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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 >> Patley Wood Farm Llp v Brake & Anor [2013] EWHC 4035 (Ch) (18 December 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2013/4035.html Cite as: [2013] EWHC 4035 (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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Patley Wood Farm LLP |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) Nihal Mohammed Kamal Brake (2) Andrew Young Brake |
Defendants |
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Stephanie Tozer (instructed by Michelmores LLP) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 28th November 2013
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Crown Copyright ©
Peter Smith J:
INTRODUCTION
BACKGROUND
ACCOUNTS
"33.1 except as otherwise provided, any dispute arising out of or in connection with this agreement, including any question regarding its existence, validity or termination, or the legal relationship established by this agreement shall be referred to and finally resolved by arbitration under the Rules of the [LCIA]
33.2 this clause shall be without prejudice to the rights of any party to seek any injunctive relief or similar relief from the Courts to protect its intellectual property rights, confidentiality obligations, restrictions on the activities of any partner or former partner or other rights of any description. "
MR LEE'S ARBITRATION
HEARING BEFORE BIRSS J IN HC13B002648
MR LEE'S AWARD
"(vi) that the parties endeavour to agree jointly within 14 days hereof the identity of a Chartered Accountant who will assist me with the drawing up of dissolution accounts. Failing the parties joint agreement I will select an appropriate Chartered Accountant".
ENFORCEMENT OF HIS ORDERS
CLAIMANT'S POSITION
"do all things necessary for the proper and expeditious conduct of the arbitral proceedings.
(2) this includes:-
(a) complying without delay with any determination tribunal s to procedural or evidence matters or with any order or directions of the tribunal…….."
"26.9 All Awards shall be final and binding on the parties. By agreeing to arbitration in these rules, the parties undertake to carry out any Award immediately and without any delay (subject only to article 27); and the parties also waive irrevocably their right to any appeal, review or recourse to any state court or other judicial authority, in so far as such waiver may be validly made."
"(1) Unless otherwise agreed by the parties the court may make an order requiring a party to comply with a peremptory order made by the tribunal……
(3) The court shall not act unless it is satisfied that applicant has exhausted any available arbitration process in respect of the failure to comply with the tribunal's order…… "
PRINCIPLES UNDER SECTION 42
"42 Enforcement of peremptory orders of tribunal
(1)Unless otherwise agreed by the parties, the court may make an order requiring a party to comply with a peremptory order made by the tribunal.
(2)An application for an order under this section may be made—
(a)by the tribunal (upon notice to the parties),
(b)by a party to the arbitral proceedings with the permission of the tribunal (and upon notice to the other parties), or
(c)where the parties have agreed that the powers of the court under this section shall be available.
(3)The court shall not act unless it is satisfied that the applicant has exhausted any available arbitral process in respect of failure to comply with the tribunal's order.
(4)No order shall be made under this section unless the court is satisfied that the person to whom the tribunal's order was directed has failed to comply with it within the time prescribed in the order or, if no time was prescribed, within a reasonable time.
(5)The leave of the court is required for any appeal from a decision of the court under this section."
"I shall deal with MWP's challenge to the jurisdiction but I am not persuaded that, even if succeeded, it would undermine the peremptory order. Mr Emmott counterclaims a 33% interest in MWP shares. The Steppe shares must be a major part of the value of those shares and so the peremptory order can be supported as an order in support of that counterclaim. This is reflected in the reasons given by the tribunal for its order made on 26 September:
"This is so whether or not the Respondent's new proprietary claim to 27% of the Claimant's Steppe shareholding is successful."
"59 I also accept, as submitted on behalf of MWP, that section 42 confers a discretion upon the court and that it would be inconsistent with the existence of a discretion that the court should act as a rubber stamp on orders made by the tribunal. However, I do not accept that the court must in every case satisfy itself that the case is a proper one for the order which is sought if by that is meant that the court must review the decision made by the tribunal and consider whether the tribunal ought to have made the order in question. The reasons that I do not accept that submission are as follows:
i) It is inconsistent with general principle (c) in the context of sections 33 and 40 of the Act.
ii) The Act confers on the court limited powers to rehear or review decisions of the tribunal. It would be surprising if a power to rehear or review was hidden within section 42.
iii) It is true that the making of an order under section 42 exposes the party against whom the order is made to being in contempt of court if he breaches the order. But that is the purpose of section 42. It may only be exercised when the arbitral process is exhausted and the party in question has failed to comply with a peremptory order. I am not persuaded that the exposure of that party to being in contempt of court requires the court to rehear or review the arbitrator's decision to grant the peremptory order.
iv) Counsel relied on a passage in Merkin On Arbitration at paragraph 16-25: "……the court has a discretion under s.42 of the 1996 Act whether or not to make an order. Relevant factors will doubtless be the reasonableness of the requirements imposed by the arbitrators' peremptory order, and whether the court takes the view that the problem could be resolved by the arbitrators themselves in their approach to the arbitration" (emphasis added). If this passage is intended to mean that the court will routinely consider whether it would have made the order I do not consider that it is correct.
60 Counsel for MWP referred to the rights of KHI under charging and pledging agreements with MWP and to HSBC's general lien over KHI's property. It was submitted that having regard to those rights the basis upon which the tribunal had concluded that it is within MWP's power to do that which it had been ordered to do by the peremptory order is not apparent. That may be so in the sense that the tribunal has not set out in detail the reasoning which led to the conclusion it reached. But the tribunal clearly stated when making the peremptory order that
"we have taken the view that it has been perfectly within Mr. Wilson's influence or control to bring about a situation in which the Steppe shares are secured as we have directed."
61 Counsel for MWP has submitted that the court should satisfy itself that it is within MWP's control to do that which it has been ordered to do. For the reasons I have given I do not consider that that is appropriate when the tribunal has reached a clear and firm view on that very matter. That is particularly so in circumstances where the tribunal has heard oral evidence from Mr. Wilson and the court has not.
62 In what circumstances then might a court decide not to make an order that a party comply with a peremptory order of the tribunal? In general terms the answer to that question will be where such an order is not required in the interests of justice to assist the proper functioning of the arbitral process; see para.212 of the DAC report. This is not the occasion for a comprehensive list of such circumstances, even assuming it were possible to compile such a list. One example might be where there has been a material change of circumstances after the peremptory order was made. Another might be where the tribunal has not fulfilled its duty to act fairly and impartially between the parties in breach of its general duty to do so. Another might be where the tribunal has made an order which it had no power to make."
CONCLUSION