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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> FW Aviation (Holdings) 1 Ltd v VietJet Aviation Joint Stock Company [2024] EWHC 1823 (Comm) (16 July 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2024/1823.html Cite as: [2024] EWHC 1823 (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 :
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FW Aviation (Holdings) 1 Limited |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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VietJet Aviation Joint Stock Company |
Defendant |
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Alexander Milner KC (instructed by Elborne Mitchell LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 17 May 2024
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Crown Copyright ©
CHRISTOPHER HANCOCK KC:
a. The claim concerns four Airbus A321 aircraft which were leased to VietJet in 2019, under a form of transaction known as a Japanese Operating Lease with Call Option (JOLCO). The transaction was financed by two banks, Natixis and BNP Paribas, which held various forms of security in relation to the aircraft and the leases.
b. In 2021, following the Covid-19 pandemic and the consequent cessation of air travel, VietJet defaulted on the rent in respect of the aircraft.
c. VietJet entered into negotiations with Natixis and BNP regarding a restructuring of its rental obligations. It is disputed whether the negotiations with Natixis led to a binding agreement but, whether they did or not, all discussions came to an end in October 2021 when the banks entered into a deal to sell their respective positions to FitzWalter Capital, a London-based fund. FWA, a FitzWalter entity, then sought to exercise the lessors' alleged rights to terminate the leases, demand the return of the aircraft, and claim various alleged debts, damages and indemnities from VietJet. It is FWA's position that it is entitled both to retain the aircraft and to recover sums totalling c.$300 million from VietJet as a result of the early termination of the leases.
d. VietJet denies that the leases have been validly terminated or that FWA has validly acquired the rights on which it relies for its claim. In the alternative, VietJet claims relief from forfeiture. VietJet also disputes the quantum of FWA's money claims.
e. In December 2022 the parties entered into a Consent Order whereby VietJet handed over the aircraft to FWA in Vietnam, without prejudice to either party's case at trial.
f. Despite having obtained possession of the aircraft 17 months ago, FWA has yet to export them from Vietnam. The reasons for this are in dispute.
Introduction
Legal principles
Unambiguous impropriety: the Defendant's submissions.
a. WPP is a rule of admissibility: Rush & Tompkins Ltd v Greater London Council [1989] AC 1280 at 1301C (and in that respect differs from legal professional privilege).
b. The rule is founded both "upon the public policy of encouraging litigants to settle their differences rather than litigate them to the finish" (Rush & Tompkins at 1299) and on "the express or implied agreement of the parties themselves that communications in the course of their negotiations should not be admissible in evidence" (Unilever plc v The Procter & Gamble Co [2000] 1 WLR 2436, 2445).
c. One exception to the rule is that evidence of WP negotiations can be admitted "if the exclusion of the evidence would act as a cloak for perjury, blackmail or other 'unambiguous impropriety'" (Unilever at 2444). The phrase "unambiguous impropriety" comes from Hoffman LJ's judgment in Forster v Friedland (CA, 10 November 1992), where he said that "the value of the without prejudice rule would be seriously impaired if its protection could be removed by anything less than unambiguous impropriety".
57. From this review of the cases I would conclude that the courts have consistently emphasised the importance of allowing parties to speak freely in the course of settlement negotiations, have jealously guarded any incursion into or erosion of the without prejudice rule, and have carefully scrutinised evidence which is asserted to justify an exception to the rule. Although the unambiguous impropriety exception has been recognised, cases in which it has been applied have been truly exceptional, and…there has been no scope for dispute about what was said, either because the statement was recorded…or because it was in writing…. I would not wish to exclude the possibility that the evidence about what was said at an unrecorded meeting may be so clear that the court is able to reach a firm conclusion about it (nor would I wish to encourage the clandestine recording of settlement meetings), but such cases are likely to be rare…
62. … the cases have firmly and rightly set their face against any erosion of the without prejudice rule, even if that means that some statements disclosing or constituting impropriety, albeit not unambiguously so, retain the protection of the rule. The policy choice is that the public interest in the settlement of litigation generally outweighs the risk of abuse of the privilege in individual cases.
63. There are sound reasons for this choice in addition to those already discussed. In particular, a party who is unable to adduce evidence of statements made without prejudice is no worse off so far as the evidence is concerned than if those statements had never been made or the settlement negotiations had not occurred. But a party who is drawn into satellite litigation about the admissibility of statements made without prejudice would have been much better off if he had refused to negotiate at all…
64. … Rather, the position should be that the test remains one of unambiguous impropriety. Nothing less will do. That is a test which, deliberately, is difficult to satisfy but the fact that it arises on an interim application is no reason to dilute it. In view of the necessary limits to the conclusions which a court can reach at an interim stage, the existence of a credible dispute about what was said (or what was meant by what was said) may mean that a court cannot be satisfied that there has been an unambiguous impropriety and therefore does not admit the evidence, but that is simply the result of applying the test which has consistently and for good reason been held to apply.
74. It is, moreover, common for potential problems of enforcement to be a factor to which both parties will be alive in international litigation and it would be unfortunate if that was a subject which could not be discussed in settlement meetings for fear of being interpreted as a threat to move assets improperly. This is a context in which one party's "colourful or even exaggerated language" (to borrow Hoffmann LJ's phrase in Forster v Friedland) may well be viewed by the other party as a threat or even blackmail.
Unambiguous impropriety: this case
a. Mr. Boylan made the following remark: "You can wait till you go to court and get an English judgement and then go to Singapore too and Vietnam and get another judgement. I cannot speak for the Vietnamese government but my sense is they are not going to collaborate with anyone from the UK or Singapore or anywhere else, and this could go on for years, but that's not a threat, that's just an observation, a Donal Boylan observation."
b. Later in the same conversation, Mr. Boylan acknowledged that "you have terminated the leases and you have the right to demand the aircraft be [returned]", but warned that "you can go through a court process in the UK to obtain that and you will probably fairly quickly get a judgement in your favor, then you will have to go through a process in Vietnam and you will soon discover how Vietnam works".
a. As to the evidential aspect, the conversation is itself in dispute. It was not recorded. The only documentary evidence of what was said is Mr Gray's note, but Mr Boylan denies that this is accurate; and Mr Gray is not giving evidence at trial. That in itself should be the end of the matter: the Court cannot conclude that the words were "unambiguously" spoken. This is not one of the "rare" cases where the evidence is clear enough to enable the Court to reach a firm conclusion, to an "unambiguous" standard, that the alleged statements were made.
b. In any event, even if it could be proved "unambiguously" that Mr Boylan spoke the words attributed to him, the qualitative test is not satisfied because the pleaded words do not convey any "unambiguously improper" meaning. Indeed it is not even arguable that Mr Boylan's alleged words "constituted threats that … VietJet would do everything in its power to frustrate the processes involved in FWA enforcing its legal rights", still less that they carried that meaning unambiguously.
c. The most the pleaded words disclose is Mr Boylan's view that (i) FWA might have difficulty enforcing a judgment, and (ii) the Vietnamese government would be unlikely to assist FWA. The second is not remotely improper: VietJet is not responsible for the actions of the Vietnamese government. Nor is the first, as was made clear in Motorola at [74] (above).
The Claimant's case on Unambiguous impropriety
a. Whether the evidential threshold is met, namely that the "evidence establishes" the impropriety: Motorola Solutions Inc v Hytera Communications Corpn Ltd [2021] QB 744 [74]; and
b. Whether the substantive threshold is met once the words used have been established, such that those words constitute threats going beyond what is permissible.
a. The conversation was recorded in a contemporaneous note by Mr Gray during the call, and which he clarified immediately afterwards. The present case is therefore closely analogous to cases where there is a direct record of the threats made (such as a recording of the call or a written threat).
b. Mr Boylan frankly accepts that he does not remember the detail of the discussions and his evidence largely consists of speculation as to what he would have said and what he would have meant. In those circumstances, Mr Boylan's outright denial that he used the words alleged lacks credibility.
c. Mr Boylan's threats must also be viewed in the context of what subsequently occurred, namely VietJet's campaign in obstructing the export of the Aircraft. It is submitted that the overwhelming evidence is that VietJet has made good on Mr Boylan's threat that it would frustrate the processes involved in FWA enforcing its legal rights and exporting the Aircraft from Vietnam, and that it has enlisted the resources of the Vietnamese state (whether knowingly or unknowingly), in furtherance of its aims.
Discussion and conclusions.
a. There is in my judgment real room for doubt as to what was in fact said. The Court of Appeal in Motorola indicated that cases not involving statements made in documents or recorded on tape which led to a loss of privilege would be rare – see paragraph 57. Although Mr Gray's note of the conversation was made shortly after it took place, whether it was accurate is disputed, and I do not think that I can fairly determine this dispute at present.
b. Secondly, in my judgment, the contents of the statements do not amount to threats, within the meaning of this exception. In my judgment, the conversation is more naturally interpreted as a warning as to difficulties of enforcement in Vietnam, rather than threats that VietJet would deliberately flout orders of the English Courts and/or procure a decision that the Vietnamese courts would not enforce those orders.
Waiver
The Claimant's submissions.
The Defendant's submissions.
Discussion and conclusions.
a. First, I reject the submission that there has been a delay in objecting to the use of the material such as to justify the assertion that there has been some sort of representation leading to a waiver. First, the general principle is that silence does not amount to consent. Secondly, I bear in mind that a waiver of privilege is not lightly to be inferred. Thirdly, on the evidence before me, objection was consistently taken to the use of the material.
b. Turning to the witness statement of Mr Boylan, then in my judgment the decision to serve this witness statement cannot be said to amount to a waiver of the privilege in relation to the without prejudice conversation. I did not find the cases relating to legal professional privilege of any real assistance. That privilege is a unilateral privilege, and it is up to the party who is entitled to assert that unilateral privilege to decide whether to assert the privilege or not. Conversely, the privilege relating to without prejudice communications is a bilateral, or joint privilege. If it is to be waived, both parties must agree to that waiver. The service of a witness statement asserting that privilege, and designed to show that the privilege has not been lost for some other reason, cannot in my judgment sensibly be construed as a waiver of the privilege.