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England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Klockner Holdings GmbH & Anor v Klockner Beteiligungs GmbH [2005] EWHC 1453 (Comm) (08 July 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2005/1453.html Cite as: [2005] EWHC 1453 (Comm) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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1) KLÖCKNER HOLDINGS GmbH 2) BALLI GROUP PLC |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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KLÖCKNER BETEILIGUNGS GmbH |
Defendant |
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Mr Tom Beazley QC and Mr Brian Kennelly (instructed by Messrs Pritchard Englefield) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 8th April 2005 (further written submissions 13-18 April 2005)
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Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Gloster, DBE:
i) Holdings' shares in Klöckner would be transferred to WestLB and another lender in lieu of payment under the Facility Agreement; however, that transfer would not take place for two months; the Claimants were to seek refinancing during this period and in the event of payment by Holdings the transfer provisions would become null and void;
ii) the claims against the Third to Seventh Defendants were to be discontinued and all claims between the Claimants and the Third to Seventh Defendants (amongst others) were fully and finally settled;
iii) a "litigation cap" was put in place in relation to the enforcement by the Claimants of any judgment against the First and Second Defendants, who remained parties to the litigation.
i) Atlantic, having been ordered to provide security for costs, served notice of discontinuance of its claims (with the ultimate result that the Counterclaim was also discontinued);
ii) Balli and Holdings entered into a settlement with the Third to Seventh Defendants and those Defendants ceased to be involved in the action;
iii) the Claimants materially amended and altered their claim;
i) In January 2002, WestLB decided, unbeknownst to Holdings, to attempt to seize control of Klöckner. WestLB considered that the Holdings had made an unusually good deal and that WestLB should transfer to itself that economic advantage.
ii) WestLB therefore engineered a situation in which Holdings would be forced to default under the Facility Agreement. In particular WestLB procured the appointment of Droege Comp Internationale Unternehmung Beratung GmbH (a consultancy firm with which it had it now appears a long standing and close relationship) ("Droege") as "independent" trustee under the Restructuring Agreement. It is further alleged that, unbeknownst to Holdings:
a) On 6 February 2002, WestLB had entered into a secret loan agreement with Mr Droege and/or with his investment firm Deutsche Investors Capital Holdings AG ("DIC"), to provide a loan for the acquisition of up to 50% of the shares in Klöckner. In the event that the acquisition took place, WestLB was to participate up to 35% in DIC.
b) WestLB and Mr Droege planned to implement a strategy they had deployed before under which WestLB would install Mr Droege's company as consultant to its customers, and, as well as providing consulting services to the customer, Mr Droege would acquire a stake in it.
c) Following the appointment of Droege GmbH as trustee Holdings was cut off from Klöckner and in particular lost access to its liquid funds which it intended to use to repay the loan facility. Thus it was only a question of time before Holdings defaulted under the Facility Agreement. Further, WestLB, Droege GmbH, Mr Droege and Mr Noe took various steps in pursuit of their own interests, with the result that Holdings had to acquiesce to WestLB's demands to agree to the Transfer Agreement and Settlement Agreement, thus losing its shares in Klöckner.
i) by its express or implied terms the Settlement Agreement fails if the Transfer Agreement is void.
ii) there was a total failure of consideration.
iii) Holdings entered into the Settlement Agreement under a mistaken belief that the transfer of the shares would be valid. The Claimants anticipate that the new English proceedings will be stayed pursuant to Article 28 of Regulation 44/2001 in favour of the German proceedings and will be very quickly resolved after judgment has been handed down in the German proceedings.
i) If the claims in the German proceedings were to succeed, Holdings would gain ownership of 94.5% of Klöckner, and in that event these proceedings would be otiose, since there would be no point in Holdings suing its own subsidiary.
ii) If the three agreements have been validly avoided, the Claimants' claim for losses suffered because of the transfer of the shares and the settlement with the Third to Seventh Defendants will not arise.
iii) Klöckner has alleged that the effect of the litigation cap is to render these proceedings pointless. The Claimants dispute this. However, if Klöckner were correct, it is crucial that the validity of the litigation cap be determined before these proceedings continue.
iv) If this claim were to continue:
a) this court, in order to determine quantum, would have to resolve issues of German law to determine whether the restructuring and Transfer Agreements are void. The German courts are seised of these issues, and to require them to be litigated twice would increase costs unnecessarily and lead to a risk of inconsistent judgments;
b) this court would have to resolve the question whether the Settlement Agreement is void. Klöckner is not a party to this agreement. This court may wish to consider consolidating this action with the separate claim in relation to the Settlement Agreement, a claim that should clearly be stayed under Article 28 of Regulation 44/2001.
v) The new evidence obtained by Holdings fundamentally changes the nature of this action. A substantial part of the Claimants' damages claim is premised on the validity of the agreements which are being challenged in Germany and before this court, and it is undesirable for the validity issues to be determined in this action.
i) whether Klöckner, by Mr Noe, made or instigated the alleged misrepresentations;
ii) whether Klöckner had the relevant intention alleged, and knew that the representations were false;
iii) whether the alleged misrepresentations were indeed false;
iv) whether, because of the alleged misrepresentations, Deutsche Bank decided not to enter into the DB contract and accordingly the refinancing negotiations failed;
He submitted that there was no reason or basis for the determination of the Misrepresentation Issues to await the outcome of the new German and English proceedings.
i) The court has a wide discretion to stay proceedings, but in circumstances where the claimant itself has voluntarily brought the two sets of proceedings, a stay should only be granted in very rare circumstances: see Ledra Fishers v Turner [2003] EWHC 1049 Ch, paragraphs 14 and 38; Reichhold Norway ASA v Goldman Sachs [2000] 1 WLR 173 at pp 179-180.
ii) Even where there are such reasons for a stay, a stay should only be granted if the benefits of doing so clearly outweigh any disadvantage to the other party (Reichhold, page 180).
iii) A particularly compelling case would be required for a stay to be granted to the Claimant years after he has brought the claim (Ledra para 39).
iv) A stay will not, at least in general, be appropriate if the other proceedings will not even bind the parties to the action stayed, let alone finally resolve all the issues in the case to be stayed.
v) A stay will not, at least in general, be appropriate if the parties to the other proceedings are not the same.
vi) A Defendant against whom a serious allegation (such as deceit) is made is entitled to an expeditious hearing, and should not be left for years waiting for the outcome of another case over which he (and the Court) has no control. An action alleging fraud should come to trial quickly; thus unwarranted delay may lead to an action being dismissed for want of prosecution even before the limitation period has expired: e.g. Clerk & Lindsell on Torts (18th ed., 2003) 15-38, Yiannides v Radley Gowns Ltd (1975) 119 SJ 711, the overriding objective (CPR 1.1, 1.2 and 1.4(2)(l)) and Article 6 of the ECHR.