[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> National Bank of Kazakhstan the Republic of Kazakhstan v The Bank of New York Mellon SA/NV London & Ors [2020] EWHC 916 (Comm) (22 April 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2020/916.html Cite as: [2020] EWHC 916 (Comm) |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Financial List
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
NATIONAL BANK OF KAZAKHSTAN THE REPUBLIC OF KAZAKHSTAN |
Claimants |
|
- and - |
||
THE BANK OF NEW YORK MELLON SA/NV LONDON BRANCH ANATOLIE STATI GABRIEL STATI ASCOM GROUP SA (5) TERRA RAF TRANS TRAIDING LIMITED |
Defendants |
____________________
Richard Handyside QC and Rupert Allen (instructed by Linklaters) for the First Defendant
Tom Sprange QC, Kabir Bhalla and Gayatri Sarathy (instructed by King and Spalding) for the Second – Fifth Defendants
Hearing dates: 26, 27 and 30 March and 1 April 2020
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Covid-19 Protocol: This judgment was handed down by Mr Justice Teare remotely by circulation to the parties' representatives by email and release to Bailii. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 22 April 2020 at 10:30 am.
Mr. Justice Teare :
Introduction | 1 |
The National Fund, The National Bank of Kazakhstan and the Trust Management Agreement | 7 |
The Global Custody Agreement | 10 |
The Garnishment Order | 12 |
BNYM's declaration | 16 |
The challenge to the order and the "referral" by the Belgian Court | 18 |
Preparation for trial | 24 |
The declarations | 28 |
The relevance of foreign law | 29 |
The reliance in fact placed on foreign law at trial | 32 |
The relevance of foreign law in the Closing Submissions | 33 |
Resolution of the Belgian garnishment proceedings | 39 |
The debt | 47 |
Agency | 48 |
Trust | 94 |
Ownership | 105 |
Whether the declarations should be granted | 110 |
The claim in debt brought by the NBK against BNYM | 130 |
Conclusion | 131 |
Introduction
The National Fund, The National Bank of Kazakhstan and the Trust Management Agreement (the "TMA")
The Global Custody Agreement (the "GCA")
The Garnishment Order
"The Bank of New York Mellon SA/NV ("BNY Mellon") – garnishee according to the present request – acts as global custodian for the [National Fund] based on which Kazakhstan must have a claim against BNY Mellon relating to the assets in the [National Fund] that BNY Mellon holds for the [National Fund] as full part of Kazakhstan. "
"Any creditor can, on the basis of authentic or other instruments, through a bailiff, protectively garnish, in the hands of a third party, any amounts owed by such third party to its debtor."
"The garnishment is therefore best defined as the attachment in the hands of the seized debtor's debtor [the garnishee] on what the latter must pay or deliver to the seized debtor………
The debt claim between the garnished debtor and the garnishee is called the subject matter of the attachment."
BNYM's declaration
"Although (legal predecessors of) BNYM entered into a global custody agreement dated 24 December 2001 ("Global Custody Agreement") with the National Bank of Kazakhstan (the "NBK"), which is a "state entity" of the Republic of Kazakhstan …….. the Bank cannot fully exclude that the Republic of Kazakhstan (including the National Fund) has or will have claims on BNYM or that BNYM holds assets of or for the Republic of Kazakhstan (including the National Fund) which are the subject of garnishment in view of its contractual relationship with the NBK and the uncertainties of the legal relationship existing between the latter and the Republic of Kazakhstan."
The challenge to the order and the "referral" by the Belgian Court
"The argument that is raised by Kazakhstan is about the subject-matter and the consequences of the attachment. Kazakhstan's contention is actually that the garnishment could not have any subject-matter, and that the garnishee still wrongly froze the accounts.
The fact that the garnishee is not the debtor of the seized-debtor is not a ground for the withdrawal of the authorization nor for the lifting of the garnishment that has been authorized. The absence of a debt from the garnishee towards the seized-debtor only leads to the conclusion that the garnishment has no subject-matter.
In the current case the attachment judge can only consider that the garnishment that has been authorized does indeed have a subject-matter. The subject-matter of the garnishment follows in fact from the declaration of the garnishee. According to the declaration …….[the declaration is then quoted]
The seized debtor is entitled to challenge the declaration from the garnishee before the attachment judge. However, this challenge relates to the debt of the third party and must be referred to the trial court in the proceedings on the merits under Article 1456 2nd. para BJC.
The competent judge on the merits is, as stated by Kazakhstan itself, the English court who must apply its own national substantive law."
"Both claims relate to the subject-matter of the attachment, notably whether or not a debt exists from BNYM towards Kazakhstan. Kazakhstan disputes the existence of such debt. The attachment judge cannot and may not settle such dispute, but only the judge on the merits. The judge on the merits is, as already mentioned above the English court who must apply its own national law."
"If the garnishee disputes the debt of which the seizing creditor is seeking payment, the case is brought before the competent court or, as the case may be, referred to the competent court by the attachment judge."
"33. At trial, the Stati parties will be able to make submissions based upon the relationship between the RoK and NBK, which go beyond the narrow question of "who is the counterparty to the GCA?", and which will enable issues analogous to the issues of piercing legal personality, sham trust and abuse of law which the Stati parties have raised in their written submissions in Belgium, to be addressed. Those are all matters that can be determined by this court, applying what it determines to be the applicable law. All such claims will go to the central question: 'what assets, if any, does BNYM(L) hold for RoK?'. That is the question raised by the declarations sought by the Claimants. As Mr Malek QC submitted for the Claimants, this "is not limited to any liability of BNYM to RoK in contract: it includes any liability to RoK relating to the assets." The resolution of that question will necessarily, therefore, have a "material effect" on the Belgian executory attachment proceedings."
Preparation for the trial
"Does Kazakhstan have claims or rights against BNYM, or any capacity to enforce the GCA, arising out of any argument based on, or analogous to:
(i) piercing legal personality;
(ii) sham trust; or
(iii) abuse of law?
under whichever law that governs that question."
"In what circumstances, if any, could Kazakhstan have claims or rights against BNYM in relation to the Securities and/or the Cash, or any capacity to enforce the GCA, having regards to: (a) any relevant features of the legal relationship between NBK and Kazakhstan and between each of them and the National Fund (including the terms and effects of the TMA); and (b) any applicable legal rule based on or analogous to piercing legal personality, sham trust, or abuse of law ?"
"In what if any circumstances could the Cash and/or the Securities held pursuant to the GCA or any claims or obligations in respect thereof fall within the scope of the Belgian Garnishment Order (a) having regard in particular to: any relevant feature of the legal personality of NBK and its potential equivalence to RoK, (b) having regard in particular to: any relevant features of the legal relationship between NBK and RoK and between each of them and the National Fund including the terms and effect of the TMA; and (c) having regard in particular to: any applicable rule or principle of law based on, or analogous to, piercing legal personality, simulation, sham trust, actio pauliana or abuse of law ?"
The declarations
i) The contracting parties to the GCA are BNYM London and NBK (and not Kazakhstan).
ii) The obligations owed by BNYM London under the GCA are owed solely to NBK (and not Kazakhstan).
iii) BNYM London has no obligation to pay any debt due under the GCA to Kazakhstan.
iv) Kazakhstan does not have any claims (under any system of law) against BNYM in relation to the cash deposits held by BNYM pursuant to the GCA which constitute a subject-matter falling within the scope of the Belgian Garnishment Order.
The relevance of foreign law
I think the reference to "under any system of law" is simply there to make it clear that for the purpose of 1445 there has to be a claim, and that claim can arise under any system of law. …….
But your Lordship is right ……….from our perspective we say that in essence you are looking at the position under the GCA, and in particular whether or not Kazakhstan has got a claim against Bank of New York Mellon in debt under the GCA, which of course is governed by English law. And it is going to be one of my submissions that a lot of the disputes that have been identified by the experts do not actually arise and have added a degree of complication that is unnecessary.
But I think the reason for the language "under any system of law" is just to highlight that a claim that is attachable can arise under any system of law. But we would agree with your Lordship that on the facts of this case that is going to be a question of English law; and the debt, and the only debt, is under English law and not under any other legal - - does not have any other legal basis...
I think that that is the rationale in 1(e) of using the words "under any system of law", just to make it clear that it could arise that the - - that the claim could arise under any legal system, although your Lordship is right, your Lordship is going to be really concerned with English law.
"It seems to me that Mr Malek must be right when he says that the genesis of that phrase "under any system of law" lies in the circumstance that under the law of Belgium the attachment order will have subject matter if, under any system of law, Kazakhstan has a claim against BNYM in relation to the cash deposits. But the relevant system of law, because that is the system of law which governs the GCA, is English law, and that is why the Belgian court referred this question to the English court."
The reliance in fact placed on foreign law by the Stati Parties at trial
The relevance of foreign law in the parties' closing submissions
"the Court does not limit its consideration of the question of subject-matter to whether RoK has any (contractual) claim against BNYM under the GCA as a matter of English law. The Court should decide whether RoK has any claim against BNYM under any applicable system of law. The only potentially relevant laws identified by the Claimants and/or the Stati Parties are English, Belgian and Kazakh law. "
"The pleaded and agreed issues were not formulated in a way that restricted them to matters of English law. On the contrary, the Reply and the Rejoinder set out in detail the parties' respective positions on the relevance and content of Belgian and Kazakh law on the central question of subject matter. The parties' experts have given their opinions on an agreed list of questions of Belgian and Kazakh law, including (in the case of the Belgian experts) a broad formulation of the central question: "In what, if any, circumstances could the Cash and/or the Securities held pursuant to the GCA, or any claims or obligations in respect thereof, fall within the scope of the Belgian Garnishment Order?"
"The Stati Parties' position is that the proper scope of this trial is whether RoK has a claim against BNYM under the GCA, as a matter of English law, taking into account foreign law only in so far as that is permissible and required by English conflict of law rules."
"So your Lordship is right when he says that the court needs to decide foreign law issues to the extent that English conflict of law rules point to the foreign law, and that is clearly right."
Resolution of the Belgian garnishee proceedings
The debt
Agency
"For present purposes the law can be summarised shortly. (1) An undisclosed principal may sue and be sued on a contract made by an agent on his behalf, acting within the scope of his actual authority. (2) In entering into the contract, the agent must intend to act on the principal's behalf. (3) The agent of an undisclosed principal may also sue and be sued on the contract. (4) Any defence which the third party may have against the agent is available against his principal. (5) The terms of the contract may, expressly or by implication, exclude the principal's right to sue, and his liability to be sued. The contract itself, or the circumstances surrounding the contract, may show that the agent is the true and only principal."
292. More recently, the relevant principles were stated by the Court of Appeal in Aspen Underwriting Limited and others v Credit Europe Bank NV [2018] EWCA Civ 2590 in these terms, per Gross LJ at paragraph 47:
It is not in dispute that English Law permits an undisclosed principal to sue or be sued on a contract, subject (for present purposes): (1) to the terms of the written contract expressly or impliedly confining it to the named parties; (2) to the willingness of the "other" contracting party to contract with the undisclosed principal; (3) to the agent having actual authority to contract on behalf of the undisclosed principal and exercising such authority.
292. Even more recently the Court of Appeal in Kaefer Aislamientos de CV v AMS Drilling Mexico SA de CV [2019] EWCA Civ 10 summarised the principles in these terms, per Green LJ at paragraph 55:
There is no material dispute between the parties as to the governing principles. For a party to be an undisclosed principal it must hence be established that: (1) the agent contracted with and within the scope of the actual authority of the undisclosed principal; (2) at the time of the relevant contract, the agent intended to contract on the principal's behalf; and (3), there is nothing in the contract or surrounding circumstances showing that the agent is the true principal and which excludes the making of a contract with an undisclosed principal.
"In principle what must be shown is conduct from which (i) a reasonable person in the position of Mansel would have understood that it was authorised to enter into the charter as agent of VSA and (ii) a reasonable person in the position of VSA would have understood that Mansel was agreeing to do so. As in any case where an agreement is sought to be implied from conduct, it is not enough to point to conduct which was consistent with an agreement or mutual intention that Mansel would contract as agent of VSA. It is necessary to identify conduct which was only consistent with such an agreement or mutual intention and inconsistent with any other intended relationship between the two Vitol Group companies. Put another way, it must be fatal to the implication of an agency relationship if the parties would have or might have acted as they did in the absence of such a relationship: see, by analogy, cases such as The "Aramis" [1989] 1 Lloyd's Rep 213 and The "Gudermes" [1993] 1 Lloyd's Rep 311. "
"These expressions of the central characteristics of the relationship reveal the closeness of identity that is required for the relationship to exist. Not every independent contractor performing a task for, or for the benefit of, a party will be an agent, and so identified as it, or as representing it, and its interests. Agency is a consensual relationship, generally (if not always) bearing a fiduciary character, in which by its terms A acts on behalf of (and in the interests of) P and with a necessary degree of control requisite for the purposes of the role. Central is the conception of identity or representation of the principal …….Examples and contexts may be infinite, and any arrangement must be understood and characterised by reference to its legal terms in context."
"Whether or not NBK had the "legal authority" from Kazakhstan to enter into this contract [the GCA] depends upon (1) whether or not the TMA was valid under the law of Kazakhstan and (2) if it is was valid, whether or not under the provisions of the law of Kazakhstan the TMA lawfully granted the authority to NBK to enter into the GCA."
"By establishing the trust management of property, the trust manager assumes an obligation to manage, in its own name, the property transferred for its possession, use and disposal in the interests of the beneficiary, unless otherwise specified in the agreement or in legislative acts."
"The TMA is a contract between a state entity, namely, the Ministry of Finance of the Republic of Kazakhstan on the one hand and on the other hand NBK as an agent, institution or organ of the Government of Kazakhstan."
National Bank of Kazakhstan acts as an agent of the Government of the Republic of Kazakhstan on the terms that have been agreed between the National Bank of Kazakhstan and the Government of the Republic of Kazakhstan.
Article 21. Basic principles of interaction
National Bank of Kazakhstan within its authority, granted to it by the laws of the Republic of Kazakhstan and the acts of the President of the Republic of Kazakhstan is independent in its activities. The representative and executive authorities may not interfere in the activities of the National Bank of Kazakhstan, its branches, representative offices, agencies and organizations in the implementation of its legislated authority.
Article 22. The Government of the Republic of Kazakhstan and the National Bank of Kazakhstan
National Bank of Kazakhstan shall coordinate its activities with the Government of the Republic of Kazakhstan. National Bank of Kazakhstan and the Government must inform each other about the prospective activities and the results of national importance, and hold regular consultations. National Bank of Kazakhstan takes into account in its activities the economic policy of the Government and contributes to its implementation, if it is not contrary to the performance of its main functions and the implementation of monetary policy. Chairman of the National Bank of Kazakhstan, or one of his (her) deputies shall have the right to participate in government sessions in a consultative capacity. The Government shall not be liable for the obligations of the National Bank of Kazakhstan, as well as the National Bank of Kazakhstan shall not be liable for the obligations of the Government, except when it takes on that responsibility. National Bank of Kazakhstan and the Government of the Republic of Kazakhstan shall cooperate on the issues of stability of financial system through the joint risk assessment for financial stability, development, adoption and implementation of a set of consistent solutions in order to prevent systemic financial crisis and minimize its effects.
Article 23. National Bank of Kazakhstan - a bank, a financial adviser and agent
National Bank of Kazakhstan may act as a bank, financial adviser and agent of the state bodies in agreement with them.
Article 24. National Bank of Kazakhstan – a bank of the Government of the Republic of Kazakhstan
The Government of the Republic of Kazakhstan allocates its funds in the National Bank of Kazakhstan. National Bank of Kazakhstan makes payments, carries out other transactions on the accounts of the Government, as well as offers other services to it. Direct funding of the Government of the Republic of Kazakhstan by the National Bank of Kazakhstan is not allowed.
Article 25. National Bank of Kazakhstan – a financial adviser of the Government of the Republic of Kazakhstan
National Bank of Kazakhstan is acting as financial adviser to the Government of the Republic of Kazakhstan in the development and implementation of government borrowing, the formation of fiscal policy on the issues, related to monetary policy.
Article 26. National Bank of Kazakhstan – an agent of the Government of the Republic of Kazakhstan
National Bank of Kazakhstan acts as an agent of the Government of the Republic of Kazakhstan on the terms that have been agreed between the National Bank of Kazakhstan and the Government of the Republic of Kazakhstan. National Bank of Kazakhstan, as an agent of the Government of the Republic of Kazakhstan, serves the government loans of the Government an agreement with it.
Trust
"18. In relation to a bare trust, such as that apparently asserted by the appellant in this case, the rule is that if the legal estate in the hands of the bare trustee is disturbed by a third party, the beneficiary may not institute legal proceedings in the name of the trustee without his authority, but may, on giving the trustee a proper indemnity, oblige the trustee to lend his name to assert his legal right: Lewin on Trusts (19th.edition) at para 43-003. An alternative procedure is available if the trustee refuses to sue, namely, a derivative action. Under a derivative action, the beneficiary sues in his own name on behalf of the trust, joining the trustee as a defendant: Lewin on Trusts (19th.edition) at paras 43-003 and 43-006.
……..
21. A beneficiary under a trust, however, may bring a derivative action only in special circumstances. There is no definitive list of what constitutes special circumstances, but the special circumstances must embrace a failure, excusable or inexcusable, by the trustees in the performance of the duty owed by the trustees to the beneficiary to protect the trust estate or to protect the interests of the beneficiary in the trust estate: Hayim v Citibank NA [1987] 1 AC 730 (PC) at 748F (per Lord Templeman).
22. The special circumstances are a necessary part of a beneficiary's cause of action in bringing a claim as a derivative action and therefore must be pleaded: Roberts v Gill & Co at [103] (per Lord Walker)."
Ownership
Whether the declarations should be granted
36. I am unable to accept that the Belgian court has not, in substance, referred the question of the content of the attachment order to this court. Whether or not the Attachment Judge made a formal 'referral' as a matter of Belgian procedural law, it is in my judgement clear from the terms of the judgment set out above that the Attachment Judge considered that the correctness of the BNYM declaration and the existence of a chose in action held by BNYM(L) for RoK to be questions for this court, as the "competent trial court". It is noteworthy that BNYM(L) shares this understanding, as pleaded in its Defence at para 35.1.
………….
49. …………In my judgment, there is plainly a "real and present dispute" concerning the subject-matter of the conservatory attachment order obtained by the Stati parties in the Belgian court. That court has referred that question to this court, and it is a question that needs to be resolved. The Stati parties, being the parties who have obtained that conservatory attachment order, are plainly "affected" by this issue, which affects "the existence or extent of a legal right between" them and the other parties to these proceedings, namely, their right to attach the assets in question. Dealing with the matter by a declaration in these proceedings is clearly the most effective way of dealing with the questions arising out of the relationship between the RoK and NBK, with all the affected parties present, in circumstances where those questions have been referred to this court by the Belgian court.
"Both claims relate to the subject-matter of the attachment, notably whether or not a debt exists from BNYM towards Kazakhstan. Kazakhstan disputes the existence of such debt. The attachment judge cannot and may not settle such dispute, but only the judge on the merits. The judge on the merits is, as already mentioned above the English court who must apply its own national law."
"Kazakhstan does not have any claims against BNYM in relation to the cash deposits held by BNYM pursuant to the GCA."
The claim in debt brought by the NBK against BNYM.
Conclusion
i) The contracting parties to the GCA are BNYM London and NBK (and not Kazakhstan).
ii) The obligations owed by BNYM London under the GCA are owed solely to NBK (and not Kazakhstan).
iii) BNYM London has no obligation to pay any debt due under the GCA to Kazakhstan.
iv) Kazakhstan does not have any claims against BNYM in relation to the cash deposits held by BNYM pursuant to the GCA.