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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 >> Autoridad Del Canal De Panamá v Sacyr, S.A. & Ors [2017] EWHC 2228 (Comm) (05 September 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2017/2228.html Cite as: [2017] EWHC 2228 (Comm), [2018] 1 All ER (Comm) 916 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Fetter Lane, London |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
Autoridad del Canal de Panamá |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Sacyr, S.A. Salini-Impregilo S.P.A. Jan De Nul, N.V. Constructora Urbana S.A. Sofidra S.A. |
Defendants |
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Rhodri Davies QC and Nehali Shah (instructed by Norton Rose Fulbright LLP) for the First Defendant
David Foxton QC and James Sheehan (instructed by White & Case LLP) for the Second, Third and Fifth Defendants.
Christopher Harris (instructed by Reynolds Porter Chamberlain LLP) for the Fourth Defendant
Hearing dates: Monday 26th June to Thursday 29th June 2017
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Blair :
(1) An application by the defendants for a stay of the proceedings under s.9 of the Arbitration Act 1996 (which provides for a mandatory stay in respect of a matter which under an arbitration agreement is to be referred to arbitration);(2) An application by the claimant for summary judgment under the APGs on the primary basis that the APGs are first demand instruments; and
(3) An alternative application by the defendants for a stay of the proceedings on case management grounds pending the resolution of the issue by arbitration.
Further claims by ACP for declaratory relief relating to (among other things) jurisdictional issues were in the event not pursued on these applications.
Factual framework and relevant agreements
The parties
(1) The first defendant, Sacyr, S.A., is a Spanish company.(2) The second defendant, Salini-Impregilo S.P.A., is an Italian company.
(3) The third defendant, Jan de Nul, N.V., is a Belgian company.
(4) The fourth defendant, Constructora Urbana S.A., is a Panamanian company.
(5) The fifth defendant, Sofidra S.A., is a Luxembourg company, and the third defendant's parent company.
The design and construction contract
The assignment of the Main Contract and the original JSG
"2. The Assignor hereby irrevocably assigns, to the Assignee, and the Assignee hereby assumes from the Assignor, all of the Assignor's rights and obligations, warranties, duties, liabilities and undertakings under and pursuant to the Contract and according to the terms of the Contract, which assignment and assumption shall be effective from the original date of the Contract, subject to the consent and agreement of the Employer to the assignment hereunder […]; provided that the Assignor and each of the Members of the Assignor shall remain jointly and severally liable […] pursuant to the Joint and Several Guarantee."
"1.1 Each of the Guarantors, jointly and severally:
(a) as primary obligor and not as surety, unconditionally, jointly and severally guarantees to the Employer the due and punctual performance by the New Contractor of each and all the obligations, warranties, duties and undertakings of the Contractor under and pursuant to the Contract according to the terms of the Contract; and
(b) if the New Contractor is in breach of any of its obligations, warranties, duties and undertakings as set out in sub-paragraph (a), shall upon demand by the Employer from time to time, forthwith perform the obligations, warranties, duties and undertakings of which the New Contractor is in breach in the same manner that the Contractor is required to perform such obligations, warranties, duties and undertakings according to the terms of the Contract."
"2.3 The obligations of each of the Guarantors hereunder are primary and not by way of surety and none of the Guarantors shall be entitled as against the Employer to any right of set-off or counterclaim…"
"2.5 None of the Guarantors shall have any greater liability to the Employer under the Guarantee than such Guarantor would have had to the Employer had such Guarantor been an original party to the Contract in place of the New Contractor…"
"3.2 Determinations of interest rate and amounts under this Guarantee shall be made by the Employer, which determinations shall be conclusive and binding hereunder in the absence of manifest error."
"Recital (A) The Guarantors […] and the Employer have entered into a contract, on a joint and several basis, for the design and construction of a third set of locks dated August 11th, 2009 (as amended, modified or supplemented, "Contract")…"
"2.2 Each of the Guarantors authorizes the Contractor and the Employer to make any addendum, variation or amendment to the Contract or the Works without reference to it or any other Guarantor, and agrees that this Guarantee shall apply to such addendum, variation or amendment."
"2.4 Each of the Guarantors' obligations under this Guarantee are continuing and accordingly shall remain in full force and effect […] until all obligations, warranties, duties and undertakings now or hereafter to be carried out or performed by the Contractor under the Contract shall have been satisfied or performed in full…"
The Panamanian law Advance Payment JSG
"1.1 Each of the Guarantors, jointly and severally:
(a) as primary obligor and not as surety, unconditionally, jointly and severally guarantees to the Employer the due and punctual performance by the Contractor of each and all the obligations, warranties, duties and undertakings of the Contractor under and pursuant to the Contract regarding or in relation to the Advance Payment for Specified Suppliers, including without limitation, the obligation of the Contractor to make full, complete and timely repayment of the Advance Payment for Specified Suppliers, all according to the terms of the Contract; and
(b) if the Contractor is in breach of any of its obligations, warranties, duties and undertakings as set out in sub-paragraph (a), shall upon demand by the Employer from time to time, forthwith perform the obligations, warranties, duties and undertakings of which the Contractor is in breach in the same manner that the Contractor is required to perform such obligations, warranties, duties and undertakings according to the terms of the Contract."
"2.3 The obligations of each of the Guarantors hereunder are primary and not by way of surety and none of the Guarantors shall be entitled as against the Employer to any right of set-off or counterclaim …"
"3.2 Determinations of interest rate and amounts under this Guarantee shall be made by the Employer, which determinations shall be conclusive and binding hereunder in the absence of manifest error."
Developments during 2013 and 2014
(1) until 31 December 2015 upon certain conditions being met; and(2) potentially until 31 December 2018 upon certain other conditions being met, including the provision of letters of credit with a 31 December 2018 expiry date and issued by Panamanian financial institutions of a specified financial standing. These had to be in place "no later than 45 days prior to January 1, 2016".
"In the event of any Award, the Guarantors agree jointly and severally that […] they will immediately:
(a) pay on first demand any sum ordered in any Award in favour of the Employer […]
(b) give full effect, or cause the Contractor to give full effect, to the terms of any Award."
The first English law/jurisdiction advance payment guarantee
"(a) …the Employer shall make a further advance payment of part of the Contract Price up to a maximum of USD 120,000,000.00…
(b) The Contractor shall obtain, at its own cost, and furnish to the Employer:
[…]
(ii) the VO No. 149 Guarantee Security no later than 50 Business Days after the date of this Variation Agreement…
(c) If the Contractor fails to comply with any or all of sub-paragraph… (b)(ii)… above within the time periods specified therein, then the whole of the balance of the Advance Payment for VO No. 149 Suppliers shall immediately become due and payable…
(e) Provided that the Contractor has complied and continues to comply with subparagraph (b)(ii) above and subject to sub-paragraphs (h) and (i) below, the Advance Payment for VO No. 149 Suppliers shall be repaid in full by the Contractor to the Employer by way of one lump sum payment on December 31, 2016.
Where this sub-paragraph (e) applies, the Advance Payment for VO No. 149 Suppliers shall become due and payable by the Contractor to the Employer on December 31, 2016.
(f) Subject to sub-paragraphs (h) and (i) below, if no later than 45 days prior to January 1, 2017 the Contractor at its sole cost has provided to the Employer the VO No. 149 LOC providing a December 31, 2018 maturity date then the Advance Payment for VO No. 149 Suppliers shall not become due and payable in accordance with sub-paragraph (e) above and the Employer shall grant the Contractor a temporary deferral of the repayment of the Advance Payment for VO No. 149 Suppliers until December 31, 2018…
(g) Subject to paragraph (h)… the Advance Payment for VO No. 149 Suppliers shall become due and payable… by way of one lump sum payment, on the due date set out in sub-paragraph (e) or (f) above as applicable. …
(h) The Advance Payment for VO No. 149 Suppliers shall immediately become due and payable by the Contractor to the Employer and the Employer shall be able to make a claim for the entire outstanding balance under the VO No. 149 Security, (and for the avoidance of doubt, a claim in respect of the Advance Payment for VO No. 149 Suppliers shall be made, in the first instance, under the VO No. 149 LOC, and, in the second instance, under the VO No. 149 Guarantee Security …), if:
(i) the Advance Payment for Vo No. 149 Suppliers has not been repaid in full on:
(1) December 31, 2016 (pursuant to sub-paragraph (e)); or
(2) December 31, 2018 (pursuant to sub-paragraph (f)), and/or
[…]"
The main terms of the APG
"1.1 …wherever used in this Guarantee, "Guaranteed Amount" shall mean the Advance Payment for VO No. 149 Suppliers Outstanding Amount less any amount of the Advance Payment for VO No. 149 Suppliers Outstanding Amount secured by the Advance Payment for VO No. 149 Suppliers LOC, if any."
"2.1 Each of the Guarantors, jointly and severally:
(a) as primary obligor and not as surety, unconditionally and irrevocably, jointly and severally guarantees to the Employer the payment by the Contractor of the Guaranteed Amount as and when due pursuant to the Contract; and
(b) if the Contractor is in breach of any of its obligations as set out in sub-paragraph (a), shall upon demand by the Employer from time to time, forthwith perform the obligations of which the Contractor is in breach in the same manner that the Contractor is required to perform such obligations according to the terms of the Contract."
"3.3 The obligations of each of the Guarantors hereunder are primary and not by way of surety and none of the Guarantors shall be entitled as against the Employer to any right of set-off or counterclaim whatsoever and howsoever arising. The Employer shall not be obliged to take any action in any court or arbitral proceedings against the Contractor or any Guarantor, to make any claim against or any demand of the Contractor or any Guarantor, to enforce any bond, security, insurance, surety or guarantee held by it in respect of the obligations of the Contractor under the Contract or to exercise, levy or enforce any distress, diligence or other process of execution against the Contractor or any Guarantor. Without prejudice to the obligations of any of the Guarantors under this Guarantee, in the event that the Employer brings proceedings (including any counterclaims) against the Contractor, each of the Guarantors will be bound absolutely by any findings of fact, interim or final award or judgment made by an arbitrator or arbitrators or court in such proceedings or counterclaims or any decision of the DAB where such decision has become final and binding under the Contract.
3.4 Each of the Guarantors' obligations under this Guarantee are continuing and accordingly shall remain in full force and effect (notwithstanding any intermediate satisfaction by the Contractor, any of the Guarantors or any other person) until all obligations, warranties, duties and undertakings now or hereafter to be carried out or performed by the Contractor under the Contract shall have been satisfied or performed in full and are not revocable and are in addition to and not in substitution for and shall not merge with, otherwise prejudice or affect or be prejudiced by, any other right, remedy, guarantee, indemnity, insurance, surety or security which the Employer may at any time hold for the performance of such obligations and may be enforced without first having recourse to any such right, remedy, guarantee, indemnity or security. Accordingly this Guarantee may be enforced notwithstanding the existence of all or any of the same and also notwithstanding the Employer at any time releasing or abstaining from perfecting or enforcing or otherwise dealing or omitting to deal with all or any of the same."
"4.2 Determinations of interest rate and amounts under this Guarantee shall be made by the Employer, which determinations shall be conclusive and binding hereunder in the absence of manifest error. For the purposes of this Guarantee, "LIBOR" shall mean a rate per annum (calculated on the basis of a 360 day year and actual days elapsed) equal to (a) the average (rounded upwards, if necessary, to the nearest 1/16 of 1%) of the offered rates which appear on Bloomberg Page BBAM1 (or on any successor or substitute page of such service, or any successor to or substitute for such service, providing rate quotations comparable to those currently provided on such page of such service, for purposes of providing quotations of interest rates of leading reference banks in the London interbank market, as designated from time to time by the Employer) as of 11:00 A.M. (London time) for deposits in U.S. dollars for a period equal to the relevant period for calculation of interest hereunder on the day two (2) Business Days prior to the first day of such period, or (b) if fewer than two (2) such offered rates appear which are relevant to the applicable period, the average (rounded upwards, if necessary, to the nearest 1/16 of 1%) of the rates at which the Employer in its reasonable discretion shall determine at approximately 11:00AM (London time) on the date that is two (2) Business Days preceding such period are the applicable rates offered for U.S. dollar deposits by at least two (2) prime banks in the London interbank market for a period comparable to such period."
"8.1 The Employer's rights under this Guarantee are cumulative and are in addition to and not in substitution for any rights provided by law or the Contract or any other guarantee, surety, bond, insurance or security that the Employer may have or hold in relation to the Contract, and the Employer may exercise its rights under this Guarantee from time to time without first having recourse to any such right, guarantee, surety, bond, insurance or security."
"9.1 This Guarantee, and any non-contractual obligations arising out of or in connection with it, are governed by, and shall be construed in accordance with, English law.
9.2 Jurisdiction of the English Courts
(a) The courts of England have exclusive jurisdiction to settle any dispute arising out of or in connection with this Guarantee (including a dispute regarding the existence, validity or termination of this Guarantee).
(b) The Parties agree that the courts of England are the most appropriate and convenient courts to settle any dispute referred to in paragraph 9.2(a) and accordingly no Party will argue to the contrary."
The two other English law/jurisdiction APGs
Summary of relevant obligations
(1) those within sub-clause 14.2I of the Main Contract covering the APSE (Specified Expenditures), which was added to the contract on 13 March 2014; this was later amended by VO 150 on 24 February 2016 extending the repayment date to 31 December 2016;(2) those within sub-clause 14.2J of the Main Contract covering repayment of OEA (Other Existing Advances), which was added to the contract on 1 August 2014; this was later amended by VO 161 on 24 February 2016 extending the repayment date to 31 December 2016; and
(3) those within sub-clause 14.2L of the Main Contract covering the advance payment for VO 149 Suppliers of approximately US$120m, which was added to the Main Contract pursuant to VO 149 on 5 June 2015. The repayment date was also 31 December 2016.
(1) In relation to the repayment of the advance payment of approximately US$120m for the VO 149 Suppliers:(A) first to fourth defendants' joint and several APG dated 8 June 2015; and(B) fifth defendant's parent company APG dated 8 June 2015.(2) In relation to the deferred repayment of the APSE:
(A) first to fourth defendants' joint and several APG dated 25 February 2016; and(B) fifth defendant's parent company APG dated 25 February 2016.(3) In relation to the deferred repayment of the OEA:
(A) first to fourth defendants' joint and several APG dated 25 February 2016; and(B) fifth defendant's parent company APG dated 25 February 2016.
The arbitrations and the court proceedings
The emergency application to the arbitral tribunal
"401. The Tribunal considers that the claim for which the likelihood of success on the merits must be examined is the Claimants' claim that they should not be required to repay the advance payments because such repayment would be subject to the resolution of the Parties' ongoing dispute concerning liability for delays and costs."
"410. The repayment terms agreed in Variation Order No.108 and the other Variation Orders are detailed provisions setting out certain repayment dates and providing for deferral of such repayment dates only on very specific and clear conditions. None of the conditions for a further deferral of the repayment dates relates to the resolution of disputes. If the First Claimant [that is, GUPC] and the Respondent [that is ACP] intended for the repayment of the advance payments to be conditioned upon the resolution of disputes, they could have, and surely would have, made that clear in the MOU or the Variation Orders."
…
"414. Consequently, the Arbitral Tribunal finds that the Claimants have not demonstrated a likelihood of success on the merits of the claim that their repayment obligations should be suspended until the resolution of disputes since the express contractual terms agreed between the First Claimant and the Respondent, in the Contract as amended in particular by the MOU and the Variation Orders, do not establish any link between the First Claimant's repayment obligations and the resolution of disputes as alleged by the Claimants. Under the clear terms of the Contract as amended, the First Claimant is required to repay the Advance Payments on certain specified dates despite any ongoing disputes between the Parties. Thus, on a prima facie basis, it has not been demonstrated that the merits of the First Claimant's request, i.e. that it would not have to repay the Advance Payments due to the outstanding disputes between the Parties, have a substantial likelihood of success."
(1) The Claimants (i.e. GUPC and the first to third defendants in the English proceedings) contended that under Art. 985 of the Panamanian Civil Code GUPC did not have the obligation to repay the advance payments on 31 December 2016 since ACP was in breach of its obligations under the Main Contract as alleged in the underlying arbitration. The tribunal dismissed this argument stating that:"417. …the contractual agreements underlying the repayment of the advance payments (namely the MOU and the Variation Orders) are specific agreements and, at the time of their execution, the First Claimant and the Respondent clearly intended for the repayment obligations to be dealt with separately from any ongoing disputes as to other contractual obligations. Therefore, Article 985 of the Panamanian Civil Code which [is] applicable to reciprocal obligations is not applicable here."(2) The Claimants contended that under Art. 1001 of the Panamanian Civil Code, ACP could not condition the deferral of the guarantees on an obligation which it was impossible for GUPC to perform (i.e. obtaining letters of credit from Panamanian financial institutions of specified financial standing). The tribunal rejected this on the basis that "this provision is only applicable in the context of absolute impossibility, i.e.where the action required would be objectively impossible for any party to achieve, which cannot be considered to be the case here" (paragraph 418).
(3) The Claimants relied on various articles of the Panamanian Civil Code that they submitted required ACP to negotiate with the Claimants and adopt measures to restore the equity of the Main Contract as new and unforeseen circumstances had rendered performance of contractual obligations by GUPC excessively onerous, invoking the difficulties in obtaining the letters of credit. The tribunal also rejected this submission, stating that it was already known when the relevant VOs were entered into that GUPC was having difficulty obtaining further letters of credit and that GUPC nevertheless agreed to the 31 December repayment date (paragraph 419).
"440. In light of the exclusive jurisdiction clause in the English Law Guarantees […] as well as the fact that the English Court proceedings [the present proceeding begun by ACP on 30 November 2016] do not involve all of the same parties as the present arbitration, the Tribunal considers that it must defer to the determination by the English Courts presently seized with the [ACP's] action under the English Law Guarantees […] As [ACP] stated during the Phone Hearing, the [first to third defendants] can raise any defenses to the Respondent's action under the English Law Guarantees […] in the English Courts, which is the proper forum for any disputes regarding the parties obligations under those security agreements."
The English proceedings
"Given the narrow scope of your client's summary judgment application (which focuses in relation to the primary claim, only on the issue of whether the Advance Payment Guarantees are to be construed as a matter of English law as unconditional demand bonds (the "Construction Issue") and provided your client does not apply at a later stage to expand the scope of its application, we accept that the Defendants' stay applications and your client's summary judgment application may be heard together…"
The guarantee arbitration
(1) Under the Main Contract and under Panamanian law, the repayment obligations are not "determinable" until disputes over the contract price are determined and are not payable until disputes over the contract price have been resolved.(2) It was objectively impossible within the meaning of Panamanian law for GUPC to obtain letters of credit in time to secure an extension for the repayment of the relevant advance payments.
(3) Under Panamanian law, no repayment obligation can arise in circumstances where ACP is in breach of its own mutual obligations.
The arbitration proceedings currently in existence
(1) ICC No 19962/ASM arbitration commenced in December 2013, under which the first to third defendants and GUPC bring claims against ACP, a final hearing of which took place in January 2017;(2) ICC No 20910/ASM and No 20911/ASM arbitrations (which have been merged) commenced on 17 March 2015, under which the first to third defendants and GUPC on one side and ACP on the other side, bring claims against each other under the Main Contract, the JSG and/or the GAA, hearings of which are to take place in January and February 2019; these are the arbitral proceedings in which the Emergency Application was made;
(3) ICC No 22465/ASM arbitration commenced on 8 December 2016, under which the first to third defendants and GUPC bring claims against ACP under the Main Contract and the JSG, which is active, but at an early stage;
(4) ICC No 22466/ASM arbitration commenced on 8 December 2016, under which the first to third defendants and GUPC brought claims against ACP under the Main Contract and the JSG, which is active, but at an early stage; and
(5) ICC No 22588/ASM arbitration commenced on 31 January 2017 being the Guarantee Arbitration described above.
The parties' claims
ACP's summary judgment application
Introduction
(1) As primary obligors, the defendants are liable to make repayment of the advance payments upon demand, and ACP itself is entitled conclusively to determine what amounts of principal and interest are due.(2) Alternatively, the defendants' primary liability was triggered by the failure of GUPC to make payment "as and when" provided for under the Main Contract, construed under English law. The defendants' liability is governed solely by English law and is in no way dependent on establishing that GUPC is also liable as a matter of Panamanian law. This is described below as ACP's "alternative case".
The parties' contentions
(a) When the English law APGs were entered into, the Main Contract and the already comprehensive guarantees in existence were subject to Panamanian law and Miami/ICC arbitration, and Miami arbitrations were already on foot.(b) The English law APGs were agreed to be provided in respect of the advance payments that were not yet secured by letters of credit (US$302m out of about US$850m in total).
(c) At the time the APGs were entered into, it was known that not all of the underlying disputes would be resolved by arbitration by the end of December 2016 when the repayment of the advance payments would fall due.
(d) The terms of the Main Contract make no reference whatsoever to the repayment obligations being dependent in any way on resolution of the underlying disputes, as the arbitral tribunal found in the Emergency Application.
(e) It was equally clear in the terms of the Main Contract that if GUPC and the defendants wished to defer repayment until the end of 2018, they would have to provide the equivalent of cash for those advance payments not yet secured by letters of credit.
(f) It would be inconsistent with this for the defendants to be able to achieve an equivalent deferral of the repayment date simply by raising defences of Panamanian law.
(g) The English law APGs if they were to be subject to Panamanian law defences would add nothing to the security already afforded by the Panamanian law guarantees other than the futile ability to commence a court action, which would then be stayed probably for years, pending the outcome of arbitrations in Miami, in circumstances where there were already Panamanian law guarantees covering the same liability and achieving (on the defendants' case) that same result.
(h) The tribunal dealing with the Emergency Application rejected the defendants' argument that repayment by GUPC of the advance payments was conditioned on resolution of the underlying Panamanian law governed disputes, and its reasoning is compelling and should be adopted.
(a) The Main Contract was originally made between ACP and the first to fourth defendants, and their liability to ACP was defined and limited by the extent of their liability as contractor (as an unincorporated consortium) under the Main Contract.(b) The JSG was required when the Main Contract was assigned by the consortium members to GUPC. The liability of the first to fourth defendants under the JSG then became co-extensive with the liabilities they previously had as direct contracting parties with joint and several liability, the purpose of the JSG being to ensure that, after their substitution by GUPC as contractor, the members of the consortium remained responsible to ACP for the performance of the Main Contract only to the extent that they had been before (clause 2.2).
(c) When it came to the APJSG, the parties used materially identical language for the operative provisions. Clause 2 was not reproduced, but because the terms used are materially identical the inference is that the same language had the same effect.
(d) By the GAA, the 'Guarantors' agreed to pay on first demand any arbitral award in favour of ACP. This is only consistent with the JSG and the APJSG being guarantees rather than unconditional demand bonds, because if they were unconditional demand bonds, ACP would have no need for these terms. Indeed, this appears to be undisputed.
(e) When it came to the APGs in 2015 and 2016 (with the JSG and the APJSG in force and confirmed as in force), the parties used (according to the defendants) the same language as in the JSG and the APJSG, the natural conclusion being that when the parties used the same (or equivalent) terms for the APGs they also intended to create guarantees. Had they intended to create a fundamentally different form of instrument, that would have been clearly signalled by the use of clearly different wording.
(f) It is the case that the JSG and the APJSG are governed by Panamanian law while the APGs are governed by English law. However, all of them are written in English and there is no suggestion that there is any difference between Panamanian and English law which would justify giving the same terms a different meaning.
(g) ACP's case requires the assertion that either the JSG and the APJSG are in fact unconditional demand bonds, or that despite using the same terms, the parties intended the APGs to be radically different in effect. This is not credible.
The legal tests
(1) Unlike a guarantee, a first demand bond is in principle autonomous of the underlying contract—liability may arise simply on a conforming demand within the validity of the instrument. For this reason, it has been likened to a letter of credit (Edward Owen Engineering Ltd v Barclays Bank International Ltd [1978] Q.B. 159 at p. 171, Meritz Fire and Marine Insurance Co Ltd v Jan de Nul NV [2011] 1 All ER (Comm) 1049 at [70], WS Tankship II BV v Kwangju Bank Ltd [2011] EWHC 3103 (Comm) at [111], Spleithoff's Bevrachtingskantoor BV v Bank of China Ltd [2015] 2 Lloyd's Rep. 123 at [69]).(2) What the instrument is labelled, the incorporation of terms such as a principal debtor clause, or terms imposing primary liability, both of which are very common in guarantees of all kinds, and the use of words such as "on demand", may be of limited value in determining its legal nature. The practical question, as in the present case, is in substance whether the instrument is effectively payable on demand, with or without some supporting documentation: this can only be ascertained by examining its terms (Marubeni Hong Kong and South China Ltd v Mongolian Government [2005] 1 WLR 2497 at [30], IIG Capital LLC v van der Merwe [2008] 1 All ER (Comm) 435 at [25], Vossloh AG v Alpha Trains (UK) Ltd [2010] EWHC 2443 (Ch) at [23] and [28], Carey Value Added SL v Grupo Urvasco SA [2011] 2 All E.R. (Comm) 140 at [22]).
(3) As was said in Gold Coast Ltd v Caja de Ahorros Del Mediterraneo [2002] 1 Lloyd's Rep 231 at [10] and [15], the court approaches the task of construing it by looking at the instrument as a whole "without any preconception as to what it is". To take advance payment guarantees as an example, the issuance of such guarantees securing advance payments made by an employer to a contractor can be in either form—it depends on what the parties agreed (see Gold Coast at [11]).
(4) When it comes to construing the instrument, the nature of the party giving the guarantee is relevant. It has been held that there is a presumption against construing an instrument as a demand bond which is not given by a bank or other financial institution (Marubeni at [30], IIG Capital LLC v Van Der Merwe [2008] EWCA Civ 542 at [9]). It has also been held that an instrument issued by a financial institution which relates to an underlying transaction between parties in different jurisdictions and contains an undertaking to pay "on demand", and does not contain clauses excluding or limiting the defences available to a guarantor, will almost always be construed as a demand guarantee (Gold Coast at [16], Wuhan Guoyu Logistics Group Co v Emporiki Bank of Greece SA (No 1) [2014] 1 Lloyd's Rep 273 at [27], Caterpillar Motoren GmbH & Co K.G. v Mutual Benefits Assurance Company [2015] EWHC 2304 (Comm) at [20]).
(5) The presence of "protective clauses" i.e. clauses excluding or limiting the defences available to a guarantor (such as those arising from variations of the principal contract) have sometimes been treated as indicative of guarantee liability (because they are unnecessary in the case of a first demand instrument), but this is not necessarily a significant factor, since there may be other reasons for including the clauses, (e.g.) out of an abundance of caution (Gold Coast at [25]). The absence of any such clauses may be a pointer to the instrument being a first demand instrument (Meritz, supra, at [74]).
(6) Whilst "conclusive evidence" clauses may not in themselves point to the nature of the instrument, since they can be found in either kind, a clause which—if effective—requires payment against certification by the beneficiary, is likely to be inconsistent with the need for the beneficiary to establish the liability (other than through such certification) of the principal debtor in order to enforce the guarantee (North Shore Ventures Ltd v Anstead Holdings Inc [2012] Ch 31 at [67], Bitumen Invest AS v Richmond Mercantile Ltd FZC [2017] 1 Lloyd's Rep 219 at [27]). However, conclusive evidence clauses, which have found support historically through the perceived institutional reliability of the party entrusted with making the relevant calculations, are strictly construed, with any ambiguity being resolved in favour of the guarantor (Bache & Co (London) Ltd. v Banque Vernes et Commerciale de Paris SA [1973] 2 Lloyd's Rep. 437 at p. 440, Bangkok Bank Ltd v Cheng Lip Kwong [1989] SLR 1154 at p.1159, North Shore at [46]).
(7) Although this has not arisen in the present case, where incorporated, the ICC Uniform Rules for Demand Guarantees (URDG) are likely to be determinative (see e.g. Meritz, supra, in the Court of Appeal at [2012] 1 All ER (Comm) 182 at [16]).
Discussion and conclusion
(1) Paragraph 3.3 excludes the right of set off, and makes express that ACP (as employer) is not obliged to take any action against GUPC (the contractor liable to repay the advance payments) in order to enforce the guarantee. (The paragraph also refers to "any Guarantor"—in the 2010 JSG and 2012 APJSG, the term was "any Member", i.e. of the consortium. Otherwise, the language is the same.) It also provides that the guarantors shall be bound by findings made in any proceedings against the GUPC.(2) Paragraph 3.4 makes it clear (among other things) that the guarantees are continuing and not discharged until repayment in full.
(3) Paragraph 8.1 provides that ACP's rights under the APG are cumulative and may be exercised without first having recourse to any other security.
(4) These provisions are effectively the same as those in the JSG and APJSG. In the court's view, whilst it is correct that these provisions show that ACP as beneficiary can enforce the APGs without having had recourse to the principal debtor or enforcing any other security (and this is important in relation to the s. 9 stay application), it does not support the contention that the guarantors' liability arises on first demand. As the defendants say, if anything, the inclusion of protective clauses points against this contention.
(1) Under these provisions, it was entitled to determine both the "amount due under the Guarantee", and the rate and amount of interest thereon.(2) The plural word "amounts" at the beginning of paragraph 4.2 thus refers both to the "amount due under the Guarantee", i.e. the "amount" already referred to in paragraph 4.1, and the amount of interest thereon. The "s" is fatal to the defendants' case that the conclusive determination is limited to interest. There is no reason to suppose that the claimants would need to make more than one ultimately binding determination of the amount of interest under each guarantee.
(3) This conclusive determination clause is critical to ACP's primary construction; it is a clear indication that the obligation was to pay on demand. It also supports ACP's alternative case, if the primary case is not accepted. It is a clear indication that the defendants' liability was not meant to hinge on defences under Panamanian law: if the payments were not paid when due under the Main Contract, ACP was entitled to demand payment and conclusively to determine the amounts of principal and interest.
(4) It cannot seriously be suggested that this provision relates only to interest; quite apart from the use of the plural word "amounts", it is impossible to determine conclusively the amount of interest without first knowing for sure (conclusively) the amount of principal on which such conclusive determination of interest is to be based. Logically, the one necessarily includes the other. It is hard to see what commercial benefit would be derived from the conclusive determination provision if paragraph 4.2 were to be read as limited to the "amount" of interest.
(5) ACP communicated its demands/determinations on 6 and 24 January 2017. After the defendants had taken some technical points in relation thereto, further demands/determinations were issued on a without prejudice basis.
(1) One would not expect to find in paragraph 4 ("Payments") a provision which substantively alters paragraph 2, which is the operative provision defining the guarantors' liability.(2) The clear and ordinary meaning of the phrase "determinations of interest rate and amounts under this Guarantee" is that it is referring to rates and amounts of interest. If "amounts" were intended to refer to the size of the principal liability, it would naturally be placed before the consequential issue of interest on such amounts.
(3) The reference to amounts in the first sentence of clause 4.2 is at best ambiguous and, since this is a conclusive evidence clause, any ambiguity is to be resolved in favour of the party liable.
(4) Even if "amounts" were to be given a greater part to play, the most it could aspire to would be to enable ACP to certify the quantum outstanding in respect of the relevant advance payments. It cannot enable ACP to determine the validity of substantive defences to liability for payment of those amounts. Clause 4.2 is clearly only concerned with quantum and not liability.
(5) Not much weight can be put on the use of the singular in 4.1 and the plural in 4.2 but, so far as it goes, the plural in 4.2 suggests that the subject is different from the one for which the singular is used in 4.1, and it is common to talk about amounts of interest.
(6) Even if there cannot be a conclusive determination as to the amount of interest which is due and payable without a conclusive determination as to the amount of principal which is due and payable, it does not follow that ACP is being given the power to make conclusive determinations on both rather than simply on interest.
(1) Paragraph 4.2 is to do with interest, as appears from a fair reading of the full clause. It entitles ACP to determine the rate and amount of interest on sums due under the APGs. It does not entitle ACP conclusively to determine the "Guaranteed Amount", payment of which the defendants guarantee. The fact that the word "amounts" in paragraph 4.2 is in the plural is a minor point, which does not have the effect of changing the whole nature of the instrument. If there is any ambiguity in that respect, it is to be resolved in favour of the guarantors (see the authorities cited above).(2) Consistently with this, ACP's original letters of demand of 6 January 2017 only determine interest. As the defendants say, these demand letters do not have the appearance of demands under unconditional demand bonds. It was only on 26 April 2017 when the letters were amended and resent that ACP purported (by adding words) to determine the principal amount as well.
(3) Alternatively, if paragraph 4.2 does extend to the principal amount, paragraph 4.2 entitles ACP to determine the quantum of such amount, but not the defendants' liability to pay it. There is nothing in the clause that supports an interpretation that ACP can conclusively determine the guarantors' liability to pay. Clear words would be required for such a result. The distinction in this context between liability and quantum is well recognised in the case law (Vossloh AG v Alpha Trains (UK) Ltd [2011] 2 All ER (Comm) 307 at [50]-[52], Carey Value Added SL, supra, at [40]-[41], North Shore Ventures, supra, at [48], to be compared to [68]).
(4) As the defendants say, this conclusion is consistent with the fact that paragraphs 4.1 and 4.2 appear in the same form in the 2010 JSG (see above), including "amounts" in the plural. The JSG covers all of GUPC's obligations under the Main Contract (as already explained the evidence is that it was entered into when the Main Contract was novated from the defendants' consortium to GUPC so as to maintain their individual liability to ACP as employer). It has not been suggested that the JSG is a first demand instrument, or that ACP is entitled conclusively to determine the amounts due under it.
ACP's alternative case
The defendants' stay application under s. 9 Arbitration Act 1996
Introduction
"Stay of legal proceedings.
(1) A party to an arbitration agreement against whom legal proceedings are brought (whether by way of claim or counterclaim) in respect of a matter which under the agreement is to be referred to arbitration may (upon notice to the other parties to the proceedings) apply to the court in which the proceedings have been brought to stay the proceedings so far as they concern that matter.
…
(4) On an application under this section the court shall grant a stay unless satisfied that the arbitration agreement is null and void, inoperative, or incapable of being performed."
"Article II
1. Each Contracting State shall recognize an agreement in writing under which the parties undertake to submit to arbitration all or any differences which have arisen or which may arise between them in respect of a defined legal relationship, whether contractual or not, concerning a subject matter capable of settlement by arbitration.
2. The term "agreement in writing" shall include an arbitral clause in a contract or an arbitration agreement, signed by the parties or contained in an exchange of letters or telegrams.
3. The court of a Contracting State, when seized of an action in a matter in respect of which the parties have made an agreement within the meaning of this article, shall, at the request of one of the parties, refer the parties to arbitration, unless it finds that the said agreement is null and void, inoperative or incapable of being performed."
(i) what is the "matter" in respect of which these legal proceedings have been brought?
(ii) does that "matter" fall within the scope of the arbitration agreements in the Panamanian Law guarantees (that is, the JSG and the APJSG and their respective parent company guarantees)?
(iii) are the arbitration agreements in the Panamanian law guarantees inoperative within the meaning of s.9(4)?
Questions (i) and (ii) are linked and arise out of s. 9(1). Question (iii) raises separate issues and arises out of s.9(4). It does not arise if ACP is correct as to either (i) or (ii). The burden of establishing (i) and (ii) falls on the defendants, and (iii) falls on ACP.
The parties' contentions
(1) It is common ground that the JSG and the APJSG continue to cover the liabilities of GUPC to repay the advance payments to ACP. ACP does not contend that the liabilities of the guarantors under these instruments have been in any way reduced or relinquished in relation to the advance payments. ACP appears to envisage that, if it fails in these proceedings, it will simply claim the same sums under the JSG and the APJSG. The duplication of coverage is therefore current and continuing. As they put it, there is a perfect overlap.(2) Although the defendants have commenced the Guarantee Arbitration to determine whether the advance payments are due for repayment under the Main Contract, it was not necessary to commence that arbitration in order to rely on s.9. There is no need for an arbitration to be pending before such an application can be made.
(3) From the defendants' standpoint as guarantors, they raise the same answer under each of the guarantees; the answer being (apart from any other defences that may arise) that repayment is not due from GUPC under the Main Contract.
(4) The effect of s. 9 is that, where the same matter or issue arises under two contracts, one of which contains an arbitration agreement, then, so far as that matter is concerned, the arbitration agreement cannot be bypassed by the expedient of suing on the other contract. Section 9 is mandatory and it represents a policy decision to prefer arbitration agreements over court proceedings.
(5) The defendants do not contend that ACP should not have brought these proceedings, or that the court cannot decide the construction issue on the APGs, or that, ultimately, the court will not be able to give a final judgment. Their case is simply that the proceedings involve a matter, namely the GUPC Repayment Issue, which is to be referred to arbitration and that the proceedings should be stayed so far as they concern that matter.
(6) The determination whether proceedings are "in respect of" a referred matter within s.9 depends upon the nature of the claim(s) made in the proceedings, and is not dependent upon the formulation in the pleadings or the nature of the relief sought.
(7) The term "matter" encompasses any question that will foreseeably arise for determination in the legal proceedings. So a matter which will foreseeably arise as a defence can be the subject of a stay under s.9. There is no doubt that the GUPC Repayment Issue is a question that will foreseeably arise for determination in this proceedings.
(8) "Matter" is a broad word which relates to substantive issues in proceedings. What counts is the nature of the issue, not the origin of the proceedings in which it arises. Thus, the GUPC Repayment Issue is one and the same matter, regardless of which guarantee it is said to arise under. Whilst the word can certainly encompass a claim or cause of action, it is not naturally confined to such concepts. If the fact that a claim has been brought under different contracts is sufficient to avoid a s.9 stay, then that would be the answer to many such cases. If the essential element of s.9 was intended to be the source of the right concerned, it would have been more natural for the draftsman to use language such as "claim" or "cause of action".
(9) A "matter" can represent only a part of the dispute in the court proceedings. Section 9(1) provides for a "stay [of] the proceedings so far as they concern that matter". While the provision can apply to proceedings where there are two separate causes of action, one subject to arbitration and one not, it also allows for a case where one issue is subject to arbitration in a case which is otherwise properly in court. The purpose of s.9 is to ensure that when parties have agreed that things, whether entire claims or particular issues, should be arbitrated then those things should indeed be arbitrated.
(10) The case law demonstrates that a "matter" for these purposes is "any reasonably substantial issue" including a defence, "that is not merely peripherally or tangentially connected to the dispute in the court proceedings" (Tomolugen Holdings v Silica Investors Ltd [2015] SGCA 57 at [113]).
(11) Accordingly, the question under s.9(1) is whether the proceedings in court raise a reasonably substantial issue, which may be a defence, and which is subject to an arbitration agreement between the parties. It matters not whether the claim in court is brought upon the contract which contains the arbitration agreement, or a different contract, or in tort, or even for statutory relief under the Companies Acts. The question is whether the issue arises in the court proceedings and whether it falls within the arbitration agreement.
(12) This is consistent with the policy of s.9 to protect arbitration agreements. A narrower approach would enable a party to circumvent an arbitration agreement by bringing an action which raised the issues in tort, or on a different contract, and then rely on a court judgment as an issue estoppel in any subsequent arbitration.
(13) The JSG is the first and primary guarantee in the contractual structure, and it was the subject of subsequent confirmations. It is a general guarantee which supports all of GUPC's obligations under the Main Contract, including all obligations to repay advance payments, and it includes an arbitration agreement in broad terms. A failure to apply s.9 would enable ACP to have key issues over liabilities for advance payments decided by the English court, even if it only brought a claim for a modest amount under one of the APGs. Such an approach would emasculate the arbitration agreements.
(14) If the question is asked whether, in relation to a claim under the JSG or the APJSG, the GUPC Repayment Issue falls within the scope of the arbitration agreements in the JSG and APJSG, the answer is unavoidably yes. These instruments encompass exactly the same set of issues as the English law APGs. Whether or not the guarantors are presently liable to repay the relevant advance payments is the same issue under both sets of guarantees. Indeed, the true issue that arises depends upon the Main Contract, and the situation between GUPC and ACP, and is whether GUPC is liable to ACP. That is the same issue regardless of whether it is raised under the Main Contract or one or two or three of the guarantees, and the wording of the arbitration agreements clearly encompasses this matter. Further, this point was raised out of time, involves consideration of foreign law and should be left to the arbitral tribunal in the Guarantee Arbitration to decide. The little evidence that was adduced does nonetheless suggest that the US courts take a broad approach to the scope of arbitration agreements.
(15) The term "defined legal relationship" in Article II.1 of the New York Convention should not be read into Article II.3 such that it would only apply when a court is "seized of an action in a legal relationship" or "concerning a defined legal relationship".
(16) So the subject matter of the guarantees is constituted by GUPC's obligations under the Main Contract. Quite apart, therefore, from the wide words of general scope of s.9, it is clear that the GUPC Repayment Issue as to whether GUPC is liable to ACP falls within the scope of the arbitration agreements in the JSG and APJSG, and that accordingly that matter must be stayed so far as it arises in the English proceedings.
(17) ACP cannot assert that the arbitration agreements in the JSG and APJSG are "inoperative" for the purposes of s. 9(4) where it is relying on the arbitration clauses in these instruments itself in ongoing arbitrations, and in circumstances where the instruments were confirmed on various occasions, including at the time when the English law APGs were entered into.
(1) The defendants' case is that, though the parties agreed an exclusive jurisdiction clause in the APGs, when an action is commenced under that clause it must be stayed because a parallel issue arises for a different purpose under a set of different guarantees governed by a different law and subject to a different jurisdiction, namely arbitration in Miami. If that is right, the protection afforded by the exclusive jurisdiction clauses was illusory. The defendants' approach flies in the face of the commercial context and objective of the transaction.(2) The defendants misunderstand the relevant "matter" for the purposes of s. 9(1). A common or parallel "issue", arising in a different context, is not sufficient, especially in a case like the present one in which there are express provisions which contradict such an interpretation. More linkage is required by the use of the word "matter" in s. 9(1). The "matter" in respect of which these proceedings have been brought is whether the defendants are liable to ACP under the English law APGs, and this is not a "matter" which is to be (or can be) referred to arbitration under the arbitration agreements in the Panamanian law guarantees.
(3) The defendants' contention that the relevant "matter" is the GUPC Repayment Issue (shorn of its context) is wrong both in principle and on the wording of the English law APGs. But, even if (contrary to its primary submission), the relevant "matter" is the GUPC Repayment Issue, that issue does not fall within the scope of the arbitration agreements insofar as it arises in relation to claims under the APGs as opposed to the Panamanian law guarantees.
(4) It is clear from the terms of the APGs and the Panamanian law guarantees that, if ACP wishes to enforce its rights in relation to the repayment of the advance payments, it has the option of bringing claims under either the APGs or the Panamanian law guarantees or both. If ACP wished to bring claims under the APGs (as it has done), all issues which could arise in relation to those claims and the defendants' defences, including the GUPC Repayment Issue (insofar as it arises at all under the APGs), would fall within the scope of the exclusive jurisdiction clauses.
(5) If ACP wished to bring claims against the defendants under the Panamanian law guarantees (which it has not done and would have no need to do if it succeeds in these proceedings), it would be bound to refer such claims to arbitration pursuant to the arbitration agreements, and all issues which could arise in relation to ACP's claims and the defendants' defences, including the GUPC Repayment Issue insofar as it arises under those guarantees, would fall within the scope of the arbitration agreements.
(6) Accordingly, on ACP's approach there will be one-stop adjudication in the forum which is specified by the dispute resolution provisions in whichever set of guarantees it chooses to enforce.
(7) ACP is not obliged to pursue any other action elsewhere either against GUPC, or under any other security, and the APGs can be enforced under the exclusive jurisdiction clauses without recourse to GUPC or other security. ACP relies on clauses 3.3, 3.4 and 8.1 of the APGs.
(8) Given that having recourse to GUPC or to the providers of other security would necessarily entail going to another forum, the defendants' suggested construction of the exclusive jurisdiction clauses is inconsistent with those provisions and would deprive them of effect because ACP would have to do the very thing that it contracted not to have to do, namely, to sue elsewhere under other contracts before it can enforce the APGs.
(9) The task of the court in determining whether a dispute falls within potentially overlapping dispute resolution provisions in one or more related agreements depends on the intention of the parties as revealed by the agreements (i.e. objectively ascertained) against the background of general principle. The preferred approach of the English courts is to find that the particular dispute falls within the scope of only one of the competing dispute resolution provisions (i.e. that they are mutually exclusive rather than overlapping), if the language and surrounding circumstances so allow.
(10) The defendants' argument concerning the fact that the Guarantee Confirmations were executed on the same days as the English law APGs is misconceived. The purpose of the confirmations was to ensure that the advance payments would be secured by the earlier set of Panamanian law guarantees as well as the new APGs. This does not detract from the fact that one set of guarantees was entered into in a particular set of circumstances and another set of guarantees was subsequently entered into years later in different circumstances and to cover one particular liability in each case.
(11) The defendants confuse the concept of the "matter" with the concept of an "issue". "Matter" requires something different from the existence of a common issue in a different contract. In identifying the "matter" in respect of which the legal proceedings have been brought, the focus must be on the particular "legal relationship" and the particular agreement under which the claim in the proceedings has been brought.
(12) The "matter" in respect of which these proceedings have been brought is whether the defendants are liable to ACP under the English law APGs. Under the APGs it was agreed that liability was independent of any need to assert liability in another forum.
(13) Nor is the relevant "matter" the "issue" whether the advance payments are currently due under the terms of the Main Contract as construed in accordance with Panamanian law (i.e. the GUPC Repayment Issue). This would have the effect of forcing ACP to go to arbitration when it was expressly agreed in the APGs that it does not have to do so. The "matter" as to whether the defendants are liable to ACP under the APGs is not a matter which is to be referred to arbitration under the arbitration agreements, nor a matter which the defendants have in fact referred to the Guarantee Arbitration.
(14) If the court nevertheless upholds the defendants' case that the "matter" is the GUPC Repayment Issue, the defendants must still prove that the issue falls within the scope of the arbitration agreements. However, these do not apply to disputes "arising out of, under or in connection with" the English law APGs or "out of the subject matter of" those guarantees. The GUPC Repayment Issue does not fall within their scope insofar as the issue arises in relation to a claim under the APGs as opposed to a claim under the Panamanian law guarantees. There is therefore no common "matter" arising in these proceedings brought in respect of the APGs that falls within the arbitration agreements.
(15) Accordingly, ACP submits that the defendants cannot discharge their burden under s. 9 of proving that these legal proceedings have been brought in respect of a "matter" which under the arbitration agreements must be referred to arbitration, and the stay applications must be dismissed.
(16) In entering into the English law APGs in the terms they did, the parties intended that, if ACP wished to bring claims under the APGs there would be one-stop adjudication in the English courts in respect of those claims and all issues arising in respect of them. The arbitration agreements in the JSG and APJSG are to be regarded as "inoperative" within the meaning of s. 9(4), such that they cannot afford the basis on which the English court could grant a stay, in circumstances in which the GUPC Repayment Issue arises only because defendants wished to obtain a ruling so as to affect claims advanced under the APGs, and ACP has not intimated any claim under the JSG and APJSG.
Discussion and conclusion
(i) Introduction
(ii) The legal principles
"Section 7(2) of the Act is concerned with "proceedings [which] involve the determination of a matter … capable of settlement by arbitration". Its operation is thus not confined to proceedings in which the parties seek the same relief as might have been sought in arbitration proceedings. … the question whether a person is claiming through or under a party to the arbitration agreement is necessarily to be answered by reference to the subject matter in controversy rather than the formal nature of the proceedings".
"125 When ascertaining whether a given matter is covered by an arbitration clause, the court must consider the underlying basis and true nature of the issue or claim, and is not limited solely to the manner in which it is pleaded (see, for example, Larsen Oil v Petroprod at [7]-[10]). As Andrew Smith J stated in Lombard North v GATX at [14]:
"... The question of course depends upon the nature of the claim (or claims) made in the legal proceedings, but not, I think only on the formulation of it (or them) in the claim form and any pleadings. That would allow a claimant to circumvent an arbitration agreement by formulating proceedings in terms that, perhaps artificially, avoid reference to a referred matter, knowing that any application to stay them must be made before a defence is pleaded. ..."
126 Blair J approached the issue in the same way in PT Thiess Contractors Indonesia v PT Kaltim Prima Coal, Standard Chartered Bank, Singapore Branch [2011] Arb LR 26, where he emphasised at [35]:
"... the importance of identifying the "substance of the controversy", rather than the formal nature of the proceedings ... [T]he court must consider the substance of the controversy as it appears from the circumstances in the evidence on the application (and not just the particular terms in which the Claimant has sought to formulate its claim in court). ..."
127 We agree with both these statements as to the proper approach which a court should take. …"
(iii) The principles applied to the present dispute
(1) As the defendants point out, the GUPC Repayment Issue is likely to be the most substantial (possibly the only) issue arising under the APGs. It is clearly not an issue that is merely peripherally or tangentially connected to the dispute in the court proceedings (see Tomolugen at [113]). The court agrees with them on this.(2) However, as was said in Tanning at p. 193, "in any context, 'matter' is a word of wide import", and the context in which it is being considered is important. The essential nature of the claim here is that it is brought under guarantees (the APGs), which are subject to English law and jurisdiction. The substance of the controversy between the parties is the claim under the APGs, and that is the "matter" for the purposes of s. 9(1). The issue of the liability of the principal debtor to repay the advance payments (i.e. the GUPC Repayment Issue) is necessarily bound up with the nature of the instrument as a guarantee, but it is not the, or a, "matter" for these purposes in itself.
(3) On that basis, the proceedings are not "brought in respect of a matter which under the agreement is to be referred to arbitration". The proceedings are brought in respect of a matter (the claim under the APGs) which is referred to the exclusive jurisdiction of the English court.
(4) Although s. 9 cannot be circumvented by the way the proceedings are framed, that does not apply here. The claim is brought under the APGs because that is the security that ACP chooses to enforce. As the court said in Tomolugen at [113], in most cases, the "matter" will encompass the claims made in the proceedings. There is no reason to take a different approach here. To hold otherwise and impose a mandatory stay would run contrary to the substantive provisions of the contract, by which ACP is entitled to enforce the security without enforcing any other security or the principal indebtedness itself.
(5) Contrary to the defendants' submissions in reply, ACPs' Note on Case Management Issues is not inconsistent with its case in this respect, the Note being concerned with potential ways forward, and not this analysis.
(6) Accordingly, ACP is correct that the "matter" in respect of which these proceedings have been brought is whether the defendants are liable to ACP under the English law APGs. This is within the exclusive jurisdiction clause, and is not a matter which the parties have agreed to refer to arbitration, nor in the context of the APGs is the GUPC Repayment Issue a matter which the parties have agreed to refer to arbitration. Section 9(1) does not apply.
Case Management Stay
Introduction
The point raised by ACP as to the effect of the Owusu case
" … the Brussels Convention precludes a court of a contracting state from declining the jurisdiction conferred on it by article 2 of that Convention on the ground that a court of a non-contracting state would be a more appropriate forum for the trial of the action, even if the jurisdiction of no other contracting state is in issue or the proceedings have no connecting factors to any other contracting state."
"Nothing in this Regulation should prevent the courts of a Member State, when seised of an action in a matter in respect of which the parties have entered into an arbitration agreement, from referring the parties to arbitration, from staying or dismissing the proceedings or from examining whether the arbitration agreement is null and void, inoperative or incapable of being performed".
The parties' contentions
(1) The tribunal would determine ACP's objections as to jurisdiction and admissibility (if ACP maintains them). If successful, the English proceedings would resume to determine the preliminary issues, with a possible case management stay afterwards. If ACP is not successful, the Guarantee Arbitration would proceed to stage 2, which is determining the preliminary issues.(2) At stage 2, the tribunal would determine the preliminary issues of Panamanian law and associated facts. It should be possible for a partial award to be produced by the summer of 2018—before the English proceedings could produce a judgment. If ACP succeeds, it could return to the English court, ask for the stay to be lifted and for judgment under the APGs with the benefit of an issue estoppel as to the GUPC Repayment Issue. If determination of the preliminary issues leads to the conclusion that there are possible Panamanian law defences, the Guarantee Arbitration would proceed to stage 3.
(3) If stage 3 is reached, further consideration would need to be given to how the underlying disputes between GUPC and ACP should be determined. Given the likely timing of a partial award at stage 2, the parties should know the scope of any remaining disputes in advance of the upcoming merits hearing in the Concrete Arbitration (the arbitration in which the Emergency Application was made) which is due to take place over 4 weeks in January-February 2019. This would allow the parties to conduct the hearing informed by the outstanding issues in the Guarantee Arbitration, which would not be possible on ACP's proposal. If ACP were to be successful on the GUPC Repayment Issue, it could return to the English courts to lift the stay and obtain judgment. If ACP were to be unsuccessful, the determination of the GUPC Repayment Issue would produce an issue estoppel in the defendants' favour, and the defendants could return to the English court to have the stay lifted and the claims dismissed.
Discussion and conclusion as to case management stay
"Mr MacDonald Eggers submitted that the presence of the exclusive jurisdiction clause (there was no such clause in the Reichhold case) meant that the circumstances justifying a stay had to be even more rare and more compelling than in a case where jurisdiction was founded for other reasons and he was even able to cite the judgment of Beatson J in Equitas Ltd v Allstate Insurance Ltd [2009] Ll Rep IR 227 in support of that proposition. For myself, however, I doubt if it is useful to talk of degrees of rarity and compellability. It is better just to decide if the circumstances of any particular case are rare and compelling enough. The presence of an exclusive jurisdiction clause conferring jurisdiction on the English courts to try a dispute is just one of the relevant circumstances to bear in mind when a judge exercises his discretion. That is what the judge did and the second ground of appeal is not, in my judgment, made out."
(1) The way the arbitration proceedings have come about is of some relevance. This is not a case in which the employer (ACP) has instituted arbitration proceedings against the guarantors in respect of the advance payments. It is common ground that such proceedings could have been commenced under the JSG and APJSG, but ACP chose to enforce the English law APGs, which came later in time. It cannot seriously be suggested that this is not a perfectly reasonable commercial choice. In this case, it is the contractor and the defendant guarantors which have commenced the arbitration proceedings, after the court proceedings had already begun. The history is summarised above, but in brief, after their Emergency Application had been dismissed in the existing arbitration, the defendants began the Guarantee Arbitration seeking negative declarations that they are not liable under the Panamanian law guarantees. But no claim has been made under those guarantees by ACP, nor does it need to make such a claim, in fact it is contractually entitled not to. This certainly does not rule out granting a case management stay in favour of the Guarantee Arbitration at some point, but at least it calls for some hesitation before reaching that conclusion at this stage.(2) The next point of relevance is the progress of the respective sets of proceedings. The English proceedings are underway, though ACP is still seeking summary judgment, and the proceedings are not particularly far advanced. Though the arbitration has been commenced, the arbitral tribunal has not yet been constituted. In distinction to Stemcor, this is not a case therefore in which the arbitration is more advanced than the court proceedings. The case is more like Classic Maritime in that respect. Further, ACP has raised jurisdictional and admissibility objections, and sought an order that the Guarantee Arbitration should be stayed pending the outcome of the English court proceedings, which places a question mark over future timing if ACP maintains this position. Overall, this is a relatively neutral factor, but on balance it tends to weigh against a case management stay at this stage.
(3) The next point of relevance is what the court, or the arbitral tribunal in the Guarantee Arbitration, is going to be asked to decide. For good practical reasons, the case management proposals submitted by both parties envisage the Panamanian law defences on which the defendants rely being subject to decision by way of preliminary issue, either by the court, or by the arbitral tribunal. This is because the position as to a case management stay will be very different if the correct view (contrary to that reached on a prima facie basis by the arbitral tribunal in the Emergency Application) is that GUPC's liability to repay the advance payments depends on the outcome of their other disputes with ACP relating to the performance of the underlying contract. There is force in the defendants' contention that the arbitral tribunal will be better qualified to decide questions of Panamanian law, since it will certainly have civil law expertise among its members. However, the earlier tribunal's decision is of some relevance in this respect, not because it is binding in any way (the defendants may make good some or all of their contentions after full argument), but because it demonstrates that the preliminary issues may turn out to be relatively self-contained, and well within the kind of issues that can be decided by the court with the benefit of expert evidence—some such evidence is already before the court on this application. So although this is a factor tending in favour of a stay, it is a relatively on balance factor at least at present.
(4) But the position could be very different if the GUPC Repayment Issue turns out to depend on disputes relating to the performance of the underlying contract. If it is, then the case for a stay in favour of arbitration may be clear, as indeed ACP accepted in its case management proposals. In at least one version of these proposals, it is fairly stated that, "If the defendants succeed, and at that stage there are detailed and complicated issues which are being considered in arbitration proceedings, it may well be that there would be an agreed stay to have them resolved in the arbitration". If not agreed, the court could order it. But that stage has not yet been reached, and may never be reached.
Conclusion
(1) The defendants are not liable under the Advance Payment Guarantees to make repayment of the advance payments upon demand, and ACP's application for summary judgment on this ground is refused. If ACP wishes to apply for summary judgment on its alternative case, it may restore the application for a hearing.(2) The defendants' application for a stay under s. 9(1) Arbitration Act 1996 is refused.
(3) A compelling case for a case management stay is not made out by the defendants at the present time, but the door is not closed on an application being made in the future, to be decided on the position as it is then.