[2024] UKSC 39
On appeal from: [2022] EWCA Civ 35
JUDGMENT
Kireeva (Appellant) vBedzhamov (Respondent)
before
Lord Reed, President
Lord Lloyd-Jones
Lord Briggs
Lady Rose
Lord Richards
20 November 2024
Heard on 21 and 22 November 2023
Appellant
Stephen Davies KC
William Willson
(Instructed by DCQ Legal and (for judgment) Steptoe International (UK) LLP (London))
Respondent
Justin Fenwick KC
Stephen Robins KC
(Instructed by Greenberg Traurig)
Intervener
Andrew Scott KC
Gayatri Sarathy
(Instructed by Mishcon de Reya LLP (London))
LORD LLOYD-JONES AND LORD RICHARDS (with whom Lord Reed, Lord Briggs and Lady Rose agree):
It is an established principle in many national legal systems, including the common law of England and Wales, that questions as regards rights to and interests in land and other immovable property are governed by the law of the country in which the property is situated (the lex situs)and that jurisdiction to decide those questions belongs to the courts of that country. Where immovable property is situated in country A, neither the law nor the courts of country A will recognise or give effect to any laws or judicial decisions of other countries which purport to govern or decide issues of rights to and interests in that immovable property, save to the extent of any exceptions under the law of country A. In this judgment, we refer to this principle of private international law, as applied to immovable property in England and Wales, as “the immovables rule”.
The issue on this appeal is the effect, if any, under English common law of the immovables rule on the claim of a trustee in bankruptcy or similar representative appointed in foreign bankruptcy proceedings to immovable property situated in England and owned by the debtor.
This issue arises in relation to a property in London owned by the Respondent, against whom a bankruptcy order was made by a Russian court. The Russian court appointed the Appellant as the trustee of his bankruptcy estate. As a matter of Russian law, the property in London forms part of his bankruptcy estate and the trustee is under a duty to get in and realise it for the benefit of his creditors. The issue for decision is whether, as a matter of English law, the immovables rule prevents the Appellant as trustee from claiming the property in London and from obtaining assistance from the English court to do so.
As we will later explain, the statutory provisions under which the English court may give assistance to a foreign trustee in bankruptcy do not apply in this case. The question is therefore whether assistance may be given at common law.
The facts
As the issue in this appeal has been argued as a question of principle, it is necessary to give only a brief summary of the facts and of the extensive proceedings in Russia and England.
The Respondent is a Russian citizen who left Russia in 2015 and has lived in England since 2017. In 2015, he acquired an interest in a house in Belgrave Square and its associated mews house (“the Property”). His interest comprised a lease with some 20 years remaining and an agreement with the freeholder for the grant of a new lease for a period of 129 years conditional on the redevelopment of the Property.
In August 2016, Vneshprombank LLC (“VPB”), a Russian bank in provisional liquidation, obtained a judgment on an unjust enrichment claim against the Respondent in a district court in Moscow. The judgment sum had a sterling equivalent in excess of £30 million. The Respondent’s appeal was dismissed, as were subsequent attempts by him to set aside the judgment. In December 2016, VTB 24 Bank (“VTB”), also a Russian bank, obtained judgment against the Respondent in another district court in Moscow on a guarantee which the court found to have been given by the Respondent. The judgment sum had an approximate sterling equivalent of £3 million.
In January and April 2017, VPB and VTB respectively filed bankruptcy petitions with the Moscow City Arbitrazh Court (“the Arbitrazh Court”) against the Respondent based on the judgments obtained by them.
On 20 September 2017, the Arbitrazh Court accepted the validity of VTB’s claim and ordered a debt restructuring procedure in respect of the Respondent’s debts, appointing a financial administrator to supervise the debt restructuring. The Respondent’s appeal against this order was dismissed.
The Arbitrazh Court subsequently accepted the validity of VPB’s claim on its judgment, which was opposed by the Respondent, as well as a claim by the Federal Tax Authority.
On 2 July 2018, the Arbitrazh Court declared the Respondent bankrupt and appointed the Appellant as the new financial manager for the purpose of realising the Respondent’s assets, a position equivalent to that of trustee in bankruptcy under English law. We will refer to this order as “the Russian bankruptcy order”.
In December 2018, VPB issued proceedings against the Respondent in the Chancery Division of the High Court in London, claiming damages in excess of £1.34 billion in respect of losses alleged to have been suffered as a result of fraud on the part of the Respondent, who it was said had personally benefitted to the extent of some £35.4 million. A worldwide freezing order was made against the Respondent in March 2019. The order applies to all his assets including, by the express terms of the order, the Property. In the usual way, the Respondent was permitted to use his funds for living expenses and for the payment of legal costs. As we understand it, these proceedings are continuing and have yet to come to trial: see Vneshprombank LLC v Bedzhamov [2024] EWHC 1048 (Ch), [2024] 1 WLR 4674.
Pursuant to a variation of the freezing order made by Falk J on 5 March 2021 (“the Variation Order”), the Respondent charged his interest in the Property to his then solicitors, Mishcon de Reya LLP, to secure accrued and future legal costs.
At least partly to fund his defence of the action brought by VPB, the Respondent has taken steps with a view to a sale of his interests in the Property and succeeded in an application, opposed by the Appellant, to vary the freezing order to permit a sale: Vneshprombank LLC v Bedzhamov [2023] EWHC 1459 (Ch).
The present proceedings
In February 2021, the Appellant issued an application in the Chancery Division, seeking recognition at common law of the Russian bankruptcy order and of her appointment as the Respondent’s bankruptcy trustee and financial manager and “[s]uch further relief as the Court sees fit, including orders for the entrustment of the Belgrave Square Property (and any other property of the Respondent in England) and that the Applicant will be able to question the Respondent in relation to the Belgrave Square Property”.
In her evidence in support of the application, the Appellant said that she had become aware of the Property in January 2021 and, given that it is a major asset, she “would therefore like to take control over it, as I am entitled and obliged to do under Russian law, to protect the interests of the bankruptcy estate (which includes the collective interest of at least three creditors)”.
The Appellant also issued an application to set aside the Variation Order which had enabled the Respondent to charge his interest in the Property in favour of Mishcon de Reya (“the Set Aside Application”).
Both applications were heard by Snowden J who, by an order dated 25 August 2021, formally recognised the Russian bankruptcy order and the Appellant’s appointment by the Arbitrazh Court. He directed that any application by the Appellant for assistance in relation to the Respondent’s movable assets in England should be made to Falk J, but he dismissed the application insofar as it sought assistance in relation to the Property and any other immovable assets in England. He also dismissed the Set Aside Application. See [2021] EWHC 2281 (Ch).
As regards recognition, Snowden J held that, although it was common ground that the Respondent had not been domiciledin Russia at the time of either the bankruptcyapplication or the bankruptcy order, he had submitted to the jurisdiction of the Arbitrazh Court and that the orders declaring him bankrupt and appointing the Appellant should be recognised on that basis. In addition to challenging the jurisdiction of the Arbitrazh Court, the Respondent resisted recognition on a number of other grounds, all of which were rejected by the judge. One of those grounds was that the VTB judgment on which the Russian bankruptcy order was based had been obtained by fraud, through forging his signature on the guarantee on which VTB made its claim. The Court of Appeal allowed the Respondent’s appeal against the order for recognition on this ground alone and directed that the matter be remitted for a new hearing with cross-examination of the Respondent: [2022] EWCA Civ 32, [2023] Ch 45. This was heard by Falk J who held that the Respondent had not established that the guarantee was a forgery and that the Russian bankruptcy order and the Appellant’s appointment should be recognised at common law: see [2022] EWHC 2676 (Ch). There is no longer any dispute about the recognition order.
As regards the Appellant’s claim for assistance in relation to the Property, the Appellant submitted that this was not barred by the immovables rule. Mr Davies KC and Mr Willson, appearing then as now for the Appellant, submitted that the effect of the immovables rule was limited to preventing an automatic vesting of the legal title to the Property in the Appellant as trustee. The foreign bankruptcy order could not bypass the local system for transferring legal title under the lex situs. The English court would, however, recognise that the Property fell within the Respondent’s bankrupt estate and would assist the Appellant to realise it for the benefit of the estate and the creditors. Snowden J rejected these submissions, holding that, by reason of the immovables rule, English law did not recognise the Appellant as having any claim on behalf of the estate to the Property or any other immovable property in England. There was therefore no basis on which the English court could provide assistance to the Appellant to gain possession of, or to realise, the Property. On the same basis, the judge dismissed the Set Aside Application.
On appeal, the Court of Appeal by a majority (Newey and Stuart-Smith LJJ, Arnold LJ dissenting) upheld the decision of Snowden J as regards the Property and the Set Aside Application. Counsel for the Appellant repeated their submission that the immovables rule bears only on legal title to the Property and that the English court will accept that a foreign trustee has complete dominion over all the debtor’s assets, including immovable property, and that the debtor holds the legal title for and at the direction of the trustee. They also developed a submission that, for relevant purposes, statutory provisions enabling the court to give assistance to foreign trustees and other office-holders and common law recognition both served as gateways to the provision of assistance, such that there was no essential difference between the statutory regimes and the common law in the assistance that the court was empowered to provide. In particular, the court could at common law as well as under the statutory regimes exercise its jurisdiction to appoint a receiver of the Property with power to sell it and remit the net proceeds of sale to the Appellant for distribution among creditors in accordance with applicable Russian bankruptcy law.
The majority rejected these submissions. Newey LJ emphasised that the immovables rule did not just prevent the automatic vesting of immovable property within England in a foreign trustee, but had the effect that a foreign bankruptcy law “will not be recognised as having conferred any interest in or right to such property on the office-holder and, absent statutory intervention, the office-holder will not be entitled to an order vesting it in him” (para 100), nor will the office-holder “be considered to have an interest meriting protection by the grant of a receiver or injunctive relief” (para 102). In a short concurring judgment, Stuart-Smith LJ agreed with this reasoning.
In his dissenting judgment, Arnold LJ took as his starting point that the effect of the recognition order was that “the English courts recognised Ms Kireeva as the duly appointed trustee of Mr Bedzhamov’s bankrupt estate, and thus recognised her duty and right to realise the assets comprising that estate for the benefit of Mr Bedzhamov’s creditors” (para 109). While the immovables rule meant that the English court would not recognise any title to immovable property in England conferred by a foreign bankruptcy court (para 112), it did not mean that the foreign office-holder had no rights at all in respect of such immovable property. English law will recognise such property as falling within the bankrupt estate and the English court may exercise its discretionary power to make an in personamorder appointing a receiver in respect of the immovable: see para 126. Arnold LJ would have remitted the Appellant’s application in relation to the Property to the High Court for a decision as to how the discretion to appoint a receiver should be exercised.
This Court gave the Appellant permission to appeal as regards her application for assistance in relation to the Property and as regards the Set Aside Application. Mishcon de Reya was given permission to intervene to protect its interests as chargee of the Property. It supports the Respondent’s case, and it is common ground that, if the appeal as regards assistance is dismissed, the appeal as regards the Set Aside Application will fall to be dismissed. If theappeal is allowed, the Set Aside Application would be remitted to the Chancery Division for re-hearing.It is not necessary to consider further the position of Mishcon de Reya as chargee.
The immovables rule
It is the special nature of land that has given rise to the immovables rule, as a result of which a foreign court has no jurisdiction to make orders in respect of land in England and Wales and rights relating to such land are governed exclusively by the law of England and Wales.
Dicey, Morris and Collins, The Conflict of Laws, 16th ed (2022), state the jurisdictional rule, as applied to land in England, as follows:
“Rule 139 – A court of a foreign country has no jurisdiction to adjudicate upon the title to, or the right to possession of, any immovable situate outside that country.”
As the editors explain (at 24-062), it is a corollary of the principle that English courts have no jurisdiction to determine the title to, or the right to possession of any immovable situate outside England: British South Africa Co v Companhia de Moçambique [1893] AC 602. It is an imprecise corollary, however, because unlike the Moçambique principle, which is subject to exceptions, no exceptions to Rule 139 have yet been formulated.
Dicey, Morris and Collins state the choice of law rule as follows:
“Rule 140 – All rights over, or in relation to, an immovable (land) are (subject to the Exception hereinafter mentioned) governed by the law of the country where the immovable is situate (lex situs).”
The exception referred to in Rule 140 is that it does not apply to the formal and material validity, interpretation and effect of a contract, and capacity to contract, with regard to an immovable.
The editors explain that, as a result, a person’s capacity to alienate an immovable by sale or mortgage (24-073), capacity to take land (24-079), the formal validity of a conveyance of land (24-080), the material or essential validity of a disposition of land (24-081) and issues of prescription and limitation (24-082) are all to be determined in accordance with the lex situs. In each case, the lex situs means, for an English court dealing with land in England, English domestic law.
These rules reflect domestic public policy. As Farwell LJ observed in In re Hoyles [1911] 1 Ch 179 at pp 185-186, “[n]o country can be expected to allow questions affecting its own land, or the extent and nature of the interests in its own land which should be regarded as immovable, to be determined otherwise than by its own Courts in accordance with its own interests”. Dicey, Morris and Collins states (at 24-070): “The sovereign of the country where land is situate has absolute control over the land within his or her dominions: he or she alone can bestow effective rights over it; his or her courts alone are, as a rule, entitled to exercise jurisdiction over such land.” In Freke v Lord Carbery (1873) LR 16 Eq 461 at p 466, Lord Selborne LC said: “The territory and soil of England, by the law of nature and of nations, which is recognised also as part of the law of England, is governed by all statutes which are in force in England.” In short, the immovables rule reflects territorial sovereignty.
Professor Adrian Briggs notes (Private International Law in English Courts, 2nd ed (2023) p 619) that the connection between the subject of the proceedings and the law which will apply to it is stronger and closer in the case of land and the lex situs than is the case with any other rule of private international law. Cheshire, North and Fawcett, Private International Law, 15th ed (2017) p 1256, affirming comments by Hay, Borchers and Symeonides, Conflict of Laws, 5th ed (2010) p 1231, consider that “there is no doubt … that the law of the situs has a powerful interest in its rules being applied to a wider range of matters – essentially “with the manner in which land is used, occupied or developed””. The editors of Dicey, Morris and Collins consider (24-003) that a modern justification for the rather special position of land in most legal systems is that important social questions may be involved, such as housing policy and tenants’ rights, and the relevant legislation may be regarded as embodying public policy.
These rules are a particular manifestation of wider principles of the sovereignty, equality and independence of states in international law. Dr F A Mann in his lectures entitled “The Doctrine of International Jurisdiction Revisited after Twenty Years” given in 1984 at the Hague Academy of International Law (see Further Studies in International Law (1990)) expresses these principles as follows (p 4):
“International jurisdiction is an aspect or an ingredient or a consequence of sovereignty … laws extend so far as, but no further than, the sovereignty of the State which puts them into force nor does any legislator normally intend to enact laws which apply to or cover persons, facts, events or conduct outside the limits of his State’s sovereignty. This is a principle or, perhaps one should say, an observation of universal application. Since every State enjoys the same degree of sovereignty, jurisdiction implies respect for the corresponding rights of other States. To put it differently, jurisdiction involves both the right to exercise it within the limits of the State’s sovereignty and the duty to recognise the same right of other States. Or, to put the same idea in positive and negative form, the State has the right to exercise jurisdiction within the limits of its sovereignty, but is not entitled to encroach upon the sovereignty of other States.”
In general, courts in this jurisdiction will normally recognise and will not question the lawfulness or validity of a foreign state’s executive and legislative acts within its territory, including acts affecting all kinds of property situated in its territory at the material time (Maduro Board of the Central Bank of Venezuela v Guaido Board of the Central Bank of Venezuela[2021] UKSC 57, reported sub nom Deutsche Bank AG London Branch v Receivers Appointed by the Court [2023] AC 156 at paras 118-135, 172-176). Similarly, courts in this jurisdiction will normally recognise at common law judgments of foreign courts affecting property within the jurisdiction of the foreign court. “A court of a foreign country has jurisdiction to give a judgment in rem capable of enforcement or recognition in England if the subject-matter of the proceedings wherein that judgment was given was immovable or movable property which was at the time of the proceedings situate in that country” (Dicey, Morris and Collins, Rule 50). However, courts in this jurisdiction will not in general give effect to foreign laws, executive acts or judgments purporting to affect property situated outside the foreign state. In Williams & Humbert Ltd v W & H Trade Marks (Jersey) Ltd [1986] AC 368 Lord Templeman observed (at p 428):
“There is undoubtedly a domestic and international rule which prevents one sovereign state from changing title to property so long as that property is situate in another state.”