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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 >> Orascom Telecom Holding SAE v Republic of Chad & Ors [2008] EWHC 1841 (Comm) (28 July 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2008/1841.html Cite as: [2009] 1 All ER (Comm) 315, [2008] 2 CLC 296, [2008] EWHC 1841 (Comm), [2008] 2 Lloyd's Rep 396 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
ORASCOM TELECOM HOLDING SAE | ||
(a company incorporated and registered in Egypt) | Claimant | |
- and - | ||
(1) THE REPUBLIC OF CHAD | ||
(2) LA SOCIETE DES TELECOMMUNICATIONS DU TCHAD | ||
(aka SOTEL TCHAD) | ||
- and - | ||
CITIBANK N.A. | Third Party | |
- and - | ||
INTERNATIONAL BANK FOR RECONSTRUCTION AND DEVELOPMENT | ||
EUROPEAN INVESTMENT BANK | Intervenors |
____________________
Mr James Dingemans QC (instructed by Saunders LLP) for the First Defendant
Hearing date: 17 July 2008
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Burton :
"In this case, the serious allegations made by the Applicants extend beyond the limits of the agreement and are levelled directly at the Republic of Chad, which must meet any such liabilities by taking part in this claim. In so doing, the Respondents have simplified any arguments there may have been about the matter."
"In its Response to the Request for Arbitration of 25 March 2005, the Respondents raised objections regarding the Arbitral Tribunal's jurisdiction over the Republic of Chad.
The Respondents are hereby advised that the Terms of Reference did not contain these objections since the Chadian State is a direct party to the arbitration and since the objections were withdrawn from their response to the Claimant's Statement of Claim of 28 February 2006. The Arbitral Tribunal thus did not have to rule on this point."
"All direct and indirect revenues from oil extraction and transportation flow first into the Transit Account. In this account, amounts are set aside on the 15th of every month to cover debts owed to [the World Bank] and [the European Investment Bank]. Remaining funds are then transferred to Chad's Borrower's Account, which is part of the escrow agreement."
"Of the direct revenues, which are royalties and dividends, 10 per cent is put aside in a future generations fund, also housed at Citibank. The remaining 90 per cent move to a special oil revenue account in Chad."
i) As at 29 April 2008 there was a nil balance in the Transit Account.ii) All the sums in the three Debt Service Accounts had been transferred to a money market fund at the Citibank London branch ("Citi"), the Citi Institutional Liquidity Fund ("CILF"), where three accounts, CILF 154724, 4225 and 4726 were, as at 29 April 2008, held with substantial balances on behalf of Chad (though, as set out above, now conceded by Orascom to be subject to a proprietary interest of the Intervenors).
iii) As provided in the RMP, as set out in paragraph 8 above, 10% of the direct revenues was put aside in a Fund for Future Generations, which account has remained with Citibank, not in a Citi CILF account, with a balance as at 29 April 2008 of US$114,945.68: Orascom has not made any claim in respect of such account.
iv) The content of the Borrower's Account was also transferred to a money market account, CILF Account No 4723, and, as at 29 April 2008, there is a balance of US$43,830,642.73.
A freezing order was made by me on 12 May 2008 in respect of the five accounts referred to in (i), (ii) and (iv) above, and there is no reason to believe that the position has materially changed since 29 April 2008.
The First Issue: The Borrowers' Account
"3. (1) A State is not immune as respects proceedings relating to--
(a) a commercial transaction entered into by the State or
(b) an obligation of the State which by virtue of a contract (whether a commercial transaction or not) falls to be performed wholly or partly in the United Kingdom.
(2) This section does not apply if the parties to the dispute are States or have otherwise agreed in writing …
(3) In this section "commercial transaction" means--
(a) any contract for the supply of goods or services;
(b) any loan or other transaction for the provision of finance and any guarantee or indemnity in respect of any such transaction or of any other financial obligation; and
(c) any other transaction or activity (whether of a commercial, industrial, financial, professional or other similar character) into which a State enters or in which it engages otherwise than in the exercise of sovereign authority;
but neither paragraph of subsection (1) above applies to a contract of employment between a State and an individual."
"13. …
(2) Subject to subsections (3) and (4) below--
(a) relief shall not be given against a State by way of injunction or order for specific performance or for the recovery of land or other property; and
(b) the property of a State shall not be subject to any process for the enforcement of a judgment or arbitration award or, in an action in rem, for its arrest, detention or sale.
(3) Subsection (2) above does not prevent the giving of any relief or the issue of any process with the written consent of the State concerned; and any such consent (which may be contained in a prior agreement) may be expressed so as to apply to a limited extent or generally; but a provision merely submitting to the jurisdiction of the courts is not to be regarded as a consent for the purposes of this subsection.
(4) Subsection (2)(b) above does not prevent the issue of any process in respect of property which is for the time being in use or intended for use for commercial purposes …"
"…"commercial purposes" means purposes of such transactions or activities as are mentioned in section 3(3) above."
i) In Alcom Ltd (above) the House of Lords, reversing the decision of the Court of Appeal, concluded that a current bank account used inter alia for the purposes of meeting expenditure incurred in the day-to-day running of a foreign embassy did not fall within s13(4). Whereas the Court of Appeal concluded that expenditure incurred in the day-to-day running of the embassy fell within the "very wide" definition of commercial transactions contained in s3(3), the House of Lords disagreed. Lord Diplock stated as follows at 604B-D:"Such expenditure will, no doubt, include some moneys due under contracts for the supply of goods or services to the mission, to meet which the mission will draw upon its current bank account; but the account will also be drawn upon to meet many other items of expenditure which fall outside even the extended definition of "commercial purposes" for which section 17(1) and section 3(3) provide. The debt owed by the bank to the foreign sovereign state and represented by the credit balance in the current account kept by the diplomatic mission of that state as a possible subject matter of the enforcement jurisdiction of the court is, however, one and indivisible; it is not susceptible of anticipatory dissection into the various uses to which moneys drawn upon it might have been put in the future if it had not been subjected to attachment by garnishee proceedings. Unless it can be shown by the judgment creditor who is seeking to attach the credit balance by garnishee proceedings that the bank account was earmarked by the foreign state solely (save for de minimis exceptions) for being drawn upon to settle liabilities incurred in commercial transactions, as for example by issuing documentary credits in payment of the price of goods sold to the state, it cannot, in my view, be sensibly brought within the crucial words of the exception for which section 13(4) provides."ii) This very passage in Lord Diplock's speech founded Mr Dingeman's further case that, since the account was indivisible, the Court would need to be satisfied that, subject to de minimis exceptions, all the contents of the bank accounts were earmarked by the foreign state for the relevant commercial purposes.
iii) Mr Dingemans relied particularly on a decision of Aikens J in AIG Capital Partners Inc v Republic of Kazakhstan [2006] 1 WLR 1420. He submitted that the facts of that case, in which Aikens J concluded that the contents of bank accounts held in London by ABN AMRO were immune from execution, are directly relevant. Aikens J did not accept the submission that, because the funds were traded in London, i.e. they were invested in security accounts which were actively traded, that the funds were thus in use, or intended for use, for commercial purposes. AIG was referred to in Jones ...above) without disapproval.
iv) Mr Dingemans referred to the decision of Stanley Burnton J in AIC Ltd v The Federal Government of Nigeria [2003] EWHC 1357 QB where, once again, there were funds in accounts in London, on this occasion with HSBC, belonging to the Federal Government of Nigeria, which accounts had been dormant for at least 18 months. Stanley Burnton J concluded:
"56. The test in s13(4) of the State Immunity Act applies as of the date of the issue of process of execution against the property in question: the words "for the time being" make this clear. The use or intended use of property may change over time. In the case of a bank account, the onus is on the judgment creditor to show that the use or intended use of the account is, apart from minimal exceptions, for commercial purposes within the meaning of the Act: Lord Diplock in Alcom at page 604D-E. Evidence of recent use of an account wholly for commercial purposes over a significant period of time may lead to the conclusion that the account is used or intended for use wholly for commercial purposes; but the older the use in evidence, the weaker the inference that may be drawn as to the use or intended use of the account …
59. … even where there is evidence that an account was previously wholly used for commercial purposes, it does not establish that the present or intended use of that account is commercial."
Mr Dingemans relied upon s13(5) of the 1978 Act by reference to the certificate of the head of a State's diplomatic mission in the United Kingdom there referred to, whereby:
"for the purposes of subsection (4) above, his certificate to the effect that any property is not in use or intended for use by or on behalf of the State for commercial purposes shall be accepted as sufficient evidence of that fact unless the contrary is proved."
In this case, Chad relies on such a document signed by the Chad Ambassador to the UK, M. Djoumbé, which reads (in the unofficial translation by Chad's solicitors) as follows:
"I, the undersigned, Ambassador Maitine Djoumbé, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the Republic of Chad, allocated to Great Britain and Northern Ireland with residence in Brussels, certify that the account of the Republic of Chad held at Citibank London which is the object of litigation in the matter of Orascom against Sotel Tchad and the Republic of Chad is not used for commercial purposes by the Republic of Chad."
Mr Dingemans recognises that this is not the most forthcoming of documents, and it is not provided by the Act to be conclusive evidence, but simply evidence which requires the contrary to be shown. In AIC, Stanley Burnton J did not find that the Nigerian High Commissioner's certificate, which in that case was actually supplemented by a witness statement by the Nigerian Finance Attaché, was ousted:
"58. A mere statement that an account is dormant begs the question of the duration of the dormancy. In this case, however, the period of dormancy is specified in the certificate of the High Commissioner. If an account has been dormant for at least 18 months, it cannot be said to be presently used for any relevant purpose, and the previous use is weak evidence of the present intention as to its use. In this case, that evidence is insufficient to disprove the statement in the High Commissioner's certificate."
In AIG, Aikens J was influenced by the certificate of the Ambassador in that case:
"92(4) Last, but not least, there is the certificate of the ambassador. That is clear and unambiguous. I have seen no evidence to contradict it other than the fact that the securities accounts are traded. For the reasons I have given, the trading of those accounts does not mean they were being used or were intended for use for commercial purposes."
"8. As referred to above … AAMGS' predecessors had agreed with Kazakhstan to hold cash and securities of the National Fund of the Republic of Kazakhstan, "as custodian and banker" pursuant to a global custody agreement dated 24 December 2001. AAMGS is now the global custodian of cash and securities of the national fund. The claimants wish to enforce the judgment against these assets insofar as they are held by AAMGS in the jurisdiction.
9. In a letter dated 22 September 2004 from AAMGS to Holman, Fenwick & Willan, solicitors for the claimants, AAMGS stated that it held cash and securities "to the order of the NBK" in a number of jurisdictions, including England and Wales. The letter stated that the value of the cash held on behalf of the NBK within England and Wales was £3.1m. The value of the securities held on behalf of the NBK was stated as £91m. It is agreed that this cash and these securities form part of the assets of the national fund. These assets were referred to (together) as "the London assets" of the national fund. It is also agreed that AAMGS holds the cash and securities in two separate types of account, respectively the cash accounts and the securities accounts. Under the terms of the global custody agreement, the cash and the securities are held by AAMGS in the name of NBK.
…
14. The national fund is described in a presentation document that was prepared by NBK in 2003. That states that the funds that make up the national fund come from tax revenues derived from oil extraction and other mining activities; budget transfers of other earnings derived from the oil sector and other mining activities; investment income from the management of the national fund itself; and some other revenues. The assets of the national fund were US$ 2.2 billion as at 1 May 2003.
…
16. The national fund is managed by NBK under the terms of Agreement No 299 on Trust Management of the National Fund of the Republic of Kazakhstan …
…
92. … my firm view is that the London assets were not in use or intended for use for commercial purposes at any stage. My reasons, briefly, are as follows:
(1) The London assets formed part of the national fund. That fund was, in my opinion, created to assist in the management of the economy and government revenues of Kazakhstan, both in the short and long term. Management of a state's economy and revenue must constitute a sovereign activity.
(2) The national fund had to be managed by NBK in accordance with the law set out in the Budget Code, in particular article 24. That demanded that the national fund be invested: article 24, para 2. I accept that this required that investment had to be placed in authorised financial assets in order to secure, amongst other things, "high profitability levels of the [national fund] in the long term outlook at reasonable risk levels". I also accept the uncontroverted evidence that the securities accounts held by AAMGS on behalf of NBK were actively traded at all times and that NBK obtained from Kazakhstan a commission on good results and paid a penalty for poor ones. But I cannot accept that this activity is inconsistent with the Stability and Savings Funds of the national fund being used or intended for use for sovereign purposes. The aim of the exercise, at all times, was and is to enhance the national fund. To do that the assets have to be put to use to obtain returns which are reinvested in the national fund, ie. to assist the sovereign actions.
(3) Mr Salter relies on the definition of "commercial purposes" set out in section 17(1) of the 1978 Act and points to the fact that "commercial purposes" means transactions and activities mentioned in section 3(3) of the Act. Those include "any transaction or activity (whether of a commercial … financial … or similar character) into which a State enters or in which it engages otherwise in the exercise of sovereign authority". He says that the trading activities of the securities accounts by AAMGS are clearly financial transactions and their aim is to make profits. Therefore they could not be transactions "in the exercise of sovereign authority" within section 3(3). So, for the purposes of 13(4), at least the securities accounts of the London assets constitute "property in use or intended for use for commercial purposes". Again, I must disagree. The dealings of the securities accounts must, in my view, be set against the background of the purpose of the global custody agreement. That was established to assist in running the national fund. The securities accounts contain assets which are part of the national fund. In my view the dealings are all part of the overall exercise of sovereign authority by Kazakhstan."
"Paragraph (a) of this tripartite definition refers to any contract for the supply of goods or services, without making any exception for contracts in either of these two classes that are entered into for purposes of enabling a foreign state to do things in the exercise of its sovereign authority either in the United Kingdom or elsewhere. This is to be contrasted with the other paragraph of the definition that is relevant to the instant case, paragraph (c), which on the face of it would be comprehensive enough to include all transactions into which a state might enter, were it not that it does specifically preserve immunity from adjudicative jurisdiction for transactions or activities into which a state enters or in which it engages in the exercise of sovereign authority, other than those transactions that are specifically referred to in either paragraphs (a) or in paragraph (b) …"
"Two aspects of this element of the definition are of note. The first is that the provision of finance may be either by or to the State. [My underlining.]"
i) so as to receive the proceeds of a contract for the supply of goods or services; and/orii) so as to be part of a system specifically established for the purposes of (repayment of) the loans by the World Bank etc to Chad.
i) The question of dormancy, which happens to have been material on the facts on AIC, has no relevance here. Neither the precise use made of the account, nor the fact that, similarly to AIG, the funds, while held in London, have been invested or traded, nor thus the issue as to whether, simply by virtue of their trading or investment, the moneys could be said to be being used for commercial purposes, arises. The Borrower's Account is established, and the money is put and kept in such account, for the purposes of a commercial transaction, as set out in paragraph 23 above, and that, by virtue of the definition in s17 of the 1978 Act, is sufficient.ii) For the reasons set out in paragraph 18 above admixture does not arise on the facts here.
iii) The Ambassador's certificate, which I have quoted in paragraph 16(iv) above, is of no persuasive power. This is not simply by reason of its exiguousness and lack of explanation. At the time it was given, all the money with Citibank (save for the Future Generations Fund) was the subject matter of Orascom's claim, such that there were in fact, as the Ambassador plainly knew or ought to have known, not one account as referred to but (at least) six. Further, on any basis (though this has now been overtaken by the subsequent intervention of the World Bank) the three Debt Service Accounts, which (if all 6 accounts were intended to be embraced) were plainly otherwise covered by his purported certificate, manifestly fell within s3(3)(b), and were thus obviously within s13(4). In any event, I have no doubt that, on the facts of this case, within s13(5) of the 1978 Act Orascom has proved the contrary.
The Second Issue: Waiver
"Every Award shall be binding on the parties. By submitting the dispute to arbitration under these Rules, the parties undertake to carry out Award without delay and shall be deemed to have waived their right to any form of recourse insofar as such waiver can validly be made."
"By submitting the dispute to arbitration by the International Chamber of Commerce, the parties shall be deemed to have undertaken to carry out the resulting award without delay and to have waived their right to any form of appeal insofar as such waiver can validly be made."
"Thus, while Article 28(6) should generally have the effect of preventing appeals against the Arbitral Tribunal's findings of fact or law in jurisdictions where such appeals may still be permitted, there are many jurisdictions that will not give effect to a waiver of all recourse, e.g. in respect of possible violations of due process, international public policy or the competence of the Arbitral Tribunal or that might not otherwise recognise the efficacy of a waiver incorporated by reference to the ICC Rules. Thus, for example, while Article 192 of the Swiss Private International Law Act permits non-resident parties to an arbitration in Switzerland to exclude various grounds of recourse against an Award rendered there, this provision has been construed as requiring a specific exclusion agreement to this effect, which the relevant provision in the ICC Rules is not considered to satisfy." [And there is a reference to one or more Swiss decisions in a footnote.]
"13. Rules Applicable to the Arbitration Proceedings
The rules applicable to this arbitration case are the International Chamber of Commerce Rules of Arbitration. These rules are, however, subject to the mandatory rules of Swiss International Arbitration Law (Chapter 12 of Switzerland's Federal Code on International Private Law)."
i) The Law of State Immunity by Lady Hazel Fox QC, in which Mr Landau refers particularly to the passage at 266-7, which reads:"Waiver by way of arbitration or choice of jurisdiction or law clauseThe extent of waiver to be deduced from entry into an arbitration agreement may be variously interpreted according to its scope. If the arbitration is to be held in the forum State (or to apply forum State law) then waiver of immunity to the jurisdiction at least to the extent of the supervisory powers over arbitration of the forum court may be implied. The difficult issue is whether such consent to arbitration constitutes waiver of enforcement of the award. Where the State has in addition committed itself under institutional rules such as the ICC Arbitration Rules or is a party to the New York or UNCITRAL Conventions, all of which instruments impose obligations on the party to honour any arbitral award rendered, an even stronger case of implied waiver of immunity from execution of the award can be argued."ii) passages in International Chamber of Commerce Arbitration (Third Edition) by Craig, Park and Paulsson, as follows:
"By operation of Article 28(6), the parties "undertake to carry out any Award without delay …" Accordingly, an ICC award must be considered binding between the parties when rendered. It constitutes not only a moral obligation to comply with the terms of the award, but also a title from which legal rights flow. Thus, an award will ordinarily be considered to have res judicata effect from the date it is rendered.The fact that the ICC Rules comport an obligation on the parties to carry out the award has an effect on its immediate enforceability pursuant to the terms of international conventions. The New York Convention, for example, requires enforcement in a signatory State without the need for prior judicial recognition by the courts at the place of arbitration. A signatory State is not required to grant enforcement, however, if it can be shown that "[t]he award has not yet become binding on the parties.
…
While the legal consequences of an ICC award may vary according to national laws … as well as the availability of recognition and enforcement treaties, it is clear that by consenting to the ICC Rules, the parties agree to the extent possible that ICC awards are binding when rendered, and accept an obligation to respect them. Article 28(6) of the Rules is therefore perhaps the most significant factor in the estimated voluntary compliance with awards (according to the Secretariat) in more than 90% of ICC arbitrations."
"Saville J rejected an argument that in some way a restrictive operation should be adopted to clauses dealing with waiver of immunity, since one of the parties is a state …"
"There has been considerable diversity of views among both jurists and courts as to how far a State can be assumed to give its consent and to waive immunity from execution in national courts in these situations."
"In an important recent ruling of the French Court of Cassation, it was decided that, by virtue of Article 28(6) of the ICC Rules, a State that has agreed to ICC arbitration is deemed to have waived its immunity to execution in France."
"The conclusion that in the presence of such a waiver, an award may be enforced against the totality of a state's assets has been tempered only by the recent Ambassade de la Fédération de Russie en France v Compagnie Noga d'Importation et d'Exportation decision of August 10 2000 in which the Paris Court of Appeals found that diplomatic immunity of states was governed by a legal regime distinct from the law of ordinary state immunity of execution, derived from the principles of public international law." [p52]
"The precedent set by Creighton v Qatar is nevertheless a major development in French law of arbitration. The Court's finding that the state had waived its immunity from execution by agreeing to submit disputes to ICC arbitration or similar arbitration rules – has opened the way for vastly increased enforceability of arbitral awards rendered against states in France."
"In addition, the ROC agreed to abide by the Rules of the ICC which precludes the ROC from asserting a sovereign immunity defense. Rule 28(6) states … [he then recites it]. Therefore we hold that the ROC explicitly waived its sovereign immunity. Accordingly we need not address a potential implicit waiver (pp6-7)."
"Accordingly, when a state signs an ICC arbitration agreement, attachments of state's assets are authorised by French courts when the state's assets are destined to private activities."
"It is not clear from the report what is meant by 'private activities'. If it is intended to mean activities such as commercial activities, then it seems that the effect of signing the ICC arbitration agreement under French law is equivalent to s13(4) of the State Immunity Act 1978 in England and Wales, which does not prevent the issue of any process in respect of property which is for the time being in use or intended for use [for] commercial purposes."
"1. State's assets "destined to private activities" means, as a general rule, assets destined to any activity which is not a sovereign activity, i.e. "jure" imperii", by contrast to "jure gestionis" activities.
"Jure gestionis" activities include not only commercial activities strico sensu but also any activity of economic nature or any other activity which is not sovereign."
"Under French law, in the presence of an ICC arbitration agreement (which includes Article 28(6)):
- assuming that the sums deposited in Chad's bank account are not diplomatic property but are used for commercial purposes, such sums are seizable (Creighton and Noga);
- assuming that such sums are neither diplomatic property nor used for commercial purposes, they may nonetheless be destined to "private activities" (jure gestionis), which is a concept broader than the concept of "commercial purposes" and may also be seized (see Creighton and Noga). In other words, the mere fact that these sums are not destined to commercial purposes does not necessarily mean that they are not destined to private activities."