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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 >> Lonestar Communications Corporation LLC v Kaye & Ors [2023] EWHC 732 (Comm) (30 March 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2023/732.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 732 (Comm) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
KING'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
B e f o r e :
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LONESTAR COMMUNICATIONS CORPORATION LLC |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) DANIEL KAYE (2) AVISHAI MARZIANO (3) CELLCOM TELECOMMUNICATIONS LIMITED (4) RAN POLANI (5) ORANGE LIBERIA, INC |
Defendants |
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Neil Kitchener KC and Andrew Lodder (instructed by Norton Rose Fulbright LLP) for the Fifth Defendant
Hearing date: 22 March 2023
Draft Judgment Circulated: 23 March 2023
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Crown Copyright ©
This judgment was handed down by the judge remotely by circulation to the parties' representatives by email and release to The National Archives. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 30 March 2023 at 10:00am.
The Honourable Mr Justice Foxton:
Interest
The starting point
"When damages are assessed in pounds sterling the conventional rate of interest that is awarded in commercial cases is "base rate plus 1%". That is the rate that a commercial borrower of good credit will have to pay to borrow sterling in London. But when the currency of the loss and the currency of damages is US dollars, then the Commercial Court will consider the cost of borrowing US dollars. That is the position in this case. The cost of borrowing US dollars is usually expressed by reference to the US Prime Rate. That is the rate that commercial banks charge their most creditworthy customers if they are borrowing US dollars. It is a short-term borrowing rate. Prime Rate includes an element of profit for a bank, so that the most creditworthy borrowers can obtain, loans at Prime Rate itself. Less creditworthy borrowers will have to pay Prime Rate plus one or more percentage points."
"[10] Andrew Smith J went on to note (at paragraphs 17-18) that a different practice prevails in arbitrations, where LIBOR is more commonly used as a benchmark – at least where the claimant operates outside the United States. That is because commercial parties outside the United States are not accustomed to using the US prime rate as a reference point for loans, whereas LIBOR rates have acquired international recognition.
[11] Mr Nazarov and Ansol have submitted that a more appropriate rate of interest to apply would be 1% above the 6-month US$ LIBOR rate. They argue that this is much more closely equivalent than the US prime rate to the rate of 1% above base rate which is conventionally used in the Commercial Court for sterling interest awards.
[12] The purpose of an award of interest is to compensate the claimant for the loss of use of the principal sums owed. In the absence of proof of actual loss suffered, the assumption is made that the loss is fairly measured by the rate of interest which the claimant could reasonably been expected to pay to borrow an equivalent amount of money. As stated in Kuwait Airways v Kuwait Insurance [2000] 1 All ER (Comm) 973 at 991–2 and confirmed in Fiona Trust at paragraph 21, the appropriate rate for this purpose is that which would be charged for a short-term unsecured loan and should reflect the creditworthiness of the claimant.
[14] In my view, the 6-month US$ LIBOR rate is a more appropriate rate to use as a benchmark in a case of this kind than the US prime rate for the reason already indicated that LIBOR has become the most widely used benchmark outside the United States for lending denominated in US dollars. That is so not only in the shipping field but generally in international commerce".
"My attention has been drawn to one authority which is relevant to the issues I have to determine, and that is the decision of Leggatt J in VIS Trading Co Ltd v Nazarov ... The relevant part of the judgment starts at para 9, where Leggatt J cites from the relatively well-known decision of Fiona Trust and Holding Corp v Privalov … Leggatt J observed that Andrew Smith J had noted a different practice in relation to arbitrations where LIBOR was more commonly used as a benchmark rate, and then he concluded at para 14 as follows:
'In my view, the six-month US LIBOR rate is a more appropriate rate to use as a benchmark in a case of this kind than the US prime rate for the reason already indicated that LIBOR has become the most widely used benchmark outside the United States for lending denominated in US dollars. That is so not only in the shipping field but generally in international commerce …'
I respectfully concur with that analysis, which reflects my experience in the Commercial Court and the London Circuit Commercial Court. For those reasons, I conclude that in principle the appropriate base rate is the six-month US LIBOR rate."
"The task of the court is to choose an interest rate it considers will be a realistic reflection of the cost of borrowing for a claimant such as Swindon, in the absence of evidence seeking to prove its actual borrowing costs (since no such evidence was provided). Given the factors set out in the previous paragraph, I consider that US Prime + 2%, as proposed by the claimants, is such a rate. The defendants proposed US$ libor + 2½%. It suffices to say that there is no presumption or practice favouring the use of US$ libor over US Prime. If anything, the court has for some time now tended to accept that US Prime represents more realistically than does US$ libor a base line for real-world US$ borrowing costs, at all events away from the world of major financial institutions or other businesses of that sort of magnitude."
i) There are long-standing decisions of the Commercial Court which have referred to US Prime as a starting point for US$ awards: see [4]-[7]. That practice is referred to in Civil Procedure §16AI.2.
ii) LIBOR is in the course of being discontinued.
iii) LIBOR itself is an interbank rate, rather than a commercial borrowing rate.
iv) The trend of the more recent authorities has been to favour the use of US Prime.
v) A default rule would not achieve the requisite clarity if it did not apply to particular commercial sectors of indeterminate scope.
The uplift
Costs independent of the WPSATC Letters
"Routinely, judges approach the matter by asking themselves three questions: first, who has won?; secondly, has the winning party lost on an issue which is suitably circumscribed so as to deprive that party of the costs of that issue?; and thirdly, is it appropriate in all the circumstances of the individual case not merely to deprive the winning party of its costs of an issue in relation to which it has lost, but also to require it to pay the other side's costs".
i) The amount recovered is only 10% of the amount claimed, in circumstances in which the material relevant to the determination of Lonestar's loss was to a significant extent in its own control.
ii) The size of the claim has proved a significant engine in the case, driving the dispute forward, and leading to it being litigated by both parties on a grand scale, with total costs of $23m. That level of costs might, possibly, be proportionate to a US$50m claim, but it is wholly disproportionate to a $5m claim.
iii) I do not find Lonestar advanced a dishonestly exaggerated claim. The issue of loss of profits is one where what Tomlinson LJ described in Sugar Hut Group Limited v AJ Insurance Service [2016] EWCA Civ 46, [25] as "the bounds of permissible optimism" may prove particularly elastic, as the enquiry inevitably involves an exercise in counterfactual analysis rather than, for example, "hard fact" issues such as whether particular property was lost or damaged. It is all too easy for parties to persuade themselves that, but for some intervening event, their business would have reached the sunlit uplands, and where the event is in the nature of a targeted criminal act, such optimism is likely to be fuelled by a sense of righteous indignation. Further, Lonestar's case was supported by expert reports.
iv) Nonetheless, it should have been obvious to Lonestar that there was a huge disconnect between the case it was advancing through expert evidence as to the start date, duration and effect of the DDOS Attacks, and its contemporary documentation and assessment. It should also have been obvious that Lonestar was not able to call any witness capable of giving factual evidence which chimed with that expert case. In these circumstances, it must have been clear that a significant part of the amount claimed was wholly speculative, even if reasonable views might have been held as to the extent of a more solid core.
v) A significant element of the costs claimed – disclosure, forensic expert evidence and trial – was devoted to the dispute as to quantum, on which Orange Liberia was substantially successful. In particular in opening and closing submissions and cross-examination, it was the amount of any loss which took up the greater proportion of the time. Mr Singla KC rightly described these issues at trial as "the real battleground".
vi) I am satisfied that there is force in Orange Liberia's point that Lonestar did very little to explain the quantum of its claim until "without prejudice" communications in November 2020 offered some insight, with a properly explained case only emerging with the expert evidence in August 2022, and particulars of its mitigation expenses claim only when it served its skeleton argument for the adjourned trial in February 2022.
i) There was no separate issue on which Orange Liberia succeeded (as opposed to Lonestar enjoying heavily diminished success on the issue of loss of profits), in contrast to Capita (Banstead 2011) v RFIB [2017] 4 Costs LR 669, on which Mr Kitchener KC relied.
ii) The fact remains that Lonestar obtained a $5m judgment. The significance of that recovery is very different from the types of case considered by Zacaroli J in Brent LBC v Davies [2018] EWHC 3129 (Ch), [46]-[48].
iii) In considering the issue of whether (in effect) a reverse costs order should be made, Orange Liberia's ability to protect itself by a payment into court is a relevant factor (although I accept doing so in this case would have involved a greater exercise in subjective judgment than in many others). As I explain below, I am satisfied that Lonestar has not beaten the First WPSATC Letter.
Costs as between the Defendants
The First WPSATC Letter
Costs after the date of the First WPSATC Letter
Costs orders against the other Defendants
i) on a joint and several basis for their common costs; and
ii) against each Defendant for any costs incurred solely in the claim against that Defendant.
i) While Cellcom BVI did write a letter indicating that it "welcome[d]" Orange Liberia's offer, and agreeing "with the outline" of the proposal, it made no offer itself, merely indicating a willingness "in principle" to contribute to any settlement. That letter did not contain any offer capable of acceptance by Lonestar, and I am satisfied it should not be taken into account under CPR 44.2.
ii) The costs order I made in relation to Orange Liberia reflected both the costs incurred by Lonestar and the costs incurred by Orange Liberia. Cellcom BVI is in a similar position up to 13 December 2021 when it ceased to have legal representation. For reasons of simplicity, and given that there is likely to have been a reduction in Cellcom BVI's legal spend before the letter was sent notifying Lonestar, I will order that Lonestar is entitled to a costs order against Cellcom BVI in respect of the period up to 5 December 2021, in the same terms as the order against Orange Liberia. In respect of the period after that date, Cellcom BVI did not incur legal costs, and for that period Lonestar is entitled to 60% of its costs from Cellcom BVI.
iii) The Individual Defendants have not incurred any legal expenses in the case. They must pay 60% of Lonestar's costs.
Summary of the costs orders
i) In respect of the period up to 5 December 2021:
a) all of the Defendants are jointly and severally liable for 40% of Lonestar's common costs, and the Individual Defendants are jointly and severally liable for a further 20% of Lonestar's common costs.
b) Orange Liberia is liable for 40% of Lonestar's costs solely referable to it, and Cellcom BVI for 40% of Lonestar's costs solely referable to it.
c) Each Individual Defendant is liable for 60% of Lonestar's costs solely referable to it.
ii) In respect of the period from 6 December 2021:
a) Cellcom BVI and the Individual Defendants are jointly and severally liable for 60% of Lonestar's common costs.
b) Each of Cellcom BVI and the Individual Defendants is liable for 60% of Lonestar's costs solely referable to it.
c) Lonestar is liable for 100% of Orange Liberia's costs, subject to the order of Moulder J dated 24 February 2022.
iii) All costs are to be assessed on a standard basis.
Contribution as between the Defendants