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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Mazur Media Ltd & Anor v Mazur Media GmbH & Ors [2004] EWHC 1566 (Ch) (07 July 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2004/1566.html Cite as: [2005] 1 Lloyd's Rep 41, [2004] 1 WLR 2966, [2004] EWHC 1566 (Ch), [2004] WLR 2966, [2005] 1 LLR 41 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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MAZUR MEDIA LIMITED APEX ENTERTAINMENT GROUP LIMITED (both in administrative receivership) |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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MAZUR MEDIA GmbH (in provisional insolvency under the laws of Germany) MANUEL SACK IRIS MAZUR HANSPETER RHEIN |
Defendants |
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James Turner (instructed by Stephenson Harwood) for the Defendants
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Lawrence Collins:
I Background
II The Agreements
III The claims and the application
V The parties' position on jurisdiction
(1) Article 5(3), by which a person domiciled in a Regulation State may be sued in another Regulation State "in matters relating to tort, delict or quasi-delict, in the courts for the place where the harmful event occurred or may occur."(2) Article 23(1): "If the parties, one or more of whom is domiciled in a Member State, have agreed that a court or the courts of a Member State are to have jurisdiction to settle any disputes which have arisen or which may arise in connection with a particular legal relationship, that court or those courts shall have jurisdiction. … Such an agreement conferring jurisdiction shall be either: (a) in writing or evidenced in writing …"
(1) Apex has no properly pleaded claim to title to the Masters, and no basis for the court's jurisdiction to determine it. Apex pleads (Particulars of Claim, paragraph 18(h)) that the Share Sale Agreement required Mrs Mazur to deliver or cause Mazur GmbH to deliver up to Apex "all Recordings". But it is legally impossible for the Share Sale Agreement alone, nor a failure by Mrs Mazur to comply with her obligations under it, to result in any transfer of property belonging to Mazur GmbH. Apex cannot establish a case that it has or at any stage had any proprietary or possessory interest in the relevant property, without which it cannot bring itself within any relevant provision of the Judgments Regulation.(2) It follows that, irrespective of any arguments about the width of the jurisdiction clause in the Share Sale Agreement or the location of any tort, none of Apex's title-derived claims can be entertained by the English court.
(3) So far as Mr Sack and Mr Rhein are concerned, no jurisdictional basis exists. Since there is no contract between either of Mazur Ltd and Apex and either of Mr Sack and Mr Rhein, the only conceivable head of alternative jurisdiction against them would be under Article 5(3), and even that could only apply to the claims for damages for conversion. The claims for a declaration as to title and for an order for delivery up do not fall within Article 5(3), as they do not seek to establish a liability on the part of the Defendants: see Case 189/87 Kalfelis v Bankhaus Schroder, Munchmeyer, Hengst & Co [1988] ECR 5565. The claim for "further and other relief" is a fortiori.
(4) To bring the claim within Article 5(3) would necessarily involve a pleaded allegation that "the harmful event" had occurred within the jurisdiction. No such pleading has been, nor could be, made. There is no such tort in English law or German law as "failure to deliver to a particular address," as is suggested in the evidence of Mazur Ltd and Apex. The jurisdictionally-significant conduct has all taken place in Germany: Case C-364/93 Marinari v. Lloyd's Bank [1995] ECR I-2719.
(5) Whatever the width of the jurisdiction clause in the Share Sale Agreement, it cannot extend to any claim brought against Mrs Mazur by Mazur Ltd in tort, since Mazur Ltd is not party to the Share Sale Agreement.
(6) Even in relation to Apex, and assuming that it had any claim in tort, the court has no jurisdiction. In relation to Article 5(3), the same considerations apply as in respect of Mr Sack and Mr Rhein. Apex cannot rely on the exclusive jurisdiction clause in the Share Sale Agreement for the purposes of the tort claim also. The parties have agreed that a "particular legal relationship" should be subject to the jurisdiction of the English court, viz., the Share Sale Agreement. That relationship does not encompass any (alleged) subsequent conversion of property which in any event never belonged to Apex.
(7) Mazur GmbH accepts that the court has jurisdiction to entertain those claims brought in the name of Mazur Ltd which fall within the jurisdiction clause in the Assignment. But this can extend only to the claims under the first two heads of relief sought by Mazur Ltd in the prayer to the Particulars of Claim: a claim for conversion of property said to have been assigned is not a claim "arising in relation to" the Assignment. The Assignment is merely part of the factual background to the claim.
(8) It cannot be said, for the purposes of Article 23(1), that the "particular legal relationship" which "the parties … have agreed" should be subject to the jurisdiction of the English court, viz., the Assignment, extends to encompass any (alleged) conversion of the property (allegedly) assigned: that relationship is merely incidental to any alleged tort.
(9) So far as the claims brought by Apex are concerned, the same considerations apply in relation to Mr Sack and Mr Rhein.
(1) Article 23(1) of the Judgments Regulation confers on the court exclusive jurisdiction to decide all disputes in relation to each of (a) the Share Sale Agreement between Mrs Mazur and Apex and (b) the Assignment between Mazur GmbH and Mazur Ltd.(2) The place of performance of the obligation by Mrs Mazur under the Share Sale Agreement was England, the place where the delivery of the Masters was to take place.
(3) The Claimants were, as a matter of contract, as against Mazur GmbH, to have the exclusive rights in respect of the Masters, since they embodied the sound recordings in which Mazur Ltd (the subsidiary) was to own the copyright and were the main asset which Apex (the parent) was buying. For the Defendants to deal with the Masters other than to the order of Mazur Ltd and Apex was conversion of the Masters. The Claimants also mentioned in argument that they had a claim for wrongful interference with contract, but no such claim has been made.
(4) The "place where the harmful event occurred" arising from the tort of conversion is England. It is in England that the Masters were supposed to be delivered by Mazur GmbH to Apex pursuant to the Share Sale Agreement. The Defendants are alleged to have converted the Masters by the failure to deliver, or to procure or to allow the delivery of, the Masters in that way. It is in England where the relevant damage was suffered - the failure to deliver there caused physical damage to be done there and that is where the recoverable economic loss is actually suffered.
V Jurisdiction
"Conversion of goods can occur in so many different circumstances that framing a precise definition of universal application is well nigh impossible. In general the basic features of the tort are threefold. First, the defendant's conduct was inconsistent with the rights of the owner (or other persons entitled to possession). Second, the conduct was deliberate, not accidental. Third, the conduct was so extensive an encroachment on the rights of the owner as to exclude him from use and possession of the goods."
"Whilst it has thus been recognized that the term 'place where the harmful event occurred' within the meaning of Article 5(3) … may cover both the place where the damage occurred and the place of the event giving rise to it, that term cannot be construed so extensively as to encompass any place where the adverse consequences can be felt of an event which has already caused damage actually arising elsewhere.
Consequently, that term cannot be construed as including the place where … the victim claims to have suffered financial damage following upon initial damage arising and suffered by him in another Contracting State."
VI Stay application by Mazur GmbH and the Insolvency Regulation
(1) Council Regulation (EC) No.1346/2000 ("the Insolvency Regulation") governs the effect in England of the German insolvency proceedings against Mazur GmbH.(2) By Article 4: "(1) Save as otherwise provided in this Regulation, the law applicable to insolvency proceedings and their effects shall be that of the Member State within the territory of which such proceedings are opened, hereafter referred to as the 'State of the opening of proceedings.' (2) The law of the State of the opening of proceedings shall determine the conditions for the opening of those proceedings, their conduct and their closure. It shall determine in particular: ….. (b) the assets which form part of the estate … (e) the effects of the insolvency proceedings on proceedings brought by individual creditors, with the exception of lawsuits pending … "
(3) By Article 15: "The effects of insolvency proceedings on a lawsuit pending concerning an asset or a right of which the debtor has been divested shall be governed solely by the law of the Member State in which that lawsuit is pending."
(4) In the circumstances of this case a stay would be appropriate for these reasons: (a) any claim in tort can only add to the cost of the proceedings, for no realistic benefit; (b) either the claim in respect of title will succeed, in which case the Claimants will recover and Mazur GmbH lose the Masters – and any judgment for substantial damages will be worth at most a very few cents in the Euro in the German liquidation; or the claim in respect of title will fail, in which case any damages claim will fall with it; (c) in relation to the remaining claims (i.e., those which relate to the disputed title to the Masters), there is another available jurisdiction which may hear them – and probably at less expense; (d) if the tortious claims against the other Defendants have to be heard in Germany and that the issue of title is key to those claims also, commonsense suggests that – if a multiplicity of proceedings (with the attendant duplication of cost and risk of inconsistent decisions) is to be avoided – a stay would be appropriate and fair, not least given that the bank behind the Claimants will have deep pockets, whereas the German liquidator's means will be far more restricted.
(1) By section 221 of the 1986 Act and subject to the provisions of Part V "all the provisions of this Act and the Companies Act about winding up apply to an unregistered company". A foreign company is an "unregistered company" within the meaning of Part V: Stocznia Gdanska v. Latreefers (No. 2) [2001] 2 BCLC 116. TA \l "Stoczina Gdanska v. Latreefers No. 2) [2001] 2 BCLC 116" \s "Stoczina Gdanska v. Latreefers No. 2) [2001] 2 BCLC 116" \c 8 That is so whether or not it carries on business in England. "Winding up order" in section 130(2) can be taken to extend to such orders or their equivalent in other EU jurisdictions.(2) Parliament had an opportunity, when amending the 1986 Act to take account of the Insolvency Regulation, to make express the application of section 130(2) to foreign windings-up. It did not do so, and, in not doing so, it must have considered that the wording of section 221(1) was sufficiently wide to achieve that result. Were its intention otherwise, then the result would be that an English liquidation would result in a stay of English proceedings, but a German (or French, or Spanish etc.) liquidation would not.
(3) Such a result would breach the fundamental principle of non-discrimination on grounds of nationality enshrined in Article 12 of the Treaty of Rome. The creditors of a company having its main centre of interest in another EU country will tend to be nationals of that country. Their position vis-à-vis English litigation will be less favourable than that of creditors of an English company in liquidation here. Such a result would also be inconsistent with the automatic recognition of insolvency proceedings prescribed by Article 16(1) of the Insolvency Regulation, and would render Article 15, in cases such as the present, a dead letter.
VII Overall conclusion