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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 >> Through Transport Mutual Insurance Association (Eurasia) Ltd. v New India Assurance Co Ltd. [2005] EWHC 455 (Comm) (21 March 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2005/455.html Cite as: [2005] EWHC 455 (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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THROUGH TRANSPORT MUTUAL INSURANCE ASSOCIATION (EURASIA) LTD |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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NEW INDIA ASSURANCE CO LTD |
Defendant |
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Mr. Christopher Smith (instructed by Holmes Hardingham) for the defendant
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr. Justice Moore-Bick:
Jurisdiction
"(1) The parties are free to agree what is to happen in the event of a failure of the procedure for the appointment of the arbitral tribunal. . . . .
(2) If or to the extent that there is no such agreement any party to the arbitration agreement may (upon notice to the other parties) apply to the court to exercise its powers under this section.
(3) Those powers are —
. . . . . . .
(d) to make any necessary appointment itself."
"52. Some of the argument in this appeal proceeded on the footing that the question is whether New India became a party to the agreement to arbitrate contained in clause D2 of the General Provisions in the Club Rules. However, we do not think that that is quite the right question and, as we read his judgment, the judge did not go so far. We accept Mr Smith's submission that New India did not become a party to an arbitration agreement. We agree that self-evidently New India was not an original party and there is no basis upon which it could be held that there was any novation or transfer to New India of the rights and obligations of the insured under the Club Rules. This is in our view important on the question whether it was appropriate to grant an anti-suit injunction discussed below."
"if New India wishes to pursue a claim under the Finnish Act, it is bound to do so by arbitration in England because the Club is entitled to rely upon the arbitration clause, just as it is entitled to rely upon any other clause in the contract to defend the claim."
"64. It seems to us to follow from the conclusions which we have reached so far that the Club is entitled to the first of those declarations. For the reasons given above under the heading 'the arbitration clause', an application of English conflict of laws principles leads to the conclusion that, if New India wishes to pursue a claim under section 67 of the Finnish Act, it must do so in arbitration in London because the Club is entitled to rely upon the arbitration clause in the Club Rules, which are the very rules which New India relies upon in order to make a claim under the Act: see, in the context of the Third Parties (Rights Against Insurers) Act 1930, The Padre Island (No 1)."
"65. It is less clear that the Club is entitled to the second declaration. In our view the Club is not entitled to such a declaration if it means, on its true construction, that New India was in breach of contract in commencing the Kotka proceedings. As indicated in paragraph 52 above, we do not think that New India was in breach of contract. So, for example, the Club could not in our view sue New India for damages for commencing the proceedings in Finland. It seems to us that the declaration could be so construed and for that reason we think it right to set aside that declaration. As we see it, the Club is sufficiently protected by the first declaration and either does not need the second or, if it is construed as just suggested, is not entitled to it."
"92. . . . . . We do not accept Mr Smith's submission that the court should not grant an anti-suit injunction in a case where a party to an arbitration agreement begins proceedings in the courts of a contracting state in breach of an arbitration clause in a contract.
93 That is not, however, this case. We therefore turn finally to Mr Smith's submission that the judge should not have granted an injunction in this case, where the highest that it can be put against New India is that the only reason that it can be said in England that New India should not be permitted to proceed in Finland is that, because of English principles of conflict of laws, the claim is classified as a claim under the contract so that New India is bound to bring any claim against the Club in arbitration in London. Mr Smith submitted that in these circumstances there is no parity of reasoning between this case and the principles relied upon by the judge and set out above.
94 We accept that submission. This claim is brought in Finland under a Finnish statute conferring rights on third parties against liability insurers in circumstances in which the insured is insolvent. The statute was no doubt passed because, as a matter of public policy in Finland, it was thought that liability insurers should be directly liable to third parties who had suffered loss in respect of which the insured was liable. The public policy behind the Finnish Act was the same as or very similar to the public policy behind the Third Parties (Rights Against Insurers) Act 1930. It appears that the only difference of importance between them is that in England the anti-avoidance provision does not defeat the pay to be paid clause, whereas it may be that section 3 of the Finnish Act will do so, although it is right to say that that is a matter yet to be determined by the Finnish courts. It may also be observed that by section 3(3) section 3(1) and (2) do not apply to "marine or transport insurance taken out by businesses". There is, as we understand it, an issue between the parties as to whether the liability insurance provided by the Club is within the exception. The court in Kotka appears to have been of the view that it was not, but was liability insurance outside the exception. However, it is not entirely clear to us whether the court has made a final decision to that effect in its decision on jurisdiction.
95. The question is whether in all the circumstances the English court should grant an injunction restraining New India from bringing its claim under the Finnish Act in Finland. It is always a strong step to take to prevent a person from commencing proceedings in the courts of a contracting state which has jurisdiction to entertain them. The ECJ has either held or in effect held that no such injunction should be granted in the case of an exclusive jurisdiction clause (Gasser) or on the ground that the proceedings are vexatious and oppressive (Turner v Grovit). New India is not in breach of contract in bringing these proceedings in Finland, so that the principles in cases like The Angelic Grace do not apply directly. In this regard we accept Mr Smith's submission that, while such cases may provide some assistance by analogy, they do not apply by parity of reasoning, as the judge thought. None of the cases to which we were referred, including Akai, was considering a case quite like this.
96. Further, this is not a case in which it can fairly be said that the proceedings in Finland are vexatious or oppressive. New India is simply proceeding in Finland under a Finnish statute which gives it the right to do so. The question is whether the English court should restrain it from doing so.
97. Given our view that the principles in the decided cases cannot be applied by parity of reasoning and given the further fact that the judge did not have the assistance of either Gasser or Turner v Grovit, both of which have made an important contribution to the jurisprudence in this area, this court is in our opinion free to form its own conclusion on the question whether to grant an anti-suit injunction on the facts of this case. We have reached the conclusion that, having regard to all the circumstances of the case, including those set out above and the reasoning underlying the approach of the ECJ in Turner v Grovit, this was not a case in which, in the language of section 37(1) of the Supreme Court Act 1981, it was or would be just and convenient to grant an injunction restraining New India from pursuing a claim under the Finnish Act in Finland. "
"Miss Bucknall submits that, even so, there is no right which can be asserted by the timecharterers against the insurance company which gives a cause of action by the former against the latter. She submitted that to recognize any such cause of action would amount to treating the burden of the contract as having been transferred, something which would only occur if there had been a novation. In the present case all that had been transferred was a right of the voyage charterers against the timecharterers. The burden of the contract was not transferred. The insurance company came under no actionable liability to the timecharterers. In my judgment this argument fails to understand the nature of the equitable remedy which is being sought in this action. The simplest way in which to illustrate this is to take a simple analogy. If the assignee of a legal right in action seeks to enforce that right against the debtor without taking into account an equitable set-off which the debtor was entitled to raise against the assignor, the debtor's remedy, prior to the Common Law Procedure Acts and the Judicature Acts of the last century, would have been to apply in the Court of Chancery for an injunction to restrain the assignee from asserting the common law right in the common law courts unless and until he recognized the equitable right of the debtor. The injunction was granted to provide the debtor with the appropriate protection from the unconscionable conduct of the assignee; it does not depend upon any liability of the assignee for the sums to be set-off. The right to apply for an injunction is not a "cause of action" of the same character as the right to sue for damages for breach of contract or tort or to collect a legal debt. It is an application for an equitable remedy to protect the plaintiff against the consequences of unconscionable conduct. Since the fusion of the jurisdiction of the Chancery and Common Law courts, the need of the aggrieved party to apply for an injunction no longer arises and the common injunction has been abolished by statute. He can raise the equity in response to and in the same proceedings as the common law action. However, where the action is brought by the assignee in another jurisdiction which does not recognize the equitable right of the debtor, the debtor's only remedy is (just as it was in the first half of the last century) to apply for an injunction to restrain the assignee from refusing to recognize the equity of the debtor. The present case is such a case. The insurance company is failing to recognize the equitable rights of the timecharterers. The equitable remedy for such an infringement is the grant of an injunction. "
"Miss Bucknall argued that, because WAV were not parties to the sub-charterparty and because the subrogation which entitled WAV to sue on Voest's contractual causes of action did not constitute a novation under which WAV became a party to the sub-charterparty, WAV were not bound by the arbitration agreement. The premises on which this argument is based are correct but the conclusion drawn therefrom is not. WAV is bound by the arbitration agreement not because there is any privity of contract between WAV and DVA but because Voest's contractual rights under the sub-charterparty, to the benefit of which WAV has become entitled by subrogation, are subject to the arbitration agreement which, too, is part of the sub-charterparty. WAV cannot enforce those contractual rights without accepting the contractual burden, in the form of the arbitration agreement to which those rights are subject (c/f Halsall v Brizell [1957] Ch. 169 and Tito v Waddell (No. 2) [1977] Ch. 106 at p. 309). WAV is, through subrogation, an assignee from Voest of Voest's contractual rights against DVA. DVA is contractually entitled, whether as against Voest or any assignee from Voest, to require the enforcement of those rights to be pursued by arbitration. WAV's attempt to enforce those rights otherwise than by arbitration is a breach of DVA's contractual entitlement. I agree with Lord Justice Hobhouse that DVA's remedy is, prima facie, the grant of an injunction to restrain the attempt."
"But the plaintiff in the Brazilian proceedings and the relevant defendant in the present action is the insurance company. The insurance company has made no contract with the timecharterers. The insurance company is the assignee or the transferee of the rights of the voyage charterers against the timecharterers. It is submitted on behalf of the insurance company that as a result the insurance company is entitled to enforce the voyage charterers' contractual rights without any obligation to refer the dispute to arbitration. This submission is unsound and contrary to decided authority.
The proper law which governs the voyage charterparty and the contractual rights which the insurance company is seeking to enforce in Brazil is English law. Under s.136 of the Law of Property Act 1925 rights of action are assignable subject to equities, for example, rights of equitable set-off. (Lawrence v Hayes [1927] 2 KB 111) Similarly under s.4 of the Arbitration Act 1950 and s.1 of the Arbitration Act 1975 the stay of an action may be ordered on the application not only of the contracting party but also "any person claiming through or under him". (The position is the same under the 1996 Act: see s.82(2).) An example of such a stay being granted against an assignee is The Leage [1984] 2 Lloyds 259. The assignee takes the assigned right with both the benefit and the burden of the arbitration clause. (Aspel v Seymour [1929] WN 152; Shayler v Woolf [1946] 1 Ch 320 not following the dicta in Cottage Club Estates v Woodside Estates [1928] 2 KB 463) In the Padre Island (No 1) [1984] 2 Lloyds 408, Leggatt J. held that the transferee under the Third Parties (Rights against Insurers) Act 1930 of an insolvent assured's rights against his insurer, a P & I Club, was bound by the arbitration clause:
"The 1930 Act transfers to the plaintiffs not the claim but the contractual rights of the insured. Those contractual rights are subject to the arbitration clause ...." (p.414)
In the Padre Island (No.2) [1990] 2 Lloyds 191 at 200 Lord Goff said:
"The agreement to arbitrate is one which regulates the means by which the transferred right is to be enforced against the Club. As such, it is inevitable that such an agreement must be treated as transferred to the statutory transferee as part of, or as inseparably connected with, the member's right against the Club under the rules in respect of the relevant liability."
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
These authorities confirm that the rights which the insurance company has acquired are rights which are subject to the arbitration clause. The insurance company has the right to refer the claim to arbitration, obtain if it can an award in its favour from the arbitrators, and enforce the obligation of the timecharterers to pay that award. Likewise, the insurance company is not entitled to assert its claim inconsistently with the terms of the contract. One of the terms of the contract is that, in the event of dispute, the claim must be referred to arbitration. The insurance company is not entitled to enforce its right without also recognising the obligation to arbitrate."
". . . . . hereby assign and transfer to the above underwriters any and all recovery and redress rights, grounds of action and recourses of any nature whatsoever arising out of the damages and losses sustained by the above referred cargo . . . . .",
but Hobhouse L.J. did not draw any distinction between the position of an assignee and that of a transferee of some other kind. Rather, his reasoning was based on the nature of the rights acquired by the insurers and the extent to which they could be exercised independently of other terms in the contract under which they arose. In my view the decision in this case is authority for the proposition that a person who obtains by an assignment or transfer of some other kind the right to pursue a claim under a contract can only enforce that right in accordance with the terms of the contract and subject to any restrictions or limitations which those terms may impose. In other words, what he obtains is a chose in action whose precise scope is determined by the contract under which it arises and which is inherently subject to certain incidents, in this case a requirement that it be enforced by arbitration. It is interesting to note that Lord Goff in The Padre Island (No. 2) and Sir Richard Scott V.-C. and Hobhouse L.J. in The Jay Bola all speak in terms that suggest that an assignee of rights under the contract is bound by the arbitration agreement as a whole with the result that he both obtains the benefits of the agreement and is subject to its burdens.
"If any difference or dispute shall arise between you (or any other person) and the Association out of or in connection with any insurance provided by the Association or any application for or an offer of insurance, it shall be referred to arbitration in London."
As one would expect, it provides not simply for any claim under the Rules to be made in arbitration, but for any differences or disputes between the insured and the Club to be referred to arbitration. The clause imposes a limitation on the chose in action represented by the insured's rights against the Club by regulating the manner in which they may be enforced. It follows, therefore, from the decision in the Jay Bola that any dispute between New India and the Club in relation to the enforceability of those rights is one that is capable of being referred to arbitration.
Discretion