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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Amtrust Europe Ltd v Trust Risk Group SpA [2014] EWHC 4169 (Comm) (10 December 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2014/4169.html Cite as: [2014] EWHC 4169 (Comm) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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AMTRUST EUROPE LIMITED |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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TRUST RISK GROUP S.p.A. |
Respondent |
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Daniel Shapiro (instructed by Lewis Silkin LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 25 November 2014 and 2 December 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Blair:
(1) The defendant challenges the court's jurisdiction. It contends that the parties have agreed that disputes between them shall be settled by arbitration in Milan, which arbitration is now underway, and that these proceedings should be stayed or dismissed. To the contrary, the claimant's case is that the relevant jurisdiction clause provides that disputes are to be determined in the English courts. Of the issues argued, this has been the most significant, and if correct is a complete answer to the claim.
(2) The defendant submits (contrary to the claimant's submission) that the account in question was not a trust account. There is, it says, no relevant proprietary claim.
(3) The defendant says that no injunction should be granted because damages are an adequate remedy on the basis that it is good for the money should it be held liable to the claimant to replace the money. The claimant says that the defendant's financial position does not support any such conclusion, which is (it submits) irrelevant in the case of a proprietary claim.
(4) The defendant submits that the balance of convenience is against ordering an injunction, and points to a freezing order made by the Italian prosecutor obtained by (or more accurately on the complaint of) the claimant in Italy on 21 November 2014 which is currently freezing its accounts.
The facts
(1) Jurisdiction
The principles
(1) As decided in Canada Trust Co v Stolzenburg (No.2) [1998] 1 WLR 547, the party seeking to invoke the court's jurisdiction must show that it has a good arguable case that the court has jurisdiction. The defendant accepted in oral argument that, at this stage in the proceedings, the same test applies as regards the mandatory stay under s.9 Arbitration Act upon which it relies, though it has not yet made a formal application.
(2) A "good arguable case" does not require proof on the balance of probabilities that the court has jurisdiction (necessarily, because that would require a trial). However, it is a higher test than "whether there is a serious issue to be tried". In Stolzenburg, Waller LJ explained at 555 that:
""Good arguable case" reflects in that context that one side has a much better argument on the material available. It is the concept which the phrase reflects on which it is important to concentrate, i.e. of the court being satisfied or as satisfied as it can be having regard to the limitations which an interlocutory process imposes that factors exist which allow the court to take jurisdiction."
(3) Where there are different jurisdiction clauses in agreements between the same parties, the "one-stop" presumption stated in Lord Hoffmann's dictum in Fiona Trust & Holding Corp v Privalov [2008] 1 Lloyd's Rep 254 at [13] is relevant. This is to the effect that the construction of an arbitration clause should start from the assumption that the parties, as rational business people, are likely to have intended any dispute arising out of the relationship into which they have entered to be decided by the same tribunal.
(4) Examples of a rational choice by the parties to a commercial relationship of resolution by different tribunals include where different agreements deal with distinct aspects of their relationship (Sebastian Holdings Inc v Deutsche Bank AG [2010] EWCA Civ 998 at [42] and following), or where it is convenient to apply a particular regime to some aspect of their relationship such as security (Deutsche Bank AG v Tongkah Harbour Public Co Ltd [2011] ArbLR 20 at [30]).
(5) In any case, the "one-stop" presumption is an aid to construction, and where the provisions in one agreement give jurisdiction to the court, and in another refer disputes to arbitration, the allocation of jurisdiction is fundamentally one of construction (UBS AG v HSH NordBank AG [2009] 2 Lloyd's Rep 272 at [83]; Lewison, The Interpretation of Contracts, 5th ed at 18.03).
The parties' contentions in summary
The relevant provisions of the agreements
"The Parties acknowledge that:
(a) Until the signing date of this Agreement, TRG has operated and shall hence continue to operate as a broker for the placement of (mainly but not only) Medical Malpractice insurance business in Italy (the TRG Business) to ATEL;
(b) ATEL and TRG shall modify the Term of Business Agreement (TOBA) currently in force between them to the extent necessary to reflect the terms hereunder. In particular, should ATEL decide to pursue business in Italy by establishing a branch, the Parties hereby commit to enter into an additional distribution agreement for MedMal insurance risks in Italy.
(c) The Parties shall ensure that all agreements and their respective procedures are and remain compliant with all applicable law and regulations."
"Upon the termination of this Agreement for any reason whatsoever, without prejudice to the Parties rights:
(a) The exclusivity provisions between the parties will terminate. The Agreements, including the TOBA shall be modified with effect as of the date of termination of this Agreement. TRG and the service company designated by ATEL in Section 1.3 each shall be entitled to the commissions due in accordance with clause 1.3 to each party in respect of each policy which falls under the Agreement until the natural expiry of each policy (including any contractual extension periods ("the run off period")."
"This Agreement, including its Schedule, constitutes the entire agreement between the Parties with respect to the transactions contemplated herein, and supersedes any prior understanding, whether written or oral, with respect to such transactions or any other matter peripheral or ancillary thereto."
"The recitals hereto and its Schedule are an integral part of this Agreement."
"This Agreement shall be governed by, and construed and enforced in accordance with Italian law."
A central question of construction is what is meant by "This Agreement " in this sub-clause.
Conclusion on jurisdiction
(1) I accept the defendant's contention that on the face of it the Fiona Trust "one-stop" presumption carries considerable weight, because on the claimant's case part of the relationship is governed by English law and jurisdiction, whereas on the defendant's case all disputes between them are referred to arbitration in Milan and Italian law. Unless there is some rational reason for such an outcome, it is more likely that both parties intended one set of jurisdiction and dispute resolution provisions to govern the agreement which should be read accordingly.
(2) The claimant relies on the fact, as it puts it, that the TOBA is "awash" with references to English law concepts. However, I agree with the defendant that the references in the agreement which depend on English law are primarily to UK financial services legislation and regulatory requirements. This reflects the fact that the claimant is a UK incorporated company, which is regulated by the UK regulators, and the form is a standard London form. I do not think that this shows that the agreement remained subject to English law if it otherwise appears that the parties chose otherwise.
(3) However, there is force in the claimant's contention that the TOBA and the Framework Agreement are dealing with different subject matters. The TOBA is dealing with aspects of their relationship including premium, whereas the Framework Agreement is dealing with exclusivity. Different choices of law and jurisdiction clauses are "rational" in such a situation.
(4) As against that, there appears as the defendant says to have been some overlap in that, albeit after the date of the agreement, endorsement 2 of the Framework Agreement dated 2 June 2014 is dealing with matters other than exclusivity, and, as the defendant says, amendments were made to the Framework Agreement, not the TOBA.
(5) However, as the claimant says, these are post contractual endorsements, and do not necessarily cast any light on the construction of the Framework Agreement itself.
(6) As a matter of construction, the principal question is whether the claimant is right to say that the reference in clause 6 of the Framework Agreement (dealing with applicable law and arbitration) to "this Agreement", is referring only to the Framework Agreement, and does not include, as the defendant contends, the scheduled TOBA as well.
(7) The "entire agreement" clause 5.5 refers to "this Agreement, including its Schedule ", and that provision has to be read with clause 5.9, providing that the " Schedule [is] an integral part of this Agreement". These two clauses give support to the defendant's position that after the Framework Agreement, the TOBA ceased to exist as a separate agreement, and that from then on there was only a single agreement.
(8) As against that, there is force in the claimant's contention that the fact that the TOBA was scheduled to the Framework Agreement is consistent with it continuing as a separate agreement. This is also consistent with clause 1.4(b) by which the parties agreed to modify the TOBA to the extent necessary to reflect the terms of the Facility Agreement.
(9) Further, as the claimant says, in the context of termination, clause 3(a) provides that "the exclusivity provisions between the parties will terminate. The Agreements including the TOBA shall be modified as of the date of termination of this Agreement".
(10) In my view, this is the strongest of the various textual submissions made by the parties. This clause is arguably inconsistent with the defendant's case that from the time of the Framework Agreement, the TOBA ceased to exist as a separate agreement, because it specifically refers to the "Agreements". It lends support to the claimant's case that where in the Framework Agreement's law and arbitration clause the words refer to "This Agreement", reference is being made to the Framework Agreement only, and not to the TOBA as well.
(11) Further, this case differs from Fiona Trust, in that although there are different law and jurisdiction clauses in the TOBA and the Framework Agreement, the two agreements were entered into at different times. The defendant accepts, of course, that the TOBA is governed by English law and jurisdiction, but contends that this changed when the Framework Agreement was entered into.
(12) On the basis (for the purposes of this application) that Italian law does not recognise the trust as such, and that the TOBA did create a trust account for the receipt of premiums (which is the next matter I have to decide), it would follow if the defendant is correct that there was a substantial change in the foundation of the parties' relationship at the time of the Framework Agreement, which applied to pre-existing business.
(13) The defendant accepts that no weight can be given to evidence as to the defendant's intention on entering into the Framework Agreement which is inadmissible as an aid to construction.
(2) The "trust account" issue
"The BROKER to the extent it collects premium shall hold premium in a trust account for and on behalf of the INSURER and as a fiduciary. Premium shall be kept separate from other bank accounts and/or the general funds of the BROKER"
The "broker" is the defendant, and the "insurer" is the claimant in this provision.
(3) The defendant's asserted right to transfer the money as a matter of Italian law
(1) The first is said to be "AmTrust's deteriorating financial position". The claimant describes this attack as spurious, based on material of no value on the internet. I agree that the material cited in the defendant's evidence gives no serious support to any suggestion that AmTrust's financial position is deteriorating. Further, the material relied on post-dates the defendant's letter of 10 October 2014, in which the claimant's financial position was not mentioned.
(2) The second reason given is the departure of a "key underwriter" at AmTrust. However, on the defendant's evidence, this occurred in July 2013 more than a year previously, and so is unlikely, as the claimant says, to have played a part in the withholding of premiums in October 2014.
(3) The third reason given is that in "the first stage of start-up" of the business, the defendant did not make use of its right to advance commission. As the claimant says, it is "completely implausible" that a broker would forego commission to which it was contractually entitled.
(4) Whether damages are an adequate remedy
(5) Balance of convenience