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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 >> Athena Capital Fund SICAV-FIS SCA & Ors v Secretariat of State for the Holy See [2022] EWCA Civ 1051 (26 July 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2022/1051.html Cite as: [2022] EWCA Civ 1051, [2022] WLR(D) 330, [2022] WLR 4570, [2022] 1 WLR 4570 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
COMMERCIAL COURT (QBD)
Simon Salzedo QC (sitting as a Judge of the High Court)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE MALES
and
LORD JUSTICE BIRSS
____________________
(1) ATHENA CAPITAL FUND SICAV-FIS S.C.A. (2) ATHENA CAPITAL REAL ESTATE AND SPECIAL SITUATIONS FUND 1 (3) WRM CAPITAL ASSET MANAGEMENT S.A.R.L. (4) RAFFAELE MINCIONE |
Appellants/Claimants |
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- and - |
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SECRETARIAT OF STATE FOR THE HOLY SEE |
Respondent/Defendant |
____________________
Charles Hollander QC, Samar Abbas Kazmi & James Bradford (instructed by Hill Dickinson LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 6 July 2022
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Males:
The parties
The facts
The Transaction
"11.1. This Framework Agreement is governed by, and shall be construed in accordance with, the laws of England.
11.2. Any dispute arising in connection with this Framework Agreement shall be submitted to the competent courts of England."
"11.1 This Agreement and any dispute or claim arising out of or in connection with it or its subject matter, existence, negotiation, validity, termination or enforceability (including non-contractual disputes or claims) shall be governed by and construed in accordance with English law.
11.2 Each Party irrevocably agrees that the Courts of England shall have exclusive jurisdiction in relation to any dispute or claim arising out of or in connection with this Agreement or its subject matter, existence, negotiation, validity, termination or enforceability (including non-contractual disputes or claims)."
The Vatican criminal proceedings
"The aim of the action is to obtain a Declaratory Relief judgment which will achieve, among other things, the recognition and confirmation of the rights and obligations of each of the parties based on the Framework Agreement, the SPA, the Transfer Agreement, the Power of Attorney and, more generally, their validity and binding nature on the parties."
The claims in this action
Procedural history
The judgment
The Secretariat's central argument
"56. The Defendant's case is that at all material times (namely, when these proceedings were issued and up until the hearing of the Application), the only relevant or real dispute was and is between the Claimants (whom the Defendant contends are controlled by Mr Mincione) and the OPJ and concerns whether or not Mr Mincione is guilty of the criminal offences which the OPJ has alleged against him and others. Accordingly, the Defendant argues that the purpose and/or effect of these proceedings is to subvert a criminal process, that there is no real present civil dispute to be determined between the parties to this claim and that it is an abuse of the process of this court to seek to use it to influence criminal proceedings in another state."
"70. I have not received any expert evidence of Italian or Vatican State law which would enable me to make any concluded finding as to the status of a civil party to criminal proceedings in the Vatican State. Based on the words of the document I have set out above, my understanding is that by seeking to register as a parte civile, or even if it has in fact done so, the Defendant has not taken a position that the charges are true, but merely asserted a right to compensation in the event that they are proved."
"73. … As I read the relevant legal framework, this remains a contingent claim by the Defendant which will be advanced if and when the relevant facts are established in the criminal case."
"74. Taking all in all, it seems to me that the Defendant has adopted a neutral position in relation to the allegations against Mr Mincione and others. As an organ of the same state which is investigating the allegations, it has naturally not sought to play them down, and indeed, it has welcomed the fact of an investigation. The Defendant's public pronouncements are consistent with a view that there appear to be questions which it is proper for the OPJ to investigate, but it has gone no further than that."
The appellants' motivation
Issue 1: Is there a good arguable case that Brussels Recast Regulation Article 25 governs some or all of the claims?
Issue 3: should the claims be dismissed at this stage?
Interference with a criminal investigation/legitimate acts of a foreign state
Justiciability/abuse
Utility
"176. It is at this stage that the findings I have made in relation to the Defendant's central argument become important. On the evidence before this Court, the real adversary of the Claimants in relation to the Transaction is not the Defendant, but other organs of the Holy See or the Vatican State, in particular, the OPJ. I readily accept the Claimants' submission (supported by reference to National Bank of Khazakstan v Bank of New York Mellon [2017] EWHC 3512 (Comm) at [48]) that the Defendant's neutrality is sufficient to constitute a 'dispute' for the purposes of the Court's jurisdiction to grant declarations. But that does not address whether such declarations would serve a useful purpose or whether they would be futile and risk creating confusion, as Cockerill J put it in the Trattamento case.
177. The Defendant submitted that it does not have access to its own documents, which have been seized by the OPJ, that it will not be in a position to call any of the key factual witnesses, and that it does not have a position on whether its officers acted in the Transaction properly on the Defendant's behalf or in breach of duty and trust (using those terms loosely, as English law may not govern some or all of the issues arising).
178. The points about documents and witnesses are less powerful now that the Defendant has access to documents through its participation as a parte civile. However, I consider that determination of the issues as between the Claimants and the Defendant would serve no useful purpose because it is not the Defendant who is primarily interested in them at this stage and because there is another party who is interested, but who will not be before the Court, namely the OPJ. Given that the OPJ is acting in its capacity as the official investigator and prosecutor of a foreign state, there would be no reality to any suggestion that it ought to join the English proceedings. To grant declarations which are primarily aimed at the position of a third party who is not before the court, cannot be brought before the court and who cannot reasonably be expected to come before the court voluntarily is, in my judgment, a paradigm example of a claim which is barred by the principle of utility. In these circumstances, it is almost adventitious that another defendant presents itself as one over whom the court has jurisdiction and that event should not be permitted to overwhelm the reality of the situation.
179. Does this point reach the level of a determination that there is no real prospect of any of the claims for declarations succeeding? I must bear in mind not only the evidence now available, but also the evidence that can reasonably be expected to be available at trial. Whether a declaration will be granted at trial will depend on all the circumstances that pertain at the time of trial. In that connection, I accept that it is reasonably possible that the picture might look different at trial, not so much because the evidence before me is incomplete without disclosure and oral evidence, but because the situation might reasonably be expected to change in important respects. In particular, it is possible that the prosecution of Mr Mincione might be dropped, or it might fail or succeed. It is also possible, as far as the evidence before me reveals, that the Defendant itself might take a partisan position either in the course of its parte civile action or in some other way. If events of that sort occur, then they might change the picture and bring it within the bounds of reasonable likelihood that the claim could succeed. For these reasons, I conclude that I ought not to grant summary judgment for the Defendant."
Issue 6: stay of proceedings
The parties' submissions
Case management stays
"It will very soon become clear that stays are only granted in cases of this kind in rare and compelling circumstances. Should the upholding of the judge's order lead to the making of unmeritorious applications, then I am confident the judges will know how to react."
"The court's power to stay proceedings is part of its inherent jurisdiction which is expressly preserved by section 49(3) of the [Senior Courts] Act 1981. It is exercised under a wide range of circumstances to achieve a wide variety of ends. Subject only to statutory restrictions, the jurisdiction to stay proceedings is unfettered and depends only on the exercise of the court's discretion in the interests of justice. I am in no doubt, therefore, that I do have jurisdiction to stay the present proceedings; the question is whether it would ever be right to do so in a case such as the present, and if so under what circumstances."
"69. In fact the court has an inherent discretion, reinforced by the Supreme Court Act 1981, section 49(3), to stay proceedings, whenever it is necessary to prevent injustice. But the power cannot be used in a manner which is inconsistent with the Judgments Regulation. Section 49 of the Civil Jurisdiction and Judgments Act 1982 provides that nothing in that Act prevents the court from exercising its power to stay, where to do so is not inconsistent with the Brussels or Lugano Conventions. That section has not been amended to refer to the Judgments Regulation, because the Regulation is directly applicable without national legislation. Where the court has jurisdiction under the Judgments Regulation, the power of the court to stay proceedings cannot be used simply because another Regulation State is the forum conveniens: Dicey and Morris, Conflict of Laws, 13th ed (2000), para 11-012.
70. It follows that the power should not be used simply because the claim in the English proceedings could be made, or more appropriately made, in the German insolvency. I would accept that there is a power to stay English proceedings in favour of insolvency proceedings in a Regulation state to prevent injustice, but it would require exceptionally strong grounds for the English court to exercise that power, particularly where (as regards the contractual claim) the parties have conferred exclusive jurisdiction on the English court. Otherwise, the court would be circumventing the Judgments Regulation by introducing forum non conveniens principles by the back door."
"82. The court has a discretion to order a stay to await the outcome of foreign proceedings in the exercise of its case management powers pursuant to section 49(3) of the Senior Courts Act 1981 and/or CPR r.3.1(2)(f). The principles relevant to the exercise of this discretion can be summarised as follows:
(1) The court has a discretion to stay an action pending the resolution of a claim pending in another forum, but a stay should only be granted in 'rare and compelling circumstances': Reichhold Norway ASA v Goldman Sachs International [2000] 1 WLR 173, 186).
(2) 'Exceptionally strong grounds' are required to justify a stay on case management grounds where the parties have conferred exclusive jurisdiction on the English court: Mazur Media Ltd v Mazur Media GmbH [2004] 1 WLR 2966, paras 69-70 (Lawrence Collins J); Jefferies International Ltd v Landsbanki Islands HF [2009] EWHC 894 (Comm) at [26]. The danger of inconsistent judgments is not a legitimate consideration amounting to exceptional circumstances and does not justify a stay in a case where the court has jurisdiction under Parliament and Council Regulation (EU) No 1215/2012 ('BIR'), especially exclusive jurisdiction: Mazur, para 71.
(3) The court's power to stay proceedings cannot be used in a manner which is inconsistent with Council Regulation (EU) No 1215/2012 ('the Judgments Regulation'): Mazur, para, 69; Jefferies, para 26. A defendant should not be permitted 'under the guise of case management, [to] achieve by the back door a result against which the ECJ has locked the front door': Skype Technologies SA v. Joltid Ltd [2009] EWHC 2783 (Ch), [2011] IL Pr 8, para 22 (Lewison J).
(4) A stay will not, at least in general, be appropriate if the other proceedings will not bind the parties to the action stayed or finally resolve all the issues in the case to be stayed, or the parties are not the same: Klöckner Holdings GmbH v. Klöckner Beteiligungs GmbH [2005] EWHC 1453 (Comm) at [21] (Gloster J)."
"99. We therefore turn to case management. The English courts have wide case management powers, and they include the power to impose a temporary stay on proceedings where to do so would serve the Overriding Objective: see CPR 1.2(a) and 3.1(2)(f). For example a temporary stay is frequently imposed (and even more frequently ordered by consent) in order to give the parties breathing space to attempt to settle the proceedings or narrow the issues by mediation or some other form of alternative dispute resolution. A temporary stay may be ordered where there are parallel proceedings in another jurisdiction, raising similar or related issues between the same or related parties, where the earlier resolution of those issues in the foreign proceedings would better serve the interests of justice than by allowing the English proceedings to continue without a temporary stay: see Reichhold Norway ASA v Goldman Sachs International [2000] 1 WLR 173. But this would be justified only in rare or compelling circumstances: see per Lord Bingham CJ [2000] 1 WLR 173 at 185-186, and Klöckner Holdings GmbH v Klöckner Beteiligungs GmbH [2005] EWHC 1453 (Comm)."
Negative declarations
"41. Lord Wilberforce and Lord Denning MR differed in the circumstances of that case as to whether the declaration would serve a useful purpose. However, if it would, that it would then be appropriate to grant a declaration was agreed. The approach is pragmatic. It is not a matter of jurisdiction. It is a matter of discretion. The deployment of negative declarations should be scrutinised and their use rejected where it would serve no useful purpose. However, where a negative declaration would help to ensure that the aims of justice are achieved the courts should not be reluctant to grant such declarations. They can and do assist in achieving justice. … in my judgment the development of the use of declaratory relief in relation to commercial disputes should not be constrained by artificial limits wrongly related to jurisdiction. It should instead be kept within proper bounds by the exercise of the courts' discretion.
42. While negative declarations can perform a positive role, they are an unusual remedy in so far as they reverse the more usual roles of the parties. The natural defendant becomes the claimant and vice versa. This can result in procedural complications and possible injustice to an unwilling 'defendant'. This in itself justifies caution in extending the circumstances where negative declarations are granted, but, subject to the exercise of appropriate circumspection, there should be no reluctance to there being granted when it is useful to do so."
"i) The touchstone is utility;
ii) The deployment of negative declarations should be scrutinised and their use rejected where it would serve no useful purpose;
iii) The prime purpose is to do justice in the particular case: see TQ Delta, LLC v ZyXEL Communications UK Limited, ZyXEL Communications A/S [2019] EWCA Civ 1277 at [37]. 'Justice' includes justice not only to the claimant, but also to the defendant: see Fujifilm Kyowa Kirin Biologics Co., Ltd. v Abb Vie Biotechnology Limited [2017] EWCA Civ 1, [2018] Bus LR 228 ("Fujifilm") at [60];
iv) The Court must consider whether the grant of declaratory relief is the most effective way of resolving the issues raised: see Rolls Royce v Unite the Union [2010] 1 WLR 318 at [120]. In answering that question, the Court should consider what other options are available to resolve the issue;
v) This emphasis on doing justice in the particular case is reflected in the limitations which are generally applied. Thus:
a) The court will not entertain purely hypothetical questions. It will not pronounce upon legal situations which may arise, but generally upon those which have arisen: Zamir & Woolf at 4-036 and Regina (Al Rawi) v Sec State Foreign & Commonwealth Affairs [2008] QB 289 at 344.
b) There must in general, be a real and present dispute between the parties before the court as to the existence or extent of a legal right between them: Rolls Royce at [120].
c) If the issue in dispute is not based on concrete facts the issue can still be treated as hypothetical. This can be characterised as 'the missing element which makes a case hypothetical': see Zamir & Woolf at 4-59.
vi) Factors such as absence of positive evidence of utility and absence of concrete facts to ground the declarations may not be determinative; Zamir and Woolf note that the latter "can take different forms and can be lacking to differing degrees". However, where there is such a lack in whole or in part the court will wish to be particularly alert to the dangers of producing something which is not only not utile, but may create confusion."
Is the Secretariat neutral?
"A civil action may not proceed or continue before the civil judge while the criminal case is in progress and until an irrevocable judgment on the same is pronounced, unless otherwise provided for by law."
"A civil action under Article 7 is brought in the criminal proceedings when the plaintiff joins the proceedings."
Future case management
Disposal
Lord Justice Birss:
Lord Justice Peter Jackson: