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England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Tonicstar Ltd. (Operating As Lloyd's Syndicate 1861) v American Home Assurance Company [2004] EWHC 1234 (Comm) (26 May 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2004/1234.html Cite as: [2005] 1 LLR 32, [2005] Lloyd's Rep IR 32, [2005] 1 Lloyd's Rep 32, [2004] EWHC 1234 (Comm), [2005] Lloyds Rep IR 32 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Royal Courts of Justice
B e f o r e :
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TONICSTAR LIMITED (Operating as Lloyd's Syndicate 1861) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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AMERICAN HOME ASSURANCE COMPANY |
Defendant |
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IN AN ARBITRATION CLAIM 2004 FOLIO 372 |
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BETWEEN: |
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(1) COMMERCIAL UNION CORPORATE MEMBER LIMITED (the corporate capital provider for Syndicate 1861 at Lloyd's for the year 2000) (2) TONICSTAR LIMITED (the corporate capital provider for Syndicate 1861 at Lloyd's for the years 2001 and 2002) |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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AMERICAN HOME ASSURANCE COMPANY |
Defendant |
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Mr D. Railton QC & Mr R. Williams (instructed by Denton Wilde Sapte) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: Monday 24 May 2004
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Morison :
The Background
"any dispute … between the Reassured and the Reinsurers with reference to the interpretation of this Reinsurance or the rights with respect to any transaction involved."
The Claimant's case
(2) The issues in question which should be decided in this jurisdiction are first, whether the English Court proceedings should be stayed in favour of arbitration; and second, whether the seat of the arbitration is in England or elsewhere (where the law governing the arbitration agreement is English Law). AHA were aware of this before they issued their Petition.
(3) England is the natural forum for the determination of the stay application as was implicitly accepted by AHA when they made their application for a stay. The Petition constitutes a blatant tactical manoeuvre to prevent the English Court from determining the extent of its own jurisdiction.
(4) The Claimants had indicated, during their disagreement in correspondence over the seat of the arbitration, that this would be a matter they would seek to raise before the English Court at the hearing of the stay application. The Petition represents an attempt by AHA to prevent this Court from deciding the question of a stay and the proper seat of the arbitration, as a matter of English law. By the Petition AHA are seeking to fix the arbitration in New York, thus pre-empting this Court's decision on the issue.
(5) It has never been disputed that the applicable law of both the reinsurance contract and the arbitration agreement is English law. The reinsurance was placed in the Lloyd's market and was to be operated in London. The alleged misrepresentations and non-disclosures took place in London. There can be no doubt that the proceedings brought by the Claimants here were properly so brought.
" The question which arises is whether the determination of the future progress, and scope, of those proceedings should be determined by this Court, as all parties originally envisaged, or in New York in accordance with the Defendants' tactically motivated change of tack."
(6) The following key facts emerge from the background. First, AHA have not disputed the territorial jurisdiction of this Court – they have made no application under CPR Part 11. Their only case is that the proceedings should be stayed pending arbitration. Second, aside from the Petition there are no ongoing proceedings in New York, the New York action having been discontinued. Third, the English action was started first. Fourth, AHA have applied to this court for a stay and that is plainly the appropriate procedure. Fifth, AHA knew before they issued their Petition that the assistance of this Court was being sought on the question of stay and the seat of the arbitration. Against that background:
"… it is plain that [AHA's] Petition in the Southern District Court of New York is a naked attempt to deprive this Court of the ability to determine issues which are naturally and properly within the province of this Court to determine, and which, at least in part, the parties have hitherto contemplated would be determined in this Court."
AHA's case
(2) When Cooke J gave permission on 11 May to serve the arbitration claim form out of the jurisdiction, he was not told that AHA had issued their Petition in the New York Court. This was a failure to make full and frank disclosure, although at the time the papers seeking leave were lodged with the Court, the existence of the Petition was unknown to the Syndicate.
(3) It is not disputed that England is a sensible forum for the determination of the stay and seat questions; but that does not mean that England is the natural forum. There are a number of clear connections with New York not least because that is the place where AHA, who is the more natural Claimant, conducts business; it is the place of the underlying risk and the place where the original losses occurred; and it is the place where AHA's witnesses are located, including the New York brokers. The underlying insurance is of an education authority of the State and is governed by the law of the State of New York.
(4) There is nothing in the arbitration agreement which specifies the seat of the arbitration or the law which governs it. AHA does not accept that English law is the proper law of the arbitration agreement (or of the reinsurance). The Claimants have no contractual right to have the stay and seat issues determined by this Court. There is nothing unnatural or inappropriate in determining these issues in New York.
(5) The fact that AHA made an application to this Court under section 9 of the Arbitration Act does not make this court the appropriate or natural forum to determine the outstanding issues. Any application to have the proceedings stayed had to be brought under that section and within the time specified.
(6) By their Petition, AHA seek to compel arbitration on the ground that the parties have agreed to it. The New York Court will determine whether the disputes are within the arbitration clause. In doing so the court would apply the applicable law, if any. If the Court concluded that there was a dispute which was subject to arbitration it would compel arbitration and if no other forum were specified it would, under the Federal Arbitration Act, compel it to take place in the Southern District of New York. The reason why AHA seek to compel arbitration in New York is not to take advantage of a federal statute which, as the Claimants mistakenly fear, disregards the intentions of the parties or the provisions of the applicable law, but rather because New York is AHA's home territory; it is the place where the witnesses are located and where its documents are to be found.
(7) It is not AHA who have sought to behave oppressively; rather it is the Claimants themselves.
"Their conduct of the matter since at least February 2004 has been based on covert actions and stealth, the sole purpose of which has been to attempt to secure for themselves a perceived tactical advantage by litigating here."
For example, immediately after obtaining the anti-suit injunction Tonicstar
issued a motion in the Federal Court in New York to dismiss the Petition. This is returnable on 28 May.
"this is a clear abuse of this Court's order and can only be designed to manoeuvre itself into a better position in New York … Further, it shows that Tonicstar considers it appropriate for the matter to be dealt with by the New York court, notwithstanding the injunction."
(8) This is not an appropriate case for the grant of an anti-suit injunction which is an exceptional remedy. The Claimants have no contractual right to restrain AHA from what it is seeking to do. The mere fact that there are concurrent proceedings which might determine the same issues between the parties is not sufficient for the grant of an injunction. AHA have acted throughout "above board and on notice". It is the Claimants "who have acted covertly and by stealth whenever they have thought it tactically in their interests to do so. Their recent conduct in New York exemplifies their attitude".
The Principles of Law
"The following conditions are necessary. First, the threatened conduct must be "unconscionable". It is only such conduct which founds the right, legal or equitable but here equitable for the protection of which an injunction can be granted. What is unconscionable cannot and should not be defined exhaustively, but it includes conduct which is "oppressive or vexatious or which interferes with the due process of the court"… The underlying principle is one of justice in support of the "ends of justice"… It is analogous to "abuse of process"; it is related to matters which should affect a person's conscience… Secondly, to reflect the interests of comity and in recognition of the possibility that an injunction, although directed against the Defendant personally, may be regarded as an (albeit indirect) interference in the foreign proceedings, an injunction must be necessary to protect the applicant's legitimate interest in English proceedings; he must be a party to litigation in this country at which the unconscionable conduct of the party to be restrained is directed, and so there must be a clear need to protect English proceedings… It follows that the natural forum for the litigation must be in England, but this, while a necessary, is not a sufficient reason." per Rix LJ at paragraph 42 of his judgment in the Court of Appeal in Glencore International v Exeter Shipping [2002] CLC 1090.
The Decision
The conclusion that England is the natural forum is not as a matter of law sufficient of itself for this court to grant an anti-suit injunction. That requires the extra ingredient that I must be satisfied that the complaint in New York is vexatious and oppressive or unconscionable: see Airbus Industrie v Patel [1999] 1AC 119. But in my judgment further pursuit of the New York Complaint would indeed be vexatious and oppressive. It was an attempt by SCB to hi-jack the hearing of forum issues to New York rather than England despite the logical and normal course, if thought to be sustainable, of arguing the matter in these courts in these proceedings which were of course begun first. To permit the two sets of proceedings to continue would, I think, plainly be oppressive. On the basis of my decision it would involve SCB, an English company subject to the jurisdiction of this court, not only pursuing parallel proceedings in an inappropriate forum but also seeking to restrain another English company from pursuing its claim in what I have held to be the natural forum. That SCB should not be permitted to do. I am of course conscious of the need for caution and observance of comity in this court granting anti-suit injunctions. It requires exceptional circumstances to grant such an injunction and there is always the alternative of leaving the New York court to decide for itself with such benefit as it might derive from my decision. But not only is it, as I have said, open to serious question whether the New York court even has claimed or would claim jurisdiction over Genstar but I would, with due diffidence and respect, expect the New York court to have the same distaste for parallel proceedings as this court and indeed to acknowledge this court's decision that the claim is properly brought and will be pursued here. It is also, I think, the reality of SCB's Complaint in New York that it seeks an anti-suit injunction and I can see no legitimate interest in SCB continuing to seek that relief or indeed pursuit of its claims on the merits in New York once it has been decided that the claims are to proceed in this jurisdiction. To do so would, I think, readily qualify as vexatious and oppressive. I shall therefore, as I said at the conclusion of the hearing, grant Genstar the anti-suit injunction which it seeks."
"I therefore conclude that the law is that I should grant the injunction if I am satisfied that in the interests of doing justice between the parties it should be granted in all the circumstances. What is the relevant natural forum is a factor to be taken into account as are the elements of vexation and oppression that are or may be involved. The discretion has to be exercised having regard to the principles of comity. It has to be exercised with caution and, as has been pointed out by Parker LJ in M&R v ACLI [1984] 1 Lloyd's Law Reports at page 613, may call for a higher standard of proof than in the case of an application for a stay. I do not consider myself … obliged to disregard what Lord Brandon said in Abdin v Daver at page 423:
. "In this connection it is right to point out that, if concurrent actions in respect of the same subject matter proceed together in two different countries, as seems likely if a stay is refused in the present case, one or other of the two undesirable consequences may follow: first, there may be two conflicting judgments of the two courts concerned; or secondly, there may be an ugly rush to get one action decided ahead of the other in order to create a situation of res judicata or issue estoppel in the latter."
Lord Diplock said in the same case (at page 412) "comity demands that such a situation should not be permitted to occur as between courts of two civilised and friendly states"; it would be, he said, "a recipe for confusion and injustice". As Bingham LJ said in Dupont No 1 the policy of the law must be to favour the litigation of issues only once in the most appropriate forum. The interests of justice require that one should take into account as a factor the risks of injustice and oppression that arise from concurrent proceedings in different jurisdictions in relation to the same subject matter."