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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 >> Times Trading Corporation v National Bank of Fujairah (Dubai Branch) [2020] EWHC 1078 (Comm) (05 May 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2020/1078.html Cite as: [2020] EWHC 1078 (Comm), [2020] 2 Lloyd's Rep 317, [2020] Bus LR 1752, [2020] 1 CLC 790 |
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OF ENGLAND AND WALES
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION CLAIM
Rolls Building Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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Times Trading Corporation |
Claimant |
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- and – |
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National Bank of Fujairah (Dubai Branch) |
Defendant |
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Mr Steven Berry Q.C and Mr John Robb (instructed by Campbell Johnston Clark Limited) for the Defendant
Hearing date: Tuesday 24 March 2020
Draft Judgment sent to parties: 23 April 2020
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HTML VERSION OF JUDGMENT
Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Cockerill:
Introduction
Background
The facts
"54 LAW & ARBITRATION
54.1 This Charterparty, any question regarding its validity, existence or termination, and any non-contractual obligations arising from or connected with it shall be governed by and construed in accordance with English law.
54.2 Any dispute arising out of or in connection with this Charterparty (including any question regarding its validity, existence or termination and any non-contractual obligations arising from or connected with it) shall be referred to arbitration in London before three arbitrators in accordance with the Arbitration Act 1996 or any statutory modification or re-enactment thereof…". (emphasis added)
Certainly no other potential clause has been identified.
"We note that the Notice of Arbitration purports to commence an arbitration against Rosalind. However at the material time the Vessel was bareboat chartered to Times Trading Corp… The Bills of Lading were not issued by Rosalind but were issued by Times. Accordingly, we do not accept the validity of the Notice of Arbitration and our client will contend that the Notice of Arbitration purports to start an arbitration against the wrong party."
i) In the 9 January 2020 hearing, and since, NBF indicated willingness for the Singapore Proceedings to be stayed in favour of London arbitration. The parties were directed to discuss and attempt to agree a stay before the next PTC.ii) On 23 January 2020, NBF is recorded as having submitted that "We will be seeking a stay ideally by consent." NBF says that what it had in mind was a stay on terms. The Court directed that any stay application was to be filed by 13 February 2020.
iii) Neither party filed a stay by 13 February 2020 as directed. There was no discussion between the parties before that deadline about staying the Singapore Proceedings by consent.
iv) On 25 February 2020, R&T wrote to Resource Law to propose a stay of the Singapore Proceedings on condition of waiver by Times of any time bar defence. This was rejected on 26 February 2020.
v) At the hearing on 27 February 2020, the Court directed that any application for a stay was to be filed (by either NBF or Times) by 12 March 2020, failing which NBF was to file and serve its Statement of Claim (also by 12 March 2020).
vi) On 4 March 2020, R&T wrote to Reed Smith:
"Our clients reserve the right to proceed to a determination of liability in the Singapore proceedings as against "Times Trading Corp", which is a matter for the jurisdiction of the Court here. Our clients are not in a position to agree an unconditional stay of the Singapore court proceedings in relation to Times Trading Corp for the self-same reasons."vii) Following the 10 March 2020 hearing before Andrew Baker J, a further PTC took place in Singapore on 19 March 2020. The Singapore Court revoked the directions made on 27 February 2020 and indicated that there was no restriction on NBF progressing the Singapore Proceedings by filing its Statement of Claim if it wished to do so.
viii) The next PTC in Singapore was set for 16 April 2020.
The London arbitration
NBF's application under section 12 Arbitration Act 1996
"12.— Power of court to extend time for beginning arbitral proceedings, &c.
(1) Where an arbitration agreement to refer future disputes to arbitration provides that a claim shall be barred, or the claimant's right extinguished, unless the claimant takes within a time fixed by the agreement some step—
(a) to begin arbitral proceedings…
the court may by order extend the time for taking that step.
(2) …
(3) The court shall make an order only if satisfied—
(a) …, or
(b) that the conduct of one party makes it unjust to hold the other party to the strict terms of the provision in question."
i) Times asserts that it was the carrier on whose behalf the Bills of Lading were issued, pursuant to a Bareboat Charter dated 27 April 2018 between Times and the Vessel's owner, Rosalind.ii) NBF asserts that the Bareboat Charter is a sham. It does not accept that there was any genuine contract between Times and Rosalind in those terms.
Applicable Principles
i) The Court has the power to grant an interim injunction "in all cases in which it appears to the court to be just and convenient to do so": section37 (1) of the Senior Courts Act 1981 ("SCA 1981"). "Any such order may be made either unconditionally or on such terms and conditions as the court thinks just": section 37(2).ii) The touchstone is what the ends of justice require: Emmott v Michael Wilson & Partners Ltd [2018] 1 Lloyd's Rep 299 at [36] per Sir Terence Etherton MR.
iii) The Court has jurisdiction under section 37(1) of the Senior Courts Act 1981 to restrain foreign proceedings when brought or threatened to be brought in breach of a binding agreement to refer disputes to arbitration: Ust-Kamenogorsk Hydropower Plant JSC v AES Kamenogorsk Hydropower Plant LLP [2013] 1 WLR 1889 (SC).
iv) The jurisdiction to grant an anti-suit injunction must be exercised with caution: Société Nationale Industrielle Aérospatiale v Lee Kui Jak [1987] UKPC 12, [1987] AC 871, 892E per Lord Goff.
v) As to the meaning of "caution" in this context, it has been described thus in The "Angelic Grace" [1995] 1 Lloyd's Rep 87 at 92:1 per Leggatt LJ: "The exercise of caution does not involve that the Court refrains from taking the action sought, but merely that it does not do so except with circumspection."
vi) The Claimant must therefore demonstrate such a negative right not to be sued. The standard of proof is "a high degree of probability that there is an arbitration agreement which governs the dispute in question": Emmott at [39]. The test of high degree of probability is one of long standing and boasts an impeccable pedigree going back to Colman J in Bankers Trust Co v PT Mayora Indah (unreported) 20 January 1999 and American International Specialty Lines Insurance Co v Abbott Laboratories [2003] 1 Lloyd's Rep 267 and has been recently affirmed on the high authority of Christopher Clarke LJ in Ecobank v Tanoh [2016] 1 WLR 2231 at 2250.
vii) The Court will ordinarily exercise its discretion to restrain the pursuit of proceedings brought in breach of an arbitration clause unless the Defendant can show strong reasons to refuse the relief: The Angelic Grace [1995] 1 Lloyd's Rep 87; The Jay Bola [1997] 2 Lloyd's Rep 279 (CA) at page 286 per Hobhouse LJ.
viii) The Defendant bears the burden of proving that there are strong reasons to refuse the relief: Donohue v Armco Inc [2002] 1 All ER 749 at [24]-[25] per Lord Bingham.
Issue 1: Is this a case where the Angelic Grace test applies?
i) In quasi-contractual cases, the question is not who is party to the arbitration agreement, but whether the dispute in question is governed by the arbitration clause. The focus is whether the foreign Claimant is, in substance, asserting a contractual liability. It points me to examples of this issue being considered in Dell v Maroc at [19]-[20]; The Yusuf Cepnioglu at [14]-[16]; Qingdao Huiquan Shipping v SDHX [2019] 1 Lloyd's Rep. 520 at [33]-[34].ii) The test is satisfied because this is a case which is or is analogous to the quasi-contractual cases. Reference was made to The Yusuf Cepnioglu as being a case where no one could suggest that there was a high degree of probability that the party resisting the injunction was party to the arbitration agreement, but once the claim was deemed contractual, the P&I club in question could show that there was an equitable right not to be sued in Turkey.
iii) There need not be a legal a right not to be sued – an equitable right will suffice: by reference to both of these cases as well as the Qingdao case.
iv) It can therefore discharge the burden upon it in that the Singapore claim itself is contractual – in that it is made under the contract of carriage and for damages for breach of that agreement; it is common ground that the Bills of Lading contain a London arbitration clause. Thus it says that whoever is the carrier, they are entitled to the benefit of the arbitration agreement.
i) Times' reliance on The Yusuf Cepnioglu and similar cases is not apt. Its submission is that there are two principles.ii) The first is that derived from the Jay Bola (and pursued into the Yusuf Cepnioglu). That is applicable where someone who is not party to contract sues on it – in such circumstances the authorities say they are bound by arbitration cause, and the Defendant can obtain an injunction. That situation is nothing to do with this case.
iii) The second is what one might term the Dell principles (also seen in Qingdao and others). In those cases the injunction claimant denies that it is a party but is still sued abroad on the basis that it is party. Those cases explain that in this situation the injunction claimant can say: "whilst I deny that I am a party, you say I am - and on that basis the relief is available to me".
iv) This is also not the present case in that Times asserts it is party to the contract, and the case that Times is a party is an alternative to the primary case that Rosalind is a party.
v) On this basis, the contractual test cannot be met and any injunction would have to proceed not on the same quasi-contractual basis as the Ust-type cases but on the basis of unconscionability – frivolity and vexation – as alluded to in Dell [34]. And any application on this basis is, NBF says, bound to fail. This could not be a case of vexation, because it is driven by the time bar issue and the reasons why the proceedings have been brought – which are far from frivolous.
Discussion
"WAV is bound by the arbitration agreement not because there is any privity of contract between WAV and DVA but because Voest's contractual rights under the sub-charter-party, to the benefit of which WAV has become entitled by subrogation, are subject to the arbitration agreement which, too, is part of the sub-charter-party. WAV cannot enforce those contractual rights without accepting the contractual burden, in the form of the arbitration agreement to which those rights are subject."
"The present case falls clearly within the scope of [the Aerospatiale] jurisdiction because the application of the time charterers for an injunction has been made to protect a contractual right of the time charterers that the dispute be referred to arbitration, a contractual right which equity requires the insurance company to recognise."
"The commencement of proceedings contrary to the arbitration clause is, … sufficiently vexatious and oppressive, or at any rate sufficiently unconscionable and unjust, to provide sufficient grounds for the court's intervention by way of the equitable remedy of an injunction. The position is no doubt at its clearest when the proceedings are between original parties to the arbitration agreement, but the rationale of the decision in the 'Angelic Grace' applies equally to both cases."
"The difference, to the extent there is one, is that Longmore LJ is saying that the Angelic Grace applies; Moore Bick LJ is saying that in the quasi-contractual situation, vexation and oppression should be treated as applying in parallel to the Angelic Grace. The result is almost the same."
i) Sea Premium Shipping Limited v Sea Consortium (David Steel J 11 April 2001): a vessel which had been under charter (with a London arbitration clause) was purchased by new owners. The charterers commenced an action against the new owners in Dubai. The charterers said that the new owners were (under Dubai law) party to or bound to respect the charterparty. That was denied by the new owners.ii) Starlight Shipping v Tai Ping Insurance ("The Alexandros T") [2008] 1 Lloyd's Rep 230: insurers of the owners of a lost cargo, carried under bills of lading containing London arbitration clauses, commenced proceedings in China.
iii) Ace Seguradora v Fair Wind Navigation [2017] EWHC 3352 (Comm) this was a claim brought to restrain proceedings brought against a vessel manager by subrogated insurers where that claim was formulated as a contract claim on a bill of lading incorporating an arbitration clause. Although authorities were cited, they are not dealt with in the judgment.
"the injunction Claimant denies the very existence of the contract under which he is sued, or otherwise denies the validity of the contract in a way which would also impeach the exclusive forum clause, or denies that he owes any contractual duties to or has any contractual rights against the injunction Defendant … but the injunction Defendant in effect seeks to make a claim under the contract, while not seeking to respect the forum clause which forms part of it."
i) The MD Gemini [2012] 2 Lloyd's Rep. 672: bunker suppliers brought proceedings in Florida and in the Marshall Islands against the shipowners seeking the price of bunkers supplied to the vessel. The shipowners denied that they (rather than charterers) were liable but sought an anti-suit injunction restraining the proceedings in Florida and the Marshall Islands on the grounds that the contract on which the claim was based contained an exclusive jurisdiction clause in favour of the English Courts.ii) Dell Emerging Markets v IB Maroc.com [2017] EWHC 2397 (Comm): IB Maroc sued Dell UK, with whom it had a contract containing a jurisdiction clause in favour of these courts and Dell Maroc (with whom it had no direct contract) on the basis that there was joint liability with Dell UK under the contract. Dell Maroc denied any contractual or quasi-contractual liability and sought an anti-suit injunction.
iii) Qingdao Huiquan Shipping v SDHX [2019] 1 Lloyd's Rep 520 per Bryan J: a settlement agreement containing a London arbitration clause had been reached between shipowners and cargo receivers which involved the payment of sums to the owners by SDHX, the receivers' "authorised agent". SDHX sued the owners in China seeking repayment under the settlement agreement. Owners sought an anti-suit injunction.
iv) XL Insurance Co v Little [2019] EWHC 1284: Mr Little, who claimed to be insured under a policy of D&O insurance sued the insurer in New York. Insurers sought an ASI, though denying the existence of the policy (Injunction sought by the party denying the contract).
i) In analysing Sea Premium the judge put it this way: "The basis of such an injunction must be that it is inequitable or oppressive and vexatious for a charterer to bring a contractual claim without respecting the arbitration clause in the charterparty, notwithstanding that the party seeking the injunction denied that it was bound by the charterparty."ii) However at [34] it was put thus: "it would be inequitable or oppressive and vexatious for a party to a contract, in the present case IB Maroc, to seek to enforce a contractual claim arising out of that contract without respecting the jurisdiction clause within that contract. If the approach of Longmore LJ in The Yusuf Cepnioglu is applicable to the present case the reason is simply that IB Maroc, when seeking to enforce a contractual right, is bound to accept that its claim must be 'handled through the English courts' as required by the contract in question."
Issue 2: Strong Reasons?
i) What these authorities demonstrate is that it may be the case that strong reason will be found if the injunction Defendant's substantive claims would be time-barred before the contractual forum and the injunction Defendant acted reasonably (or at the least not unreasonably) in not commencing in the contractual forum before the time-bar.ii) Here it is in just such a position – with a time bar against it which was the result of no negligence or unreasonableness on its part;
iii) It is a relevant factor that the Court in Singapore would take a different view, granting a stay only on condition that the time bar point was not taken. Reference was made to OT Africa Line v Magic Sportswear [2005] 2 Lloyd's Rep 170.
Discussion
Other discretionary factors
"It does not subsume or exclude issues relating to delay on the part of the applicant or other general discretionary considerations which may arise on any application for equitable relief, even where an entitlement to such relief would otherwise have been established".
i) There is no rule as to what will constitute excessive delay in absolute terms. The Court will need to assess all the facts of the particular case.ii) The question of delay and the question of comity are linked. The touchstone is likely to be the extent to which delay in applying for anti-suit relief has materially increased the perceived interference with the process of the foreign Court or led to a waste of its time or resources.
iii) In considering whether there has been unacceptable delay a relevant consideration is the time at which the applicant's legal rights had become sufficiently clear to justify applying for anti-suit relief.
Conclusion