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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Korea National Insurance Corp (KNIC) v Allianz Global Corporate & Speciality AG [2008] EWCA Civ 1355 (02 December 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2008/1355.html Cite as: [2009] Bus LR D59, [2008] EWCA Civ 1355, [2009] Lloyd's Rep IR 480, [2008] 2 CLC 837 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QBD, COMMERCIAL COURT
Mr Justice Field
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
Vice-President of the Court of Appeal, Civil Division
LORD JUSTICE RIX
and
LORD JUSTICE THOMAS
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Korea National Insurance Corporation |
Respondent |
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- and - |
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Allianz Global Corporate & Speciality AG (on its own behalf and on behalf of the reinsurers subscribing to Policy Number AJFM157 for the 2004 year of account) |
Appellant |
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Malcolm Shaw QC, Steven Berry QC and David Scorey (instructed by Messrs Clyde & Co LLP) for the Appellant
Hearing date : 2nd December 2008
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Waller :
The background
"Albeit now raised by KNIC on the eve of the trial, the issue of non-justiciability logically must be determined before the court progresses to hear the evidence and investigate the allegations made by Allianz. This must necessarily be the case, otherwise the court will engage in the very inquiry which, if there is non-justiciability, is prohibited."
The fraud defence
The public policy defence
The law as referred to by the judge
"27. As is well known, Lord Wilberforce went on to find that there was a general principle for judicial restraint or abstention which was inherent in the very nature of the judicial process and was to be derived not only from English authority but also from American decisions, particularly those in which Buttes successfully moved to dismiss claims brought by Occidental which were based on allegations similar to those made in the English proceedings. Amongst the passages in these latter cases quoted by Lord Wilberforce were:
[Occidental] necessarily ask this court to "sit in judgment" upon the sovereign acts pleaded, whether or not the countries involved are considered co-conspirators. That is, to establish their claim as pleaded plaintiffs must prove, inter alia, that Sharjah issued a fraudulent territorial waters decree, and that Iran laid claim to the island of Abu Musa at the behest of the defendants. Plaintiffs say they stand ready to prove the former allegation by use of "internal documents". But such inquiries by this court into the authenticity and motivation of the acts of foreign sovereigns would be the very sources of diplomatic friction and complication that the act of state doctrine aims to avert. (District Judge Pregerson, March 17,1971)
The issue of sovereignty is political not only for its impact on the executive branch, but also because judicial or manageable standards are lacking for its determination. To decide the ownership of the concession area it would be necessary to decide (1) the sovereignty of Abu Musa, (2) the proper territorial water limit and (3) the proper allocation of the continental shelf. A judicial resolution of the dispute over Abu Musa between Iran and Sharjah is clearly impossible. (The Court of Appeals, August 9, 1978)."
"28. In Kuwait Airways Corporation v Iraqi Airways Company [2001] 3 WLR 1117, having reviewed many authorities touching on act of state, the public policy exception thereto and non-justiciability, Brooke LJ, giving the judgement of the Court of Appeal, said:
317. In our judgment, these authorities indicate that English law is seeking to balance (at least) three separate insights as to the appropriate role of national courts when faced with reliance on foreign legislative or executive acts by way of defence to what might otherwise be a wrong for which those courts are called upon to provide a remedy.
318. First, there is the prima facie rule that a foreign sovereign is to be accorded that absolute authority which is vested in him to act within his own territory as a sovereign acts. This rule reflects concepts of both private and public international law as to territorial sovereignty. As such, we think that the rule is founded primarily on a view as to the comity of nations, rather than on concern as to giving offence to the foreign sovereign or as to the absence of judicial standards (see Buck v Attorney-General [1965] Ch 745 per Diplock LJ at p 770). We say this because, if the sovereign purports to act outside his territory, or even if he acts within it in a penal or discriminatory way and a claimant then seeks to found his claim on that sovereign act, the English court vindicates to itself the right in the first case not to recognise and in the second case not to enforce it. This shows that embarrassment about sitting in judgment on the acts of a foreign sovereign is not per se the cause of judicial restraint in this context. Rather, each sovereign says to the other: "We will respect your territorial sovereignty. But there can be no offence if we do not recognise your extra-territorial or exorbitant acts."
319. The second insight, however, is that, whether the sovereign acts within his own territory or outside it, there is a certain class of sovereign act which calls for judicial restraint on the part of our municipal courts. This is the principle of non-justiciability. It is or leads to a form of immunity ratione materiae. It may not be easy to generalise about such acts, and the application of the principle may be fact sensitive. Guidance, however, is to be found in such considerations as whether there are "judicial or manageable standards" by which to resolve the dispute, whether the court would be in "a judicial no-man's land", or perhaps whether there would be embarrassment in our foreign relations, at any rate if that possibility was drawn to the court's attention by the executive. Sensitive issues involving diplomacy between states, or uncertain or controversial issues of international law, may be other examples of situations calling for judicial restraint. The distinction which has been developed in the analogous area of sovereign immunity between situations where the sovereign acts by way of sovereign authority (acta iure imperii) and where he acts in the commercial sphere (acta iure gestionis) may also be of some assistance, because with the development of the restrictive theory of sovereign immunity there has come the realisation that it is not every impleading of a sovereign that requires judicial restraint or gives rise to a legitimate fear of giving offence. In essence, the principle of non-justiciability seeks to distinguish disputes involving sovereign authority which can only be resolved on a state to state level from disputes which can be resolved by judicial means.
320. The third insight is that the rule whereby there is a principle of judicial restraint in so far as a sovereign acts within his own territory, is only a prima facie rule. It is subject to certain exceptions. One exception we have already mentioned is that a penal or discriminatory act of a foreign sovereign cannot be made the basis of a claim in our courts. This is perhaps one aspect of a general exception to the effect that these courts will not recognise the act of a foreign sovereign which is contrary to English public policy. The existence of this exception is not in doubt. But how far does it extend, and what is meant by English public policy in this context? The width of the exception is uncertain both because the concept of public policy is itself not hard edged, and also because it has to take into account the abhorrence of outrageous acts on the one hand, and on the other hand the concerns which give rise to the first and second insights to which we have referred. This is the route by which it is possible to say that discriminatory breaches of fundamental human rights will not be recognised, even in a sphere which is as much a matter for individual sovereign choice as a person's nationality."
"30. As the Court of Appeal recognised in para 319 of its judgement in Kuwait Airways, judicial restraint may be called for where the court is asked to decide matters, the investigation into which and adjudication thereon, would embarrass this country's foreign relations. In saying this, the Court of Appeal was reflecting, inter alia, the dictum of Justice Rehnquist in First National City Bank cited in paragraph 25 above and the views of District Judge Pregerson and the Court of Appeals cited with approval by Lord Wilberforce in Buttes. Indeed, it seems to me relatively plain that it was because of the potential embarrassment for this country's foreign relations with Singapore that in Jayaretnam v Mahood and Others (The Times, 21 May 1992) Brooke J (as he then was) set aside an order granting leave to serve libel proceedings outside the jurisdiction on the ground that the court was precluded by principles of judicial restraint from embarking on an enquiry into the plaintiff's grounds for fearing that he would not receive justice in Singapore. This too was one of the reasons given by Morland J in Skrine & Co v Euromoney Publications plc [2001] EMLR 434 (para 15) for striking out parts of a pleading in libel contribution proceedings that alleged that: (i) the Malaysian Prime Minister had acted in a manner intended and/or calculated to interfere with the independent judiciary; (ii) Malaysian judges applied the law of defamation to penalise dissent and stifle freedom of expression; and (iii) the claimants' insurers only paid the original plaintiffs "exorbitant sums by way of ostensible damages and costs because they apprehended that the claimants would not have received a fair trial at the hands of Malaysia's internationally discredited legal system.""
"31.In my opinion, the investigation into and adjudication on the Reinsurers' allegations that the N Korean State, under the guiding mind, inter alios, of the Dear Leader, fraudulently procured the N K judgement and that this was of a piece with and is to be inferred from many other criminal acts committed by the N Korean State has an obvious potential for embarrassing the foreign relations between Her Majesty's Government and the Government of N Korea. Indeed, so obvious is this potential embarrassment that the court does not need a letter from the Foreign and Commonwealth Office before coming to this view."
Discussion and conclusion
" Guidance, however, is to be found in such considerations as whether there are "judicial or manageable standards" by which to resolve the dispute, whether the court would be in "a judicial no-man's land", or perhaps whether there would be embarrassment in our foreign relations, at any rate if that possibility was drawn to the court's attention by the executive. Sensitive issues involving diplomacy between states, or uncertain or controversial issues of international law, may be other examples of situations calling for judicial restraint. "
Lord Justice Rix :
Lord Justice Thomas: