|
HOUSE OF
LORDS |
SESSION
2006-07
[2007] UKHL 1
on appeal from: [2005]
EWCA Civ 204
|
|
OPINIONS
OF
THE LORDS OF APPEAL
for
judgment IN THE CAUSE |
|
Fourie
(Appellant)
v.
Le Roux and
others (Respondents)
|
|
Appellate
Committee
Lord Bingham of
Cornhill
Lord Hope of
Craighead
Lord Scott of
Foscote
Lord Rodger of
Earlsferry
Lord
Carswell
|
|
Counsel |
|
Appellants:
Leon
Kuschke
Sam
Neaman
(Instructed by CMS Cameron McKenna LLP) |
Respondents:
Stuart
Isaacs QC
Tom
Smith
(Instructed by Rawlinson Butler LLP) |
|
Hearing
dates:
13 and 14 november
2006 |
|
on
WEDNESDAY
24 JANUARY 2007 |
|
|
|
HOUSE OF LORDS
OPINIONS OF THE LORDS OF APPEAL FOR JUDGMENT
IN THE CAUSE
Fourie (Appellant) v. Le Roux and others
(Respondents)
[2007] UKHL 1LORD BINGHAM OF CORNHILL
My Lords,
- I have had the advantage of
reading in draft the opinion of my noble and learned friend Lord Scott
of Foscote. For the reasons he gives I would dismiss the appeal and make
the orders which he proposes.
- Mareva (or freezing) injunctions
were from the beginning, and continue to be, granted for an important
but limited purpose: to prevent a defendant dissipating his assets with
the intention or effect of frustrating enforcement of a prospective
judgment. They are not a proprietary remedy. They are not granted to
give a claimant advance security for his claim, although they may have
that effect. They are not an end in themselves. They are a supplementary
remedy, granted to protect the efficacy of court proceedings, domestic
or foreign: see Steven Gee, Commercial Injunctions, 5th ed
(2004), pp 77-83.
- In recognition of the severe
effect which such an injunction may have on a defendant, the procedure
for seeking and making Mareva injunctions has over the last three
decades become closely regulated. I regard that regulation as beneficial
and would not wish to weaken it in any way. The procedure incorporates
important safeguards for the defendant. One of those safeguards, by no
means the least important, is that the claimant should identify the
prospective judgment whose enforcement the defendant is not to be
permitted, by dissipating his assets, to frustrate. The claimant cannot
of course guarantee that he will recover judgment, nor what the terms of
the judgment will be. But he must at least point to proceedings already
brought, or proceedings about to be brought, so as to show where and on
what basis he expects to recover judgment against the defendant.
- On his application to Park J, Mr
Fourie failed to do this. It follows that the judge was wrong to make
the order he did. It also follows, in my opinion, that Mr Jarvis QC, the
deputy judge, was right to discharge it. There had been a clear neglect
of the correct procedure, and the court should not absolve the
defaulting party from the consequences of its neglect by maintaining the
order in force: Siporex Trade SA v Comdel Commodities Ltd [1986]
2 Lloyd's Rep 428, 436. That, I think, is so whether or not the deputy
judge foresaw that Mr Fourie might, in the immediate future, re-apply
successfully in accordance with the recognised practice.
LORD HOPE OF CRAIGHEAD
My Lords,
- I have had the advantage of
reading in draft the speech of my noble and learned friend Lord Scott of
Foscote. I agree with him, for the reasons that he gives, that the
appeal on the main issue should be dismissed. I would however set aside
the order for indemnity costs.
- On the main issue I also agree
with the observations of my noble and learned friends Lord Bingham of
Cornhill and Lord Rodger of Earlsferry. The importance of maintaining
safeguards against misuse of such injunctions has recently been
emphasised by the Court of Session in two cases dealing with the
analogous procedure that is available in Scotland. It has pointed out
that the maintenance of these safeguards is necessary if the use of the
procedure is not to be held to be incompatible with article 1 of the
First Protocol to the European Convention on Human Rights: Karl
Construction Ltd v Palisade Properties plc 2002 SC 270; Advocate
General for Scotland v Taylor 2003 SLT 1340.
- Those cases were concerned
primarily with issues of Scots procedure which do not arise in this
case. But Lord Drummond Young said in para 54 of his opinion in Karl
Construction Ltd v Palisade Properties plc, which was
approved by the Inner House in Advocate General for Scotland v
Taylor, that among the requirements that would have to be met if the
order was to conform to that article was that the pursuer must establish
that he has a prima facie case on the merits of the action in connection
with which he is seeking the protective remedy. As he pointed out in
para 55, nearly all of the other legal systems in which a protective
security is available insist that a test which is broadly of this nature
should be satisfied. I agree that the test will not be met if the
claimant is unable to identify the claim which he is seeking to protect
when he is seeking the remedy.
- On the indemnity costs issue I
share the concerns which have been expressed by Lord Rodger and by my
noble and learned friend Lord Carswell as to whether an order for costs
on the higher scale was appropriate. But I would, with respect, go
further and hold that an order for indemnity costs was not justified in
this case and that an order for costs on the standard basis should be
substituted.
- I recognise, of course, that there
are limits on the extent which this House can properly interfere with
orders of this kind. I accept too that the Civil Procedure Rules contain
a new procedural code, the object of which is to enable the court to
deal with cases justly, and that it is no longer necessary to show that
there has to be some sort of moral lack of probity or conduct deserving
moral condemnation on the part of the paying party: Reid Minty v
Taylor [2001]
EWCA Civ 1723; [2002] 1
WLR 2800, para 27, per May LJ.
- But, as the judgments that were
given in that case show, the award of costs on this basis will not be
justified unless the conduct of the paying party can be said in some
respect to have been unreasonable: see May LJ at para 32, Kay LJ at para
37. For example, as Kay LJ said in para 37, if one party has made a real
effort to find a reasonable solution to the proceedings and the other
party has resisted that sensible approach, then the latter puts himself
at risk that the order for costs may be on an indemnity basis. I do not
think that the appellant was guilty of conduct of that kind.
- It is true that Park J was
persuaded to make an order that he ought not to have made because, on
the information that was laid before him, the making of a freezing order
could not yet be justified. But litigants do from time to time persuade
judges to make orders in their favour ex parte which on more mature
reflection have no sound basis in law and must be set aside. That in
itself, without more, does not justify a departure from the ordinary
rule that the costs that are awarded to the other party are assessed on
the standard basis in such circumstances. I do not detect anything in
the appellant's conduct that was unreasonable in the sense referred to
in Reid Minty v Taylor. I bear in mind also that the making of a
freezing order albeit for a lesser amount was within a matter of hours
substituted for that made by Park J.
LORD SCOTT OF FOSCOTE
My Lords,
The Issues
- On 9 July 2004 Park J, on a
without notice application made by the appellant, Mr Fourie, made a
freezing order (commonly called a Mareva injunction) against two
individuals and a number of companies of whom only two are still
actively involved in the proceedings. They are Mr Le Roux and Fintrade
Investments Ltd. ("Fintrade"), the respondents to this appeal. The order
froze the assets in England and Wales of each respondent up to a value
of £3.4 million. Mr Fourie had made the application for the order in his
capacity as liquidator of two South African companies, Herlan Edmunds
Engineering (Pty) Ltd ("HEE") and its parent company, Herlan Edmunds
Investment Holdings Ltd ("HEI"). Mr Le Roux was the majority shareholder
of HEI and, until HEE and HEI went into liquidation in South Africa, had
been in control of the two companies. Fintrade is an English company
owned and controlled by Mr Le Roux.
- HEI and HEE went into
liquidation in South Africa in June 2004 on a creditor's petition and Mr
Fourie was appointed liquidator of both companies. He formed the view
that Mr Le Roux and Fintrade had by fraud and deception (some details of
which I will refer to later) stripped HEE of its assets and removed
those assets, or their proceeds, to England. Hence his application to
Park J for the freezing order.
- By an application dated 28 July
2004 Mr Le Roux, and others of those against whom the freezing order had
been made (it is not clear which of them, but Fintrade must have been
one) applied for the freezing order to be set aside. The main ground of
the application was that "there was no jurisdiction to make the order"
because, at the time the order was made, there had been no subsisting
proceedings to which the freezing order could be ancillary and no
undertaking to commence any such proceedings had been offered by Mr
Fourie. The application came before Mr Jarvis QC, sitting as a deputy
judge of the High Court, on 30 September 2004. On the jurisdiction point
the deputy judge said that in order to support the grant of a freezing
order the applicant needed proceedings to enforce an existing cause of
action that had either already been instituted or that would, pursuant
to an undertaking given to the court, be instituted within a short
timeframe. He pointed out that, when the matter was before Park J, not
only had no proceedings for substantive relief been commenced but no
such proceedings had yet been formulated. In paragraph 60 of his
judgment he said this:
"In my judgment, the court had no jurisdiction to grant a freezing
order in circumstances where the applicant had no intention of issuing
proceedings immediately or almost immediately. I do not regard this as
a simple procedural irregularity which can be cured by issuing
proceedings now. I do not regard it as akin to material non-disclosure
which, in certain circumstances, the court may overlook and allow an
injunction to be continued. In my judgment, this goes to the root of
the jurisdiction."
So he discharged the freezing order, made an order for Mr Fourie to
pay costs on an indemnity basis and gave directions for the immediate
enforcement of the cross-undertaking in damages that Mr Fourie had
given.
- Mr Fourie appealed to the Court
of Appeal. On 7 March 2005 the Vice-Chancellor (as he then was) gave a
judgment, concurred in by Mance LJ and Jonathan Parker LJ, dismissing
the appeal. He said he agreed with counsel for the respondents that
"… jurisdiction to make an interim order depends on its activation
by the commencement of substantive proceedings or an undertaking to do
so" (paras 37 and 38)
and went on, in paragraph 38, as follows:
"There was no suggestion of substantive claims being made in
England before Park J … There had been no activation of the
jurisdiction whether by the issue of substantive proceedings in
England or an undertaking to do so. Without either, the jurisdiction
to grant any form of interim relief in support of the relevant cause
of action under English law simply does not exist. … In my view the
deputy judge was right."
The Vice-Chancellor also dismissed Mr Fourie's appeal against the
indemnity costs order that the deputy judge had made. Mr Fourie has
appealed to this House.
- The background facts are much
more complex than the previous paragraphs might suggest, and I shall
have to refer to some of them later, but the main issue for your
Lordships is, as expressed by the parties in their statement of Facts
and Issues, whether Park J had had jurisdiction to make the freezing
order. In my opinion, however, this issue cannot be confined to the
issue of jurisdiction in its strict sense. Even if Park J did have power
to make the freezing order, the question remains whether, in the absence
of any proceedings for substantive relief or any undertaking to commence
such proceedings, it was proper for him to have made the order.
- There is also an issue about the
propriety of the indemnity costs order and an issue as to whether the
directions for the enforcement of the cross-undertaking were premature
both of which your Lordships must deal with. Next, however, I must say
rather more about the background facts and the litigation history than I
have yet done.
The Background Facts
- HEE had carried on business in
South Africa but in July 2003 had ceased trading and the story really
starts with an ex parte order obtained by Mr Le Roux and Fintrade
in November 2003 from the Germiston Magistrate's Court in South Africa
(the Germiston Order) for the seizure and handing over of HEE's plant
and machinery pursuant to alleged debts owed to them by HEE. Pursuant to
the Germiston Order Mr Le Roux took possession of HEE's assets. Some
were sold. When Mr Fourie became, in June 2004, liquidator of HEE and
began an investigation of its affairs he took the view that Mr Le Roux
and Fintrade had obtained the Germiston Order by fraud and deception
and, assisted by the Germiston Order, had stripped HEE of its assets and
had exported some of these assets to England. He therefore commenced
proceedings in the Transvaal Provincial Division of the High Court of
South Africa and on 2 July 2004 Preller J made an order nisi
requiring Mr Le Roux and other respondents to show cause why an
order setting aside the Germiston Order should not be made. Fintrade was
not one of the respondents to the proceedings. Your Lordships were told
that South Africa does not have a procedure that would have enabled
Fintrade, an English company with no presence in South Africa, to be
served outside South Africa. At the same time Preller J made an order
authorising Mr Fourie to institute in England such proceedings as might
be necessary, including proceedings for injunctive relief, for the
purpose of recovering HEE's assets. Preller J also ordered that
"… letters of request be issued requesting the appropriate
Division of the High Court of the United Kingdom to act in aid of the
High Court of South Africa (Transvaal Provincial Division) for the
purposes of recognising the appointment of [Mr Fourie], the applicant,
as the duly appointed provisional liquidator of [HEE] and [HEI] …"
- Preller J's order nisi
came before Bosielo J who, in a judgment delivered on 8 September
2004, confirmed the order. Leave to appeal against Bosielo J's judgment
was refused at first instance and again in the Supreme Court of Appeal
of South Africa. A subsequent application for leave to appeal made by Mr
Le Roux and others to the South African Constitutional Court was
dismissed with costs. It is convenient to record some of the remarks
made by Bosielo J in his judgment. He referred, at p15, to allegations
made against Mr Le Roux as constituting
"… eloquent and irrefutable evidence of serious fraud which was
used to deliberately mislead the magistrate in the Germiston
proceedings to grant the order …"
and expressed his agreement with Mr Fourie's counsel that
"… the proceedings in the Germiston Magistrate's Court were a
shameless sham by the parties to hoodwink the Magistrate into granting
an order, the sole purpose and effect whereof was to grant the
parties, in particular [Mr Le Roux], the right to strip HEE of all its
assets."
Bosielo J commented also that the respondents before him had based
their resistance to confirmation of the order nisi on, in effect,
technicalities. He said, at p18,
"What I find disturbing is that notwithstanding the fact that the
replying affidavit contained damning and damaging allegations, the
respondents elected to ignore it."
In the meantime, and before the order nisi had been confirmed,
Mr Fourie had applied to Park J for the freezing order.
- Another event in South Africa
that deserves mention is that on 20 July 2004 an order was made in the
Transvaal Provincial Division, on Mr Fourie's application, for an
examination under section 417 of the South African Companies Act (No.61
of 1973 as amended). Section 417, similar to section 236(2) of the
Insolvency Act 1986, enables directors and ex-directors, among others,
of an insolvent company which is being wound-up to be brought before the
court to answer questions about the company's assets and affairs. Your
Lordships were not given any details about the institution or progress
of any examination conducted under this order. Its relevance is that it
constitutes a potential vehicle for the examination of Mr Le Roux.
The litigation history
- At the hearing before Park J
various references were made to the proceedings in aid of which the
freezing order was being sought. Park J was told by Mr Selwyn Bloch QC,
counsel for Mr Fourie, that
"The liquidator is intending to proceed in South Africa in terms
of statutory enquiries and within the existence of that various claims
would be formulated …"
The reference to "statutory enquiries" was, presumably, a reference
to proceedings under section 417 of the South African Companies Act. The
transcript of the hearing records, also, Park J asking about the effect
of the freezing order he was being asked to make. Both his question and
Mr Bloch's answer (Appendix page 39) deserve attention:
Mr Justice Park: … What is going to happen in the end
about any assets that are frozen in this way? Who is advancing a claim
for those assets and in what proceedings? We are here today in an
application which is ancillary to the insolvency jurisdiction of the
South African court. What is before me is not a case in which Mr Fourie
is seeking some sort of order from the English court that the money be
paid over [to] him. The English court can freeze the money, but then, if
some sort of order for the recovery of it is going to be sought, how is
that going to be done?
Mr Bloch: My Lord has put his finger on a point that has
exercised me to some extent. That is what is the formal proceeding
leading up to some final form of final relief to which this
attaches."
Mr Bloch (pages 39-40) then answered the question he had posed by
referring, first, to a possible claim in respect of torts committed in
England and, secondly, to possible proceedings under section 426 of the
Insolvency Act 1986 as a result of which, he appears to have thought,
the court might give directions dealing with "pleadings and discovery
and the usual procedural points" (Appendix page 40) and eventually
"adjudicate on the merits of whether these assets are, for example,
traceable." (Appendix pages 40-41). Later Mr Bloch again referred to the
possibility of a proprietary claim being made. He said
"Using the English procedure [presumably a reference to section
236 of the 1986 Act], an enquiry would be sought at which the
defendants would be interviewed or cross-examined … Depending upon
that, if the claimant or the applicant concluded that these assets
were, in fact, owned by the companies in South Africa, it would invoke
the South African solvency procedures as part of section 426 in order
to recover those assets here." (Appendix pages 41,42)
These exchanges appear to me to demonstrate a muddle as to the
purpose and nature of the freezing order that was being sought. The
judge seems to have had in mind that the purpose, or perhaps one of the
purposes, of the freezing order would be to preserve assets to which a
proprietary claim would or might be brought by or on behalf of HEE (see
his reference to an order for the "recovery" by Mr Fourie of the frozen
money). Mr Bloch's references to assets being "traceable" or "owned by
the South African companies" points in the same direction. But Mr
Bloch's reference to the possibility of the eventual claim being a tort
claim suggests that the purpose of the freezing order would be the
"Mareva" purpose, namely, to prevent the proposed defendants from
making themselves judgment-proof by disposing of their assets against
which a damages judgment might be enforced. But whatever the judge and
Mr Bloch had in mind the freezing order as granted was unquestionably of
the "Mareva" type. Its terms were wholly inconsistent with an
intention to preserve assets to which a proprietary claim by, or on
behalf of, HEE might eventually be brought. The order being sought by Mr
Bloch and granted by the judge was an order under CPR 25.1(f), not an
order under CPR 25.1(c)(i). It is clear, however, that at the time of
the hearing before Park J the nature of the proceedings in aid of which
the freezing order was being sought was unformulated and inchoate. The
judge knew that the proceedings, whatever they might turn out to be,
would result from and be based upon the alleged fraud and breach of
fiduciary duty of Mr Le Roux. Everything else about the proceedings was
in the air.
- Park J made the freezing order,
subject to the usual cross-undertaking in damages, over 23 July 2004.
When the matter came back before the court it was dealt with by Judge
Norris QC, sitting as an additional judge of the Chancery Division. He
renewed the freezing order for a further four months or thereabouts.
Counsel for the respondents told him that an application to discharge
the freezing order was in the pipeline. No additional elucidation of the
details or nature of the eventual proceedings for substantive relief
were proffered by counsel for Mr Fourie.
- Mr Le Roux's and Fintrade's
discharge application was dealt with by deputy judge Jarvis QC in the
morning of 30 September 2004. The freezing order made by Park J was
discharged. Mr Fourie and his lawyers immediately set about formulating
a claim for substantive relief that could support a freezing order. They
went back before the deputy judge in the afternoon of 30 September,
armed with a proposed claim form, and renewed the application for a
freezing order. The deputy judge, on their undertaking to issue and
serve particulars of claim within 7 days, made a freezing order against
Mr Le Roux and Fintrade in the same terms as the order he had discharged
in the morning save that the protection was reduced to a sum of
£1million for each respondent. Counsel for the respondents, who had
succeeded in obtaining the discharge of the first freezing order, were
present during the afternoon hearing but took no part. This second
freezing order and, later, a third freezing order were the subject of
several subsequent applications relating, mainly, to the amount of the
protection. These applications culminated in a hearing before the Court
of Appeal on the same occasion as that at which Mr Fourie's appeal
against the discharge of the first freezing order was dealt with. The
Court of Appeal upheld the third freezing order with a limit of
£900,000. This freezing order remains in place and is not at the moment
under challenge by either side.
- In the appeal now before the
House Mr Fourie does not seek the re-instatement of the first freezing
order, or any increase in the amount of the protection above the
£900,000 fixed by the Court of Appeal for the third and current freezing
order. Instead he seeks a declaration that Park J did have power and
jurisdiction to grant the first freezing order and an order setting
aside the determination to the contrary by deputy judge Jarvis QC and
the Court of Appeal. Since there is no challenge to the third freezing
order and Mr Fourie does not ask for an increase of the £900,000, the
question arises as to why he is seeking to invalidate the discharge of
the first freezing order. The answer must be that, if he succeeds, the
indemnity costs order must go and, too, the directions for the
enforcement of the cross-undertaking in damages must be set aside. These
last two desiderata (from Mr Fourie's point of view) are,
presumably, the reason why this appeal is being prosecuted. The
challenge to the discharge of the first freezing order is no more than a
vehicle for their attainment.
The first issue
- Both the deputy judge and the
Vice-Chancellor referred to the issue as one of "jurisdiction". But
jurisdiction is a word of some ambiguity. The ambiguity was referred to
by Pickford LJ in Guaranty Trust Co of New York v Hannay & Co
[1915] 2 KB 536 at 563. He said:
"The first and, in my opinion, the only really correct sense of
the expression that the Court has no jurisdiction is that it has no
power to deal with and decide the dispute as to the subject matter
before it, no matter in what form or by whom it is raised. But there
is another sense in which it is often used, i.e., that, although the
Court has power to decide the question it will not according to its
settled practice do so except in a certain way and under certain
circumstances."
The same point was made by Diplock LJ in Garthwaite v
Garthwaite [1964] P.356 at 387, citing with approval Pickford LJ's
remarks (see also Edge v Pensions Ombudsman [2000] Ch.602 at
642/3 and Tehrani v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2006] UKHL
47; [2006] 3 WLR
699, 718-719, paras.66 to 68 to the same effect). The references to
jurisdiction made both by the Vice-Chancellor and by the deputy judge
(see paras.3 and 4 above) read as though they had in mind jurisdiction
in the strict sense. If they did, then I think they were wrong. It seems
to me clear that Park J had jurisdiction, in the strict sense, to grant
an injunction against Mr Le Roux and Fintrade. Both were within the
territorial jurisdiction of the court at the time the freezing order was
made. Both were, shortly after the freezing order had been made, served
with an originating summons in which relief in the form of the freezing
order was sought. There is no challenge to the propriety or the efficacy
of the service on them. The power of a judge sitting in the High Court
to grant an injunction against a party to proceedings properly served is
confirmed by, but does not derive from, section 37 of the Supreme Court
Act 1981 and its statutory predecessors. It derives from the pre
Judicature Act 1873 powers of the Chancery courts, and other courts, to
grant injunctions (see s.16 of the 1873 Act and s.19(2)(b) of the 1981
Act). The issue is, in my opinion, not whether Park J had jurisdiction,
in the strict sense, to make the freezing order but whether it was
proper, in the circumstances as they stood at the time he made the
order, for him to make it. This question does not in the least involve a
review of the area of discretion available to any judge who is asked to
grant injunctive relief. It involves an examination of the restrictions
and limitations which have been placed by a combination of judicial
precedent and rules of court on the circumstances in which the
injunctive relief in question can properly be granted. The various
matters taken into account by the deputy judge and the Vice-Chancellor
respectively in holding that Park J had no jurisdiction to make the
freezing order were really, in my respectful opinion, their reasons for
concluding that, in the circumstances as they stood when the matter was
before him, it had not been proper for Park J to have made the order.
That, in my opinion, is the real issue.
- The line of authority on the
power of the court to grant an injunction under section 37 of the 1981
Act, starting from The Siskina [1979] AC 210 and ending with
Channel Tunnel Group Ltd v Balfour Beatty Construction Ltd [1993]
AC 334, to which your Lordships have been referred by both sides on this
appeal, needs, in my opinion, to be examined bearing in mind the
ambiguity attendant upon references to the jurisdiction of the court to
which Pickford LJ had referred. The Siskina is a very well known
case and it is unnecessary for me to describe in any detail how the
issue about the court's power to grant an injunction arose. Put briefly,
a Mareva type injunction was sought against a Panamanian
ship-owning company to restrain it from disposing of a fund, consisting
of insurance proceeds, in England. The claimant for the injunction was
suing the company in a Cyprus court for damages and believed the company
to have no other assets from which to meet the hoped-for damages award
than the fund in England. No proprietary claim was, or could have been,
made by the claimant to the fund. The issue in the case was whether the
"long-arm" jurisdiction of the court under R.S.C. Order 11 rule 1 could
be invoked. If it could not be invoked, the proceedings claiming the
injunction could not properly have been served on the Panamanian
company. The claimant relied on sub-rule (i) which permitted the service
of proceedings on a defendant out of the jurisdiction if a claim were
made for "an injunction .… ordering the defendant to do or refrain from
doing anything within the jurisdiction …". The leading judgment, when
the case came to this House, was given by Lord Diplock. He referred to
section 45(1) of the Judicature Act 1925 (the predecessor of section
37(1) of the 1981 Act) and said at 254:
"That sub-section, speaking as it does of interlocutory orders,
presupposes the existence of an action, actual or potential, claiming
substantive relief which the High Court has jurisdiction to grant and
to which the interlocutory orders referred to are but ancillary. This
factor has been present in all previous cases in which Mareva
injunctions have been granted …. it is not present in this."
Lord Diplock went on (at 256) to say of Order 11 rule 1(i) that the
words used in the sub-rule were "terms of legal art" and that the
reference to "an injunction" "presupposes the existence of a cause of
action on which to found the 'action'". He continued
"A right to obtain an interlocutory injunction is not a cause of
action. It cannot stand on its own. It is dependent upon there being a
pre-existing cause of action against the defendant arising out of an
invasion, actual or threatened by him, of a legal or equitable right
of the plaintiff for the enforcement of which the defendant is
amenable to the jurisdiction of the court. The right to obtain an
interlocutory injunction is merely ancillary and incidental to the
pre-existing cause of action. It is granted to preserve the status quo
pending the ascertainment by the court of the rights of the parties
and the grant to the plaintiff of the relief to which his cause of
action entitles him, which may or may not include a final injunction"
and concluded that
"To come within the sub-rule the injunction sought in the action
must be part of the substantive relief to which the plaintiff's cause
of action entitles him; and the thing that it is sought to restrain
the foreign defendant from doing in England must amount to an invasion
of some legal or equitable right belonging to the plaintiff in this
country and enforceable here by a final judgment for an injunction."
The effect of this, concurred in by the other members of the
Appellate Committee, was that the case could not be brought with Order
11 rule 1(i) and service of the writ on the Panamanian company had to be
set aside. At which point there was, unarguably, an absence of any
jurisdiction, in the strict sense, to grant any injunction against the
company.
- Castanho v Brown & Root
(UK) Ltd [1981] AC 557 and British Airways Board v Laker Airways
Ltd [1985] AC 58 both involved claims for anti-suit injunctions. In
Castanho Lord Scarman referred to what Lord Diplock had said in
The Siskina at 256 and commented at 573:
"No doubt, in practice, most cases fall within one or other of
these two classes. But the width and flexibility of equity are not to
be undermined by categorisation. Caution in the exercise of the
jurisdiction is certainly needed: but the way in which the judges have
expressed themselves from 1821 onwards amply supports the view for
which the defendants contend that the injunction can be granted
against a party properly before the Court, where it is appropriate to
avoid injustice."
His remarks were concurred in by the other members of the Appellate
Committee, who included Lord Diplock. In British Airways Board v
Laker Airways Ltd, where considerable reliance was placed by the
unsuccessful respondents on Lord Scarman's dictum in Castanho,
cited above, Lord Diplock, at 81, referred to what he had said in The
Siskina at 256 but agreed that the "statement of principle in the
stark terms in which [he] expressed it in The Siskina"
needed to be qualified by what Lord Scarman had said in
Castanho. And Lord Scarman, in the British Airways case at
95, emphasised that his remark in Castanho about an injunction
being an available remedy "against a party properly before the court,
where it is appropriate to avoid injustice" stated "an approach and a
principle which are of general application". It is to be noted that in
The Siskina the Panamanian company had not been "a party properly
before the court".
- In South Carolina Insurance
Co. v Assurantie NV [1987] 1 AC 24, another anti-suit injunction
case, Lord Brandon of Oakbrook referred to section 37 of the 1981 Act
and to the three cases in this House to which I have just referred and
continued at 40:
"The effect of these authorities, so far as material to the
present case, can be summarised by saying that the power of the High
Court to grant injunctions is, subject to two exceptions to which I
shall refer shortly, limited to two situations. Situation (1) is when
one party to an action can show that the other party has either
invaded, or threatens to invade, a legal or equitable right of the
former for the enforcement of which the latter is amenable to the
jurisdiction of the court. Situation (2) is where one party to an
action has behaved, or threatens to behave, in a manner which is
unconscionable."
But Lord Goff of Chieveley, while agreeing with Lord Brandon's
conclusion, expressed a reservation (with which Lord Mackay of Clashfern
associated himself). Lord Goff said this, at 44:
"I am reluctant to accept the proposition that the power of the
court to grant injunctions is restricted to certain exclusive
categories. That power is unfettered by statute; and it is impossible
for us now to foresee every circumstance in which it may be thought
right to make the remedy available."
- And, finally, in the Channel
Tunnel case [1993] AC 334, the House rejected the proposition that
an English court can never grant an interlocutory injunction where the
cause of action is being litigated in arbitration proceedings abroad
(see Lord Mustill at 361/362). Lord Browne-Wilkinson, at 342, said this:
"Although the respondents have been validly served (i.e., there is
jurisdiction in the court) and there is an alleged invasion of the
appellants' contractual rights (i.e., there is a cause of action in
English law), since the final relief (if any) will be granted by the
arbitrators and not by the English court, the English court, it is
said, has no power to grant the interlocutory injunction. In my
judgment that submission is not well founded."
And, at 343, he concluded that
"… the court has power to grant interlocutory relief based on a
cause of action recognised by English law against a defendant duly
served where such relief is ancillary to a final order whether to be
granted by the English court or by some other court or abitral body."
- My Lords, these authorities
show, in my opinion, that, provided the court has in personam
jurisdiction over the person against whom an injunction, whether
interlocutory or final, is sought, the court has jurisdiction, in the
strict sense, to grant it. The practice regarding the grant of
injunctions, as established by judicial precedent and rules of court,
has not stood still since The Siskina was decided and is
unrecognisable from the practice to which Cotton LJ was referring in
North London Railway Co v The Great Northern Railway Co (1883) 11
QBD 30 at 39-40 and to which Lord Diplock referred in The Siskina
at 256. Mareva injunctions could not have been developed and
become established if Cotton LJ's proposition still held good. In The
Siskina the jurisdiction of the court over the defendant depended
upon the ability of the plaintiff to obtain leave to serve the defendant
out of the jurisdiction. Once the leave that had been granted had been
set aside there was no jurisdictional basis on which the grant of the
injunction could be sustained. On the other hand, if the leave had been
upheld, or if the defendant had submitted to the jurisdiction, it would
still have been open to the defendant to argue that the grant of a
Mareva injunction in aid of the foreign proceedings in Cyprus was
impermissible, not on strict jurisdictional grounds, but because such
injunctions should not be granted otherwise than as ancillary to
substantive proceedings in England. In 1977 Mareva injunctions
were in their infancy and the House might well have agreed (c/f
Mercedes Benz AG v Leiduck [1996] AC 284).
- Whatever might have been the
impact if that point had been raised in 1977 it would, today, fail. The
effect of section 25 of the Civil Jurisdiction and Judgments Act 1982,
as extended by the Civil Jurisdiction and Judgments Act 1982 (Interim
Relief) Order 1997, is to enable the High Court "to grant interim
relief" in relation to "proceedings" that have been or are about to be
commenced in a foreign state, for example, South Africa. The consequence
of this, in relation to the present case, is in my opinion to settle the
question of jurisdiction, in its strict sense. Whether the interlocutory
freezing order made by Park J was to protect the ability of Mr Fourie,
or HEE, to recover money awards they might succeed in obtaining in
proceedings in England, or to recover money awards they might succeed in
recovering in proceedings in South Africa, there was, in my opinion,
jurisdiction, in the strict sense, for the order to be made.
- In paragraph 38 of his judgment
in the Court of Appeal the Vice-Chancellor referred to the need for
there to be an "activation of the jurisdiction [to make the freezing
order] whether by the issue of substantive proceedings in England or an
undertaking to do so." I would agree that, without the issue of
substantive proceedings or an undertaking to do so, the propriety of the
grant of an interlocutory injunction would be difficult to defend. An
interlocutory injunction, like any other interim order, is intended to
be of temporary duration, dependent on the institution and progress of
some proceedings for substantive relief. But it is not in dispute that
in suitable circumstances a freezing order may be, and often is, granted
and served on the respondent before substantive proceedings have been
instituted. Such an order is not a nullity. It is of immediate effect.
If proceedings for substantive relief are not instituted, the freezing
order may lapse in accordance with its own terms or, on an application
by the respondent, may be discharged. But none of this indicates that
the court had no jurisdiction to make the order. No "activation" of the
jurisdiction is needed.
- Whenever an interlocutory
injunction is applied for, the judge, if otherwise minded to make the
order, should, as a matter of good practice, pay careful attention to
the substantive relief that is, or will be, sought. The interlocutory
injunction in aid of the substantive relief should not place a greater
burden on the respondent than is necessary. The yardstick in section
37(1) of the 1981 Act, "just and convenient", must be applied having
regard to the interests not only of the claimant but also of the
defendant. This is particularly so in the case of freezing orders
applied for without notice. Assets of the defendant to which the
claimant has no proprietary claim whatever are to be frozen so as to
constitute a source from which the claimant can hope to satisfy the
money judgment that, in the substantive proceedings, he hopes to obtain.
The frozen assets are removed for the time being from any beneficial use
by their owner, the defendant. This is a draconian remedy and the strict
rules relating to full disclosure by the claimant are a recognition of
the nature of the remedy and its potential for causing injustice to the
defendant.
- In Memory Corporation Plc v
Sidhu (No.2) [2000] 1 WLR 1443 Mummery LJ referred at 1460 to the
"… high duty to make full, fair and accurate disclosure of
material information to the court and to draw the court's attention to
significant factual, legal and procedural aspects of the case."
He went on to say this:
"It is the particular duty of the advocate to see that the correct
legal procedures and forms are used; ….; and that at the hearing the
court's attention is drawn by him to unusual features of the evidence
adduced, to the applicable law and to the formalities and procedure to
be observed."
- In the present case no claim for
substantive relief was formulated and shown to Park J, nor for that
matter to Judge Norris QC, nor to deputy judge Jarvis QC until the
afternoon of 30 September 2004. I find it very difficult to visualise a
case where the grant of a freezing order, made without notice, could be
said to be properly made in the absence of any formulation of the case
for substantive relief that the applicant for the order intended to
institute. It has to be inferred that, at the time of the application to
Park J, Mr Fourie's counsel were unclear whether the substantive
proceedings would be proceedings in South Africa or in England and, in
either case, unclear what the cause or causes of action would be. But at
the least a draft claim form could have been prepared claiming an
inquiry as to what Mr Le Roux and Fintrade had done with the assets they
had seized under the Germiston order and for the return of those assets
or damages for their conversion. It seems to me significant that, when
the freezing order was discharged in the morning of 30 September 2004,
an adequate claim form was produced by that afternoon.
- In my opinion, in the
circumstances as they stood before Park J, the protection for the
defendant that ought to be associated with the grant of a without notice
freezing order was absent. The protection ought to include directions
about the institution of proceedings for substantive relief. Here there
were none. In the circumstances a challenge to the propriety of the
making of the order was entitled to succeed, and to succeed for much the
same reasons as were relied on by the deputy judge and the
Vice-Chancellor for their conclusion that Park J had lacked jurisdiction
to make the order. I disagree with that conclusion but am in respectful
agreement with them about the deficiencies in the case for the freezing
order that had been laid before Park J.
- I am, nonetheless, uneasy about
the discharge by the deputy judge of the freezing order. It may be that
he did not know when he announced his decision on the discharge
application that he would, an hour or so later, be dealing with an
application for a renewed freezing order fortified by a draft claim
form. If he did know that, I think it would have been sensible to
postpone his conclusion on the discharge application until he had heard
the renewed application. It is often said that nature does nothing in
vain and I think that courts of equity should follow suit. But, since
the deputy judge, when he discharged the freezing order, may not have
realised that he was likely in a short time to grant another, I will
quell my doubts and concur in the dismissal of Mr Fourie's appeal
against the discharge.
Indemnity costs
- There is, in the Record, a very
short Note of the deputy judge's decision to award indemnity costs
against Mr Fourie. Mr Isaacs QC is recorded as having relied on three
matters:
"1. the English claims were not thought out;
2. non-compliance with the practice direction [concerning issue of
a claim form];
3. failure to comply with warning of Mummery LJ in the Memory
case"
The Note then records the judge as saying
"… It seems to me that when [a freezing] order is granted on a
wrong basis which could have been avoided … indemnity costs"
The Vice-Chancellor, dismissing Mr Fourie's appeal, explained his
decision by saying this:
"The question is not whether I would have made the same order as
Mr Jarvis did, but whether he erred in principle in the exercise of
his discretion. I see no error in principle. The judge plainly had all
material facts in mind and those facts justified the conclusions he
reached."
- My Lords, I think it needs to be
understood that the difference between costs at the standard rate and
costs on an indemnity basis is, according to the language of the
relevant rules, not very great. According to CPR 44.5(1), where costs
are assessed on the standard basis the payee can expect to recover costs
"proportionately and reasonably incurred" or "proportionate and
reasonable in amount"; and where costs are assessed on the indemnity
basis the payee can expect to recover all his costs except those that
were "unreasonably incurred" or were "unreasonable in amount". It is
difficult to see much difference between the two sets of criteria, save
that where an indemnity basis has been ordered the onus must lie on the
payer to show any unreasonableness. The criterion of proportionality,
which applies only to standard basis costs, seems to me to add very
little to the reasonableness criterion. The concept of costs that were
unreasonably but proportionately incurred or are unreasonable but
proportionate in amount, or vice versa, is one that I find
difficult to comprehend.
- For my part I find it difficult
to identify why the procedural deficiencies of the application for the
freezing order before Park J should have warranted an indemnity costs
order against the applicant. However CPR 43 and 44 are a product of Lord
Woolf's civil justice reforms, one object of which was to produce
greater flexibility in awards of costs. It was, I believe, contemplated
that greater use would be made of the discretion to award costs on an
indemnity basis than had previously been the practice. Costs awards, as
with most matters of practice and procedure, are primarily the
responsibility of first instance judges with the Court of Appeal
available to correct obvious errors. In the present case the Court of
Appeal has affirmed the deputy judge's award on the ground that no error
of principle could be discerned. I do not think your Lordships should
interfere. I would dismiss the appeal on this point too.
The directions regarding the cross-undertaking
- There was no appeal directed to
the deputy judge's directions for the immediate enforcement of Mr
Fourie's cross-undertaking in damages but they seem to me so plainly
wrong in principle that I do not think your Lordships should let them
stand.
- The cross-undertaking was
expressed in these terms:
"If the court later finds that this order has caused loss to [a]
Respondent, and decides that the Respondent should be compensated for
that loss, the Applicant will comply with any order the court may
make."
The gravamen of Mr Fourie's complaint against Mr Le Roux and
Fintrade, namely, that each had taken part in fraudulently stripping HEE
of its assets, had been made clear to Park J and, later, to the deputy
judge. The deputy judge knew, therefore, that there were substantial
claims that Mr Fourie, or HEE, had against Mr Le Roux and Fintrade, and
that the claims were at least reasonably arguable. To the extent that
the Park J freezing order did no more than prevent them from disposing
of or dealing with assets, or the proceeds of assets, that they had
fraudulently obtained from HEE, or from dealing with a sum of money
representing the amount of damages payable by them on account of the
fraud, it seems to me very highly questionable whether it can be right
that they should be enabled to obtain compensation for loss caused to
them by being so prevented. In a case of this sort it seems to me that a
decision as to what, if anything, should be paid to Mr Le Roux and
Fintrade for loss caused to them by the freezing order over the period
12 July 2004 to 30 September 2004 should not be taken until the result
of the litigation is known. To take the decision at the stage the deputy
judge took it was, in my opinion, in the circumstances of this case,
wrong in principle. I think the directions for the immediate enforcement
of the cross-undertaking should be set aside.
Conclusion
- In summary, I would dismiss Mr
Fourie's appeal so far as the discharge of the Park J freezing order and
the award of indemnity costs are concerned, but I would set aside the
deputy judge's directions, in paragraphs 4 to 9 (inclusive) of his order
of 30 September 2004, for the enforcement of the cross-undertaking.
LORD RODGER OF EARLSFERRY
My Lords,
- I have had the advantage of
considering the speech of my noble and learned friend, Lord Scott of
Foscote, in draft. For the reasons which he gives I too would dismiss
the appeal and make the order which he proposes.
- I should wish to associate
myself, in particular, with the remarks of my noble and learned friend,
Lord Bingham of Cornhill, about the desirability of not weakening the
safeguards which have been developed to protect defendants against
possible misuse of Mareva injunctions or freezing orders. Here,
as Lord Scott shows, it is all too clear that, at the time when he made
the application to Park J, the claimant had neither brought proceedings
nor worked out what proceedings he was going to bring to which the
freezing order would be relevant. That being so, one of the important
safeguards was missing and so, even if he had the power to do so, the
judge ought not to have granted the order at that stage. It was
accordingly right for the deputy judge to discharge it - even though,
shortly afterwards, when a claim form was produced and the claimant
undertook to issue and serve particulars of claim within 7 days, he
himself made a freezing order which differed only in the amount of the
protection.
- Whatever the exact scale of the
difference may be in any particular case, an order for indemnity costs
does, and is intended to, weigh more heavily on the party against which
it is made than an order for costs on the standard basis. I share the
doubts expressed by others as to whether the order for costs on this
higher scale was appropriate in the present case, but I too have
reluctantly come to the view that it is not a matter with which the
House can properly interfere.
LORD CARSWELL
My Lords,
- I have had the advantage of
reading in draft the opinion prepared by my noble and learned friend
Lord Scott of Foscote, with which I agree, and for the reasons he has
given I would make the order which he proposes.
- I share his unease about the
strangeness of the position, where the deputy judge discharged the
freezing injunction made by Park J and continued by Judge Norris, then
within a matter of hours made another order of like nature substituting
a different sum as the limit of protection. There is a considerable air
of artificiality about an appeal which centres round the correctness of
the deputy judge's action in discharging the earlier order. That
unreality is not decreased by the fact, as Lord Scott has clearly
demonstrated, that the decision of the deputy judge and that of the
Court of Appeal which upheld it were based on a flawed approach to the
issue of the propriety of the injunction granted by Park J. I was during
the hearing before the House attracted to the view that it would be
desirable, in order to avoid injustice, to decline to apply the rule in
The Siskina rigidly and to allow the appeal. I am persuaded by
your Lordships, however, of the importance of maintaining the safeguards
to defendants provided by the network of rules which the courts have
developed in granting Mareva injunctions. I therefore must agree
that, notwithstanding my reservations, the freezing order was wrongly
made by Park J on 9 July 2004 and that it was proper to discharge it.
- I also have reservations about the propriety
of making an award of indemnity costs against the appellant. I find it
hard to see any sustainable ground on which such an order should be
made, which traditionally was restricted to marking the court's serious
displeasure at the way in which the losing party has behaved or his case
has been conducted : see Cook on Costs 2006, para 11.48. As Lord Scott
indicates in paragraph 40 of his opinion, however, indemnity costs now
tend to be awarded in a broader range of cases : see, e.g., Reid
Minty v Taylor [2001]
EWCA Civ 1723; [2002] 1
WLR 2800. That said, I still find it difficult to discern any
clearly defensible reason in the present case for making the order: if a
party commences proceedings on a mistaken basis, an award of standard
costs is ordinarily sufficient sanction. I agree with Lord Scott,
however, that this is peculiarly an area in which the principles should
be developed and applied by the judges at first instance, with the
oversight of the Court of Appeal, and that the House should not reverse
a costs order without a strong reason in principle.
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