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ALLIED IRISH BANK v. ASHFORD HOTELS LIMITED and ASHFORD HOTELS LIMITED v. JAY FRANCIS HIGGINS; CHARLES DANIEL TYREE and EMBLEM BV [1997] EWCA Civ 1635 (8th May, 1997)
IN
THE SUPREME COURT OF JUDICATURE
QBENI 97/0463/E
COURT
OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON
APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S
BENCH DIVISION
(His
Honour Judge Anthony Thompson QC)
Royal
Courts of Justice
Thursday,
8th May 1997
Before:
LORD
JUSTICE HIRST
LORD
JUSTICE SWINTON THOMAS
LORD
JUSTICE PHILLIPS
-
- - - - - - -
ALLIED
IRISH BANK
Plaintiff
-v-
ASHFORD
HOTELS LIMITED
Defendants
and
ASHFORD
HOTELS LIMITED
Plaintiff/Respondent
-v-
(1)
JAY FRANCIS HIGGINS
(2)
CHARLES DANIEL TYREE
(3)
EMBLEM BV
Defendants/Appellants
-
- - - - - - -
(Transcript
of the Handed Down Judgment of Smith Bernal Reporting Limited, 180 Fleet
Street, London, EC4A 2HD. Telephone No:
0171-831 3183. Shorthand Writers to the Court.)
-
- - - - - -
MR.
S. GEE Q.C. and MR. M. ROLLASON
(instructed by Messrs Lee &
Priestly,
Leeds) appeared on behalf of the Appellants/First and Second Defendants.
MR.
C. FALCONER Q.C. and MR. M. SMITH
(instructed by Messrs Wilde Sapte) appeared on behalf of the Respondents.
-
- - - - - -
J
U D G M E N T
(As
approved by the Court
)
Crown
Copyright
Phillips
L.J.
This
interlocutory appeal is brought with leave of this Court given on the 27th
March of this year. The Appellants are Defendants to an Action commenced by
Ashford Hotels Ltd ("Ashford") in 1993 ("the 1993 Action"). Part of the relief
that they seek relates, however, to an Action commenced a year earlier between
Allied Irish Bank ("the Bank") and Ashford ("the 1992 Action"). A question has
been raised as to their locus standi to seek relief in respect of that Action
and, should it be procedurally necessary they seek leave to be joined in that
Action in order to acquire locus standi. I propose to consider the merits of
their appeal before turning, should it be necessary, to procedural questions.
The
Facts
Ashford
is a Delaware Company, with its principal office in New York. In 1989 Ashford
embarked on a venture to convert an English stately home called Nuneham Park
into a luxury hotel. The Bank financed this venture with a loan of £3
million. Ashford guaranteed repayment of that loan. Under a restructuring
agreement the Appellants, Mr Higgins and Mr Tyree, who are New York
businessmen, agreed with Ashford to indemnify it against its liabilities to the
Bank under the guarantee. The project did not prosper and, in the 1992 Action,
the Bank sued Ashford on its guarantee and entered a default judgment for
£3,607,520.
By
way of what is described as "equitable execution" the Bank obtained an Order
appointing Mr Gill, a partner in Wilde Sapte -the Bank's London Solicitors - as
a Receiver in respect of Ashford's right to an indemnity from Mr Higgins and Mr
Tyree.
On
the 8th January 1993 the Receiver, in the name of Ashford, commenced the 1993
Action against Mr Higgins and Mr Tyree, claiming under the indemnity. By this
time, however, Mr Higgins and Mr Tyree had commenced an Action in the State
Court of New York ("the New York Action") against, among others, Ashford. In
this Action they sought, amongst other relief, rescission of, or more
accurately, a declaration that they had validly rescinded, the restructuring
agreement that contained the indemnity, on the ground that it had been procured
by misrepresentation. The nature of this misrepresentation, very shortly
summarised, was that investor support for earlier similar development projects
had been deliberately exaggerated by the use of what are referred to as
'stand-by' investors. Much of the evidence in relation to this matter was
located in New York. Ashford, which had an active Board of Directors in New
York and, it would seem, at least some available funds, was actively defending
this Action.
On
the 18th April 1994 Mr Higgins and Mr Tyree obtained from His Honour Judge
Rich, Q.C., an Order staying the 1993 Action to await the result of the New
York Action. In these circumstances, the Receiver decided not to seek to take
any part in the New York Action, but to leave Ashford to fight his battle for
him. If the New York Court held that Mr Higgins and Mr Tyree were entitled to
rescind the restructuring agreement then the Receiver accepted that the
principle of 'res judicata' would defeat his claim in the 1993 Action. If,
however, Mr Higgins and Mr Tyree lost the New York Action, they would then, by
virtue of the same principle, have no defence to the 1993 Action.
Five
years have elapsed since the New York Action was commenced and it has not yet
reached trial. At the end of 1996 Mr Higgins and Mr Tyree proposed a
settlement to Ashford on the basis that they would each drop all outstanding
claims against the other.
This
was an attractive proposition so far as Ashford were concerned, for they had
exhausted their available funds in the litigation and had little to gain from
it. They, and their lawyers, took the view, however, that they had no right to
agree to release Ashford's claim to an indemnity unless the Receiver concurred
in this. As their lawyers put it in a letter to the Receiver:
"under
New York law once a receiver has been appointed to control an asset the party
holding that asset loses all control to alienate the subject property,
including causes of action and contract rights."
It
is common ground that this is also the position at English law and that the
appointment of Mr Gill as Receiver in respect of the claim to an indemnity from
Mr Higgins and Mr Tyree had the effect of the grant of an injunction
restraining Ashford from disposing of that chose in action.
Mr
Higgins and Mr Tyree have called on the Receiver to agree to the proposed
settlement. The Receiver is not prepared to do so.
He
takes the view that the proposed settlement is not one that has been negotiated
on the basis of an appraisal of the merits of the litigation. While Ashford
has nothing to lose from the settlement, the Bank would lose the value of the
indemnity and he can see no justification for agreeing to this.
Mr
Higgins and Mr Tyree contend that it is unjust that the Receiver should be able
to prevent a settlement that both they and Ashford are anxious to conclude,
particularly if he is able to do so without shouldering any liability for the
loss that his refusal may cause. If the New York Action has to go to trial,
this is likely to cause them to incur legal costs in the region of $1 million.
If they win the action, this expenditure will be attributable, so they contend,
to the Receiver's unreasonable refusal to agree to the proposed settlement.
In
these circumstances, in summonses brought in both the 1992 and the 1993
Actions, Mr Higgins and Mr Tyree sought:
(i) an
order that the Receiver be directed to approve the proposed settlement; or
(ii) an
order that the appointment of the Receiver be discharged.
In
the alternative, they contended that the Bank should be required to give what
they have described as a cross-undertaking in damages, that is to say an
undertaking to bear any losses caused to them by the appointment of the
Receiver that the Court considers that the Bank ought to bear.
The
Bank countered by applying for the stay of the 1993 Action to be lifted on the
ground that Mr Higgins and Mr Tyree had so procrastinated in their conduct of
the New York action that the issue of their liability under the indemnity
should now be resolved by the English Court instead.
These
cross-applications were made to H.H. Judge Thompson, Q.C., sitting as a deputy
High Court Judge. On the 27th February 1997 he dismissed the applications of
Mr Higgins and Mr Tyree and allowed the Bank's application for the stay on the
1993 Action to be lifted.
Mr
Higgins and Mr Tyree now appeal against all parts of H.H. Judge Thompson's Order.
The
relief that the Appellants contend should be granted by this Court in place of
H.H. Judge Thompson's Order consists of a number of Orders which are to a
degree alternative. They are as follows:
(1) The
Receiver be discharged unconditionally.
(2) The
Receiver be directed to approve the proposed settlement.
(3) The
Receiver be directed to pursue the claim on the indemnity in New York.
(4) The
Bank be required to give a cross-undertaking in damages.
(5) The
stay on the 1993 Action be re-imposed.
It
is helpful at the outset to summarise the effect of the Order appointing Mr
Gill as Receiver, as to which there is no dispute.
The
Order was made by way of execution in the 1992 Action. It appointed Mr Gill,
as an officer of the Court and not as agent or trustee for the Bank. It
appointed him to receive the fruits of a chose in action alleged to be owned by
the judgment debtor, Ashford, namely the right to an indemnity from Mr Higgins
and Mr Tyree. It specifically authorised the Receiver to take all steps
necessary to enforce payment of the indemnity. The Order did not vest in the
Receiver any right to the indemnity, nor did it effect a charge on the
indemnity by way of security in favour of the Bank. But it entitled the
Receiver to bring proceedings to enforce the indemnity in the name of Ashford
which, if successful, would result in the proceeds of the action being
available to discharge Ashford's liability to the Bank.
So
far as Ashford were concerned, the Order operated as an injunction restraining
them from disposing of the chose in action, or the proceeds of it. So far as
Mr Higgins and Mr Tyree were concerned, the effect of the Order, once they had
notice of it, was to prevent them from discharging any liability that they had
under the indemnity by payment to Ashford, rather than to the Receiver. It is,
however, their case that their obligations under the indemnity had been
rescinded before the Receiver was appointed. If that be correct, the
appointment of the Receiver had no effect on their legal rights. Its practical
effect was that any (ex hypothesi) invalid claim in respect of the indemnity
would be brought against them in the name of Ashford, not at the instigation of
the directors of that Company, but at the instigation of the Receiver. Its
further practical effect was and is that Ashford are not prepared, without the
consent of the Receiver, to agree to abandon any claim under the indemnity.
Discharge
of the Receiver
The
Court has, of course, jurisdiction to discharge the Receiver, who is the
Court's own officer. The circumstances in which it is appropriate to exercise
this jurisdiction are set out in Chapter 12 of Kerr on Receivers, 17th edition.
In the context of the present case it seems to me that the only grounds upon
which the Appellants can argue that the Receiver should be discharged are:
(1) That
his appointment has been demonstrated to have been inappropriate and
unnecessary because the chose in action that he was appointed to receive does
not exist.
(2) That
he has acted with impropriety in failing to approve the settlement.
(3) That
he has failed to perform the function that he was appointed to perform in that
he has failed to pursue a claim in respect of the indemnity in New York.
(4) That
the Bank have refused to provide a cross-undertaking in damages in
circumstances where justice demands that this should be a condition of the
continuation of the receivership.
The
Appellants accept that they are not presently in a position to demonstrate that
the Receiver should be discharged on the first ground. It is common ground
that whether or not the indemnity has been discharged by agreement is a triable
issue.
The
other grounds reflect the alternative mandatory orders which the Appellants
seek, and I think it convenient to turn straight to those orders.
Approval
of the settlement
As
I understand it, the basis upon which the Appellants contend that the proposed
settlement of the New York action should be agreed by the Receiver is as
follows: The Receiver left the conduct of the New York proceedings to Ashford.
The trial process in New York, and in particular discovery that has been given
in other actions in New York, has now satisfied Ashford of the validity of the
Appellants' claim that they have rescinded the restructuring agreement for
misrepresentation. In these circumstances it is improper for the Receiver to
refuse to approve the settlement.
If
this were the true scenario, I would have some sympathy with the Appellants'
criticism of the Receiver's conduct. I am, however, satisfied that it is not
the true scenario. Rogers & Wells, the New York lawyers acting for
Ashford, have made clear in correspondence the basis upon which their clients
are prepared to agree to the proposed settlement. Thus in their letter of
January 17th 1977 they wrote:
With
regard to the settlement let me emphasize that all defendants, including AHL,
continue to vigorously deny all material allegations of the complaint but are
willing to settle the matter on the basis that Higgins and Tyree agree to
dismiss all claims against AHL and the AHL will release all claims it
currently
possesses against plaintiffs at the time of the release. AHL can only release
claims it currently holds and not any claims controlled by any other person
such as the duly appointed English Receiver.
and
in a letter of February 7th they added:
In
November 1996, I received a proposed settlement agreement from plaintiffs'
attorney, Mr. Andrew Schlafly. In this document, Mr. Schlafly proposed that
Tyree and Higgins and Ashford mutually release each other from all claims with
no cash payment to be made by either side. The proposed settlement document by
way of explanatory introductory statements contained an acknowledgement that
Ashford, for the purpose of the settlement, would no contest that the 1990
Restructuring Agreement could be considered unenforceable. This was done for
the reason that Ashford has no ongoing business in the United States and, for
the purpose of facilitating an end to the U.S. action at no cost, saw little
need to extend the debate as to the enforceability of the 1990 Restructuring
Agreement. However I should note that for five years, Ashford has vigorously
defended against the claim that the 1990 Restructuring Agreement is invalid or
unenforceable. Unfortunately, Ashford at this time has insufficient financial
resources or incentive to continue to defend against that claim.
Ashford
have not recognised the validity of the Appellants rescission claim. Their
attitude to the settlement simply reflects the fact that it is the Bank, not
Ashford, that stands to gain from the claim on the indemnity. I have already
observed that the Appellants are not currently in a position to demonstrate
that the chose in action in respect of which the Receiver was appointed does
not exist.
In
these circumstances I consider that the Receiver is acting with perfect
propriety in refusing to approve of the settlement. There is no justification
for ordering him to approve it, and his attitude does not constitute grounds
for his removal.
Pursuit
of a claim under the indemnity in New York
It
is the Appellants' case that New York was the appropriate forum in which to
pursue the claim under the indemnity and that, having particular regard to the
fact that the English proceedings were stayed, it was the duty of the Receiver
to pursue the claim with diligence in New York. This appears to be a novel
submission. The Receiver has exhibited to an Affidavit sworn on the 10th
February 1997 extracts from the Affidavits and skeleton argument advanced on
behalf of the Appellants when they applied for a stay of the English
proceedings in 1994. These contain no hint of the possibility that the
Receiver would intervene in the New York proceedings. The Appellants advanced
the argument that the New York proceedings were well under way, would be
prosecuted briskly, would be likely to be concluded before the English
proceedings could be brought to trial and would be determinative of the English
proceedings. In his Judgment granting a stay, H.H. Judge Rich expressed his
understanding of the position as follows:
If
the stay is granted, AIB could seek to be joined in the New York proceedings,
in a way which Mr. Robinson explained to me this morning, and they could then
enforce their English judgment against AHL by seeking a lien on AHL's indemnity
against the Defendants. That would clearly involve AIB in additional expense,
and would effectively deprive them of the benefit of the advantage from a point
of view of enforcement that they obtained when they obtained their order of
receivership. Since AHL are continuing operation in New York under the
direction of the United State's board of that company and are apparently
defending the New York proceedings in any case, AIB are at any rate probably
unlikely to intervene in those proceedings, even if this action here is now
stayed.
In
my judgment the Receiver acted properly and sensibly, on the understanding that
the Appellants would pursue their claim in New York with due despatch, in
standing on the sidelines to await the result of the New York Action. There is
no basis for an Order that he should involve himself in the New York
proceedings, nor for discharging him on the ground that he has not so involved
himself.
Thus
far, my conclusions have been the same as those of H.H. Judge Thompson.
The
Cross-undertaking in Damages
For
the Appellants Mr Gee, Q.C., submits that the Court has jurisdiction to make it
a condition of the continuation of the Receivership that the Bank gives a
cross-undertaking in damages.
He
further submits that, as a result of a change of circumstances since the
Receiver was appointed, justice requires that such a condition should be
imposed. The willingness of Ashford to settle the New York proceedings,
subject to the approval of the Receiver, means that it is now the attitude of
the Receiver which is exposing the Appellants to ongoing costs in New York.
Should they succeed in New York, the Bank ought to bear those costs.
For
the Bank, Mr Falconer, Q.C., submits that the Court has no jurisdiction to give
the relief sought, or alternatively should not exercise such jurisdiction on
the facts of this case.
Jurisdiction
In
urging that the Court had jurisdiction to grant the relief sought, Mr Gee
relied upon the following provisions of the Supreme Court Act 1981:
37 (1)
The High Court may by order (whether interlocutory or final) grant an
injunction of appoint a receiver in all cases in which it appears to the Court
to be just and convenient to do so.
(2)
Any such order may be made either unconditionally or on such terms and
conditions as the Court thinks just.
Mr
Gee submitted that the form of cross-undertaking in damages which he seeks is
one that the Court is accustomed to give as a
matter
of course when granting a Mareva injunction under the same statutory
jurisdiction. He further argued that there are close analogies between the
grant of a Mareva injunction and the appointment of a Receiver by way of
equitable execution.
The
form of undertaking to be given by a Plaintiff seeking a Mareva injunction, as
set out in a 1994 Practice Direction, [1994] 1 W.L.R.1233, included the
following:
6)
The plaintiff will pay the reasonable costs of anyone other than the defendant
which have been incurred as a result of this order including the costs of
ascertaining whether that person holds any of the defendant's assets and that
if the Court finds that this order has caused such person loss, and decides
that the person should be compensated for that loss, the plaintiff will comply
with any order the court may make.
This
remains part of the current undertaking.
Mr
Falconer argued that the appointment of a Receiver by way of equitable
execution was not properly to be compared with a Mareva injunction. No
precedent existed for exacting the giving of such an undertaking as a condition
of the appointment of a Receiver.
It
does not seem to me that this argument bears on the jurisdiction of the Court
to require such an undertaking in such circumstances. The Mareva injunction is
a comparatively recent addition to the armoury of the Court. Having discovered
the existence of, or some would say invented, this weapon, the Court went on to
invent the ancillary weapon of the cross-undertaking in damages for the benefit
of third parties - see
Z
Ltd. v A-Z and AA-LL
[1982] 1 Q.B. 558. In that case the cross-undertaking approved by the Court
was one designed to protect third parties from the consequences of compliance
with the injunction but the scope of the protection of the undertaking has
since been expanded to embrace third parties adversely affected by the
injunction.
For
myself I cannot accept that the jurisdiction of the Court to require such an
undertaking only exists where a Mareva injunction is ordered. Once the
cross-undertaking for the benefit of third parties became a recognised feature
of the Court's jurisdiction in that context, it necessarily followed that the
Court could make use of it when granting other discretionary relief, at least
where that relief was empowered under the same statutory provision.
For
these reasons I have concluded that the relief that Mr Gee seeks is relief
which the Court has jurisdiction to grant.
Precedent
The
Judge refused to require the Bank to give a cross-undertaking in damages as a
condition of allowing the Receivership to continue. In so doing :
(1) He
appears to have assumed that Mr Gee's application was founded on Order 30, Rule
2 of the Rules of the Supreme Court and held that the Rule did not entitle the
Appellants to the relief sought;
(2) He
held that the analogy that Mr Gee had drawn between a Mareva injunction and the
appointment of a Receiver by way of equitable execution was not apt. The
latter had more in common with a garnishee order, which was never subject to a
cross-undertaking in damages.
(3) He
held that there was no precedent for ordering a cross-undertaking in damages
where a Receiver was appointed by way of equitable execution.
It
is not clear whether the Judge considered that these points were relevant to
jurisdiction or discretion. The first point was misconceived, and Mr Falconer
has not sought to rely on it. Mr Gee had not invoked Order 30, Rule 2 and the
relief which he was seeking had nothing in common with the security which the
Court could order under that Rule. Mr Falconer has, however, relied before us
on the other two points. While I do not consider that they bear on the
question of jurisdiction, they are plainly relevant in the context of discretion.
A
Mareva injunction has this in common with the appointment of a Receiver by way
of equitable execution. It restrains the owner of property from dealing with
that property, but there it seems to me that the similarity ends. The relevant
peculiarity of the Mareva injunction is that the property in question is likely
to represent credit balances at third party banks and that notice of the
injunction will immediately be given to those banks, requiring action and
possible expenditure on their part in order
to
comply with the injunction. It is this feature which led the Court to impose
cross-undertakings in favour of third parties.
The
appointment of a Receiver by way of equitable execution will not normally have
this feature, nor does the present case. For these reasons I do not find the
analogy urged by Mr Gee to be compelling.
So
far as the analogy with garnishee orders is concerned, they do have
similarities with the form of equitable execution with which this case is
concerned and cross-undertakings in damages form no part of such orders, but I
do not find that fact provides assistance in determining the application which
is founded on the peculiar facts of this case.
There
was a lively debate before the Judge, and before us, as to the extent to which
the relief sought by the Appellants was unprecedented in the context of the
appointment of a Receiver.
The
Second Edition of Lightman and Moss on the Law of Receivers of Companies
advances the following proposition in relation to the appointment of a Receiver
at p.338:
A
cross-undertaking in damages will ordinarily be required of the application,
whether the order is made ex parte or inter partes.
H.H.
Judge Thompson held that this did not accurately state the law and Mr Falconer
contended that this was correct. He argued that it was only appropriate to
order a cross-undertaking in damages were a Receiver was appointed ex parte,
for in such circumstances it might subsequently prove that the appointment had
been wrongfully made, and the applicant ought to be liable in damages in such
circumstances. Where a Receiver was appointed on an inter partes hearing there
was no such justification for a cross-undertaking.
Mr
Gee urged that Lightman and Moss correctly stated the position, and relied on
the authority cited by the authors in support of the proposition,
National
Australia Bank Ltd v. Bond Brewing Holdings Ltd
[1990] C.L.R. 271, a decision of the High Court of Australia.
I
found this a barren debate for the following reasons.
In
the first place, the cross-undertaking referred to by Lightman and Moss is the
conventional undertaking in favour of the other party to the litigation, not an
undertaking extending to third parties. In the second place the
National
Australia Bank
case concerned the appointment of a Receiver over companies, which is also the
subject matter of Lightman and Moss' work, and can have little bearing on the
appointment of a receiver by way of equitable execution. In the third place,
when one is considering a cross-undertaking to protect third parties, I cannot
see that the question of whether it is given ex parte or inter partes has any
relevance. Whether the proposition in Lightman and Moss is correct or not, the
reality in this case is plain. Mr Gee is seeking to persuade the Court to
require, in a very different context, an undertaking of a type that has
hitherto only been required as a condition of the grant of a Mareva injunction.
Discretion
Mr
Gee was asked by the Court whether it was his case that the cross-undertaking
in damages which he seeks should always be required as a condition of
appointing a Receiver by way of equitable execution. His answer was that he
did not so submit, but that the special circumstances of this case made it just
to impose such a requirement. He identified those special circumstances as
follows:
1) The
existence of the cause of action in respect of which the Receiver has been
appointed is disputed. If the Appellants are right, no cause of action exists
so that there was no property over which the Receiver could properly have been
appointed. They should be protected by an undertaking in respect of loss
suffered in that eventuality.
2) The
issue of whether the cause of action exists is being litigated in New York, the
natural forum, where the Appellants will not recover costs if they are
successful.
3) The
reason why the Appellants are being compelled to incur ongoing costs in New
York is the refusal of the Receiver to give his consent to the settlement which
is on offer.
I
consider that the critical issue on this aspect of the appeal is whether these
circumstances do render it just to make the Order sought. What Mr Gee is, in
effect, contending is that in the circumstances of this case it should be open
to the Appellants, should they succeed in the litigation, to recover an
indemnity in respect of the ongoing New York costs incurred in order to make
good their case.
In
my judgment the fact that Ashford are now ready to agree a settlement of the
New York proceedings, which Mr Gee has placed at the heart of his submissions,
is a red herring. From the moment that the Receiver was appointed, settlement
was no longer in Ashford's gift. At that point the Appellants successfully
applied for a stay of the English proceedings in order to litigate in New York
the issue of their liability under the indemnity. They did so in the knowledge
that, if successful, they would not be entitled to recover their costs. Had
they, at that stage, sought the order that they now seek, I think that the
short answer should and would have been that it was their choice to sue in New
York and that they had to bear the consequences of that choice. It now seems
that Ashford have no longer got the funds to continue to fight the New York
proceedings and would like to settle. In these circumstances, as Mr Falconer
pointed out, the Receiver may have to fund those proceedings to prevent the
Appellants proceeding to an unopposed hearing. The order that Mr Gee seeks
would unbalance the New York proceedings, leaving the Appellants with the
possibility of recovering their costs if they win, but being under no liability
for Ashford's costs should they lose. I do not consider that the interests of
justice require the Appellants to be placed in that position.
The
Appellants contend that, if they are to pursue the New York action to its
conclusion, this will involve costs in the region of $1,000,000. If this be
the case, it is not clear to me that the convenient course is for them to
continue to fight those proceedings, rather than discontinue them and use the
material that they have obtained in them in defence of the English proceedings.
The choice which course to take is theirs.
For
all these reasons Mr Gee has failed to persuade me that justice requires this
Court to require the Bank to give a cross-undertaking in damages as a condition
of the continuance of the Receiver's appointment.
The
Stay
I
now turn to the question of whether the Judge was right to lift the stay of the
1993 Action. This was a discretionary matter, but Mr Gee urges that the Judge
was wrong in principle and that, in any event, there has been a very material
change of circumstances since he made his Order.
The
Judge was faced with a conflict of Affidavit evidence as to the enthusiasm with
which the Appellants have pursued the New York proceedings and the likely trial
date in New York.
In
their letter to the Receiver dated the 17th January, Rogers & Wells wrote:
Since
the filing of the action almost five (5) years ago there has been only limited
discovery consisting of an exchange of relevant documents among the parties and
the deposition of Mr. Higgins. The last deposition was taken at least two and
one-half (2½) years ago. Since Mr. Schlafly became counsel to plaintiffs
I am unaware of any depositions taken on behalf of Messrs. Higgins and Tyree.
Based upon the lack of activity, on a substantive level, in this case it is my
belief that it is at least two or three years away from trial.
In
contrast Mr Schlafly, the Appellants' New York lawyer, deposed on the 18th
February 1997, stating that the Appellants had been taking vigorous steps in
furtherance of the New York proceedings, although many of these had been in the
form of obtaining evidence in related actions in New York, that evidence under
New York rules of procedure being available for use in the New York action. As
to the trial date, Mr Schlafly stated:
The
current position is that pre-trial procedures in Index No. 19592/92 are nearing
completion and that the assigned trial judge, Justice Friedman, stated at the
pre-trial conference held on 30th January 1997 that if the proposed settlement
were not concluded, then trial would be scheduled "promptly".....
I
believe that the trial could commence within a few months of the proposed
settlement not proceeding. I would add that the court of Justice Friedman is
considered to be one of the fastest courts in New York for determining
disputes.
H.H.
Judge Thompson observed that he was unable to determine which of the rival
pictures was correct. He expressed scepticism as to whether the New York
proceedings would progress further, having regard to Ashford's attitude and to
the fact that the Appellants said that they would have to spend a further
$1,000,000 of costs. He concluded:
The
issue is very finely balanced. I have to make a decision. I think the stay
should be lifted. If it remains nothing will happen in New York. Here the one
party who h as an interest in concluding the proceedings and can prosecute them
to a conclusion is AIB. The successful party here will recover costs. This is
a case where the issues are finely balanced whether it is here or in New York.
The contract which is sued upon is an English contract. There is a
non-exclusive jurisdiction clause. These militate in favour of England. It
was sensible to proceed first in New York. Mr. Higgins and Mr. Tyree are U.S.
citizens and Ashford is a Delaware corporation. However the subject matter is
undoubtedly in England.....
The
case could be litigated in either jurisdiction and from time to time the
convenient forum may vary. The balance has now shifted. The case may not be
litigated in New York. The balance has swung this way. The stay should be
lifted so the action can be brought on. Both sides have done a fair measure of
preparation. In the interests of discretion the stay should be lifted.
Since
the Judgment, the Appellants have served an Affidavit giving the following
information:
The
assigned trial Judge in New York (Justice Friedman of the Commercial part of
the New York Supreme Court) after being informed of the orders made by Judge
Thompson, Q.C., has directed the trial to start in New York on 30th June 1997.
I have been informed of this by Mr. Andrew Schlafly who is the New York Counsel
acting for my clients.
Mr
Gee submits that this resolves in the Appellants' favour the doubts expressed
by H.H. Judge Thompson and tilts the scales decisively against lifting the
stay. If I were confident that the trial in New York would indeed proceed on
the 30th June I would agree, but I do not have that confidence. The Appellants
are attempting to obtain evidence from the Bank for the purpose of the New York
proceedings and it is apparent that they consider this evidence important. I
think it at least possible that they will seek an adjournment of the New York
proceedings in order to enable them to obtain this evidence. When asked by the
Court whether his clients would be prepared to give an undertaking that would
allay this apprehension, Mr. Gee proffered one that included the following:
"Mr
Higgins and Mr Tyree will do their best not to apply for an adjournment of the
trial date fixed for 30th June 1997"
This
has merely confirmed my conclusion that an adjournment of the New York
proceedings will be a possibility if the stay of the English action is
re-imposed.
I
see the position as follows. If the New York trial date of 30th June is held,
the New York action will proceed to a conclusion before any significant further
steps are likely to be taken or significant expense incurred in the English
action. The lifting of the stay provides a powerful incentive to hold the New
York trial date, which I would be loath to remove. If, on the other hand, the
New York trial date proves to be one that cannot be held, then this will tend
to vindicate the view formed by H.H. Judge Thompson. For these reasons I do
not consider that the fresh evidence about the New York trial date constitutes
a reason for reversing the Judge's decision on this point, which fell within
the proper exercise of his discretion on the material before him.
For
these reasons I would dismiss this appeal.
Swinton
Thomas L.J.
I
agree.
Hirst
L.J.
I
also agree.
Order:
Appeal dismissed with costs; application for leave to appeal to the House of
Lords refused.
© 1997 Crown Copyright
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