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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Pacific International Sports Clubs Ltd v Surkis & Ors [2010] EWCA Civ 753 (02 July 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2010/753.html Cite as: [2010] EWCA Civ 753 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION
THE HON MR JUSTICE BLACKBURNE
HC08C01562
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE MOORE-BICK
and
LORD JUSTICE STANLEY BURNTON
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PACIFIC INTERNATIONAL SPORTS CLUBS LIMITED |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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IGOR SURKIS & ORS |
Respondent |
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MR ALI MALEK QC & MR CYRIL KINSKY QC (instructed by Edwin Coe LLP) for the Respondents
Hearing dates : 23rd & 24th March 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Mummery :
Introductory
The judgment
"31. … First, in a stay case the court already has jurisdiction and the issue is why the court should not exercise that jurisdiction. In addressing that issue, the court must first consider whether there is a forum outside England which is the appropriate forum. If there is, the court will ordinarily grant a stay unless there are circumstances by reason of which justice requires that a stay should nevertheless not be granted. The burden of proving that there is a forum outside England which is the appropriate forum rests on the defendant. In a stay case, if the court is satisfied that the prima facie appropriate forum is outside England, the burden shifts to the claimant to show that there are special circumstances by reason of which justice requires that a stay should nevertheless not be granted. Second, and by contrast, in a case involving service out of the jurisdiction the issue is why the court should take jurisdiction at all. In addressing that issue, the court must consider whether England is the appropriate forum ("the first stage"). If it is, the court will normally grant permission to serve out of the jurisdiction unless there are circumstances by reason of which justice requires that service out of the jurisdiction should nevertheless be refused ("the second stage"). In short the court takes jurisdiction over the case because England is the appropriate forum. The burden of proving that England is the appropriate forum rests on the claimant. In a service out case, if the court is satisfied that the prima facie appropriate forum is England, however, the burden shifts to the defendant to show that there are special circumstances by reason of which justice requires that service out should nevertheless be refused."
"33. Third, allegations as to why the appropriate forum should be displaced must amount to an allegation that the forum is or will be unavailable for the trial of the claim. This must be clearly demonstrated against an objective standard and supported by positive and cogent evidence. In the Abidin Dover [1984] 1 AC 398 at 411 Lord Diplock said in reference to this point:
'The possibility cannot be excluded that there are still some countries in whose courts there is a risk that justice will not be obtained by a foreign litigant in particular kinds of suits whether for ideological or political reasons, or because of inexperience or inefficiency of the judiciary or excessive delay in the conduct of the business of the courts, or the unavailability of appropriate remedies. But where there is already a lis alibi pendens in a foreign jurisdiction which constitutes a natural and appropriate forum for the resolution of the dispute, a plaintiff in an English action, if he wishes to resist a stay upon the ground that even-handed justice may not be done to him in that particular foreign jurisdiction, must assert this candidly and support his allegations with positive and cogent evidence.'
In the Spiliada at 478D-F, Lord Goff, in discussing what must be shown if a stay of proceedings in this country is to be refused, referred to "…the fact, if established objectively by cogent evidence, that the plaintiff will not obtain justice in the foreign jurisdiction…"
"34. …As the BVI defendants challenge the grant of permission to serve out of the jurisdiction on them it is for Pacific, having sought and obtained permission to do so, to satisfy the court that England is the proper place in which to bring the claim. See CPR 6.37(3). By contrast, having been duly served with the claim within the jurisdiction, the burden is on SMI and Mr Surkis who apply to stay the claim on forum non conveniens grounds, to satisfy the court that England is not an appropriate forum in which to bring the claim. All of this was common ground between the parties. The fact that the burden of proof on this issue is different according to whether it is a defendant duly served within the jurisdiction who is seeking a stay or it is the claimant who, having served out with the court's permission is having to satisfy the court on a challenge to the grant of permission, that England is the proper place in which to bring the claim does not present any practical difficulties in the present case: the BVI defendants are, on any view, part players in this dispute; the essential contest, as I have explained, is between Pacific and Mr Surkis…The effective burden therefore is on Mr Surkis to persuade me that, although duly served within the jurisdiction, this country is not a proper place to try Pacific's claims."
"92…grave doubts about the impartiality and honesty of the courts in Ukraine, not least when faced with a claim of the nature brought by Pacific concerned with shares in, and ultimately control of it, such a high profile football club where powerful interests are at stake."
Grounds of appeal
Approach to appeal
"The solution of disputes about the relative merits of trial in England and trial abroad is pre-eminently a matter for the trial judge before whom submissions should be measured in hours, not days. An appeal should be rare and the appellate court should be slow to interfere."
"41. …the need to examine most clearly the matters relied upon a demonstrating that a fair trial in what is otherwise the appropriate forum for the resolution of the dispute will not be possible. Nor does it follow that because claimant A cannot obtain a fair trial in a particular country, claimant B will not be able to do so in the same country."
Forum non conveniens issue
" 99. …I am of the view that, notwithstanding the undoubted problems highlighted by the evidence over the independence of the Ukrainian court system and the problems that Pacific has so far encountered in pursuing its claims over the Dynamo shares, the correct decision for this court to make is (1) to stay the proceedings against SMI and Mr Surkis and (2) to set aside the permission order and, with it, the service of the claim on the BVI defendants."
"91. What conclusions should I draw from the blizzard of proceedings that have been brought in Ukraine in connection with the Dynamo share dispute brought by Pacific? And what of the other evidence connected with the inadequacies of the Ukrainian judicial system and the suggestions of political and other interference with the system? Do they constitute the cogent evidence which is needed to justify a finding that Pacific will be denied justice in Ukraine if it is compelled to litigate its claims in the courts of that country so that, even if Ukraine is otherwise the appropriate forum for the resolution of its claims, I should permit the proceedings which Pacific has brought in this country to proceed to trial?
92. I have come to the conclusion, I confess not without considerable hesitation, that they do not. The evidence leaves me with the strong impression that Pacific (or Mr Grigorishin) is happy to resort to the Ukrainian courts where it suits it (or him) to do so. It is quite true that the repeated inability of Pacific to get its claim off the ground coupled with apparently perverse conclusions reached by some at least of the courts there until ultimately corrected in the Supreme Court (at any rate in the case of the Obolonsky Court proceedings) raise grave doubts about the impartiality and honesty of the courts in Ukraine, not least when faced with a claim of the nature brought by Pacific concerned with shares in, and ultimately control of it, such a high profile football club where powerful interests are at stake.
93. But I am not persuaded that the evidence relied upon to demonstrate that Pacific will be denied justice in Ukraine in its dispute with Mr Surkis quite crosses the threshold of cogency that the jurisprudence requires. I am the more willing to reach that conclusion by three further considerations."
Standard of proof
"36. The standard of evidence needed to establish the unavailability of the appropriate forum if that forum is overseas-the cogent evidence to which Lord Diplock and Lord Goff referred- must be such as to demonstrate that the forum in question is or will be unavailable, not merely that it may be unavailable."
" …the fact, if established objectively by cogent evidence, that the plaintiff will not obtain justice in the foreign jurisdiction…"
Pacific's use of Ukraine courts
The three considerations and the two stage process
The proceedings against SMI
Defects of Ukrainian legal system
"79. …the English court [Mr Brisby submitted] should not turn a blind eye to the deficiencies in the Ukrainian judicial system which were acknowledged to exist, even by the President of Ukraine. The fact that efforts were being made to improve the system was not assisted by pretending in the present dispute that all was well. He submitted that the evidence overwhelmingly indicated that all was not well. He emphasised that Pacific's complaints were not about defects in Ukrainian substantive law or procedure but about the way that the courts in Ukraine went about their judicial function: the essential complaint was that the judges there are subject to improper influence. There was, he submitted, a very strong likelihood that the Ukrainian courts would be subject to improper influence in their disposal of the claims that Pacific sought to advance in the current proceedings. Its attempts in Ukraine to pursue those claims, or aspects of them, had all this far been thwarted as a result, he submitted, of improper influences on the courts there."
Permission to serve out of jurisdiction
Result
Lord Justice Stanley Burnton:
Lord Justice Moore-Bick