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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions >> Jalla & Ors v Shell International Trading and Shipping Company Ltd & Ors [2020] EWHC 3281 (TCC) (19 November 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2020/3281.html Cite as: [2020] EWHC 3281 (TCC) |
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HT-2020-000143 BL-2019-002334 |
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT (QBD)
BL-2019-002334 Royal Courts of Justice, Rolls Building Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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(HT-2017-000383) HARRISON JALLA & ABEL CHUJOR |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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(2) SHELL INTERNATIONAL TRADING AND SHIPPING COMPANY LIMITED (3) SHELL NIGERIA EXPLORATION AND PRODUCTION COMPANY LIMITED |
Defendants | |
(HT-2020-000143) HARRISON JALLA & OTHERS |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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(1) SHELL INTERNATIONAL TRADING AND SHIPPING COMPANY LIMITED (2) SHELL NIGERIA EXPLORATION AND PRODUCTION COMPANY LIMITED |
Defendants |
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(BL-2019-002334) HRH THE OLUGBO (KING) OF UGBO KINGDOM & OTHERS |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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(1) SHELL INTERNATIONAL TRADING AND SHIPPING COMPANY LIMITED (2) SHELL NIGERIA EXPLORATION AND PRODUCTION COMPANY LIMITED |
Defendants |
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Lord Peter Goldsmith QC and Dr Conway Blake (instructed by Debvoise & Plimpton LLP) for the Defendants
Hearing date: 19th November 2020
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Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice O'Farrell Thursday, 19 November 2020
(3.46 pm)
Judgment by MRS JUSTICE O'FARRELL
The claims
"We write on behalf of all the claimants in Akinruntan's proceedings in Case no: BL-2019002334 to withdraw the case from the High Court of England & Wales.
This is due to some reasons beyond our control having realised certain facts in the case during the course of pursuit of the Bonga oil spill proceedings."
Procedural history
a. firstly a declaration that the court did not have jurisdiction to try the claims, or alternatively that the court should not exercise any jurisdiction which it had pursuant to CPR part 11(1)(a) and (1)(b);
b. secondly, an order setting aside the claim form, service of the claim form, and the order of Fraser J giving the claimants permission to serve the claim form on SNEPCo out of the jurisdiction, pursuant to CPR part 11(6)(a) and/or (b);
c. thirdly, in the event that the court found that there was no real issue against STASCO, an order striking out the claims against STASCO as having no real prospect of success pursuant to CPR 3.4(2)(a) and/or 24.2;
d. fourthly, in the alternative an order that proceedings be stayed pursuant to article 34 of the Recast Brussels Regulation and/or section 49(3) of the Senior Courts Act 1981 and pursuant to the court's inherent jurisdiction.
"i) It is clear that many claimants will have suffered actionable damage before 4 April 2012;
ii) On current information the defendants have a reasonably arguable case on limitation, though it is not certain that all claimants suffered actionable damage caused by oil from the December 2011 spill before 4 April 2012;
iii) If and to the extent that the claimants had not suffered actionable damage before 4 April 2012, it is arguable and inherently plausible that some may have suffered actionable damage between April 2012 and June 2013;
iv) On present information it is not possible to exclude the possibility that some claimants may first have suffered actionable damage after June or even October/November 2013. There is, however, at present no reason to conclude that they did;
v) On present information it is not possible to reach any further conclusions for the purposes of these applications about who suffered damage when."
"Subject to questions of limitation, the English court has jurisdiction to try the claims against STASCO."
"I therefore conclude that the necessary criteria are satisfied and find that the court has jurisdiction over SNEPCo. As already indicated, this conclusion is subject to my conclusions on limitation issues earlier in this judgment. If and to the extent that the claim against STASCO falls away for limitation reasons, the first prerequisite for jurisdiction over SNEPCo also goes."
"I direct that there shall be a further half-day hearing after hand-down of this judgment to address (a) the "representative" nature of this action and whether its structure needs to be adjusted; (b) how to determine which claimants can and cannot go forward to a trial in the light of the findings I have made in this judgment; and (c), any other consequential orders."
"My present and provisional view is that the following steps need to be taken.
i) The claimants must identify and plead their case on where their causes of action accrued with a view of trying that issue as a preliminary issue for all claimants where the issue is live;
ii) Either before or at the same time as the preliminary issue on when causes of action accrued, there should be a trial of a second preliminary issue, namely whether the applicable period of limitation for the claimants is six years or five."
(That of course is subject to whether the limitation period is five years under Nigerian law, or six years as under English law).
"The claimants shall by 4 pm 24 November 2020 file and serve a Date of Damage Pleading setting out the claimants' case on when all relevant accruals of damage occurred with sufficient particularity to enable the defendants to know the case they have to meet, any lay evidence upon which they rely in the proceedings in support of the case advanced by the Date of Damage Pleading and any expert evidence upon which they wish to rely in the proceedings in support of the case advanced by the Date of Damage Pleading."
"... file and serve a response to the Date of Damage Pleading setting out the defendants' case in response to the claimants' Date of Damage Pleading any lay evidence upon which they rely in the proceedings in support of the case advanced by their response to the Date of Damage Pleading and any expert evidence upon which they wish to rely in the proceedings in support of the case advanced by their response to the Date of Damage Pleading."
"To review progress and vary or add to these Case Management Orders as appropriate. The present target is to have a preliminary trial, if appropriate, during the summer term of 2021 of preliminary issues (a) as to the date on which claimants suffered damage, (b) the appropriate limitation periods applicable to the claimants' claims, and (c) limitation as a defence to the claimants' claims."
"(5) If the relevant period of limitation for a given claimant had expired on 4 April 2018, for that claimant:
5.1 the purported amendment on that date pursuant to CPR 17.1 by which STASCO was purportedly joined as the second defendant was a nullity and ineffective;
5.2 the application to join STASCO as the second defendant pursuant to CPR 17.4(3) and/or CPR 19.5(3)(a) is dismissed; and
5.3 service out of the jurisdiction on SNEPCo is set aside.
(6) If the relevant period of limitation for a given claimant had not expired on 2 March 2020 for that claimant:
6.1 the application to amend the claim form dated 3 October 2019 is granted pursuant to CPR 17.1(2)(b) and the amendment sought in the draft re-amended claim form attached thereto are allowed and effective; and
6.2 the application to amend the particulars of claim dated 3 April 2019 is granted pursuant to CPR 17.1(2)(b) and the amendments sought in the draft amended particulars of claim produced to the court at the hearing in October 2019 are allowed and effective.
(7) If the relevant period of limitation for a given claimant had expired on 2 March 2020 for that claimant:
7.1 the application to amend the claim form dated 3 October 2019 is dismissed;
7.2 the application to amend the particulars of claim dated 3 April 2019 is dismissed;
7.3 the claim against STASCO is dismissed; and
7.4 service out of the jurisdiction on SNEPCo is set aside."
(8) For any claimants falling within both paragraphs 4 and 6 above [i.e. where the limitation period had not expired by the stated dates]:
8.1. The court has and shall exercise its jurisdiction to try the claims against both STASCO and SNEPCo; and
8.2. STASCO's and SNEPCo's jurisdiction applications are dismissed.
(9) For any claimants falling within [and that must read paragraphs 5 and 7] STASCO's and SNEPCo's jurisdiction applications dated 28 September 2018 are granted and the court will not exercise its jurisdiction to try the claims against either STASCO or SNEPCo."
"They are, however, entitled and right to point out that the evidence marks a fundamental shift from the basis on which these proceedings were instituted and run until September 2019; this is now presented as an action about damage suffered over a wide area, up to 50 kilometres or more from the coast, and not simply along the Atlantic coast. The implications for the need to adduce wide ranging factual and expert evidence are obvious."
The current position
Parties' submissions
a. whether the legal professionals and representatives acting in the Jalla proceedings are properly authorised by the claimants to bring the claims in these proceedings;
b. whether the court has jurisdiction pursuant to CPR 19.6 to try the claims in the Jalla Protective Proceedings and Akinruntan Proceedings on a representative basis;
c. whether the court can fairly and proportionately determine the claims in the Jalla Protective Proceedings as it is currently constituted, namely comprising a vast number of individual claimants who purport to claim on behalf of themselves and of a number of communities;
d. which limitation period applies under Nigerian law to the claims in each set of proceedings;
e. whether on the basis of the judgment given on 2 March and the evidence currently on the record any of the claims are statute-barred or excluded from the court's jurisdiction; and
f. whether the claimants in the Jalla proceedings have abused and continue to abuse the court's process.
Discussion
(a) ensuring that the parties are on an equal footing;
(b) saving expense;
(c) dealing with the case in ways which are proportionate -
(i) to the amount of money involved;
(ii) the importance of the case;
(iii) the complexity of the issues; and
(iv) to the financial position of each party;
(d) ensuring that it is dealt with expeditiously and fairly;
(e) allotting to it an appropriate share of the court's resources, while taking into account the need to allot resources to other cases; and
(f) enforcing compliance with rules, practice directions and orders."
Decision