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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 >> Sodzawiczny v McNally [2021] EWHC 3384 (Comm) (15 December 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2021/3384.html Cite as: [2021] EWHC 3384 (Comm), [2022] 1 CLC 348 |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
FRANEK JAN SODZAWICZNY |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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SIMON JOHN MCNALLY |
Defendant |
____________________
Bajul Shah (instructed by Lexent Partners Limited) for the Defendant/Respondent
Hearing dates:8 December 2021
Further written submissions: 9 December 2021
Draft Judgment to parties: 9 December 2021
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Foxton :
Introduction
i) a declaration that Mr Sodzawiczny was the ultimate beneficial owner of the Property;
ii) a declaration that Mr McNally held and holds on trust any powers or interests he had or has, directly or indirectly, in relation to the Property on trust for Mr Sodzawiczny; and
iii) an order that Mr McNally transfer or do whatever is necessary to effect the transfer of the Property or its indirect ownership to Mr Sodzawiczny.
i) He found that Mr Sodzawiczny was the ultimate beneficial owner of the Property ([460]).
ii) He referred to the declarations and order sought by Mr Sodzawiczny (as set out at [3] above), noting that no argument had been advanced by Mr McNally "as to the terms of any declaration or order" ([460]).
iii) He held that it was "appropriate to grant the Claimant declaratory relief and consequential orders" ([462]), from which it follows that the Arbitrator must have been satisfied that (i) the factual basis for the declarations sought had been made out and (ii) there was no obstacle to an order being made against Mr McNally in the terms sought.
i) "grants the Claimant a declaration that he was and is the ultimate beneficial owner of the Property" ("Declaration (1)");
ii) "grants the Claimant a declaration that Mr McNally held and holds any powers or interests which he had or has, directly or indirectly, in relation to the Property on trust for the Claimant" ("Declaration (2)"); and
iii) "orders Mr McNally to transfer or do whatever is necessary to effect the transfer of the Property (or its indirect ownership) to the Claimant" ("the Transfer Order");
the Arbitrator reserving jurisdiction over "all other requests and claims, including questions of costs and interest, to one or more future awards".
S.66 Arbitration Act 1996
"(1) An award made by the tribunal pursuant to an arbitration agreement may, by leave of the court, be enforced in the same manner as a judgment or order of the court to the same effect.
(2) Where leave is so given, judgment may be entered in terms of the award.
(3) Leave to enforce an award shall not be given where, or to the extent that, the person against whom it is sought to be enforced shows that the tribunal lacked substantive jurisdiction to make the award. The right to raise such an objection may have been lost (see section 73).
(4) Nothing in this section affects the recognition or enforcement of an award under any other enactment or rule of law, in particular under Part II of the Arbitration Act 1996 (enforcement of awards under Geneva Convention) or the provisions of Part III of this Act relating to the recognition and enforcement of awards under the New York Convention or by an action on the award."
i) Leave should readily be given to enforce an award as a judgment (Middlemiss & Gould v Hartlepool Corporation [1972] 1 WLR 1643, 1646H, rejecting the more cautious approach previously suggested by Scrutton LJ in In re Boks & Co and Peter Rushton & Co Ltd [1919] 1 KB 491, 497).
ii) Despite some suggestions to the contrary (see e.g. Margulies Bros Ltd v Dafnis Thomaides & Co (UK) Ltd (No 2) [1958] 1 Lloyd's Rep 205, 207 and Tongyuan (USA) International Trading Group v Uni-Clan Ltd 19 January 2001, transcript pages 19-20), it is now clear that a declaration made by the arbitrator can be the subject of an order under s.66: see African Fertilizers and Chemicals NIG Ltd (Nigeria) v BD Shipsnavo GmbH & Co Reederei KG [2011] 2 CLC 761, [20]-[22]; The Front Comor [2011] EWHC 819 (Comm), [28]; [2012] EWCA Civ 312, [36]-[37].
iii) If the relief granted by the award is not sufficiently clearly stated, that will be a reason to refuse a s.66 order. This was the position in Margulies Bros Ltd, where the award was intended to identify an amount payable by one party to the other but did not identify sufficiently clearly the amount or how it was to be calculated (as that decision has been explained in Tongyuan, p.8 and African Fertilizers, [21]). That includes cases in which the effect of the award cannot be framed in terms which would make sense "if those were translated straight into the body of a judgment" (Tongyuan, p.8) or where the operative parts of the award which would fall to be enforced are inconsistent or ambiguous (Moran v Lloyd's [1983] QB 542, 550: "the executive power of the state to enforce an award is not to be invoked in an inconsistent or ambiguous form").
iv) That applies to an award of injunctive as well as declarative relief (e.g., Birtley & District Cooperative Society Ltd v Windy Nook and District Industrial Cooperative Society Ltd (No 2) [1960] 1 QB 1, 19).
v) In the event of such ambiguity or inconsistency (and by analogy with the position under s.100 and following of the Arbitration Act 1996), for the reasons explained in Norsk Hydro ASA v State Property Fund of Ukraine and others [2002] EWHC 2120 (Comm), [17]-[18], the court is "neither entitled nor bound to go behind the award in question, explore the reasoning of the arbitration tribunal or second-guess its intentions." If, therefore, the terms of the award are such as to render enforcement by the court's processes inappropriate without some form of elaboration or refinement, then, save in cases of true slips or changes of name, enforcement will be refused. To do otherwise "necessarily requires the enforcing court to stray into the arena of the substantive reasoning and intentions of the arbitration tribunal." However, "the court should not … be astute to find difficulties of construction of awards or, for that matter, judgments, where none really exist" (Tongyuan, 11).
vi) As is clear from the terms of the DAC Reports quoted at [12] above, an application under s.66 will be refused to the extent that the award concerns a dispute which, under English law, is not arbitrable. This is one manifestation of the court's power to refuse enforcement on public policy grounds, as to which see Soleimany v Soleimany [1999] QB 785.
vii) As noted above, the DAC reports also make it clear that an order may be refused where it "would improperly affect the rights and obligations of those who were not parties to the arbitration agreement". It is not necessary to determine the precise scope of this ground but it must include those cases in which the courts would refuse injunctive relief or specific performance because of the existence of a prior third party right the impact of such an order would have on third parties (see Snell's Equity 34th para. 17-035 and the reference to this principle of equity in the s.66 context by Clare Ambrose in Sterling v Rand [2019] EWHC 2560 (Ch), [80]).
viii) The court will not itself enter a declaratory judgment under s.66(2) in the terms of a declaration already made by the arbitrator if it is not in the interests of justice to do so, for example because such a declaration is not necessary: The Front Comor, [28] (Field J), [38] (CA).
i) In favour of the latter view is the fact that an application under s.66 is intended to be a summary form of procedure which does not differ in substantive terms from an action to enforce the award: see [11] above. An action on an award is rationalised as a conventional contractual claim to enforce the implied promise to comply with the award (see Mustill & Boyd page 417 and London Steam-Ship Owners' Mutual Insurance Association Limited v The Kingdom of Spain, the French State (The Prestige (Nos 3 and 4)) [2021] EWCA Civ 1589, [108]). Historically at least, the grant of discretionary relief on the conclusion of such an action has been treated as being subject to the general considerations governing the granting of such relief in contractual claims (see Mustill & Boyd, 417 footnote 12 and Blackett v Bates (1865-66) LR 1 Ch App 117, 124 where Lord Cranworth LC held that "the rights of the parties in respect of specific performance are the same as if the award had been simply an agreement between them". There is a statement to similar effect in Fry on Specific Performance (6th) [1593], which, when discussing orders for specific performance of arbitral awards, observes that "the interference of the court in these cases being in exercise not of any jurisdiction peculiar to awards, but of its ordinary jurisdiction as applied to the specific performance of contracts, it follows that many, if not all, of the principles applicable to ordinary actions of that nature must apply".
ii) While it might be said that the implied promise to honour the award must also extend to honouring any discretionary relief ordered by the arbitrator, the parties' agreement as to the suitability of discretionary relief does not in general oust the court's discretion to determine whether to order or withhold such relief (Warner Bros Pictures Inc v Nelson [1937] 1 KB 209, 220-221 and Awbury Technical solutions llc v Karston Management (Bermuda) Ltd) [2019] EWHC 233 (Comm), [57]-[58]).
iii) The granting of declaratory relief is also discretionary, albeit the factors conditioning the exercise of that discretion are essentially those of whether there is a "live dispute", the utility of any declaration and fairness as between the parties (Brent v Malvern Mews Tenants [2020] EWHC 1024 (Ch), [13]-[14]). The Court of Appeal in The Front Comor, [37] noted that where a party to an arbitration award had obtained declaratory relief and then brought an action on the award, the court "if it thought appropriate could itself make a declaration in the same terms", with s.66 being "a simpler alternative route to bringing an action on the award". There is scope for debate as to whether that requires the court to determine for itself whether a court declaration is appropriate at all (e.g. whether there is a sufficiently live controversy) or whether, as I think is likely to be the case, the issue for the court is the rather different one of whether there is any need for (in effect) a second declaration. While a s.66 order in respect of some forms of discretionary relief may allow the award creditor to use the conventional means for enforcing court judgments, in many cases, the granting of declaratory relief by the court will not add anything to the benefits the award creditor has obtained from the declaration by the arbitrator: The Front Comor, [28] (Field J).
iv) In approaching these questions it is also necessary to have regard to the principle of non-intervention enshrined in s.1(c) of the Arbitration Act 1996, and the strong English public policy which favours the enforcement of arbitration awards (IPCO (Nigeria) Limited v Nigerian National [2005] 1 CLC 613, [25]). Clearly the s.66 application is not intended to allow an award debtor, in general terms, to re-open battles which were (or should have been) fought in the arbitration.
i) It will always be open to a court to refuse a s.66 order in respect of relief ordered by the arbitrator which is unclear, or which would not make sense if incorporated into a judgment.
ii) Similarly, as in most cases the making of a declaration by the arbitrator will give the award creditor the benefit which such relief is intended to bring, it will always be open to a court to refuse a s.66 order in respect of a declaration where no useful purpose would be served in doing so. This is not to interfere with or undermine the award, but to recognise that in such a case, the award represents sufficient relief in itself.
iii) Where the discretionary relief is prescriptive rather than declaratory, then the decision of the arbitrators on those issues relevant to the granting of discretionary relief which arise only as between the parties to the arbitration, and do not engage any independent interest of the court, should not normally be open to re-argument at the s.66 stage. That would include such issues as whether damages are an adequate remedy for the breach, whether the applicant applied for such relief with sufficient despatch, whether they acted with clean hands in the period up to the award, and (as in this case) whether Mr McNally owned or controlled the asset in respect of which the Transfer Order was sought.
iv) However, as the DAC Reports noted (see [12] above), the impact of discretionary relief on third parties is an issue which may lead the court to refuse a s.66 order. This concern can also be seen in the significance attached to the impact of the determination of a dispute on the rights of third parties when addressing the issue of arbitrability (see e.g., Fulham Football Cub (1987) Ltd v Richards [2012] Ch 333, [40]). Arbitration is essentially a bilateral and consensual process, and the arbitration award binds only the parties to the arbitration agreement or those claiming through or under them (s.58(1) of the Arbitration Act 1996). By contrast, court judgments have the potential to impact third parties, and interested third parties are often able to apply to join in court proceedings to protect their positions (Sterling v Rand, [70]). For this reason, I am satisfied that it is open to the court faced with a s.66 application to determine whether third party interests provide a reason not to allow an award to be enforced as if it were a court judgment, or to enter a judgment in terms of the award, and any decision by the arbitrator on this issue will not be determinative at the s.66 stage.
v) Similarly, the court will reach its own determination as to whether granting a s.66 order in the terms of an award would engage independent interests of the court, such as difficulties for the court in supervising compliance with the order made by the arbitrator if the effect of the s.66 order were to require it to do so, or where the order concerns a contract of a kind for which it would not be appropriate for the coercive powers of the courts to be used to compel performance (e.g. certain contracts for personal service).
vi) In an appropriate case, there seems to be no reason why the court could not have regard to events which occurred after the making of the award when deciding whether or not to make a s.66 order. This might, in an appropriate case, include the applicant's conduct (as in Blackett, p.126).
vii) Different considerations are likely to apply where any attempt is made to engage the court's jurisdiction to commit the award debtor for contempt for failure to comply with a judgment entered in the terms of an award under s.66(2), but as this issue is not engaged by the s.66(1) order in this case, it is not necessary to consider what they might be.
Mr McNally's preliminary points
Was the Award made "pursuant to an arbitration agreement"?
Was the dispute insofar as it related to the Property arbitrable?
i) It was said that the Award did (or might) deprive Treehouse Spain of its interest in the Property when it had not had an opportunity to be heard on that issue, and thereby contravened Article 6(1) of the European Convention of Human Rights (a "no deprivation without representation" argument). However, (i) the Award makes findings only as to the obligations owed by Mr McNally to Mr Sodzawiczny, and it orders no relief against Treehouse Spain (still less relief which deprives it of its interest in the Property), and (ii) the Award would only bind Treehouse Spain if it was Mr McNally's privy (in which eventuality Treehouse Spain will have had the opportunity of effective participation in the LCIA Arbitration through Mr McNally).
ii) It is said that disputes as to the ownership of interests in land, or perhaps foreign land, are not arbitrable. The former cannot conceivably be correct (see for example s.48(5)(a) of the Arbitration Act 1996, which carves out only a specific form of relief in relation to land from those remedial powers which an arbitral tribunal is presumed to have, but clearly presupposes such disputes are otherwise arbitrable). As to the narrower formulation, even if I were willing to make that significant assumption in Mr McNally's favour, this was not such a dispute, for the reasons given at [20] above.
Mr Sodzawiczny's preliminary point
i) the alleged uncertainty or ambiguity of the Award;
ii) the impact on third parties if a s.66(1) order is made;
iii) the utility of the court giving permission to enforce the declarations already made by the Arbitrator; and
iv) public policy.
Declaration (1): that Mr Sodzawiczny was and is the ultimate beneficial owner of the Property
"Section 58 provides that, unless otherwise agreed by the parties, an award made by the tribunal pursuant to an arbitration agreement is final and binding both on the parties and on any persons claiming through or under them, which plainly includes a subrogated insurer. In those circumstances, an independent observer might think it a pointless question whether such an award can be turned into a judgment of the court, since it is binding as a declaration of rights in any event, and in most cases he would be right."
Declaration (2): that Mr McNally held and holds any powers or interests which he had or has, directly or indirectly, in relation to the Property on trust for the Claimant
i) As noted at [32] above, the real issue in the LCIA Arbitration was not whether Mr McNally held or holds an interest directly in the Property, but whether he held or holds an interest in the companies in the ownership structure through which the Property was acquired and owned.
ii) The argument that there is nothing which Mr McNally has which he can hold on trust as regards the Property is an assertion of contested fact which is inconsistent with the Arbitrator's decision to make Declaration (2) and the Transfer Order. In any event, Declaration (2) does not purport to determine what rights Mr McNally holds now in relation to the Property, merely to determine that such rights as he used to hold or still holds are held on trust for Mr Sodzawiczny.
The Transfer Order: ordering Mr McNally to transfer or do whatever is necessary to effect the transfer of the Property (or its indirect ownership) to the Claimant
i) First, he says that the words "whatever is necessary" are ambiguous and unclear (positing the question of whether they required Mr McNally to take steps to discharge the mortgage over the Property or not). Mr Shah accepted that an order using the words "shall use reasonable endeavours" could not have been objected to on this basis (and it is, of course, possible that the Arbitrator would have made such an order if Mr McNally had engaged with the scope of the relief sought in the LCIA Arbitration and the Arbitrator had been persuaded by his submissions). This was so even though it is always possible to have an argument about whether "reasonable endeavours" require a particular step to be taken. The words "whatever is necessary" are, if anything, clearer, because they posit an absolute rather than relative obligation, but in any event the fact that there may be room for a factual dispute as to whether a particular step is necessary does not render the language unclear or unworkable, any more than a dispute as to what reasonable endeavours requires would.
ii) Second, it was said that the reference to transferring "indirect ownership" of the Property is unclear. However, read in context, it clearly means transferring the ownership of a company in the corporate chain which would bring with it (directly or indirectly) the ownership of the Property.
iii) Third, it is suggested that the word "or" is unworkable, because it is not clear whether the word provides for optional means of performance, and, if so, at whose option. I am satisfied that the order clearly gives Mr McNally the option of discharging the obligation by one of the specified means, and there is nothing unclear in an order in those terms (see e.g., s.3(2)(b) of the Torts (Interference with Goods) Act 1977).
i) It is said that Treehouse Spain may be adversely affected if the Transfer Order causes it to lose the Property, and Treehouse IOM and/or GACH may be adversely affected if the Transfer Order leads to their shares in Treehouse Spain being transferred from them. However, the Transfer Order is only directed to and binding on Mr McNally. If the Corporate Third Parties are "true" third parties, rather than Mr McNally's privies, the Transfer Order will not bind them. If they are Mr McNally's privies, they are not third parties in the relevant sense and no issue of third party rights can arise in relation to them. In any event, the order clearly requires Mr McNally only to take lawful steps to procure the transfer. If, exercising such powers of control as he has, Mr McNally is able to procure a transfer by the owner of the Property or relevant shares, that will not involve prejudice to the Corporate Third Parties, merely a lawful transaction which the organs of management of those entities have decided to enter into.
ii) So far as Bankinter is concerned, there is no prospect of any transfer defeating its mortgage over the Property. The fiduciary obligations which Mr McNally has been found to owe to Mr Sodzawiczny cannot override Bankinter's registered charge over the Property. If Mr McNally performs the Transfer Obligation by effecting a transfer of shares in the ownership structure, the charge will remain over the Property. As Mr Caplan accepted, any direct transfer of the Property by Treehouse Spain would be subject to the mortgage, and effectively require Bankinter's consent unless the mortgage is discharged.
Conclusion
i) Mr McNally's application to set aside the Cockerill Order so far as it concerns Declaration (1) is granted.
ii) Mr McNally's application to set aside the Cockerill Order so far as it concerns Declaration (2) and the Transfer Order is refused.