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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Star Reefers Pool Inc v JFC Group Co Ltd [2012] EWCA Civ 14 (20 January 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2012/14.html Cite as: [2012] Bus LR D117, [2012] 1 CLC 294, [2012] EWCA Civ 14, [2012] WLR(D) 3 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
MR JUSTICE TEARE
2010 FOLIO 1230
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE SULLIVAN
and
LORD JUSTICE LEWISON
____________________
STAR REEFERS POOL INC. |
Claimant / Respondent |
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- and - |
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JFC GROUP CO. LTD. |
Defendant / Appellant |
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Mr Charles Kimmins QC and Mr Luke Pearce (instructed by Messrs Stephenson Harwood) for the Respondent
Hearing dates : Thursday 6th October 2011
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Rix :
The underlying transactions
"We herewith certify that our company guarantees… performance…for account of our Nominee, Kalistad Limited, Nicosia."
The text of the guarantees had been negotiated between the parties. Star Reefers had earlier sent copies of the charterparties to JFC for signature. Copies of the agreed text of the guarantee letters accompanied the charterparties, but the covering letters did not refer to them.
JFC's Russian proceedings
Star Reefers' English proceedings
"I also take the view on the material before me that the application to the Russian courts is vexatious and oppressive and an attempt to prevent the claimants from successfully proceeding in England. The Russian proceedings were commenced after the arbitration had been initiated; there was no letter before action; there was no warning that the point that there was no guarantee was to be taken; there was no notice of the proceedings when they had begun; and the issue as to whether or not there was an effective guarantee had never been raised before.
The argument that there is no effective guarantee seems to me very unconvincing, whether the relevant law be English or Russian law, and the proposed proceedings in Russia are necessarily likely to take a considerable time to resolve and will only deal with one portion of the potential dispute namely whether the guarantee is effective."
"25. Thus the circumstances in which the Russian proceedings were commenced coupled with the apparent weakness of the point sought to be argued in those proceedings strongly indicate that the proceedings are vexatious and oppressive.
26. It therefore appears to me that the anti-suit injunction was properly granted and should be continued."
The expert evidence
Submissions
Jurisprudence
"42…However, jurisprudence has limited the conditions under which such an injunction may be regarded as 'just and convenient'. The following conditions are necessary. First, the threatened conduct must be 'unconscionable'. It is only such conduct which founds the right, legal or equitable but here equitable, for the protection of which an injunction can be granted. What is unconscionable cannot be defined exhaustively, but it includes conduct which is 'oppressive or vexatious or which interferes with the due process of the court' (see the South Carolina case [1986] 3 All ER 487 at 496, [1987] AC 24 at 41 per Lord Brandon of Oakbrook). The underlying principle is one of justice in support of the 'ends of justice' (see the SNI Aerospatiale case [1987] 3 All ER 510 at 519, 520, [1987] AC 871 at 892, 893 per Lord Goff of Chieveley). It is analogous to 'abuse of process'; it is related to matters which should affect a person's conscience (see Turner v. Grovit [2002] 1 WLR 107 at [24] per Lord Hobhouse of Woodborough). Secondly, to reflect the interests of comity and in recognition of the possibility that an injunction, although directed against the respondent personally, may be regarded as an (albeit indirect) interference in the foreign proceedings, an injunction must be necessary to protect the applicant's legitimate interest in English proceedings; he must be a party to litigation in this country at which the unconscionable conduct of the party to be restrained is directed, and so there must be a clear need to protect existing English proceedings ([2002] 1 WLR 107 at [27]-[28]); the Airbus Industrie case). It follows that the natural forum for the litigation must be in England, but this, while necessary, is not a sufficient condition.
43. While these are the conditions (and in this sense may be said to go to jurisdiction) for the grant of an anti-suit injunction, at a secondary stage, that of the exercise of discretion, the court will always exercise caution before granting an injunction (but cf Aggeliki Charis Cia Maritima v Pagnan SpA, The Angelic Grace [1995] 1 Lloyd's Rep 87 in cases dealing with contractual arbitration and jurisdiction clauses). Moreover, because the court is concerned with the ends of justice, the respondent will always be entitled to show why it would nevertheless be unjust for the injunction to be granted (see the SNI Aerospatiale case [1987] 3 All ER 510 at 522, [1987] AC 871 at 896; Dicey and Morris on the Conflict of Laws (13th edn, 2000) para 12-064)."
See also AES Ust-Kamenogorsk Hydropower Plant LLP v Ust-Kamenogorsk Hydropower Plant JSC [2011] EWCA Civ 647 at para 89.
"(1) Under English law the court may restrain a defendant over whom it has personal jurisdiction from instituting or continuing proceedings in a foreign court when it is necessary in the interests of justice to do. (2) It is too narrow to say that such an injunction may be granted only on the grounds of vexation or oppression, but, where a matter is justiciable in England and a foreign court, the party seeking an anti-suit injunction must generally show that proceeding before the foreign court is or would be vexatious or oppressive. (3) The courts have refrained from attempting a comprehensive definition of vexation or oppression, but in order to establish that proceeding in a foreign court is or would be vexatious or oppressive on grounds of forum non conveniens, it is generally necessary to show that (a) England is clearly the more appropriate forum ("the natural forum"), and (b) justice requires that the claimant in the foreign court should be restrained from proceeding there. (4) If the English court considers England to be the natural forum and can see no legitimate personal or juridical advantage in the claimant in the foreign proceedings being allowed to pursue them, it does not automatically follow that an anti-suit injunction should be granted. For that would be to overlook the important restraining influence of considerations of comity. (5) An anti-suit injunction always requires caution because by definition it involves interference with the process or potential process of a foreign court. An injunction to enforce an exclusive jurisdiction clause governed by English law is not regarded as a breach of comity, because it merely requires a party to honour his contract. In other cases, the principle of comity requires the court to recognise that, in deciding questions of weight to be attached to various factors, different judges operating under different legal systems with different legal policies may legitimately arrive at different answers, without occasioning a breach of customary international law or manifest injustice, and that in such circumstances it is not for an English court to arrogate to itself the decision how a foreign court should determine the matter. The stronger the connection of the foreign court with the parties and the subject matter of the dispute, the stronger the argument against intervention. (6) The prosecution of parallel proceedings in different jurisdictions is undesirable but not necessarily vexatious or oppressive."
"Second, I do not regard this as a case in which the dates of the beginning proceedings are significant. As it happens, the English proceedings began first and the Illinois action a month later. It might have been the other way round. I do not think the outcome of these appeals should be affected by what is little more than an accident of timing."
Unconscionability
Comity
Service out of the injunction documentation
Conclusion
Lord Justice Sullivan :
Lord Justice Lewison :