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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Arduina Holdings BV v Celtic Resources Holdings Plc [2006] EWHC 3155 (Comm) (10 October 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2006/3155.html Cite as: [2006] ArbLR 5, [2006] EWHC 3155 (Comm) |
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COMMERCIAL COURT
Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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ARDUINA HOLDINGS BV | Claimant | |
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CELTIC RESOURCES HOLDINGS PLC | Defendant |
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183 Clarence Street Kingston-Upon-Thames Surrey KT1 1QT
Tel No: 020 8974 7300 Fax No: 020 8974 7301
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MS CATHERINE NEWMAN QC and MR GREGORY BANNER (instructed by Kerman and Co LLP) appeared on behalf of the Defendant
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Crown Copyright ©
Framework Agreement
"Any dispute, controversy or claim arising out of or relating to this agreement or the breach termination or invalidity hereof, shall be settled by arbitration in accordance with Rules of the London Court of International Arbitration as at present in force, which rules shall be incorporated into this agreement."
"The Arbitral Tribunal shall have authority to consider and include in any proceeding, decision or award any further dispute properly brought before it, insofar as such dispute arises out of this Agreement. But subject to the foregoing, no other parties or other disputes shall be included in or consolidated with the arbitral proceedings."
"Except for the assignment agreements, this Agreement shall constitute the entire agreement between the Parties" and that "in case of conflict between the Framework Agreement and the terms of the assignment agreements, this Agreement should take precedence."
Assignment Agreements
Commercial Background
Arduina's Claims in the Arbitration
Celtic's Counterclaim
"The claimant repeats that it is clear from clause 1 of the Framework Agreement that the condition precedent is only relevant to the ten separate assignment agreements. Clause 4.1 of each of the assignment agreements sets out that they should be governed and construed in accordance with the laws of the Russian Federation. The claimant respectfully submits that a Russian court is therefore, best placed to decide upon the terms of the assignment agreements and the relevance of the condition precedent to those agreements."
"Arduina denies Celtic's entitlement to the declaratory relief sought in its counterclaim, without elaboration. In its written submissions after the Evidentiary Hearing, Arduina rely on the fact that the assignment agreements are expressed to be governed by Russian law and submit that as a result a Russian court is best placed to decided upon the terms of the assignment agreements and the relevance of the condition precedent to the agreements. The relief which is sought arises under the Framework Agreement. I am required to settle disputes arising out of that agreement. I see no reason to refuse Celtic the relief it seeks."
The Challenge to the Award on the Counterclaim
"The tribunal purported to dispose (wrongly) of matters of Russian law which always were and are the subject of ongoing litigation in the Russian courts and which always were and are beyond its proper remit and jurisdiction."
i) The parties had previously agreed that the validity of the assignments was not a matter for the arbitrator to rule upon. This is undisputed.ii) The sole purpose of the declaration sought was in order to mount a challenge in the Russian courts to the validity of the assignments. This too is undisputed.
iii) Therefore, the arbitrator was being asked, by necessary implication, to rule upon something which was properly within the jurisdiction of the Russian courts and accordingly not within the jurisdiction of the arbitrator.
"If a party to arbitral proceedings takes part, or continues to take part, in the proceedings without making, either forthwith or within such time as is allowed by the arbitration agreement or the tribunal or by any provision of this part, any objection -
(a) that the tribunal lacks substantive jurisdiction;
(b) that the proceedings have been improperly conducted …
he may not raise that objection later, before the tribunal or the court, unless he shows that, at the time he took part or continued to take part in the proceedings, he did not know and could not with reasonable diligence have discovered the grounds for the objection."
The Challenge to the Award on the Claim
"The tribunal failed to take any, or any proper, consideration of the evidence put forward on behalf of the claimant, and accordingly based its awards contrary to the weight of the evidence."
"The issues in the arbitration involve complex claims for breach of contract, misrepresentation, misstatement, non-disclosure and fraudulent variants thereof, claims for damages for breach of contract, loss of opportunity, breach of a duty of good faith, breach of the LSE's AIM prospectus requirements, the AIM listing rules of the LSE, breach of the Financial Services Act, breach of company law, breach of fiduciary and other duties, breach of the relevant EU directives and regulations as to prospectuses, fraud and deceit, etc"
"It will be clear from the above that there are complex issues of law, jurisdiction and fact in relation to which the claimant has been working since the award was first received by it, on or about 14 December 2005, and since the Final Award was only received by the claimant on or about 24 February 2006. Accordingly the Commercial Court is requested to issue and grant to Arduina the extension of time now sought until Friday 30 June 2006."
"It is Arduina's further and separate contention that, taken as a whole, the award of 12 December 2005 ("the First Award") is so deeply flawed in point of view of the findings of the Arbitrator as to give rise to a serious irregularity within the meaning of section 68 of the 1996 Act and so as to give rise to a breach of the duty set out in section 33 of the Act.
In the Exhibit hereto I include a detailed list and description of the criticisms, and deficiencies in, the Substantive Award upon which Arduina relies in support of this contention.
Whilst it may be fairly be said that certain of these criticisms or deficiencies taken in isolation are of relatively little consequence in the context of the Substantive Award as a whole, save that they demonstrate a somewhat sloppy approach by the Arbitrator to the evidence generally, several are, even when taken individually, sufficient each in themselves to constitute a serious irregularity.
Good examples of the latter are:
(1) The failure to analyse and understand the Russian and Yakutian law as applied to the constitutional structure of SVMC and the consequence failure in an area that was uncontroversial between the experts, to appreciate that in the case of a fifty/fifty joint venture in a company such as SVMC it is impossible as a matter of logic for either party to have in themselves management or control or management control of such a company;
(2) The failure to recognise that on any footing, as a result of the retirement of Mr Barker and the removal of Mr Foo as Chairman, Celtic had inevitably lost any such control as it might have had, well in advance of 22 November 2002;
(3) The total lack of any evidential support for the conclusion that Arduina did not rely upon the representations made to it, in the face of clear evidence to the contrary;
(4) The total lack of any evidential support for the conclusion that Arduina would have proceeded anyhow, had it known the real situation and truth as to Celtic's position despite the misrepresentations of Celtic/Foo as found by the Arbitrator.
Any one of the examples in paragraph 50 above would, it is submitted, be sufficient to constitute a serious irregularity under section 68(2)(a) or (c) of the Act, and when taken cumulatively inevitably undermines the analytical integrity of the Substantive Award as a legitimate jurisprudential exercise.
Substantial Injustice. So far as the broader challenge to the Substantial Award is concerned, in the light of the matters set out above, and in the Schedule, I suggest that it is plain that had the Arbitrator properly addressed the matters there set out, his Substantive Award should and would have been different."
"As to section b generally and paragraphs 94 and 95, we refer to the opinion of Alexander Layton QC which analyses the meaning of clause 1(a) of the Framework Agreement very nicely."
Misrepresentation and Reliance
"There was a total lack of any evidential support for the conclusion reached by the Arbitrator that Arduina did not rely upon the representations that were made by Celtic. Both Dr Johannes Sittard and Mr Pieter du Plessis gave evidence that Arduina would never have contemplated entering into a contract with Celtic if it had known that Celtic did not have at least a 50 per cent shareholding in SVMC, as well as management and control.
There was a total lack of any evidential support for the conclusion reached by the Arbitrator that Arduina would have proceeded to sign the Framework Agreement in any event even if it had known the truth behind the representations made by Celtic."
"The witness statement of Mr du Plessis recites that he relied heavily on information contained in Celtic's prospectus. I accept that evidence. However, this was relied upon by Mr du Plessis for the purpose of producing his reports to Mr Steinmetz. That is quite different from reliance by Arduina for the purposes of deciding whether to enter into the Framework Agreement."
"I should at this stage address the proposition that certain passages in the statements of Arduina's witnesses of fact and reports of Arduina's experts represent advocacy on the part of Michael Wilson and Partners and are not the evidence of the witness or expert concerned. I accept this proposition."
"Taken in isolation, each of these considerations gives rise to suspicion. Taken together, they lead me to conclude that Michael Wilson and Partners have been willing to include in witness statements and expert reports facts and views which are not the evidence of the witness or expert concerned. I have therefore found it necessary to treat these statements and reports with some caution."
"Arduina's statement of case and the written statement of Dr Sittard's evidence characterise the execution of the Framework Agreement and the assignment agreements as the culmination of a process of negotiation and the basis on which Arduina and its principals undertook extensive work and made major investments. Dr Sittard's statement contains a lengthy recital of extracts from Celtic's prospectus which are said to be among the representations that Arduina relied upon in deciding to execute these agreements. I do not accept that characterisation.
Dr Sittard's oral evidence, which in general I considered to be truthful, had a different tone to his statement. Dr Sittard clearly viewed the agreements as of a more incidental nature. They were a means to an end rather than an end in itself. They formulated the basis on which Arduina could choose to acquire the shares in SVMC held by SUE Komdragmetal if acceptable terms could be agreed by all involved. Dr Sittard's real focus was on the acquisition of those shares.
Much of the work required started before the agreements were signed and continued afterwards. The agreements were not the point of departure. I have no doubt that the recital in Dr Sittard's statement of the passage in the prospectus did not come from Dr Sittard. It reads like legal argument. Throughout this arbitration, Michael Wilson and Partners have looked for opportunities to develop the contention that Celtic has failed to comply with its AIM disclosure obligations."
"I conclude that, in effect, the Framework Agreement and the assignment agreements gave Arduina an option. The parties were contemplating a power-play, the outcome of which would depend in part on the political clout of IG Alrosa and President Shtyrov. Arduina would then decide whether to go ahead. The parties contemplated that the principals of Arduina would negotiate terms with SUE Komdragmetal and President Shtyrov. Clause 1(b) of the Framework Agreement gave Arduina a discretion as to whether to accept or decline such terms. If no agreement proved possible, there was no transaction. As Celtic put it in its submissions, the agreements amounted to a tool which allowed Arduina to go window shopping for a deal."
"This conclusion will be important when I come to consider Arduina's misrepresentation claims. In Dr Sittard's mind, execution of the Framework Agreement and the assignment agreements did not involve much of a commitment. So it was not important to Dr Sittard to conclude his due diligence before execution. The due diligence was not concerned with whether to execute these agreements. It was only concerned with establishing the value of Nezhdaninskoye and the ownership structure."
"I have therefore to consider whether Mr Foo's failure to qualify his earlier statement by bringing Dr Sittard up to date with events in Yakutsk did actually make any difference to his decision to sign the Framework Agreement and the assignment agreements. I have no doubt that it did not influence Dr Sittard. If at the signing meeting Mr Foo had brought Dr Sittard fully up to date, I have no doubt that Dr Sittard would have gone ahead regardless. A question over the existence of a right of pre-emption would not have been viewed by Dr Sittard as a deal breaker. The plan was to apply pressure on SUE Komdragmetal to sell its shares to Arduina. If that could be agreed, that absence of a right of pre-emption was irrelevant."
"If Dr Sittard had been told that IG Alrosa appeared to have seized control of SVMC, he would have considered that an unhelpful development, but I have no doubt that this would not have deterred him from signing any agreements. The plan was for Arduina's principals to negotiate with SUE Komdragmetal and President Shtyrov. Their ability to reach an agreement was not directly affected by whether Celtic had management control of SVMC. The viability of the scheme depended, amongst other things, on who was behind IG Alrosa and the resulting balance of political power. Dr Sittard would have wanted to give Mr Steinmetz, Mr Mashkevitch, Mr Chodiev and Mr Ibragimov the opportunity to explore these mattes, which is what the Framework Agreement and assignment agreements were designed to do."
Substantial Injustice
"Although I was only occasionally involved in the matter after 22 November 2002, I was aware that Mr Steinmetz and Mr Mashkevitch and Mr Chodiev, in particular, spent a lot of time on the matter, visiting Moscow and meeting with senior people there able to assist."
"I, of course, have no evidence from Mr Steinmetz, Mr Mashkevitch and Mr Chodiev. In the circumstances referred to above, I treat the claim with some caution."
"While Celtic lost on some particular issues, viewed overall it has enjoyed complete success."
Other Matters
Other Proceedings