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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 >> ADM Asia-Pacific Trading PTE Ltd v Toepfer International Asia PTE Ltd & Anor [2016] EWHC 1427 (Comm) (20 June 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2016/1427.html Cite as: [2016] EWHC 1427 (Comm) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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ADM ASIA-PACIFIC TRADING PTE. LTD | ||
(formerly known as TOEPFER INTERNATIONAL ASIA PTE. LTD) | Claimant/Applicant | |
- and - | ||
PT BUDI SEMESTA SATRIA | Defendant/Respondent |
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Philippa Hopkins (instructed by Addleshaw Goddard LLP) for the Defendant/Respondent
Hearing date: 16 December 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE PHILLIPS :
The background facts
(a) The relevant contracts
"17. GOVERNING LAW AND JURISDICTION
17.1 This agreement shall be governed, construed and interpreted in accordance with the laws of the Republic of Indonesia.
17.2 For the implementation of this Agreement and all its consequences and for the adjudication of any dispute arising hereunder, the Parties here by irrevocably choose the non-exclusive jurisdiction of the District Court of Central Jakarta in Jakarta, Indonesia "
"Should any dispute arise between the contracting parties and no agreement can be reached, these disputes shall be settled by Arbitration, which shall take place in London as per FOSFA regulation. The award given by the organization concerned shall be final and binding upon both parties ..."
(b) The underlying dispute
(c) The proceedings in Indonesia
(d) The FOSFA arbitration
(e) The present proceedings
The issues
Delay in applying for an anti-suit injunction the legal principles
i) waiting for the foreign court to determine a challenge to its jurisdiction should not be regarded as unconscionable delay: the applicant should not be obliged to seek relief in two jurisdictions simultaneously;ii) in the absence of evidence that the respondent would have complied with an anti-suit injunction, had it been obtained sooner, by discontinuing the foreign proceedings, the respondent could not show detrimental reliance or prejudice;
iii) comity has no role to play where the applicant is seeking to enforce a contractual right not to be sued in the foreign jurisdiction.
"to recognise that where an exercise of discretion is called for there can be no absolute or inflexible rule governing that exercise, and also that the party may lose his claimed equitable relief by dilatoriness or other unconscionable conduct".
"42. It is clear from the statement of principle in The Angelic Grace to which I have referred and from the application of that principle in Toepfer v Molino Boschi that once a person is aware that a claim which has been agreed to be referred to London arbitration is being pursued in a foreign court in breach of that agreement he ought, if he wishes to obtain an anti-suit injunction from the English Court, "promptly and before the foreign proceedings are too far advanced" to apply to the English Court.
43. Having regard to the statement of principle in The Angelic Grace it was incumbent upon the Owners to take steps to obtain an anti-suit injunction from the English Court (if that is what they wanted to do) long before December 2007. The Owners knew that proceedings were being taken in Antwerp in January/February 2005 in breach of the arbitration clause. They served recourse proceedings against FAVV on or about 17 March 2005 and informed FAVV that they "positively disputed the jurisdiction of the Antwerp Commercial Court". If the basis of that objection was the London arbitration clause then it seems to me that any application to the English Court for an anti-suit injunction against the Cargo Interests ought to have been made at some stage in 2005. By failing to do so the Owners failed to act promptly.
44. The owners waited until December 2007 before applying to the English Court. I regard that as a substantial delay notwithstanding that in Antwerp the time for challenging the jurisdiction has not yet passed. Whether the proceedings in Antwerp are "too far advanced" depends upon an analysis of what has happened there and what is still to happen there . It seems to me fair to conclude that, by reason of the completion of the surveyors' report, substantial progress has been made in the Antwerp proceedings with regard to an investigation both of the facts relevant to the Cargo Interests' claim against the Owners and of the facts relevant to the Owners' claim against FAVV.
46. The statement of principle by Millet LJ in The Angelic Grace that an anti-suit injunction should be sought "promptly and before the foreign proceedings are too far advanced" is clear and should be understood and applied in a common sense and straightforward manner."
"43 Moreover, I consider that the approach adopted by Knowles J is supported by strong public interests in requiring that those who seek an anti-suit or anti-enforcement injunction should act promptly even though, on the facts of a particular case, there has been no detrimental reliance upon the delay. That does not mean that parties must rush to court prematurely. The starting point is that it is generally desirable to resolve issues speedily. Moreover, there are significant dangers to the interests of the parties and to the public interest if applications for coercive relief are delayed. If such applications are made promptly they are inherently likely to be much less complicated than will be the case at a later stage. Where a party seeking coercive relief does not act promptly, the other side is likely to be understandably aggrieved by the delay. An anti-suit injunction is a particularly intrusive form of relief, barring a party from access to justice in the forum that it would prefer. In the particular context of anti-suit and anti-enforcement injunctions, lack of promptness will increase the danger that such injunctions, although they are granted against a party and are not directed to the foreign court, will nevertheless be seen as inappropriately interfering with the jurisdiction of the foreign court."
"46. If the notion of applying to the foreign court "first" connotes a delay before applying to the English court, then I cannot accept this proposition
50. At the hearing ESL acknowledged that its positive proposition required qualification, and that it might not be reasonable if the application to the foreign court would involve "long delay". Again it seems to me that there is a failure here to engage with Angelic Grace: it is not a question of whether it is reasonable to apply to the foreign court, nor of whether there will be long delay in the foreign court, but a question of whether the application in this court has been made promptly."
"122 An injunction is an equitable remedy. Before granting it the court must consider whether it is appropriate to do so having regard to all relevant considerations, which will include the extent to which the respondent has incurred expense prior to any application being made, the interests of third parties, including, in particular, the foreign court, and the effect of making such an order in relation to what has happened before it was made.
123. A relevant consideration, particularly in relation to interlocutory relief, as was sought in the present case, is whether the party seeking an injunction has acted with appropriate speed. The longer a respondent continues doing that which the applicant seeks to prevent him from doing, the greater the amount of labour and cost that he will have expended which could have been avoided "
"124. Nor do I think it right to say that the prejudice to Mr Tanoh arising from Ecobank's failure to seek relief before judgment is to be disregarded in the light of the fact that Ecobank was challenging jurisdiction. Whilst Mr Tanoh knew of Ecobank's objection, it was not apparent that Ecobank was ever going to seek injunctive relief until it did so (nor, as these proceedings indicate, was its entitlement to such relief self-evident) and the expenditure and effort which would have been wasted if an injunction was granted (and obeyed) increased as time went by. That is a relevant form of prejudice
125. The judge was, therefore, right [22], in my view, not to accept that any time during which the foreign jurisdiction is challenged is to be left out of account when considering whether to grant an anti-enforcement order
126. Moreover the prejudice or detriment which would be involved in Ecobank allowing the proceedings to continue without seeking injunctive relief and then securing an injunction would not have been limited to Mr Tanoh. It extends to third parties involved in the litigation and, most importantly, the foreign courts which, in the present case, have held hearings and produced judgments of considerable length which are obviously the product of much labour."
"127. I agree with the judge [24] that it is not a precondition to the refusal of an injunction that the respondent should establish detrimental reliance, if by that is meant that he must show (a) that he believed that no application for an injunction would be made or (b) that he believed that and, if he had realised that an application would or might be made, he would have abandoned the foreign proceedings. The existence or otherwise of such reliance is relevant but not determinative. The relevance of delay is wider than that. The need to avoid it arises for a variety of reasons including the avoidance of prejudice, detriment, and waste of resources; the need for finality; and considerations of comity.
128. It is, thus, not, in my view, a complete answer for Ecobank to say that someone in the position of Mr Tanoh has only himself to blame because it his breach which will have caused the waste. The court is, in an appropriate case, entitled to be reluctant to use its coercive powers to restrain that which the applicant has in fact allowed to continue without any application for relief for some time. This is especially so if, as appears to me to be the case here, little useful purpose is likely to be served by the party who claims to be entitled to an injunction holding back from claiming it. In some cases, an objection to the jurisdiction can be dealt with first before the substantive merits, so that there may be something to be said for pursuing that objection in the foreign court. But that was not the case here.
129. Further the tenor of modern authorities is that an applicant should act promptly and claim injunctive relief at an early stage; and should not adopt an attitude of waiting to see what the foreign court decides. In The Angelic Grace Leggatt LJ said that it would be patronising and the reverse of comity for the English court to decline to grant injunctive relief until it was apparent whether the foreign court was going to uphold the objection to its exercising jurisdiction and only do so if and when it failed to do so. Whilst those observations related to the approach of the court it seems to me that they are a guide to what should be the approach of a would-be applicant for anti-suit or anti-enforcement relief.
"133. Injunctive relief may be sought (a) before any foreign proceedings have begun; (b) once they have begun; (c) within a relatively short time afterwards; (d) when the pleadings are complete; (e) thereafter but before the trial starts; (f) in the course of the trial; (g) after judgment. The fact that at some stage the foreign court has ruled in favour of its own jurisdiction is not per se a bar to an anti-suit injunction: see AES. But, as each stage is reached more will have been wasted by the abandonment of proceedings which compliance with an anti-suit injunction would bring about. That being so, the longer an action continues without any attempt to restrain it the less likely a court is to grant an injunction and considerations of comity have greater force.
134. Whilst a desire to avoid offence to a foreign court, or to appear to interfere with it, is no longer as powerful a consideration as it may previously have been, it is not a consideration without relevance. A foreign court may justifiably take objection to an approach under which an injunction, which will (if obeyed) frustrate all that has gone before, may be granted however late an application is made (provided the person enjoined knew from an early stage that objection was taken to the proceedings). Such an objection is not based on the need to avoid offense to individual judges (who are made of sterner stuff) but on the sound basis that to allow such an approach is not a sensible method of conducting curial business."
"61. lack of promptness alone may justify refusal of an injunction, even if there has been no significant progress in the foreign proceedings and no detrimental reliance upon the delay "
"73. Moreover, whatever their significance for the further conduct of the Nigerian proceedings, the fact is that steps have been taken and costs incurred in those proceedings including through the filing by the Owner of a defence on the merits and two hearings in the Nigerian court, with a further hearing date set without any application being made to this court to prevent VSA from pursuing the Nigerian proceedings and without anything being said to the Nigerian court to suggest that the Owner might be contemplating making such an application. In these circumstances I consider that the Owner has allowed the Nigerian court to become seised of the matter to an extent which would make it inappropriate for the English court to intervene at this stage."
Exercise of the discretion
i) It is self-evident that a prompt application for an anti-suit injunction would have been one made shortly after service of the Indonesia proceedings on 26 May 2014. No good reason has been put forward why an application could not have been made at that point. Nor has it been suggested that there was a useful purpose to be served in holding back. It cannot be said, in my judgment, that ADM acted with appropriate speed.ii) ADM clearly made a conscious choice to engage with the Indonesian proceedings and to claim the costs of so doing as damages for breach of the arbitration clause, rather than to apply for an injunction. Whilst that was not a formal or binding election, the fact that an applicant initially claimed (and has been awarded) damages for a breach of contract rather than claiming an injunction must weigh against the applicant in a subsequent application for an injunction.
iii) ADM engaged in a jurisdiction dispute knowing that it would also be required to file a substantive defence and did so, submitting a detailed and lengthy rebuttal of the underlying claim. It did so also knowing that it would claim the costs of the exercise from BSS in the arbitration. ADM's delay in applying for an anti-suit injunction therefore caused BSS to incur both its own costs and liability for ADM's costs.
iv) ADM was clearly content for the matter to be dealt with by the Indonesian courts until those courts made a decision contrary to its interests, at which point it has belatedly sought the intervention of this court. ADM is, in a very real sense, attempting to have the best of all worlds, litigating in Indonesia on the basis that it would claim the costs as damages, and then resorting to this court whilst the issue it was previously content to leave to the Indonesian courts is pending in the Supreme Court of that country on ADM's own appeal.
v) Intervening at this stage, when ADM has engaged on the substantive issues in Indonesia (albeit without prejudice to its jurisdiction challenge) and is taking the jurisdiction issue to the Supreme Court, cannot be regarded as a sensible method of conducting curial business. The Indonesian courts have been seised of the matter, including the scope and application of the arbitration clause, to an extent which would make it inappropriate for this court to intervene.
Conclusion