[2024] UKSC 30
On appeal from: [2024] EWCA Civ 64
JUDGMENT
UniCredit Bank GmbH (Respondent) vRusChemAlliance LLC (Appellant)
before
Lord Reed, President
Lord Sales
Lord Leggatt
Lord Burrows
Lady Rose
18 September 2024
Heard on 17 and 18 April 2024
Appellant
Alexander Gunning KC
Alexander Brown
(Instructed by Enyo Law LLP)
Respondent
Stephen Houseman KC
Jonathan Harris KC (Hon)
Stuart Cribb
(Instructed by Latham & Watkins (London) LLP)
LORD LEGGATT (with whom Lord Reed, Lord Sales, Lord Burrows and Lady Rose agree):
Introduction
This judgment gives the reasons for the court’s unanimous decision, announced on 23 April 2024, to dismiss this appeal. The appeal is from an order made by the Court of Appeal on 29 January 2024 requiring the appellant, RusChemAlliance LLC (“RusChem”), to cease court proceedings in Russia against the respondent, UniCredit Bank GmbH (“UniCredit”), in circumstances where the parties have agreed, in a contract governed by English law, that any disputes between them shall be settled by arbitration in Paris. The result of this court’s decision is therefore that the Court of Appeal’s order is undisturbed.
The underlying dispute
RusChem is a Russian company which in July and September 2021 entered into two contracts with German companies (together described as “the Contractor”) for the construction of liquefied natural gas and gas processing plants in Russia. Under these contracts RusChem agreed to pay, in stages, approximately €10 billion, including advance payments of around €2 billion. RusChem made the advance payments to the Contractor.
Performance of the Contractor’s obligations was guaranteed by bonds payable on demand. Seven such bonds have been issued by the respondent, UniCredit, a German bank. Each of the contracts contained in these bonds provides (in clause 11) that the bond is governed by English law and (in clause 12) that all disputes are to be settled by arbitration in Paris under the rules of the International Chamber of Commerce (“ICC”). Here is the full wording of these clauses:
This Bond and all non-contractual or other obligations arising out of or in connection with it shall be construed under and governed by English law.
In case of dispute arising between the parties about the validity, interpretation or performance of the Bond, the parties shall cooperate with diligence and in good faith, to attempt to find an amicable solution. All disputes arising out of or in connection with the bond (which cannot be resolved amicably) shall be finally settled under the Rules of Arbitration of the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC) by one or more arbitrators appointed, in accordance with the said ICC’s Rules. The place of arbitration shall be Paris and the language to be used in the arbitral proceedings shall be English.”
Following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, the European Union imposed sanctions on Russia and on designated Russian legal entities and individuals. The designated entities did not include RusChem. Even so, in May 2022 the Contractor announced that, because of EU sanctions, it could not continue to perform the construction contracts. As a result, RusChem terminated the contracts and requested the return of the advance payments. The Contractor stated that it could not return the advance payments, again giving EU sanctions as the reason.
In October 2022 and April 2023 RusChem made demands on UniCredit for payment under the bonds. UniCredit refused to pay on the ground that payment was prohibited by EU sanctions, in particular article 11 of Council Regulation (EU) No 833/2014 of 31 July 2014 concerning restrictive measures in view of Russia's actions destabilising the situation in Ukraine. UniCredit has not relied on any other reason for its refusal to pay.
The Russian proceedings
On 5 August 2023 RusChem issued proceedings against UniCredit before the Arbitrazh Court of the St Petersburg and Leningrad Region in Russia, claiming payment of €448 million under the bonds. In its statement of claim in those proceedings RusChem relied on article 248.1 of the Arbitrazh Procedural Code, introduced by the Russian Federation in 2020. The effect of article 248.1 is, among other things, to confer exclusive jurisdiction on Russian Arbitrazh Courts over disputes between Russian and foreign persons arising from foreign sanctions; to treat an agreement providing for arbitration of such a dispute outside the territory of the Russian Federation as inoperable. Article 248.2 enables Russian persons affected by foreign sanctions to apply to a Russian Arbitrazh Court for an anti-suit injunction prohibiting the other party from initiating or continuing proceedings before a foreign court or international arbitration tribunal located outside the territory of the Russian Federation.
UniCredit applied to the Arbitrazh Court to dismiss RusChem’s claim on the ground that the parties have agreed that all disputes arising out of the bonds are to be settled by arbitration in Paris under the rules of the ICC.
On 1 November 2023 the judge in the Russian proceedings, SS Saltykova, announced the decision of the Arbitrazh Court to dismiss that application. Judge Saltykova ruled that, by virtue of article 248.1(2)(1) of the Arbitrazh Procedural Code, the dispute falls within the exclusive competence of the Arbitrazh Courts of the Russian Federation, so that the arbitration agreements cannot be enforced. The judge stayed the proceedings, however, and has since adjourned the matter pending the outcome of the present proceedings. Lord Reed PSC has formally expressed this court’s gratitude to Judge Saltykova for taking this course and enabling these proceedings to be dealt with in an orderly way.
These proceedings
These proceedings were begun in the Commercial Court in London by UniCredit on 22 August 2023. The claim was for injunctive and declaratory remedies for RusChem’s commencement and pursuit of the Russian proceedings in breach of the arbitration agreements in the bonds. UniCredit applied without notice for an interim injunction prohibiting RusChem from continuing the Russian proceedings until further order of the court, which was granted on 24 August 2023.
On 8 September 2023 RusChem issued an application disputing the English court’s jurisdiction to hear UniCredit’s claim.
On 22 September 2023 the hearing of RusChem’s challenge to the English court’s jurisdiction and an expedited trial of UniCredit’s claim took place in the Commercial Court before Sir Nigel Teare sitting as a High Court judge. For reasons given in an ex tempore judgment, the judge held that the English court did not have jurisdiction to hear the claim; but he continued the interim anti-suit injunction until the process of appeal from his order had been exhausted: [2023] EWHC 2365 (Comm).
The Court of Appeal granted UniCredit permission to appeal from the judge’s decision and the appeal was heard on 25 January 2024. At the end of the hearing, the court (Bean, Males and Lewis LJJ) announced its decision to allow the appeal and to grant a final anti-suit injunction, with reasons to follow. On 29 January 2024 the order of the Court of Appeal was made granting final relief including a mandatory injunction requiring RusChem to discontinue the Russian proceedings. The reasons for the Court of Appeal’s decision were given by Males LJ in a judgment handed down on 2 February 2024: [2024] EWCA Civ 64; [2024] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 350.
In the Court of Appeal the issues were: (1) whether the English court has jurisdiction over UniCredit’s claim; and (2) if so, whether the Court of Appeal should grant the final injunction claimed by UniCredit or should remit that question to the Commercial Court. In summary, the Court of Appeal decided that the English court has jurisdiction over the claim because: (a) the arbitration agreements in the bonds are governed by English law; and (b) England and Wales is the proper place in which to bring the claim. The Court of Appeal also decided that the question whether to grant a final injunction should not be remitted to the Commercial Court and granted the injunction.
This appeal
On 12 February 2024 this court gave RusChem permission to appeal from the decision of the Court of Appeal on the jurisdiction issue. RusChem was refused permission to appeal on the question whether, if the English court has jurisdiction over UniCredit’s claim, the Court of Appeal was entitled to grant a final injunction rather than remit the matter to the Commercial Court. Permission to appeal on that issue was refused because it did not raise a point of law of general public importance.
The sole issue in this appeal is therefore whether the English court has jurisdiction over UniCredit’s claim. This depends on whether the Court of Appeal was right to decide (a) that the arbitration agreements in the bonds are governed by English law and (b) that England and Wales is the proper place in which to bring the claim. I will refer to these issues, respectively, as “the governing law issue” and “the proper place issue” and will address them in turn.
The governing law issue
Under rule 6.36 of the Civil Procedure Rules (CPR), the claimant may serve a claim form on a defendant out of the jurisdiction with the permission of the court if any of the grounds (commonly known as “gateways”) set out in para 3.1 of Practice Direction 6B applies. The sole ground, or gateway, on which UniCredit relies is that set out in para 3.1(6)(c) of Practice Direction 6B (the “contract gateway”). The contract gateway applies where a claim is made in respect of a contract which is governed by the law of England and Wales.
When applying for permission to serve proceedings out of the jurisdiction, it is only necessary for the claimant to satisfy the court that there is a “good arguable case” that the claim falls within the relevant gateway. The Court of Appeal, however, thought it right to decide this question on a final basis and this court has approached the question in the same way.
To which part of the bond contracts does the test apply?
As explained in para 3 above, the bond contracts are expressly governed by English law. Where, however, as here, a contract includes an agreement to arbitrate disputes arising out of the contract, it is possible in principle for that agreement to be governed by a different system of law from the rest of the contract. RusChem argues that that is so here and that the arbitration agreements in clause 12 of the bonds are governed by the law of the place which the parties have chosen for the arbitration, that is to say, the law of France.
UniCredit argues that the arbitration agreements are governed by English law because the choice of English law in clause 11 as the governing law applies to clause 12 (the arbitration clause) as well as all the other clauses of the contract. In the courts below this was the only argument that UniCredit advanced on the governing law issue. On this appeal UniCredit raised a suggestion in its written case that, even if the arbitration agreements in clause 12 are governed by French law, UniCredit’s claim still falls within the contract gateway because English law on any view governs the rest of the bond contracts and it can be said that UniCredit’s claim is made in respect of those contracts. If this argument were thought to have any merit, there is no reason why it could not have been made in the courts below. As it is, UniCredit gave no notice that it might seek to raise this new point until after RusChem had filed its written case for this appeal. At the hearing I did not understand counsel for UniCredit to be asking the court to allow UniCredit to rely on this new argument; but if permission to do so had been sought, I would not have thought it right to give it.
I therefore proceed on the basis that, for the purpose of the governing law issue, the only relevant question is whether the arbitration agreements in clause 12 of the bonds are governed by English law.
This court’s decision in Enka
The principles which determine what system of law governs an arbitration agreement were considered by this court in depth in Enka Insaat ve Sanayi AS v OOO Insurance Company Chubb[2020] UKSC 38; [2020] 1 WLR 4117 (“Enka”). The central issue on that appeal was which system of law governs an arbitration agreement when the law applicable to the contract containing it differs from the law of the seat of the arbitration. According to the common law rules which the court must apply in deciding this question, the arbitration agreement is governed by whichever system of law the parties have agreed will govern it or, in the absence of such an agreement, the system of law with which the arbitration agreement is most closely connected. Whether the parties have agreed on a choice of law to govern the arbitration agreement is ascertained by construing the arbitration agreement and the contract containing it, as a whole, applying the rules of contractual interpretation of English law as the law of the forum.
It is rare for the law governing an arbitration agreement to be separately specified, either in the arbitration clause itself or elsewhere in the contract. It is common, however, in a contract which has connections with more than one country (or territory with its own legal system) to find a clause specifying the law which is to govern the contract. A typical clause of this kind states: “This Agreement shall be governed by and construed in accordance with the laws of [name of legal system]”. Where the contract also contains an arbitration clause, it is natural to interpret such a governing law clause as applying to the arbitration clause for the simple reason that the arbitration clause is part of the contract which the parties have agreed is to be governed by the specified system of law. Thus, in Enka the Supreme Court unanimously held: (1) that a choice of law to govern the contract should generally be construed as applying to an arbitration agreement set out (or incorporated by reference) in a clause of the contract; and (2) that this is so even where the parties have chosen a place with a different system of the law as the seat of the arbitration: see paras 43, 53–54, 60, 170(iv)–(v), 260, 267, 269–271. Additional reasons given for adopting this approach as a general presumption were that it provides a degree of certainty, achieves consistency, avoids complexities and uncertainties, avoids artificiality and ensures coherence: see para 53.
This court in Enka also considered what law applies if the parties have not agreed on a choice of law to govern the arbitration agreement but have chosen a seat of arbitration. The majority held that as a general rule the law applicable in this situation is the law of the seat, even if this differs from the law applicable to the parties’ substantive contractual obligations: see paras 120, 145, 170(viii). In the present case no reliance is placed on this second aspect of the decision in Enka, so there is no need to consider it further.
This court’s decision in Kabab-Ji
In Kabab-Ji SAL v Kout Food Group[2021] UKSC 48; [2021] Bus LR 1717 the claimant brought proceedings in England to enforce an arbitration award made in France. The defendant resisted enforcement on the ground that it was not a party either to the contract under which the underlying claim was brought or to the arbitration agreement contained in that contract and therefore had not agreed to arbitration of the claim. The first and main issue on appeal to the Supreme Court was what system of law governed the arbitration agreement. Although the issue arose under section 103(2)(b) of the Arbitration Act 1996, it was common ground that the general principles identified in Enka were applicable to ascertain whether the parties had chosen the law which was to govern their arbitration agreement and, if so, what law they had chosen.
Like the bonds in this case, the contract in Kabab-Ji contained a clause providing for settlement of disputes under the rules of the ICC in Paris and also contained a typical governing law clause, which stated: “This Agreement shall be governed by and construed in accordance with the laws of England”. The phrase “this Agreement” was further defined as consisting of “the terms of agreement set forth herein below …”. The Supreme Court regarded the effect of these clauses as “absolutely clear”: para 39. Even without the further definition, the phrase “this agreement” was “ordinarily and reasonably understood … to denote all the clauses incorporated in the contractual document, including therefore clause 14 [the arbitration clause]”. There was no good reason to infer that the parties intended to except clause 14 from their choice of English law to govern all the terms of their contract. In particular, the choice of Paris as the seat of the arbitration was not such a reason. The law governing the arbitration agreement was therefore English law.
Express and implied choice
Some commentators have described the general principle recognised in Enka and applied in Kabab-Ji as being that a choice of governing law for the contract containing an arbitration clause amounts to an “implied choice” of law for the arbitration agreement. That is not how the principle was articulated in those cases. Thus, in our judgment in Enka Lord Hamblen and I expressed the principle simply in terms of what, on the proper interpretation of the contract, the parties would reasonably be understood to have agreed and did not use the phrase “implied choice”: see eg para 170(ii)–(iv) and the passages on which that summary was based.
This was deliberate. We pointed out, at para 35, that whether a choice is described as “express” or “implied” is a matter of degree as language may be more or less explicit. If the contract contains a typical governing law clause of the kind contained, for example, in the contract in Kabab-Ji, an element of inference or implication is involved in ascertaining that the parties have chosen that law to govern the arbitration clause. But this is only because the governing law clause does not refer specifically to the arbitration clause. The same can be said about all the other individual clauses of the contract. None of the individual clauses of the contract is specifically referred to in the governing law clause: the inference is merely that the general includes the particular. If it were necessary or relevant to characterise the choice of law for the arbitration agreement signified by such a governing law clause as “express” or “implied”, I think it would be more apt to call it an “express choice” because it is identified by interpreting the express terms of the contact and is not based on any implied term. But it does not matter which description is preferred. The distinction is of no legal significance. As was said in Enka, at para 35, it is “important to keep in mind that whether a choice is described as express or implied is not a distinction on which any legal consequence turns”. The only question of legal relevance is whether, on the proper interpretation of the contractual documents, the parties have agreed on the law which is to govern the arbitration agreement.
The Law Commission’s Review
Since Enka and Kabab-Ji were decided, the Law Commission in its Review of the Arbitration Act 1996: Final report and Bill (Law Com No 413), published on 5 September 2023, has suggested that the law as stated in Enka is “complex and unpredictable” (para 12.20) and has recommended that the Arbitration Act 1996 be amended to provide that the arbitration agreement is governed by the law of the seat, unless the parties expressly agree otherwise (para 12.77). Depending on what the word “expressly” is taken to add to the word “agree”, this would not by itself alter the law as stated in Enka. The draft clause proposed by the Law Commission, however, includes a further provision that (para 12.78):
“agreement between the parties that a particular law applies to an agreement of which the arbitration agreement forms a part does not … constitute express agreement that that law also applies to the arbitration agreement.”
A Bill is before Parliament which includes a clause in these terms.