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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 >> Nordea Bank Norge Asa & Anor v Unicredit Corporate Banking SPA & Anor [2011] EWHC 30 (Comm) (19 January 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2011/30.html Cite as: [2011] EWHC 30 (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 :
____________________
Nordea Bank Norge ASA Vasonia Shipping Company Limited |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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Unicredit Corporate Banking SpA Banca di Roma SpA |
Defendants |
____________________
Hugh Mercer Esq, QC (instructed by Dewey & LeBoeuf LLP) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 22nd October 2010; 5th November 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Gloster, DBE:
Introduction
Background Facts
Commercial background
"Any claims or disputes arising out of this Guarantee shall be referred to the English High Court and we hereby irrevocably submit to the non-exclusive jurisdiction of the English High Court."
There was no dispute that it was an agreement to which Article 23 of the Jurisdiction Regulation applies
The English Claim
The Italian Proceedings: (i) The Initial Proceedings
i) drew the Court's
"attention in the first instance to the need to join the following parties … Vasonia …, Nordea …, and [the latter's parent company] Ross Chemical AS"[3]
to the Initial Proceedings, so that they, rather than Unicredit, could contest the continuation of the injunction pending the outcome of the arbitration;
ii) referred to the fact that the need to join the additional parties was "naturally the responsibility of the plaintiff [MF]"[4];
iii) sought in its prayer relief that the Genoa Court might
" – subject to an order for [MF] to join Vasonia …, Nordea … and Ross Chemical AS, in as far as not already present in the proceedings – to rule in equity on the claim put forward by [MF], the purpose of which is to prevent the enforcement of the [Guarantee] …, rejecting all other claims, filed by any other party against Unicredit …".
i) observed:
"that the joinder of parties should be ordered with sole reference to Vasonia and not extended to Nordea or Ross Chemical.";
ii) upheld the interim injunction for the time being; and
iii) directed MF to serve Vasonia with a copy of the application for the interim injunction, the interim injunction dated 2 November 2009 and the Court's order of 25 November 2009 by 22 December 2009.
The Genoa Court did not order MF to serve Unicredit's defence brief dated 12 November 2009 on Vasonia and it is common ground that it was not served.
"… the injunction requested against Unicredit is an anticipatory measure and therefore is not necessarily followed by trial."
"This situation therefore demonstrates that, while the parties were in the process of renegotiating their respective positions, suddenly, and entirely unexpectedly, Vasonia put forward their call for enforcement of the Guarantee, an act open to censure for the purposes of identification of exceptio doli."
The Italian Proceedings; (ii) the Final Proceedings
"18. By this writ of summons [MF] introduce the proceedings on the merits in order to preserve the order issued by such Honourable Tribunal in the procedure number 14507/2009 and, consequently, to obtain a judgement ascertaining and statement that Unicredit Corporate Banking is not bound to apply any amount in favour of Vasonia as per the said Guarantee dated 30/5/2006."
The writ went on to claim that the Genoa Court should:
"… ascertain and state the Unicredit Corporate Banking does not have to effect any payment in favour of Vasonia Shipping Company Limited as per the said Guarantee dated 30 May 2006, preliminarily, for substantial lack of title of Vasonia; alternatively, because such Guarantee is collateral in respect of the substantial relationship existing between the undersigned and Vasonia and the undersigned, as secured debtor, is not obliged to effect payment in favour of the same Vasonia; more alternatively, in the denied hypothesis of qualification of the concerned Guarantee as autonomous contract of security, due to the unlawful and fraudulent character of the request of payment."
Liquidation of MF and other relevant or subsequent dates
"19. Entering an appearance in the present statement of defence, UCB can only reiterate their position of entire extraneity with regard to the dispute between Marittima and Vasonia, a dispute in relation to which Vasonia considers that the conditions for enforcement of a guarantee issued in its favour have been fulfilled.
By virtue specifically of their extraneous position vis-à-vis this dispute, UCB finds itself entirely incapable of assessing the validity of the complaints put forward by the former and the payment claims put forward by the parties whose entitlement is under dispute.
As in the precautionary interim proceedings, the applicant Bank can only throw itself on the Court concerning the acceptance of Marittima's claims, which seek confirmation of the injunction preventing payment under the guarantee in question.
20. Nonetheless, UCB has an interest in seeking the establishment, in a binding judgment – in relation to all parties in the trilateral relationship created as a result of issue of the guarantee – of the existence or otherwise of their obligation to make payment under the guarantee, to enable it to take the necessary action, including claims for redress where necessary, given the existence of the necessary grounds.
21. It is evident that, due to the Bank's extraneous position vis-à-vis the substantive dispute, the costs of these proceedings should be awarded against the losing party, either Marittima or Vasonia, in the substantive dispute between the latter.
*.*.*.*.*
In the light of the above, Unicredit Corporate Banking SpA, as above represented and defended, files the following pleadings.
May it please the Court to rule in equity on the claim put forwarded by Marittima Fluviale de Navigazione SpA, seeking confirmation of the ruling of 28 January 2010, suspending payment under guarantee no. 3362 (now 460231318529), dismissing all other claims, filed by any party, against Unicredit corporate Banking SpA.
With the award of costs, fees and disbursements attaching to these proceedings, including the flat-rate reimbursement of overheads, CAN and VAT."
"Insolvency of Marittima Fluviale di Navigazione SpA/Unicredit SpA/Vasonia (Court of Genoa, reg no 11706/2010
Further to our discussion, I am writing to you in connection with the above proceedings, originally initiated by Marittima Fluviale di Navigazione SpA in bonis, but not docketed by that company.
Following your information that Unicredit SpA has docketed the case, I can confirm that the administrators will examine the case ahead of the first hearing scheduled for 22 February 2011."
It was common ground that this letter did not amount to an adoption of the proceedings by the liquidator.
Issues
Article 27
i) Is the English Court obliged to stay the English Claim under Article 27 of the Jurisdiction Regulation brought by Vasonia[11] as against Unicredit? This involves consideration of the following sub-issues as to whether the pre-conditions for the mandatory stay requirement under Article 27 are satisfied:
a) was the Genoa Court the court first seised;
b) do the English Claim and the Italian Proceedings involve the "same cause of action and the same parties"; and
c) are the Italian Proceedings currently pending in the Genoa Court?
Article 28
ii) Does the English Court have power under Article 28 to stay the English Claim brought by both Vasonia and Nordea? This involves consideration of the following sub-issues:
a) was the Genoa Court the court first seised;
b) are the English Claim and the Italian Proceedings "related actions" for the purposes of Article 28; and
c) are the Italian Proceedings currently pending in the Genoa Court?
iii) If the Court does have power to stay the English Claim under Article 28, should it exercise its discretion to do so?
Article 27
"1. Where proceedings involving the same cause of action and between the same parties are brought in the courts of different Member States, any court other than the court first seised shall of its own motion stay its proceedings until such time as the jurisdiction of the court first seised is established.
2. Where the jurisdiction of the court first seised is established, any court other than the court first seised shall decline jurisdiction."
"For the purposes of this Section, a court shall be deemed to be seised:
1. at the time when the document instituting the proceedings or an equivalent document is lodged with the court, provided that the plaintiff has not subsequently failed to take the steps he was required to take to have service effected on the defendant …."
Unicredit's Article 27 arguments
The Claimants' Article 27 arguments
Discussion and determination of the Article 27 issue
i) that the Genoa Court was the court first seised; and
ii) that the English Claim and the Italian Proceedings involve the "same cause of action and the same parties".
64. The purpose of Article 30 is to have a uniform interpretation of the date on which a court is regarded as seised. Recital 11 to the Regulation states that the rules of jurisdiction must be "highly predictable" and Recital 15 that there "must be a clear and effective mechanism for resolving cases of lis pendens". Of particular significance in the present context is the statement in Recital 15 that:
'for obviating problems flowing from national differences as to the determination of the time when a case is regarded as pending. For the purposes of this Regulation that time should be defined autonomously'.
Grupo Torras SA v Al-Sabah shows that, in the context of the Convention and now the Regulation, including Article 30, any domestic procedural doctrine of relation back (such as that in CPR 17.3.4) does not apply."
First seised
i) The obiter comment of Beatson J in Syndicate 980 v SINCO SA (supra) at paragraph 61:
"In a case where an amendment can only be made with the permission of the court, it must be the position under the Regulation that the proceedings can be seen as pending in relation to the amendment only once an order allowing it has been made and the claim form reissued."
ii) Dicey, Morris and Collins (supra), The Conflict of Laws paragraph 12-061, which states:
"… where new parties or new claims are to be added by amendment, the corresponding date is presumably the date of reissue, rather [than] the date of application for such permission as may be required."
iii) Briggs and Rees, Civil Jurisdiction and Judgments 5th Edition at paragraph 2.235.
Same cause of action
Article 28
"1. Where related actions are pending in the courts of different Member Sates, any court other than the court first seised may stay its proceedings
2. Where these actions are pending at first instance, any court other than the court first seised may also, on the application of one of the parties, decline jurisdiction if the court first seised has jurisdiction over the actions in question and its law permits the consolidation thereof.
3. For the purposes of this Article, actions are deemed to be related where they are so closely connected that it is expedient to hear and determine them together to avoid the risk of irreconcilable judgments resulting from separate proceedings."
Unicredit's Article 28 arguments
i) The Genoa Court was first seised, either on 2 November or on 17 November on 2009 of "related proceedings", irrespective of the fact that neither Vasonia, nor Nordea, had been joined as parties at that stage.
ii) The object of Article 28 is to avoid the risk of conflicting judgments. As the Jenard Report on the Brussels Convention said of the original Article 22:
"... where actions are related, the first duty of the court is to stay its proceedings."
He also referred to Overseas Union Insurance [1991] ECR I-3317 at §16 and The Tatry [[1994] ECR I-5439 at 52-55, in this context.
iii) In Cooper Tire & Rubber v. Shell [2009] EWHC 2609, (affirmed by Court of Appeal [2009] EWHC 2609 (Comm)), Teare J recently applied this principle. He stated that the object of Article 28 is to "avoid the risk of conflicting judgments", and adopted the approach that the Court should be
"ready to give generous support to the convention's obvious concern about the undesirability of irreconcilable judgments".
iv) The approach of Mance J in Sarrio v. KIA [1996] 1 Ll Rep 650 at 660-661 (a decision restored by the House of Lords at [1999] 1 AC 32) was also instructive. Mance J referred at p.661 col 1 to the
"... caution which must be exercised before concluding that other factors justify a refusal of the stay towards which satisfaction of the last sentence of art. 22[17] will already point".
v) He referred to the principles of Community law, which are applicable where a court other than the court first seised is deciding whether to stay its proceedings, as articulated by Advocate General Lenz in Owens Bank Ltd v Bracco BAILII: [1994] EUECJ C-129/92 (Case C-129/92) QB 509 at 540-542. He submitted that the application of those criteria, (the extent of the relatedness and the risk of mutually irreconcilable decisions, the stage reached in each set of proceedings, and the proximity of the courts to the subject matter of the case), strongly pointed to the grant of a stay under Article 28 in the present case.
vi) He submitted that the degree of relatedness is very extensive here; that the scope of the dispute is narrow given the limited arguments arising in relation to a Guarantee; the same arguments will arise in both jurisdictions; and that the risk of irreconcilable judgments is therefore correspondingly high. He submitted that there is and can be no suggestion that the Genoa Court as the court first seised will stay its proceedings; in Italy, there will be a decision, binding on MF, Unicredit and Vasonia, which will determine whether the injunction will prevent Unicredit paying pursuant to the demand. In England an order to pay or a declaration of liability to pay would be manifestly irreconcilable. In particular, he emphasised the evidence of Professor Saletti[18] to the effect that Unicredit had no locus standi to apply to discharge the interim injunction in the Initial Proceedings.
Vasonia's Article 28 arguments
i) This Court has no power to stay the English proceedings under Article 28 but, if it is does have such power, it should not exercise its discretion to stay the English proceedings.
ii) In summary as to jurisdiction, he submitted:
a) The power to stay under Article 28 is only available to the court second seised, and then only to the extent that there are related proceedings which are pending.
b) The English Court was the court first seised of any claim on the merits. At all times up to and including 17 November 2009, when the English Claim was issued and the English Court became seised, the Initial Proceedings consisted only of a claim for interim relief, with no substantive claim.
c) As at 17 November 2009, when the English Court was first seised, the Initial Proceedings (being a claim for interim relief only) were not "related". This is doubly so, if Vasonia was not then a party to the Initial Proceedings. But even if Unicredit is correct that Vasonia became a party to the Initial Proceedings on 17 November 2009, the Initial Proceedings remained at that stage a claim for interim relief only, with no claim for substantive relief. Furthermore, in the context of a claim on an autonomous payment obligation, there is an insufficient degree of relatedness between a claim by the customer against the bank, and by the beneficiary against the bank.
d) The fact that Final Proceedings, introducing a claim on the merits, were subsequently issued, which bear a different action number and which are on Unicredit's own evidence[19] "technically separate" from the Initial Proceedings does not mean that the Initial Proceedings are to be treated for Jurisdiction Regulation purposes as having always encompassed the claim for substantive relief introduced for the first time in April 2010, after the English Court was first seised of the substantive issues.
e) Unicredit's propositions, based on a completely different context in Italian procedural law (the relationship between the courts in different cities), involve treating the Final Proceedings as in some way "relating back" to the date when MF initiated the Initial Proceedings. This can have no applicability under the Jurisdiction Regulation: see Burton J in the FKI Engineering Ltd v Stribog Ltd [2010] EWHC 1160, at paragraph 39. The question of "relatedness" has to be answered as at the time the English court was seised, i.e. as at 17 November 2009.
f) The Initial Proceedings are no longer pending.
g) The Final Proceedings are no longer pending, as the liquidator of MF has not adopted the Final Proceedings within time nor (if relevant) has Unicredit.
iii) As to the principles governing the exercise of the discretion, he submitted as follows:
a) English courts regularly had regard to what was said by the Advocate General in Owens Bank Ltd v Bracco supra; see e.g. most recently, the judgment of the Court of Appeal in Cooper Tire (supra) at paragraph 51, upholding Teare J's decision at first instance to decline to grant a stay ([2009] EWHC 2609 (Comm) at paragraph 113).
b) The burden of proof was considered by Rix J in Centro Internationale Bank AG v Morgan Grenfell Trade Finance Limited [1997] CLC 870 at 891-2, where he said:
"there is no presumption in favour of a stay" and that "the burden of proof or persuasion is on the applicant"
where the preconditions for the Article 28 power have been satisfied. Accordingly, Unicredit bears the burden of persuading the English Court that it should stay the English Claim.
iv) As to the application of the principles in the present case, he submitted:
a) Unicredit cannot discharge its burden of showing that a stay of the English proceedings is appropriate.
b) Applying the three factors identified by Advocate General Lenz:
i) The extent of the relatedness and the risk of mutually irreconcilable decisions: he submitted that there is no, or no sufficient, relationship between MF's claim against Unicredit, and Vasonia's claim against Unicredit, nor any risk of mutually irreconcilable decisions, as MF's claim against Unicredit relates to the customer/bank relationship and the circumstances in which MF provided the collateral to the bank. As for MF's claim against Vasonia, MF has no substantive rights under the demand Guarantee as a matter of English law and is not a party thereto. Unicredit does not argue to the contrary.
ii) The stage which the two sets of proceedings have reached: he submitted that here, even if it could be shown that the Final Proceedings are still technically pending, the liquidation of MF makes it inherently unlikely that the Final Proceedings will proceed to be determined. Furthermore, in circumstances where Unicredit does not assert that it has any defence to Vasonia's claim, Vasonia will be in a position to obtain, and will obtain, summary judgment from the English Court before the first date fixed for the hearing of the Final Proceedings, namely February 2011. In circumstances where nothing has happened in the Final Proceedings since they were served, it is highly unlikely that the Final Proceedings will be resolved in 2011, let alone in February 2011 at the first hearing which has been fixed. Unicredit's alleged difficulty in seeking to join MF to the English Claim, raised as a suggestion for the first time in Unicredit's skeleton argument dated 19 October 2010, is irrelevant, as there is no basis at all for joining MF to the English proceedings; Vasonia has a straightforward claim against Unicredit under a Guarantee issued by Unicredit to which MF is not a party.
iii) The proximity of the courts to the subject matter of the case: here, the demand Guarantee is plainly governed by English law. The demand Guarantee also contains the parties' agreement on English jurisdiction; the fact that Unicredit is domiciled in Italy (if that be the case) is irrelevant. For what it is worth, English law was also the proper law of the charterparty. The relationship between Vasonia and Unicredit, and between Vasonia and MF, has no connection with Italy. The English Court is plainly in the best position to determine Vasonia's claim against Unicredit.
v) Mr. Lockey submitted that the Advocate General recognised that there might be other factors. He submitted that, here, the following further circumstances also pointed clearly against a stay:
a) First, the English Court was being asked to stay a claim in circumstances where no defence has been suggested by Unicredit under the proper law of the Guarantee, whether in its evidence or in its skeleton argument.
b) Second, the proposed stay would in effect compel Vasonia to litigate the substance of its claim against Unicredit in Italy, in proceedings involving both Unicredit and MF, and in breach of the jurisdiction clause in the Guarantee and of the autonomy principle.
c) Third, the English jurisdiction clause in the Guarantee is material. Contrary to Unicredit's submission, the clause means that if Vasonia elects to bring proceedings in England under the Guarantee, Unicredit agrees to submit to the jurisdiction of the English court. A similar clause ("the parties hereby submit to the non exclusive jurisdiction of the English courts") was so construed by Moore-Bick J in Mercury Communications Ltd and another v Communication Telesystems International [1999] 2 All ER (Comm) 33 at 40h.
d) Fourth, a judgment of the English Court in favour of Vasonia's claim will reduce (not increase) the risk of Unicredit being exposed to double jeopardy. Unicredit will be able to rely on the English Court's judgment to set aside the interim injunction and/or to defend the claim in the Final Proceedings.
e) Fifth, if Unicredit remains exposed to the risk of double jeopardy, that is the result of the conduct of Unicredit's customer, MF, not of Unicredit's contractual counterpart, Vasonia, and/or the conduct of Unicredit. Any concerns on Unicredit's part about double jeopardy could have been avoided by Unicredit stipulating English law and English jurisdiction in its relationship with MF. In any event, if anyone should suffer prejudice as a result of MF's forum shopping litigation, it is Unicredit, its bank, rather than Vasonia, Unicredit's contractual counterpart, who accepted a guarantee payable on demand in the expectation that Unicredit would honour it and not seek to hide behind the skirts of the Italian courts.
f) The reality is that Unicredit's concern is not with the risk of irreconcilable judgments, but with protecting its right to the collateral security provided by MF. That is not a matter which should in any way concern Vasonia, who are entitled to judgment without further ado, nor is it relevant to the issue of jurisdiction over the claim under the Guarantee.
g) The point raised by Unicredit on discretion in relation to the delayed service of Vasonia's English Claim goes nowhere.
vi) Accordingly, Mr. Lockey submitted that the proper course is for the English Court to exercise its discretion in such a way as to decline Unicredit's application and for Vasonia to proceed to obtain judgment on its claim; that for the English Court to do otherwise would be to deprive Vasonia of its contractual rights and to permit the frustration of the commercial utility of demand guarantees.
Discussion and determination of the Article 28 issue
Jurisdiction
"The essential debate between the parties is whether the actions are related, and the debate is concentrated on whether there is a risk of irreconcilable judgments relating from the two sets of proceedings".. and
"there should be a broad commonsense approach to the question whether the actions in question are related …and refraining from an over-sophisticated analysis of the matter".
"[i]ts effect [i.e. of article 28] is not entirely mechanical. It requires an assessment of the degree of connection, and then a value judgment as to the expediency of hearing the two actions together (assuming they could be so heard) in order to avoid the risk of inconsistent judgments. It does not say that any possibility of inconsistent judgments means that they are inevitably related. It seems to us that the Article leaves it open to a court to acknowledge a connection, or a risk of inconsistent judgments, but to say that the connection is not sufficiently close or the risk is not sufficiently great, to make the action related for the purposes of the Article. Mechanics do not, for once, provide a complete answer."
i) At the time the English Proceedings were issued on 17 November 2009, there were no existing Italian proceedings which satisfied the description of "related" proceedings.
ii) There were no Italian proceedings which satisfied the description of "related" proceedings until the issue of the substantive Final Proceedings in April 2010, or, in the alternative, until, at the earliest, 25 November 2009, when the Genoa Court made an order that Vasonia should be joined as a party to the Initial Proceedings.
iii) It follows that the English Court was the court first seised for the purposes of Article 28.
Discretion
"75. The decision required in the context of article 22 of the Convention is a discretionary decision. It goes without saying that the circumstances of each individual case are particularly important here. The national courts must bear in mind that … the aim of this provision is
'to prevent parallel proceedings before the courts of different contracting states and to avoid conflicts between decisions which might arise therefrom.'
It would therefore be appropriate in case of doubt for a national court to decide to stay its proceedings under article 22: see in this regard the judgment of the High Court (Ognall J) of 31 January 1990 in Virgin Aviation Services Ltd v CAD Aviation Services [1991] ILPr 79 in which the court held that there was a strong presumption in favour of allowing an application for a stay (see at page 88: "Commentary on the Jenard Report on article 22 signifies the strong presumption where an application is made for a stay, lies in favour of the applicant.")
76. Furthermore, there are three factors which may be relevant to the exercise of the discretion vested in national courts by virtue of article 22, but this does not mean that other considerations may not also be important. Those three factors are (1) the extent of the relatedness and the risk of mutually irreconcilable decisions; (2) the stage reached in each set of proceedings, and (3) the proximity of the courts to the subject matter of the case.
77. Clearly, the closer the connection between the proceedings in question, the more necessary it would appear for the court second seised to stay its proceedings. If other factors are of some relevance to the proceedings pending before the court first seised, it may be appropriate for the court second seised not to stay its proceedings …. The more the proceedings are related, however, and the greater the risk of the courts arriving at irreconcilable decisions, the more likely it will be that the court second seised should stay it proceedings in accordance with article 22.
78. … it is also legitimate for the court second seised to have regard, when reaching its decision regarding a possible stay, to the stage reached in the parallel proceedings. The proceedings before the court first seised should of course have reached a more advanced stage than the proceedings before the court subsequently seised of a related action. Where this is not the case, however, and where there is no prospect of a decision in the first set of proceedings, there is nothing to prevent the court subsequently seised from taking account of this when arriving at its discretionary decision.
79. Finally, it goes without saying that in the exercise of such discretion regard may be had to the question of which court is in the best position to decide a given question …."
i) The extent of the relatedness and the risk of mutually irreconcilable decisions: even if (contrary to my view in the context of jurisdiction) the Italian Claim and the English Claim are "related" proceedings, the degree of "relatedness" or the extent of the relationship, is slight. As Mr. Lockey submitted, as a matter of English law, MF has no substantive rights under the Guarantee and is not a party thereto. As a matter of English law (the law which governs the relationship between MF and Vasonia), MF is not entitled, in the absence of an allegation of fraud[21], to argue that Unicredit should not pay up under the Guarantee, because of an alleged counterclaim or variation to the terms of the charter. Unicredit does not argue to the contrary. Further, Vasonia's claim against Unicredit for payment under the Guarantee is a free-standing autonomous claim – certainly as a matter of English law, the law which governs the relationship between the two parties.
ii) In reality, on the evidence, there is very little risk of mutually irreconcilable decisions, as between the Genoa Court and the English Court. Irrespective of whether he is actually time-barred from continuing the proceedings,[22] MF's liquidator to date has shown no interest whatsoever in taking steps to continue the substantive Final Proceedings to restrain Unicredit on a permanent basis from paying out under the Guarantee, or seeking the return of its collateral. No substantive pleadings have been filed by MF in the Italian Final Proceedings beyond the writ. Indeed, nothing has happened in the Final Proceedings since they were served, apart from Unicredit's recent filing of its defence brief on 16 October 2010 in an attempt to reinstate the Final Proceedings - a step taken only once Unicredit appreciated that Vasonia was intending to argue that Unicredit was time-barred and that the Final Proceedings were no longer pending. There is no suggestion that the liquidator has rejected or taken issue with Unicredit's proof of debt or the statements made in that document about the latter's entitlement to apply the collateral to meet its liability under the Guarantee. Moreover, so far as the evidence before me is concerned, no claim has been made to date by MF in the arbitration proceedings that Vasonia/Nordea should be restrained from seeking payment from Unicredit under the Guarantee. Moreover, even at this stage, no positive case is being put forward by Unicredit in the Final Proceedings to the effect that it should not pay under the Guarantee, or that the injunction should continue. On the contrary, it purports to maintain its position of neutrality.
iii) Nor am I persuaded on the evidence that Unicredit would have no standing to apply to the Genoa Court to set aside the interim injunction in circumstances where Vasonia/Nordea obtained judgment against it on the English Claim. In this respect I prefer the evidence of Avv. Cristoffanini to that of Prof Saletti. It would be wholly contrary to common sense if, following a judgment of the English Court against Unicredit, it were unable to apply to set aside the interim injunction in order to pay the judgment, in circumstances where the interim injunction was originally directed only at Unicredit, and given that Unicredit is a defendant to the claim in the Final Proceedings. Unicredit's rights were clearly affected by the interim injunction, since that suspended its right to apply the collateral provided by MF in satisfaction of any payment made by it. In those circumstances I find Unicredit's evidence to the effect that it would not have capacity "in practice" to apply to revoke the Interim Injunction as unconvincing.
iv) The stage which the two sets of proceedings have reached: even if the Final Proceedings are still pending, for the reasons stated above, I accept Mr. Lockey's submission that it inherently unlikely that the Final Proceedings will proceed to be determined. Even if they were to continue, I accept Vasonia's contention that, given the circumstances, there is no prospect of any final judgment the Italian Proceedings in the near future. Although there have to date been no statements of case in the English Claim, that is because of the need to determine this application before statements of case can be served. But the English Claim appears to a straightforward claim against Unicredit under the Guarantee issued by Unicredit, to which MF is not a party, and there is no reason why it cannot be determined expeditiously. Indeed Vasonia/Nordea have indicated that they intend to apply for summary judgment in the English Claim, which could be dealt with by the English Court within a short time frame. Accordingly there is no reason to suppose that any delay will be caused by a refusal to grant a stay of the English Claim. On the contrary, the issues as between Unicredit and Vasonia/Nordea are likely to be determined far more speedily .
v) The proximity of the courts to the subject matter of the case: in terms of proximity, the subject matter of the case is, in my judgment, clearly more closely linked to England. The Guarantee is governed by English law and it is subject to an express agreement to submit to the jurisdiction of the English High Court. English law was also the proper law of the charterparty and the arbitration as between MF and Vasonia is taking place here. The relationships between Vasonia and Unicredit, and between Vasonia and MF, have no connection with Italy. The English court is in the best position to determine Vasonia's claim against Unicredit under English law. I have taken into account the fact that Unicredit is domiciled in Italy, and so is MF, and that their banking relationship is no doubt governed by Italian law, but these are not factors which in my view have any serious weight in the exercise of my discretion, given the other factors referred to above and below.
vi) Other factors: other factors which have persuaded me to decide not to order a stay include the following:
a) Unicredit has not suggested (whether in argument or in its evidence) that it has any defence to Vasonia/Nordea's claim under the proper law of the Guarantee, English law. The only possible defence referred to is one said to be available to MF of exceptio doli under Italian law, which, as formulated in the Italian Proceedings, would afford no defence to a claim by Vasonia/Nordea as against Unicredit as a matter of English law. But if there is no defence to the claim in the English Claim under the Guarantee, it is difficult to see what legitimate purpose there could be for staying the English Claim.
b) I accept Mr. Lockey's submission that to grant a stay of the English Claim in such circumstances would be to frustrate the very purpose of demand guarantees such as the Guarantee, and to undermine their commercial utility as well-recognised financial instruments widely used throughout the EU and elsewhere. If proceedings brought against a bank to enforce a demand guarantee in the forum chosen in the guarantee can be pre-empted by proceedings brought by the customer against the bank in another Jurisdiction Regulation territory, requiring the beneficiary to become embroiled in those proceedings, the efficacy of such instruments will be emasculated.
c) Moreover, in my view, any proposed stay would in effect compel Vasonia to litigate the substance of its claim against Unicredit in Italy, in proceedings involving both Unicredit and MF, and in breach of the jurisdiction clause in the Guarantee and of the autonomy principle, simply because MF sought interim protective relief against its bank in Italy, pending its claim in arbitration, before Vasonia issued proceedings in England. A stay of the English Claim would not hold the ring: its effect would be to compel Vasonia to pursue its claim on the Guarantee in Italy in proceedings involving the customer, even though Vasonia had the contractual right to require Unicredit to submit to the jurisdiction of the English Court in relation to its claim under the autonomous obligation assumed by Unicredit.
d) The English jurisdiction clause in the Guarantee is material to the exercise of my discretion. Its effect is that, if Vasonia elects to bring proceedings in England under the Guarantee, Unicredit irrevocably agrees to submit to the jurisdiction of the English High Court; see, in relation to a similar clause, per Moore-Bick J in Mercury Communications Ltd and Another v Communication Telesystems International [1999] 2 All ER (Comm) 33 at 40h. Thus, once Vasonia had elected to bring proceedings against Unicredit in the English High Court, Unicredit was in breach of contract in not submitting to the jurisdiction of the English Court. In this context I reject Mr. Mercer's submission on this point based on Gubisch and other cases cited by him. Those cases in my judgment concern the relationship between Article 27 and exclusive jurisdiction clauses, not the Article 28 discretion. In relation to Article 28, the English Court is in my judgment entitled to consider the jurisdiction agreement as one of the factors to be taken into account as part of the balancing exercise on discretion.
e) Accordingly, I agree with Mr. Lockey's submission that any proposed stay would in effect wrongly reward MF for commencing proceedings in Italy against its bank, notwithstanding that it knew that any claim under the Guarantee should be pursued in England. The whole basis of MF's claim in the Final Proceedings runs contrary to the acknowledgements and representations which MF made when asking Unicredit to issue the Guarantee to Vasonia[23]. To grant a stay of the English proceedings in these circumstances inappropriately rewards MF and offends justice: cf JP Morgan Europe Ltd v Primacom [2005] EWHC 508 (Comm) at 65, per Cooke J:
"The injustice of giving precedence to proceedings brought in breach of an exclusive jurisdiction clause where the parties have agreed that England is the appropriate forum is self-evident. To breach the clause and to gain the benefit of priority for the [foreign] Courts by such breach offends justice, where the Court has a discretionary decision to make".
f) I do not consider that a judgment of the English Court in favour of Vasonia's claim would seriously increase the risk of Unicredit being exposed to double jeopardy. On the contrary, even if the Italian Proceedings were to continue, Unicredit would be able to rely on the English Court's judgment to set aside the interim injunction and/or to defend the claim in the Final Proceedings.
g) Even if Unicredit were to remain exposed to the risk of double jeopardy, that would be the result of the conduct of Unicredit's customer, MF, not of Unicredit's contractual counterpart, Vasonia, and/or because of Unicredit's decision not to pay under the Guarantee within a few days of the demand having been made but instead to seek to interplead. Both MF and Unicredit voluntarily agreed to the autonomous terms of a demand guarantee and to such a guarantee being provided to Vasonia, notwithstanding that it provided for resolution of disputes in the English High Court.
h) I do not consider that Unicredit's point in relation to the delayed service of Vasonia's English Claim should have any significant weight in the exercise of my discretion. It was reasonable in my view for Vasonia to have awaited the outcome of the January 2010 hearing of the interim injunction because, if the interim injunction had been refused, no further proceedings in Italy or England would have been necessary. Whilst the delay in service of the English Claim is a factor to be taken into account, it does not persuade me that it is appropriate to grant a stay.
Conclusion
Note 1 These were largely agreed. To the extent that they were not agreed, the narrative includes any findings on the evidence before the court. [Back] Note 3 See paragraphs 12 and 13 of the brief. [Back] Note 4 See paragraph 14 of the brief. [Back] Note 5 See e.g. paragraph 42 of Mr. Gailani’s witness statement. [Back] Note 6 It was issued and stamped by the Genoa Court on 12 April 2009, but bears the date 9 April 2009, but nothing turns on the difference between the two dates. [Back] Note 7 See paragraph 43 of Mr. Gailani’s statement. [Back] Note 8 The precise date is in dispute, but it is agreed that nothing turns on the point. [Back] Note 9 Plus 45 further days from 7 July 2010 to reflect holiday periods. [Back] Note 10 Articles 303 and 305 of the Italian Civil Procedure Code [Back] Note 11 It was common ground that Article 27 did not apply to the claim brought by Nordea in the English Proceedings as it was not party to the Italian Proceedings. [Back] Note 12 Cf. Article 28. [Back] Note 13 In relation to which issue the parties’ respective Italian lawyers disagree. [Back] Note 14 See Mance J (as he then was) in Grupo Torras SA (supra) at page 418 (right hand column). [Back] Note 15 Again, see paragraph 43 of Mr. Gailani’s witness statement. [Back] Note 16 The parties’ Italian lawyers are in disagreement on this point of Italian law. However, as the Jurisdiction Regulation requires the application of autonomous concepts, it is not necessary for this Court to resolve the disagreement. [Back] Note 17 The last sentence of Article 22 of the Brussels Convention is now, in identical terms, Article 28(3) of the Regulation. [Back] Note 18 Which was disputed by Avv. Cristoffanini. [Back] Note 19 Again, as per Mr. Gailani paragraph 43. [Back] Note 20 Again, as per Mr. Gailani paragraph 43. [Back] Note 21 Which has not been made as a matter of English law, as Mr. Mercer emphasised. [Back] Note 22 Although I do not need to decide the point, the evidence of Italian law strongly suggests that this is indeed the case. [Back] Note 23 See, for example, Unicredit’s defence brief in the Initial Proceedings at paragraph 15, which quotes MF’s acknowledgements. [Back]