HIGHLANDS AND ISLANDS ENTERPRISE AGAINST CS WIND UK LTD [2020] ScotCS CSIH_48 (18 August 2020)


BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?

No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!



BAILII [Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback]

Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> HIGHLANDS AND ISLANDS ENTERPRISE AGAINST CS WIND UK LTD [2020] ScotCS CSIH_48 (18 August 2020)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2020/2020_CSIH_48.html
Cite as: 2020 GWD 26-343, [2020] CSIH 48, [2020] ScotCS CSIH_48

[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]


Page 1 ⇓
FIRST DIVISION, INNER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION
Lord President
Lord Menzies
Lord Malcolm
OPINION OF THE COURT
[2020] CSIH 48
CA176/19
delivered by LORD MALCOLM
in the commercial action by
HIGHLANDS AND ISLANDS ENTERPRISE
against
Pursuer and Respondent
CS WIND UK LIMITED
Defender and Reclaimer
______________
Pursuer and Respondent: D. M. Thomson, Q.C.; CMS Cameron McKenna Nabarro Olswang LLP
Defender and Reclaimer: R. Dunlop, Q.C.; MacRoberts LLP
18 August 2020
[1]       The defender manufactures wind turbines at a site at Campbeltown airport. At the
outset it received substantial financial assistance from the pursuer. In return, in a formal
and detailed deed of undertaking, the defender agreed to various restrictions on its activities
for the period to March 2021, which the pursuer required in order to protect its investment
and ensure that it created employment and economic activity in its area of operation. The
pursuer is concerned that the defender is not complying with its obligations, and has raised
Page 2 ⇓
2
a commercial action seeking, among other things, an interdict prohibiting the removal of
plant and equipment used in the business; something which is said to be in breach of the
undertaking. The summons states that the defender has expressed doubts as to the
sustainability of its operations and has announced the redundancy of three-quarters of the
workforce. The commercial judge granted an interim interdict against such removal, and
subsequently refused the defender’s motion for recall, albeit he altered its wording. With the
leave of the judge, the defender now reclaims (appeals) against that interlocutor.
[2]       The commercial judge subsequently explained his reasoning in a note to this court.
The balance of convenience strongly favours the pursuer. Out of 80, only 13 employees
remain on site. Items of plant and equipment, said to have been covered by the
undertaking, have been removed. The defender is part of a South Korean operation with
production facilities in other parts of the world. It would cause no material prejudice to the
defender if the plant and equipment still on site stayed there pending resolution of the
action. As to whether the pursuer had put forward a prima facie case in support of interim
interdict, the judge described the issue as concerning the proper approach to clause
FOURTH 1(8) of the undertaking. It stops the defender from moving “the Business or any of
(the defender’s) plant, equipment or other assets acquired in connection with the Purpose
out of the Highlands and Islands area of operation of HIE.” The defender contends that this
clause does not cover plant and equipment used in its business. It is said to be restricted to
plant and assets acquired for the construction of the premises from which it operates. The
commercial judge took the view that, having regard to the pursuer’s submissions, which
included reference to the factual background and the purpose of the restrictions, there is a
prima facie case in support of interdict ad interim in the terms granted.
Page 3 ⇓
3
[3]       The defender has three grounds of appeal. First it is said that, by addressing balance
of convenience at the outset, the commercial judge misdirected himself, in that his view on
that issue will have coloured his approach to prima facie case in a manner favourable to the
pursuer. In effect he “put the cart before the horse”. The defender accepts that if it fails on
the other grounds of appeal, which as will become apparent is indeed the case, this issue is
academic. In any event, in the view of the court the decision on balance of convenience was
clearly open to the judge, and there is no foundation for the assertion that the order of
treatment caused or led to a misdirection on his part.
[4]       The second ground of appeal focusses on prima facie case, and asserts that the
defender’s construction of the said clause is the only tenable outcome; therefore it follows
that the interim order should have been refused. The defender has no intention of removing
plant and other assets acquired in connection with the building works on the site. Attention
is drawn to the definition of “Purpose” in the undertaking, and its connection with the
construction works, allied to a textual analysis of the clause itself. The pursuer contends that
if regard is had to the background of assistance from public funds to provide economic
activity in its area; the fact that the parties knew that the defender would not be responsible
for the construction works; the terms of the deed of undertaking as a whole; and its
commercial purpose, the overall intention of the parties is tolerably clear. The commercial
judge’s decision on prima facie case was more than justified. In any event the court should
not, in effect, treat the appeal as a fully-fledged debate on relevancy; something which the
defender could have sought from the commercial judge, but instead chose to reclaim a
determination on interim regulation. Affidavit evidence might be relevant to a proper
consideration of the issue, and it was explained that the pursuer’s case is not intended to be
Page 4 ⇓
4
predicated solely on clause FOURTH 1(8), there being a number of other relevant provisions
in the deed of undertaking.
[5]       The court is not prepared to embark on a consideration of the merits of this dispute.
An interim order of this kind made at an early stage of proceedings is the result of the
exercise of a discretionary power designed to regulate matters pending a substantive
hearing. As it is put in Burn-Murdoch, Interdict in the Law of Scotland, (1933) at paragraph
143, “The question at this stage is not so much the absolute relevancy of the case as the
seeming cogency of the need for interim interdict.” In Toynar Ltd v Whitbread & Co plc 1988
SLT 433, their Lordships of the Second Division observed (434F): “Where matters of law are
raised, it is neither necessary nor desirable for any concluded decision to be made upon
them at the stage of considering the making of an interim order.” That is as true for this
court as it was for the commercial judge. Suffice to say that, having considered all the
submissions, both oral and written, we have identified no good reason to criticise the view
taken by the commercial judge on the question of prima facie case. Given that the whole
matter will be remitted to the commercial roll for further procedure it would not be
appropriate to express any more definitive opinion on the proper approach to clause
FOURTH 1(8), or as to the other clauses mentioned in the course of the discussion.
[6]       The final ground of appeal states that any prima facie case is so weak, an interim
order should have been refused. While the court does not wish to address the merits of the
matter, it can say that it does not accept that description of the pursuer’s position.
[7]       For the above reasons, the reclaiming motion is refused and the action will be
remitted to the commercial roll for further procedure.
[8]       By way of a postscript, the court adds that it is surprised that leave was granted for
this reclaiming motion. It will only be in a clear case that this court will interfere with an
Page 5 ⇓
5
interim order of a commercial judge. And speaking more generally, given the potential for
delay, when commercial procedure is designed for a speedy resolution of business disputes,
the court expects leave to be granted in respect of an interlocutory matter only when such
delay is outweighed by compensating benefits which further the just and effective disposal
of the case at hand.



BAILII: Copyright Policy | Disclaimers | Privacy Policy | Feedback | Donate to BAILII
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2020/2020_CSIH_48.html