiction of the Singapore High Court, alternatively this was at least seriously arguable and there was a failure to disclose as much;
e) there were other material failures to disclose on the part of ST in particular as to the availability to the MND of a limitation defence, the existence of the First English Registered Judgment and the fact that the Cayman Default Judgment was based on the Singapore Judgment from 2002;
f) the First English Registered Judgment could not now be enforced without permission and it would be wrong for ST to recover now sums by way of arrears of interest under that judgment;
g) the practice of "judgment laundering" is to be discouraged. The Second English Registered Judgment is brought to circumvent the defects and delay in relation to the First English Registered Judgment. If necessary, the MND submits that there has been an abuse of process. There is no justification for the entry of a second judgment on the same underlying claim;
h) ST's conduct in its threats to execute the Second English Registered Judgment warrants setting aside registration.
i) on delay, that ST never slept on the question of enforcement, expending time and effort in investigations and attempts in different jurisdictions. The reason for any staleness is that, despite acknowledgment of its debt to ST, the MND has evaded enforcement in Singapore, the USA, Italy, France, Belgium as well as the UK. It is notable that no court, wherever situated, has refused to enforce on the merits;
ii) that it is just and convenient for the Cayman Default Judgment to be registered here. ST takes issues with all of the MND's criticisms. Reliance is placed on the MND's conduct in 1998 and 1999 and in particular on events in the Cayman proceedings in 2013 and 2014.
Analysis
Should the Second English Registered Judgment be set aside because of non-disclosure (or misrepresentation) on the part of ST?
The Article 53 Order
The Writ of Control
i) Material non-disclosure by ST at the time of obtaining the Writ of Control;
ii) It was not appropriate for the Writ of Control to be issued in all the circumstances. Amongst other things, it would be wrong now to allow execution in circumstances where the non-pursuit of the 2004 Judgment could not be enforced. No good grounds for enforcement of the Second English Registered Judgment against the three entities the subject of the Writ had been identified. The consequences of enforcement against those entities would be "potentially catastrophic". The TRO essentially fulfils the functions of a diplomatic mission in London; it is a de facto consulate of the ROC. Enforcement on the CBC would potentially delay the reporting of critical financial research to the bank's head office in Taipei. Further, the Writ of Control was not being used for proper purposes, rather it was a) based on purely speculative evidence as to the availability of assets and b) being used to coerce payment out of the MND under threat of significant disruption and embarrassment (see in particular the comments of Blair J in Midtown Acquisitions LP v Essar Global Funding Limited and others [2017] EWHC 2206 (QB) at [30];
iii) The 2004 Judgment could not now be enforced without permission. It would be not merely inexpedient but tantamount to an abuse for ST to seek now to enforce by the indirect route of the Cayman Default Judgment an alleged liability for which ST failed to take enforcement steps in England since 2006.
i) That there were no good grounds for setting aside the Writ of Control for non-disclosure;
ii) That, whilst I held concerns about the tone and content of certain correspondence written by Mr Prentice (who is not a lawyer) to the MND's solicitors in June 2019, that correspondence was borne out of Mr Prentice's frustration at what he (with some justification) considers to be the MND's longstanding refusal to meet its liabilities to ST, which liabilities the MND has recognised in the past. I would have held that, however unfortunate his words or actions - and his threat to offer to sell the debt to the People's Republic of China is particularly troubling - the Writ of Control nevertheless represented a genuine attempt by ST to enforce against assets properly available for such purpose;
iii) In the context of available assets, it is now agreed between the Taiwanese law experts that a debt of the MND is a debt of the ROC, even though the assets of an organ like the MND are held separately from other organs. All of the assets of the CBC and TRO belong to the ROC. It is to be remembered that the Chief of the MND's Performance Section deposed in 1998 that the MND is a Taiwanese government agency with sufficient funds for its projects at all times;
iv) Looking at the circumstances as a whole, I would not have considered it inexpedient (or an abuse) to allow enforcement of the Second English Registered Judgment. That it is not to say that repeat attempts to enforce the same debt in the same jurisdiction via different routes are to be granted lightly, let alone encouraged. The failure on the part of ST to give any detail as to why it did not progress enforcement of the 2004 Judgment is unsatisfactory. However, against that, I balance the MND's persistent failure to challenge jurisdiction or fight the merits at any substantive hearing and its subsequent acknowledgment of its debt to ST in 2014, a debt which it has never satisfied.
Residual power to conclude judgment not enforceable and to stay its enforcement generally
Conclusion
i) The MND's application to set aside the Second English Registered Judgment will be dismissed;
ii) The MND's application to set aside the Article 53 Order and the Writ of Control will be allowed;
iii) The MND's application for a general stay of enforcement and execution will be dismissed;
iv) ST's cross-application for retrospective validation of service of the Second English Registered Judgment under CPR 6.15 will be dismissed.