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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 >> Celtic Resources Holdings v Arduina Holding BV [2006] EWHC 2553 (Comm) (11 September 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2006/2553.html Cite as: [2006] EWHC 2553 (Comm), [2006] ArbLR 4 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Royal Courts of Justice Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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CELTIC RESOURCES HOLDINGS | Applicant | |
-v- | ||
ARDUINA HOLDING BV | Respondent |
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183 Clarence Street Kingston-Upon-Thames Surrey KT1 1QT
Tel No: 020 8974 7300 Fax No: 020 8974 7301
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Email Address: [email protected]
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Crown Copyright ©
"(1) The parties hereby agree that the payment of any amount, and the obligations of the Parties under any of the Assignment Agreements, shall be subject to the condition precedent (the 'Condition Precedent') that the State Committee for Precious Metals of the Republic of Sakha (Yakutia) shall have agreed with the Assignee to transfer to the Assignee [Arduina] or its nominee or subsidiary all its shareholding in the Borrower (the 'Transfer') on terms and conditions satisfactory to the Assignee (the 'Terms') and that such Transfer has taken place and been duly undertaken, registered and recorded in the books and share register of the borrower. (2) For the avoidance of doubt, (a) the Assignor shall take all steps and do all acts so as to encourage the State Committee for Precious Metals of the Republic of Sakha (Yakutia) to agree to transfer to the Assignee or its nominee or subsidiary its shareholding in the Borrower and to cause the due registration of such transfer in the books and share register of the Borrower and (b) the Assignee shall and may in its own discretion set the Terms and accept or decline the Transfer in whole or in part…
(3) If the Assignee does not notify the Assignor in writing that the Condition Precedent is wholly or partially satisfied (as the Assignee in its sole discretion shall decide) within twelve (12) months of the date hereof, this agreement and the obligations hereunder shall terminate and the Assignment Agreements shall be null and void and of no effect."
"(1) I declare that the Framework Agreement contained a condition precedent to the operation of the Assignment Agreements, such condition precedent being that SUE Komdragmetal shall have agreed with Arduina to transfer to Arduina or its nominee or subsidiary all its shareholding in SVMC on terms and conditions satisfactory to Arduina and that such transfer has taken place and been duly undertaken, registered and recorded in the books and share register of SVMC.
(2) I declare that the said condition precedent had not been fulfilled either wholly or partially by 22nd November 2003, and that accordingly the Framework Agreement terminated on 22nd November 2003."
(1) $15,276,822.28 in receivables owed to it by SVMC pursuant to ten awards issued in its favour by arbitral tribunals which Arduina was in the process of enforcing. These were awards made by the International Commercial Court of Arbitration in Moscow in respect of the purportedly assigned loans.
(2) 27,233,406 shares in Emperor Mines Limited ("Emperor"), a company listed on the Australian Stock Exchange and held for it by a nominee; and
(3) €87,646 in IMG Bank.
(a) it was unclear who was behind Arduina. In the arbitration its pleaded case was that it was "indirectly a joint venture vehicle for two substantial groups, BSG Group and J & W Group". BSG is the group controlled by Mr Beny Steinmetz, an Israeli national. In his evidence in the arbitration Dr Sittard described Eurasian National Resources Corporation as the ultimate shareholder of Arduina and as itself owned by entities ultimately owned by a Mr Mashkevich, Mr Chodiev and Mr Ibragimov, but he said that Mr Steinmetz had no interest in Arduina. But the precise relationship between these individuals and Arduina was unclear.
(b) Arduina appeared to be a convenient "wrapper" in which the Emperor shares were held. It had no business to speak of to which the holding of Emperor shares was ancillary, and no assets to speak of save those shares. These could easily be removed to another company under the control of Mr Mashkevich, Mr Chodiev and Mr Ibragimov without Arduina being left with a commensurate asset against which Celtic could enforce any judgment. There was nothing to suggest that there was any particular reason for Arduina to continue to hold the shares if there was a reason to transfer them, or for Mr Mashkevich, Mr Chodiev and Mr Ibragimov to see that Arduina did so.
(c) Under the commercial arrangements made at the time of the framework agreements, if Arduina were to acquire a 50% interest in SVMC that interest would be transferred to Celtic in exchange for Celtic issuing shares to BSG and Eurasian. Accordingly, Arduina would be nothing more, if that happened, than a vehicle through which the SVMC shares would pass.
(d) Arduina's claims in the arbitration were roundly rejected. Arduina did not fund the bringing of the arbitration. That was done by Alferon Management Limited, Dr Sittard's company. If Arduina did not fund its own costs, there could be no confidence that those behind it would suffer it to pay Celtic's costs. Arduina was involved in about 30 pieces of litigation in Russia, but it was unclear who was funding them.
(e) Arduina's solicitors, Michael Wilson & Partners Limited, had been heavily criticised by the arbitrator for having been willing to include in witness statements and expert reports facts and views which were not the evidence of the witness or expert concerned. Arduina, it was suggested, must have been complicit in their conduct.
(f) Arduina's conduct in the arbitration which it had started was one of delaying and protracting matters.
The law
Non-disclosure
1. The arbitrator found that, before the framework agreement was signed, Celtic had lost management control of the Nezhdaninskoye mine, that there had not been fair and adequate disclosure of this on the part of Mr Foo of Celtic, but that Arduina could not show that it had materially relied on his untrue statements of fact. This should have been disclosed to the court in order to balance out the evidence filed in support of the freezing injunction.
2. Celtic failed to refer in its original application to the debts due to Arduina from SVMC which had been the subject of awards which had been upheld by the Russian courts.
"3.5 In order to ensure correct understanding of the nature of the relations, which occur as a result of the assignment of the rights of claim, one should clearly distinct (sic), on the one hand, the relations, from which the assigned rights have arisen (in this case, the relations under the Agreement, which originally were formed between the debtor and the initial creditor, and afterwards – between the debtor and the new creditor, which replaced the initial creditor in the liability) and, on the other hand, the relations between the initial creditor and the new creditor in respect of the assignment of the right of claim on the basis of agreement(s) between them. Each of the specified types of legal relationship is based upon different legal grounds, while the entities being parties in such relations, as well as the scopes of such legal relationship differ from each other.
In this dispute, the debtor refers to invalidity of the Assignment Agreement made between the initial creditor and the new creditor, which, as asserted by the Defendant, is linked to another Framework Agreement between the initial creditor and new creditor. In other words, when substantiating its legal position, the Defendant refers to relations under certain agreements, to which it is not a party.
In the opinion of the Tribunal, such a reference falls outside the scope of the lawful rights and interests of the debtor that are protected by the civil law, for the reasons set out above and below."
Delay
"There is at the very least a question whether English law allows an arbitrator to decide such an application ex parte; but, whatever the legal position as to jurisdiction, I would decline to do so in the exercise of my discretion."
Merits
"72. Taken in isolation, each of these considerations give rise to suspicion. Taken together, they lead me to conclude that Michael Wilson & Partners have been willing to include in witness statements and Expert Reports facts and views which are not the evidence of the witness or expert concerned. I have therefore found it necessary to treat these statements and reports with some caution."
Merits