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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Sberbank of Russia v Ramljak [2018] EWHC 348 (Ch) (21 February 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2018/348.html Cite as: [2018] EWHC 348 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
COMPANIES COURT (ChD)
IN THE MATTER OF AGROKOR D.D.
AND IN THE MATTER OF THE CROSS-BORDER INSOLVENCY REGULATIONS 2006
Rolls Building, Fetter Lane London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
(sitting as a Judge of the High Court)
IN THE MATTER OF AGROKOR D.D.
AND IN THE MATTER OF THE CROSS-BORDER INSOLVENCY REGULATIONS 2006
____________________
SBERBANK OF RUSSIA | Applicant | |
AND | ||
ANTE RAMLJAK | Respondent |
____________________
Tom Smith QC and William Willson (Instructed by Kirkland & Ellis International LLP) appeared on behalf of the Respondent
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Wednesday, 21 February 2018
(2.04 pm)
"Upon the application of Ante Ramljak as the Extraordinary Commissioner of Agrokor DD for the recognition under the Cross Border Insolvency Regulations 2006 of the Extraordinary Administration Proceedings commenced in Croatia in respect of Agrokor DD."
"And upon the applicant and the respondent Sberbank agreeing and undertaking that:(1) Pending final determination of the Recognition Application, Sberbank shall take no further steps in LCIA arbitration no. 173684 as against Agrokor DD and its subsidiaries which are the respondents to the arbitration (together the Relevant Companies) and the applicant will cause or procure that the Relevant Companies shall take no further steps in the LCIA arbitration no. 173684 as against Sberbank, save as required to comply with this undertaking;
(2) They shall take all necessary steps to procure a stay of LCIA arbitration no. 173684 as against the Relevant Companies pending final determination of the Recognition Application.
(3) Pending final determination of the Recognition Application, no further arbitration or claim in relation to any debts arising prior to the commencement of the Extraordinary Administration roceeding shall be commenced by Sberbank against the Relevant Companies in the courts of England and Wales or before an arbitral tribunal seated in England and Wales.
IT IS ORDERED BY CONSENT that ..."
"I agree with the rejection by Lord Justice Lloyd of the appellant's arguments as to the meaning of 'finally determined' for the reasons he gives. I agree with him that it refers to the final determination of the VAT due, whether by assessment and the expiration of the time for appeal against that assessment or by appeal so far as an appeal lies. That approach to final determination leads Ms Lonsdale on behalf of Mr Ali to submit as her core proposition that the amount of the penalty must be fixed by reference to the amount of VAT as finally determined. There is unlikely to be an issue about this if the evasion is detected before the amount of VAT due is finally determined. In that situation the commissioners would take steps to ensure that the VAT as finally determined reflects the adjustments necessary to correct this evasion. However, even once the VAT due is finally determined, the commissioners still have two years in which to raise a penalty assessment, see section 77(2). This is a comparatively long period if the amount of the liability to the penalty must always be calculated by reference to the amount due by way of VAT as finally determined. There would seem to be little point in such a lengthy period on the respondent's approach and that consideration throws doubt upon the respondent's core proposition."
"However, having said that, does the appellant also have a good case that it is the date of the striking out which matters for measuring the two years? What does 'finally determined' in section 77(2) VATA mean? There is no statutory definition. Applying a normal meaning to the phrase, it is clear that 'finally' is meant to qualify 'determined'. So Parliament was not referring to something which merely determined the proceedings, it was referring to something which finally determined the proceedings."91. It seems unarguable to me that Parliament clearly had in mind proceedings coming to a final end. It had in mind the end of any appeal process and, it necessarily follows, any reinstatement process. The strike out, whether it took place on 5 May or 29 June, while it determined the proceedings, could not have been final until the time for a reinstatement application elapsed, without such application being made or if such application was made, until it was finally resolved. Final resolution in this appeal was when the appeal against the reinstatement refusal was finally determined in the Upper Tribunal on 3 March 2014."
"This case turns on the interpretation of Order 67 rule 10(2) of the Rules of Court. The appellant/judgment debtor, PT Bakrie Investindo ... is appealing against the dismissal of an application to adjourn the examination of judgment debtor proceedings ... granted in favour of the respondent/judgment creditor, Global Distressed Alpha Fund I Limited Partnership ...2. This appeal raises two issues in relation to Order 67 rule 10(2):
"(a) first, whether an EJD comes within the meaning of 'execution' for the purposes of order 67 rule 10(2); and
"(b) second, whether an application to set aside a registration of a foreign judgment registered under the Reciprocal Enforcement of Commonwealth Judgments Act ... ('RECJA') is considered "finally determined" for the purposes of order 67 rule 10(2) if the application is pending hearing before the Court of Appeal."
Pausing there, it can be seen that that actually raises almost exactly the point which I have to decide, except of course that it does it in a quite different statutory context, and the statutory context, indeed, of a foreign legal system.
"Order 67, rule 10 reads as follows ..."I need not read paragraph 1 of the rule. It deals with a limit on execution on a judgment registered under the reciprocal enforcement legislation.
Then subparagraph 2 reads:
"If an application is made to set aside the registration of a judgment, execution on the judgment shall not issue until after such application is finally determined."
There is then subrule 3 which I need not read.
So there is the text of the rule. The question therefore is whether execution is restricted until after such application is finally determined by way of an appeal, or whether it is sufficient that the court at first instance should have disposed of the application.
"In my opinion a final judgment means a judgment obtained in an action by which the question whether there was a pre-existing right of the plaintiff against the defendant is finally determined in favour either of the plaintiff or the defendant. I think that definition will be found to cover most cases, though perhaps not every one. In my opinion, the question is not only was the claim determined, but was it finally determined? It can only have been finally determined if between the two parties to the action, it cannot be raised again."
"Any judgment of a superior court of a foreign country to which this part extends other than a judgment of such a court given on appeal from a court which is not a superior court, shall be a judgment to which this part applies if (a) it is final and conclusive as between the parties thereto ..."I need not read (b) or (c).
Then subsection 3:
"For the purposes of this section, a judgment shall be deemed to be final and conclusive, notwithstanding that an appeal may be pending against it, or that it may still be subject to appeal in the courts of the country of the original court."
"In fact it was deemed necessary to include section 3(3) of the REFJA to clarify any potential ambiguity in the interpretation of 'final' in section 3(2) of the REFJA, since a natural reading of 'final' in section 3(2) of the REFJA suggests that it means no further avenues for either party to raise any arguments in relation to the foreign judgment before the foreign court are available. However, there is no similar clarifying provision in relation to section 4(5) of the REFJA (and correspondingly in order 67, rule 10) which suggests that it is the natural meaning of 'finally determined' that is to be preferred in section 4(5) of the REFJA (and correspondingly in Order 67, rule 10) ie no further appeals are possible."
Of course that is in a different statutory context. But, again, I think it is the way in which the judge approaches the task of construction that is of assistance to me.
"Affidavits shall be confined to such facts as the witness is able of his own knowledge to prove… Provided that in interlocutory proceedings, an affidavit may contain statements of information and belief with the sources and grounds thereof."
The argument was that this is not an interlocutory proceeding and therefore hearsay evidence was not permitted in the affidavit.
"This was a case in which an order dismissing an action was made upon the hearing of a point of law raised by the pleadings before the trial under Order 25, rules 2 and 3 (UK). For present purposes we consider it sufficient to quote the judgment of Lord Justice Lopes ([1891] 1 QB at pages 736 and 737):'I am of the same opinion. I think the definition suggested by the Master of the Rolls in the case that has been referred to is the right definition for this purpose.
I think that a judgment or order would be final within the meaning of the rules when, whichever way it went, it would finally determine the rights of the parties. The case of In Re Riddell appears to me to be in point. That was a decision under the bankruptcy rules in which the term "final judgment" is used. The court held that an order dismissing an action for want of prosecution was not a final judgment'."
"It seems to us that the critical point in determining that an order is final for this purpose is that it must appear that whichever way it went -- in other words, whatever was the decision of the judge in chambers in this application -- it would have the effect of determining the rights of the parties. Of course, determining does not mean that there cannot be an appeal, but determining the rights of the parties in a case where the plaintiff had obtained an order against the defendant entering judgment for damages to be assessed."
(2.46 pm)