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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 >> SCF Tankers Ltd & Ors v Privalov & Ors [2017] EWCA Civ 1877 (21 November 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2017/1877.html Cite as: [2017] EWCA Civ 1877, [2018] 1 WLR 5623, [2018] WLR 5623 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION, COMMERCIAL COURT
THE HON MR JUSTICE MALES
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE KITCHIN
and
LORD JUSTICE BEATSON
Between :
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SCF TANKERS LIMITED (formerly known as FIONA TRUST & HOLDING CORPORATION) and Others |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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YURI PRIVALOV and Others |
Respondents |
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and Mr Dan McCourt Fritz (instructed by Reynolds Porter Chamberlain LLP) for the Appellant
Mr Steven Berry QC, Mr Nathan Pillow QC and Mr Adam Board (instructed by Lax & Co LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing date : 4 October 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Beatson :
I Overview:
II Background:
"the security on which the [Fiona Trust parties] are entitled to insist would never permit the risk to capital which the [Standard Maritime parties'] commercial aspirations would require".
III The material terms of the 2005 orders:
"If the court later finds that this order has caused loss to the respondent, and decides that the respondent should be compensated for that loss, the applicants will comply with any order the court may make".
"This order does not prohibit Standard Maritime or any of its subsidiaries, from dealing with or disposing of any of its assets in the ordinary and proper course of business. For the avoidance of doubt, for the purpose of this Order, the sale and purchase of vessels (including vessels under construction), the sale and purchase of shares in any company or corporation and the grant of security over any vessels or shares are not in the ordinary and proper course of business."
"This order and the undertakings given are an interim measure only in order to allow the [Standard Maritime parties] sufficient time to seek to provide alternative security and nothing in the order or undertaking shall in away affect the appropriate form of security. The [Standard Maritime parties] shall have liberty to apply to use funds in the Lawrence Graham Account in the normal course of business to vary the undertaking given above so as to provide substitute security or otherwise. This shall be without prejudice to any contentions that might be put forward by the [Fiona Trust parties] that such funds should not be used in the ordinary course of business or that such substitute security is not satisfactory or that the undertakings should otherwise be maintained."
"If the court finds later that this order, the orders made 31 August 2005, 7 September 2005 or the provisions of undertakings as set out in this order or as may be provided in connection with the provision of security in accordance with this order, have caused loss to any respondent, and decides that any respondent should be compensated for that loss, the applicants will comply with any order the court may make".
IV The cases of the parties before the judge:
V The judgment below:
"[I]t remains inherently credible, without needing to depend to any real extent on Mr Nikitin's credibility, that but for the 2005 order Mr Nikitin would have wished to invest the proceeds of re-sale of the four Hyundai and Daewoo newbuildings … in the shipping business … which was experiencing a boom … and that by far the most likely shipping investment for him was a further programme of newbuildings".
Although, (see [73]) the investment would not necessarily have consisted of the purchase of four Suezmax vessels and two BLCCs, it was not suggested that the profits to be made from such vessels were markedly out of line with profits from the purchase of other types of vessel. The judge proceeded on the basis that those were the types of vessel which Mr Nikitin would probably have sought, making some allowance for the uncertainty involved in this choice, which at [114] he assessed meant that the Standard Maritime parties had a 50% chance overall of achieving the profit they claimed.
(a) At the hearing on the return date on 7 September 2005, the application to vary paragraph 30 was rejected save in relation to a single vessel and certain incidental payments, and the express prohibition on the Standard Maritime parties buying and selling vessels remained in place. The submission of counsel then appearing for the Fiona Trust parties (see [31]) was that because they had a proprietary claim it was wholly inappropriate to allow the party who is the subject to that proprietary claim to deal with the asset in the ordinary course of business. That remained the position of the Fiona Trust parties until Andrew Smith J handed down the liability judgment in December 2010.
(b) The security regime which the parties put in place (see [38]) prohibited the Standard Maritime parties from using the secured funds even in the ordinary and proper course of business unless they first made a successful application to the court to permit such use. In that event, however, the claimants expressly reserved a right to argue that such funds should not be used in the ordinary course of business. The judge did not regard the submission of the Fiona Trust parties that this provision demonstrated that the Standard Maritime parties did not then have a present need to use the funds and that the parties contemplated that if a future need arose, the Standard Maritime parties would say so and if necessary make an application for permission to do so, as realistic and rejected it.
(c) The observation of Judge Mackie QC when refusing the application for increased security for the Fiona Trust parties' undertaking in damages set out at [10] above was (see [43]) "revealing". It demonstrated that "an application by the [Standard Maritime parties] for the release of the security which they had provided in order to employ the funds in a project such as the purchase of newbuildings would have been far from straightforward".
"The duty to mitigate is only a duty to act reasonably. Any failure by the [Standard Maritime parties] to make a further application which would have taken time, would have been strongly resisted, and which had only moderate prospects of success, was not unreasonable. There was here no failure to mitigate."
He considered (at [85]) that his view was reinforced by what he described as a "practical dilemma" which the Standard Maritime parties would have faced because they could not request a quote from the Korean shipyards "on the basis that they would like to conclude some shipbuilding contracts, but would need to make an application to the court in order to find out whether they were allowed to do so", but would need some concrete proposal in hand for the court to assess before applying to the court for permission.
VI: Analysis:
"This approach does not mean that a party seeking to enforce an undertaking must deal with every conceivable or theoretical cause of the damage claimed, however unlikely this may be. Once a party has established a prima facie case that the damage was exclusively caused by the relevant order, then in the absence of other material to displace that prima facie case, the court can, and generally would, draw the inference that the damage would not have been sustained but for the order. In other words, the court seeks to approach and deal with this question of causation in a common-sense way."
In this court, Lloyd LJ with whom Stocker LJ and Sir George Waller agreed, stated that he saw no fault or flaw in Saville J's judge's approach or in his conclusion on causation: see Transcript 7 November 1990.
"[T]he court must be realistic as to the dilemma facing a defendant when served, out of the blue, with a freezing order. Some claimants are far from reasonable in practice – the present case provides a very clear example … Applications for variation are not that simple. They take time to prepare and are not without cost. … Approaches to claimants who agree variations, or even to provide suitable written indications to banks and other third parties that particular payments are not caught by the order, are often far from straightforward. If, in such circumstances, a defendant is shown to have suffered an unusual loss, then in my judgment the claimant should not be surprised if the court orders him to pay for it."
Lord Justice Kitchin :
Lord Justice Lewison :
Note 1 The neutral citations of the judgments that gave rise to the orders that are the subjects of this appeal are [2016] EWHC 2163 (Comm) (“liability”) and [2016] EWHC 2451 (Comm) (“quantum”). There is a third judgment on costs: [2016] EWHC 2567 (Comm). [Back] Note 2 Les Laboratoires Servier v Apotex Inc [2008] EWHC 2347 (CH) and Astrozeneca Abvkrka v Novo Mesto [2015] EWCA Civ 484 at [16] on the need for a “liberal but fair assessment of loss”, Annie Bailey & Co Ltd v Balholm Securities Ltd (1973) 2 Lloyds Rep 404 and Parabola Investments Ltd v Browallia Cal Ltd [2009] EWHC 901 (Comm), [2010] EWCA Civ 486 on damages for loss of a chance even if the claimant might have made a loss. [Back]