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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Weissfisch v Julius, [2006] EWCA Civ 218 (08 March 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2006/218.html Cite as: [2006] EWCA Civ 218, [2006] ArbLR 64, [2006] 2 All ER (Comm) 504, [2006] 1 CLC 424, [2006] 1 Lloyd's Rep 716 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION (COMMERCIAL COURT)
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE DAVID STEEL
Claim No. 2005 Folio 683
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MASTER OF THE ROLLS
and
LORD JUSTICE MOSES
____________________
AMIR WEISSFISCH |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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ANTHONY JULIUS, |
First Defendant |
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RAMI WEISFISCH, |
Second Defendant |
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and |
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PHILIP DAVIS |
Third Defendant |
____________________
Iain Milligan QC & Paul Stanley (instructed by Messrs Allen & Overy) for the First Defendant
Michael Briggs QC, Nicholas Lavender, Toby Landau & Jonathan Adkin (instructed by Messrs Lewis Silkin) for the Second Defendant
Michael Brindle QC (instructed by Messrs Taylor Wessing) for the Third Defendant
Hearing dates : 20 February 2006
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Phillips CJ :
This is the judgment of the court.
The background
"A. Arbitration
1.1 The parties agree to and hereby appoint Anthony Julius, who accepts such appointment, to act as arbitrator ("the Arbitrator"), with the broadest possible powers to make final and binding determinations or awards on all issues and disputes between the parties in full and final settlement of them.
1.2 These issues and disputes, which in substantial part were the subject of the Arbitrator's extensive efforts over a period of several months to help the relevant parties settle matters amicably (and through which he was able to understand the intention of the parties with regard to this arbitration and its scope), are as follows:
a) Those issues and disputes already known to the Arbitrator in consequence of his many discussions with the parties;
b) Such further issues or disputes as may arise during the arbitration (which the Arbitrator will allow within his discretion);
…
1.4 The Arbitrator will have the discretion to act ex aequo et bono whenever he may find it suitable or equitable, paying due regard in all circumstances to the parties' equal treatment and their right to be heard in fair adversarial proceedings.
1.5 The parties agree that the Arbitrator may represent or continue to represent them, outside of this arbitration, for reward, and represent or continue to represent such other persons or entities, as the parties may, in their sole discretion, desire.
1.6 The parties expressly waive any rights they may have to challenge the appointment of the Arbitrator on any ground, including on the grounds that he
(a) endeavoured to help the relevant parties settle matters amicably, and/or
(b) was engaged in the mediation of their disputes, and/or
(c) has been legal advisor (and Mishcon de Reya have been legal advisors) over the course of many years to Amir Weissfisch, Rami Weisfisch and companies owned (or formerly owned) by Amir Weissfisch, Rami Weissfisch and the APW Trust, and/or
(d) accepts instructions in accordance with 1.5 above.
1.7 The parties acknowledge that they each had legal representation both prior to and during the negotiation and finalisation of this Agreement.
1.8 In the making of determinations or awards the Arbitrator may draw on information he acquired during the course of his relationship with the parties or any one or more of them. He shall not make reasoned determinations or awards, unless so requested by all parties.
1.9 The parties expressly agree to waive their rights to
(a) challenge any determination(s) or award(s) by the Arbitrator through set aside proceedings or any other proceedings;
(b) oppose enforcement of the Arbitrator's determination(s) or award(s) in any jurisdiction.
"1.3 This Agreement is governed by Swiss law, the arbitration will be ad hoc, and the seat of the arbitration shall be Geneva, Switzerland."
"6.1 In the period from May 2004 until 26 July 2005 the Claimant was the victim of a fraudulent scheme carried on by the Second Defendant in which he was assisted directly or indirectly by the First and [Third] Defendants. Without discovery the Claimant cannot state whether the First Defendant was knowingly involved in the scheme. The aim of the Second Defendant's fraudulent scheme was to obtain total control of the MRG Group of companies and to exclude the Claimant from all rights and interests in it and APW Trust without paying any or any sufficient consideration. Significant elements of the said fraud were perpetrated in England.
6.2 The scheme was (1) secretly to purport to remove the Claimant and his children from membership of the class of discretionary objects of APW Trust then (2) use unlawful, illegitimate and fraudulent means to cause the Claimant to enter in the Agreement with the effect that (3) control and direction of the MRG Group companies and APW Trust would pass from the Claimant to the Second Defendant and the ownership thereof would pass to the Third Defendant as trustee of APW Trust by (4) fraudulently leading the Claimant to believe that no attempts had been made to remove him from the said class (and that his interests in the APW Trust and underlying MRG Group were therefore secure) while (5) ensuring that his (the Second Defendant's) interests were secure against enforcement of any award by keeping them or moving them into jurisdictions where any award made under the Agreement would be unenforceable (e.g. Liechtenstein).
6.3 The Claimant therefore contends that the Agreement is an instrument of, or is designed to facilitate, the Second Defendant's fraud and is therefore void and unenforceable as being contrary to public policy."
"The First Defendant ("the Arbitrator") seeks an order that the action against him be stayed on the grounds that:
(1) the proceedings concern an arbitration the seat of which, as provided for in clause 1.3 of the Arbitration Agreement, is Geneva, Switzerland and which is expressly governed by Swiss law;
(2) the matters raised in the Particulars of Claim are all, or essentially, either (a) matters of substance that fall within the scope of the Arbitration Agreement and should accordingly be decided by the Arbitrator or (b) matters alleged to go to the jurisdiction of the Arbitrator which should be decided by the Arbitrator, at least in the first instance (subject to any review by the Swiss Courts);
(3) accordingly, as they concern matters agreed to be subject to arbitration, the proceedings should be stayed under section 2(2)(a) and 9 of the Arbitration Act 1996 and/or under the inherent jurisdiction of the Court;
(4) insofar as, notwithstanding (1) to (3) above, any matters raised in the Particulars of Claim should be decided by any Court (as opposed to being decided by the Arbitrator), they should be decided either (a) by the Swiss Courts, being the Court(s) at the seat of the arbitration, or (b) the Courts of the Bahamas, where certain proceedings are already pending between the parties and, accordingly, these proceedings should be stayed on the basis of forum non conveniens and/or lis alibi pendens;
(5) insofar as the Particulars of Claim make any non-demurrable claim(s) for damages against the Defendants, such claim(s) for damages is/are brought in breach of clause 2.1(a) of the Arbitration Agreement and/or such claims(s) is/are intimately connected with the matters to be determined in the arbitration and/or (if necessary) in the Swiss Courts and/or in the Courts of the Bahamas (as per (1) to (3) above) and/or at present such claims(s) is/are premature and cannot or should not be tried pending such determination(s) of the Court and/or on the basis of forum non conveniens and/or lis alibi pendens;
(6) further, in all circumstances, the action against the Arbitrator should be stayed under the inherent jurisdiction of the Court because it is an abuse of process, vexatious and oppressive and/or an illegitimate attempt to invoke the jurisdiction of the English Court to disrupt a foreign arbitration."
Steel J's judgment
"17. The starting point for any consideration of the merit of the claimant's application must be Switzerland and Swiss law. The seat of the arbitration is in Geneva. Both the curial and governing law of the contract is Swiss law. The arbitration has been underway for about a year. The arbitrator has made a number of orders and awards. On the face of it, the obvious forum for any challenge to the contract and to the appointment or performance of the arbitrator at this stage is Switzerland."
He went on to note that under Swiss law the arbitrator had Kompetenz-Kompetenz and, indeed, was obliged to decide his own jurisdiction. An appeal against his decision would lie pursuant to article 191 of the Swiss Federal Act and article 180 of that Act made other provisions for challenging the arbitrator. He commented that Swiss law furnished a full scheme for the supervision of arbitral tribunals in the state courts, consistent with the 1985 UNCITRAL Model Law on Commercial Arbitration. Any restraint on the decision of an arbitral tribunal as to its own jurisdiction would be inconsistent with a mandatory Kompetenz-Kompetenz rule and would preclude access to the Swiss courts.
Grounds of the Appeal
Conclusion
(i) Amir and Rami, each of whom was receiving independent legal advice, expressly agreed that their disputes should be resolved by Mr Julius under arbitration which would be governed by Swiss law and have its seat in Switzerland.
(ii) The natural consequence of this Agreement was that any issues as to the validity of the unusual provisions of the Arbitration Clauses would fall to be resolved in Switzerland according to Swiss law.
(iii) This consequence accords with principles of the law of international arbitration agreed under the New York Convention and recognised by this country by the 1996 Act.
(iv) For the English court to restrain an arbitrator under an agreement providing for arbitration with its seat in a foreign jurisdiction to which the parties unquestionably agreed would infringe those principles.
(v) Exceptional circumstances may, nonetheless, justify the English court in taking such action. Whether such circumstances exist will be a matter to be resolved by Colman J and nothing in these reasons is intended to influence his decision in that regard.
(vi) No special circumstances have been shown which justify taking such action on an interim basis, pending the hearing before Colman J.