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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Sophocleous & Ors v Secretary of State for the Foreign And Commonwealth Office & Anor [2018] EWHC 19 (QB) (12 January 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2018/19.html Cite as: [2018] EWHC 19 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
ATHANASIOS SOPHOCLEOUS & OTHERS |
Claimants |
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-and |
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(1) SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE FOREIGN AND COMMONWEALTH OFFICE (2) SECRETARY OF STATE FOR DEFENCE |
Defendants |
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Mr Martin Chamberlain QC & Mr James Purnell (instructed by Government Legal Department) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 27th and 28th of November, 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Kerr:
Introduction
Assumed Facts: Overview
Reasoning and Conclusions
Where in substance did the causes of action arise?
"First, in deciding whether an alleged tort has been committed in this country or in some other country, our courts will look back over the series of events constituting it and ask themselves 'Where in substance did this cause of action arise?' Secondly, in answering this question, the courts will apply exclusively English law."
"The right approach is, when the tort is complete, to look back over the series of events constituting it and ask the question, where in substance did this cause of action arise?"
"great virtue in a general well-understood rule covering the majority of cases provided that it can be made flexible enough to take account of the varying interests and considerations of policy which may arise when one or more foreign elements are present."
"When this House restored the double actionability rule to its full rigour in Boys v Chaplin, there was a somewhat increased risk that the test would exclude certain claims which it would actually be just to admit. Recognising this, the House held that, in appropriate cases, a claim or head of claim could proceed even though it was not actionable under the lex loci delicti. The flexible test for recognising these situations which Lord Wilberforce formulated came to win acceptance. In Red Sea Insurance Co Ltd v Bouygues SA [1995] 1 AC 190, the Privy Council held, conversely, that, where justice required in particular circumstances, an action could proceed in the courts of the forum on the basis of the lex loci delicti, even though the damage or head of damage would not be actionable under the lex fori."
"But a particular issue between the parties may be governed by the law of the country which, with respect to that issue, has the most significant relationship with the occurrence and the parties."
"the principle of comity of nations will ordinarily require that a person who is given protection by the laws of one country in respect of acts done in that country shall be protected against legal proceedings in other countries in respect of those acts, at least if they cause damage solely in that country".
"[w]hen seeking to decide where in substance the tort was committed it is necessary to have regard both to the nature of the particular tort and to the manner in which it was committed".
"the identity, importance and location of the conspirators, the place(s) of any agreement or combination, the nature and place(s) of the concerted action, the nature and place(s) of any unlawful act or means, the plaintiff's location and the place(s) where he or it suffered loss. It is possible to cite passages from authorities underline the importance of one factor or another. It would be wrong to attempt any general rule regarding their comparative importance, which must be considered from case to case "
" it is sensible to apply the gravamen of the case, when viewed as a whole. The gravamen of the case is that Mr Shamurin made an impermissible decision to speculate, or that he pursued a policy of speculation. That was a decision made or a policy pursued in Moscow from where he conducted this as all other aspects of BMTL's business."
"[i]t would be a triumph of form over substance to conclude that Mr Shamurin's supposed tort was in substance committed in England. . [I]t was in substance committed in Russia where both Mr Shamurin and BMTL's place of business were located, the former studying his Reuters' screen and forming his own evaluation of likely market movements."
Vicarious liability for the assaults
Joint liability for the assaults
"D must have acted in a way which furthered the commission of the tort by P; and D must have done so in pursuance of a common design to do or secure the doing of the acts which constituted the tort."
"Persons are said to be joint tortfeasors when their respective shares in the commission of the tort are done in furtherance of a common design ."
" the defendant will be liable as a joint tortfeasor if (i) he has assisted the commission of the tort by another person, (ii) pursuant to a common design with that person, (iii) to do an act which is, or turns out to be, tortious."
"[As Lord Sumption JSC pointed out in argument,] in order for a defendant to be party to a common design, she must share with the other party, or parties, to the design, each of the features of the design which make it wrongful. If, and only if, all those features are shared, the fact that some parties to the common design did only some of the relevant acts, while others did only some other relevant acts, will not stop them all from being jointly liable."
"recognise a liability for assisting the commission by the primary actor of a tort, while ensuring that the mere facilitation of the tort will not give rise to such a liability, even when combined with knowledge of the primary actor's intention".
" different laws might govern different claims arising from the same facts . and specifically the law governing the liability of the secondary party to breach of fiduciary duty (whether the claim is for dishonest assistance or knowing receipt) is not necessarily that which governs the relationship between the fiduciary and his principal."
The cause of action in negligence
Can the claimants rely on the "flexible exception" to the double actionability rule?
"[u]nless a rigorous approach to this question is adopted, the application of the exception is at risk of giving rise to much uncertainty and to the criticism alluded to in the Australian cases that it has become instinctive and arbitrary".
"There is nothing in Gibraltar law to suggest that CUK [the Crown in right of the United Kingdom] cannot be sued in England and Wales, where it has been rendered capable of being sued by statute. And there is nothing in the 1947 Act to suggest that under that Act CUK cannot be rendered liable for torts committed abroad . ."
The defendants' submissions on the flexible exception
"We think that it is correct in principle that the introduction of a foreign element may make it just to apply a foreign law to determine a dispute, even though the substantive provisions of that foreign law might be different from our own. There is no reason why this general principle of the conflicts of laws should not apply in cases involving torts and delicts. Apart from matters of procedure, and subject to overriding public policy considerations, there is no reason why the lex fori should be applied in all cases involving a tort or delict regardless of the foreign complexion of the factual situation."
The claimants' submissions on the flexible exception
" if the British Government does something in London which is directed against British Subjects in Cyprus, 'whether as a matter of justice, comity or public policy' there can be no reason to allow the British Government to claim exemption from liability in tort under English law by reference to the law of Cyprus."
His italicised words are taken from Slade LJ's judgment in Metall und Rohstoff, at 446G.
The flexible exception; reasoning and conclusions
"The burden of proving foreign law lies on the party who bases his claim or defence on it. If that party adduces no evidence, or insufficient evidence, of the foreign law, the court applies English law. This principle is sometimes expressed in the form that foreign law is presumed to be the same as English law until the contrary is proved. But this mode of expression has given rise to uneasiness in certain cases. Thus in one case the court refused to apply the presumption of similarity where the foreign law was not based on the common law, and in others it has been doubted whether the court was entitled to presume that the foreign law was the same as the statute law of the forum. In view of these difficulties it is better to abandon the terminology of presumption, and simply to say that where foreign law is not proved, the court applies English law."
Conclusion