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England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions >> Ohpen Operations UK Ltd v Invesco Fund Managers Ltd [2019] EWHC 2246 (TCC) (16 August 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2019/2246.html Cite as: [2019] EWHC 2246 (TCC), [2019] BLR 576 |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS
OF ENGLAND AND WALES
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT (QBD)
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
OHPEN OPERATIONS UK LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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INVESCO FUND MANAGERS LIMITED |
Defendant |
____________________
Mr Fionn Pilbrow QC (instructed by Herbert Smith Freehills LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 18th July 2019
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice O'Farrell :
Background to the dispute
i) the parties would agree the requirements for the platform and its implementation, which would be set out in a Development and Implementation Plan ("the DIP");
ii) Ohpen would develop and deliver the platform in accordance with the DIP; and
iii) Invesco would pay Ohpen an implementation fee of £75,000 per month.
i) a declaration that the Court will not exercise any jurisdiction it may have to hear the claim filed by Ohpen; and
ii) an order for a stay of the claim pending compliance with the contractually agreed dispute resolution procedure.
The Agreement
"Parties will jointly agree in writing on the contents of the Development and Implementation Plan within a period of two (2) months after the Effective Date… Ohpen will manage the process of drafting the Development and Implementation Plan for approval by Client and when Parties agree on its contents, it shall be signed by Parties and attached to this Agreement as Schedule 4 (Development and Implementation Plan) ("Agreed Development and Implementation Plan"). Ohpen will thereafter manage the execution and delivery of the Agreed Development and Implementation Plan in accordance with the agreed planning, deliverables and dependencies (including any agreed actions to be executed by Client and Rplan) set out in the Agreed Development and Implementation Plan.
…
The date after the signature date on which the last Party has signed off the Development and Implementation Plan is considered to be the Commencement Date of the BPO Services, unless Parties agreed to a specific and different commencement date of such BPO Services."
"During the Development and Implementation Phase, Ohpen will carry out the Implementation Services in order to meet its obligations resulting from the agreed Development and Implementation Plan. Ohpen shall have an autonomous responsibility to plan its resources in such a way that the milestones derived from the Development and Implementation Plan shall be met in time. An Implementation Fee as described in Schedule 3 (Pricing) shall apply to Client from the Effective Date.
…
Any disputes about or arising out of delays shall be resolved through the Dispute Procedure as described in clause 011.1.1 and 11.1.2. Pending the resolution of the dispute, the parties shall continue to work together to resolve the causes of, and mitigate the effects of, the delay."
"As of the Commencement Date, Ohpen shall perform the BPO Services in accordance with all elements of this Agreement, but specifically in accordance with the Service Level Agreement for Client and Client's (prospective) Customers…"
"11.1 Internal Escalation
11.1.1 The Parties will first use their respective reasonable efforts to resolve any Dispute that may arise out of or relate to this Agreement or any breach thereof, in accordance with this Clause 0. If any such Dispute cannot be settled amicably through ordinary negotiations within a timeframe acceptable to Client and Ohpen, either Party may refer the Dispute to the Contract Managers who shall meet and use their reasonable efforts to resolve the Dispute.
11.1.2 During the Development and Implementation Phase, any disputes shall firstly be handled by the persons as described in Clause 22.1. If such escalation does not lead to resolution of the Dispute, then the Dispute shall be escalated to the executive committees of respectively Client and Ohpen. If escalation to the executive committee does not lead to resolution of the Dispute, then the Dispute shall be referred for resolution to mediation under the Model Mediation Procedure of the Centre of Dispute Resolution (CEDR) for the time being in force. If the Parties are unable to resolve the Dispute by mediation, either Party may commence court proceedings.
11.1.3 If any such Dispute that arises after Commencement Date is not resolved by the Contract Managers within ten (10) Business Days after it is referred to them, either Party may escalate the Dispute through the hierarchy of the committees, as set out in the chapter on governance of Schedule 2 (Service Level Agreement), who will meet and use their respective reasonable efforts to resolve the Dispute.
11.1.4 Ohpen shall continue to provide the Services and to perform its obligations under this Agreement notwithstanding any Dispute or the implementation of the procedures set out in this Clause. Client's payment obligations that are listed in Schedule 3 (Pricing) shall not be halted during the resolution of any Dispute.
11.2 Jurisdiction
If a Dispute is not resolved in accordance with the Dispute Procedure, then such Dispute can be submitted by either Party to the exclusive jurisdiction of the English courts.
11.3 Urgent Relief
Nothing contained in Clause 11.1 shall restrict either Party's freedom to commence summary proceedings to procure or ensure performance of obligations and/or any required action to prevent further damages, preserve any legal right or remedy or to prevent the misuse of any of its Confidential Information."
"a dispute or failure to agree."
"the procedure for resolving Disputes contained in Clause 11 of the Agreement."
"The employee of Ohpen and Client respectively appointed as a contract manager in accordance with the chapter on governance of Schedule 2 (Service Level Agreement)."
"Termination of this Agreement will not affect any accrued rights or liabilities or payments due or the coming into force or continuing in force of any provision of this Agreement which is expressly or by implication intended to come into or continue in force on or after termination. Without limitation, Clauses 18 and 19 and any other provision expressed to survive termination or expiry and those provisions necessary for interpretation or enforcement of this Agreement shall survive termination or expiration of this Agreement for whatever reason and shall continue to apply indefinitely."
"This Agreement and any dispute or claim (including non-contractual disputes or claims) arising out of or in connection with it or its subject matter or formation will be construed in accordance with and governed by the laws of England and Wales. Each Party irrevocably agrees that the courts of England and Wales shall have exclusive jurisdiction to settle any dispute or claim (including non-contractual disputes or claims) arising out of or in connection with this Agreement or its subject matter or formation."
Challenge to Jurisdiction
"A defendant who wishes to –
…
(b) argue that the court should not exercise its jurisdiction,
may apply to the court for an order declaring that it has no such jurisdiction or should not exercise any jurisdiction which it may have."
"An order containing a declaration that the court has no jurisdiction or will not exercise its jurisdiction may also make further provision including –
(d) staying the proceedings."
Applicable principles
"[21] ... Essentially the question that arises is whether that reference is in substance nothing more than an agreement to negotiate and, as such, an agreement incapable of enforcement in English law as decided by the Court of Appeal in the Courtney and Fairbain case ... It is to be observed that the parties have not simply agreed to attempt in good faith to negotiate a settlement. In this case they have gone further than that by identifying a particular procedure, namely an ADR procedure as recommended to the parties by the Centre for Dispute Resolution to which I refer as 'CEDR'…
[23] There is an obvious lack of certainty in a mere undertaking to negotiate a contract or settlement agreement, just as there is in an agreement to strive to settle a dispute amicably, as in the Paul Smith case. That is because a court would have insufficient objective criteria to decide whether one or both parties were in compliance or breach of such a provision. No doubt, therefore, if in the present case the words of cl 41.2 had simply provided that the parties should 'attempt in good faith to resolve the dispute or claim', that would not have been enforceable.
[24] However, the clause went on to prescribe the means by which such attempt should be made, namely 'through an [ADR] procedure as recommended to the parties by [CEDR].' The engagement can therefore be analysed as requiring not merely an attempt in good faith to achieve resolution of a dispute but also the participation of the parties in a procedure to be recommended by CEDR. Resort to CEDR and participation in its recommended procedure are, in my judgment, engagements of sufficient certainty for a court readily to ascertain whether they have been complied with.
[28] For the courts now to decline to enforce contractual references to ADR on the grounds of intrinsic uncertainty would be to fly in the face of public policy as expressed in the CPR and as reflected in the judgment of the Court of Appeal in Dunnett v Railtrack…
[32] …In principle … where there is an unqualified reference to ADR, a sufficiently certain and definable minimum duty of participation should not be hard to find…
[34] The reference to ADR is analogous to an agreement to arbitrate. As such, it represents a free-standing agreement ancillary to the main contract and capable of being enforced by a stay of the proceedings or by injunction absent any pending proceedings. The jurisdiction to stay, although introduced by statute in the field of arbitration agreement, is in origin an equitable remedy."
"It seems to me that considering the above authorities the principles to be derived are that the ADR clause must meet at least the following three requirements: First, that the process must be sufficiently certain in that there should not be the need for an agreement at any stage before matters can proceed. Secondly, the administrative processes for selecting a party to resolve the dispute and to pay that person should also be defined. Thirdly, the process or at least a model of the process should be set out so that the detail of the process is sufficiently certain."
"[59] The Court has been in the past, and will be, astute to consider each case on its own terms. The test is not whether a clause is a valid provision for a recognised process of ADR: it is whether the obligations and/or negative injunctions it imposes are sufficiently clear and certain to be given legal effect.
[60] In the context of a positive obligation to attempt to resolve a dispute or difference amicably before referring a matter to arbitration or bringing proceedings the test is whether the provision prescribes, without the need for further agreement, (a) a sufficiently certain and unequivocal commitment to commence a process (b) from which may be discerned what steps each party is required to take to put the process in place and which is (c) sufficiently clearly defined to enable the Court to determine objectively (i) what under that process is the minimum required of the parties to the dispute in terms of their participation in it and (ii) when or how the process will be exhausted or properly terminable without breach.
[61] In the context of a negative stipulation or injunction preventing a reference or proceedings until a given event, the question is whether the event is sufficiently defined and its happening objectively ascertainable to enable the court to determine whether and when the event has occurred."
"Enforcement of such an agreement when found as part of a dispute resolution clause is in the public interest, first, because commercial men expect the court to enforce obligations which they have freely undertaken and, second, because the object of the agreement is to avoid what might otherwise be an expensive and time-consuming arbitration."
i) The agreement must create an enforceable obligation requiring the parties to engage in alternative dispute resolution.
ii) The obligation must be expressed clearly as a condition precedent to court proceedings or arbitration.
iii) The dispute resolution process to be followed does not have to be formal but must be sufficiently clear and certain by reference to objective criteria, including machinery to appoint a mediator or determine any other necessary step in the procedure without the requirement for any further agreement by the parties.
iv) The court has a discretion to stay proceedings commenced in breach of an enforceable dispute resolution agreement. In exercising its discretion, the Court will have regard to the public policy interest in upholding the parties' commercial agreement and furthering the overriding objective in assisting the parties to resolve their disputes.
Whether enforceable alternative dispute resolution obligation
"… it is quite unreal to equate this clause with those provisions in the contract which relate to performance. It is a clause which comes into operation when contractual performance has become impossible, or has been given up: then, it regulates the manner in which liability for breach of contract is to be established. In this respect their Lordships find it relevantly indistinguishable from an arbitration clause, or a forum clause, which, on clear authority, survive a repudiatory breach: see Heyman v. Darwins [1942] AC 356, Photo Production Ltd. v. Securicor Transport Ltd. [1980] AC 827, 849. Mr. Hobhouse appealed for support to some observations by Lord Diplock in Photo Production Ltd. v. Securicor Transport Ltd., at p. 849, where reference is made to putting an end "to all primary obligations … remaining unperformed." But these words were never intended to cover such "obligations" to use Lord Diplock's word, as arise when primary obligations have been put an end to. There then arise, on his Lordship's analysis, secondary obligations which include an obligation to pay monetary compensation. Whether these have been modified by agreement is a matter of construction of the contract."
Condition precedent
Enforceable ADR process
Exercise of discretion
Conclusion and order
i) The Defendant shall serve and file the Defence and Counterclaim by 4pm on 27 September 2019.
ii) The Claimant shall serve and file the Reply and Defence to Counterclaim by 4pm on 25 October 2019.
iii) From 28 October 2019 to 9 December 2019 there shall be a stay of these proceedings to allow the parties to arrange and attend a mediation.
iv) If the parties are unable to settle the dispute by 9 December 2019, they should notify the Court of the position and apply for a date for a costs and case management conference.