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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 >> ICICI Bank UK Plc v Diminco NV (Rev 1) [2014] EWHC 3124 (Comm) (28 August 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2014/3124.html Cite as: [2014] EWHC 3124 (Comm), [2014] 2 CLC 647 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
THE COMMERCIAL COURT
7 Rolls Buildings Fetter Lane London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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ICICI BANK UK plc | Claimant | |
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DIMINCO NV | Defendant |
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101 Finsbury Pavement London EC2A 1ER
Tel No: 020 7421 6131 Fax No: 020 7421 6134
Web: www.merrillcorp.com/mls Email: [email protected]
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
The Defendant did not appear and was not represented
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Crown Copyright ©
"Diminco, after careful consideration, has decided not to serve any evidence in the English proceedings or to take any further active part in them. Diminco is already having to deal with proceedings in Belgium and elsewhere at the same time as managing its day-to-day business and simply does not have available the necessary management and legal resources to deal with yet further proceedings in England. Diminco proposes, nevertheless, to summarise in this letter its objections to the relief which your client (the Bank) is seeking in the English proceedings. Please ensure that this letter is shown to the Court at the hearing of any application which the bank may make."
Risk of dissipation
"Inexpedient"
"That was an exercise of discretion, and that of course is an obstacle to any appeal against the judge's decision, but I am bound to say that in my view he was abundantly right. I say that because, as it seems to me, there is all the difference in the world between proceedings in this country, whether by litigation or by arbitration, to determine rights of parties on the one hand, and proceedings in this country to enforce rights which have been determined by some other court or arbitral tribunal outside the jurisdiction.
Where this court is concerned to determine rights then it will, in an appropriate case, and certainly should, enforce its own judgment by exercising what would be described as a long-arm jurisdiction. But where it is merely being asked under a convention or an Act of Parliament to enforce in support of another jurisdiction, whether in arbitration or litigation, it seems to me that, save in an exceptional case, it should stop short of making orders which extend beyond its own territorial jurisdiction. I say that because, if you take a hypothetical case of rights being determined in state A and assets being found in states B to M you would a find very large number of subsidiary jurisdictions, in the sense that they were merely being asked to enforce the rights determined by another jurisdiction, making criss-crossing long-arm jurisdictional orders with a high degree of probability that there would be confusion and, indeed, resentment by the nations concerned at interference with their jurisdictions. It seems to me that, apart from the very exceptional cases, the proper attitude of the English courts – and, I may add, courts in other jurisdictions – is to confine themselves to their own territorial area, save in cases in which they are the court or tribunal which determines the rights of the parties. So long as they are merely being used as enforcement agencies they should stick to their own last."
"It is a strong thing to restrain a defendant who is not resident within the jurisdiction from disposing of assets outside the jurisdiction. But where the defendant is domiciled within the jurisdiction such an order cannot be regarded as exorbitant or as going beyond what is internationally acceptable. To treat it as such merely because the substantive proceedings are pending in another country would be contrary to the policy which informs both Article 24 and s. 25.
Where a defendant and his assets are located outside the jurisdiction of the court seized of the substantive proceedings, it is in my opinion most appropriate that protective measures should be granted by those courts best able to make their orders effective. In relation to orders taking direct effect against the assets this means the courts of the state where the assets are located; and in relation to orders in personam, including orders for disclosure, this means the courts of the state where the person enjoined resides."
"Finally, Mr Cuoghi submits that it is established by authority that the English courts should make orders having extra-territorial effect in aid of substantive proceedings being carried on abroad only in 'very exceptional circumstances'. For this proposition he relies on an observation of Lord Donaldson MR in Rosseel…"
Having set out the part of the judgment from Rosseel which I have quoted above, Millett LJ continued at pages 828F-829E:
"I find the decision surprising, given that the court was being asked to exercise its enforcement jurisdiction against defendants resident in England and who were amenable to the provisions of RSC order 48 and the inherent jurisdiction to compel disclosure of assets abroad: see Maclaine Watson & Co Ltd v Dept of Trade and Industry, Re International Tin Council (No 2) [1989] Ch 286. I would not for my part accept that the English court was being asked to exercise a long-arm jurisdiction; indeed, I think that an order of the New York court might well have qualified for this description. The explanation, to my mind, is that no or no suficient regard was paid to the fact that the defendants were resident in England… [Rosseel] was not concerned with s 25, but it was followed in [S & T Bautrading v Nordling]. In that case substantive proceedings were pending in Germany. The defendants were domiciled in this country. The plaintiffs applied for worldwide Mareva relief. The judge limited the order to assets in England and Wales and this court upheld his decision. No consideration appears to have been given by the court to the terms of s 25(2) or to the question whether the making of a worldwide order would have been inexpedient, and no account appears to have been taken by the court of the fact that the defendants were domiciled in England or of the absence of any question of conflicting jurisdictions…
Where an application is made for in personam relief in ancillary proceedings two considerations which are highly material are the place where the person sought to be enjoined is domiciled and the likely reaction of the court which is seized of the substantive dispute. Where a similar order has been applied for and has been refused by that court it would generally be wrong for us to interfere."
"The point of principle which lies at the heart of the appeals is whether a world-wide freezing order should be made under section 25 of the 1982 Act in support of an action in another jurisdiction in circumstances where the defendant in question is neither domiciled nor resident within the jurisdiction and there is no substantial connection between the relief sought and the territorial jurisdiction of the English Court."
"As the authorities show, there are five particular considerations which the court should bear in mind, when considering the question whether it is inexpedient to make an order. First, whether the making of the order will interfere with the management of the case in the primary court e.g. where the order is inconsistent with an order in the primary court or overlaps with it. That consideration does not arise in the present case. Second, whether it is the policy in the primary jurisdiction not itself to make worldwide freezing/disclosure orders. Third, whether there is a danger that the orders made will give rise to disharmony or confusion and/or risk of conflicting inconsistent or overlapping orders in other jurisdictions, in particular the courts of the state where the person enjoined resides or where the assets affected are located. If so, then respect for the territorial jurisdiction of that state should discourage the English court from using its unusually wide powers against a foreign defendant. Fourth, whether at the time the order is sought there is likely to be a potential conflict as to jurisdiction rendering it inappropriate and inexpedient to make a worldwide order. Fifth, whether, in a case where jurisdiction is resisted and disobedience to be expected, the court will be making an order which it cannot enforce."
"The issue in this case arises because, on the face of it, the only fetter placed upon the otherwise apparently unlimited powers which the court has as a result of the combination of s.37 of the Supreme Court Act 1981, s.25 of the Civil Jurisdiction and Judgments Act 1982 and CPR Rule 6.20 is its power to refuse to grant relief if its absence of jurisdiction apart from s.25 makes such grant 'inexpedient'. It is plain that, in relation to the grant of worldwide relief, the jurisdiction is based on assumed personal jurisdiction; as such it has the potential for extra-territorial effect in the case of non-residents with assets abroad. Thus it is likely that the jurisdiction will prove extremely popular with claimants anxious to obtain security against defendants in disputes yet to be decided where they cannot obtain it in the court of primary jurisdiction or the court of the defendants' residence or domicile, which courts are the natural fora in which to make such applications. There is thus an inherent likelihood of resort to the English jurisdiction as an 'international policeman', to use the phrase employed by Moore-Bick J, in cases of international fraud. We would do nothing to gainsay, and indeed would endorse, the observations of Millett LJ in Cuoghi's case [1998] QB818 to the effect that international fraud requires courts, within the limits of comity, to render whatever assistance they properly can without the need for express provision by an international convention requiring it. However, even in the case of Article 24 of the Brussels Convention it has been made clear that:
'The granting of provisional or protective measures on the basis of Article 24 is conditional on, inter alia, the existence of a real connecting link between the subject matter of the measures sought and the territorial jurisdiction of the contracting state of the court before which those measures are sought.' (see Van Uden Maritime BV (trading as Van Uden Africa Line) v Kommanditgesellschaft in Firma Deco Line (Case C-391/95) [1999] QB 1225, 1227, para 40).
Further, in so far as 'police' action is concerned, policing is only practicable and therefore expedient if the court acting in that role has power to enforce its powers if disobeyed. In that respect the principle in Derby & Co Ltd v Weldon (No. 3 and 4) [1990] Ch 65, already quoted, plainly has application and is apt to be applied in cases of this kind."
"only if there is doubt about whether the order will be obeyed and if, should that occur, no real sanction would exist… the court should refrain from making an order which the justice of the case requires."
"The worldwide order is only directed at assets outside the jurisdiction. There is therefore no connecting link at all between the subject matter of the measure sought and the territorial jurisdiction of this court. It is not suggested that the worldwide order should be made in order to assist the Italian court or any of the other courts of the member states which have been involved in enforcement proceedings."
(1) It will rarely be appropriate to exercise jurisdiction to grant a freezing order where a defendant has no assets here and owes no allegiance to the English court by the existence of in personam jurisdiction over him, whether by way of domicile or residence or for some other reason. Protective measures should normally be left to the courts where the assets are to be found or where the defendant resides or is for some other reason subject to in personam jurisdiction.
(2) Where there is reason to believe that the defendant has assets within the jurisdiction, the English court will often be the appropriate court to grant protective measures by way of a domestic freezing order over such assets, and that is so whether or not the defendant is resident within the jurisdiction or for some other reason is someone over whom the English court would assume in personam jurisdiction.
(3) Where the defendant is resident within the jurisdiction, or is someone over whom the court has in personam jurisdiction for some other reason, a worldwide freezing order may be granted applying the discretionary considerations which were explained in the Cuoghi, Motorola and Banque Nationale cases.
(4) Where the defendant is neither resident within the jurisdiction nor someone over whom the court has or would assume in personam jurisdiction for some other reason, the court will only grant a freezing order extending to foreign assets in exceptional circumstances. It is likely to be necessary for the applicant to establish at least three things:
(a) that there is a real connecting link between the subject matter of the measure sought and the territorial jurisdiction of the English court in the sense referred to in Van Uden;
(b) that the case is one where it is appropriate within the limits of comity for the English court to act as an international policeman in relation to assets abroad; and that will not be appropriate unless it is practical for an order to be made and unless the order can be enforced in practice if it is disobeyed; the court will not make an order even within the limits of comity if there is no effective sanction which it could apply if the order were disobeyed, as will often be the case if the defendant has no presence within the jurisdiction and is not subject to the in personam of the English court;
(c) it is just and expedient to grant worldwide relief, taking into account the discretionary factors identified at paragraph 115 of the Motorola case. They are (i) whether the making of the order will interfere with the management of the case in the primary court, e.g. where the order is inconsistent with an order in the primary court or overlaps with it; (ii) whether it is the policy in the primary jurisdiction not itself to make to make worldwide freezing/disclosure orders; (iii) whether there is a danger that the orders made will give rise to disharmony or confusion and/or risk of conflicting, inconsistent or overlapping orders in other jurisdictions, in particular the courts of the state where the person enjoined resides or where the assets affected are located; (iv) whether at the time the order is sought there is likely to be a potential conflict as to jurisdiction rendering it inappropriate and inexpedient to make a worldwide order; and (v) whether in a case where jurisdiction is resisted and disobedience may be expected the court will be making an order which it cannot enforce.
Assets within England & Wales
Foreign Assets