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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Gard Marine & Energy Ltd v Lloyd Tunnicliffe & Ors [2009] EWHC 2388 (Comm) (09 October 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2009/2388.html Cite as: [2010] Lloyd's Rep IR 62, [2009] EWHC 2388 (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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GARD MARINE & ENERGY LIMITED (A company incorporated in Bermuda) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) LLOYD TUNNICLIFFE (sued on his own behalf and on behalf of all other members of Lloyd's Syndicate 780 for 2005 year) (2) GLACIER REINSURANCE AG (A company incorporated in Switzerland) (3) AGNEW HIGGINS PICKERING & COMPANY LIMITED |
Defendants |
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Mr Peter MacDonald Eggers (instructed by Barlow Lyde & Gilbert) for the 2nd Defendant
Hearing dates: 17th September 2009
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Hamblen :
Introduction
(1) London market underwriters (Advent, Ascot, Map and Axis) subscribed to a slip in respect of a reinsurance order of 7.5% of the whole ("the London Market slip").
(2) Glacier Re signed a slip in respect 100% of a reinsurance order of 5% of the whole ("the Glacier Re slip").
Procedural history
The grounds of jurisdiction asserted by Gard
(1) The Court has jurisdiction pursuant to article 5(1) because the relevant contractual obligation was to be performed in London pursuant to an alleged custom and practice of the London market.
(2) The Court has jurisdiction pursuant to article 6(1), because the claim against Glacier Re is intrinsically connected with the claim against Advent and AHP.
Applicable law
"A contract shall be governed by the law chosen by the parties. The choice must be expressed or demonstrated with reasonable certainty by the terms of the contract or the circumstances of the case."
(1) The slip was in English, in a London market form. The slip also used specific London Market wording. It is well established that such matters are sufficient to demonstrate an implied choice of law.
(2) Both parties were clearly aware that the Glacier Re slip was part of facultative reinsurance protection intended to provide consistent and coherent reinsurance cover to such participants on the primary insurance cover as ordered reinsurance. This could only be achieved if the same applicable law applied to all the lines that were written on the reinsurance (which then fell to be allocated by the brokers). Both Gard and Glacier Re must therefore be taken to have agreed that English law should govern the Glacier Re reinsurance as well as the Lloyd's reinsurance.
(1) The choice of policy form (the J(A) form being a mere policy jacket) and the London market clauses were incidental to the scope and operation of the Glacier Re reinsurance contract.
(2) The absence of an express choice of English law is indicative that English law was not intended to apply to the Glacier Re slip. London market placements now commonly require the insertion of an express choice of law clause. The fact that the London market slip refers expressly to English law and the Glacier Re slip does not militate against the argument that English law is the chosen law.
(3) There was therefore no (express or implied) choice of English law. On the contrary, the choice of Swiss law as the applicable law is reasonably demonstrated, the most telling factor in favour of a choice of Swiss law being the fact that the slip was placed entirely ("100% of order") in the Swiss market with a Swiss reinsurer, Glacier Re. Placing a reinsurance contract in a particular market invariably points to that market's legal system as the chosen law, as is often said when slips are placed in the London market.
(4) Alternatively, however, there is no such choice, the applicable law is the law of the country with which the Glacier Re slip has its closest connection. That country is Switzerland, pursuant to the presumption in article 4(2) of the Rome Convention, there being no closer connection with England.
(5) Accordingly, the Glacier Re reinsurance contract is governed by Swiss law.
"We place a reinsurance for certain participants on the Primary Package…Due to certain participants reducing their line size we are looking for more capacity and would be delighted if you would take a look at this reinsurance.."
"Referring to our conversation earlier today we thank you very much for offering us a share on the XS Fac R/I Policy for the Primary Package Policy. As discussed we are pleased to offer you a line of 5% subject to a total discount of 10%. Please advise."
Article 5(1)
"A person domiciled in a Contracting State may, in another Contracting State, be sued: 1. in matters relating to a contract, in the courts for the place of performance of the obligation in question …"
(1) The fact that both parties were aware that Gard had instructed the London broker, AHP, to place and administer the reinsurance. It was clear from the form and terms of the slip and the circumstances of the placing that the reinsurance was to be administered by AHP in accordance with London market practice.
(2) The London Market practice in respect of risks is for brokers to pay premiums and collect claims (and engage in net accounting). See O'Neill and Woloniecki, the Law of Reinsurance (2nd ed.) paras 11-24-11-25 (pp. 608-9). See also Grace v Leslie & Godwin Financial Services Ltd [1995] LRLR 472 per Clarke J at 477; Citadel Insurance [1982] 2 Lloyd's Rep 543, at 548; Deutsche v La Fondiara [2001] 2 Lloyd's Rep 621 per David Steel J at 625).
(3) In this case, both parties would have been aware that it would be impractical not to follow London market practice, and to make payments either direct to Glacier Re in Switzerland or to Gard in Bermuda.
(4) Moreover, all payments made by the reinsured, Glacier Re and the other reinsurers under the reinsurance slips and their predecessors were paid to AHP in London. This included the interim payment in respect of this claim.
(5) Gard accordingly contends that it was an implied term of the Glacier Re reinsurance (implied as obvious or necessary) that claims would be paid to AHP in London. Accordingly there is jurisdiction under Article 5(1).
(1) There is no evidence of a market custom or practice that claims would be paid to the broker, AHP, in London, let alone evidence satisfying the stringent demands of proof of a custom imposing a legal obligation. In fact, the English legal position in respect of the payment of claims is to the contrary. Further, Glacier Re's evidence is that it was not aware of any such custom or practice.
(2) In any event, the slip refers only to Glacier Re's obligation to pay the Sum Insured and the only counterpart or payee identified is Gard. It follows that, in the absence of any contrary provision, Glacier Re is obliged to pay Gard, not AHP, and that payment to Gard, not AHP, would discharge any such obligation.
(3) Further, the position under the Glacier Re slip stands in contrast to the London Market slip, which contains a subscription agreement requiring the management of claims in accordance with the Lloyd's 2005 Claims Scheme (absent from the Glacier Re slip).
"There were however features of that case regarding the position of the brokers, and in particular regarding calculation by them of quarterly balances of account and the resulting remittances to be made under the cover which was being operated by them, which are absent from the present case. I do not think therefore that the Citadel Insurance case provides any direct authority to guide us. It may be that, in practice, claims would in fact be paid by underwriters to the brokers in London in a case such as the present; but there is no evidence before us of any binding practice to that effect, and I do not feel able to say that there was a term of the contract requiring this to be done."
Article 6(1)
"A person domiciled in a Contracting State may also be sued: 1. where he is one of a number of defendants, in the courts for the place where any one of them is domiciled."
"i) The test now contained in article 6(1) of the Regulation, codifies the effect of the earlier decision of the Court of Justice of the European Communities ("the European court") on the Brussels Convention in Kalfelis v Schroeder, Muenchmeyer, Hengst & Co [1988] ECR 5565 , at page 5584 (para 12), namely: whether there is such a connection between the claims at the time when they are instituted that it is expedient to hear and determine them together to avoid the risk of irreconcilable judgments resulting from separate proceedings ("the Kalfelis test"). The risk of irreconcilability may arise from potential conflicting findings of fact or from potential conflicting decisions on questions of law: Gascoine v Pyrah [1994] IL Pr 82 , at 93. While article 6(1) constitutes an exception to the general rule contained in article 2 (that the defendant's domicile governs jurisdiction) and must not be abused, it does not follow that article 6(1) is so subservient to article 2 that it could only be invoked in special circumstances: Gascoine v Pyrah , at 94".
"even assuming that the concept of irreconcilable judgments for the purposes of the application of Article 6(1) of the Brussels Convention must be understood in the broad sense of contradictory decisions, there is no risk of such decisions being given [in this case] ... As the Advocate General observed ... in order that decisions may be regarded as contradictory it is not sufficient that there be a divergence in the outcome of the dispute, but that divergence must also arise in the context of the same situation of law and fact".
(1) Both claims raise the same issue of construction, namely what is the correct meaning of the phrase "USD 250,000,000 (100%)". If the claims were to be heard in different jurisdictions, there is a risk that the different Courts might reach different conclusions on this central construction issue, particularly if, as I have held, the matter is to be approached on the basis that English law is the applicable law.
(2) Irrespective of the proper law, any Court which hears the claims will have to hear evidence and make findings of fact on factual matrix issues. Since the slips were placed pursuant to the same reinsurance order and against the same background, the evidence and factual issues will be the same or substantially the same. If these factual issues are canvassed before different Courts there is a clear risk of inconsistent findings of fact.
(3) Leaving aside the construction issue and factual matrix, the claims are also connected by the fact that both reinsurance defendants allege that AHP made misrepresentations to them or failed to make proper disclosure. Any Court which hears the claims will therefore have to hear evidence and make findings of fact on what was and what should have been said by AHP during the placing. Since the two slips were placed as part of a single placing exercise (with the same placing information), the same evidence will be relevant for each case. If these issues are canvassed before different Courts there is a clear risk of inconsistent findings of fact.
(4) Further, the close connection test is also satisfied in respect of Gard's claims against Glacier Re and against AHP. The case against Glacier Re will require the Court to consider Glacier Re's allegations as to what AHP said (and did not say) to Glacier Re during the placing and the evidence about this. So too will the Claimant's contingent claim against AHP. If these claims are not heard together then two Courts will have to hear evidence on the same matters and there will be a risk of inconsistent and irreconcilable judgments on issues of fact.
(1) The two slips, the London Market slip and the Glacier Re slip, are entirely separate contracts based on separate presentations of the risk to different underwriters in different insurance markets.
(2) The terms of each slip are not the same, although they share a number of common provisions. In particular, the London market underwriters made a number of manuscript amendments to the London Market slip after the risk was placed with Glacier Re in Switzerland.
(3) The London Market slip contains a detailed Subscription Agreement as between the London market underwriters which regulates the agreement of contractual amendments and the handling of claims on behalf of the entire subscribing market. The Glacier Re slip contains no such subscription agreement.
(4) There is no reference in the Glacier Re slip to the London market placement (having been made after Glacier Re had agreed to a 100% reinsurance order).
(5) The issues arising in respect of the claims against Advent and Glacier Re are different. Advent relies on specific exchanges between the syndicate and AHP. These exchanges are not relevant to the claim against Glacier Re.
(6) Both claims give rise to an issue of construction, namely the proper interpretation to be given to the Sum Insured provision in each slip. Even if the issue could be formulated and determined in precisely the same terms, that is insufficient reason to hold that there is a risk of an irreconcilable judgment (the same contractual provisions are regularly interpreted by different courts in different countries at different times). In any event, in this case the issues of construction would be formulated and determined in different terms, because the factual matrix surrounding the negotiation of the Glacier Re slip is necessarily different from the factual matrix surrounding the presentation to the London market underwriters, being dependent on the actual or constructive knowledge of each of the reinsurers.
(1) The claims against Glacier Re and AHP do not share a common basis. The claim against Glacier Re is a claim by Gard for an indemnity under the Glacier Re reinsurance contract. By contrast, the claim against AHP is concerned with the agency relationship between AHP and Gard and whether AHP observed an applicable duty of care in the discharge of its agency services with respect to the reinsurance contract. Given that there is an entirely separate legal and factual relationship in issue between the two claims, there can be no sufficient degree of connection between them to justify the application of article 6(1).
(2) Further, the claim against AHP is made by Gard only if Glacier Re is not liable to indemnify Gard under the reinsurance contract. Therefore, the Swiss Court would determine Glacier Re's liability under the Glacier Re slip prior to the determination of AHP's liability in England.
(3) There is an additional reason why the Court cannot assume jurisdiction pursuant to article 6(1) by reference to the claim against AHP. The time at which the relevant nexus should exist is the date of the original issue of the claim form, namely on 25th March 2007, not the date on which the claim form is amended or re-issued to effect the addition of further defendants. This follows first from the prescription laid down by the ECJ in Kalfelis v Bankhaus Schröder, Münchmeyer, Hengst and Co (Case 189/87) [1988] ECR 5565, para. 12, in requiring the actions to be "related when the proceedings are instituted" (emphasis added) and from the House of Lords' interpretation of the word "sued" in both articles 2 and 6(1) of the Lugano Convention. Such a construction was adopted by the House of Lords in the interests of uniformity and predictability (both objectives of the Lugano Convention).
(4) Accordingly, as no claim had been brought against AHP at the time of the initiation of the proceedings against Glacier Re in March 2007, it follows that the Court did not have jurisdiction to hear the claim against Glacier Re under article 6(1) at that time. That defect could not be rectified by the joinder of AHP as an additional defendant in April 2008.
Conclusion