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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 >> Fortress Value Recovery Fund I LLC v Blue Skye Special Opportunities Fund LP & Ors [2013] EWCA Civ 367 (17 April 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2013/367.html Cite as: [2013] WLR(D) 154, [2013] WLR 3466, [2013] 1 CLC 752, [2013] 2 All ER (Comm) 315, [2013] 1 WLR 3466, [2013] EWCA Civ 367, [2013] 1 Lloyd's Rep 606 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
COMMERCIAL COURT
Mr Justice Blair
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE TOULSON
and
LORD JUSTICE TOMLINSON
____________________
(1) Fortress Value Recovery Fund I LLC (2) ZBS Capital Partners LP (3) Cypress Way European Asset Investors II SARL |
Respondents |
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- and - |
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(1) Blue Skye Special Opportunities Fund LP (2) Mr Salvatore Cerchione (3) Mr Gianluca D'Avanzo (4) Stepstone Acquisition SARL (5) Blue Skye GP Ltd (6) DBZ Investment (Lux) SARL (Formerly Blue Skye (Lux) SARL) (7)Benlomond Corporation SARL (8) Blue Skye Management SARL (9) Blue Skye Capital SARL (10) Blue Skye Management SARL SCS (11) Greentea SA (12) Blue Skye Financial Holdings SARL (13) Omega Skye Partners Limited Partnership (14) Omega Partners SARL (15) Mr Mattia Mirko Danese (16) Mr Francesco Paolo Padula (17) Mr Giovanni Caslini (18) BSkye Investors SARL |
Appellants |
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Hearing date : 31 January 2013
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Tomlinson :
Introduction
The dispute in outline
"17.11 Governing Law
This Agreement and the rights, obligations and relationships of the parties hereto under this Agreement shall be governed by and construed in accordance with the laws of England and Wales. Any dispute, controversy or claim arising out of or in connection with this Agreement or the formation, breach, termination of invalidity thereof, that the parties hereto are unable to resolve between themselves, shall be finally settled under the Rules of Arbitration of the International Chamber of Commerce of Paris by three arbitrators appointed in accordance with the aforementioned rules. The place of arbitration shall be London, UK. All submissions and awards in relation to arbitration under this Agreement shall be in English, and all arbitration proceedings and pleadings shall be in English."
"Stay of legal proceedings
(1) A party to an arbitration agreement against whom legal proceedings are brought (whether by way of claim or counterclaim) in respect of a matter which under the agreement is to be referred to arbitration may (upon notice to the other parties to the proceedings) apply to the court in which the proceedings have been brought to stay the proceedings so far as they concern that matter.
(2) An application may be made notwithstanding that the matter is to be referred to arbitration only after the exhaustion of other dispute resolution procedures.
(3) An application may not be made by a person before taking the appropriate procedural step (if any) to acknowledge the legal proceedings against him or after he has taken any step in those proceedings to answer the substantive claim.
(4) On an application under this section the court shall grant a stay unless satisfied that the arbitration agreement is null and void, inoperative, or incapable of being performed.
. . ."
". . . A wide construction of the arbitration clause is mandated by Fiona Trust & Holdings Corp v Privalov [2007] UKHL 40 at [12] and [13]. Whether for the purposes of the dispute Omega Skye and Omega Partners are viewed as shareholders in Stepstone, or as partners, I am satisfied that the claims in question are claims "arising out of or in connection with" the Partnership Deed, or "the formation, breach, termination or invalidity" of the agreement. On that basis, the claims against Omega Skye and Omega Partners (the thirteenth and fourteenth defendants), should be stayed in accordance with paragraphs 3 – 4 of the Draft Order attached to the application."
The Contracts (Rights of Third Parties) Act 1999
1. Right of third party to enforce contractual term.
This section has no associated Explanatory Notes
(1) Subject to the provisions of this Act, a person who is not a party to a contract (a "third party") may in his own right enforce a term of the contract if -
(a) the contract expressly provides that he may, or
(b) subject to subsection (2), the term purports to confer a benefit on him.
(2) Subsection (1)(b) does not apply if on a proper construction of the contract it appears that the parties did not intend the term to be enforceable by the third party.
. . .
(4) This section does not confer a right on a third party to enforce a term of a contract otherwise than subject to and in accordance with any other relevant terms of the contract."
The meaning of "enforce", in the context of an exclusion clause or limitation on liability, is set out in s.1(6)
(6) Where a term of a contract excludes or limits liability in relation to any matter references in this Act to the third party enforcing the term shall be construed as references to his availing himself of the exclusion or limitation.
This section has no associated Explanatory Notes
(1) Where -
(a) a right under section 1 to enforce a term ("the substantive term") is subject to a term providing for the submission of disputes to arbitration ("the arbitration agreement"), and
(b) the arbitration agreement is an agreement in writing for the purposes of Part I of the Arbitration Act 1996,
the third party shall be treated for the purposes of that Act as a party to the arbitration agreement as regards disputes between himself and the promisor relating to the enforcement of the substantive term by the third party.
(2) Where -
(a) a third party has a right under section 1 to enforce a term providing for one or more descriptions of dispute between the third party and the promisor to be submitted to arbitration ("the arbitration agreement"),
(b) the arbitration agreement is an agreement in writing for the purposes of Part I of the Arbitration Act 1996, and
(c) the third party does not fall to be treated under subsection (1) as a party to the arbitration agreement,
the third party shall, if he exercises the right, be treated for the purposes of that Act as a party to the arbitration agreement in relation to the matter with respect to which the right is exercised, and be treated as having been so immediately before the exercise of the right.
The Partnership Deed
"any person which in relation to the person concerned is . . . (e) any person, body corporate, partnership or other unincorporated body who exercises day to day control over the person concerned or over the ultimate direct or indirect holding entity (or entity which ultimately controls, directly or indirectly) of the person concerned . . ."
The references to "control" must be read against Clause 1.7, which states that:-
"The term "controlled by" shall mean the possession, directly or indirectly, of the power to direct or procure the direction of the management and policies of the person, whether through the ownership of shares, by contract or otherwise."
It is for present purposes common ground that the Appellants owned and controlled Blue Skye GP and that they are therefore to be regarded as Associates of Blue Skye GP.
"17.2.1 Neither the General Partner nor any of its Associates shall have any liability for any loss to the Partnership or the Partners arising in connection with the services to be performed hereunder or pursuant hereto, or under or pursuant to any management agreement, advisory agreement or other agreement under which it provides or agrees to provide services to or in respect of the Partnership or which otherwise arises in relation to the operation, business or activities of the Partnership save in respect of any matter resulting from its fraud, wilful misconduct, bad faith or reckless disregard for its obligations and duties in relation to the Partnership or its gross negligence or breach of any law, regulation or material term of this Agreement.
17.2.2 The Partnership agrees to indemnify and hold harmless out of Partnership Assets the General Partner and any Associate (the "Indemnified Party") against any and all liabilities, actions, proceedings, claims, costs, demands, damages and expenses (including legal fees) incurred or threatened by reason of the Indemnified Party being or having acted as a general partner or manager in respect of the Partnership or arising in respect of or in connection with any matter or other circumstance relating to or resulting from the exercise of its powers as a general partner or manager or from the provision of services to or in respect of the Partnership or which otherwise arise in relation to the operation, business or activities of the partnership provided however that it shall not be so indemnified with respect to any matter resulting from its fraud, gross negligence, wilful misconduct, bad faith, reckless disregard for its obligations and duties in relation to the Partnership or breach of any law, regulation or material term of this Agreement or, in the case of the General Partner, from any material breach of any provision of FSMA binding upon it."
"17.14 Contracts (Rights of Third Parties) Act 1999
(a) Any person (other than the Parties to this agreement) who is given any rights or benefits under this agreement (including pursuant to Clause 17.2 and the definition of "Independent Valuer") shall be entitled to enforce those rights or benefits against the parties in accordance with the Contracts (Rights of Third Parties) Act 1999.
(b) Save as otherwise provided in Clause 17.14(a) above, the operation of the Contracts (Rights of Third Parties) Act 1999 is hereby excluded."
The application for a stay
"40. The promise under these charterparties to pay commission to the brokers was clearly a promise made to and enforceable by the charterers. Failure to perform that obligation would clearly fall within the scope of all the arbitration clauses. If the charterers had assigned their cause of action for failure to pay commission to the brokers by a statutory assignment the latter could only have enforced that promise if they resorted to arbitration against the owners. Had they done so, it would not have been open to the owners to challenge the arbitrators' jurisdiction on the grounds that the only parties to the arbitration agreement who were identified by it were the owners and the charterers. That would be because such identification would be completely irrelevant to the entitlement of the brokers to utilize the arbitration agreement. The transference by assignment of the substantive chose in action necessarily involved the transference of the procedural means of enforcement of it.
41. There is also authority which suggests that under the Third Parties (Rights against Insurers) Act 1930, which effects a statutory assignment of rights of action in a case where the assured has become bankrupt or been wound up, the party to whom the benefit of a right of action under the liability insurance contract has been transferred is obliged to pursue that right in accordance with an arbitration agreement in the contract of insurance even if that agreement is expressed to refer only to the parties to the contract of insurance and not in terms wide enough to cover a statutory assignee: see The Padre Island [1984] 2 Lloyd's Rep 408.
42. It is against this background that one must consider the words in subsection (1) "… the third party shall be treated for the purposes of that Act as a party to the arbitration agreement …". In my judgment these words clearly reflect and are entirely consistent with the assignment analogy. The third party never was expressed to be a party to the arbitration agreement but, in view of the fact that he has in effect become a statutory assignee of the promisee's right of action against the promisor and because, by reason of the underlying policy of the 1999 Act expressed in section 1(4) he is confined to the means of enforcement provided by the contract to the promisee, namely arbitration, he is to be treated as standing in the shoes of that promisee for the purpose only of the enforcement of the substantive term. Thus although the wording of sub-section (1)(a) – "is subject to a term" – is capable of having a range of possible meanings, one of those meanings is that which I have described and, having regard to the further words of the sub-section, entirely reflects the assignment analogy referred to in the Explanatory Notes.
. . .
44. Since, as I have held, the scope of the disputes covered by all nine arbitration agreements is wide enough to embrace a dispute between owners and charterers about payment of the brokers' commission, I conclude that in the present case Cleaves were entitled and, indeed, obliged to refer those disputes to arbitration and that the arbitrators had jurisdiction to determine them."
"1. These explanatory notes relate to the Contracts (Rights of Third Parties) Act 1999 which received Royal Assent on 11 November 1999. They have been prepared by the Lord Chancellor's Department in order to assist the reader in understanding the Act. They do not form part of the Act and have not been endorsed by Parliament.
2. The notes need to be read in conjunction with the Act. They are not, and are not meant to be, a comprehensive description of the Act. So where a section or part of a section does not seem to require any explanation or comment, none is given."
Relevant paragraphs of the Notes include:-
"Section 1 : Right of third party to enforce contractual term
6. Section 1 gives effect to the central purpose of the Act. It sets out the circumstances in which a third party would have the right to enforce a term of the contract.
7. Subsection (1) sets out a two-limbed test for the circumstances in which a third party may enforce a term of a contract. The first limb is where the contract itself expressly so provides. The second limb is where the term purports to confer a benefit on the third party unless it appears on a true construction of the contract that the contracting parties did not intend him to have the right to enforce it (subsection (2)).
. . .
9. Subsection (4) clarifies subsection (1). The third party's right of enforcement is subject to the contract's terms and conditions. It is open to the parties to limit or place conditions on the third party's right; for example, if he wishes to enforce the right he is to do so by way of arbitration and not litigation.
. . .
11. Subsection (6) makes it clear that the Act is to apply so as to enable a third party to take advantage of an exclusion or limitation clause in the contract, as well as to enforce "positive" rights. The Act, for example, allows a term of a contract which excludes or limits the promisee's liability to the promisor for the tort of negligence and expressly states that the exclusion or limitation is for the benefit of the promisee's "agents or servants or subcontractors" to be enforceable by these groups.
. . .
Section 8 : Arbitration provisions
33. Section 8 ensures that, where appropriate, the provisions of the Arbitration Act 1996 apply in relation to third party rights under this Act. Without this section, the main provisions of the Arbitration Act 1996 would not apply because a third party is not a party to the arbitration agreement between the promisor and the promisee.
34. Subsection (1) deals with what is likely to be the most common situation. The third party's substantive right (for example, to payment by the promisor) is conferred subject to disputes being referred to arbitration (see section 1(4)). This section is based on a "conditional benefit" approach. It ensures that a third party who wishes to take action to enforce his substantive right is not only able to enforce effectively his right to arbitrate, but is also "bound" to enforce his right by arbitration (so that, for example, a stay of proceedings can be ordered against him under section 9 of the Arbitration Act 1996). This approach is analogous to that applied to assignees who may be prevented from unconscionably taking a substantive benefit free of its procedural burden (see, for example, DVA v Voest Alpine, The Jaybola [1997] 2 Lloyd's Rep 279). "Disputes …. relating to the enforcement of the substantive term by the third party" is intended to have a wide ambit and to include disputes between the third party (who wishes to enforce the term) and the promisor as to the validity, interpretation, existence or performance of the term; the third party's entitlement to enforce the term; the jurisdiction of the arbitral tribunal; or the recognition and enforcement of an arbitration award. But to avoid imposing a "pure" burden on the third party, it does not cover, for example, a separate dispute in relation to a tort claim by the promisor against the third party for damages.
35. Subsection (2) is likely to be of rarer application. It deals with situations where the third party is given a right to arbitrate under section 1 but the "conditional benefit" approach underpinning subsection (1) is inapplicable. For example, where the contracting parties give the third party a unilateral right to arbitrate or a right to arbitrate a dispute other than one concerning a right conferred on the third party under section (1). To avoid imposing a pure burden on the third party (in a situation where, for example, the contracting parties give the third party a right to arbitrate a tort claim made by the promisor against the third party) the subsection requires the third party to have chosen to exercise the right. The timing point at the end of the subsection is designed to ensure that a third party who chooses to exercise his right to go to arbitration by, for example, applying for a stay of proceedings under section 9 of the Arbitration Act 1996, can do so. Under section 9 of the Arbitration Act 1996, the right to apply for a stay of proceedings can only be exercised by someone who is already a party to the arbitration agreement."
The judgment below
"103. There is a further issue as regards the exclusion clause. The claimants assert that the right of Mr Cerchione and Mr D'Avanzo to avail themselves of the exclusion clause as against Stepstone falls outside the arbitration clause. This is essentially because it is a contractual defence, as opposed to a contractual right of action which is subject to arbitration. In my view, this is correct. Whether proceedings are liable to be stayed in favour of arbitration must depend on the nature of the claim, not on the nature of an exclusion defence, because the issue has to be determined at the time the proceedings are issued (see Sebastian Holdings Inc v Deutsche Bank AG [2011] 1 Lloyd's Rep 106, at [62] to [63], Thomas LJ, in the context of jurisdiction clauses) and before the taking of any step in those proceedings to answer the substantive claim (s. 9(3) of the Arbitration Act 1996). In my view, the claimants are right to contend that Mr Cerchione and Mr D'Avanzo are entitled to rely on the exclusion clause (if applicable) regardless of the forum of the particular proceedings against them.
104. This conclusion is consistent with the decision in the Nisshin case. In that case, the brokers were seeking to enforce a positive right of action against the owners. It was held that they were entitled to rely on the arbitration clause under s. 8(1) of the 1999 Act because they should be treated as in effect an assignee of the charterers' right to enforce payment as against the owners, and that such assignment carried with it the benefit and burden of the arbitration clause. The present case, by contrast, is concerned with a contractual defence. I agree with the claimants that there is no analogy with assignment. A right of action can be assigned, but it is not possible to assign in any meaningful way an exclusion."
The argument on the appeal
Discussion
"102. I turn to the argument as it revolved around the exclusion clause in Clause 17.2 given to "any Associate" and thereby Mr Cerchione and Mr D'Avanzo. The position is similar to that as regards the indemnity. Mr Cerchione and Mr D'Avanzo do not rely on the exclusion clause in their defence. It was suggested in oral argument that consideration might be given to an amendment in this regard. I agree that in applying the statutory stay under s. 9 Arbitration Act 1996, it is the substance of the matter which is important rather than the formal nature of the proceedings. But I do not think that the prospect of a possible amendment can alter the outcome of the issue that I have to decide. Mr Cerchione and Mr D'Avanzo do not seek to avail themselves of the substantive term, and there is no dispute relating to the enforcement of the substantive term by them. Section 8(1) does not (in my view) result in them being treated as parties to the arbitration agreement by reference to the exclusion clause."
Conclusion
Lord Justice Toulson:
Lord Justice Pill :