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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Lenkor Energy Trading DMCC v Puri [2020] EWHC 1432 (QB) (04 June 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2020/1432.html Cite as: [2020] EWHC 1432 (QB), [2021] 1 Lloyd's Rep 47 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ON APPEAL FROM THE ORDER OF MASTER DAVISON
DATED 23 JANUARY 2020
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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LENKOR ENERGY TRADING DMCC |
Claimant/ Respondent |
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- and - |
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IRFAN IQBAL PURI |
Defendant/ Appellant |
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Mr James Collins QC and Mr Philip Jones (instructed by Mackrell Solicitors) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 18 May 2020
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Crown Copyright ©
Covid-19 Protocol: This judgment was handed down remotely by circulation to the parties' representatives by email and release to BAILII. The date and time for hand-down are deemed to be 10:00 am on 4 June 2020.
Mr Justice Murray :
Law on the recognition of a foreign judgment at common law
Background
Privacy application
i) the hearing to be held in private under CPR rule 39.2(3)(c) on the basis that it was necessary to do so in order to protect confidential information of the Buyer; and
ii) for this judgment to be redacted to the extent necessary to protect the confidentiality of the Buyer.
Entry into the Tripartite Agreement and subsequent events
"issue a payment guarantee for hundred percent of the cargo value by cheque in favour of Lenkor Energy Trading DMCC, that is acceptable to the Seller, 3 days before the vessel commences loading."
i) payments in US Dollars to IPC Dubai, as nominee for Lenkor Hong Kong, in three tranches on 7, 8 and 13 August 2014, amounting, in aggregate, to US$4,008,900; and
ii) payments in Pakistan Rupees to an account in Pakistan of IPC Pakistan, as nominee for IPC Dubai, on various dates between 22 September 2014 and 9 January 2015, amounting, in aggregate, to PKR 3,196,855,717.
i) in respect of the first cargo, cheque number 156861, dated 20 July 2014, in the amount of AED 91,400,200; and
ii) in respect of the second cargo, cheque number 156862, dated 7 August 2014 in the amount of AED 117,100,000.
The total face amount of the two cheques was therefore AED 208,500,200, which was the equivalent of about US$55 million, according to the Particulars of Claim. Each cheque was payable to Lenkor Dubai, was signed by Mr Puri and was drawn on a Dubai branch of Habib Bank Ltd.
The Award
"IPC Dubai submitted that Lenkor [Hong Kong] was not entitled to an account [of the funds it received from the Buyer as nominee for Lenkor Hong Kong] unless or until it returned the guarantee cheques, but this was not agreed, is not a necessary implication, and is inconsistent with the actual agreement. The cheques were security for payment in full and, as matter of necessary implication, did not have to be returned by Lenkor until payment in full was received for the particular cargo for which each cheque was security. In the event of partial payment the cheques would then amount to more security than was needed, but that does not mean they had to be returned at all or in exchange for smaller cheques. Lenkor could not, of course, by itself or its agent Lenkor Dubai, recover or keep more in the aggregate than is due to it. Any sums actually received by Lenkor Dubai by way of enforcement of the security cheques for Lenkor's claims would be held by it as agent for the benefit of Lenkor and would, as between Lenkor and IPC Dubai, be receipt by or for the account of Lenkor. Therefore any sums actually paid by or on behalf of IPC Dubai to, or collected by, or on behalf of Lenkor or Lenkor Dubai by reason of any liability on the cheques or any judgment on the cheques are to be credited against liability of IPC Dubai as claimed and awarded in this arbitration. But the failure to return or cancel the cheques following part payment affords no defence to those claims."
i) IPC Dubai's defences to the claims of Lenkor Hong Kong failed, including its defence of illegality under English law on the grounds of Lenkor Hong Kong's deceptive and fraudulent conduct. Accordingly, Lenkor Hong Kong succeeded against IPC Dubai both as to its contractual claim against IPC Dubai and its claim in restitution for payment over of what IPC Dubai had received as its nominee. IPC Dubai, as nominee for Lenkor Hong Kong, was liable to account to Lenkor Hong Kong for the amounts in USD it received directly from the Buyer as well as the amounts in PKR that were paid, at its direction, to IPC Pakistan. Accordingly, IPC Dubai was required to pay Lenkor Hong Kong the amounts of US$4,008,900 and PKR 3,196,855,717.
ii) The Buyer had a valid defence on the basis of illegality to payment of the contract price under the Tripartite Agreement for the two cargoes the Buyer received, but Lenkor Hong Kong had a valid claim for restitution to reverse unjust enrichment for the balance of the value of the two cargoes delivered, after deduction of the amounts that the Buyer had paid in respect of the two cargoes to IPC Dubai in US Dollars and to IPC Pakistan in Pakistan Rupees. The balance due from the Buyer to Lenkor Hong Kong was therefore US$19,101,284.44.
iii) Lenkor Hong Kong was liable to pay the Buyer damages in the amount of US$19,888.53 for breach of the arbitration clause of the Tripartite Agreement.
Civil and criminal proceedings in Dubai against Mr Puri in relation to the cheques
"In other words, Mr Puri was found liable for the sums which the Buyer had paid over to IPC Dubai but which had not been remitted onwards to the Seller."
This claim, the Order and the Master's judgment
i) The cheques were given under Clause 15(C) of the Tripartite Agreement as a payment guarantee for the contract price of the cargoes of gasoil. The arbitrator had found that Lenkor Hong Kong's claim for the contract price was tainted by illegality and had further found, applying the principles set out in Patel v Mirza [2016] UKSC 42, that it was proportionate to deny that claim, although the arbitrator upheld Lenkor Hong Kong's claim for restitution.
ii) Under English law, the finding that the principal obligation was tainted by illegality would have prevented enforcement of a guarantee of that obligation, citing, by way of example, Heald v O'Connor [1971] 1 WLR 497 (QBD).
iii) Although Mr Cooper acknowledged that the cheques and the judgment of the Dubai FIC gave rise to autonomous rights and obligations, the Master should "look at the reality", which was that illegality tainted the underlying transaction and therefore both the cheques and the claim to recognise the judgment. Lenkor Hong Kong was seeking to enforce "by the back door" a claim that the arbitrator had found it was not entitled to enforce.
"… it is the judgment and not the underlying transaction upon which the judgment is based which must offend against English public policy. That point has been illustrated in a number of cases, but perhaps most economically in the case of Omnium de Traitement et de Valorisation v Hilmarton [1999] 2 Lloyd's Rep 222, a decision of Timothy Walker J."
i) Although there is no equivalent provision in English law to Article 599/2 of the Dubai Commercial Transactions Law, which imposes personal liability on the drawer of a cheque where the drawer cannot prove that the account was sufficiently in funds, there is a rationale behind the policy (namely, to encourage probity in cheque transactions), which cannot be said to offend any principle of English public policy. The relevant provision, although providing for more onerous liabilities on the drawer of a cheque than is the case under English law, is "neither surprising nor repugnant".
ii) While the Master accepted that there are circumstances where an English court might enquire into the underlying transactions giving rise to the judgment, referring to the example given by Timothy Walker J in the OTV v Hilmarton case of an arbitral award or judgment containing a finding of fact of corrupt practices and to the example given to the Master by Mr Collins of a money judgment in respect of a "contract killing", which the Master considered "very extreme" (although Mr Collins noted, during his submissions to me, that this example is given by Lord Neuberger in Patel v Mirza at [159]). The Master found that there were no such circumstances here.
iii) The most that could be said is that the Dubai FIC judgment did not confront the issue of illegality affecting the Tripartite Agreement, but there are "two decisive answers to this issue":
a) The Dubai FIC judgment did not need to confront the illegality issue as it was based squarely on the legal consequences of signing a cheque in Dubai in circumstances where there were insufficient funds to meet them. Those legal consequences were:
"… self-contained and independent. That an English court might have approached matters differently is irrelevant. It was a Dubai court applying the law of Dubai."
b) Even if it were permissible to look at the underlying transactions in this case, the question that would arise would be whether enforcing the judgment of the Dubai FIC would amount to enforcing indirectly the Buyer's obligation to pay the contract price. However, the answer to that question would be negative. The Dubai FIC judgment was for a sum equal to the amount which the Buyer had paid to IPC Dubai and not remitted by IPC Dubai to Lenkor Hong Kong, which was considerably less than the contract price. If the Dubai FIC judgment enforced any obligation, it was the obligation of IPC Dubai to account to Lenkor Hong Kong for the sums that it had received, which was found by the arbitrator to be an enforceable obligation both in contract and in restitution.
i) Mr Puri operated in Dubai and knew or should have known the legal consequences of a signing a cheque there; and
ii) Mr Puri was the managing director and sole shareholder of IPC Dubai, in other words, its "controlling mind" and a key actor in the relevant events; IPC Dubai and Mr Puri had been involved in the deception of the Buyer; and IPC Dubai had been found liable by the arbitrator to pay to Lenkor Hong Kong all the monies it had received from the Buyer in respect of the two cargoes of HEP delivered to the Buyer, which did not amount to the payment of any profit to Lenkor Hong Kong but in substance restitution to it for the value of the two cargoes.
Ground of appeal
Submissions
"Does public policy render a foreign judgment unenforceable as a matter of English law if the effect of that judgment is to enable enforcement of rights of guarantee relating to a contractual claim which has been found to be unenforceable on grounds of illegality?"
"If the judgment [of the Dubai FIC] indirectly enforced any obligation, it was IPC Dubai's obligation to account to Lenkor [Hong Kong] for the sums which it had received. This was found by the arbitrator to be an enforceable obligation both in contract and restitution. Thus, if I were required to form my own view, it would be that the underlying illegality was confined to the Buyer's obligation to pay the contract price and that that obligation was not indirectly enforced by the civil claim and judgment in Dubai."
Analysis
i) there was no error of law in the Master's reasoning or conclusion at [28(i)] of his judgment; and
ii) the Master's conclusion was a sufficient basis on which to recognise the Dubai FIC judgment and to grant summary judgment to the respondent on its claim against Mr Puri.
"… It is agreed between the parties that the basis of the judgment was Article 599/2 of Dubai's Commercial Transactions Law, which imposes a personal liability on the drawer of a cheque where the drawer cannot prove (the burden being on him) that the account was sufficiently in funds. As already observed, there is a powerful rationale behind this statutory liability. It is not the law of this country. But it cannot be said to offend any principle of English public policy. English law certainly recognises that a cheque gives rise to rights and liabilities that are unconditional and autonomous such that a cheque is treated as akin to cash. That the law of Dubai provides for more onerous liabilities is neither surprising nor repugnant."
"In my judgment, the English courts should not enforce an English law contract which falls to be performed abroad where: (i) it relates to an adventure which is contrary to a head of English public policy which is founded on general principles of morality, and (ii) the same public policy applies to the country of performance so that the agreement would not be enforceable under the law of that country."
"What in my view the Lemenda case decided was that: (1) there are some rules of public policy which if infringed will lead to non-enforcement by the English court whatever their proper law and wherever their place of performance but others are based on considerations which are purely domestic …. There is also an implied recognition as it seems to me that if all that can be said of a contract is that performance in a foreign country will be contrary to the domestic public policy of that state, enforcement will only be refused if performance would be contrary to the domestic public policy in England. If that were not so, consideration of English public policy would not in fact have been necessary or relevant.
It must also follow, as it seems to me, that an English court would take notice of the fact that different courts and different tribunals might have different views as to the enforceability of contracts for the purchase of personal influence depending on the proper law of the contracts and where they were to be performed. It would be for example legitimate for a foreign tribunal to take the view (indeed consistent with the English court's own view if I am right on the above implication), that albeit performance was contrary to domestic public policy in its place of performance, since it was not contrary to the domestic public policy either of the country of the proper law and/or the curial law, enforcement should be allowed.
It is in this context, in my view, that albeit the award is not isolated from the underlying contract, it is relevant that the English court is considering the enforcement of an award, and not the underlying contract. The English court takes cognisance of the fact that the underlying contract, on the facts as they appear from the award and its reasons, does not infringe one of those rules of public policy where the English court would not enforce it whatever its proper law or place of performance. It is entitled to take the view that such domestic public policy considerations as there may be, have been considered by the arbitral tribunal. It is legitimate to conclude that there is nothing which offends English public policy if an arbitral tribunal enforces a contract which does not offend the domestic public policy under either the proper law of the contract or its curial law, even if English domestic public policy might have taken a different view." (emphasis added)
Conclusion