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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 >> Fortress Value Recovery Fund I LLP & Ors v Blue Skye Special Opportunities Fund LP (A Firm) & Ors [2012] EWHC 1486 (Comm) (30 May 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2012/1486.html Cite as: [2012] EWHC 1486 (Comm) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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(1) FORTRESS VALUE RECOVERY FUND I LLC (2) ZBS CAPITAL PARTNERS L.P. (3) CYPRESS WAY EUROPEAN ASSET INVESTORS II SARL |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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(1) BLUE SKYE SPECIAL OPPORTUNITIES FUND L.P. (A Firm) (2) MR SALVATORE CERCHIONE (3) MR GIANLUCA D'AVANZO (4) STEPSTONE ACQUISITION Sārl (5) BLUE SKYE GP LTD (6) DBZ SPECIAL INVESTMENT (LUX) Sārl (Formerly BLUE SKYE (LUX) Sārl) (7) BENLOMOND CORPORATION Sārl (8) BLUE SKYE MANAGEMENT Sārl (9) BLUE SKYE CAPITAL Sārl (10) BLUE SKYE MANAGEMENT Sārl SCS (11) GREENTEA S.A. (12) BLUE SKYE FINANCIAL HOLDINGS Sārl (13) OMEGA SKYE PARTNERS LIMITED PARTNERSHIP (A Firm) (14) OMEGA PARTNERS Sārl (15) MR MATTIA MIRKO DANESE (16) MR FRANCESCO PAOLO PADULA (17) MR GIOVANNI CASLINI (21)BSKYE INVESTORS Sārl |
Defendants |
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Mr Tim Lord QC, Mr Orlando Gledhill, Ms Sarah Abram, Mr Edward Harrison and Mr Craig Morrison (instructed by Reynolds Porter Chamberlain LLP) for the Second, Third, Fifth, Seventh to fourteenth and Twenty-First Defendants
Mr Daniel Toledano QC and Mr Thomas Plewman (instructed by Stephenson Harwood) for the Fifteenth, Sixteenth and Seventeenth Defendants
Hearing dates: 25th and 26th April 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE BLAIR:
(1) The claimants' disclosure application from Mr Cerchione and Mr D'Avanzo.(2) The RPC defendants' application for further fortification of the cross-undertaking in the order (an application for an amendment to clarify the relevant part of the order is not pursued).
(3) The defendants' application for the claimants to provide security for costs.
(4) The application by Mr Cerchione, Mr D'Avanzo, Blue Skye GP Ltd (the fifth defendant), Omega Skye Partners Limited Partnership (the thirteenth defendant) and Omega Partners Sārl (the fourteenth defendant) for the stay of various claims said to be brought in breach of an arbitration clause.
(5) The claimants' application for permission to re-re-amend the Claim Form (which is not opposed in principle).
(6) Directions, in particular as to the RPC defendants' intended strike-out/summary judgment application.
(7) Costs, in particular an application by the defendant managers for their costs of two applications for the variation of the order in respect of its anti-suit injunction aspect (this refers to the Luxembourg insolvency proceedings).
In summary, the issues which were the subject of argument at the hearing were disclosure, fortification, security for costs, stay pending arbitration, and the defendant managers' application for their costs of earlier hearings, and I shall take them in that order.
The claimants' application for disclosure by Mr Cerchione and Mr D'Avanzo
6. The Second Respondent or the Third Respondent must, by 4pm on [ ] 2012, swear and serve on the Applicants' solicitors a further affidavit setting out and/or exhibiting the following information and/or documents:
6.1. All agreements and arrangements for the payment of or transfer by the Seventh, Tenth, Eleventh or Twelfth Respondent or any of their direct or indirect subsidiaries to the Second Respondent, the Third Respondent or any entities under their control or in which they are interested of any fees, expenses, assets or other benefits, and exhibiting all such agreements and/or arrangements in so far as in writing.
6.2. All distributions paid to any of the Respondents in respect of their management or involvement or otherwise in connection with the management of the companies, partnerships, entities and instruments identified at paragraph 5 above and /or the Italian Assets (including but not limited to salaries and expenses paid) for the period from 31 December 2010 to date.
6.3. A list of each of the Italian Assets (including loans and/or other debts or financial instruments) held at the last valuation date, the value ascribed to each asset at that date, and an explanation as to the manner in which the make-up or valuation of the Italian Assets has changed since that date.
6.4. All information given to and other information relied upon by Butterfield Fulcrum to enable it to produce the Quarterly accounts referred to at paragraph 9 of the Second Respondent's First Affidavit dated 7 February 2012 ("Cerchione 1").
Fortification
Security for costs
(1) It is not in dispute that the first claimant has been in wind-down since 2008, and cash is gradually being returned to investors. A letter dated 21 February 2008 from the then investment manager of the VRF Funds stated that it had decided to implement an orderly disposition of assets over a period of two to four years. In their evidence, the claimants say that an "orderly disposition" of the portfolios began in March 2008 and is continuing, and that the current position is that the process is expected to take another three to five years.(2) The claimants submit that this is an orderly process, not an insolvent liquidation. The first claimant is solvent and has large net assets; there is no question of assets being distributed to members without liabilities first being paid or provision being made for them.
(3) The defendants submit however that the fact that the first claimant is in wind-down not only means that it may ultimately have disposed of its assets before the litigation is finally concluded, but also that such assets as it has are inherently unstable, since by definition they are being continuously returned to the investors in the fund.
(4) That there is potential volatility in the first claimant is, the defendants say, demonstrated by the drop in net asset value from an estimated US$250 million to approximately US$159 million between 31 November 2011 and 31 December 2011 (explained by an "unusually large unrealised write-down in the valuation of one of [its] investments").
(5) Further, the assets may be illiquid, and held by subsidiaries in many jurisdictions, something, the defendants say, which is not clarified by the accounts, making enforcement potentially very difficult.
(6) The claimants say that there are large cash deposits within the United States. However, the defendants point to the fact that cash has fallen significantly over the last couple of years. It started off at US$81.7 million at the beginning of 2010, it was US$34.7 million at the end of 2010, and it dropped to US$25 million by February 2012. The claimants say that it has now gone back up to US$34.7 million but the court only has evidence before it of balances of US$27 million.
Stay under s. 9 Arbitration Act 1996
"Governing law
This Agreement and the rights, obligations and relationships of the parties hereto under this Agreement shall be governed by and construed in accordance with the laws of England and Wales. Any dispute, controversy or claim arising out of or in connection with this Agreement or the formation, breach, termination or invalidity thereof, that the parties hereto are unable to resolve between themselves, shall be finally settled under the Rules of Arbitration of the International Chamber of Commerce of Paris by three arbitrators appointed in accordance with the aforementioned rules. The place of arbitration shall be London, UK. All submissions and awards in relation to arbitration under this Agreement shall be in English, and all arbitration proceedings and pleadings shall be in English."
Omega Skye and Omega Partners
Mr Cerchione and Mr D'Avanzo
The submissions on behalf of Mr Cerchione and Mr D'Avanzo
(1) Clause 17.2.1 is an exclusion clause, providing that neither the General Partner (Blue Skye GP) nor any of its Associates "shall have any liability for any loss to the Partnership or the Partners arising in connection with the services to be performed hereunder or pursuant hereto...". Mr Cerchione and Mr D'Avanzo are Associates and Stepstone is a Partner. There follows a proviso in respect of fraud, etc.(2) Clause 17.2.2 provides that the Blue Skye Special Opportunities Fund LP (the first defendant) "Agrees to indemnify and hold harmless out of Partnership Assets the General Partner and any Associate ... against any and all liabilities, actions, proceedings, claims, costs, demands, damages and expenses (including legal fees) incurred or threatened ..." in relation (in essence) to the activities of the Blue Skye Fund. Mr Cerchione and Mr D'Avanzo are Associates. There follows a proviso in respect of fraud, gross negligence, etc.
(3) Clause 17.2.3 excludes liability and extends an indemnity out of partnership assets to any "officer, director, shareholder, agent, partner or employee of the General Partner" (among whom is Mr Cerchione). There follows a proviso in respect of fraud, gross negligence, etc.
The submissions on behalf of the claimants
Discussion and conclusions
"(1) Where
(a) a right under section 1 to enforce a term ("the substantive term") is subject to a term providing for the submission of disputes to arbitration ("the arbitration agreement"), and
(b) the arbitration agreement is an agreement in writing for the purposes of Part 1 of the Arbitration Act 1996,
the third party shall be treated for the purposes of that Act as a party to the arbitration agreement as regards disputes between himself and the promisor relating to the enforcement of the substantive term by the third party."
Subsection (2) is concerned with the situation where the right is itself a right to arbitrate.
"33. Section 8 ensures that, where appropriate, the provisions of the Arbitration Act 1996 apply in relation to third party rights under this Act. Without this section, the main provisions of the Arbitration Act 1996 would not apply because a third party is not a party to the arbitration agreement between the promisor and the promisee.
34. Subsection (1) deals with what is likely to be the most common situation. The third party's substantive right (for example, to payment by the promisor) is conferred subject to disputes being referred to arbitration (see section 1(4)). This section is based on a "conditional benefit" approach. It ensures that a third party who wishes to take action to enforce his substantive right is not only able to enforce effectively his right to arbitrate, but is also "bound" to enforce his right by arbitration (so that, for example, a stay of proceedings can be ordered against him under section 9 of the Arbitration Act 1996). This approach is analogous to that applied to assignees who may be prevented from unconscionably taking a substantive benefit free of its procedural burden (see, for example, DVA v Voest Alpine, The Jay Bola) [1997] 2 Lloyd's Rep 279). "Disputes relating to the enforcement of the substantive term by the third party" is intended to have a wide ambit and to include disputes between the third party (who wishes to enforce the term) and the promisor as to the validity, interpretation, existence or performance of the term; the third party's entitlement to enforce the term; the jurisdiction of the arbitral tribunal; or the recognition and enforcement of an arbitration award. But to avoid imposing a "pure" burden on the third party, it does not cover, for example, a separate dispute in relation to a tort claim by the promisor against the third party for damages."
The defendant managers' application for costs of applications on 7 and 10 February
Conclusion
17.2 Exculpation and indemnities
17.2.1 Neither the General Partner nor any of its Associates shall have any liability for any loss to the Partnership or the Partners arising in connection with the services to be performed hereunder or pursuant hereto, or under or pursuant to any management agreement, advisory agreement or other agreement under which it provides or agrees to provide services to or in respect of the Partnership or which otherwise arises in relation to the operation, business or activities of the Partnership save in respect of any matter resulting from its fraud, wilful misconduct, bad faith or reckless disregard for its obligations and duties in relation to the Partnership or its gross negligence or breach of any law, regulation or material term of this Agreement.
17.2.2 The Partnership agrees to indemnify and hold harmless out of Partnership Assets the General Partner and any Associate (the "Indemnified Party") against any and all liabilities, actions, proceedings, claims, costs, demands, damages and expenses (including legal fees) incurred or threatened by reason of the Indemnified Party being or having acted as a general partner or manager in respect of the Partnership or arising in respect of or in connection with any matter or other circumstance relating to or resulting from the exercise of its powers as a general partner or manager or from the provision of services to or in respect of the Partnership or which otherwise arise in relation to the operation, business or activities of the Partnership provided however that it shall not be so indemnified with respect to any matter resulting from its fraud, gross negligence, wilful misconduct, bad faith, reckless disregard for its obligations and duties in relation to the Partnership or breach of any law, regulation or material term of this Agreement or, in the case of the General Partner, from any material breach of any provision of FSMA binding upon it.
17.2.3 No officer, director, shareholder, agent, partner or employee of the General Partner or any Associate nor any person (whether or not also an officer, director, shareholder, agent, partner or employee of the General Partner or any Associate) nominated by any of them to be a director of any company in which the Partnership holds an Investment (a "Nominated Director") shall have any liability for any loss to the Partnership or the Partners howsoever arising in connection with services performed or to be performed hereunder or pursuant hereto or under or pursuant to any management agreement, advisory agreement relating to the Partnership or in respect of services as a Nominated Director save in respect of any matter resulting from such person's fraud, gross negligence, wilful misconduct, bad faith or reckless disregard for any obligations and duties such person may have in relation to the Partnership or breach of any law, regulation or material term of this Agreement and each of them (the "Indemnified Party") shall be indemnified out of the Partnership Assets against any and all liabilities actions, proceedings, claims, costs, demands, damages and expenses (including reasonable legal fees) incurred arising out of or in connection with or relating to or resulting from the performance or otherwise by the Indemnified Party of services in relation to the Partnership, its operations, business or activities or the Indemnified Party having acted as a Nominated Director, provided however that such person shall not be so indemnified with respect to any matter resulting from such person's fraud, gross negligence, wilful misconduct or bad faith or reckless disregard for any obligations and duties such person may have in relation to the Partnership or breach of any law, regulation or material term of this Agreement. Without prejudice to the generality of the foregoing, the General Partner shall be entitled to give indemnities on behalf of the Partnership out of the Partnership Assets to any Nominated Director in terms similar to those set out in this Clause 18.