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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Vale SA v BHP Group (UK) Ltd [2023] EWCA Civ 1388 (24 November 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2023/1388.html Cite as: [2023] EWCA Civ 1388 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
BUSINESS & PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT
Mrs Justice O'Farrell
[2023] EWHC 2607 (TCC)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE ELISABETH LAING
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Vale S.A. |
Appellant |
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BHP Group (UK) Ltd |
1st Respondent |
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BHP Group Ltd |
2nd Respondent |
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Shaheed Fatima KC, Nicholas Sloboda and Veena Srirangam (instructed by Slaughter and May Solicitors) for the Respondents
Hearing Date: 15 November 2023
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Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE COULSON:
Introduction
The Legal Framework
"2. The appeal is therefore an appeal on a pure question of fact. The approach of an appeal court to that kind of appeal is a well-trodden path. It is unnecessary to refer in detail to the many cases that have discussed it; but the following principles are well-settled:
i) An appeal court should not interfere with the trial judge's conclusions on primary facts unless it is satisfied that he was plainly wrong.
ii) The adverb "plainly" does not refer to the degree of confidence felt by the appeal court that it would not have reached the same conclusion as the trial judge. It does not matter, with whatever degree of certainty, that the appeal court considers that it would have reached a different conclusion. What matters is whether the decision under appeal is one that no reasonable judge could have reached.
iii) An appeal court is bound, unless there is compelling reason to the contrary, to assume that the trial judge has taken the whole of the evidence into his consideration. The mere fact that a judge does not mention a specific piece of evidence does not mean that he overlooked it.
iv) The validity of the findings of fact made by a trial judge is not aptly tested by considering whether the judgment presents a balanced account of the evidence. The trial judge must of course consider all the material evidence (although it need not all be discussed in his judgment). The weight which he gives to it is however pre-eminently a matter for him.
v) An appeal court can therefore set aside a judgment on the basis that the judge failed to give the evidence a balanced consideration only if the judge's conclusion was rationally insupportable.
vi) Reasons for judgment will always be capable of having been better expressed. An appeal court should not subject a judgment to narrow textual analysis. Nor should it be picked over or construed as though it was a piece of legislation or a contract.
3. If authority for all these propositions is needed, it may be found in Piglowska v Piglowski [1999] 1 WLR 1360; McGraddie v McGraddie [2013] UKSC 58, [2013] 1 WLR 2477; Fage UK Ltd v Chobani UK Ltd [2014] EWCA Civ 5, [2014] FSR 29; Henderson v Foxworth Investments Ltd [2014] UKSC 41, [2014] 1 WLR 2600; Elliston v Glencore Services (UK) Ltd [2016] EWCA Civ 407; JSC BTA Bank v Ablyazov [2018] EWCA Civ 1176, [2019] BCC 96; Staechelin v ACLBDD Holdings Ltd [2019] EWCA Civ 817, [2019] 3 All ER 429 and Perry v Raleys Solicitors [2019] UKSC 5, [2020] AC 352."
"4. Often the question whether this test is satisfied will not have a single right answer. Views may reasonably differ as to the weight to be attributed to the different connecting factors relied on. The fact that this court might (or even would) have reached a different conclusion from the judge below is not in itself a reason to allow an appeal. Rather, this court may only interfere if the judge has made "a significant error of principle, or a significant error in the considerations taken or not taken into account" (VTB Capital v Nutritek at [69]: similar formulations to much the same effect can also be found in other cases).
5. Further, it is important to say that the function of this court is to review the decision of the court below. The question is whether the judge has made a significant error having regard to the evidence adduced and the submissions advanced in the lower court. Just as the trial of an action is not a dress rehearsal for an appeal (see the well-known metaphor of Lord Justice Lewison in Fage UK Ltd v Chobani UK Ltd [2014] EWCA Civ 5 at [114]), neither is an application to set aside an order for service out of the jurisdiction. In general an appellant will not be permitted to rely on material which the judge was not invited to consider or to advance an entirely new basis for saying that the judge's evaluation on the issue of appropriate forum was wrong. A judge can hardly be criticised for not taking something into account if he was never asked to do so. Although no doubt this principle will be applied with some flexibility, bearing in mind that the ultimate Spiliada question is concerned with "the interests of all the parties and … the ends of justice", good reason will be required for taking a different approach."
Ground 1: Serious Issue to be Tried
Ground 2A: Appropriate Forum
A Point of Principle?
"The court must consider what is the natural forum for the claim against Vale, that is, the forum with which it has the most real and substantial connection, but in the wider context of the whole case, including the interests of all other parties: Lungowe v Vedanta (above) at [68]."
Paragraph 68 of Lungowe is in these terms:
"68. There can be no doubt that, when Lord Goff [in Spiliada] originally formulated the concept quoted above, he would have regarded the phrase "in which the case can be suitably tried for the interest of all the parties" as referring to the case as a whole, and therefore as including the anchor defendant among the parties. Although the persuasive burden was reversed, as between permission to serve out against the foreign defendant and the stay of proceedings against the anchor defendant, the court was addressing a single piece of multi-defendant litigation and seeking to decide where it should, as a whole, be tried. The concept behind the phrases "the forum" and "the proper place" is that the court is looking for a single jurisdiction in which the claims against all the defendants may most suitably be tried. The Altimo case also involved multiple defendants. Although it was decided after Owusu v Jackson, it concerned the international jurisdiction of the courts of the Isle of Man, so that the particular problems thrown up by this appeal did not arise."
Error 1: Failure To Have Regard To Paragraph 73 of Altimo
Error 2: The Failure to Find Altimo Directly Analogous
Error 3: Erroneous Starting Point
"87. If BHP's claims against Vale were standalone proceedings, the natural forum in which those claims should be determined would be Brazil, for the reasons articulated by Mr Salzedo and summarised above. However, they are not standalone proceedings; they are additional claims within substantial proceedings brought by 732,000 claimants against BHP, in respect of which it has been determined that this jurisdiction is the appropriate forum. It is in that context that the court must consider the forum in which the claims against Vale could most suitably be tried for the interests of all parties and for the ends of justice."
Error 4: Risk of Irreconcilable Decisions
Standing Back
Ground 2B: Readiness for Trial
Background
Analysis
Ground 3: Vale's Continuing Participation
Conclusion
LADY JUSTICE ELISABETH LAING:
Note 1 In fact, the passage comes from the judgment of Lloyd LJ, as he then was, in The Goldean Mariner [1990] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 215 at 222, which Lord Collins approved inAltimo. [Back] Note 2 Her detailed judgment, dated 12 May 2023, is at [2023] EWHC 1134 (TCC) [Back] Note 3 It was a stance which also lay behind Ground 2B. [Back]