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England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Public Joint Stock Company ("Rosgosstrakh") v Starr Syndicate Ltd & Ors [2020] EWHC 1557 (Comm) (17 June 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2020/1557.html Cite as: [2020] EWHC 1557 (Comm) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
COMMERCIAL COURT (QBD)
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
Public Joint Stock Company ("Rosgosstrakh") |
Claimant |
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- and – |
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(1) Starr Syndicate Limited (2) Dornoch Limited (3) Caitlin Insurance Company (UK) Ltd (4) Antares Underwriting Limited (5) Antares Capital Limited (6) Treimco Limited (7) Antares Capital III Limited (8) F&G UK Underwriters Limited (9) April Grange Limited (10) QBE Corporate Limited (11) Kiln Underwriting Limited (12) ICP Capital Limited (13) SCOR Underwriting Limied (14) Munchener Ruckversicherungs-Gesellschaft AG (15) Oriental Insurance Company Limited (16) New Indian Assurance Co Ltd (17) General Insurance Corporation of India (18) Assicurazioni Generali S.P.A (19) Swiss RE Europe S.A (20) Starr Insurance and Reinsurance Ltd |
Defendants |
____________________
Mr Michael McParland QC and Mr Samar Abbas Kazmi (instructed by Clyde & Co LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 12 and 13 May 2020
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
"Covid-19 Protocol: This judgment was handed down by the judge remotely by circulation to the parties' representatives by email and release to BAILII. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 10:30 ON 17 June 2020."
MRS JUSTICE MOULDER :
Background
"To indemnify the Reinsured in respect of a Policy or Policies issued by them to the Original Insured as follows: -
Section 1
1) Hull All Risks: covering against all risks of physical loss of or damage.
2) Aircraft legal liability.
arising from the test flights of Sukhoi Superjet 100 aircraft following production, as original."
"Uses: Test and Certification flights"
"Reinsurance Underwriting and Claims Control Clause AVN41A (excluding rate and retention) and with notice of loss within seven days"
and under the heading "Original Conditions" the relevant paragraph stated:
"Original Policy Wording includes the following: –
Original Policy Number: 01-004-000 or 04
Section 1
Original policy as per AVN1C"
"This reinsurance shall be governed by and construed in accordance with the law of Russia and each party agrees to submit to the exclusive jurisdiction of the Courts of Russia."
"we would like to mention here that our group and our client have made the decision to initiate PR-campaign within the players of the Russian insurance/reinsurance market. The aim of that campaign is to inform other players about the named reinsurers breaking of contractual obligations. The campaign is going to take place in mass media as well as in the insurance and reinsurance pools and unions where our group is represented.
We are going to reconsider our cooperation with the nonpaying companies and groups which they represent as we cannot be sure they will be ready to support us on future claims. Our lawyers investigate the possibility of putting the arrest on the reinsurers' assets in Russia if any exist"
Moscow Actions
"…under the heading of Interest in the section on liability in the reinsurance contract the risk of post-production test flights was accepted for reinsurance. The parties acknowledge that the owners' liability arose as a result of the aircraft carrying out a demonstration flight. Consequently, this liability is not covered by the reinsurance.
Furthermore, according to the clause on reinsurance underwriting the obligation to pay a reinsurance settlement is contingent upon the original policy being unchanged. The terms of the original policy were initially defined by the London aviation insurance policy; this is shown by a note in the text of the insurance policy. The London aviation insurance policy contains an exclusion which is applicable to all sections of the policy: aviation Hull, passenger liability and third party liability. This exclusion state that the insurance is not valid if the aircraft is not used in the ways that have been agreed by the parties. The parties agreed that the aircraft should be used only for in-flight testing in the form of test …flights…" [emphasis added]
KM Main Action
"for two main objects:
1 Hull all-risks: the coverage of all risks and material loss or damage (applicable to all losses including total loss);
2 Liability connected with the exploitation of an aircraft, being the result of the experimental flights by the Sukhoi Superjet 100 aircraft, as set out in the original contract (original insurance policy).
As can be seen from the case files, and undisputed by the parties, an insured event took place involving the total loss of an aircraft, and therefore paragraph 1 of section 1, Hull all-risks, is applicable: the coverage of all risks and material loss or damage, including total loss.
Therefore the hull insurance coverage is applied to all material losses (including total loss of an aircraft), regardless of what type of flight was being executed."
"…the court finds it necessary to remark that half of the Respondents have voluntarily executed the claim demands and in so doing have accepted that is well-founded and justified."
"a comprehensive evaluation of the working of the navigational equipment was carried out that is to say testing and evaluation of the operation of the aircraft in normal conditions".
Relevant legal principles on summary judgment application
"The court may give summary judgment against a claimant or defendant on the whole of a claim or on a particular issue if –
(a) it considers that –
(i) that claimant has no real prospect of succeeding on the claim or issue; or
(ii) that defendant has no real prospect of successfully defending the claim or issue; and
(b) there is no other compelling reason why the case or issue should be disposed of at a trial."
"[49] The test in question is that of "no real prospect of success". The relevant principles are well known and have been considered inter alia in TFL Management Services v Lloyds TSB Bank [2014] 1 WLR 2006 and EasyAir Ltd (trading as Openair) v Opal Telecom Ltd [2009] EWHC 339 (Ch) I do not attempt any generalised summary of the principles to be drawn from the various cases but note in particular the following factors:
i) The burden of proof is on the applicant for summary judgment;
ii) The court must consider whether the claimant has a 'realistic' as opposed to a 'fanciful' prospect of success: Swain v Hillman [2001] 1 All ER 91;
iii) The criterion 'real' within CPR 24.2 (a) is not one of probability, it is the absence of reality: Lord Hobhouse in Three Rivers DC v Bank of England (No.3) [2001] 2 All ER 513 [2003] 2 AC 1 at paragraph 158;
iv) At the same time, a 'realistic' claim is one that carries some degree of conviction. This means a claim that is more than merely arguable: ED & F Man Liquid Products v Patel [2003] EWCA Civ 472 at [8];
v) The court must be astute to avoid the perils of a mini-trial but is not precluded from analysing the statements made by the party resisting the application for summary judgment and weighing them against contemporaneous documents (ibid);
vi) However disputed facts must generally be assumed in the [respondent's] favour: James-Bowen v Commissioner of Police for the Metropolis [2015] EWHC 1249 per Jay J at paragraph 3;
vii) An application for summary judgment is not appropriate to resolve a complex question of law and fact, the determination of which necessitates a trial of the issue having regard to all the evidence: Apovdedo NV v Collins [2008] EWHC 775 (Ch) ;
viii) If there is a short point of law or construction and, the court is satisfied that it has before it all the evidence necessary for the proper determination of the question and that the parties have had an adequate opportunity to address it in argument, it should grasp the nettle and decide it: ICI Chemicals & Polymers Ltd v TTE Training Ltd [2007] EWCA Civ 725 ;
ix) However, in reaching its conclusion the court must take into account not only the evidence actually placed before it on the application for summary judgment, but also the evidence that can reasonably be expected to be available at trial. The court should hesitate about making a final decision without a trial, even where there is no obvious conflict of fact at the time of the application, where reasonable grounds exist for believing that a fuller investigation into the facts of the case would add to or alter the evidence available to a trial judge and so affect the outcome of the case: Royal Brompton Hospital NHS Trust v Hammond (No 5) [2001] EWCA Civ 550, Doncaster Pharmaceuticals Group Ltd v Bolton Pharmaceutical Co 100 Ltd [2007] FSR 63 ;
x) The same point applies to an extent to difficult questions of law, particularly those in developing areas, which tend to be better decided against actual rather than assumed facts: TFL at [27]."
"[10] It is certainly the case that under both rules, where there are significant differences between the parties so far as factual issues are concerned, the court is in no position to conduct a mini-trial: see per Lord Woolf MR in Swain v Hillman [2001] 1 All ER 91 at 95 in relation to CPR 24 . However, that does not mean that the court has to accept without analysis everything said by a party in his statements before the court. In some cases it may be clear that there is no real substance in factual assertions made, particularly if contradicted by contemporary documents. If so, issues which are dependent upon those factual assertions may be susceptible of disposal at an early stage so as to save the cost and delay of trying an issue the outcome of which is inevitable: see the note at 24.2.3 in Civil Procedure (Autumn 2002) Vol 1 p.467 and Three Rivers DC v Bank of England (No.3) [2001] UKHL/16, [2001] 2 All ER 513 per Lord Hope of Craighead at paragraph [95]."
"45. I shall now draw the threads together. The issue is whether the second Savelovsky judgment is final and binding and therefore preclusive of any further order uplifting compensation by reference to inflation. Because of the choice of law rules set out in paragraphs 29 and 30 above, the court in these proceedings must resolve the question of the incidents under Russian law of the second Savelovsky judgment before it can consider whether to recognise or to refuse to recognise the judgments on which Aeroflot sues in these proceedings. It can only do that at trial since it must make findings on questions of Russian law about which there is conflicting expert evidence. Aeroflot may or may not win at trial, but the only question for this court is whether there should be summary judgment without a trial, which for the reasons given I would answer in the negative." [emphasis added]
Grounds for summary judgment
Lack of Jurisdiction
"Rule 41: A judgment of a court of a foreign country (hereinafter referred to as a foreign judgment) has no direct operation in England but may
(1) be enforceable by claim or counterclaim at common law or under statute, or
(2) be recognised as a defence to a claim or as conclusive of an issue in a claim"
Rule 42: Subject to the Exceptions hereinafter mentioned and to Rule 62 (international conventions), a foreign judgment in personam given by the court of a foreign country with jurisdiction to give that judgment in accordance with the principles set out in Rules 43 to 46, and which is not impeachable under any of Rules 49 to 54, may be enforced by a claim or counterclaim for the amount due under it if the judgment is
(a) for a debt, or definite sum of money…; and
(b) final and conclusive
but not otherwise.
Rule 43: Subject to Rules 44 to 46, a court of a foreign country outside the United Kingdom has jurisdiction to give a judgment in personam capable of enforcement or recognition as against the person against whom it was given in the following cases:
First Case—
If the person against whom the judgment was given was, at the time the proceedings were instituted, present in the foreign country.
Second Case—
If the person against whom the judgment was given was claimant, or counterclaimed, in the proceedings in the foreign court.
Third Case—
If the person against whom the judgment was given, submitted to the jurisdiction of that court by voluntarily appearing in the proceedings.
Fourth Case—
If the person against whom the judgment was given, had before the commencement of the proceedings agreed, in respect of the subject matter of the proceedings, to submit to the jurisdiction of that court or of the courts of that country.
Rule 48: A foreign judgment which is final and conclusive on the merits and not impeachable under any of Rules 49 to 52 is conclusive as to any matter thereby adjudicated upon, and cannot be impeached for any error either
(1) of fact; or
(2) of law."
Rule 49: (1) A foreign judgment is impeachable if the courts of the foreign country did not, in the circumstances of the case, have jurisdiction to give that judgment in the view of English law in accordance with the principles set out in Rules 43 to 47 inclusive.
(2) A foreign judgment cannot, in general, be impeached on the ground that the court which gave it was not competent to do so according to the law of the foreign country concerned." [emphasis added]
"[14-132] If a judgment is pronounced by a court of a foreign country whose courts have jurisdiction in the view of English law, but the particular foreign court is not the proper court in terms of the domestic rules of the foreign legal system, is the judgment capable of enforcement or recognition in England? This question must almost certainly be answered in the affirmative, at any rate so far as judgments in personam are concerned; but the authorities are at first sight in a state of some confusion." [emphasis added]
"[14-135] The difficulties of the question raised and the apparent differences of opinion between judges may be reduced by the following considerations. When, e.g. a New York court, which from an international point of view is a court of competent jurisdiction, delivers a judgment in excess of the authority conferred upon the court by New York law, the judgment, though obviously not pronounced by a court having local competence, may bear one of two characters. It may be irregular but have validity in New York until it is set aside; or it may be a complete nullity, and have no legal effect whatever in New York. In the former case the judgment ought to be held valid in England unless and until it is set aside in New York. The latter case is doubtful, but most unlikely to occur in practice. A judgment pronounced by a foreign court is far more likely to be irregular than void. The practical result, therefore, is that such a judgment is generally unimpeachable in England, even though not pronounced by a court having local competence." [emphasis added]
i) whether there is an agreement to submit to the jurisdiction is a question of English private international law and although questions of contractual interpretation are governed by the applicable law that does not mean that the English court considers the effect of the foreign law where that goes beyond the question of whether there has been an agreement to submit to the jurisdiction of the courts of the foreign jurisdiction;
ii) the submission to the courts of a country (as opposed to a particular court) constituted a submission to the courts of that country;
iii) "it is plain beyond argument" that Russian law would conclude that the jurisdiction clause constituted a submission to the courts of Russia.
i) the issue of whether the KM Court had jurisdiction was a question of construction of the jurisdiction clause in the Reinsurance Policy which in turn is a question of Russian law;
ii) as a matter of Russian law, a clause which specified the courts of Russia without specifying a particular court would not have permitted the KM Court to take jurisdiction under the domestic rules: the position under Russian law is that at that time in Russian law there was nothing which allowed the KM Court to take jurisdiction (the position has now changed);
iii) if as a matter of construction, the KM Court had no jurisdiction, the English court will have regard to the absence of jurisdiction and will not enforce the judgment;
iv) the authority of Pemberton v Hughes [1899] 1 Ch 781, (CA). (a divorce case in Miami) is not authority for a broader rule as it related to a procedural defect in the Miami proceedings and not a want of jurisdiction. The statements in Dicey should not be taken as a definitive statement of the law and are to be contrasted with the position adopted in Cheshire, North & Fawcett Private International Law 15th Ed. ("Cheshire and North") at 576 where the position is described as "less certain".
Discussion
The legal principles
"… in deciding whether the foreign court was one of competent jurisdiction, our courts will apply not the law of the foreign court itself but our own rules of private international law. "
"[59] Finally it is necessary to consider the implications in the conflict of laws of the distinction between terms implied in fact or from the circumstances, on the one hand, and terms implied by law, on the other hand. The starting point is that the characterisation of whether there has been a submission to the jurisdiction of the foreign court for the purposes of enforcement of foreign judgments depends on English law: Rubin v Eurofinance SA [2012] UKSC 46, [2013] 1 AC 236 (a case on submission in the course of proceedings). But in the present context what that means is that there must have been an agreement to submit to the jurisdiction of the foreign court, and that agreement may arise through an implied term.
[60] Terms implied as a matter of fact depend on construction of the contract in the light of the circumstances. Where the applicable law of the contract is foreign law, questions of interpretation are governed by the applicable law…" [emphasis added]
"This engagement is governed by Turkish law, place of jurisdiction is Ankara."
It was argued in that case that this was a submission to a particular court (namely the court of Ankara), and that a submission to a particular court was not of itself a submission to all the courts of that country. Butcher J held at [70]:
"I consider that, as Dicey, Morris and Collins says, whether there is a submission to the courts of the country or to a particular court must depend on the proper construction of the contract and of the relevant clause within it. I conceive that there may well be cases in which a reference to the 'place of jurisdiction' as being a city in a particular country, especially if it is the capital city, is properly to be regarded as a submission to the courts of the country in question. This would depend in part, as it seems to me, on the extent to which the courts in that country operated independently of each other; whether there might be transfers between courts; and whether, in view of such matters, it was plausible that parties might have wished to choose only the courts of a particular city or place within the country rather than the courts of the country. I have no material as to whether there was any factual matrix to the making and terms of the guarantee which might be relevant to this issue, and do not consider that it is one on which I can take a reliable view at this stage. For that reason I would regard this as being an issue on which the Claimants have shown a serious issue to be tried and a good arguable case."
"59. Finally it is necessary to consider the implications in the conflict of laws of the distinction between terms implied in fact or from the circumstances, on the one hand, and terms implied by law, on the other hand. The starting point is that the characterisation of whether there has been a submission to the jurisdiction of the foreign court for the purposes of enforcement of foreign judgments depends on English law: Rubin v Eurofinance SA [2012] UKSC 46, [2013] 1 AC 236 (a case on submission in the course of proceedings). But in the present context what that means is that there must have been an agreement to submit to the jurisdiction of the foreign court, and that agreement may arise through an implied term.
60. Terms implied as a matter of fact depend on construction of the contract in the light of the circumstances. Where the applicable law of the contract is foreign law, questions of interpretation are governed by the applicable law. In such a case the role of the expert is not to give evidence as to what the contract means. The role is "to prove the rules of construction of the foreign law, and it is then for the court to interpret the contract in accordance with those rules": King v Brandywine Reinsurance Co [2005] EWCA Civ 235, [2005] 1 Lloyd's Rep 655, para 68; Dicey, paras 9-019 and 32-144 ("the expert proves the foreign rules of construction, and the court, in the light of these rules, determines the meaning of the contract").
61. The position is different in the case of terms implied by law, where the function of the expert would be to give an opinion on whether a particular term is implied by law. That is because whether there are statutory terms or other terms implied by law depends on the foreign law. The common law rules, as indicated above, apply to the question whether there has been a contractual submission, and at common law "[t]he proper law of the contract does indeed fix the interpretation and construction of its express terms and supply the relevant background of statutory or implied terms" ( Vita Food Products Inc v Unus Shipping Co Ltd [1939] AC 277 , 291 (PC));… " [emphasis added]
"70. Most relevant for present purposes, there is no suggestion that there is a term implied as a matter of fact or as a matter of law that Vizcaya consented to the jurisdiction of the New York court. For a term to be implied as a matter of fact, the trustee would have to adduce evidence of New York law, not on what the contract means, but that there is a rule of interpretation or construction, on the basis of which the Gibraltar court could conclude that clause 10 in the context of the choice of law and the deemed place of contracting amounts to a choice of jurisdiction. For a term to be implied as a matter of law, the expert would have to show what relevant terms are implied under New York law. There is no relevant evidence under either head. The statements that Vizcaya agreed to the jurisdiction of the New York court by agreeing to New York as the governing law and by transacting business in New York say no more than that these factors justified the assumption of jurisdiction under New York CPLR, section 302 .
71. There is no basis on the wording of the contract or in the evidence for the trustee's suggestion that it makes a difference that the contract deems it to have been made in New York. In the English cases the fact that a contract was made in the foreign country had no weight in determining whether a party had agreed to submit. If there had been an implied term under New York law as a result of that provision, no doubt it would have been relied upon in the motion in New York for the default judgment. The unsurprising overall effect of the evidence is that, as in English law or Gibraltar law, these are factors in the exercise of long arm jurisdiction.
72. There is therefore no basis in the evidence for the assertion that there was a contractual term that Vizcaya submitted to the New York jurisdiction." [emphasis added]
Decision of the Russian courts
"the absence of an agreement on the particular arbitrazh court that would have the jurisdiction over the present dispute does not entail the recognition of such an agreement as null and void and may not be regarded as an obstacle and (or) restriction for an interested person to apply to a court. The other approach would mean the denial of access to the justice, which is unacceptable."
"From the text of the reinsurance agreement (section "Choice of exclusive law and jurisdiction") there follows the parties' unconditional will to acknowledge the competence of arbitrazh courts of the Russian Federation for consideration of dispute arising from the reinsurance agreement.
"Since Arbitrazh procedure code of the Russian Federation contained no regulations directly determining what the court should in the absence of a clearly defined jurisdiction clause, but taking into account that the right to judicial protection is guaranteed by the constitution of the Russian Federation and a number of international legal obligations of Russia, that the dispute by virtue of express provisions of the law and the parties' agreement is within the subject matter competence of the arbitrazh court of the Russian Federation, and given the inadmissibility of dual ("asymmetric") interpretation of the jurisdictional arrangement the present dispute is directly within the jurisdiction of the arbitrazh court of the Khanty-Mansiysk Autonomous Region." [emphasis added]
Evidence of Mr Karabelnikov
"In my opinion the Khanty-Mansiysk Arbitrazh Court did not have jurisdiction over this action…It had no jurisdiction under Russian law under the terms of the jurisdiction clause in the Reinsurance Policy or under the ordinary jurisdiction rules of Russian procedural law found in Articles 34-38 of the APC."
i) the jurisdiction clause in the Reinsurance Policy did not identify a specific arbitrazh court in Russia on which the parties intended to confer jurisdiction;
ii) in such circumstances under Russian law a specific Russian arbitrazh court could only lawfully assume jurisdiction over such a dispute when it had both subject matter and territorial jurisdiction based on the jurisdiction rules of Russian procedural law found in Articles 34 - 38 of the Arbitrazh Procedural Code ("APC"); this was made clear by the guidance given in the Information Letter No 158;
iii) on the facts of this case, the KM Court did not have jurisdiction under Articles 34 - 38 and should have declined jurisdiction.
Evidence of Professor Bevzenko
"confirms the correctness of the interpretation of the [procedural provisions] on jurisdiction by the [KM Court]"
Discussion
"given by the court of a foreign country with jurisdiction to give that judgment in accordance with the principles set out in Rules 43 to 46"
"[14-132] If a judgment is pronounced by a court of a foreign country whose courts have jurisdiction in the view of English law, but the particular foreign court is not the proper court in terms of the domestic rules of the foreign legal system, is the judgment capable of enforcement or recognition in England?..."
i) the English court in considering whether the written agreement constituted a binding jurisdiction clause for the KM Court had to take into account the applicable law as an English court is directing its mind to the competence or otherwise of the foreign court to summon the defendant before it and decide such matters as it has decided: Pemberton v Hughes;
ii) where the foreign applicable law imposes restrictions on the ability of a particular court to exercise jurisdiction, the question of whether jurisdiction was properly exercised over the defendants should and must be considered by the English court (paragraph 157 the defendants' skeleton argument);
iii) if the applicable rules of Russian law made it clear that a jurisdiction clause for the "Courts of Russia" would not confer jurisdiction on the KM Court unless that court had jurisdiction on the basis of the ordinary jurisdictional rules of the APC (and those rules could not be satisfied on the facts of this case), then the jurisdiction clause was "void or ineffective" (paragraph 160 of the defendants' skeleton).
i) failure to specify a particular court does not assist the defendants because Russian law does not expressly provide that such failure makes the jurisdiction agreement void;
ii) the KM Court dealt with the failure to refer to a specific court by analogy with procedural law and with the Sony Ericsson case; there was a gap in the procedural law at the time and there was not a "ready answer" as to what to do if the clause did not specify a particular arbitrazh court;
iii) it was necessary to address the gap and the fact that the procedural code did not cover it; the decision was necessary to give effect to the claimant's procedural rights and the KM Court concluded that did not render the jurisdiction agreement void and ineffective;
iv) the English courts do not seek to apply municipal rules because the foreign court has made a decision on jurisdiction and it would undermine the rule that an English court treats as final and conclusive a foreign judgment on the issues that it has determined and it is not permissible to reargue jurisdiction: Adams v Cape Industries; Pemberton v Hughes.
"If a judgment is pronounced by a foreign Court over persons within its jurisdiction and in a matter with which it is competent to deal, English Courts never investigate the propriety of the proceedings in the foreign Court, unless they offend against English views of substantial justice. Where no substantial justice, according to English notions, is offended, all that English Courts look to is the finality of the judgment and the jurisdiction of the Court, in this sense and to this extent - namely, its competence to entertain the sort of case which it did deal with, and its competence to require the defendant to appear before it. If the Court had jurisdiction in this sense and to this extent, the Courts of this country never inquire whether the jurisdiction has been properly or improperly exercised, provided always that no substantial injustice, according to English notions, has been committed…" [emphasis added]
"It may be safely said that, in the opinion of writers on international law, and for international purposes, the jurisdiction or the competency of a Court does not depend upon the exact observance of its own rules of procedure. The defendants' contention is based upon the assumption that an irregularity in procedure of a foreign Court of competent jurisdiction in the sense above explained is a matter which the Courts of this country are bound to recognise if such irregularity involves nullity of sentence. No authority can be found for any such proposition; and, although I am not aware of any English decision exactly to the contrary, there are many which are so inconsistent with it as to shew that it cannot be accepted.
A judgment of a foreign Court having jurisdiction over the parties and subject-matter - i.e., having jurisdiction to summon the defendants before it and to decide such matters as it has decided - cannot be impeached in this country on its merits: Castrique v. Imrie (in rem); Godard v. Gray (in personam); Messina v. Petrococchino (in personam). It is quite inconsistent with those cases, and also with Vanquelin v. Bouard, to hold that such a judgment can be impeached here for a mere error in procedure. And in Castrique v. Imrie Lord Colonsay said that no inquiry on such a matter should be made" [emphasis added]
"The State had exclusive jurisdiction to deal with divorces of persons domiciled and resident within its territory, and (if that be material) the Court which pronounced the decree for a divorce was the proper court, and the only proper court, for entertaining and deciding upon divorce actions within the territory. It seems to me that, on principle and authority, the Courts of this country are bound to assume that the Florida Court understood its own procedure and law, and that the evidence of experts ought not to have been resorted to. I think that Castrique v. Imrie (a case of a judgment in rem) and Vanquelin v. Bouard are two of the most important authorities on the point. I think that the result of all the cases is that a decision of a proper Court having, in accordance with general principles of law recognised by our Courts, sole jurisdiction over the subject-matter of the action and the parties thereto must, by the Courts of this country, be treated as the only competent tribunal to deal with the question raised in the divorce action. Even though it were possible to point out some mistake as to the municipal procedure or law, the Courts of this country ought not, on that ground, to override the actual decision." [emphasis added]
"What, for many years has been less certain is whether the foreign court must have had internal competence, i.e. jurisdiction under its own law. Lindley LJ [in Pemberton v Hughes] once said that the jurisdiction which alone is important in connection with a foreign judgment is the competence of the foreign court in the international sense. "Its competence or jurisdiction in any other sense is not regarded as material by the courts of this country." According to this view, action will lie in England on a foreign judgment although delivered by a court that, according to its own internal law, had no jurisdiction whatsoever over the cause of action. If, for instance, the foreign court has adjudicated on a claim in excess of the legally permitted amount, is it to be no answer to an action on the judgment in England that the court lacked internal jurisdiction? To admit this would be inconsistent with principle. According at any rate to the English rule, a judgement delivered by a court with no jurisdiction is a complete nullity, and it seems curious that what was null and void in the foreign country can be regarded as valid for the purposes of an English action. Such a foreign judgment creates no rights whatsoever in favour of the claimant, yet it is because a right has been vested in him that, according to the doctrine of obligation, he may sue on the judgement in England. The dictum of Lindley LJ, for it was nothing more, was not applied in Papadopoulos v Papadopoulos where one of the grounds on which the Cypriot decree of nullity was held to be ineffective was that the court had no power by the law of Cyprus to declare the marriage null and void. Similarly in Adams v Adams recognition was refused to a Rhodesian divorce decree because, under Rhodesian law as interpreted in England, the decree was invalid as it had been pronounced by a judge who was not a judge de iure of the High Court of Rhodesia." [emphasis added]
"As Lindley M.R. put it in Pemberton v. Hughes (1899) 1 Ch 781:
There is no doubt that the Courts of this country will not enforce the decisions of foreign Courts which have no jurisdiction in the sense above explained – i.e., over the subject-matter or over the persons brought before them … But the jurisdiction which alone is important in these matters is the competence of the Court in an international sense – i.e., its territorial competence over the subject-matter and over the defendant. Its competence or jurisdiction in any other sense is not regarded as material by the Courts of this country".
Criticism of Mr Karabelnikov
"19. I am in no doubt that I very much prefer the evidence of Professor Karabelnikov. He was on occasion, as Mr Brindle put it, 'over the top', he was trenchant in his views, and it is clear that he had read much about, and become critical of, Judge Shumilina's decision and the appeals therefrom as an independent commentator in academic works before he was selected, no doubt for that reason, as the expert for the Claimant. I was not persuaded by his analogy of the ' political cases '. Those of which he gave examples all related to matters in which (as referred to in paragraph 12(1) above) the Russian Government had a direct or indirect interest, and he indeed found it difficult to explain why the Russian court had gone so wrong in the decisions which I am considering, but which led him in measured tones to conclude that they must have been affected by bias. He had been far more outspoken in his reports in the Dutch proceedings, in which he was also instructed, his task there being to address the two experts' reports commissioned by the Dutch court, and it is clear that he found it difficult to understand why those experts had also gone so wrong. Certainly it seems clear, after the investigation which this Court has carried out, with the benefit of cross-examination of the experts, which is not available in the Dutch courts, that those lawyers did fall into substantial error, and indeed because of the limited nature of his brief in the Dutch courts he has been able to explain his case much more fully before me." [emphasis added]
"[17] The presence in the judgment of two grounds which the judge did not raise during the hearing is obviously a matter which is uncomfortable for an English court to address, and in any event one which raises issues under Article 6 of the ECHR. Professor Karabelnikov is very critical of this, particularly in relation to the introduction in the judgment for the first time of such an almost untested issue as arbitrability, but, as Mr Brindle points out, Professor Bevzenko has more recent experience of the Russian courts and he asserts that this kind of thing happens quite regularly, and has happened to him. Nevertheless, I conclude that he felt discomfort about this, and he faltered in his logic in attempting to defend it. He gave evidence that, if a judge raised in the hearing a point of his own motion which had not been raised by the parties, then this might give rise to a motion for him to recuse himself; but if the judge said nothing, and only raised the point in his judgment afterwards, that would not amount to a ground for recusal or challenge. This seems difficult to fathom. At the end of the day the point is either supportive of bias or it is not. If it were only an Article 6 point, it would be covered by being addressed on appeal, as these two grounds were, provided that the appeal courts were not similarly so biased.
"[18]… save for the matters referred to in paragraph 17 above, Professor Bevzenko gave no evidence that was in the end material to my decision…" [emphasis added]
Conclusion on "lack of jurisdiction"
Bias
Relevant legal principles
"A foreign judgment relied upon as such in proceedings in England, is impeachable for fraud.
Such fraud may be either
(1) fraud on the part of the party in whose favour the judgment is given; or
(2) fraud on the part of the court pronouncing the judgment.
or not in accordance with the principles of natural justice."
"The fraud which vitiates a judgment must generally be fraud of the party in whose favour the judgment is obtained, but it may (conceivably, at any rate) be fraud on the part of the foreign court giving the judgment, as where a court gives judgment in favour of A, because the judges are bribed by some person, not the plaintiff, who wishes judgment to be given against X, the defendant. In such a case the defence of fraud tends to merge with the defence that the proceedings were opposed to natural justice."
"There has not been a great deal of dispute between the parties as to the proper test for me to apply, on any basis a high hurdle for the Claimant to surmount, before refusing to recognise the judgment (upheld on appeal) which set aside the award. There was no evidence in the case of actual bias, but I am asked to infer bias from the perverse nature of the Russian court's conclusions (and in certain respects the manner in which they were arrived at). Effectively the test is whether the Russian courts' decisions were so extreme and incorrect as not to be open to a Russian court acting in good faith." [emphasis added]
" …
(1) The fact that a foreign court decision is manifestly wrong or is perverse is not sufficient (see for example Dicey, Morris and Collins, The Conflict of Laws 15th Ed at 14-163, OJSC Bank of Moscow v Chernyakov [2016] EWHC 2583 (Comm) and Erste Group Bank AG (London) v JSC (VMZ Red October) [2013] EWHC 2926 (Comm) ). The decision must be so wrong as to be evidence of bias, or be such that no court acting in good faith could have arrived at it.
(2) The evidence or grounds must be ' cogent '.
(3) The decision of the foreign court must be deliberately wrong, not simply wrong by incompetence." [emphasis added]
"117. In any event, the rule in Abouloff may not necessarily affect the outcome of the proceedings. Thus if the April and December 2005 Judgments were corruptly obtained by the exercise of improper influence on the relevant Kyrgyz courts, or if their recognition is contrary to public policy, those judgments would not be recognised or enforced in the Isle of Man, whether or not the rule in Abouloff applies." [emphasis added]
"6. The fraud ground covers fraud on the part of the party in whose favour the judgment is given for fraud on the part of the court pronouncing the judgment. It extends to every kind of fraudulent conduct. A foreign judgment can be impeached for fraud even though no newly discovered evidence is produced and even though the fraud was alleged in the foreign proceedings: see Dicey , para. 14-139. Moreover, it is immaterial that the fraud could have been raised in the foreign proceeding but was not raised at that point.
7. The public policy ground is not easy to demarcate from the fraud and natural justice grounds. Its ambit is not precise and it may extend to an English court's refusal to recognise or enforce a judgment where the foreign court is corrupt or the judgment was obtained by the exercise of improper influence on the judges: see Altimo Holdings v. Kyrgyz Mobil Tel Ltd [2011] UKPC 7; [2012] 1 WLR 1804 , at [101], [117], per Lord Collins; Yukos Capital Sarl v. OJSC Rosneft Oil Co [2012] EWCA Civ 855; [2014] QB 458 , [90]. However, the principle of comity demands caution, and cogent evidence will be required if a foreign judgment is said to be infected in this way. It is not contrary to English public policy to refuse to recognise a judgment which is obviously wrong. However, if there is evidence of a perverse refusal by the foreign court to apply the law in a judicial manner, it may be possible to oppose recognition on the ground that the behaviour of the court infringed natural justice: Professor Adrian Briggs, Private International Courts in English Courts, 2014, p.480." [emphasis added]
Defence
i) the independence and impartiality of Russian courts is often undermined by interference by the State and "powerful litigants", especially in remote regions of the Russian Federation;
ii) Kapital deliberately chose to issue proceedings in the KM Court because they believed they would be able to secure a verdict in their favour;
iii) Mr Khachaturov and Kapital had the ability, connections and motive to improperly influence the KM Court as well as the subsequent appeal courts;
iv) on the balance of probabilities, judging by the "wholly perverse" decisions reached in Kapital's favour, the proper inference to be drawn is that they (and others) improperly influenced those courts.
Submissions
i) The KM Court (and the two appeal courts) were the only courts to conclude that the reinsurers could be liable in respect of a demonstration flight; and
ii) Mr Karabelnikov's evidence is that no court acting in good faith could have come to a different conclusion on the law and facts at that stage.
i) the breadth of the conspiracy is implausibly vast;
ii) no proper particulars are given as to what form of improper influence has been exercised and by whom;
iii) there is no evidence of actual bias and the case is largely one of "systemic" bias;
iv) the alleged bias is impossible to reconcile with the agreement to the Russian jurisdiction clause, the Moscow proceedings and the application for review in September 2018 in which no allegation of bias was raised.
Discussion
Judgment of KM Court
i) the judge ignored the literal wording of the Reinsurance Policy (which is required under the Russian civil code);
ii) she failed to provide any proper reasons for her departure from the clear words;
iii) Kapital had agreed that it was a demonstration flight but argued that as long as they were liable to pay under the Insurance Policy the reinsurers were liable to reimburse them. This was clearly not what the Reinsurance Policy said: the judge failed to deal with the AVN defences;
iv) the judge used the ex gratia payments by other reinsurers to support a finding of liability.
"she provided no reference to any source of Russian law or to the parties agreement under which the coverage under the Insurance Policy (between Sukhoi and Kapital) could have been extended contrary to volition of the reinsurers and contrary to the terms of AVN 41 A." (paragraph 227 of his report)
"it is impossible to see Mr Karabelnikov's and the defendants' hyperbole as anything other than an attempt to manufacture a triable issue of foreign law, where in truth, applying the correct standard there is none ."
Appeals in the KM Main Action
Moscow Actions
Influence of Mr Khachaturov
" personally invested in ensuring that the reinsurers paid up…"
"our sense was that RGS was run hierarchically all the way from the top…"
Choice of KM Court
"Systemic bias"
Conclusion on "bias"
i) the burden of proof is on the applicant for summary judgment.
ii) the court must consider whether the claimant has a 'realistic' as opposed to a 'fanciful' prospect of success: the test is not one of probability, it is the absence of reality;
iii) disputed facts must generally be assumed in the respondent's favour.
i) the defendants will not have to establish a "conspiracy" but will have to establish on the evidence improper influence both of the KM Court and the relevant appeal courts. The defendants will have to show that the courts were deliberately wrong and not merely incompetent and that is a high threshold. However the evidence for the defendants is that the KM Court was "plainly wrong" for the reasons given by Mr Karabelnikov and referred to above. To the extent that Professor Bevzenko disagrees with the evidence as to Russian law the court will need to resolve the conflicts in the expert evidence and this will need to be done at trial (JSC 'Aeroflot-Russian Airlines' v Berezovsky[2014] EWCA Civ 20 at [45]);
ii) in order to determine whether there is a real prospect of showing that the KM court was deliberately wrong as opposed to merely incompetent, the court has regard to the alleged "improper influence" of Mr Khachaturov; the defendants will have to show that the proper inference is that influence was exercised in this regard over the courts: at this stage the evidence of the current allegations against Mr Khachaturov's influence on other legal proceedings supports the defendants' case taken together with the evidence of his involvement in the conduct of the claim; the extent of his involvement and the nature of any influence will have to be tested at trial;
iii) the case of the defendants rests not on showing systemic bias against all foreigners but on the facts of this case which the defendants say was high-profile by reason of the significance of the Superjet programme and the involvement of the Russian State; similarly it is not suggested by the defendants that all Russian judges are biased but that in the specific judgments influence was brought to bear;
iv) as to the original agreement for submission to the Russian courts, this is irrelevant in my view to the factual issue of whether or not the decision of the courts in the KM Main Action were perverse and whether improper influence was in fact brought to bear;
v) as to the Moscow Actions, the defendants' case is that the KM Court and the courts of western Siberia were subject to potential influence in a way which the Moscow courts were not; the initial judgments in the Moscow Actions (and the judgment of the Collegium) support the defendants' case that the courts in the KM Main Action could not properly have reached its substantive decision on the proper application of the law to the Reinsurance Policy. The subsequent reversal in the Moscow Actions was the result of the re-examination of the nature of flight following the decision of the Collegium which decision is of itself criticised by Mr Karabelnikov as a matter of Russian law and (as noted above) the factual case then advanced by Sukhoi is contrary to the position taken by Kapital in the original Moscow Actions. I therefore reject the submission for the claimant that ultimately the decisions in the Moscow Actions were consistent with the decisions of the courts in the KM Main Action as the basis for the reversal of the Moscow decisions appears to be completely at odds with the factual position previously accepted by Kapital in the KM Main Action;
vi) there is no principle of English law that the allegation of bias should have been raised in the Russian proceedings before a foreign judgment of the Russian courts is capable of being challenged before the English court for alleged fraud (bias).