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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Standard Bank Plc & Anor v Agrinvest International Inc & Ors [2007] EWHC 2595 (Comm) (09 November 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2007/2595.html Cite as: [2008] 1 Lloyd's Rep 532, [2007] EWHC 2595 (Comm) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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(1) STANDARD BANK PLC (2) STANDARD BANK GROUP LIMITED |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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(1) AGRINVEST INTERNATIONAL INC. (2) CHARLES CHAWAFATY (3) CAIRO PHOENIX FOREIGN TRADE CENTRE |
Defendants |
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The Defendants were not represented.
Hearing dates: 5 November 2007
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr. Justice Teare :
The background to the applications
19.1 This Agreement and all Trade Confirmations shall be governed by and construed in accordance with the laws of England.
19.2 Each party hereto irrevocably submits to the jurisdiction of the courts in England for the purpose of any action, suit or proceeding relating to this Agreement or any Trade Confirmation and irrevocably agrees that all claims in respect of any such action, suit or proceeding may be heard and determined in any such court.
Mississippi
Egypt
The Part 8 claim
Anti-suit relief
"If contracting parties agree to give a particular court exclusive jurisdiction to rule on claims between those parties, and a claim falling within the scope of the agreement is made in proceedings in a forum other than that which the parties have agreed, the English Court will ordinarily exercise its discretion (whether by granting a stay of proceedings in England, or by restraining the prosecution of proceedings in the non-contractual forum abroad, or by such other procedural order as is appropriate in the circumstances) to secure compliance with the contractual bargain, unless the party suing in the non-contractual forum (the burden being on him) can show strong reasons for suing in that forum. …………… Whether a party can show strong reasons, sufficient to displace the other party's prima facie entitlement to enforce the contractual bargain, will depend on all the facts and circumstances of the particular case" (per Lord Bingham in Donohue v Armco Inc [2002] 1 Lloyds' Rep 425 at para.24).
"The test which has been developed for distinguishing an exclusive from a non-exclusive jurisdiction clause is whether on its proper construction the clause obliges the parties to resort to the relevant jurisdiction, irrespective of whether the word "exclusive" is used: Dicey and Morris 13th. ed 2000 at para.12-078. Or to put the issue in another way: is the obligation contained in the clause the intransitive one to submit to a jurisdiction if it is chosen by the other contracting party, or is it the transitive one to submit all disputes to the chosen jurisdiction ?"
"(i) The Court will grant an injunction where the pursuit of the foreign proceedings is "unconscionable", as is made clear by the House of Lords in Turner v Grovit [2002] 1 WLR107 at paragraphs 22-29, per Lord Hobhouse. The injunction is a personal remedy for the wrongful conduct of another party - a fault based remedial concept, in respect of conduct which the Court may describe as "vexatious" or "oppressive", but deriving from "the basic principle of justice".
(ii) The Court will readily grant an injunction to restrain proceedings which are brought in breach of an exclusive jurisdiction clause save in circumstances where the Brussels Regulation applies – see Through Transport Mutual v New India Assurance Co. [2005] 1LLR 67 at paragraph 67 – 68. This is an example of the wider principle that an English Court will grant an injunction to prevent the pursuit of foreign proceedings which are vexatious, oppressive or unconscionable – see SNIA v Lee Kui Jack [1987] AC 871.
iii) Absent an agreement to the exclusive jurisdiction of the English Court, or some other special factor, a person has no right not to be sued in a particular forum. Where suit is brought in a foreign forum, the question whether or not that forum is an appropriate forum is a factor in assessing the conduct of the party suing there, for the purposes of considering whether to grant a restraining injunction, but if it is the only factor, it is easily overridden by other considerations (per Lord Hobhouse at para 25 of Turner (ibid)).
iv) To grant an injunction, the English Court must have a sufficient legitimate interest in the foreign proceedings, which means that if there is no contractual reason to prevent suit there, there must be proceedings in this country which require protection (per Lord Hobhouse at para 27 of Turner (ibid), by reference to the House of Lords' decision in Airbus Industries GIE v Patel [1999] 1 AC 119.
v) English law attaches a high importance to international comity and the perception of the foreign court of an interference in its proceedings, albeit indirect. There must therefore be a clear need for protection of the English proceedings (per Lord Hobhouse at para 29 of Turner (ibid) if an injunction is to be granted.
vi) An injunction should not be granted if its effect would be to deprive the claimant in the foreign action of an advantage in that forum of which it would be unjust to deprive him (Snia v Lee Kui Jak (ibid) at p 896)."
The option agreement
Further Declarations of non-liability
i) English law is the law applicable to the claims brought by the Defendants against the Claimants in the Defendants' Egyptian Proceedings and to the contracts in relation to which those claims are brought.
ii) English law is the law applicable to the claims sought to be brought by the First Defendant against the First Claimant in the First Defendant's proposed Amended Complaint in its Mississippi Proceedings against the First Claimant, as well as the law applicable to the contracts in relation to which those claims are brought.
iii) The claims set out in the said Egyptian Proceedings against each of the Claimants, and the claims set out in the First Defendant's proposed Amended Complaint in its Mississippi Proceedings against the First Claimant, are claims in relation to which the English Court has exclusive jurisdiction.
iv) All of the claims set out in the Egyptian Proceedings and in the proposed Amended Mississippi Complaint against either of the Claimants are time barred as a matter of English Law and for that reason neither of the Claimants has any liability in respect of any of them.
v) Further, as a matter of English Law, the Second Claimant is not liable to any of the Defendants in respect of the claims sought to be brought by any of the Defendants against it in the Egyptian Proceedings for the reason that it is not, and never has been, a party to any contractual relationship with any of them.
Costs