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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 >> Sovarex SA v Romero Alvarez SA [2011] EWHC 1661 (Comm) (29 June 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2011/1661.html Cite as: [2011] EWHC 1661 (Comm), [2011] ArbLR 31, [2011] 2 Lloyd's Rep 320 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
SOVAREX S.A |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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ROMERO ALVAREZ S.A |
Defendant |
____________________
David Semark (instructed by Ashfords LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 10 June 2011
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Hamblen:
A. Introduction
(1) Alternatively the court should decline jurisdiction or stay proceedings on the basis that (i) any English judgment would be an interference with the jurisdiction of the Spanish courts and/or (ii) that it is obliged to recognise the findings by the Spanish courts on 6 July and 6 October 2009, that the validity of the contract would be determined in Spain, pursuant to Article 33 (1) of the Regulation.
(2) Alternatively the court should decline jurisdiction or stay proceedings on the basis that (i) any English judgment would be an interference with the jurisdiction of the Spanish courts and/or (ii) that it is obliged to recognise the findings by the Spanish courts on 6 July and 6 October 2009, that the validity of the contract would be determined in Spain, pursuant to Article 33 (1) of the Regulation.
(3) Alternatively, the court should stay these proceedings in the exercise of its inherent discretion, on lis pendens and forum non conveniens grounds.
B. Background
B.1 The Contract
B.2 The arbitration
B.3 The Spanish proceedings
B.4 The s. 66 application
C. The Issues
C.1 (1) Whether the s. 66 application should be dismissed because the evidence shows that there is a real ground for doubting the validity of the award.
"66.— Enforcement of the award.
(1) An award made by the tribunal pursuant to an arbitration agreement may, by leave of the court, be enforced in the same manner as a judgment or order of the court to the same effect.
(2) Where leave is so given, judgment may be entered in terms of the award.
(3) Leave to enforce an award shall not be given where, or to the extent that, the person against whom it is sought to be enforced shows that the tribunal lacked substantive jurisdiction to make the award.
The right to raise such an objection may have been lost (see section 73).
(4) Nothing in this section affects the recognition or enforcement of an award under any other enactment or rule of law, in particular under Part II of the Arbitration Act 1950 (enforcement of awards under Geneva Convention) or the provisions of Part III of this Act relating to the recognition and enforcement of awards under the New York Convention or by an action on the award."
"72.— Saving for rights of person who takes no part in proceedings.
(1) A person alleged to be a party to arbitral proceedings but who takes no part in the proceedings may question—
(a) whether there is a valid arbitration agreement,(b) whether the tribunal is properly constituted, or(c) what matters have been submitted to arbitration in accordance with the arbitration agreement,
by proceedings in the court for a declaration or injunction or other appropriate relief.
…."
"73.— Loss of right to object.
(1) If a party to arbitral proceedings takes part, or continues to take part, in the proceedings without making, either forthwith or within such time as is allowed by the arbitration agreement or the tribunal or by any provision of this Part, any objection—
(a) that the tribunal lacks substantive jurisdiction,(b) that the proceedings have been improperly conducted,(c) that there has been a failure to comply with the arbitration agreement or with any provision of this Part, or(d) that there has been any other irregularity affecting the tribunal or the proceedings,
he may not raise that objection later, before the tribunal or the court, unless he shows that, at the time he took part or continued to take part in the proceedings, he did not know and could not with reasonable diligence have discovered the grounds for the objection.
(2) Where the arbitral tribunal rules that it has substantive jurisdiction and a party to arbitral proceedings who could have questioned that ruling—
(a) by any available arbitral process of appeal or review, or(b) by challenging the award,
does not do so, or does not do so within the time allowed by the arbitration agreement or any provision of this Part, he may not object later to the tribunal's substantive jurisdiction on any ground which was the subject of that ruling."
"It is noteworthy in that case that Clarke J was able to find that protestations as to the absence of jurisdiction, which were presumably intended to persuade, did not amount to participating in the arbitration even where the body had the additional function of deciding whether there was a prima facie case on jurisdiction."
"It may be difficult to distinguish between a letter that does no more than inform the arbitral tribunal, as a matter of courtesy, that the respondent does not accept its jurisdiction, and a submission that it has no jurisdiction. This is such a case".
(1)Alvarez's message, on 18 February 2009, to FOSFA setting out reasons as to why FOSFA should refuse to deal with the arbitration commenced by Sovarex. It stated that:
"…..We have received your registered letter date 05.02.09 whereby you advise us that Sovarex has requested FOSFA to appoint an arbitrator on our behalf on an arbitration proceeding instigated by Sovarex. Please note that in respect to the above, we have never concluded any such a contract as suggested by Sovarex. In fact, proceedings were commenced in Spain last 3rd of October 2008 by Romero Alvarez SA denouncing this serious matter before the Court of Seville (proceedings no 1634/2008, Seville Court no.10). Please find enclosed Court documents admitting our claim and agreeing to summoning same to Sovarex. The Spanish Court in Seville have accepted jurisdiction to deal with our application to declare that no contract was ever agreed with us as suggested in bad faith by Sovarex. Accordingly, there was never a contract with Sovarex and there is a pending litigation case before the Courts of Seville. Therefore, FOSFA must respect the pending litigation case and refuse to deal with Sovarex's groundless application."
(2)Alvarez's further message, on 2 June 2009, following the constitution of the Tribunal, again submitting that there was no arbitration agreement between the parties and also that the proceedings in Spain created a litis pendente. It stated that:
"…. As advised earlier on by Messrs. Romero Alvarez SA our clients did not enter into any contract of sale with Sovarex during the year 2008. Accordingly, no arbitration can be claimed by Sovarex before FOSFA. In such respect, Sovarex has a full copy of our writ of action produced before the Spanish Courts and we trust Sovarex has passed a copy to FOSFA. Indeed, Sovarex's lawyers have appeared before the Spanish Court and have pleaded the proceedings to be set aside. The Court has to deal with Sovarex's arguments as to the existence of a contract and hence as to the arbitration. Furthermore, as you know, proceedings were commenced by Romero Alvarez SA in Spain well in advance to the FOSFA arbitration, thus there is a litis pendente and we request FOSFA to stop this arbitration until the Spanish Court makes a decision on the merits of our claim."
(3)Alvarez's further message, on 2 July 2009, following the Tribunal's direction that it would deal with jurisdiction and the merits together, containing submissions based on Articles 27 and 28 of the Brussels Regulation and citing the line of case law "consolidated in" Allianz SpA v West Tankers (The Front Comor). It stated that:
"We draw your attention to the fact that in accordance to Arts. 27 and 28 of the 44/2001 Regulation, there is a lis pendens since proceedings were initiated first in Spain. Accordingly, we request FOSFA to respect the proceedings that were started in Spain well before the arbitration. If this not the case we will ask the award to be declared null in Spain in breach of 44/2001 and other relevant laws. FOSFA should notice that Sovarex Spanish lawyers have applied for the Spanish proceedings to be stopped and the Court is dealing with such request and will shortly deliver a decision in that respect. You should further consider the line of case law consolidated in the judgment of the Court (Grand Chamber) 10 February 2009 ECJ. In Case C 185/07, on the reference for a preliminary ruling under Articles 68 EC and 234 EC from the House of Lords (United Kingdom), made by the decision of 28 March 2007, received at the Court on 2 April 2007, in the proceedings Allianz SpA, formerly Riunione Adritica di Sicurta SpA, General Assicurazioni Generali SpA. Therefore, we cannot accept to draft any submission before FOSFA as that would be a recognition that a contract was ever reached with Sovarex containing arbitration clause, which our clients insist was not the case."
(4) Alvarez's further message, on 23 July 2009, with further submissions about lis pendens and res judicata based on the Spanish proceedings and on the Regulation. It stated that:
"Romero Alvarez SA insists that FOSFA should stop the proceedings or the award will be unenforceable for various reasons, inter alia; Romero Alvarez has not appointed arbitrators, nor produce submissions as this matter has been in the hands of the Spanish Courts before the commencement of this arbitration; there is a lis pendens. Furthermore, we trust that FOSFA has been informed by Messrs. HBJ Gateley Wareing LLP that Sovarex's application challenging the competence of the Seville Court number 10 in the proceedings number 1634/2008 has been refused by the court in its order of 6 July 2009. The Court Magistrate has ruled that Romero Alvarez's action is to follow before the Spanish Courts and has rejected the argument of Sovarex that a contract had been fixed between Sovarex and Romero Alvarez. For good order sake, we repeat that any award issued under the present circumstances will not be enforceable in Spain. Moreover, FOSFA should consider the judgment of the Court (Grand Chamber) 10 February 2009 ECJ. In Case C 185/07, on the reference for a preliminary ruling under Articles 68 EC and 234 EC from the House of Lords (United Kingdom), made by decision of 28 March 2007, received at the Court on 2 April 2007, in the proceedings Allianz SpA, formerly Riunione Adriatica di Sicurta SpA, Generali Assicurazioni Generali SpA. This judgment makes very clear that 44/2001 applies to Court and arbitrations cases as the present one. Therefore, we reiterate that we cannot accept to draft any submission before FOSFA as that would be a recognition that a contract was ever reached with Sovarex containing an arbitration clause, which our clients insist was not the case."
(1) S.66 of the Act (and its predecessor section 26 of the 1950 Act) provides a summary procedure for the enforcement of arbitration awards.
(2) It is "mere machinery". It does not modify the conditions for enforcement which existed at common law. The right at common law, being an action on the award, is expressly retained under the Act (see section 66(4) of the Act): The Amazon Reefer [2010] 1 Lloyd's Rep 222 at [5 – 7] per Thomas LJ.
(3) As a summary procedure, s.66 cannot be used as a route to a full trial.
(1) S.66 is the section of the Act that deals with enforcement of arbitration awards generally (see Gater, at [44] (Rix LJ). It is intended to reflect Article 35 of the Model Law.
(2) Consistent with its general application, CPR 62 shows that an arbitration claim started under s.66 does not automatically fail simply because the award debtor can show, on paper, that there is a real ground for doubting the validity of the Award.
(3) On the contrary, CPR 62.18 contemplates two different paths for an application under s.66; namely:
(i) Either an enforcement order may be made without notice pursuant to CPR 62.18(1);
(ii) Alternatively, the court will specify that the arbitration claim form must be served under CPR 62.18(2) and the enforcement proceedings then continue. This contemplates the enforcement proceedings being assimilated to any CPR claim in circumstances where the court has felt unable to act summarily (see Gater at [74-75] (Rix LJ), see also Colliers International [2008] 2 Lloyd's Rep 368 at [24] (Beatson J)).
(4) By reason of the order of Teare J, this case has taken the second path. The court should now make directions to dispose finally of these enforcement proceedings. The procedure should henceforth be the equivalent of a jurisdictional rehearing under s.67 of the Act.
"The procedure for enforcement by action is little used in practice. For many years it has been the practice of parties who seek to use the enforcement mechanism of the court in England and Wales to use the procedure under section 26 of the 1950 Act and section 66 of the 1996 Act to enforce an award. The procedure is straightforward. The parties make an application to the court on an ex parte ...or without notice) basis and any challenge to the enforcement is heard by the judge. The procedure under sections 26 and 66 had its origins in earlier legislation and was a summary form of proceeding intended to dispense with the full formalities of the action to enforce an award. The summary procedure was originally intended only to be invoked in reasonably clear cases – see Boks & Co v Peters, Rushton & Co Ltd [1919] KB 491 at page 497 where Scrutton LJ made clear it was only to be invoked in "reasonably clear cases". However, procedures were developed so that the court could decide summarily questions of law which did not involve issues of fact. By the 1980s courts were prepared to deal with all applications under the summary procedure provided objections could be disposed of without a trial: see, for example, Middlemiss and Gould v Hartley Corporation [1972] 1 WLR 1643 and Hall & Wodehouse Ltd v Panorama Hotel Properties Ltd [1974] 2 Lloyd's Rep 413. The summary procedure both under section 26 and the 1950 Act and section 66 of the 1996 Act is so convenient that it is by far the most common way of enforcing an award."
"If the application under section 26 is refused, the plaintiff is left to enforce the award, if he can, by action. In such a case the Court has power, in order to save the time and expense of commencing fresh proceedings, to order that the proceedings should continue as if begun by writ and to give directions for the further conduct of the action."
C.2 (2) Whether the court should decline jurisdiction or stay proceedings on the basis that (i) any English judgment would be an interference with the jurisdiction of the Spanish courts and/or (ii) that it is obliged to recognise the findings by the Spanish courts on 6 July and 8 October 2009, that the validity of the contract would be determined in Spain, pursuant to Article 33 (1) of the Regulation.
(1)A claimant is entitled to try and enforce the award where it sees fit and it is generally incumbent on the respondent to resist enforcement "then and there" (see Dallah Real Estate v Ministry of Religious Affairs [2010] 2 Lloyd's Rep 691 at [23] and [29] (Lord Mance).
(2)S.66 is intended to reflect Article 35 of the Model Law (see the DAC Report on the Arbitration Bill at para. 273, cf. paras. 371-376 and the DAC Supplementary Report at para. 32). Accordingly, while s.66 does contain a discretion, the Model Law upon which it is based only contemplates, by Article 36(2), a discretion to refuse enforcement in deference to competing proceedings in the seat of the arbitration, mirroring Article VI and V(1)(e) of the New York Convention (and, therefore, s. 103(5) and 103(2)(f) of the Act). It would be surprising if the English courts had a significantly different, wider discretion in relation to an award where England was the seat than the discretion they have in relation to an award from a foreign seat.
(3) The English court has recently taken the view that enforcement proceedings under s.66 should not be derailed by reason of competing Regulation proceedings in another Member State, in circumstances where the award creditor has a real prospect of establishing the primacy of the award, through its conversion into an English judgment, over any inconsistent foreign judgment (see West Tankers Inc v Allianz SpA [2011] EWHC 829 (Comm), 6 April 2011, at [30] (Field J)).
(4) An English judgment would be enforceable and have primacy in England. Whilst Sovarex accepts that a decision of the English court that there was a valid arbitration agreement would not be entitled to automatic recognition in Spain under Article 33 of the Regulation, that does not necessarily mean it is incapable of preclusive effect, in Spain or elsewhere. Its effect will depend upon whether the Spanish (or other) courts recognise any principle similar to issue estoppel (see Dallah, ibid, at [29] (Lord Mance)).
"… I would suggest that, at least by implication if not expressly, one can say that it was the Advocate General's opinion: (i) that it was not an interference with the jurisdiction of a member state for one court at the seat of the arbitration to grant a declaration as had occurred in that case…"
(1) The two Spanish decisions were Regulation judgments and as such they give rise to an issue estoppel on the question of which court should determine the validity of the contract.(2) This applies to English arbitration proceedings excluded from the Regulation, just as it would in Regulation proceedings before an English court: The Wadi Sudr [2010] 1 Lloyd's Rep 193 (CA) at [56] per Waller LJ and [119] per Moore-Bick LJ.
(3) The finding in these judgments that the Spanish court had jurisdiction to determine the validity of the alleged contract, was not affected by the subsequent judgment of the Spanish court that declaratory relief in the form requested by Alvarez was not available
(1) The Spanish judgments have not decided the key issue of whether or not an arbitration agreement has been concluded (cf. Through Transport Mutual v New India Assurance Co. Ltd [2005] 1 Lloyd's Rep 67 at [13-14] [50] (Clarke LJ) as qualified in The Wadi Sudr [2010] 1 Lloyd's Rep 193 at [51] (Waller LJ) and at [121] (Moore-Bick LJ)).
(2) The judgments of the Spanish court should be taken as a whole and the overall outcome is that the Spanish court has declined jurisdiction because of its ruling on 22 September 2010 that Spanish law does not recognise the possibility of negative declaratory relief in relation to the existence of a contract.
(3) Even taking the judgments of 6 July and 8 October 2009 in isolation, they are not a preclusive ruling that only the Spanish Court has jurisdiction so that the English court does not have jurisdiction in relation to enforcement proceedings seeking an English judgment on an Award given in an arbitration with the seat in England.
C.3 (3) Whether the court should stay these proceedings in the exercise of its inherent discretion, on lis pendens and forum non conveniens grounds.
(1) The submissions made regarding (i) interference, and (ii) recognition.
These have been addressed above. Neither provides good grounds for a stay.
(2) The undesirability of parallel proceedings, involving the same witnesses, being conducted before the courts of two EU Member States simultaneously.
As matters stand, however, there will not be parallel proceedings.
(3) The fact that the two principal witnesses, Mr Garrido and Mr Romero are (i) domiciled in Spain, and (ii) native Spanish speakers. A Spanish court is therefore inherently better placed than an English court to assess their credibility. (Mr Romero is also 78 years old.).
Again, this assumes that the Spanish court decision will be reversed and that there will be Spanish proceedings on the issue. In any event the English court is well able to conduct such a trial and most of the relevant documents are in English.
(4) The fact that but for Article 1 (2) (d) there would be no question that this court would be compelled to decline jurisdiction in favour of Spain, in circumstances where the Spanish courts have accepted jurisdiction.
This is irrelevant given the existence and application of Article 1(2)(d).
(5) The weakness of the evidence in support of Sovarex's claim that a valid contract was concluded.
Whilst I accept that Sovarex has an arguable case on the evidence on the material before the court it is not possible or appropriate to form any view as to the relative strength and weaknesses of the parties' respective cases.
(6) The fact that the Spanish court, being first seised in Regulation proceedings, is highly unlikely to recognise any judgment given by the English court which is inconsistent with its ability to determine the validity or otherwise of the contract.
This again assumes that there is a successful appeal since there is currently no inconsistency. In any event there is no evidence as to this and, if this be correct, it is a further reason why there can be no "interference". Further, it is up to Sovarex where it wishes to seek enforcement and there is no necessary reason for assuming that it can only be in Spain.
(8) The possibility that the English court may have to recognise the final judgment of the Spanish courts pursuant to Article 33 (1) of the Regulation. Field J's decision in West Tankers v. Allianz is under appeal.
This assumes two successful appeals. The court cannot proceed on such a hypothetical basis.
(1)The arbitration in England was started at about the same time as the Spanish proceedings.
(2)The English proceedings are significantly advanced: there is already a detailed arbitration award in existence, which the English courts can examine (see Dallah at [31] (Lord Mance)), and both sides have adduced considerable witness and documentary evidence.
(3)The Spanish courts have, as things stand, dismissed Alvarez's action in Spain.
(4) Any further hearing in England could take place later this year, whereas (even if the Alvarez's appeal against its dismissal was successful) a first instance hearing in Spain would not be likely until June 2012.
D. Conclusion