Modern Law of Marine Insurance Volume Five, The
CHAPTER 10
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Jurisdictional rules and anti-suit injunctions post-Brexit: Uncertainties and opportunities
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Introduction
10.1 The United Kingdom's withdrawal from the European Union (EU), and the European Commission's decision to oppose the UK's application to accede to the Lugano Convention, has removed from the jurisdictional rules applied by the English court1 the sharp, immediate distinction drawn between cases where the defendant is domiciled in an EU member state and where it is not. All cases are now to be dealt with in accordance with the English, as opposed to EU, principles of private international law,2 albeit that those rules have undergone some limited modification post-Brexit. 10.2 It is fair to say that this is doubled-edged from the perspective of those who wish to litigate their disputes in London; in very broad terms, the jurisdiction and powers of the English courts are broader under the English common law rules than under either the Recast Brussels Regulation3 (hereinafter, “the Recast Regulation”), whereas the ease with and extent to which judgments rendered in English courts will be recognised in EU member states is reduced. 10.3 This chapter will examine the key questions that a practitioner instructed in a marine insurance dispute post-Brexit may need to consider. In particular, the focus will be on two main questions:- 1. What are the rules that determine whether the English court has jurisdiction to try a marine insurance dispute?
- 2. What powers does the English court have to restrain proceedings brought before foreign courts or tribunals?
Jurisdiction in relation to marine insurance matters
10.4 Under the Recast Regulation and the Lugano Convention, insurance contracts were carved out for special treatment, along with employment contracts and consumer contracts, and contained rules granting additional protection to employees, consumersPage 214
The basic principle: Jurisdiction as a function of service of the claim form
10.8 The following section contains a brief summary of the structure of the English rules. A full examination of this topic is outside the scope of this work, but it is nevertheless helpful to remind the reader of the basic framework, with an eye on specific questions that are likely to arise in the context of a marine insurance dispute. 10.9 Jurisdiction as understood in the English sense is founded by service of process. The English court has jurisdiction where a claimant has served a claim form on a defendant in accordance with the English Rules of Civil Procedure (CPR). The question is, therefore, one of when and how a claimant may serve process on the defendant. 10.10 Where a defendant is physically located within the jurisdiction, even fleetingly, the CPR permits the service of the claim form, and if so served, the English court hasPage 215
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The effect of a jurisdiction agreement in favour of the English Court
10.24 Many marine insurance policies will contain a jurisdiction clause in favour of the English court, and the presence of such a clause will be very important indeed in identifying the proper forum. The consequences of such clauses therefore deserve separate treatment. 10.25 The CPR now provides that a claimant may serve a claim form out of the jurisdiction without the court's permission where each claim made against the defendant falls within a jurisdiction agreement in favour of the English court.22 10.26 A defendant served in reliance upon an English jurisdiction clause has two, independent means of jurisdictional counterattack. First, it can seek to set aside service on the basis that the claim is not in fact caught by a valid jurisdiction agreement at all. If the defendant is successful, service will be set aside, and the English court will rule that it does not have jurisdiction. 10.27 Second, the defendant can try to persuade the court (leaving aside cases to which the Hague Convention applies23) that there are countervailing considerations (often, but not always, questions of appropriate forum) powerful enough to outweigh the parties' contractual choice in choosing a particular forum, and therefore that the court should stay its proceedings. Such an argument is always likely to be difficult – judges are understandably reluctant to decline to give effect to the parties' contractual agreement as to jurisdiction – but English law's approach to the question of the appropriate forum recognises that party autonomy is not the only principle at play.Is the claim caught by a jurisdiction agreement?
10.28 The first route of attack will depend on an examination of the jurisdiction agreement relied upon, and whether it covers each of the claims brought.24 This is, of course, a question to be determined using familiar principles of contractual interpretation, but there is a body of jurisprudence that has developed in this particular context. There are three main questions that arise:- 1. Is the jurisdiction agreement valid?
- 2. Does the dispute in question fall within its scope, as a matter of interpretation?
- 3. Is the jurisdiction agreement exclusive or merely permissive?
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the construction of an arbitration clause should start from the assumption that the parties, as rational businessmen, are likely to have intended any dispute arising out of the relationship into which they have entered or purported to enter to be decided by the same tribunal.30