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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 >> Percival v Motu Novu LLC [2019] EWHC 1391 (QB) (05 June 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2019/1391.html Cite as: [2019] EWHC 1391 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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JOHN KENNETH PERCIVAL |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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MOTU NOVU LLC |
Respondent |
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Ms Elaine Palser (instructed by Howat Avraam Solicitors) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 1 February 2019
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Murray :
i) a ruling dated 30 May 2007 of the Tribunal of Milan ("the Milan Tribunal") in proceedings number RG 34100/2006 ("the Tribunal Judgment") granting judgment in favour of the claimants, Mr Enrico Teruzzi, Ms Carmen Puthod and La Fattoria di Enrico & Carmen società semplice – società agricola ("La Fattoria" and, together with Mr Teruzzi and Ms Puthod, "the Original Claimants") against the defendants, Mr Percival and PLC Holdings srl ("the Original Defendants") and ordering the Original Defendants to pay the Original Claimants the amount of €3,454,047.00 plus interest and costs;
ii) a ruling dated 20 October 2010 of the Court of Appeal of Milan ("the CA Milan") in proceedings number RG 2735/2007 ("the CA Milan Judgment") under which the CA Milan allowed in part an appeal by the Original Defendants against the Tribunal Judgment, reducing the amount of damages awarded to the Original Claimants to €3,226,900 plus interest and costs (the costs were erroneously stated by the court to be €28,000,000, but this was later corrected to read €28,000) but otherwise affirming the Tribunal Judgment; and
iii) a ruling dated 8 March 2012 of the Supreme Court of Cassation of the Republic of Italy ("the Italian SCC") in proceedings number RGN 1640/2011 ("the Italian SCC Judgment") under which the Italian SCC rejected the further appeal by the Original Defendants, affirming the CA Milan Judgment and awarding a further €15,200 in costs to the Original Claimants.
Chapter III of the Regulation
i) under Article 39 of the Regulation, a first stage involving only the applicant, who must be an "interested party" and who applies ex parte to the relevant "court or competent authority" listed in Annex II to the Regulation to obtain an order for registration of the foreign judgment in order to permit enforcement locally; and
ii) under Article 43 of the Regulation, a second stage, inter partes, during which the respondent (the judgment debtor) has the opportunity to raise certain limited objections by lodging an "appeal".
"(17) By virtue of the … principle of mutual trust [in the administration of justice in the Community], the procedure for making enforceable in one Member State a judgment given in another must be efficient and rapid. To that end, the declaration that a judgment is enforceable should be issued virtually automatically after purely formal checks of the documents supplied, without there being any possibility for the court to raise of its own motion any of the grounds for non-enforcement provided for by this Regulation."
i) under Article 53(1), the production of an authentic copy of the judgment to be enforced;
ii) under Articles 53(2) and 55(1), the production of a certificate of enforceability issued by the member state where the judgment was given using the standard form in Annex V to the Regulation ("an Annex V Certificate") or an "equivalent document", provided that if the relevant court or competent authority considers that it has "sufficient information" before it as to enforceability, it can dispense with the requirement for the Annex V Certificate or equivalent document; and
iii) under Article 55(2), where the registering court or competent authority so requires, the production of certified translations of the documents submitted in support of the application.
"[Article 45(1)] cannot be read literally. After all, if the appellant were not entitled at this stage to submit that the judgment is not within the domain of the Regulation at all, or that he is protected from enforcement by a bilateral treaty to which Article 72 refers, or on any other ground is not within the ambit of this rule, it must come up at this point or not be raised at all. It follows that all grounds and every ground of opposition to the enforcement of the judgment may be raised at this stage, though, of course, the substance of the judgment may not be reviewed. Article 45(1) must be taken to be referring to grounds which are internal to and expressly provided by the Regulation for judgment which fall within its scope, and not those which go to define its outer edges."
"It is provided [in Article 45(1) of the Regulation] that the order can be refused or revoked only on the grounds specified in Articles 34 and 35 of [the Regulation], but this cannot be quite right. A court hearing the appeal must be entitled to conclude that the judgment was not given in a civil or commercial matter, or was for a periodic payment which had not been quantified, or was of a measure which should not have been granted because it did not fall within Article 31 [which deals with provisional, including protective, measures], or in respect of which there was a bilateral treaty providing for non-recognition. If Article 45 directs the court to ignore all such facts and matters, it cannot be taken to mean what it says."
i) the judgment is not enforceable in the Member State in which it was given; and
ii) the applicant is not an "interested party" for purposes of Article 38(1) of the Regulation.
"According to Art.45(1), the appeal against registration may only be founded on the grounds listed in Arts 34 and 35, but this must be an error on the part of the drafters: an appellant must be entitled to question whether the judgment falls within the scope of the Regulation …, or that the provisions of some other law or international treaty preclude its recognition."
Procedural history
Amended Grounds of Appeal
i) The Master erred in making the Order as the documentation filed in support of the application did not satisfy the requirements of the Regulation. There was no Annex V Certificate as required by Article 53(2) nor any "equivalent document" or other "sufficient information" as required by Article 55(1) of the Regulation.
ii) To the extent the Master exercised a discretion to make the order notwithstanding the lack of an Annex V Certificate, equivalent document or other sufficient information, he was wrong to do so.
iii) The Master was wrong to register the Italian Judgments "in full". Motu Novu, as assignee of Mr Enrico Teruzzi, is "entitled to enforce only its one-third share of the Italian Judgments".
iv) The Master was wrong to register the Tribunal Judgment, as it was overturned in part by the CA Milan Judgment.
v) The Master was wrong to register the Italian SCC Judgment as Motu Novu has not been assigned any right in respect of that judgment and is not entitled to enforce it.
vi) For the foregoing reasons, the Master erred in awarding Motu Novu its costs of the application for registration in the sum of £2,500 plus £66 in court fees. Mr Percival seeks a costs order in his favour in respect of the proceedings before Master Cook, including the costs of his application to set aside the Order.
Ground (i) and (ii): failure to comply with Articles 53 and 55 of the Regulation
i) Motu Novu failed to provide an Annex V Certificate. Master Cook made no direction dispensing with that requirement. The Order does not record that he considered the issue, and therefore Mr Percival cannot know whether the Master failed to consider the requirement or, if he did consider it, on what basis he concluded that he could dispense with the need for the Annex V Certificate, for example, whether he considered that he had an "equivalent document" or "sufficient information" or simply had a discretion to dispense with the requirement if he thought appropriate.
ii) If the Master failed to consider the issue, then he erred in law in making the Order. If he considered it appropriate to dispense with the requirement, he was wrong to do so. He had neither an equivalent document nor sufficient information as to enforceability so as to justify dispensing with the requirement.
iii) There was no proper evidence before Master Cook that Motu Novu could enforce the Italian Judgments or any of them. The requirement that an Annex V Certificate or equivalent document be provided by the applicant for registration of a foreign judgment is essentially the only safeguard protecting judgment debtors from having unenforceable judgments registered against them.
iv) To the extent that the Master considered it appropriate to dispense with the requirement of an Annex V Certificate or equivalent document on the basis that he had "sufficient information" or he purported to exercise a discretion to dispense with the requirement, he was wrong to do so.
i) This is not an appeal in the ordinary sense. It is only at this stage that the objections to the order are considered. It would therefore be wrong to set aside the Order on the basis of what Master Cook may or may not have considered. The court must now consider whether the Order should stand, be revoked or be amended on the basis of the evidence and information before the court, including the Annex V Certificate dated 2 July 2018 in relation to the CA Milan Judgment.
ii) In any event, Master Cook did have sufficient information before him, it must be assumed that he considered the question of the sufficiency of the information he had before him, and he was entitled to dispense with the Annex V Certificate or equivalent document. The Master had all three Italian Judgments before him, which collectively tell the full story. There is no question of Motu Novu attempting to recover more than the single judgment debt, plus any costs associated with the other two Italian Judgments. The CA Milan Judgment had an Italian enforceability formula annexed, which is itself the basis for obtaining the Annex V Certificate. There is evidence on which Master Cook could have concluded that he was dealing with enforceable judgments.
iii) There is now an Annex V Certificate in respect of the CA Milan Judgment, so at the very least the Order should be upheld in relation to that judgment. It would not be efficient or in keeping with the spirit of the Regulation to remit the matter to Master Cook to be re-determined or for Motu Novu to be forced to apply again.
Grounds (iii), (iv) and (v): the Master was wrong to register all three Italian Judgments
i) The CA Milan Judgment is the only enforceable judgment. This is agreed by the Italian law experts for Motu Novu and Mr Percival. The Master was therefore wrong to register the Tribunal Judgment and the Italian SCC Judgment.
ii) The CA Milan Judgment is not enforceable by Motu Novu for more than a one-third share. Motu Novu has not established any right to enforce it in full. The evidence of Mr Parlatore, the appellant's Italian law expert, confirms that, for reasons of Italian law, the 2011 Assignment is not effective to have transferred to Motu Novu more than Mr Enrico Teruzzi's personal one-third interest in the CA Milan Judgment, arguably excluding his one-third interest in costs awarded in relation to the Italian SCC Judgment, which post-dates the 2011 Assignment. The 2018 Affirmation, again for reasons of Italian law, was not effective to cure the failure of the 2011 Assignment effectively to assign to Motu Novu more than Mr Enrico Teruzzi's personal one-third share of the judgment debt.
iii) Where a judgment creditor is entitled to enforce only part of a foreign judgment, that must be made clear in the order declaring the judgment to be enforceable in this jurisdiction. That is the necessary effect of Article 48(1) of the Regulation. The Master failed to do that in this case. Article 48(2) permits an applicant seeking registration of a foreign judgment to request a declaration of enforceability limited to parts of a judgment.
i) Although it is accepted that the CA Milan Judgment is the only substantive judgment, the costs components of the Tribunal Judgment and the Italian SCC Judgment are enforceable through the CA Milan Judgment, as confirmed by the expert evidence of Italian law. As non-substantive judgments, no Annex V Certificate is required in relation to either of them. Motu Novu's Italian law expert, Mr Spangaro, confirmed that Motu Novu was prudent to register all three judgments, given their interlinkage.
ii) As to the argument that Motu Novu is entitled to enforce only one third of the judgment debt, that issue does not arise at this stage, the registration stage, but only when Motu Novu comes to enforce the judgment. The court should not be engaging in substantive issues of Italian or Massachusetts law as to whether the CA Milan Judgment (and/or either of the others) are enforceable as to a third or in full. Article 45(2) of the Regulation prohibits the review of the foreign judgment to be registered as to its substance, yet that is what Mr Percival is seeking to do.
iii) If that is wrong, it is clear that the right, title and interest in the Italian Judgments is vested in Motu Novu in full. The original claimants have confirmed this to be the position in the 2018 Affirmation. The 2018 Affirmation is clear on its face and does not require interpretation by a Massachusetts lawyer.
iv) There is nothing in the Annex V Certificate that says each claimant is only entitled to a one-third share of the judgment debt. One should proceed on the basis that the CA Milan Judgment is enforceable in full, with the other claimants entitled to seek their share from the one who has enforced the judgment.
Remedy
Costs of the original application, the set-aside application and this appeal
Form of the order