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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 >> Harper Versicherungs AG v Indemnity Marine Assurance Company Ltd & Ors [2006] EWHC 1500 (Comm) (23 June 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2006/1500.html Cite as: [2006] EWHC 1500 (Comm), [2006] ArbLR 36 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
Harper Versicherungs AG (Also known as Harper Insurance Limited and formerly known as Turegum Versicherungsgesellschaft and Turegum Insurance Company) - and - (1) Indemnity Marine Assurance Company Limited (2) London & Scottish Assurance Corporation Limited (3) Ocean Marine Insurance Company Limited |
Claimant Defendants |
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And |
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River Thames Insurance Company Limited - and- (1) Indemnity Marine Assurance Company Limited (2) London & Scottish Assurance Corporation Limited (3) Ocean Marine Insurance Company Limited |
Claimant Defendants |
____________________
S. J. Phillips (instructed by Messrs Waltons & Morse) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 26 January and 10 March 2006
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr. Justice Tomlinson:
"This Reinsurance is a Permanent Contract and is to take all business as may be declared by the Reinsured on any interest whatsoever as per Treaty Wording.
The Reinsurers agree to accept all business as may be declared by the Reinsured on any Interest whatsoever, subject to the limits and terms as under.
i) it is understood and agreed that cessions hereunder will include business regarded by the Reinsured as Incidental Marine and/or business classified by Lloyds as dual Market Business and may be of non-marine and/or marine and/or Aviation character. Treaties may be included hereunder subject to special agreement.
ii) …
iii) this Agreement is a permanent contract in respect of cessions allocated by the Reinsured to Contract "BW65" or appropriate designation for subsequent years and shall continue until terminated by either party given in writing three months notice of cancellation, all cessions allocated to this contract prior to the date of cancellation shall continue until their natural expiry…
iv) …
xvi) Disputes arising between the Reinsured and Reinsurers with respect to this Contract shall be referred to two arbitrators (one arbitrator to be appointed by each party) and an Umpire, who shall be appointed by the arbitrators before entering upon the reference. The award of the arbitrators, or the Umpire, as the case may be, shall be final and binding upon all parties without appeal. This Contract shall be interpreted rather as an honourable engagement than as a legal obligation and the award shall be made with a view to effecting the general purpose of this Contract rather than in accordance with the literal interpretation of its language. The Arbitrators and the Umpire may abstain from judicial formality and from following strictly the rules of law. Except as herein before provided, the terms of the Arbitration Act for the time being enforce shall apply to the arbitration. Arbitration is to take place in London."
"Further to your letter dated 18th February 2005 we acknowledge your desire to undertake an inspection of the underwriting and claims records relating to the above mentioned treaty between 1965 and 1968.
Currently we have substantial balances owed from the Castlewood entities on this treaty and having read the wording the reinsurance treaty does not include an inspection of records clause. We therefore assume that you are relying on an implied right to inspect. With this in mind please can you supply us with your reasons for requesting the inspection especially considering the age of the treaty."
"The Scheme will have the effect of transferring all the Subsidiaries general insurance business including those assets and policies relating to reinsurance to Ocean Marine. The only change from a reinsurers perspective will be that from the effective date the Subsidiaries' reinsurance covers will be provided to Ocean Marine. Following the Scheme, we will make any necessary administrative changes and settlements would continue to be made in the usual way.
We should be grateful if you would acknowledge receipt of this letter and indicate that you have no objections to our proposals by signing and returning the enclosed copy of this letter using the stamped address envelope provided by 16 January 2004."
After chasers the notice was returned by Mr. Alan Turner of Castlewood duly signed on behalf of River Thames. In so doing Mr. Turner described himself as Chief Executive of River Thames.
"Bland Welch Treaty Ref: 5899027
Reinsured: Indemnity Marine Assurance Company Limited And/Or London & Scottish Assurance Corporation Limited
Turegum Versicherungsgesellschaft (Years: 1965 To 1968)
River Thames Insurance Company Limited (Years: 1996 To 1998)
We refer to our conversation just now (Purssell/Berry) and are grateful to you for accepting an appointment as arbitrator on behalf of our clients, Indemnity Marine Assurance Company Limited and London & Scottish Assurance Corporation Limited. The reference is commenced under the above referenced Treaty against Turegum Versicherungsgesellschaft and River Thames Insurance Company Limited to recover all sums currently due and owing to our clients.
In this regard, a copy of the Treaty wording is enclosed for your records."
"Bland Welch Treaty Ref: 5899027
Reinsured: Indemnity Marine Assurance Company Limited And/Or London & Scottish Assurance Corporation Limited
Years: 1965 To 1968 (Turegum) And 1966 To 1968 (River Thames)
We have been instructed on behalf of Indemnity Marine Assurance Company Limited and London & Scottish Assurance Corporation Limited to commence arbitration proceedings against you to collect all balances currently due to them under the Bland Welch Treaty reference above.
In this regard, we attach a copy of our letter to Tony Berry confirming his appointment as arbitrator on behalf of our clients pursuant to Clause 16 of the Treaty wording. Please now appoint your arbitrator within 14 days in accordance with Section 16 (6) of the Arbitration Act 1996."
"Bland Welch Treaty Ref: 5899027
Reinsured: Indemnity Marine Assurance Company Limited And/Or London & Scottish Assurance Corporation Limited
Years: 1965 To 1968 (Turegum) And 1966 To 1968 (River Thames)
We represent Harper Insurance Limited (formerly known as Turegum Insurance Company – "Harper") and River Thames Insurance Company Limited ("River Thames") and refer to your correspondence of 27 May 2005. We respond to the abovementioned correspondence on behalf of both companies merely for the sake of convenience.
In your abovementioned letter, you purport, on behalf of your clients, to commence arbitration proceedings against Harper and River Thames for balances allegedly due under the above captioned treaty.
We consider your Notice of Arbitration to be defective on a number of grounds:
1. You attach a copy of a "Memorandum of Reinsurance effected by Bland, Welch & Co Ltd …" dated February 1965. The document is not signed and in the absence of production of a wording signed by Harper, we cannot accept that you have established the existence of an arbitration agreement.
2. The document as described in 1 above does not relate to business in which River Thames participated. You provide no wordings relating to River Thames, signed or otherwise. Again, your clients have failed to establish the existence of an arbitration agreement with River Thames.
3. Your Notice of Arbitration purports to commence proceedings against both Harper and River Thames. Even if one ignores the fact that you have failed to demonstrate arbitral jurisdiction in relation to either company, it is a fact that River Thames did not assume any risk in relation to the 1965 year of account. Even if there were arbitration proceedings between the parties, the claimant/s is/are not at liberty to assume that parties to any proceedings will agree to a request to have such proceedings consolidated. Such consolidation may be achieved only by agreement between the parties.
As a separate issue, we find your clients' decision to commence arbitration proceedings entirely misplaced and premature. Our respective clients have been in discussions in relation to the alleged balances. Our clients have explained both in correspondence, as well as in a recent meeting, the reasons for which such balances have not been agreed. Our clients have further furnished your clients with repeated requests for documents necessary for them to review and establish their liability, if any. More importantly, our clients have requested that they be allowed to carry out an inspection, which they hope will assist in progressing matters. Your clients' responses to such requests have neither been forthcoming nor indeed in the spirit of co-operation or willingness to move this matter to resolution.
In light of the above:
1. We invite your clients either to provide evidence that arbitration agreements exist or to accept that a dispute must be determined by the courts:
2. In the light of the foregoing, you will appreciate that our clients consider that Mr. Berry has not been validly appointed and has no jurisdiction to enter into arbitration in relation to the matters under discussion."
"BLAND WELCH TREATY ARBITRATION
1. We refer to your faxed letter of 10th June.
Litigation?
2. We note your invitation to our clients either to evidence the existence of arbitration agreements between our clients and Harper Insurance Limited (Formerly Turegum Versicherungsgesellschaft) for the years 1965 to 1968 on the one hand and River Thames Insurance Company Ltd for the years 1966 to 1968 on the other or to accept that the disputes should be determined by the courts.
3. It is our view that there are undoubtedly binding arbitration agreements as between the parties as outlined above (which incidentally need only be in writing, with no requirement for signature). However, to be absolutely clear, is it your principals' position that these disputes should be determined by the courts? If so, our clients would be happy to proceed in that forum provided that your principals do not then seek to challenge the court's jurisdiction on the basis of the arbitration agreements. Please could you clarify their position?
4. If they are content to proceed in litigation, please could Harper/Turegum confirm that proceedings served on either or both companies by sending the same by first class post to 1 Stoke Road, Guildford will constitute good service or otherwise please advise whether they are prepared to appoint solicitors to accept service?
Arbitration?
5. If your clients are not prepared to agree that the disputes should be resolved by the courts then please accept this fax as notice requiring your principals to appoint their arbitrator within 7 clear days, failing which we will proceed to appoint Mr Berry as sole arbitrator pursuant to Section 17 of the Arbitration Act 1996. In this eventuality, we will be asking Mr Berry to treat each reference as separate and distinct.
6. If, on the other hand, you do not nominate your principals' arbitrator within the above timeframe, please could you advise whether they are willing to proceed on the basis of consolidating references? The case for this in terms of efficiency and economy is overwhelming.
7. Our clients reserve the right to produce a copy of this correspondence to the court or Tribunal, as appropriate."
"Bland Welch & Co Limited Treaty Ref 5899027
Reinsured: Indemnity Marine Assurance Company Limited And/Or London & Scottish Assurance Corporation Limited
Years: 1965 To 1968 (Turegum) And 1966 To 1968 (River Thames)
We refer to your letter of 20 June 2005,
As stated in our letter of 10June, our clients consider the commencement of any form of litigation entirely misplaced and premature in the light of your clients' failure to deal with enquiries and requests for inspection. Please advise by return whether your clients will now respond fully to the requests our clients have made so that the matter can be dealt with in a fully informed and proper manner.
Our clients' position is that they do not accept that your client has commenced a valid arbitration in the absence of evidence that an agreement to arbitrate has been concluded with either of our clients. You merely assert "that there are undoubtedly binding arbitration agreements as between the parties", in circumstances where we have clearly put the purported existence of such agreements in issue. Please produce the evidence to support your assertions.
If you fail to establish that arbitration agreements exist, it follows that the purported arbitrations are invalid and that Mr Berry has not been validity appointed. Consequently, he cannot be appointed as sole arbitrator. What other steps or form of litigation your clients may instruct you to take is a matter for them.
Pending a full answer to the matters raised above – which were also raised in our letter of 10 June, 2005 – our clients' position remain fully reserved."
"BLAND WELCH TREATY ARBITRATION
We refer to your letter of 24th June and note that you have failed to respond substantively to our fax of 20th June.
It is insufficient merely to say that you have "put the purported existence of such [arbitration] agreements in issue". Either there are or there are not, arbitration agreements in force between our respective clients/principals. Your principals have paid claims under agreements in writing containing an arbitration clause for the best part of 40 years. It cannot sensibly therefore be suggested that there are no binding arbitration agreements (which need only be in writing or evidenced in writing, not necessarily signed). Nevertheless, in your letter of 10th June you invited our client to have the dispute(s) determined by the courts, whilst stating that Mr. Berry had no jurisdiction in this matter as arbitrator.
If your clients genuinely believed that there are no arbitration agreements in place, the proper approach is nevertheless to appoint an arbitrator or arbitrators under reservation(s) of the rights and then make an application to the tribunal to determine its own jurisdiction under Section 30 of the Arbitration Act 1996.
Our clients are not prepared to tolerate any further prevarication on your part. Please therefore let us know your principals' position on the following: -
1. Are they prepared to abide by the terms of the arbitration agreement(s)?
2. If so, will they now appoint their arbitrator?
3. Alternatively, do they agree to have the disputes determined by the courts?
4. If they prefer (or require) the claims to be brought in litigation, do they undertake not to try to challenge the court's jurisdiction on the basis of the existence of arbitration agreements?
5. If their preference/requirement is for litigation, are your clients willing to nominate solicitors to accept service of proceedings on their behalf?
These questions invite "yes" or "no" answers, except for number 5, which requires elaboration if the answer is "yes". Please note that clear and unequivocal answers are required to the above questions within 7 days of the date of this fax. If no, or no satisfactory answers are received within that timeframe, our clients reserve the right to proceed as they see fit. To be clear, their options include (but are not necessarily limited to) appointing Mr. Berry to proceed as sole arbitrator (unless, of course, your clients have nominated their arbitrator, whether under a reservation of rights or otherwise) or to accept your principals' repudiation of the arbitration agreement(s) and/or to accept their invitation to proceed with the litigation.
We continue to reserve the right to produce these exchanges to the court or tribunal, as we see fit.
We have shown a copy of your letter of 24th June to our clients. Insofar as you assert that the commencement of arbitration is premature, our client's Richard Chilvers has prepared a response, a copy of which is attached."
"With reference to your letter to Waltons & Morse of 24th June 2005, a copy of which has been passed to me.
We would like to address your suggestion that your clients "consider the commencement of any form of litigation to be entirely misplaced and premature in the light of your clients' failure to deal with enquiries and requests for inspection".
As a background our Treaty accounts up to 1st Half Year 2004 were submitted to CMGL in September 2004. We were advised by CMGL in late October that although they could have agreed these the sale to Castlewood had just been announced and their authorities withdrawn. In spite of various telephone conversations and E-mails to Martin Wynn at Castlewood in November/December and thereafter with James Linford requesting agreement, it was not until 18th February 2005 that a letter was sent to us requesting an inspection. In the meantime we had answered all queries raised by Kinsale in December 2004 in respect of the River Thames involvement on this contract.
Although, as we pointed out in our letter of 21st February 2005, the contract wording does not include an inspection of records clause, we indicated that we would be prepared to allow an inspection on receipt of settlement of the outstanding balances (which by this stage, as detailed above, were already long overdue) subject to a full reservation of rights. As matters did not progress, we requested a meeting with Alan Turner in April in order to try to move things forward amicably and reiterated our offer. In spite of his indication to the contrary Alan then responded on 29th April by saying that no settlement could be made prior to inspection. It was only after we advised Alan that in view of the fact that Castlewood seemed to have no intention of settling these valid claims we would, regrettably, have to resort to legal means to recover the amounts due that he was "prepared to consider" making a token offer of less than 15% of the outstanding debts.
At this stage, after various request, we had received some detail of the information which Castlewood were seeking to obtain from their inspection. We pointed out various articles in the wording of the contract (supplied on their request) which indicated that they were not entitled to this information. Notwithstanding this, we committed to endeavour to supply the detailed information they required for future quarters presentation, once settlements were brought up to date. This was also refused. We did not address any of the other questions relating to the placement of contracts, which of course have been running for 40 years and which Castlewood themselves had been settling on behalf of River Thames, as they were not entitled to this and we also saw this as yet another method of delaying settlement. We were confident, from our experience of Castlewood's actions in the past, that answers to these questions would simply have been followed up with a list of further questions in order to further delay.
We therefore feel that this demonstrates clearly that our actions were in no means premature. We made it perfectly clear throughout that we were prepared, if reluctant, to take legal action if Castlewood continued to delay settlement. We also tried throughout to avoid going down the legal route but felt that we were given no alternative as your clients seemed intent on delaying/avoiding settlement."
"We refer to yours and Mr Chilvers' letters of 30 June 2005. We respond to your correspondence on behalf of both our clients, again, for the sake of convenience.
We reiterate our view that your clients' instructions to commence arbitration are entirely premature and misplaced.
We are obviously aware of the events set out in Mr Chilvers' letter, although we wish to state that our clients do not entirely agree with his version of events and that prior to receiving the notice of arbitration on 31 May believed that our respective clients would be able to reach a satisfactory outcome to this matter. Mr Chilvers argues that the treaty wording does not include a right to inspection. Regardless of the treaty wording (whether or not it was agreed), our clients have a right of inspection under common law. We believe that your client has wrongly denied our clients the right to inspection. If your client were willing to allow a proper inspection, beyond the unsigned copy of the alleged treaty wording, it is unlikely that there would be any need for any further recourse to either a tribunal or the Courts.
You will appreciate that there is a serious issue here as to whether it was permissible to cede non-marine risks to what was clearly a marine treaty. Both the slip and all statements submitted indicate that the treaty was in respect of marine cargo business. One concern is whether the Price Forbes lineslip has been ceded properly or at all so as to entitle your client to claim losses in their entirety thereunder regardless of whether they were pure non-marine losses and/or went beyond incidental non-marine losses. Our clients have seen no evidence that wordings were agreed which in any way altered the marine cargo nature of the treaty. They would like to establish the position by reference to all available documents, whether this be part of the normal claims adjusting process, via an inspection or via litigation/arbitration. Whichever route is taken, your client must understand that the provision of this information is of paramount importance to this issue.
We reiterate our clients' request for inspection, which, we have no doubt, any tribunal or Court would consider us entitled to.
In any case, we repeat our position that your client has not commenced a valid arbitration. You state that you rely on the terms of the treaty wording, which has been provided to us, is unsigned, you point out that there is no necessity for an arbitration agreement to be signed. However, there still needs to be an agreement and we have seen no evidence that our clients were aware of the treaty wording, let alone agreed to it. We await evidence from you to prove that there is an effective agreement to arbitrate before we accept the validity of the appointment of Mr Berry as arbitrator.
We are under no obligation to respond to the questions set out in your letter, which frankly cannot be answered until you clients produce the documents which our clients have asked me to see, and do not intend to do so until our client's requests and queries have been satisfactorily answered."
"…
Resolution of Current Dispute
We wish to clarify our clients' position with regard to the above treaty. Our clients have not contended that they are not party to the relevant slips attached to your letter to Mr Tony Berry of 21 July 2005, although the extent of their liability under such slips is, of course, in dispute and as our clients have yet to be given sufficient information to enable them to ascertain this liability or to adjust claims under those slips, their position is fully reserved. Indeed, our clients have been paying claims pursuant to those slips for almost four decades.
What your clients have failed to establish is the existence of an agreed treaty wording containing a valid arbitration clause. Notwithstanding numerous requests, your clients have failed to provide any evidence that the unsigned wording upon which you purported to rely in support of the commencement of arbitration was either agreed or even acknowledged by our clients. Absent such confirmation, our clients do not consider themselves bound by the arbitration clause, by the purported commencement of arbitration or by the purported appointment of Mr Berry. This letter is copied to Mr Berry only as a matter of courtesy and on the basis that he is included in the communication without prejudice to our clients' previously stated positions.
That said, it is clear that there is now a dispute between our clients exacerbated by your clients' decision purportedly to commence arbitration proceedings without allowing our clients access to their books and records or to the information that our clients have reasonably requested to enable them to properly review the claims at issue. We maintain that such a dispute can and should be resolved by way of discussion and agreement between the parties. If your clients insist upon a litigious approach, however, we see no option but for them to commence court proceedings. It will no doubt be obvious from our comments above that our clients will not be seeking to argue that the Court proceedings should be stayed pending arbitration, as they have consistently maintained there is no agreement to arbitrate. However, for the avoidance of doubt, we confirm that if your clients do commence proceedings against our clients in the High Court of England and Wales, they will not object to the same grounds of jurisdiction regardless of any subsequent argument, submission or determination regarding the applicability of any treaty wording in respect of which our clients' rights are fully reserved. We confirm that should your clients choose to proceed to court, the undersigned is authorised to accept service on their behalves.
Finally, our clients continue to consider your client's purported commencement of arbitration to be wholly premature and inappropriate. Regardless of the outcome of any subsequent court proceedings, our clients refuse to be responsible for any of the costs incurred by your clients in purportedly commencing such arbitration proceedings, including the fees of Mr Berry.
…
Finally, for the avoidance of doubt, we write this letter on behalf of both River Thames Insurance Company Ltd and Harper Insurance Ltd for the sake of convenience and without prejudice to each company's position that the claims against them are entirely separate and should be treated as such. This has been our clients' position from the outset."
"Claimant (Reinsured): Indemnity Marine Assurance Company Limited and/or Scottish Assurance Corporation Limited
Respondent: (1) River Thames Insurance Company Limited ("River Thames") (1996 to 1968) and (2) Harper Versicherungs AG ("Harper") (1965 to 1968)
We refer to our earlier correspondence on this matter.
Since receiving the decision of Mr Berry of 5th August 2005, our clients have undertaken a further review of their books and records in a final attempt to locate any evidence to establish that the wording provided by your client is, indeed, the correct treaty wording. They have, in the last few days, found one further bundle of documents in a deep archive of papers kept by Harper (formerly Turegum). Our clients only purchased Harper in the last year and were previously unaware of these further files of papers.
As you will see from the attached document, included in this file of papers is a treaty wording for the 1965 policy year signed (in 1968) by Harper. This is the first time that our clients have been able to establish the existence of an agreed treaty wording, your clients having failed, hitherto, to provide any evidence that such a wording was agreed. It is to be noted that this treaty wording is only for one of the three relevant policy years, and that there is no evidence that the wording was ever agreed by River Thames. Notwithstanding this, our clients accept that the decision of Mr Berry as to the applicability of the treaty wording and his own jurisdiction is correct and they will not challenge the same on behalf of either Harper or River Thames.
We must now move to the substance of the underlying dispute. We understand that you are in the process of settling with Counsel Points of Claim in the arbitrations. It would be helpful at this stage if you would indicate what claims are to be subject to arbitration as, in view of the likely defences to be raised by our clients, there is likely to be the need for substantial disclosure. It would be helpful if this is addressed sooner rather than later in order that we can consider, in light of the list of claims, what disclosure is likely to be necessary.
We look forward to hearing from you."
"Following service of our clients' Point of Claim on Wednesday 31st August 2005, our clients have provided us with copies of their letter to the broker (Marsh Limited) and latest statements of account in respect of the Bland Welch Treaty for the period from 1st January 2005 to 30 June 2005.
We have asked the broker to provide us with a copy of the Treaty Statement (which is customarily provided by the broker to your clients) which we shall forward to you so that you have details of the amounts involved.
Pending receipt of and production to you of the copy of Treaty Statement, we consider that the best approach would be for the parties to agree that the sums mentioned in our clients' Points of Claim are deemed amended so as to include the sums which are the subject of the latest Treaty Statements/Collections from your clients, thereby removing the need for us to formally amend the Points of Claim and incur further costs.
We should be grateful if you would confirm your agreement to our suggestion."
"I refer to the extensive correspondence between the parties, for which I thank them, and the application of Waltons & Morse to add and/or substitute Ocean Marine as Claimants in this action. I have reviewed the correspondence and submissions made by each side.
In my view, the issue is one of form rather than substance. For the following reasons, I grant the application made by Waltons & Morse to substitute Ocean Marine Insurance Company Limited as Claimants in this arbitration.
1. The spirit of the honourable engagements clause in the treaty wording is to avoid delay of the resolution of the matter caused by a technicality un-related to the issues in dispute. I consider the intention was to bring a claim for balances due under the treaty. It is clear that neither party was aware of the part VII transfer of insurance business to Ocean Marine in the first instance and in these circumstances, the commencement of the proceedings in the names of Indemnity Marine Assurance Company limited and London & Scottish Assurance Company Limited was an oversight.
2. Neither party has been able to demonstrate that they will suffer prejudice as a result of the substitution of Ocean Marine for the current claimants.
In these circumstances, I am satisfied that the appropriate course of action to take is to allow the application to substitute Ocean Marine as Claimants in this action."
"It is common ground between the parties and their German law experts, that the merger between Old Aachener Re and AMB was a transfer, under the German Transformation Statute 1994, by universal succession, of all assets and liabilities of the transferor entity (Old Aachener Re) to the transferee entity (AMB); that such universal succession transferred all assets and obligations in one legal act, by operation of law, with the result that the transferee entity, AMB, became party to all the agreements concluded by Old Aachener Re, the transferor entity, without requiring any participation by the transferor entity's creditors or counter-parties and became responsible for all of Old Aachener Re's liabilities; that all creditors of Old Aachener Re automatically became creditors of AMB as the transferee entity; that upon the merger, Old Aachener Re ceased to exist as a separate corporate entity, without liquidation, with its shareholders ceasing to have any rights in Old Aachener Re and having, in return, corresponding rights in AMB."
It so happens also that, before the arbitration was there commenced, Old Aachener Re was in fact dissolved and ceased to exist as a separate entity.
i) The transferors remained in existence.
ii) The transferors retained certain residual assets.
iii) The transferors kept certain excluded policies.
iv) The transferors kept certain residual liabilities.
v) The transferors retained certain untransferred outward reinsurances in their favour.
It is also the case that the transferors entered into or it was anticipated that they would enter into an excluded policies reinsurance agreement with Ocean Marine. However it seems to me that none of these points of distinction are of any relevance to the manner in which the question with which I am now concerned was approached by either Gloster J or the Court of Appeal in the SEB Trygg case. Gloster J said this, at paragraphs 24-26 and 34 of her judgment, at pages 138-139 and 141: -
"Para 24. The question which arises under this head is, simply stated, what was the identity of the corporate entity which Manches, the solicitors then acting, intended should be a claimant in the arbitration proceedings? Did Manches simply get the name wrong, because they did not know about the merger, or Old Aachener Re's dissolution, or could it be said that their mistake was not merely the use of a wrong name, or a "misnomer", but evinced a more fundamental error, that is to say an intention to bring the proceedings by a wrong claimant, which was no longer in existence. If the case was one of mere "misnomer", then the authorities showed that the position can be corrected by simply amending the name of the parties of the proceedings, which are nonetheless validly constituted; on the other hand, if the intention was in fact to bring the proceedings on behalf of a wrong party, then the proceedings are indeed a nullity.
Para 25. Thus where proceedings are begun in the name of a non-existent company, they are a nullity and the defect cannot be cured by amending to substitute another company (i.e. a different legal entity) as claimant: Lazard Brothers v. Midland Bank Ltd 1933 AC 289. However, the rule is different if the case is one of misnomer. In cases of misnomer, even where the name on the record refers to an entity which no longer exists, the Court can correct the record in the proceedings are correctly constituted ab initio: The Sardinia Sulcis 1991 1 Lloyds Report 201 at 205.
Para 26. The cases show that the identity of the party intended to be a claimant in an arbitration is to be determined objectively in accordance with the ordinary principles for the construction of a contract, by reference to the notice of arbitration and the surrounding circumstances; see Unisys International Services Ltd v Eastern Counties Newspapers Ltd 1991 1 Lloyds Report 538 at 550-551 and 558-562 per Ralph Gibson LJ.
…
Para 34. Thus it can be seen that the continental process of universal succession is recognised by the English Courts as being a special case, distinct from the dissolution of an English company and from the assignment of rights, so far as the correct constitution of an arbitration is concerned. Thus, whereas if a company, during the course of an arbitration, assigns away its rights and is dissolved, the arbitration ipso facto lapses because one of the parties has ceased to exist (Baytur SA v Finagro Holding SA 1992 QB 610), where a party has ceased to exist by reason of universal succession the arbitration does not lapse and the tribunal is entitled to continue with the reference: Eurosteel Ltd v Stinnes AG 2000 1ALL ER 964 at 969."
"Misnomer
50. This is the description given to the issue identified at para. 13 (i) above. If the proceedings were started on behalf of a party who did not exist, then they were a nullity. If on the other hand it was clear who the party was, but there was simply an error in naming him, the proceedings were not a nullity and the error can, in appropriate circumstances, be corrected within them. This issue has usually arisen in, and decided authority relates to, litigation in which it is alleged that a named party is incompetent to conduct litigation and that substitution of another party would infringe rules of court as to limitation. The present case differs from the orthodox in two ways. First, it concerns an arbitration, governed by the law of contract and not by rules of court. Second, it is a singular feature of the case that it is the claimant in that arbitration who asserts that the proceedings in which he has taken an active part are a nullity because the claim was brought not in his name but in the name of a non-existent company.
51. We were shown a very great deal of authority on this issue, but much of it was of no direct assistance because it is mainly directed at limitation and at the rules of court. We prefer to state the question as one of principle, namely, who would reasonably have been understood by the party against whom the claim was asserted to be the entity bringing the claim? Within the misnomer cases, that approach is that of Lloyd LJ in The Sardinia Sulcis 1991 1 Lloyds Report 201, in particular at page 207, an approach adopted in the most recent case in this court, Morgan Est v Hanson Concrete Products 2005 1 WLR 2557. In our case, the proceedings were commenced on the instructions of Mr. Merrifield, acting on the authority of Professor Hauptmann. But what was the nature of that authority? Plainly, to protect the interests of the vendors of Interlife. Mr. Merrifield had no business to include a claimant in the proceedings, and Professor Hauptmann had no business to permit him to do so, unless that claimant was one of those vendors. The fourth claimant was therefore a claimant as, but only as, one of the vendors.
52. That would have been obvious, to the extent of not even needing thought, to SEB. And it would also have been obvious from a scrutiny of the pleadings, in relation to which we respectfully adopt the observation of Jacob LJ in Morgan Est at para 31 of the report of that case that the best source for what the claimant actually intended is to be found in the point of claim. In our case the pleadings unequivocally said that there were brought jointly by the Interlife vendors. In those circumstances the fact that the title of the proceedings did not recall that the relevant vendor had transferred all of its rights to AMB under the Transformation Agreement was indeed was a mere misnomer.
…
54. The approach suggested above marches with that of this court in a case shown to us by Mr. Strauss concerning a landlord's counter-notice, Lay v Ackerman 2004 EWCA Civ 184. The notice is valid if it leaves the tenant in no doubt that it comes from the landlord. By the same token, the pleadings in this case could not leave anyone in any possible doubt that they were advanced on behalf of the vendors of Interlife, and of no one else.
55. The arbitral proceedings according were not and are not a nullity. AMB even if not already a party to them joined in them by instructing its solicitors to put its name in the place of the Fourth Claimant."
"On the 25th May 2005 I instructed Waltons & Morse to commence arbitration proceedings against the claimants to recover unpaid balances due from them under the subject treaty. These instructions were carried through when, on 27th May 2005, Waltons & Morse commenced the "Indemnity Marine Arbitrations". In issuing instructions to Waltons & Morse the intention was to pursue recalcitrant reinsurers on behalf of, and for the benefit of, the party or parties properly entitled to receive the unpaid balances from the claimants in this action."
"When I instructed Waltons & Morse to commence the arbitration proceedings against the defendants in the names of Indemnity Marine and London & Scottish, I consider that Waltons & Morse were implicitly, if not expressly, thereby given authority to pursue those arbitrations equally on behalf of Ocean Marine. The benefit of the treaty had, however, without my knowledge, passed Ocean Marine. Resolute was responsible for the administration of the books of business of all three companies and I was their properly delegated representative with authority to instruct solicitors. If, however, the court disagrees with me, I make clear that I nevertheless ratified all actions which have been taken by Waltons & Morse on behalf of Ocean Marine when, on 13 September 2005, I confirmed to Waltons & Morse that they were instructed to act on behalf of Ocean Marine in connection with what had conveniently been termed the Indemnity Marine Arbitrations (and of course to take whatever action was considered appropriate in relation to the Ocean Marine Arbitrations)."
"10. Resolute's authority extends to commencing legal proceedings on behalf of Ocean Marine as much as to commencing proceedings on behalf of Indemnity Marine or London & Scottish. …
11. Because the claimants in Clyde & Co have persisted in their unfounded allegations that resolute does not have authority to bind Ocean Marine in the commencement and pursuit in legal proceedings, the board of directors of Ocean Marine was asked to convene a special meeting for the sole purpose of passing a resolution ratifying the actions of Waltons & Morse taken in their name or alternatively confirming resolute's ratification of those acts on behalf of the company."
"IT IS RESOLVED:
That insofar as it is for the Company to do so, then it ratifies, alternatively it confirms the ratification of, Waltons & Morse's actions among other things in:
- Commencing arbitration proceedings on behalf of the Company on 27 May 2005 against Harper Insurance Limited ("Harper") and River Thames Insurance Company Limited ("River Thames");/or
- Applying to the arbitral tribunal for an order substituting the name of the Company as claimant in place of Indemnity Marine and London & Scottish;
- Acting on behalf of the Company in all respects in relation to the pursuit of claims for unpaid treaty balances against and River Thames (sic), including the progression of the arbitral proceedings referred to above."