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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 >> VTB Commodities Trading DAC v JSC Antipinsky Refinery [2020] EWHC 72 (Comm) (20 January 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2020/72.html Cite as: [2020] 1 Lloyd's Rep 540, [2020] 2 All ER (Comm) 613, [2020] WLR(D) 68, [2020] WLR 1227, [2020] 1 CLC 148, [2020] 1 WLR 1227, [2020] EWHC 72 (Comm) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS
OF ENGLAND AND WALES
COMMERCIAL COURT (QBD)
Rolls Building, Fetter Lane London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
VTB COMMODITIES TRADING DAC |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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JSC ANTIPINSKY REFINERY |
Defendant |
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- and – PETRACO OIL COMPANY SA |
Intervener |
____________________
Kenneth MacLean QC and Alexander Brown (instructed by Candey Limited)
for the Defendants
Louis Flannery QC and Andrew Leung (instructed by Stephenson Harwood LLP)
for the Intervener
Hearing dates: 16-18 October and 4, 5 and 12 December 2019
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Phillips:
i) a worldwide freezing order ("the WFO") in relation to Antipinsky's assets up to the value of €225,000,000;
ii) an order ("the Cargo Injunction") (i) restraining Antipinsky from selling, transferring or otherwise disposing of High Sulphur Vacuum Gasoil ("VGO") to third parties save to the extent that such dealings did not inhibit Antipinsky's ability to supply VGO to VTB under contractual arrangements between them or pursuant to bona fide agreement with third parties entered before those contractual arrangements; and (ii) requiring Antipinsky to comply with its delivery obligations under the contractual arrangements in respect of shipments of VGO.
The background facts and procedural chronology
i) served Notice of Default under each of the Prepayment Agreements and exercised its right to accelerate Antipinsky's obligation to repay all outstanding pre-payments and interest accrued thereon;
ii) commenced the six LCIA arbitrations against Antipinsky;
iii) issued the arbitration claim form in these proceedings seeking the WFO and Cargo Injunction;
iv) applied urgently and without notice to Waksman J, who granted cargo injunctions until a further without notice application could be heard the next day, in the event by Teare J.
i) ordered VTB to pay US$30 million into court by way of fortification of its undertaking in damages;
ii) ordered the sale of the 85,675 mts of VGO stored aboard the Polar Rock pursuant to two contracts of sale between VTB and third parties, by loading aboard the MT Stone and the MT Meganisi;
iii) directed an expedited trial of the rights and obligations of VTB, Antipinsky and Petraco in respect of the Polar Rock Cargo and/or the sums paid into court by VTB;
iv) adjourned the Return Date to a date to be fixed.
Jurisdiction under s.44
"(1) Unless otherwise agreed by the parties, the court has for the purposes of and in relation to arbitral proceedings the same power of making orders about the matters listed below as it has for the purposes of and in relation to legal proceedings.
(2) Those matters are—
(a) the taking of the evidence of witnesses;
(b) the preservation of evidence;
(c) making orders relating to property which is the subject of the proceedings or as to which any question arises in the proceedings—
(i) for the inspection, photographing, preservation, custody or detention of the property, or
(ii) ordering that samples be taken from, or any observation be made of or experiment conducted upon, the property;
and for that purpose authorising any person to enter any premises in the possession or control of a party to the arbitration;
(d) the sale of any goods the subject of the proceedings;
(e) the granting of an interim injunction or the appointment of a receiver.
(3) If the case is one of urgency, the court may, on the application of a party or proposed party to the arbitral proceedings, make such orders as it thinks necessary for the purpose of preserving evidence or assets.
(4) If the case is not one of urgency, the court shall act only on the application of a party to the arbitral proceedings (upon notice to the other parties and to the tribunal) made with the permission of the tribunal or the agreement in writing of the other parties.
(5) In any case the court shall act only if or to the extent that the arbitral tribunal, and any arbitral or other institution or person vested by the parties with power in that regard, has no power or is unable for the time being to act effectively.
(6) If the court so orders, an order made by it under this section shall cease to have effect in whole or in part on the order of the tribunal or of any such arbitral or other institution or person having power to act in relation to the subject-matter of the order.
(7) The leave of the court is required for any appeal from a decision of the court under this section."
(i) Continuing jurisdiction
"On the basis that the matter was urgent on 2 May 2008 (which it clearly was) the court had jurisdiction under section 44(3) to grant the freezing order. Once clothed with jurisdiction and seised of the matter, the court clearly had jurisdiction to continue or vary the injunction at the return date which was set out in the order made on 2 May 2008. It does not seem to me that section 44 (4) is concerned with the continuation or variation of orders already made by the court. Rather it is focusing on the initiation of applications to the court…"
i) An application notice for relief on notice is "the initiation of an application", both as a matter of analysis and practice;
ii) It would be strange if a party applying afresh, on notice, for relief which could only be granted under s.44 did not have to establish that the court had jurisdiction to entertain his application under that section because it had previously obtained an order without notice to the respondent, being the very relief it was now required to justify on an inter partes basis. It would mean that an applicant would be in a better position through having obtained a without notice order than had no such order been obtained. There appears to be no rationale for such a distinction, which would be counter to the rule (based on the fundamental principle that a party is entitled to be heard) that the applicant must establish its entitlement to relief afresh, with no benefit from having obtained a prior without notice order;
iii) S. 44 is designed to respect party autonomy and to restrict the scope of the court's jurisdiction accordingly, consistently with the general principle set out in s.1 of the 1996 Arbitration Act. As Lord Mance stated in AES Ust-Kamengorsk Hydropower Plant LLP v Ust-Kamengorsk Hydropower Plant JSC [2013] 1 WLR 1889 at §46: "The power to grant an interim injunction is limited, save in cases of urgency, to circumstances in which either the tribunal permits an application to the court or all the other parties agree in writing..";
iv) S.44(3) therefore gives the court jurisdiction to act where an application is urgent, but it is plain from s.44(4) that once such urgency has ceased the court should not act further without the consent of the tribunal or all parties, and that even then it is necessary to consider (under s.44(5)) whether it remains the case that the tribunal cannot itself act effectively for the time being. There is no reason why that approach and mechanism cannot be applied to applications for relief where a without notice injunction is due to expire on a return date. It will often be the case that a tribunal will be appointed between a without notice injunction being granted and the return date (particularly one which has been adjourned) and it is plainly right that the requirements of s.44(4) and (5) should be considered and applied in the context of that new situation.
(ii) Written agreement
"The power of the Arbitral Tribunal under Article 25.1 shall not prejudice any party's right to apply to a state court or other legal authority for interim or conservatory measures to similar effect: (i) before the formation of the Arbitral Tribunal; and (ii) after the formation of the Arbitral Tribunal, in exceptional cases and with the Arbitral Tribunal's authorisation, until the final award…. "
i) strictly speaking, an application notice only gives notice of the intention to make an application. The application itself is made in court;
ii) a rule which permitted a party to move an application in court long after the formation of the tribunal (even if a notice of the application notice was "issued" before its formation) would drive a coach and horses through the intended scheme of the rules; and
iii) s.44 (to which the LCIA rules plainly have regard in this respect) is expressed in terms of the jurisdiction of the court to "act" on an application, indicating that the application in question is that to be argued in court, not the notice of an application.
(iii) Conclusion on jurisdiction under s.44
Material non-disclosure
(i) Novation of the April contracts
"… a default ... under the [Prepayment Agreement] which would mean that the Non-Assigning party is prevented from delivering Commodities … and which has been continuing unremedied for 60 days."
i) The novation was not conditional on mere default by Antipinki, but on Antipinsky being "prevented" from delivering VGO, an event which had not occurred on 30 April 2019, as now determined by the Tribunal in the PFA at paragraph 7.4.3;
ii) It followed that any novation would not have occurred for at least 60 days after the grant of the WFO, well after the Return Date specified in the order of Teare J. As Antipinsky was party to the Deed of Novation and was well aware of the arrangements, it was in a position to raise the existence of the Deed and its effect well before VTB's claim could have been reduced;
iii) In the event, Antipinsky did not seek a reduction of the WFO by reason of the Deed of Novation on the original return date, nor on 16 July 2019;
iv) Further, ING and Crudex have (out of an abundance of caution) executed re-assignments of the cause of action against Antipinsky in respect of the April contracts, so there is no doubt that VTB has title to the entirely of its claim. There can be no doubt that, had any question of that title been raised, steps could and would have been taken in conjunction with ING and Crudex to perfect the position;
v) Antipinsky belatedly raised the matter by way of defence to VTB's debt claim in the arbitrations, but that defence was rejected by the Tribunal, which awarded VTB the full amount of its claim.
"… it "is not for every omission that the injunction will be automatically discharged. A locus poenitentiae may sometimes be afforded": per Lord Denning M.R. in Bank Mellat v. Nikpour [1985] F.S.R. 87, 90. The court has a discretion, notwithstanding proof of material non-disclosure which justifies or requires the immediate discharge of the ex-parte order, nevertheless to continue the order, or to make a new order on terms."
"The sanction available to the court to preserve [the integrity of the court process] is not only to deprive the applicant of any advantage gained by the order, but also to refuse to renew it. In that respect it is penal, and applies notwithstanding that even had full and fair disclosure been made the court would have made the order. The sanction operates not only to punish the applicant for the abuse of process, but also, as Christopher Clarke J observed in Re OJSC ANK Yugraneft v Sibir Energy PLC [2010] BCCC 475 at [104], to ensure that others are deterred from such conduct in the future. Such is the importance of the duty that in the event of any substantial breach the court inclines strongly towards setting aside the order and not renewing it, even where the breach is innocent. Where the breach is deliberate, the conscious abuse of the court's process will almost always make it appropriate to impose the sanction."
(ii) Alteration to the Commercial Court precedent
"…If the Respondent has other assets outside England and Wales, she, he or it may dispose of or deal with those assets outside England and Wales so long as the total unencumbered value of all its, her or his assets whether in or outside England and Wales remains above £ ."
".. If the Respondent has other assets outside England and Wales, he may dispose of or deal with those assets outside England and Wales so long as the total unencumbered value of all of his assets within England and Wales remains above €225,000,000."
(iii) Conclusion on non-disclosure
The Cargo Injunction
(i) The legal principles
"…to grant the relief claimed would violate well established principles of common law and equity. It would also appear to embarrass to a most serious degree the ordinary operations of buying and selling goods, and the banking operations which attend them….
Speaking generally, Courts of equity did not decree specific performance in contracts for the sale of commodities which could be ordinarily obtained in the market where damages were a sufficient remedy. Possibly the statutory remedy was intended to be available even in those cases. But the Code appears to have this effect, that in contracts for the sale of goods the only remedy by way of specific performance is the statutory remedy, and it follows that as the goods were neither specific nor ascertained the remedy of specific performance was not open to the creditors….
"Does it make any difference that the creditors here paid their purchase money in advance of the due date, and in any case before they could get delivery under the contract? I think not. So far as specific performance is concerned, the right seems to exist, if at all, independently of whether one party or the other has performed his part of the contract; and I have already dealt with the objections to the demand for specific performance under the provisions of s.52 of the Code…."
"Many would think that deliberately to break a contract for the sale of future goods, where no question of property at law or in equity could arise, would be dishonest; but the law gives only a remedy in damages. In the simple cases suggested, which I hesitate to repeat, the farmer might be acting dishonestly in parting with the whole of his flock, his apples, his potatoes or his eggs to a different purchaser; but I venture to think that if he does the purchaser even with notice acquires a complete title to the property bought."
"There is trade evidence that the plaintiffs have no great prospect of finding any alternative source of supply for the filling stations which constitute their business. The defendants have indicated their willingness to continue to supply the plaintiffs, but only at prices which, according to the plaintiffs' evidence, would not be serious prices from a commercial point of view. There is, in my judgment, so far as I can make out on the evidence before me, a serious danger that unless the court interferes at this stage the plaintiffs will be forced out of business. In those circumstances, unless there is some specific reason which debars me from doing so, I should be disposed to grant an injunction to restore the former position under the contract until the rights and wrongs of the parties can be fully tried out.
Now I come to the most serious hurdle in the way of the plaintiffs which is the well known doctrine that the court refuses specific performance of a contract to sell and purchase chattels not specific or ascertained. That is a well-established and salutary rule … However, the ratio behind the rule is, as I believe, that under the ordinary contract for the sale of non-specific goods, damages are a sufficient remedy. That, to my mind, is lacking in the circumstances of the present case. The evidence suggests, and indeed it is common knowledge that the petroleum market is in an unusual state in which a would-be buyer cannot go into the market and contract with another seller, possibly at some sacrifice as to price. Here, the defendants appear for practical purposes to be the plaintiffs' sole means of keeping their business going, and I am prepared so far to depart from the general rule as to preserve the position under the contract until a later date. I therefore propose to grant an injunction."
"In practice, the courts are reluctant to exercise this discretion [to grant specific performance outside of s.52] unless the goods are effectively unique. However, in very exceptional circumstances in which the normal market is not functioning, the courts may be more flexible about specific remedies, even for goods that are not specific or ascertained."
(ii) Application of the legal principles to the facts of this case
i) there are multiple claimants to Antipinsky's production of VGO (including that aboard the Polar Rock), both contractual claims (in the case of Petraco) and proprietary claims (in the case of Machinoimport); and
ii) it appears that Antipinsky was in deep financial difficulties and might well have creditors with equal if not better claims than VTB to the preservation and ultimate distribution of its assets.
The Polar Rock Application
Conclusion