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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Winnetka Trading Corp v Julius Baer International Ltd & Ors [2008] EWHC 3146 (Ch) (26 November 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2008/3146.html Cite as: [2009] 2 All ER (Comm) 735, [2009] Bus LR 1006, [2008] EWHC 3146 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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WINNETKA TRADING CORPORATION | ||
AND | ||
JULIUS BAER INTERNATIONAL LTD (1) | ||
BANK JULIUS BAER AND COMPANY (2) |
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Tel: 020 7269 0370<
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE NORRIS:
'At the back of our decision in this problematic appeal is the fact that an orderly use of available national forums depends upon a combination of mutual respect and self denial on the part of their respective courts. The risk inherent in an anti-suit injunction if unwisely granted is that it will not succeed in stopping a party whose assets are located outside the jurisdiction from litigating abroad nor dissuade the courts of other countries from entertaining the litigation against this. It is universally contrary to comity for courts to stand-by whilst a party who has contracted to litigate in one county reneges on that agreement. Comity creates an expectation that the courts of other countries will collaborate in holding the parties to the terms of an exclusive jurisdiction clause.
The present case poses these problems sharply because in a carefully reasoned judgment Judge Swartz of New York has already accepted jurisdiction on behalf of the courts of the state of New York in all matters in contention before it. As between two independent justice systems, no question of issue estoppel can arise but equally it cannot be right that the first party to get to court can by that means alone determine the nationality of the forum. In my view, the correct approach for us is to give real and respectful weight to the decision of Judge Swartz in coming to what is nevertheless our own conclusion as to whether an anti-suit injunction is appropriate.'
'If contracting parties agree to give a particular court exclusive jurisdiction to rule on claims between those parties and a claim falling within the scope of the agreement is made in proceedings in a forum other than that which the parties have agreed, the English court will ordinarily exercise its discretion whether by granting a stay of proceedings in England or by restraining the prosecution of proceedings in the non-contractual forum abroad or by such other procedural order as is appropriate in the circumstances to secure compliance with a contractual bargain unless the party suing in the non-contractual forum, the burden being on him, can show strong reasons for suing in that forum. I use the word 'ordinarily' to recognise that where an exercise for discretion is called for there can be no absolute or inflexible rule governing that exercise.'
'Article 2 of the Brussels Convention applies to circumstances such as those in the main proceedings involving relationships between the courts of a single contracting state and those of a non-contracting state rather than relationships between the courts of a number of contracting states.'
'It is clear that Article 23 of the Regulation can have no direct application to a clause choosing the courts of a non member state. After all, neither the state's party to the Brussels Convention nor the Council of the European Union in making the regulation could legislate for the jurisdiction of courts in non-member states.
It follows that the court should be entitled to give such effect to the agreement for the courts of a non-member state as is allowed by its own rules of the conflict of laws. As a result an English court will be entitled to give effect to a choice of court clause by staying its proceedings for a non-member state if the English court has jurisdiction from a provision lower than the hierarchy such as that given by Article 2 or Article 4.'
'An injunction restraining the continuance of the proceedings would not of course be granted unless the party seeking the injunction being someone entitled to the benefit of the clause had a sufficient interest in obtaining the injunction. It would I think be necessary for him to show that the claim being prosecuted in the forum jurisdiction was one which if it succeeded would involve him in some consequential liability.'
'The question whether the court has jurisdiction always arises on an interlocutory basis before trial, so that it is possible that a trial may falsify the basis on which jurisdiction has been assumed. It is for that reason that the court has always applied a "good arguable case" test before proceedings. Having proceeded on that basis, what is to happen if at trial the basis proves to have been false notwithstanding that it was well arguable at an interlocutory stage?'
Mr Fulton's answer to this conundrum was that the Guernsey court would at trial determine the question whether the exclusive or non-exclusive jurisdiction clauses were incorporated in the contract and if it should turn out that they were not, then the fact that Winnetka had been compelled to proceed in Guernsey when it was not bound to do so and could have proceeded in England as it preferred is something that would have to be addressed as a matter of costs.