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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Crucial Music Corporation & Anor v Klondyke Management AG & Ors [2007] EWHC 1782 (Ch) (25 July 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2007/1782.html Cite as: [2007] EWHC 1782 (Ch), [2008] Bus LR 327 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
On appeal from Master Moncaster
Defendants / Appellants |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
(1) CRUCIAL MUSIC CORPORATION (FORMERLY KNOWN AS ONEMUSIC CORPORATION) (a corporation incorporated under the laws of the State of Texas, USA)
(2) POINT CLASSICS LLC (a limited liability company incorporated under the laws of the State of Tennessee, USA)
Claimants / Respondents
- and -
(1) PREMSTROY ENTERPRISES LIMITED
(2) KLONDYKE MANAGEMENT AG (FORMERLY KNOWN AS POINT CLASSICS AG)
(a company incorporated under the laws of Switzerland)
(3) KLONDYKE VERWALTUNGS UND BETEILIGUNGSGESELLSCHAFT AG
(a company incorporated under the laws of Switzerland)
(4) WILHELM MITTRICH
(5) ODS OPTICAL DISC SERVICE GMBH
(a company incorporated under the laws of Germany)
Defendants / Appellants
Mr Charles Samek, instructed by Marriott Harrison, appeared for the respondents.
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
The underlying facts can be shortly stated.
The Facts:
i. The authorisation contracts for the recordings are valid and there are no collateral agreements relating to rights of the performers capable of being detrimental
ii. The licence agreements granting third parties rights in the Catalogue are valid ...
iii. The Mastertapes have been kept in proper custody and are in a physical condition which did not impair the reproduction quality ....
iv. Schedule 2 to the Agreement is a true and complete list of all the Licences and their principle terms. ....
"the Company shall [inter alia]
i. deliver to the Purchaser those Transferred Assets title to which is capable of transfer by delivery save for the Mastertapes;
ii. Hold all other Transferred Assets on trust for the purchaser absolutely pending their assignment;
iii. Execute and deliver an assignment in the Agreed Form of the Intellectual Property;
iv. Deliver to the Purchaser a release executed by the Bank of the Transferred Assets from the Security.
"within 7 days of Completion to deliver to the Purchaser a letter from C&T Studio [1] confirming that it holds the Mastertapes in its possession and that it shall not release such Mastertapes to anyone other than the Purchaser".
Alleged Breaches:
THE CONVENTIONS:
i. By Article 5(1) ["A person domiciled in a Contracting State may, in another Contracting State, be sued] in matters relating to a contract, in the courts for the place of performance of the obligation in question".
ii. By Article 5(3) ["A person domiciled in a Contracting State may, in another Contracting State, be sued] in matters relating to tort, delict or quasi-delict, in the courts for the place where the harmful event occurred".
The defendants' case:
THE PROPER APPROACH TO THE CONVENTION:
i) The threshold for establishing jurisdiction under the Conventions
a. The second claimant is required to establish only that it has a "good arguable case" that one of the special jurisdictional provisions applies: a lower threshold than on the balance of probabilities: Canada Trust Co. v Stolzenberg (No. 2) [2002] 1 AC, 13 E-H.
b. So far as the threshold for the merits of the underlying claim is concerned, the second claimant must show only a serious issue to be tried: ET Plus SA v Welter [2006] EWHC 2115 (Comm.) para. 59 (iii). There is no dispute on the evidence that the second claimant can pass this threshold.
ii) Article 5(1) Lugano Convention / Article 5.1(a) Judgments Regulation [2]
c. "Matters relating to a contract" is an expression which has an 'autonomous' meaning: Martin Peters Bauunternehmung GmbH v Zuid Nederlanse Aannemers Vereniging (Case 34/82), [1983] ECR 987.
d. A matter cannot relate to a contract if it is not "an undertaking freely entered into by one party in relation to another": Jakob Handte & Co GmbH v Soc. Traitements Meano-Chimiques des Surfaces (Case 26/91), [1992] ECR I-3967.
e. The "obligation in question" refers to "the contractual obligation forming the basis of the legal proceedings" or "the obligation . . . which arises under the contract and the non-performance of which is relied upon to support [the claim]": De Bloos Sprl v Bouyer SA (Case 14/76) [1976] ECR I-1497 at p. 1508, paragraph 11.
f. Where there is more than one obligation which is being sued on, the court will be guided by the maxim accessorium sequitur principale, so that the principal obligation (of those in question) will determine jurisdiction: Shenavai v Kreischer (Case 266/85) [1987] ECR 239, para. 19 and followed by the CA in Royal & Sun Alliance Ins v MK Digital FKE [2006] 1 Lloyd's Law Reports 110 at paras. 92 – 93. [3]
g. The obligation in question is the obligation to perform rather than the later obligation to pay money for failure to perform, ie. it is the obligation the breach of which gives rise to compensation which must be identified: De Bloos supra.
h. In determining the place for performance, the applicable law of the contract must be applied: Industrie Tessili Como v Dunlop AG [1976] ECR 1473 (repeatedly affirmed by the European Court – see Briggs & Rees 4th ed. para. 2.137).
Although there was express agreement as to the principles as recorded above, there appeared to me to remain underlying disagreement as to the meaning, for the purposes of Article 5, of the term "obligation" and in particular "obligation to perform".
"conceptual difficulty in ascribing a place of performance to an obligation which does not require any act of performance by the contracting party, but is rather an acceptance of responsibility upon the occurrence or non-occurrence of an event. But this has to be done for the purposes of article 5(1), and in my judgment the alleged undertaking by the defendant that its machines would achieve certain production levels and efficiencies at the plaintiffs' factory in England can properly be regarded as a contractual obligation whose place of performance was in England. It is akin to a performance guarantee which in my judgment is "performed" or broken where the subject matter is situated at the relevant time.
Morritt LJ disagreed. But he did
"agree with Evans LJ that, regarded in isolation it is difficult, if not impossible, to ascribe any place for the performance of that obligation for, in isolation, it does not require Paul Kiefel to do anything. But if no place for performance can be ascertained then article 5(1) does not provide for any jurisdiction alternative to that of the domicile of the defendants and the appeal should be allowed on that ground alone."
However, he concluded that it was not appropriate to analyse the warranty in isolation from the other terms of the contract; it had to be construed with the other terms. He therefore agreed with Chadwick LJ, who took the view that there was only one answer to the question and said
"The obligation is to supply a machine which is reasonably fit for the known purpose. That obligation has to be performed at the time when the machine is supplied. … If the obligation has to be performed at the time when the machine is supplied, then the place at which it has to be performed is the place of delivery under the contract".
i. if it is executory, the obligation is to be performed;
ii. if it is negative, the obligation is to be honoured;
iii. if it is a warranty as to an existing condition or state of affairs, the condition or state of affairs is required by the contract to exist.
The following principles set out in Mr Samek's Skeleton Submission were also not in dispute:
(iii) Article 5(3) Lugano Convention / Article 5.3 Judgments Regulation
(1) In considering whether a claim concerns a matter "relating to tort, delict or quasi-delict" ("tort"), which has an autonomous meaning, there is to be excluded all claims that properly fall under Art. 5(1): Kalfelis v Bankhaus Schröder Münchmeyer Hengst & Co (Case 189/87), [1988] ECR 5565, paras. 15 – 18.
(2) Although a claim for misrepresentation is necessarily related to a contract it does not follow that it is a "matter relating to a contract" within the autonomous meaning in Art. 5(1): it depends upon the remedy which is sought. If the remedy sought is damages (as opposed to rescission), then the claim can be brought under Art. 5.3: Alfred Dunhill Ltd v Diffusion Internationale de Maroquinerie de Prestige SARL [2002] 1 All ER (Comm) 950, 965 a- h.
(3) The expression "where the harmful event occurred" covers two matters in respect of which a claimant need only satisfy one: (i) where the damage occurred; or (ii) where the event giving rise to the damage occurred: Handelswekerij GJ Bier NV v SA Mines de Potasse d'Alsace (Case 21/76) [1976] ECR 1735, 1746 – 1747, [1978] 1 QB 708, para. 19 & see Domicrest Ltd. v Swiss Bank Corp. [1998] 3 AER 577 at 589 f – g.
(4) "Damage" means damage in the direct sense and not financial loss consequent on the initial damage arising elsewhere: Marinari v Lloyds Bank plc [1996] 1 QB 217, paras. 14 – 15. See also London Helicopters Ltd. v Heliportugal [2006] 1 AER (Comm) 595 para. 20 & Raiffeisen Zentral Bank v Tranos [2001] I.L.Pr. 85.
(5) In a case of misrepresentation or misstatement:
i. the damage is likely to occur at the place where the misstatement or misrepresentation is received and relied upon: see London Helicopters at para. 25;
ii. the event giving rise to the damage is quite likely to be where the misstatement or misrepresentation originates: see Domicrest supra at 594 b – g (approved by the CA in ABCI v Banque Franco-Tunisienne [2003] 2 Lloyds Rep 146).
Note 1 Which were located in Amsterdam. Neither party argued that this was the “place of performance”. [Back] Note 2 The decided cases show no difference of approach between the Lugano Convention and the Judgments Regulation in relation to the application of the articles. [Back] Note 3 Cs should for the sake of completeness refer to Leathertex Divisione Sintetici SpA v Bodetex BVBA [1999] ECR 1I-6747 where it was held that there was special jurisdiction only over that part of the claim which arose from the obligation which was to be performed in the territory of the referring Court. This has been described as a “procedurally disastrous ruling” and judicial and academic preference is for the principal / accessory approach referred to in Shenavai. See also Dicey & Morris 14th ed. para. 11-291. [Back]