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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 >> Claxton Engineering Services Ltd v TXM Olaj-Es Gazkutato KFT [2010] EWHC 2567 (Comm) (15 October 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2010/2567.html Cite as: [2011] 1 Lloyd's Rep 252, [2010] EWHC 2567 (Comm), [2011] ILPr 13 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
CLAXTON ENGINEERING SERVICES LIMITED |
Claimant/ Respondent |
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- and - |
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TXM OLAJ–ÉS GÁZKUTATÓ KFT |
Defendant/ Applicant |
____________________
Mr. Stewart Shackleton, solicitor advocate (instructed by Mundays LLP) for the Defendant/Applicant
Hearing date: 4 August 2010
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Gloster, DBE:
Introduction
The parties
The issues
i) Whether this court, or an (as yet) unconstituted Hungarian arbitral tribunal, should decide the threshold question whether an arbitration agreement was reached between the parties.ii) If this court is indeed the correct forum to decide the threshold question of jurisdiction, whether, as a result of exchanges between the parties in June 2006, the parties agreed to do business on TXM's unamended terms and conditions (including the Hungarian arbitration clause), or subject to the amendments proposed by Claxton (which deleted the arbitration clause and incorporated an English exclusive jurisdiction clause instead).
iii) If there was no arbitration agreement between the parties, whether Article 2 of the Regulation requires TXM to be sued before the courts of Hungary.
iv) In any event, even if Article 2 does not so require, whether a stay should be granted on the grounds that the Hungarian courts are the more appropriate forum.
Issue i): Who should decide the question of jurisdiction?
Issue ii): What are the terms of the contract between the parties relating to dispute resolution and proper law?
Evidence relied upon
Summary of commercial dealings between the parties
Period October 2005 to April 2006
"Terms and conditions
The placement of a written order in respect to a quotation, bid or proposal from [Claxton], will result in the terms and conditions stated below being deemed to be reasonable and enforceable and to form part of the contract between the client and contractor, unless where expressly agreed otherwise in correspondence between the parties:-
…
9. No order will be processed prior to receipt of written instructions/purchase order, a faxed or e-mail copy is acceptable. …"
The terms also included a number of provisions relating to e.g. delivery ex-works, arrangement for transportation costs, certification, retention of title, payment in sterling etc. that are not necessary to quote for present purposes. No express provision was made in the terms and conditions in relation to the method of resolution of disputes or as to the proper law.
"1. Please notify us immediately if you are unable to meet the required delivery date.
2. The Seller, by acceptance of this order, expressly agrees to all of the terms and conditions on the face of the order, and on any accompanying pages incorporated therein and made a part of this order."
"2. The Vendor, by signing this Purchase Order, expressly acknowledges that it has read the Purchaser's General Terms and Conditions and that it accepts them as binding upon it; further the Vendor expressly waives its rights to use its own general terms and conditions in connection with this order."
Ms Claxton's evidence, which is not challenged by any deponent on evidential grounds, is that she is quite certain that Claxton was not provided with TXM's general terms and conditions at this point. For the purposes of this application I accept that evidence.
Period February to June 2006
"2. THE CONCLUSION OF THE AGREEMENT
2.1 The Purchaser's orders will only be binding if they are made in writing. Purchase Orders made orally as well as oral agreements between the Parties must be drawn up in writing to be valid and legally binding upon the Parties. Likewise, modifications or supplements to the Agreement must be made in writing in order to be valid.
2.2 A valid and binding contract between the Purchaser and the Vendor shall be formed by:
(i) the Purchaser's written Purchase Order submitted to the Vendor (constituting a purchase offer); and
(ii) The Vendor's express written acceptance of the Purchase Order by means of sending a signed copy of this Purchase Order back to the Purchaser, which acceptance is to be received by the Purchaser within five (5) days of the Date of the Purchase Order.
Any acceptance by the Vendor which is received later or which differs from the Purchaser's Purchase Order will represent a new purchase offer and must be accepted by the Purchaser in writing. However, the Vendor's general terms and conditions do not become part of the Agreement even in the case of the acceptance of such a new purchase offer.
2.3 The Vendor acknowledges that from among the provisions of these General Terms and Conditions the Purchaser expressly draws its attention on sections 2.4, 3.1, 3.3, 4.4, 10 and 11.
2.4 The Vendor shall examine the Purchaser's purchase order – especially the Description and the Intended Purpose of the Purchase Order Items – and the Purchaser's instructions with the diligence that can be expected from an entrepreneur with appropriate professional knowledge, and if they are unreasonable, unprofessional, inconsistent or unlawful, it shall inform the Purchaser thereof without delay in writing.
…
13. INTERPRETATION AND SAVINGS CLAUSE
13.1 The Agreement shall be governed by and interpreted in accordance with the substantive laws of Hungary, excluding the application of Decree No. 13 of 1979 on International Private Law. Further, the Parties expressly include the application of Decree No. 20 of 1987 on the promulgation of the United Nations Convention on the International Sale of Goods, dated Vienna, April 11, 1980.
13.2 If any provision herein, or the application thereof to any person or circumstances becomes invalid, the invalidity shall not affect any other provision or application of the Agreement which can be given effect to without the invalid provision or application. The Parties agree to substitute the invalid provision with such a valid provision which comes closest to the legal and commercial content of the invalid provision.
14 DISPUTE RESOLUTION, GOVERNING LANGUAGE VERSION
14.1 The Parties will attempt to reach an amicable settlement with each other regarding any legal dispute arising out of the Agreement. A dispute between the Parties of any nature whatsoever, shall not entitle the Vendor to stay the performance of the Agreement or to withhold delivery. If an amicable settlement is not reach within a reasonable period of time, but within not longer than 30 (thirty) calendar days from the commencement of the dispute, the Parties agree to submit the resolution of their legal dispute arising from or in connection with the Agreement, its breach, termination, validity or interpretation, to the exclusive competence of the Court of Arbitration attached to the Hungarian Chamber of Commerce and Industry, Budapest, in accordance with its own Rules and Proceedings. The language to be used in the arbitral proceedings will be Hungarian, and the number of arbitrators will be three.
14.2 These General Terms and Conditions will be attached to the Purchase Order in one Hungarian and one English language version. In the case of any discrepancy between the Hungarian and the English language version, the Hungarian version will prevail."
"I have checked over them and they all look okay, I have noticed that is no provision for any transport charges and the cost for the Service Engineers time, travel and expenses, does this come in a separate purchase order. Please advise".
Mr. Shackleton contended that this amounted to approval of TXM's terms and conditions; in my judgment that was clearly not the case. All Ms Skoyles was doing was confirming that she had looked at the purchase orders, not that she was approving the terms and conditions.
"Further to the TXM terms and conditions which you sent through to my colleague, Sonja Skoyles.
Our contracts department has now reviewed these and we attach:-
1) Our exceptions to the general Terms and conditions
2) A Modified set of conditions to be used in conjunction with the general set of conditions.
It is my understanding that these then cover a variety of services e.g. Manufacturer, rental and labour. Payment terms detailed in each quotation and subsequent purchase order.
Please advise if this is acceptable."
"Modified or Supplementary Conditions. To be read in conjunction with General Terms and Conditions of TMX [sic]"
That document went on to state that:
"The following modifications to be General Terms and Conditions of [TXM] shall apply to this Purchase Order …"
and there then followed detailed deletions, insertions, modifications and substitutions to almost every single clause of TXM's terms and conditions. In particular, in relation to clauses 13 and 14, the Claxton modified conditions stated as follows:
"13. INTERPRETATION AND SAVINGS CLAUSE
13.1 Delete this Section in its entirety and substitute:
'The Agreement shall be governed by and interpreted in accordance with the laws of England and the parties hereby submit to the exclusive jurisdiction of the English courts.'
14. DISPUTE RESOLUTION, GOVERNING LANGUAGE VERSION
Delete this Section in its entirety."
Period to July 2006 to October 2007
Submissions of the parties
Analysis of the contractual position
i) The parties' course of dealings demonstrates that binding contracts were concluded between them when TXM gave written instructions by e-mail to Claxton to proceed with the manufacture of the equipment specified in Claxton's prior quotation, or in prior e-mail exchanges between the parties, or, at the latest, when Claxton confirmed by e-mail that it was proceeding with the manufacture of such equipment in accordance with the instructions given by TXM.ii) Accordingly, TXM's subsequent formal purchase orders, which were not submitted by TXM until after binding contracts had been formed, were not operative contractual documents, in the sense of either being documents which constituted, or comprised part of, an offer or acceptance, or of being documents upon the terms of which the parties were contracting prior to 2 June 2006 in such a way as to alter Claxton's terms and conditions, as set out in its quotations.
iii) For this reason, and despite the fact that Claxton signed the 4 and 6 April 2006 purchase orders, without endorsement, and subsequently returned these to TXM in April 2006, I do not consider that the context shows that, by doing so, Claxton was agreeing that, in relation to all its subsequent contracts and dealings with TXM, it was prepared to contract exclusively on TXM's terms. At that stage, Claxton had not even seen TXM's terms and conditions; there was no consideration for any such agreement; and Claxton's subsequent conduct in June 2006, when it did see TXM's terms and conditions, was wholly inconsistent with any such agreement arising as a result merely of its conduct in signing unrelated purchase orders. Moreover, the fact that the purchase order contained a so-called acknowledgement at paragraph 2 that Claxton had read TXM's terms and conditions and that "… it accepted them as binding upon it …"; and "… expressly waives its rights to use its own general terms and conditions in connection with this order …" (emphasis supplied), does not in my view in the circumstances of this case amount to a contractually binding waiver or estoppel in relation to future orders.
iv) In any event this point only directly affects invoice 8671 (purchase order reference H-06-1157), where, as I have said, the relevant quote was apparently issued on 14 April 2006 and where, according to Ms Claxton, the contract was concluded prior to submission of TXM's formal purchase order H-06-1157 on 2 June 2006, as a result of written instructions given by TXM to Claxton to proceed with the manufacture of the relevant equipment, and accepted by the latter. I conclude that this contract was not subject to any arbitration agreement as a result of Claxton's conduct in the period prior to 19 June 2006.
v) On proper analysis, Claxton's counterproposal, by its e-mail dated 19 June 2006 amounted to a counter offer to that proposed in TXM's submitted terms and conditions for governing the parties' relationship going forward. The terms of Claxton's e-mail clearly indicated to TXM on any objective basis that Claxton was not prepared to accept a Hungarian arbitration clause or a Hungarian proper law clause, and was proposing that the terms on which the parties should do business thereafter should expressly be governed by an exclusive English jurisdiction clause and an English proper law clause. What representatives of TXM may have subjectively thought at the time as to which terms were governing their continued relationship with Claxton, after receipt of Claxton's e-mail, is irrelevant (as indeed are Claxton's subjective views).
vi) On any basis therefore, Claxton was, as at 19 June 2006 making it clear that it did not accept the Hungarian arbitration clause and Hungarian proper law clause.
"… The way in which I would put it is to say that the traditional offer and acceptance analysis must be adopted unless the documents passing between the parties and their conduct show that their common intention was that some other terms were intended to prevail."
I also refer to paragraphs 23 to 25 in the judgment of Dyson LJ (as he then was) where he said as follows:
"23. The so-called 'last shot' doctrine has been explained in Chitty on Contracts (30th edition) at para 2-037 as meaning that where conflicting communications are exchanged, each is a counter-offer, so that if a contract results at all (e.g. from an acceptance by conduct) it must be on the terms of the final document in the series leading to the conclusion of the contract. This doctrine has been criticised in Anson's Law of Contract (28th edition) at p 39 as depending on chance and being potentially arbitrary as well as on the ground that, unless and until the counter-offer is accepted, there is no contract even though both buyer and seller may firmly believe that a contract has been made.
24. The paradigm battle of the forms occurs where A offers to buy goods from B on its (A's) conditions and B accepts the offer but only on its own conditions. As is pointed out in Cheshire, Fifoot & Furmston's Law of Contract (15th ed.) at p 210, it may be possible to analyse the legal situation that results as being that there is (i) a contract on A's conditions; (ii) a contract on B's conditions; (iii) a contract on the terms that would be implied by law, but incorporating neither A's nor B's conditions; (iv) a contract incorporating some blend of both parties' conditions; or (v) no contract at all.
25. In my judgment, it is not possible to lay down a general rule that will apply in all cases where there is a battle of the forms. It always depends on an assessment of what the parties must objectively be taken to have intended. But where the facts are no more complicated than that A makes an offer on its conditions and B accepts that offer on its conditions and, without more, performance follows, it seems to me that the correct analysis is what Longmore LJ has described as the 'traditional offer and acceptance analysis', i.e. that there is a contract on B's conditions. I accept that this analysis is not without its difficulties in circumstances of the kind to which Professor Treitel refers in the passage quoted at [20] above. But in the next sentence of that passage, Professor Treitel adds: 'For this reason the cases described above are best regarded as exceptions to a general requirement of offer and acceptance'. I also accept the force of the criticisms made in Anson. But the rules which govern the formation of contracts have been long established and they are grounded in the concepts of offer and acceptance. So long as that continues to be the case, it seems to me that the general rule should be that the traditional offer and acceptance analysis is to be applied in battle of the forms cases. That has the great merit of providing a degree of certainty which is both desirable and necessary in order to promote effective commercial relationships."
i) are not subject to the terms of any agreement to arbitrate disputes before a Hungarian arbitral tribunal;ii) are subject to an agreement that the English courts should have exclusive jurisdiction and accordingly Article 23.1 of the Regulation is engaged[9].
i) it was not subject to the terms of any arbitration agreement;ii) notwithstanding Article 2 of the Regulation, this Court has jurisdiction under Article 5.1 (b), because the evidence clearly showed that Claxton's delivery obligation was ex-Claxton's works in Great Yarmouth, albeit that transportation arrangements could have been made (or were made), in a separate contract, to transport the equipment to Hungary.
Issue ii): If there was no arbitration agreement between the parties, whether Article 2 of the Regulation requires TXM to be sued before the courts of Hungary.
Issue iii): In any event, even if Article 2 does not so require, whether a stay should be granted on the grounds that the Hungarian courts are the more appropriate forum.
Inadequate time estimates given by counsel
Note 1 The New York Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards 1958. [Back] Note 2 [2000] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 1, at 11. [Back] Note 3 [2000] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 500 at 509. [Back] Note 4 (2000) 16 Const. LJ 394 at 399. [Back] Note 5 [2000] 1 Lloyds Rep 522. [Back] Note 6 Supra , at pages 525 -526, per Waller LJ; and at pages 527 - 528 per Chadwick LJ. [Back] Note 8 [2009] EWCA Civ 1209 [Back] Note 9 I point out that there was no argument put forward by Mr. Shackleton to the effect that there was no sufficient agreement in writing to satisfy the provisions of Article 23. [Back]