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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> WWRT Ltd v Zhevago [2024] EWHC 122 (Comm) (26 January 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2024/122.html Cite as: [2024] EWHC 122 (Comm) |
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KING'S BENCH DIVISION
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
COMMERCIAL COURT
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
WWRT LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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KOSTIANTYN VALENTYNOVYCH ZHEVAGO |
Defendant |
____________________
James Sheehan and Katherine Ratcliffe (instructed by Reynolds Porter Chamberlain LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 18th – 19th December 2023
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE JACOBS:
A: Introduction
A1: The parties and the proceedings
The application
(1) The court has no jurisdiction, or alternatively will not exercise its jurisdiction (and the claim will be stayed), in relation to the claim brought by WWRT;
(2) The Order of Moulder J dated 20 May 2022 granting WWRT permission to serve its claim out of the jurisdiction and for alternative service be set aside.
The parties
The proceedings and the evidence served by the parties
The issues on the jurisdiction application
(1) Was there a serious issue to be tried? The question here was whether (there was a serious issue to be tried that) the assignment from DGF to Horizon transferred tortious rights to sue Mr Zhevago. The evidence had debated another issue in the context of serious issue to be tried, namely limitation. In the event, however, Mr Sheehan did not pursue that argument in the context of the present application.
(2) Was there a good arguable case that WWRT's case came within the jurisdictional "gateway" on which it relied, namely the tort gateway in CPR PD 6B paragraph 3.1(9)(b)?
(3) The forum conveniens issue: could WWRT show that England (as opposed to Ukraine) was clearly and distinctly the more appropriate forum for the resolution of its claim?
Earlier proceedings
A2: The substantive claim in the present proceedings
(1) A number of loans ("the Loans") were issued to various "Borrowers" ("Valsa", "Interprokat", "KPAA", and "ZCP") each owned and/or controlled by Mr Zhevago;
(2) the Loans were advanced for specified purposes, but were instead diverted, sometimes directly, to other entities owned and/or controlled by Mr Zhevago (such that it is to be inferred that the given purposes were, at Mr Zhevago's direction, deliberately false);
(3) despite occasional payments of interest by the Borrowers and one repayment of capital in the case of Valsa—generally, so far as WWRT can ascertain, from funds supplied by other entities also owned and/or controlled by Mr Zhevago—no principal was ever repaid on the Loans;
(4) instead, the Loans were continually varied to permit the extension of repayment dates and the ability to draw down further funds (in one instance as many as 106 times between February 2007 and August 2015);
(5) as purported security for two of the Loans as so varied, PJSC "Rosava", an entity also controlled at the relevant time by Mr Zhevago, was caused to pledge its receivables under certain contracts (whether real or fictitious, or a mixture, is unclear to WWRT) in amounts that significantly outstripped any possible true value of such contracts;
(6) while the Loans were outstanding, the business of two of the Borrowers was caused to be taken over by newly incorporated, similarly named 'clone' companies, unencumbered by the liability to repay the Loans, thereby depriving the relevant Borrowers of the trade necessary to enable them to do so; and
(7) save for the payments of interest and principal referred to above, the Loans remain entirely outstanding.
Section B: Serious Issues to be Tried
Undisputed areas of Ukrainian law
"Article 213. Interpretation of the content of the transaction
3. When interpreting the content of the transaction, the meaning of words and concepts, which are the same for the entire content of the transaction, as well as the generally accepted meaning of terms in the relevant sphere of relations, are taken into account.
If the literal meaning of words and concepts, as well as the commonly accepted meaning of terms in the relevant sphere of relations, does not provide the possibility to ascertain the meaning of separate parts of the transaction, their meaning is established by comparing the relevant part of the transaction with the content of its other parts, its entire content, the intentions of the parties.
4. If, according to the rules established by the third part of this article, it is not possible to determine the true will of the person who committed the transaction, the purpose of a transaction, the content of previous negotiations, the established practice of relations between the parties, principles of business efficacy, subsequent behavior of the parties, the text of the standard contract and others circumstances of significant importance are taken into account.
…
Article 512. Grounds for the replacement of a creditor in an obligation
1. The creditor in the obligation can be replaced by another person due to
1) the transfer of his right to another person under the transaction (assignment of claim);
2) legal succession;
3) performance of the debtor's obligation by the guarantor or mortgagor (property guarantor);
4) performance of the debtor's obligation by a third party.
…
Article 513. The form of the transaction on the replacement of the creditor in the obligation
1. The transaction regarding the replacement of the creditor in the obligation is performed in the same form as the transaction giving rise to such obligation, according to which the assignment of claim is transferred to the new creditor.
…
Article 514. The scope of the rights transferred to the new creditor in the obligation
1. A new creditor acquires the rights of the original creditor in the obligation in the scope and on the conditions that existed at the time of the transfer of these rights unless otherwise established by the transaction or legal acts.
…
Article 1166. General grounds of liability for inflicted property harm
1. Property harm inflicted on the personal intangible rights of an individual or a legal entity by unlawful decisions, acts or omissions, as well as harm inflicted to the property of an individual or a legal person shall be compensated in full by the person who inflicted the harm.
2. A person who has inflicted harm shall be released from liability if he proves that the harm was inflicted without his fault.
3. Harm inflicted by the mutilation, other injury or death of a natural person due to force majeure shall be compensated in cases established by law.
4. Harm inflicted by lawful actions shall be compensated in cases established in this Code or another law."
"Conclusions in relation to the application of rules of law established in resolutions of the Supreme Court shall be taken into account by other courts when applying such rules of law".
"I use the term "assignment" in this report as a legal concept within the meaning given to it by Article 512 (1) of the Civil Code of Ukraine. In particular, the "assignment" refers to a situation where a creditor in an obligation (the original creditor) transfers to a third party (a new creditor), on the basis of a contract concluded between them, the right of claim arising from the obligation in question against a debtor in the same obligation (assignment of the right of claim). As a result of such assignment, the new creditor replaces the original creditor in the obligation, and the obligor now must perform its duties under the obligation to the new creditor".
The DGF/ Horizon assignment: contractual interpretation
"The Article 1166 CCU [i.e. Civil Code] claim is attached to the right to receive repayment (the gist of harm is that the creditor cannot receive repayment because of the scheme and this constitutes harm). As the right to the money after the assignment belongs to the new creditor, the Bank does not have the right to the money, and so cannot have the Article 1166 CCU claim too."
"[E]ven if there was no wording related to the third parties in the Agreements at all, the right to claim against any third parties, is transferred together with the rights of creditor under the loan agreements to the new creditor, and here was transferred to Horizon. Horizon became entitled to the sums payable under the loan agreements, and as the repayment is impossible because of the fraudulent scheme, it has the right of claim against third parties whose scheme made the repayment impossible".
"1. Under this Agreement in the manner and on the terms specified in this Agreement, the Bank hereby assigns its rights of claim to the New Lender, while the New Lender hereby acquires the Bank's rights of claim on the borrowers and guarantors referred to in Schedules No. 1-2 to this Agreement, hereinafter referred to as the Debtors, including the rights of claim on the Debtors' legal successors, the Debtors' legitimate heirs, or other parties to which the Debtors' obligations under loan agreements and guarantee agreements have been transferred, taking into account all the amendments, annexes and attachments thereto, according to the registers in Annexes No. 1-2 to this Agreement, hereinafter referred to as the Main Agreements, hereinafter referred to as the Rights of Claim. The new creditor shall pay to the Bank for the Rights of Claim monetary funds in the amount and in the manner specified in this Agreement.
1.1. The Parties have agreed that the Bank's assignment, to the New Lender, of the rights of claim under the pledge agreements that were entered into to secure the fulfilment of the Debtors' obligations under the Main Agreements takes place under separate agreements which are concluded between the Parties simultaneously with this Agreement.
2. Under this Agreement the New Lender on the date of conclusion of this Agreement, but in any case not earlier than the date of the Bank's receipt in full of the funds, in accordance with clause 4 of this Agreement, acquires all the rights of the creditor under the Main Agreements, including: the right to demand the proper fulfilment of the Debtors' obligations under the Main Agreements, payment of the monetary funds by the Debtors, payment of interest specified in Appendix No. 1 to this Agreement and payment of penalties in the amounts provided for by the Main Agreements. The amount of the Rights of Claim to be transferred to the New Lender is specified in Appendix No. 1 to this Agreement. The rights of the creditor under the Main Agreements shall be transferred to the New Lender in full and on terms existing at the time of assignment of the Rights of Claim, except for the right to conduct contractual debiting of funds from the Debtors' account/accounts provided to the Bank in accordance with the terms of the Main Agreements.
…
5. The documents available to the Bank confirming the Rights of Claim on the Debtors shall be transferred by the Bank to the New Lender under the relevant act no later than 30 (thirty) business days from the date of conclusion of this Agreement.
…
7. The Bank shall not be liable to the New Lender for non-fulfilment or improper fulfilment by the Debtors of their obligations under the Main Agreements. All legal relations arising out of or related to this Agreement, including in relation to the validity, conclusion, execution, modification and termination of this Agreement, as well as interpretation of its terms, determination of consequences of invalidity or violation of the terms and conditions of this Agreement, shall be governed by this Agreement and by the relevant norms of the current legislation of Ukraine.
…
11. The Parties agree that the future invalidation (declaring void) of all or any of the Right of Claim under the Main Agreements will not affect the validity of this Agreement, and the Bank shall not bear any liability in case of invalidation (declaring void) of any of the Main Agreements."
The automatic transfer argument: the issue
"I agree with Mr Alyoshin that the Bank/ Horizon assignment does not contain any explicit provisions to the effect that the Bank held any tortious claims against the borrowers and/or KZ. The fact that any tortious claims have been assigned by the Bank to Horizon follows from the assignment of rights in the loan agreements, as rights of claim against third parties are transferred automatically with rights of creditor in the loan agreement by operation of law".
"[26] The principles in relation to a defendant's summary judgment application were set out in Easyair Ltd v Opal Telecom Limited [2009] EWHC 339 (Ch) at [15]. Those principles have been recited in many subsequent cases, including perhaps most recently by me in JJH Holdings Ltd v Microsoft [2022] EWHC 929 (Comm) at [11]:
"(i) the Court must consider whether the claimant has a 'realistic' (as opposed to a 'fanciful') prospect of success; (ii) a 'realistic' claim is one that carries some degree of conviction, which means a claim that is more than merely arguable; (iii) in reaching its conclusion the Court must not conduct a 'mini-trial', albeit this does not mean that the Court must take at face value and without analysis everything that a claimant says in statements before the court; and (iv) the Court may have regard not only to the evidence before it, but also the evidence that can reasonably be expected to be available at trial. Furthermore, where a summary judgment application turns on a point of law and the Court has, to the extent necessary, before it 'all the evidence necessary for the proper determination of the question,' it 'should grasp the nettle and decide it' since the ends of justice are not served by allowing a case that is bad in law to proceed to trial."
[27] As to (iv), the Court will "be cautious" in concluding, on the evidence, that there is no real prospect of success; it will bear in mind the potential for other evidence to be available at trial which is likely to bear on the issues and it will avoid conducting a mini-trial: King v Stiefel [2021] EWHC 1045 (Comm) at [21] (per Cockerill J).
[28] Furthermore, as Fraser J also recently put it in The Football Association Premier League Limited v PPLive Sports International Ltd [2022] EWHC 38 (Comm) at [25] , on a summary judgment application the Court must "always be astute, and on its guard" to an applicant maintaining that particular issues are very straightforward and simple, and a respondent attempting to dress up a simple issue as very complicated and requiring a trial.
"[256] As I explained above, neither Article 514 UCC, nor other provisions of Ukrainian law support the view that the tortious claims are somehow "embedded" into contractual obligations and automatically "follow" such contractual obligations in case of their assignment. Assignment of the right to claim under the tort against a tortfeasor shall be made by an arrangement between an assignor and an assignee where they reached an agreement upon all material terms of the assignment. Having read the Bank/Horizon Assignment, I have not identified any provision to the effect that (i) the Bank held any tortious claims against the Borrowers and/or the Defendant, and (ii) that any tortious claims, if they even existed, have been assigned by the Bank to Horizon."
Discussion
"[206] Normally, assignment is made by the conclusion of a contract between (i) an original creditor (an assignor) holding a right of claim against an obligor and (ii) a new creditor (an assignee) to whom the right of claim is transferred. For a contract to be concluded, the parties must have reached an agreement upon all of its material terms, including its subject matter. As to its subject matter, a contract must indicate the scope, quantum of claim and other relevant details of rights that are being transferred."
"27. The Resolutions of the Supreme Court of Ukraine dated 7/5/2017 in cases No. 6-459??-17 and No. 752/8842/14-? (one of which the court of appeal reasonably took into consideration in this case under review) and of the Supreme Court dated 26/9/2018 in case No. 756/9788/15-? set out the following legal conclusion: In accordance with Article 512 (1) (1) of the Civil Code of Ukraine, the creditor in an obligation may be replaced with another person by transferring its rights to such person under a legal instrument (assignment of claim).
The transaction for replacement of the creditor in an obligation shall be executed in the same form as the transaction that gave rise to the obligation under which the claims are transferred to the new creditor. A transaction for replacement of the creditor in an obligation that arose on the basis of the transaction that requires the state registration shall be registered in accordance with the procedure established for registration of this transaction, unless otherwise provided by law (Article 513 of the Civil Code of Ukraine).
Article 514 of the Civil Code of Ukraine states that a new creditor shall accrue rights of the original creditor under the obligation to such extent and on such the conditions as existed at the time of transfer of these rights, unless otherwise provided in the agreement or the laws.
Thus, as a matter of the applicable law, a claim may be assigned only if it is a valid claim that existed at the time of transfer of such rights.
The scope of the rights to be transferred to the new creditor may be limited under the law and the contract under which the right is transferred. The scope and contents of the rights to be transferred to the new creditor shall be treated as essential terms and conditions of this contract."
"In this regard, the panel of judges does not share the Fund's position that the right to claim damages under the obligation at issue in this case cannot be assigned.
Pursuant to the provisions of Article 512 of the Civil Code of Ukraine, a creditor in an obligation may be replaced by another person as a result of the transfer of its rights to another person under a transaction (assignment of the right of claim).
Pursuant to Article 514 of the Civil Code of Ukraine, the rights of the original creditor in the obligation are transferred to the new creditor to the extent and on the terms and conditions that existed at the time of the transfer of these rights, unless otherwise provided by agreement or law.
At the same time, the Court of Appeal draws attention to the clear definition by the legislator of the legal structure of the transfer of the right of claim - within the scope of a specific obligation.
In accordance with the conclusions set out in the Resolution of the Grand Chamber of the Supreme Court of March 16, 2021 in case No. 906/1174/18 (to which the DGF itself referred), the rights of claim under loan agreements and agreements ensuring their fulfillment may be transferred in favor of any person by selling them at auction.
Loan obligations are not obligations that are inextricably linked to the creditor's personality, and therefore, where the creditor may not be replaced (Article 515 of the Civil Code of Ukraine).
In view of the above, in the case of assignment of the right of claim in a loan obligation, the new creditor acquires both the right to claim performance in kind and the right to claim damages from the person who prevented the proper performance of such obligation to the same extent and to the same extent as the original creditor.
Despite the fact that the legal provisions referred to by both the claimant in its claim and the DGF in its appeal provide for the application of some of them to be within the exclusive competence of the DGF and other entities (within certain limits), the court's opinion is that the above refers to the wording of such legal provisions currently in force."
C: The tort gateway
C1: Legal principles
"Condition (c) prompts the inquiry: what if damage has resulted from acts committed partly within and partly without the jurisdiction? This will often be the case where a series of acts, regarded by English law as tortious, are committed in an international context. It would not, we think, make sense to require all the acts to have been committed within the jurisdiction, because again there might be no single jurisdiction where that would be so. But it would certainly contravene the spirit, and also we think the letter, of the rule if jurisdiction were assumed on the strength of some relatively minor or insignificant act having been committed here, perhaps fortuitously. In our view condition (c) requires the court to look at the tort alleged in a common sense way and ask whether damage has resulted from substantial and efficacious acts committed within the jurisdiction (whether or not other substantial and efficacious acts have been committed elsewhere): if the answer is yes, leave may (but of course need not) be given. But the defendants are, we think, right to insist that the acts to be considered must be those of the putative defendant, because the question at issue is whether the links between him and the English forum are such as to justify his being brought here to answer the plaintiffs' claim."
"It is wrong in law to suggest that, in such circumstances, it was only the last misrepresentation or threat, whatever it was that finally broke [the claimant sellers'] resistance, that could amount to the material event for the purposes of the claim in deceit. The absence of immediate reliance on one particular misrepresentation in an evolving fraud cannot be said to render that particular misrepresentation insubstantial or not causative of the eventual loss: it is sufficient if the misrepresentation substantially contributed to the ultimate deception."
"[52] Of course, as the judgment in that case makes plain, when considering whether damage resulted from substantial and efficacious acts committed within the jurisdiction, it is important that the court looks at the allegations and the evidence 'in a common sense way'. That means looking at the fraud as a whole. But it is wrong in principle to conclude, as the judge appears to have done, that because what he thought was a more important event (namely the call of 22 August, noted at paragraph 19 above), which was obviously substantial and efficacious, had occurred outside the jurisdiction, this therefore 'emphasises the insignificance of what was said at the first London meeting'.
[53] The judgment of the court in Metall und Rohstoff makes it clear that the court has to ask whether damage has resulted from substantial and efficacious acts committed within the jurisdiction, and not to concern itself with 'whether other substantial and efficacious acts have been committed elsewhere'. That is what the judgment says in express terms. It is not possible to gloss it. In an evolving international fraud like this, with relevant events in London, Vienna, Singapore and India, it is not permissible to embark on a geographical comparison exercise, identifying where each event happened, and then announcing the single winner of the jurisdictional contest by reference to the competing quantities and/or qualities (in terms of causative significance) of the relevant events. The fact that, on the judge's analysis, the telephone call of 22 August was more substantial and efficacious is irrelevant in principle to the question of whether what was said and done at the meeting in London on 8/9 August 2015 was substantial and efficacious."
"[13] My interpretation of the state of the law and the three limb test is straightforwardly as follows:
(i) In limb (i) the Court must decide if it can who has the better of the case. If it decides that the claimant has the better of the case, he will have a good arguable case or a plausible evidential basis. If the defendant has the better of the case then the claimant fails.
(ii) Limbs (ii) and (iii). The judge may have to struggle because at the jurisdiction stage the evidence may be wholly uncertain and insufficient and, in particular, because there has been no testing of that evidence by cross-examination or otherwise, and usually no adequate disclosure of documents by either side. He or she may not be able to reach even a provisional conclusion as to which party has the better case, and even if the judge tried to do so he or she may well turn out to be wrong. In such a circumstance where the judge cannot decide, after conscientiously doing his or her best, who has the better of the case, then it is sufficient if the claimant has a plausible evidential basis and that will suffice for a good arguable case."
C2: The parties' arguments
Mr Zhevago's argument
WWRT's submissions
C3: Discussion
D: Forum conveniens
D1: Legal principles
(1) In a permission to serve out case such as this, the burden is on the claimant to establish that this jurisdiction is clearly or distinctly the appropriate forum.
(2) The court is concerned to identify the forum in which the case could most suitably be tried for the interests of all parties and for the ends of justice. The court must consider what is the natural forum for the claim, i.e. the forum with which it has the most real and substantial connection. (Mr Sheehan referred to this as "Spiliada limb 1").
(3) If this enquiry points not to England but to another jurisdiction, the claimant must then show that justice requires this court to exercise jurisdiction, e.g. because it is established objectively, by cogent evidence, that there is a real risk that justice will not be obtained in the foreign jurisdiction (Mr Sheehan referred to this as "Spiliada limb 2"). Comity requires that the court be extremely cautious before deciding that there is a risk that justice will not be done in the foreign country by the foreign court. Simply pointing to a legitimate personal or juridical advantage to the claimant in suing in England is not enough, so long as substantial justice will be done in the other forum.
(4) A powerful and often decisive factor is the avoidance of a multiplicity of proceedings and the risk of irreconcilable judgments, favouring resolution of all related claims in the jurisdiction in which such a trial is possible.
(5) The court decides the question of forum conveniens (and other questions arising in a service out jurisdiction application) by way of rehearing whether permission to serve out should be given. As a general rule, the question of appropriate forum falls to be considered as at the date of the original order granting permission to serve out (i.e. 20 May 2022). Events occurring since then are only relevant insofar as they may shed light upon considerations which were relevant at that time.
"(a) The basic principle is that a stay will only be granted on the ground of forum non conveniens where the court is satisfied that there is some other available forum, having competent jurisdiction, which is the appropriate forum for the trial of the action, i.e. in which the case may be tried more suitably for the interests of all the parties and the ends of justice.
(b) …. If the court is satisfied that there is another available forum which is prima facie the appropriate forum for the trial of the action, the burden will then shift to the plaintiff to show that there are special circumstances by reason of which just requires that the trial should nevertheless take place in this country (see (f) below).
(c) … the burden resting on the defendant is not just to show that England is not the natural or appropriate forum for the trial, but to establish that there is another available forum which is clearly or distinctly more appropriate than the English forum. …
(d) Since the question is whether there exists some other forum which is clearly more appropriate for the trial of the action, the court will look first to see what factors there are which point in the direction of another forum. These are the factors … indicating that justice can be done in the other forum at "substantially less inconvenience or expense"… [I]t may be more desirable … to adopt the expression … the "natural forum" as being "that with which the action had the most real and substantial connection". So it is for connecting factors in this sense that the court must first look; and these will include not only factors affecting convenience and expense (such as availability of witnesses), but also other factors such as the law governing the relevant transaction … and the places where the parties respectively reside or carry on business.
…
(f) If however the court concludes at that stage that there is some other available forum which prima facie is clearly more appropriate for the trial of the action, it will ordinarily grant a stay unless there are circumstances by reason of which justice requires that a stay should nevertheless not be granted. In this inquiry, the court will consider all the circumstances of the case, including circumstances which go beyond those taken into account when considering connecting factors with other jurisdictions. One such factor can be the fact, if established objectively by cogent evidence, that the plaintiff will not obtain justice in the foreign jurisdiction; … on this inquiry, the burden of proof shifts to the plaintiff."
"[95] The better view is that, depending on the circumstances as a whole, the burden can be satisfied by showing that there is a real risk that justice will not be obtained in the foreign court by reason of incompetence or lack of independence or corruption. Of course, if it can be shown that justice 'will not' be obtained that will weigh more heavily in the exercise of the discretion in the light of all other circumstances.
[96] Is the court able to find that justice will not, or may not, be done because of endemic corruption in the foreign system? …
[97] Comity requires that the court be extremely cautious before deciding that there is a risk that justice will not be done in the foreign country by the foreign court, and that is why cogent evidence is required. But, contrary to the appellants' submission, even in what they describe as endemic corruption cases, (ie where the court system itself is criticised) there is no principle that the court may not rule …
…
[101] The true position is that there is no rule that the English court … will not examine the question whether the foreign court or the foreign system is corrupt or lacking in independence. The rule is that considerations of international comity will militate against any such finding in the absence of cogent evidence …"
"[174] Some consideration to what might or might not constitute "cogent evidence" was given by Andrew Smith J in Ferrexpo AG v Gilson Investments Ltd [2012] 1 Lloyd's Rep 588 ; [2012] CLC 645. The judge there rejected the submission that because there was evidence from a distinguished expert as to a risk of injustice, that would suffice to establish one. While recognising that allegations of the risks of injustice in the foreign forum are ones on which it may be difficult for the claimant to present "direct or primary evidence" (para 43) he continued, at para 44:
"44. But this is no reason that allegations of the kind made by Ferrexpo need not be supported with evidence that enables the court to examine their basis, and which is sufficiently detailed and focused to justify them. In my judgment, some of Ferrexpo's evidence, including evidence upon which Professor Koziakov relied, is not of this quality. Some of it could properly be described as mere 'press or political comment' unsubstantiated by independent evidence …"
[175] I was also referred by both sides to, and found helpful, the commentary of Professor Briggs in Civil Jurisdiction and Judgments (6th Edition). At para 4.30, in relation to the second stage of the Spiliada test, he says:
"… What is required of the claimant is that he establish, by clear and cogent evidence, the grounds on which he says it would be unjust to leave him to go to a foreign court. An English court will not proceed on the basis of whisper or suggestion, and it will not be at all receptive to a general disparaging of a foreign court's procedure. Despite the occasional surprising decision, it is only rarely that the strong presumption of a stay will be rebutted on these grounds."
[176] At para 4.35, in considering "direct attacks on the integrity of the foreign court", he comments on the general difficulties of an English court conducting "some kind of quality audit" of the judicial systems of friendly states, and the absence of 'judicially manageable standards by which this could be done'. Subsequently, having referred to the development of the law ratified in A K Investment CJSC, Professor Briggs says:
"There can be no objection to this development if there is proper and focused evidence that the foreign court will not (or would be acting quite out of character if it were to) do justice according to the law. But 'a real risk' may set the bar rather low. It immediately raises the question what manner of evidence would be needed to sustain such a contention, and the answer is that there is no answer. Evidence of judicial propensity in general, or of judicial propensity when one of the litigants is well connected, may suffice; rather less focused observations from organisations which have given themselves grand names and which compile 'indexes of corruption', for example, may be accorded rather less weight. But as the circumstances of each case will be individual, the question of how to discharge the burden of proof will vary from case to case."
[177] Aspects of the cautions enunciated by Professor Briggs are in my view well founded. The bar should not be set too low. It must be borne in mind that in being invited by the claimant to act on a risk that justice will not be done in the other forum, the court is also being invited to take the risk of other undesirable results, including that the case is tried in a forum other than the natural one in circumstances where justice could in fact have been done in the natural forum, as well as acting in a manner which may be contrary to comity.
[178] In addition, as the passage quoted indicates, there are reasons for circumspection in having regard to general statements as to a country's legal system, even coming from reputable organisations. Unless the court can see what underpins such statements, it is very difficult to place weight upon them. General statements are easily made, but may embody an opinion by the author with which others might not agree, based on evidence which others might not find convincing."
"I agree with Mr McGrath QC that, in circumstances where the first defendant wants the case tried in Ukraine and will submit to the Ukrainian jurisdiction, any court where the claimants sought to enforce a Ukrainian judgment against him would be likely to give pretty short shrift to any inappropriate or fanciful argument on the part of the first defendant that, notwithstanding, he had not obtained justice in Ukraine. However, there might be circumstances in which the first defendant had a legitimate cause for complaint about how the case was dealt with and it seems to me that it would be wrong for this court to seek to second guess what such circumstances might be or to preclude the first defendant from raising legitimate arguments hereafter."
D2: "Natural forum"/ the forum with which the action has the most real and substantial connection
D3: The war in Ukraine
The evidence
The parties' submissions
Discussion
D4: The allegation of corruption
The background to the allegation, and the parties' arguments
Discussion
D5: Enforceability of a Ukrainian judgment
The parties' arguments
Discussion
D6: Conclusion on forum issues
E: CONCLUSION