Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 969South Africa
East Asian Consortium, B. V. v MTN Group Limited and Others (2013/44462) [2022] ZAGPJHC 969; [2023] 1 All SA 632 (GJ); 2023 (3) SA 77 (GJ) (30 November 2022)
Headnotes
Summary:
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## East Asian Consortium, B. V. v MTN Group Limited and Others (2013/44462) [2022] ZAGPJHC 969; [2023] 1 All SA 632 (GJ); 2023 (3) SA 77 (GJ) (30 November 2022)
East Asian Consortium, B. V. v MTN Group Limited and Others (2013/44462) [2022] ZAGPJHC 969; [2023] 1 All SA 632 (GJ); 2023 (3) SA 77 (GJ) (30 November 2022)
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sino date 30 November 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NUMBER: 2013/44462
REPORTABLE:
YES
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED:
In
the application of:
EAST
ASIAN CONSORTIUM, B.V.
Plaintiff
versus
MTN
GROUP LIMITED
1
st
Defendant
MTN
INTERNATIONAL (MAURITIUS) LIMITED
2
nd
Defendant
MOBILE
TELEPHONE NETWORKSHOLDINGS (PTY) LTD
3
rd
Defendant
MTN
INTERNATIONAL (PTY) LTD
4
th
Defendant
NHLEKO,
PHUTUMA FREEDOM
5
th
Defendant
CHARNLEY,
IRENE
6
th
Defendant
Coram:
Wepener J
Date
of hearing
: 5
th
, 7
th
and 8
th
September 2022
Date
of Judgment:
30 November 2022
This
judgment is made an Order of Court by the Judge whose name is
reflected herein, duly stamped by the Registrar of the Court
and is
submitted electronically to the Parties/their legal representatives
by email. The judgment is further uploaded to the electronic
file of
this matter on Caselines by the Judge or his secretary. The date of
this Order is deemed to be 30 November 2022.
Summary
:
Choice
of laws:
or determination of the system of law governing the
cause of action – conduct alleged to have occurred in both Iran
and South
Africa leading to delict. The heart of the conduct taking
place in Iran. The test to apply is the
lex loci delicti
commissi
.
Jurisdiction:
Party bound by terms of an agreement to subject itself to a
particular court’s jurisdiction, may be obliged to litigate in
that court. Discretion to be exercised when parties agreed to a
particular jurisdiction.
International
law
: Act of State Doctrine and State Immunity applicable in
instances where conduct of sovereign government alleged to be
unlawful.
Court will decline to exercise jurisdiction in such
instances.
JUDGMENT
Wepener,
J:
[1]
The plaintiff (‘EAC’) has instituted action against the
defendants claiming damages
as a result of the defendants having
wrongfully interfered with EAC’s contractual rights,
alternatively, having unlawfully
competed with EAC for those rights.
It is common cause that EAC’s causes of action are found in
delict.
[2]
Pursuant to an application by the first, third and fourth
defendants,
[1]
the parties
agreed to separate out issues in terms of Rule 33(4)
[2]
for determination prior to the trial commencing. The issues so agreed
upon were made an order of court on 31 January 2022 as follows:
1.
‘The
following questions arising from the paragraphs of the pleadings
between the parties identified in the footnotes
[3]
to this order (and as amplified by the requests for particulars and
the replies thereto) will be decided without the leading of
any
evidence and in advance of the remaining issues in the action:
1.1
Does Iranian or South African law (or
any other legal system) determine whether the allegations made in
paragraphs 36 to 60 and
66 of the particulars of claim, both
individually and collectively, (read with the corresponding pleas of
the defendants thereto)
found a claim for damages as the plaintiff
contends?
1.2
Which system of law governs:
1.2.1
the tender process, including the tender
invitation and regulations
1.2.2
the Turkcell Consortium Agreement,
1.2.3
the interpretation of the Turkcell
Consortium Agreement;
1.2.4
whether the Turkcell Consortium
Agreement was concluded for the benefit of the plaintiff;
1.2.5
whether the plaintiff accepted any such
benefit, and how it did so;
1.2.6
whether the conditions precedent to the
Turkcell Consortium Agreement were fulfilled or waived;
1.2.7
whether the plaintiff acquired any
rights under the Turkcell Consortium Agreement upon its
incorporation;
1.2.8
the effect of the incorporation of the
Irancell Telecommunications Services Company and the conclusion of
its shareholders’
agreement on the Turkcell Consortium
Agreement;
1.2.9
whether such incorporation and
shareholders’ agreement superseded the Turkcell Consortium
Agreement and any rights the plaintiff
acquired as a member thereof;
1.2.10
whether the plaintiff became a party to
the Turkcell Consortium Agreement and can base its claim in the
action thereon.
1.3
Does
South African or Iranian law (or any other legal system) determine
whether the GSM
[4]
licence
agreement, or the certificate read with the draft licence agreement,
as alleged in paragraphs 20, 29 and 30 of the Particulars
of Claim:
1.3.1
constituted
a valid and binding agreement between the Turkcell Consortium, or the
Turkcell Consortium acting on its own behalf and
for the benefit of
the Operating Company to be formed, and the MCIT
[5]
;
or
1.3.2
gave rise to
binding and enforceable rights in favour of the Turkcell Consortium,
alternatively the Turkcell consortium acting on
its own behalf and
for the benefit of the Operating Company to be formed; and
1.3.3
Does South
African or Iranian law (or any other legal system) determine the
terms of the valid and binding agreement, and the content
of the
binding and enforceable rights?
1.4
Which system
of law determines the impact of the Single Article Act and the
Irancell Act on the alleged agreement or binding and
enforceable
rights.
1.5
Which system of law
determines the validity of MTN’s Third Special Plea, (and,
correspondingly, the same choice of law issues
which arise in t
he
Fifth Defendants Fifth Special Plea (Res Judicata / Issue Estoppel)
and the Sixth Defendants Plea (Abuse of Process)).
1.6
Which system of law
determines the validity of MTN’s Fourth Special Plea
(
and,
correspondingly, the Sixth Defendants Plea marked "C"
(Abuse of Process)).
1.7
Which system of law
determines the validity of MTN’s Fifth Special Plea; (and,
correspondingly,
the Fifth
Defendant's Sixth Special Plea and the Sixth Defendant's Special Plea
marked "D"?
(Prescription)).
1.8
The Fifth Defendant's
First and Second Special Pleas (and, correspondingly, MTN's Second
Special Plea and the Sixth Defendant's
Special Pleas, marked as D(1)
& (2). (
"
The
jurisdiction point
" pertaining
to the Foreign
Act of
State Doctrine,
State Immunity
and the Exclusive Jurisdiction of the Iranian Courts
).
2
The choice of law issues in paragraphs 1
to 1.7 above which equally arise on the pleadings as they relate to
the Fifth Defendant's
and Sixth Defendant's case against the
Plaintiff; and the issues for separation in paragraph 1.8 above which
equally arise on the
pleadings as they relate to the MTN Defendants'
and Sixth Defendant's case against the Plaintiff, are included as
issues for separation.
3
Each of the First, Third and Fourth
Defendants (jointly) and the Fifth and Sixth Defendants shall have an
equal and independent
opportunity to participate in the hearing of
the separated issues.
4
In the event that the applicable law to
decide any one or more issue identified in paragraph 1 to 1.7 above
cannot be determined
without evidence, then the Court will make an
order to that effect.
5
In respect of the choice of law issues
identified in paragraph 1 to 1.7 above, the court’s direction
will accordingly be that
legal system A, B or C applies to the issues
arising in the each of the identified paragraphs in the pleadings, or
that the applicable
legal system cannot be determined without
evidence and the court declines to do so.
6.
The costs of this application are costs in the cause.’
Choice
of Laws
[3]
Prior to hearing these issues, the parties further agreed that the
following legal systems
apply to the issues of the order:
1.2.1 Iranian law;
1.2.2 Swiss law;
1.2.3 Swiss law;
1.2.4 Swiss law;
1.2.6 Swiss law;
1.2.8 Swiss law;
1.2.9 Swiss law;
1.3 Iranian law;
1.4 Iranian law;
1.5 South African law;
1.6 South African law;
and
1.7 South African law.
[4]
Save for the question of the law governing the delict, the three
issues contained in para
1.2.5, 1.2.7 and 1.2.10 that were not agreed
upon, are closely related. MTN submitted that the law of Switzerland
applies and EAC
submitted that the law of the Netherlands should
govern these three issues.
[5]
The only issues contained in the separation order that remain for
determination are:
‘
4.1
the choice of laws for the issues contained in paras 1.1, 1.2.5,
1.2.7 and 1.2.10; as well as
4.2 the
special pleas raised in para 1.8.’
[6]
The first issue revolves, in the main, around 1.1, ie, whether
Iranian or South African
law or any other legal system (although no
such was argued) should determine the allegations in paras 36 to 60
and paras 66 of
the particulars of claim read with the pleas and
further particulars, founding a claim in damages. In order to decide
this, the
contents of paras 36 to 60, and 66 require consideration.
In essence, the cause of action and the facts relied upon for it, are
set out in these paragraphs. There is no disagreement. between the
parties that the cause of action is one in delict. There is
also no
disagreement between the parties that the delict, which is alleged in
the alternative, is based on an unlawful interference
with
contractual rights or alternatively, unlawful competition by
inappropriate means.
[7]
The approach I take by virtue of the agreed court order, is similar
to a stated case: given
all the allegations contained in the
particulars of claim
[6]
to be
correct, what system of law should apply to the issues based on the
pleadings as they stand without reference to any evidence?
In the
circumstances, the submission on behalf of EAC, that the analysis for
determination of the choice of laws should go much
wider and include
evidence that is referred to, although not contained in the
pleadings, or defer the decision to hear what evidence
that might be
led at the trial, falls foul of the agreed separation order that the
issue will be decided without the leading of
any evidence and I shall
limit the consideration of the EAC argument by the exclusion of
references to that which falls outside
of the pleadings.
[8]
A further aspect relied upon by counsel for EAC is the submission
that, in the event of
a finding that a foreign law applies, it must
be determined if that law passes constitutional muster in this
country. However,
nothing has been pleaded to show that the Iranian
law of delict, or any other foreign law, if applicable, would be
repugnant to
our constitutional dispensation and I need say no more
about that argument.
[9]
Both parties relied on
Forsyth
[7]
and a decision of the High Court of the Eastern Cape,
Burchell,
[8]
for their respective submissions regarding the choice of laws to be
applied. They submitted that the
lex
loci delicti
commissi
(the law of the place where the delict was committed) is the starting
point to determine the issue.
[10]
The MTN parties relied on the following legal principles: In
Burchell
it was
held the the
lex
loci delicti
commissi
should
be applied by default. The test favoured by Forsyth is the
lex
loci delicti
commissi
but
with some flexibility.
[9]
MTN
supported the preferred approach of Forsyth and EAC submitted that
the
lex
loci delicti commissi
may be displaced by another legal system, which had a more
significant relationship with the matter, a test that was also
referred
to in
Burchell
.
[11]
The pleaded facts, and in particular, paras 36 to 60 and 66 to which
I was directed, are therefore
analysed to determine whether the
lex
loci delicti commissi
should
be applied or whether to dispose of it with another legal system (the
South African system) if the first answer would be
the Islamic
Republic of Iran (Iran). In my view the pleaded facts heavily favour
the place of the commission of the delict to be
Iran. The pleadings
under consideration refer to a breach of a joint venture-agreement
and a breach of the award of a tender and
although, not stated, was
clearly not something that occurred in South Africa. In particular,
the particulars of claim allege
[10]
that the defendants acted with the intention of inducing the Iranian
government and its agencies to exclude EAC from the consequences
or
benefits of the grant of the licence agreement, and that the
government should instead transfer the benefit to MTN. The pleading
states that the conduct of MTN was designed to persuade the Iranian
government to breach the Iranian government’s contractual
obligations to EAC. It is this very breach that forms the basis of
the delictual claim.
[12]
Also, the tender award occurred in Iran. It was regulated by Iranian
tender regulations. However,
the allegations of a breach of the joint
venture-agreement takes one back to the allegations regarding the
joint venture-agreement
in the previous paragraphs of the particulars
of claim. The reference to the place thereof is Iran.
[11]
[13]
The allegations are further that there was a breach of rights arising
from the ‘award of
the tender’ – which is common
cause, occurred in Iran. In addition, a breach of a licence agreement
which formed part
of the tender documents, occurred in Iran.
[14]
A demand to remedy the breaches was sent to the eight relevant
parties and copied to three others,
all in Iran. The stepping in of
MTN is alleged to have occurred without reference to place, but it
could only have been in Iran.
Further allegations of the conduct of
the breaching parties are referred to as the Iranian shareholders;
discussions were held
in Iran,
[12]
loan agreements were entered into in Tehran, Iran;
[13]
a shareholders agreement was entered into in Iran;
[14]
the tender was awarded in Iran and the licence was issued by the
Iranian government in Tehran.
[15]
The allegations regarding MTN’s conduct to replace EAC could
only have occurred in Iran. The alleged action that induced
the
Iranian government to take the new course, could only have occurred
in Tehran. It is alleged that representatives of MTN repeatedly
travelled to Iran to visit influential persons and the Iranian
government, and that other ‘advocacy efforts’ over a
period of a year occurred in Tehran. Other visits, also by the South
African Minister of Defence, were made to Iran which led to
meetings
and a memorandum of understanding being entered and issued in Iran. A
bribe was provided to a minister of state in Tehran,
Iran and free
gifts provided to him and his family in Tehran. It is alleged that a
payment was made to the South African ambassador
in Tehran for him to
influence the awarding of the licence. The pleading carries on to
matters that refer to the Iranian government
and to the actions of
the Iranian government and the wrongful interference into the
contractual relationship of the government
of Iran with EAC by MTN.
The agreement constitutes a number of documents, one of which is the
trade regulations. It provides in
art 29 that the regulations are
regulated by Iranian law. The rights acquired by the bidders were so
acquired under a process run
by the Iranian government in Iran under
Iranian law for an Iranian licence. The pleadings refer to
significant conduct in Iran.
[15]
The references to conduct within the Republic of South Africa are few
indeed. They refer to meetings
and gifts to foreign dignitaries.
Compared to the conduct in Iran, the few references to visits by
influential persons to South
Africa, and receiving gifts or bribes
virtually pale in significance, compared to the conduct relied upon
that occurred in Iran.
EAC relied on a few occurrences in South
Africa which it alleged, in argument, were the planning of the whole
conspiracy. In my
view, the breach occurred in Iran, and any possible
planning for the execution of the breach is ancillary. The conduct
complained
of, forming the basis of the delict, is conduct that
occurred in Iran. That is where the delict, as pleaded, was put into
effect.
Applying the
lex loci delicti
commissi,
the law
of Iran would apply to the conduct complained of.
[16]
This would be so if the preferred test of
Forsyth
is applied or even whether one approaches the matter on the basis of
a more significant relationship. I am of the view that the
test
proposed by Forsyth is preferable for the reasons offered by the
author.
[16]
Those are that in
most cases the
lex
loci delicti commissi
will be clear, certain and appropriate; the rule is in accord with
the reasonable expectations of most parties; the rule is in
accord
with Roman-Dutch authority; the rule has been adopted in both Canada
and Australia;
[17]
there have
been clear legislative moves in the United Kingdom and in Europe in
support of the rule. The acceptance of the rule
would
‘
ensure broad
uniformity with many other influential jurisdictions across the
world, including important trading partners. . . .’
[17]
This test would lead to a conclusion that the delict, as pleaded,
occurred in Iran, or as counsel
for EAC submitted, ‘the effect
of the delict may well have been felt in Iran. . . .’ In my
view, the loss suffered
by EAC was both caused and suffered in Iran
and that the
lex loci delicti commissi
leads one to the law of
Iran. In my view, even if the test of the country with a more
significant relationship with the delict
would be applied, the result
would be Iran.
Choice
of laws: three ancillary issues
[18]
Three ancillary issues remain. EAC submitted that the matters
referred to in the court order
in paras 1.2.5, 1.2.7 and 1.2.10 are
governed by the law of the Netherlands. MTN submitted that the Swiss
law must apply. If one
has regard to the wording of each of those
issues, in particular the wording of order 1.2.10, I am asked to
determine whether EAC
became a party to the Turkcell Consortium
Agreement and
can
base its claim in the action thereon.
(my underlining). It immediately becomes clear that the case, being a
delictual claim, is based on conduct that occurred in Iran,
and that
such a claim falls to be brought under the Iranian law. However, the
additional portion of the question refers one to
the Turkcell
Consortium Agreement.
[18]
All
three issues flow from the consortium agreement. That agreement
provides
[19]
that it shall be
governed by the laws of Switzerland.
[20]
If one has regard to the agreed legal system, which is the Swiss law,
it is difficult to see, although entirely possible, that
there is a
distinction between the orders as agreed and the three outstanding
matters. EAC submitted that the place where it was
incorporated, ie,
the Netherlands must be decisive. I do not know if the law of the
Netherlands covers the issue. I am not convinced
that the issues
should be determined by the law of the Netherlands because its law is
‘probably codified’ and deals
with company law. The
submission advanced by EAC was not based on the pleadings as per the
agreed court order.
[19]
I am not satisfied that there is sufficient matter before me,
contained in the pleadings, to
determine the last three issues in
relation to the choice of laws. However, it is a small part of the
issues that are to be determined
and it can conveniently be finalised
at trial proceedings.
[21]
[20]
MTN (as defined) has been successful in its separated issue save for
the minor ones that were
left for the court to determine at the
trial. It should be awarded its costs.
The
Special Pleas or Jurisdictional Issue
[21]
MTN pleaded the following three special pleas that are alleged to
deprive this court of jurisdiction.
They are:
21.1 Exclusive
Jurisdiction of the Iranian Courts
21.2 The Foreign
Act of State Doctrine
21.3 State immunity
[22]
[22]
EAC relied on the summary (as contained in
Amler’s
[23]
)
explaining how issues of jurisdiction are approached. The learned
author says:
‘
A court must have
jurisdiction for its judgment or order to be valid. If the court does
not have jurisdiction, its judgment or order
is a nullity. No
pronouncement to that effect is required.
Jurisdiction in this
context means “the power invested in a court by law to
adjudicate upon, determine and dispose of a matter.”
The time
for determining whether a court has jurisdiction is when proceedings
commence – that is, when the initiating papers
are served on
the defendant or respondent. Once jurisdiction is established, it
persists to the end of the proceedings even though
the ground may
have ceased to exist.
Communication Workers
Union v Telkom SA Ltd
[1999] 2 All SA 113
(T),
1999 (2) SA 586
(T)
Jurisdiction is
determined with reference to the allegations in the pleadings and not
by the substantive merits of the case. In
the event of the court’s
jurisdiction being challenged at the outset (
in limine
), the
plaintiff’s pleadings are the determining factor since they
contain the legal basis of the claim under which the plaintiff
has
chosen to invoke the court’s competence.
Gcaba v Minister for
Safety and Security
2010 (1) BCLR 35
(CC),
2010 (1) SA 238
(CC) para 75.
[24]
’
[23]
As far as the nullity
[25]
of
the judgment where jurisdiction is absent is concerned, the decision
of the Supreme Court of Appeal in
Travelex
Limited v Maloney and Another
sets
out the law
:
[26]
‘
I incline to the
view that if a judgment or order has been granted by a court that
lacks jurisdiction, such order or judgment is
a nullity and it is not
required to be set aside. However, I agree with the view expressed in
Erasmus Superior Court Practice
, that if the parties do not
agree as to the status of the impugned judgment or order, it should
be rescinded. That is the position
in the instant matter where the
appellant applied to have the order set aside on the premise that the
court did not have jurisdiction.
Therefore, the usual requirements
for a rescission application in terms of the common law or rule 42 do
not apply.’
[24]
This would be relevant to a plea that a court lacks jurisdiction and
where no discretion vests
in a court.
[25]
The reliance on the pleadings of EAC to determine a court’s
jurisdiction is thus settled
law.
[27]
MTN’s argument that a court has to look at the pleadings on
both sides in order to determine what the jurisdictional limits
are,
cannot be sustained, nor can this court have regard to EAC’s
argument regarding facts contained in a submission by MTN
to the
courts of the United States of America. It does not appear in the
particulars of claim and is extraneous evidence.
[26]
There are different ways in which a court’s jurisdiction can be
challenged. These include
that the plea can deny that a court has
jurisdiction due to a missing allegation in the particulars of claim,
or it may add reasons
why the court lacks jurisdiction. Based on
these reasons, a court then has to determine whether EAC’s
pleadings contain a
jurisdictional basis for the claim.
[28]
The pleas of MTN raised objections to this court’s jurisdiction
pertaining to three distinct legal arguments. The result
is, whilst
taking note of the content of the pleas, as without it there is no
challenge to the court’s jurisdiction, the
focal point of the
enquiry must be the particulars of claim, which particulars include
extensive annexures. Although EAC filed
a replication to the special
pleas in which it is alleged that the three jurisdictional issues
raised by MTN are bad in law as
they either do not form part of the
South African law or they do not apply in instances such as those
that EAC relies on in this
matter. The replication, in my view, does
not widen the enquiry but furnishes reasons why it confirms that this
court does have
jurisdiction to hear the matter. The enquiry remains
whether this court has jurisdiction and EAC’s pleadings are the
determining
factor.
[27]
For purposes of considering the special pleas I summarise the
allegations contained in the particulars
of claim, this time not to
determine where the delict occurred, but with emphasis on who the
persons are that were involved, in
particular the involvement of
Iranian government as a sovereign state.
[28]
The allegations commence with a tender process communicated by the
Iranian Government, who issued
an international tender invitation for
Iran’s first private licence for a global system for mobile
communications. It is
then alleged that
‘
In terms of the
tender regulations contract (article 1) the purpose of the tender was
the selection of an operating company that
would be granted the GSM
licence for the implementation and operation of a GSM-type cellular
phone system public network in Iran’,
and
that a winning bidder, a subsequent award of the tender ‘on
behalf of Iran’ and the establishment of a binding agreement
between EAC
[29]
and the
Iranian government
[30]
would
follow. The alternative claim
[31]
is based on rights of EAC against the Iranian government. These
rights included rights to negotiate with the Iranian government
with
the view of finalising a licence agreement and to enforce against it
the obligation not to accept an offer from another party
and to
enforce the rights and entitlements conferred upon EAC in terms of
the tender regulations.
[29]
The particulars of claim continue to state under a heading ‘The
events pursuant to the
award of the tender’ that the Iranian
government issued to EAC a certificate of selection as a provisional
licensee and there
was a provisional licence agreement signed. This
led to a final licence signed between EAC and the government of
Iran.
[32]
This is followed by
the allegation that there came into existence a binding agreement
[33]
between EAC and the Iranian government. The allegation continues
[34]
that the licence which was issued would not be transferred to a third
party without the Iranian government’s prior written
authorisation. At some stage the Iranian government enforced a change
to the relationship by passing the Irancell Act. It is the
party that
repudiated the relationship with the bidder or provisional licensee.
EAC then took steps to do what is required of it
in terms of the
agreement which it had with the Iranian government. The particulars
of claim allege a breach of the joint venture
agreement and a breach
of the award of the tender
[35]
by the Iranian government and that it concluded a written addendum to
the existing agreement. This written addendum displaced EAC
and
substituted MTN for it. This forms the basis of what follows and is
said to be the unlawful conduct that constituted the delict.
[30]
Once this occurred, EAC (in writing) demanded that the Iranian
government must remedy the breaches,
and despite the demand, it
persisted with the breaches. It is therefore clear that the Iranian
government is the party who caused
the breach upon which EAC relies.
The next significant allegation
[36]
is that the government of Iran issued a licence to Irancell in which
MTN obtained an interest. The replacement by MTN of EAC occurred
by
MTN acting with the intention of inducing the Iranian government to
prevent EAC from receiving the benefits of the licence.
The conduct
of MTN, as alleged, was directed at the Iranian government, in
consequence of which the Iranian government caused the
unlawful
breach. Fundamental to the cause of action is that the Iranian
government allowed and received another bid from MTN. The
particulars
of claim say:
[37]
‘
That the defendant
therefore had engaged in a second secret tender bidding process after
the tender had been awarded. The defendants
induced the Iranian
government to take such action by the steps set out below. . . .’
The
steps set out thereafter referred to bribery and corruption. Such a
second secret tender process must of necessity involve the
Iranian
government. It was the Iranian government that was bribed and
corrupted. All the conduct relied on is inextricably linked
to the
acts of the government of Iran. The particulars of claim
[38]
allege that the objective was designed to unlawfully prevent, by
bribery and corruption, the conclusion of finally binding contractual
obligations between the government of Iran and EAC. Thereafter
influential officials in the Iranian government were targeted with
the aim of exerting influence over these individuals in the Iranian
government to achieve the objective. The particulars of claim
state
that the intended effect of the actions was to induce the Iranian
government to breach its contractual obligations to EAC
and have it
replaced, and that the Iranian government was induced through bribery
and corruption to replace EAC.
[31]
The allegations are material to the cause of action. The unlawful
conduct is equally that of
all the actors, including the Iranian
government. It is my view, that the conduct of the Iranian government
is integral to the
case. If it did not act wrongfully, there could
never have been a delictual cause of action as all other acts were
acts of preparation
which could only lead to the final delictual
conduct, despite the conduct of MTN on its own alleged to have been
wrongful. The
finding regarding the unlawful actions of the Iranian
government, in my view, is sine quo non to establish a delict. Its
pivotal
role looms large and central in the claim. The trial court
will thus be called upon to adjudicate on the unlawful conduct of the
Iranian government, which conduct occurred within the territory of
the Iranian state. I conclude that the constituent elements
of
causation of the delict took place in Iran.
[32]
Approaching the particulars of claim holistically, the Iranian
government decided to reform its
telecommunications sector and adopt
new policy decisions with an increase in private participation
described as follows:
[39]
A
comprehensive reform of the overall telecommunications sector is
underway in Iran. This reform aims at:
Fostering competition;
Protecting consumer’s
interest;
Supervising tariffs and
quality of service;
Ensuring fair
competition;
Supporting the
development of the telecommunications sector;
The objectives of this
reform are:
Horizontal expansion: by
2004 the number of fixed lines is expected to double, the number of
mobile lines is expected to be increased
five fold and the number of
internet subscribers is expected to increase ten fold;
Vertical expansion: by
2004 quality of service is expected to increase substantially and new
services such as extended roaming,
pre-paid cards, SMS and advanced
services are expected to be introduced.
Increased private sector
participation in the telecommunications sector.
Key components of this
reform process are:
A revision of the
regulatory framework, including the creation of an independent
regulatory framework;
The restructuring of TCI,
the incumbent operator. TCI is expected to be transformed into a
holding company that will have different
subsidiaries for regional,
backbone, data, satellite and mobile services. While the backbone
subsidiary will remain 100% owned
by TCI holding, other subsidiaries
will be partially floated on the Teheran Stock Exchange.
Increased private sector
participation in the mobile telecommunications market. This process
started with a BOT tender process for
the provision of 2 million
mobile lines initiated by TCI. The award of a GSM licence is expected
to accelerate the trend of private
sector participation in this
industry.
Based
on these and other statements contained in the tender documents,
counsel for MTN argued that the tender transaction was a
centre piece
of the Iranian government’s reform of an economic sector, being
the introduction of a telecommunications network
for the country. A
new telecommunications operator would exist that would build, operate
and then transfer the network to Iran.
It was planning a regulation
of the market and not as a private player in it.
[40]
The environment in which the allocation and operation of the licence
were to operate, is one of public law in Iran in which the
Regulations, being subordinate legislation, play a pivotal role. The
argument has much force. The articles in my view, are inextricably
linked to the cause of action.
[33]
MTN argued that the determination of EAC’s claims will require
of this court to enquire
into and determine whether or not the
conduct of the government of Iran, within the borders of Iran and
under Iranian law, was
unlawful and that under the foreign state act
doctrine it is not permissible and appropriate for this court to
embark on and enquire
into and make a determination of the lawfulness
of the conduct of a foreign state that acted within the borders of
its own territory
and under its own domestic law. It is through this
prism that the particulars of claim should be scrutinized.
Exclusive
Jurisdiction of the Iranian Courts
[34]
The argument presented on behalf of MTN relied on article 29
[41]
of the Iranian tender document, in terms of which the parties,
including EAC, were bound as follows:
‘
Applicable laws
and Competent jurisdiction’
These regulations and the
call for competitive bids to which they relate, are regulated by
Iranian law, notably as regards their
validity, interpretation,
performance and termination.
Any dispute or litigation
relative to these present Regulations, or to the call for competitive
bids to which they relate, will
be submitted to the competent Iranian
courts.’
[35]
MTN contended that the reference to ‘any dispute relative to
these present regulations
or the call for competitive bids to which
they relate . . .’ is wide and encompasses the present
litigation and that the
words ‘relative to the present
regulations’ do not include any limitation.
[42]
EAC submitted that the present action falls outside of the
regulations as the regulations provided for the competition phase
only.
[36]
Although the tender document provides for two distinct trajectories
for the award of the tender,
it was not in dispute that in this
matter the bidder or EAC was a consortium to which a specific
trajectory applied. That trajectory
allowed for the successful
bidding consortium an opportunity to create an operating company
which would be the recipient of the
licence. This provision, and the
provisions in general, show that the article 29 provision remained
operative beyond the allocation
of the tender to a bidder as part of
an extended process involving a provisional licence. It is EAC’s
case that the cause
of action is grounded in MTN’s conduct and
not that of the government of Iran. Although this may be so, the
summary of facts
shows that the conduct of the government of Iran
looms large in the matter and findings of untoward conduct by it will
have to
be made to sustain the delictual claim. The thrust of MTN’s
argument was that EAC, as a bidder, is bound by the provisions
of art
29 and is thus forced to make its claim in the courts of Iran. This
is so due to the fact that the regulations remain binding
also beyond
the time of the allocation of the bid. This is no doubt so as counsel
for MTN demonstrated, one cannot compartmentalise
the bid and its
consequences. Much was still to happen subsequent to the award of the
tender, resulting from the provisions of
the tender, including art
29, which had a reach and application far beyond the acceptance of
the bid. It is the acceptance by EAC
of the terms of art 29 that
binds it to the terms, also beyond the award of the bid.
[43]
EAC’s contrary argument cannot be sustained and is in conflict
with its pleaded case.
[37]
In
Johannesburg
City Council v
Victteren
Towers
[44]
it was held:
‘
. . . the
respondent, pointed to the very wide ambit of the phrase "any
matter relating to"; the Afrikaans being, "enige
aangeleentheid met betrekking tot". (See
Springs Town Council
v Soonah
,
1963 (1) SA 659
(AD)). It is, in fact, so wide, this
phrase, that it must logically be regarded as vague and without a
purely logical limitation.
Rather, in my view, one should look at the
context and other circumstances to try and determine the lawgiver's
intention, for it
is obvious that the legislature must have
contemplated an ultimate limit to the scope of the phrase.’
Read
with the opening word ‘any’, I am of the view that the
claim that EAC seeks to enforce is indeed relative to the
Regulations
upon which it is found, there being a number of actions or further
conduct required after the award of the licence,
all regulated by the
Regulations.
[38]
In
The
Eleftheria
[45]
Brandon J said:
[46]
‘
1. Where
plaintiffs sue in England in breach of an agreement to refer disputes
to a foreign court, and the defendants apply for
a stay, the English
Court, assuming the claim to be otherwise within its jurisdiction, is
not bound to grant a stay but has a discretion
whether to do so or
not.
2. The discretion should
be exercised by granting a stay unless strong cause for not doing so
is shown.
3. The burden of proving
such strong cause is on the plaintiffs.’,
or as Slomowitz AJ said:
[47]
‘
As I see it then,
the sanctity of contract lies heavy on the scale beam, and much must
be placed on the other end of that beam to
tip the scale against a
stay.’
[39]
In
Metallurgical
& Commercial Consultants(Pty) Ltd v Metal Sales Co (Pty) Ltd
,
[48]
Colman J said the
following:
‘
Such an onus is
not easily discharged. There are certain advantages, such as
finality, which a claimant in an arbitration enjoys
over one who has
to pursue his rights in the Courts; and one who has contracted to
allow his opponent those advantages will not
readily be absolved from
his undertaking . . . the discretion of the Court to refuse
arbitration under a submission was to be exercised
judicially, and
only when a "very strong case" for its exercise had been
made out . . . .’
Being
bound by the terms of art 29, EAC is enjoined to submit its dispute
to the competent Iranian courts, unless it can show that
a court
should exercise its discretion otherwise. EAC has not put up facts in
support
[49]
of such an
exercise of a discretion.
[40]
What happens to the matter if the special plea has merit?
Foize
Africa (Pty) Ltd v Foize Beheer BV and Others
[50]
held that a court should then exercise a discretion whether or not to
enforce the foreign jurisdiction clause. This discretion,
in my view,
is akin to the discretion to be exercised in arbitration clauses
which require compelling reasons to permit a party
to avoid its
contractual obligations.
[51]
It is not possible to evaluate each consideration referred to in
Foize
as some of them cannot be determined on the pleadings but, as Leach
JA said:
[52]
‘
These are some of
the relevant factors which spring readily to mind. The list is
certainly not intended to be exhaustive. Of course
the discretion to
be exercised is fact-specific in the sense that each case must be
considered in the light of its own discrete
facts, with the various
relevant factors being afforded whatever weight in the scales is
appropriate in the circumstances. Certainly
no hard-and-fast rules
can be prescribed.’
[41]
I am of the view that the discretion should be exercised in favour of
a stay for the reasons
[53]
that follow:
a)
The allegations, save for the preparatory actions, are situated in
Iran.
b)
Much of the documentation attached to the particulars of claim is
illegible and
the original documents must surely be available there.
c)
The law of Iran is to be applied to art 29 and any relevant matter
and an Iranian
court would not require expert testimony on Iranian
law.
d)
Although the defendants are South African, the plaintiff is not and
did business
in Iran.
e)
Save for argument, there is nothing to suggest that the defendants
did not genuinely
desire the trial to be conducted in Iran.
f)
There is nothing before me to indicate any prejudice to the plaintiff
should
it pursue the matter in Iran.
g)
There is nothing before me to justify a case why the plaintiff should
not be
bound by the terms of art 29.
h)
A multiplicity of actions was not foreseen by any party.
i)
It appears that the claim can be decided within a single action
before
the Iranian courts.
j)
EAC alleged:
’
65.
In the alternative to previous paragraph, the conduct of the
defendants pleaded above is wrongful
and unlawful in terms of Iranian
law and entitles the plaintiffs to claim damages under Iranian law,
calculated in the manner set
out below
66.
The plaintiffs rely on their assertions concerning the unlawfulness
of the defendants’
conduct and the manner of calculation of
damages, in the alternative to their reliance on South African law,
on the following provisions
of Iranian law’.Then follows a set
out articles of Iranian law and attached to the particulars of claim
are: The Irancell
Act, articles of Iranian Civil Code, art 1 of the
Civil Responsibility Code of Iran, articles of the law promoting the
Health of
Administrative System and Countering Corruption in Iran,
articles of the Act on Aggravated Penalties for Offender of Bribery,
Embezzlement
and Fraud, articles of the Law on Punishment of
Disrupters in the Economic System of the State, articles of the
Islamic Criminal
Code, articles of the Law on Punishment of Exerting
Undue Influence, an article on the Law on Punishment of Collusion in
Government
Transactions, an article of the Governmental Transactions
Regulations, articles of the Law on Prohibition of Intervention by
Ministers,
Members of Parliament and Government Personnel in
Government and Civil Transactions, an article of the Transfer of
Property of
Others Punishment Act and an article of the Registration
of Deeds and Real Properties Act. This leaves one in no doubt that
Iranian
law will play a central and important role in the matter.
k)
Several of the documents attached to the particulars of claim are in
the Iranian
vernacular, or so it appears.
l)
A weighty factor is the central involvement of the Iranian
Government.
m)
The special
plea was raised before the trial or any evidence being led.
[54]
[41]
As against this, some the factors relied upon by EAC are not factors
that are ascertainable from
the pleadings. The second is based on the
preparatory actions that occurred in South Africa. Against this is
the overwhelming conduct
in Iran. The third factor, ie that MTN is an
incola of South Africa, is at best, neutral. The fourth factor
correctly refers to
art 29 but concludes that MTN’s plea is a
device. There is no basis for this conclusion.
[42]
In the circumstances, there is no cognisable balance of convenience
favouring a retention of
the matter in a South African court.
‘
There is surely
nothing illegal or improper in allowing persons who are
sui
juris
to agree upon a reference to arbitration as a mode of settling their
disputes, and if such an agreement is not illegal it surely
ought to
be enforced, if it is in the power of the Court to enforce it.’
[55]
[43]
A further question that arises is whether ‘strangers’
[56]
can rely on the provisions of art 29 as they did not commit
themselves to the provisions of art 29. Counsel for MTN submitted
that the rights which EAC asserts are not self-standing but are
hemmed in by the obligations which were undertaken to obtain the
right which is not exigible except in terms of the provisions that
hedged it in. If a right arises under the tender law one may
only
exercise the right, in this case, in the Iranian court. On the basis
that art 29 finds application, I shall follow the line
of English
cases which held that if a party wishes to enjoy the benefit of a
derived right it is also to comply with the associated
obligation to
pursue the right, only in the agreed contractual forum.
[57]
In this regard Justice Foxton said:
’
15. In
many cases, the ASI
[58]
respondent seeks to assert in the non-contractual forum a right
derived from a contracting party (e.g., by virtue of direct action
statute of the kind which commonly allows the victims of torts or
those standing in their stead to proceed directly against the
providers of liability insurance to the wrongdoer or by pursuant to a
right of subrogation). The granting of ASI relief in these
circumstances has been rationalised on a “benefit of burden”
basis: the ASI respondent cannot enjoy the benefit of
the derived
right without complying with the associated obligation to pursue the
right only in the contractual forum. For example,
in
Through
Transport Mutual Insurance Association (Eurasia) Limited v New India
Assurance Association Company Limited
[2003] EWHC 3158
, [39] Moore-Bick J stated:
“
There is a strong
presumption that in commercial contracts of this kind parties should
be free to make their own bargains and having
done so should be held
to them. By parity of reasoning those who by agreement or operation
of law become entitled to enforce the
bargain should equally be bound
by all the terms of the contract.”
The same point is
sometimes explained on the basis that the obligation to arbitrate (or
to litigate in a particular jurisdiction)
is a legal incident of the
right asserted:
Schiffahrtsgesellschaft Detlev von Appen v Voest
Alpine Intertrading (The Jay Bola)
[1997] Lloyds’s Rep 279
and
Through Transport Mutual Insurance Association (Eurasia) Ltd v
New India Assurance Co (No 2)
[2005] EWHC 455
(Comm), [24]-[25].
16. In
this “derived rights” context, it is now clear (at least
to the Court of Appeal level) that
an application for ASI relief will
be approached by reference to the same decision-making framework as
that which applies in a
wholly contractual context. In
The Yusuf
Cepnioglu
, [32]-[35], Longmore LJ held that the
Angelic Grace
framework applied, and there was no requirement to establish
vexatious or oppressive conduct, because the ASI was necessary to
protect a contractual right to have the substantive rights arising
under the contract in question determined in the contractual
forum.
Moore-Bick LJ (at [49]-[56] but in particular at [49] and [55]) held
that whether the ASI was sought against a party to
the arbitration
agreement, or against a non-party seeking to exercise a derivative
right, “the basis for the court’s
intervention is the
same in each case”, namely “enforcement by arbitration
alone is an incident of the obligation which
the claimant [in the
non-contractual forum] seeks to enforce and because the defendant [in
that forum] is therefore entitled to
have any claim against him
pursued in arbitration”. At [55], he explained that “there
is no distinction in principle
between the position of a claimant [in
the non-contractual forum] who is an original party to a contract
containing an arbitration
clause and one who is a remote party . . .
[T]he rationale of the decision is
The Angelic Grace
applies
equally to both cases”.’
and
at para 19:
‘
In any event,
there is a substantial body of first instance authority which holds
that a Non-Contractual Claimant can obtain an
ASI in both the
scenarios referred to in [16] and [17] above. By way of summary:
i) In
Sea Premium v Sea Consortium
(11 April 2011), David Steel J
held at pp. 22-23 that, because the claim asserted by the respondent
was contractual in nature, the
respondent was bound by the
arbitration clause in so far as it was seeking to assert a
contractual claim against the owner of a
vessel under time charter
(even though the owner was not a party to the time charter which the
respondent was seeking to enforce).
It is clear that David Steel J
accepted that the case before him was analogous to a conventional
derived rights ASI, and that he
did not regard the fact that the
owner was denying that it was a party to the contract in issue as a
distinguishing factor.
ii)
Jewel
Owner Ltd v Sagaan Developments Trading Ltd (the MD Gemini)
[2012] EWHC 2850
(Comm), a case in which a shipowner denied that it
was the contracting party under a bunker supply agreement but sought
an ASI
to prevent proceedings being pursued under that agreement
otherwise than in accordance with the English exclusive jurisdiction
clause it contained. At [15]. Popplewell J observed
obiter
that “generally it would be oppressive and vexatious for a
party asserting a contractual right in a foreign jurisdiction
under a
contract which contains an exclusive jurisdiction clause in favour of
England to seek to enforce the rights under that
contract without
giving effect to the jurisdiction clause which is part and parcel of
that contract notwithstanding that the party
being sued maintains
that it is not party to that contract”.
iii)
Dell
Emerging Markets (EMEA) v IBMaroc.com SA
[2017] EWHC 2397
(Comm),
Teare J followed these decisions stating (at [34]):
“
In those cases,
and in the present case . . . it would be inequitable or oppressive
and vexatious for a party to a contract, in
the present case IB
Maroc, to seek to enforce a contractual claim arising out of that
contract without respecting the jurisdiction
clause within that
contract. If the approach of Longmore LJ in The Yusuf Cepnioglu is
applicable to the present case the reason
is simply that IB Maroc,
when seeking to enforce a contractual right, is bound to accept that
its claim must be ‘handled
through the English courts’ as
required by the contract in question.”
iv) In
Clearlake
Shipping Pte Ltd x Xiang Da Marine Ltd
[2019] EWHC 1536
(Comm),
[37], Bryan J described an ASI in these circumstances as “protecting
the injunction claimant’s equitable rather
than legal right not
to be vexed by litigation in relation to a contract where the party
asserting the claim is not respecting
the dispute resolution clause”,
and held that
The Angelic Grace
framework applied.
[44]
This results in all the defendants being able to rely on the
principle that EAC is bound by the
terms of its contract with the
Iranian Government as set out in art 29, that is that the matter
against both the direct and removed
defendants should be determined
by the Iranian courts.
The
Foreign Act of State Doctrine
[45]
The foreign act of state doctrine and the state immunity plea overlap
to a large extent, despite
being distinct grounds upon which the
justiciability of a suit is to be determined.
‘
In essence, a
claim to state immunity if successful, has the effect that a domestic
court does not have jurisdiction to adjudicate
the matter before it,
whereas reliance upon the act of state doctrine concerns the
justiciability of the suit before the domestic
forum not-withstanding
its jurisdiction to adjudicate on the matter before it.’
[59]
[46]
The foreign act of state doctrine was first endorsed as part of South
African law in
Swissborough
Diamond Mines (Pty) Ltd and Others v Government of the Republic of
South Africa and Others
as follows:
[60]
‘
The basis of the
application of the act of State doctrine or that of judicial
restraint is just as applicable to South Africa as
it is to the USA
and England. The comity of nations is just as applicable to South
Africa as it is to other sovereign States. The
judicial branch of
government ought to be astute in not venturing into areas where it
would be in a judicial no-man’s land.
It would appear that in
an appropriate case, as an exercise of the Court’s inherent
jurisdiction to regulate its own procedure,
the Court could determine
to exercise judicial restraint and refuse to entertain a matter,
notwithstanding it having jurisdiction
to do so, in view of the
involvement of foreign states therein.’
[47]
This was approved by the Supreme Court of Appeal in
Van
Zyl v Government of the Republic of South Africa and Others
[61]
where Harms JA, citing
Swissborough
and the
House
of Lords
decision in
Kuwait
Airways Corporation v Iraqi Airways Company
,
[62]
stated that:
‘
[c]ourts should
act with restraint when dealing with allegations of unlawful conduct
ascribed to sovereign states.’
[48]
Underhill
v Hernandez
[63]
summarised the principle as follows:
‘
Every sovereign
state is bound to respect the independence of every other sovereign
state, and the courts of one country will not
sit in judgment on the
acts of the government of another, done within its own territory.
Redress of grievances by reason of such
acts must be obtained through
the means open to be availed of by sovereign powers as between
themselves.’
[49]
In
Belhaj
and Another v Straw and Others
[64]
Lord Neuberger said this:
‘
In summary terms,
the Doctrine amounts to this, that the courts of the United Kingdom
will not readily adjudicate upon the lawfulness
or validity of
sovereign acts of foreign states, and it applies to claims which,
while not made against the foreign state concerned,
involve an
allegation that a foreign state has acted unlawfully. In so far as it
is relied on in these proceedings, the Doctrine
is purely one of
domestic common law, and it has all the advantages and disadvantages
of a principle that has been developed on
a case by case basis by
judges over the centuries.’
[50]
The doctrine has subsequently been accepted as being part of South
African law in two Full Court
decisions:
The
Cherry Blossom
;
[65]
and more recently in
Obiang
v Janse van Rensburg and Another
.
[66]
In
The
Cherry Blossom
:
Phosphate mined in Western Sahara was on board the NM Cherry Blossom,
a ship which had docked in Port Elizabeth to refuel en route
to New
Zealand. The phosphate had been mined by a Moroccan mining company,
pursuant to Moroccan law and a mining licence granted
by Morocco. The
applicants were the Saharawi Arab Democratic Republic (SADR)— a
state recognised by South Africa but regarded
by the United Nations
as the non-self-governing territory of Western Sahara—and the
Polisario Front, a national liberation
movement. They applied
ex
parte
and were granted an urgent interim interdict restraining the cargo of
phosphate from being removed from the jurisdiction of the
court,
pending a return date. Their claim was based on the ownership of the
phosphate, as a natural resource extracted from Western
Sahara, being
vested in the people of Western Sahara. On the return date, two
Moroccan mining companies, OCP and its subsidiary
Phosboucraa
(together ‘OCP’), opposed the confirmation of the rule
nisi
.
OCP’s
mining rights in the Western Sahara were granted by Morocco, which
claimed that Western Sahara formed part of its territory.
OCP raised
two principal legal defences to the applicants’ claims: that
the application indirectly impleaded Morocco and
the Court was barred
from hearing the case as a result of Morocco’s state immunity;
that the issues in the application were
non-justiciable before any
South African court in terms of the act of state doctrine.
[51]
In considering the foreign act of state defence, the Full Court found
that it was premature to
consider whether the doctrine would preclude
the applicants’ claim to the phosphate. This was so, the court
reasoned, because
courts that are dealing with interlocutory
proceedings where the issues are of particular complexity should only
decide such issues
as are strictly necessary to be determined at an
interlocutory stage. The court found that it was only once the issues
had been
fully and precisely pleaded at the trial stage that it would
be appropriate to consider whether the claim made it necessary for
the court to determine the lawfulness of a foreign act of state.
[67]
[52]
In the course of considering the doctrine, it was not suggested that
because Morocco was not
a party to the proceedings, the respect for
equality of sovereign states and the principle of comity would not
apply. Similarly,
it was not suggested that OCP (a corporate body)
had no locus standi to assert that the matter was not justiciable in
a South African
court.
[53]
The application of the doctrine cannot be avoided by not joining the
relevant state. Similarly,
it cannot be avoided because another
party, not being the relevant state, raises the defence. Such an
approach is contrary to authority
and would render nugatory the
principles underlying the doctrine.
[54]
In
Obiang
[68]
the
Full Bench of the Western Cape relied on
The
Cherry Blossom
and followed the decisions in
The
Cherry Blossom
and
Kuwait
Airways
[69]
‘
[70] In the
result, I am of the view that it would be prudent for this court to
follow the route proposed by the Full Bench in
The Cherry Blossom
and decline to finally determine this dispute through the application
of the act of state doctrine at this stage, given that proceedings
for attachment are essentially interlocutory in nature. Rather, the
parties should be given adequate opportunity to properly articulate
the defence and any response thereto in the pleadings to be filed in
the proposed action whereafter the trial court, having heard
all the
evidence and argument, will be best placed to adjudicate thereon.’
[55]
This action has been fully pleaded and this court is bound to
consider whether the doctrine would
prevent it from adjudicating the
matter
.
On the
authority of
Gallo
Africa
[70]
,
this
jurisdictional challenge entails no more than a factual enquiry, with
reference to the particulars of claim to establish the
nature of the
right that is being asserted in support of the claim.
[56]
The history, nature and modern status of the foreign act of state
doctrine was traversed in the
UK Supreme Court case of
Belhaj
v Straw
.
[71]
There has since
Belhaj
been another Supreme Court decision of the United Kingdom, namely
Deutsche
Bank AG London Branch v Receivers Appointed by the Court
; Central
Bank of Venezuela v Governor and Company of the Bank of England and
Others.
[72]
[57]
In
Belhaj
the claimants sought to bring claims in tort against
the United Kingdom government and certain officials for alleged
complicity
in their rendition and mistreatment at the hands of
foreign states. These foreign states (Libya, Malaysia, the USA and
Thailand)
were not parties to the action. The defendants raised the
act of state defence. They included natural persons i.e. Mr Jack
Straw,
Sir Mark Allen, who were the first and second appellants.
There was no suggestion that because the foreign states were not
parties
and the appellants included natural persons, that the
doctrine was inapplicable.
[58]
In
Venezuela
, the dispute was who had the power to appoint the
board of directors of the Central Bank of Venezuela. Both Mr Guaidó
and
Mr Maduro claimed to have that power as President of Venezuela.
As the UK Government recognised Mr Guaidó as the President
of
Venezuela, his appointments were recognised and not those of the
former president, Mr Maduro. This meant that the Guaidó
Board
could control gold located in the UK - which was held by the Bank of
England and by court-appointed receivers.
[59]
In
Belhaj
,
Lord Neuberger, who spoke for the majority, sought to summarise the
doctrine under four rules. These rules are a distillation
from a long
line of English jurisprudence and pertain to different types of
foreign acts of state. Only the first and second rules
are of
application in this matter
.
[73]
[60]
In both
Belhaj
[74]
and
Venezuela
[75]
,
the first rule was confirmed as follows:
‘
The first rule is
that the courts of this country will recognise, and will not
question, the effects of a foreign state’s
legislation or other
laws in relation to any acts which take place or take effect within
the territory of that state.’
[61]
The first rule applies where acts under legislation or laws of the
foreign state ‘take
place or effect’ in that foreign
state. A court will not sit in judgment of the legislature of another
state or acts undertaken
thereunder, provided those acts are carried
out in that state.
[62]
The rule is more than just about the non-justiciability of the laws
of the foreign state. It
is also about the conduct undertaken under
those laws in that foreign state. The reason being that the foreign
state is sovereign
within its territory the laws of its legislature
are accordingly unimpeachable in the courts of other countries.
[63]
In
Belhaj
the second rule was described as set out below:
[76]
‘
The second rule is
that the courts of this country will recognise, and will not
question, the effects of an act of a foreign state
executive in
relation to any acts which take place or take effect within the
territory of that state.’
[64]
In
Venezuela,
Lord
Lloyd-Jones, speaking for the unanimous court, described Lord
Sumption’s judgment in
Belhaj
on the
issue with apparent approval
[77]
,
analysed
the authorities, and came to the following conclusions:
‘
It appears
therefore that a substantial body of authority, not all of which is
obiter, lends powerful support for the existence
of a rule that
courts in this jurisdiction will not adjudicate or sit in judgment on
the lawfulness or validity under its own law
of an executive act of a
foreign state, performed within the territory of that state. The rule
also has a sound basis in principle.
It is founded on the respect due
to the sovereignty and independence of foreign states and is intended
to promote comity in inter-state
relations. While the same rationale
underpins state immunity, the rule is distinct from state immunity
and is not required by international
law. It is not founded on the
personal immunity of a party directly or indirectly impleaded but
upon the subject matter of the
proceedings. The rule does not turn on
a conventional application of choice of law rules in private
international law nor does
it depend on the lawfulness of the conduct
under the law of the state in question. On the contrary it is an
exclusionary rule,
limiting the power of courts to decide certain
issues as to the legality or validity of the conduct of foreign
states within their
proper jurisdiction. It operates not by reference
to law but by reference to the sovereign character of the conduct
which forms
the subject matter of the proceedings. In the words of
Lord Cottenham, it applies "whether it be according to law or
not according
to law". I can, therefore, see no good reason to
distinguish in this regard between legislative acts, in respect of
which
such a rule is clearly established (see paras 171-179 below),
and executive acts. The fact that executive acts may lack any legal
basis does not prevent the application of the rule. In my view, we
should now acknowledge the existence of such a rule.’
[65]
In
Venezuela
,
the Supreme Court considered an argument that if rule 2 existed, it
was limited to cases of executive acts affecting property,
and
therefore had no application to conduct such as the making of
appointments to the Bank’s board.
[78]
This argument was rejected. Reliance was placed on
Dobree
v Napier
and
Duke
of Brunswick
– which involved appointments over property. It was held that
there was no principled reason to distinguish between direct
appointments of that kind and appointments over a legal entity which
owned or controlled property.
[79]
Also, in
Venezuela
,
Lord Lloyd-Jones JSC held:
[80]
‘
139 I am,
nevertheless, not persuaded that we should accept that Rule 2 can
have no application to conduct such as the exercise
of a power of
appointment in issue here. First, there is no support in the
pre-
Belhaj v Straw
case law in the United Kingdom for limiting
the operation of Rule 2 in this way to cases of expropriation of
property and it is
inconsistent with the much broader statements of
principle in cases such as
Duke of Brunswick
and
Princess
Paley Olga
. Moreover,
Hatch v Baez
(1876) 7 Hun 596
and
Underhill v Hernandez
, early examples of the application of
the act of state doctrine in the United States were cases concerning
imprisonment and personal
torts.
140 Secondly,
there is no identifiable reason of principle why the rule should be
limited to seizures of property. As
Lord Sumption JSC observed in
Belhaj v Straw
[2017] AC 964
, para 231, there is no rational
reason to distinguish in this regard between seizures of property and
injury to other interests
equally protected by the municipal law of
the place where they occurred (see also the observations of Teare J
in present proceedings
at para 69).
141 Thirdly,
while there is undoubtedly a “serious practical argument”
identified by Lord Neuberger PSC
(paras 142, 160) in favour of the
application of Rule 2 to unlawful executive acts in so far as they
relate to interference with
property and property rights, referred to
at para 119 above, it may be thought that corresponding practical
advantages may arise
from the application of Rule 2 to the exercise
of a power of appointment to the board of a public body functioning
within the territory
of the foreign state.
142 Fourthly,
the specific question of the application of Rule 2 to the exercise of
a power of appointment by the executive
did not arise for
consideration in
Belhaj v Straw.
The Guaidó Board is,
however, able to point to other decisions in this field which touch
on the point. In
Dobree v Napier
[1836] EngR 690
;
(1836) 2 Bing NC 781
Sir
Charles Napier, a British subject, had been appointed an admiral in
the navy of Queen Donna Maria of Portugal. In that capacity
he
captured a British steamship, “Lord of Isles”, while it
was trying to run a blockade of the Portuguese coast. The
ship was
forfeited as prize by a Portuguese prize court. On his return to
England Napier was sued for trespass in the Court of
King’s
Bench. Tindal CJ dismissed the action on the ground that the decree
of the prize court was conclusive. However, he
also rejected an
argument that Napier was prevented from relying on the authority of
the Queen of Portugal because he had entered
her service in breach of
the Foreign Enlistment Act. Tindal CJ held that that breach of
English law could not make the acts of
the Portuguese state
justiciable:
“
Again no one can
dispute the right of the Queen of Portugal, to appoint in her own
dominions, the defendant or any other person
she may think proper to
select, as her officer of servant, to seize a vessel which is
afterwards condemned as a prize . . .”
(At p 796.)
The decision on this
point was approved by Earl of Halsbury LC in
Carr v Fracis Times &
Co
[1902] AC 176
, 179-80 (see also
Belhaj v Straw
, para
204, per Lord Sumtion JSC).
143
Duke of Brunswick
(1848) 2 HL Cas 1
itself is a case
concerning the exercise of a power of appointment. Charles, the
deposed Duke of Brunswick, sought, inter alia,
to challenge the
validity of the appointment of a guardian over his property. As we
have seen, the House of Lords held that, notwithstanding
the
allegations that the instrument was contrary to the laws of Hanover
and Brunswick, “still if it is a sovereign act, then
whether it
be according to law or not according to law, we cannot inquire into
It” (p. 21 per Lord Cottenham LC).’
[66]
Although
Venezuela
dealt with an act of state, I can see no reason why the principle
should not apply to state immunity.
[81]
[67]
In regard to both the first and second rules, fundamental principles
of public policy or serious
violations of international law would be
a basis for not applying them.
[82]
However, in
Venezuela
,
the Supreme Court made it clear that the limitation was not such as
to neutralise the applicability of rule 2 merely because an
executive
or sovereign act may have extra-territorial effect:
‘
However, this
cannot provide a basis for an unprincipled extension of the
limitation simply on the ground that effects of the relevant
conduct,
whether intended or not, are felt extra-territorially. Sovereign acts
legitimately performed within the territory of a
state will not fall
outside the ambit of Lord Neuberger's Rule 2 simply because they may
have extra-territorial effect.’
[83]
[68]
The justification for the foreign act of state doctrine is best
described in the following dictum
by Lord Sumption in
Belhaj
:
‘
239 The foreign
act of state doctrine has commonly been described as a principle of
non-justiciability. The label is unavoidable,
but it is fundamentally
unhelpful because it is applied to a number of quite different
concepts which rest on different principles.
One, comparatively rare,
case in which an issue may be non-justiciable is that although it is
legally relevant, the courts are
incompetent to pronounce upon it or
disabled by some rule of law from doing so. Leaving aside cases in
which the issue is assigned
to the executive or the legislature under
our conception of the separation of powers, most cases of this kind
involve issues which
are not susceptible to the application of legal
standards. The most famous example is
Buttes Gas
, where Lord
Wilberforce declined to resolve the issue because there were no
‘judicial or manageable standards’ by which
to do so. The
court was therefore incompetent to adjudicate upon it at all. As this
court pointed out in
Shergill v Khaira
[2015] AC 359
at para
40, this was because the issue was political. But there is another
sense in which an issue may be non-justiciable, which
is also
illustrated by the facts of
Buttes Gas
. It may be
non-justiciable because the English court ought not to adjudicate
upon it even though it can, because it is not a matter
which can
properly be resolved by reference to the domestic law of the state.
Occidental’s contention in
Buttes
Gas
was that
the mixture of diplomacy and power politics by which the four states
involved had eventually resolved the border dispute
in a manner
unsatisfactory to them,
could be characterised as an unlawful
conspiracy for the purposes of domestic law. An unlawful conspiracy
is in itself justiciable.
It is a recognised cause of action in
English law. But an English court could not adjudicate upon it
because it was parasitic upon
a finding that the foreign states
involved had acted in breach of international law, being the only law
relevant to their acts
. This too can fairly be called a principle
of non-justiciability, because its effect is that it is not the
proper function of the
English courts to resolve the issue. But
Buttes Gas
has been widely misunderstood as suggesting that an
absence of judicial or manageable standards is the juridical basis of
the foreign
act of state doctrine in all cases where it is applied to
the transactions of sovereign states. It is not. The absence of
judicial
or manageable standards was simply the reason why the House
declined to review the particular facts alleged in that case.’
[own emphasis]
[69]
The oft-quoted
ratio
i.e
. that there are no manageable
judicial standards by which to judge the acts of a foreign state,
seems, as Lord Sumption said, not
to justify any of the rules on its
own. For example, if a foreign act of another state is illegal in
South Africa, then a South
African court has manageable judicial
standards by which to adjudicate that conduct. Nevertheless, the
rules as formulated by Lord
Neuberger would have the South African
court disclaim jurisdiction. But that is not because there are no
manageable legal standards
by which to judge the foreign acts of
states. After all, anti-bribery laws are rules of South African law
and provide for manageable
standards.
[70]
Lord Sumption’s opinion gives a coherent explanation of the
doctrine and it is apparent
that his reasoning has been unanimously
endorsed by the Supreme Court in
Venezuela
.
[84]
[71]
It follows that the real
ratio
is that even where judicial standards exist because the cause is
framed as one recognised under law, the courts will nevertheless
refuse to assume jurisdiction where it would be parasitic upon
another finding that the domestic court should not make. An alleged
unlawful conspiracy
[85]
should
not be adjudicated on in South Africa, as it is parasitic upon a
finding that the award of the tender in Iran involved a
breach of the
tender regulations, being the only law relevant to the award of the
tender.
[72]
It was not suggested that the facts of this matter do not relate to a
foreign state as defined.
[86]
The determination that is required is whether the doctrine only
applies where the foreign state is a party to the litigation or
whether this court’s jurisdiction is also ousted if the conduct
of the foreign state falls to be investigated and determined.
The
phrase that a foreign state is immune from the jurisdiction calls for
a determination of what ‘jurisdiction’ entails.
In his
discussion of foreign sovereigns,
Forsyth
[87]
says that at
‘
common law it was
clear that, in principle, foreign sovereigns and their property were
immune from suit in South African courts.’
[73]
At common law it was held that the principle applied so that a court
will not make such a sovereign
party to their legal proceedings,
whether the proceedings involve process against his person or seeks
to recover from him specific
property or damages.
‘
The
second is that they will not by their process, whether the sovereign
is a party to the proceedings or not, seize or detain property
which
is his, or of which he is in possession or control.’
[88]
[74]
In this matter, there are no proceedings against a foreign state, nor
any claim against its assets.
[89]
But, as MTN argued, the principle should be extended to a matter such
as this where the conduct of the foreign state falls to be
examined
and determined.
In
Dynasty Company
for Oil
and Gas Trading v Kurdistan Regional Government of Iraq and
Another
,
[90]
Justice Butcher said:
‘
105 The
issue of whether the relevant acts were done in the exercise of
sovereign authority arises at two stages of the analysis.
Given that
the KRG is a “separate entity” within section 14 of the
SIA, it will not have immunity unless the proceedings
“relate
to anything done by it in the exercise of sovereign authority”
(section 14(2)(a)). In addition it will not
be immune unless the
circumstances are such that a State would have been so immune
(section 14(2)(b)) which itself entails that
the exception in s 3 is
not applicable. As was recognised by Dynasty, however, in cases such
as the present in which only the commercial
exception within s 3
would potentially be applicable in relation to the immunity of a
state, the two tests under section 14(2)
and (b) can be conflated.
106 The
question of whether or not proceedings “relate to anything done
in the exercise of sovereign authority”
requires the court to
consider:
“
whether the acts
performed by [the separate entity] to which the proceedings relate
were performed in the exercise of sovereign
authority, which here
means acta juri imperii (in the sense in which that expression has
been adopted by English law from public
international law)”
(per Lord Goff in
Kuwait Airways Corporation v Iraqi Airways Co
[1995] 1 WLR 1147
at 1156 F/G).
107 The
question to be addressed in deciding whether an act is jure imperii
was formulated by Lord Wilberforce in
Playa Larga (Owners of Cargo
laden on board) v I Congreso del Partido
[1983] 1 AC 244
(at
common law), as follows:
“
When . . . a claim
is brought against a state . . . and state immunity is claimed, it is
necessary to consider what is the relevant
act which forms the basis
of the claim: is this, under the old terminology, an act ‘jure
gestionis’ or is it an act
‘jure imperii’: is it .
. . a ‘private act’ or is it a ‘sovereign or public
act’, a private
act meaning in this context an act of an act of
a private law character such as a private citizen might have entered
into?”
(at p 262E-G),
and:
“
The conclusion
which emerges is that in considering, under the ‘restrictive’
theory whether state immunity should be
granted or not, the court
must consider the whole context in which the claim against the state
is made, with a view to deciding
whether the relevant act(s) upon
which the claim is based, should, in that context, be considered as
fairly within an area of activity,
trading or commercial, or
otherwise of a private law character, in which the state has chosen
to engage, or whether the relevant
act(s) should be considered as
having been done outside that area, and within the sphere of
governmental or ‘sovereign activity’”
(at p267B-C).
108 In
Kuwait
Airways
Lord Goff, having quoted from Lord Wilberforce’s
speech in
I Congreso
said (at p 1160A):
“
It is apparent
from Lord Wilberforce’s statement of principle that the
ultimate test of what constitutes an act jure imperii
is whether the
act in question is of its own character a governmental act, as
opposed to an act which any private citizen can perform.”’,
and:
[91]
‘
Relatively few
cases have been decided in this jurisdiction relating to the
exploration of state-owned natural resources. The issue
was
considered, albeit briefly, and without a concluded view being
expressed, in
Svenska Petroleum Exploration AB v Government of the
Republic of Lithuania (No 2)
[2007] QB 886.
At para 133
Moore-Bick LJ said:
“
As the judge
pointed out, the agreement contains many of the hallmarks of a
commercial transaction, but the fact that it relates
to the
exploration of oil reserves within the territory of the state
suggests that it involved an exercise by the state of its
sovereign
authority in relation to its natural resources and so falls outside
the realm of activities which a private person might
enter into.”,
and:
[92]
‘
In
IAMAW v OPEC
477 F. Supp 553 (CC.D.CAL., 1979) it was said (at p 567-8) that:
“
The control over a
nation’s natural resources stems from the nature of sovereignty
. . . The defendant’s control over
their primary, if not sole,
revenue-producing resource, is crucial to the welfare of their
nations’ people.”
Similarly,
in
In re Sedco Inc
(1982) 543 F Supp 56I, it was said in the
context of conduct of Pemex, a Mexican state-owned oil company (at p
566) that
“
A very basic
attribute of sovereignty is the control over its mineral resources
and short of actually selling these resources on
the world market,
decisions and conduct concerning them are uniquely governmental in
nature.”
In
Jones
v Petty Ray Geophysical Geosource Inc
(1989) 722 F Supp 343 the
In
re Sedco Inc
approach
was followed, and it was held that a petroleum production sharing
agreement between Sudan and an energy company was not
a “commercial
activity”. More recently, in
RSM
Production Corpn v Fridman
(2009) 643 F Supp 2d 282
, it was found that the Deputy Prime Minister
of Granada, in denying the EAC’s application for a licence to
conduct oil and
gas exploration off the coast of Granada, had
“exercised a right that is ‘peculiar to sovereigns’”,
because
“ ‘licencing the exploration of natural resources
is a sovereign activity.”’
[93]
,
and:
[94]
‘
In my judgment,
the entry into by the KRG of the PSC’s were “sovereign
public acts” , or acts jure imperii, and
not “private
acts”. They concerned the exploration of the natural resources
of the KRI. There is no doubt that those
resources were publicly, and
not privately, owned, whatever the precise meaning which is given to
article 111 of the Constitution;
and only a government, acting on
behalf of the public, could enter into contracts such as these in
relation to the exploration
of such resources. They were entered into
pursuant to powers which, as I have found, were allocated to the KRG
under the Constitution,
and under the KROGL, which was enacted to
give effect to those powers. Moreover, the terms of those contracts
contain a number
of provisions which it is apparent that no private
person could make, including promises in relation to such matters as
compulsory
purchase, planning consents, customs, tax exemptions and
pipeline rights. . . .’
and:
[95]
‘
Dynasty contends,
however, that even of the entry into of the PSC’s was a
sovereign act, the same does not apply to decisions
to sanction, or
not sanction or consent to, a transfer of control of the contracting
entities. I do not consider that this is correct.
A decision as to
whether or not a new party should be permitted to become a
replacement party to a long-term contract for the exploration
of
natural resources which, as I have said, contains a series of
stipulations by the KRG which a private citizen could not make,
would
seem to me to partake of the same sovereign nature as the making of
the contract at the outset. Consent to whether there
can be a change
of control over a contracting entity is the functional equivalent to
consent to novation of the contract because
in relation to
arrangements of the present kind, the expertise, integrity and
financial position of those standing behind the contracting
entity
will be of great importance.’
[75]
The question therefore is whether the acts complained of were acts of
the sovereign authority
of the State of Iran in relation to its
national territorial infrastructure. I have already made this finding
in the summary of
facts. The concessions, rights and powers which
were to be accorded in the licence, could not have been done by a
private entity.
These include tax conversions, rights bestowed to
enter onto private property and provisions for the licence to provide
facilities
necessary to comply with the requirements of national
defence and public security and the prerogatives of the judiciary and
other
duly empowered Iranian authorities. All of these arrangements
are only imposable by the State.
[96]
The issue and awarding of the tender in my view, falls within the
ambit of the public law: the government officials exercised a
public
function in the public interest.
[97]
It formed part of the implementation of government policy.
[98]
This was also the approach of McLaren J in
Ramburan
[99]
who said:
[100]
‘
It is clear from
the evidence that the CDB was at all material times, in its dealings
with the applicant, implementing government
policy. These dealings
culminated in the allocation to the applicant of the shop and the
flat. The applicant had no choice in the
matter, except to refuse the
allocation to him of the shop. Furthermore, the applicant was simply
advised of the rental and the
other terms of the agreements. In my
view the evidence establishes that, at all material times, the
applicant had every reason
to believe that, if the CDB decided to
sell the shop and the flat, he would be afforded an opportunity to
buy them. Any sale of
an immovable property by the CDB could, in
terms of s 15(2)(b)(iii), only be effected for the purpose of
achieving the objects
of the CDB. In this sense such a sale would
amount to a step in the implementation of the government policy.
The Board was established
by s 2 of the Housing Development Act (House of Delegates) 4 of 1987.
Section 10 of Act 4 of 1987 sets
out the objects and general powers
of the Board. These are similar to the objects and general powers of
the CDB, but are exercised
in areas which are
'referred to in para 5(2)
of Schedule 1 of the Republic of South Africa Constitution Act 110 of
1983, which (have) been declared
for the use of population groups of
which members of the House of Delegates are members'.
By
virtue of Government Notice 657 dated 27 March 1987, the rights and
obligations of the CDB vested in the Board from 1 April 1987
and,
therefore, it became the lessor of the shop and the flat with effect
from 1 April 1987.
In
terms of s 10(1)(c) of Act 4 of 1987 the Board has the power to
assist natural persons to purchase or hire immovable property
in a
declared area.
For
the purpose of achieving its objects the Board has the power, in
terms of s 10(2)(a)(ii) of Act 4 of 1987, in respect of immovable
property in a declared area
'which belongs to or
vests in the Board, to sell, hypothecate or otherwise dispose of it .
. . and to let it to any person . . .
or to deal therewith in any
manner as the Board may deem fit'.
Section
10(2)(b)(v) of Act 4 of 1987 empowers the Board, for the purpose of
achieving its objects, and with the approval of the
first respondent,
'to sell or otherwise dispose of land which belongs to or vests in'
it. I will not attempt to reconcile these
two subsections of s 10(2).
Suffice it to say that the property belongs to the Board and that at
its meeting held on 7 June 1991
the Board resolved to sell the
property 'to the tenants at a fair market related price of R200 000'.
On 13 December 1991 the Board
resolved to sell the property to the
third respondent only.
It
is clear that the Board of the fifth respondent only has the power to
sell and let immovable property for the purpose of achieving
its
objects and that, at all relevant times, it was implementing
government policy.
In
my view, the decisions by the Board to sell the property constituted
steps in the implementation of government policy which,
at that time,
embraced the concept of 'privatisation', ie the disposal of assets
owned by the State.’
[76]
Belhaj
referred to
Noor
Khan
[101]
where Moses LJ said:
““
It is
necessary to explain why the courts would not even consider, let
alone resolve, the question of the legality of United States’
drone strikes. The principle was expressed by Fuller CJ in the United
States Supreme Court in Underhill v Hernandez
[1897] USSC 197
;
(1897) 168 US 250
, 252:
‘Every sovereign state is bound to respect the independence of
every other sovereign state, and the courts of one country
will not
sit in judgment on the acts of the government of another done within
its own territory. Redress of grievances by reason
of such acts must
be obtained through the means open to be availed of by sovereign
powers as between themselves’ (cited with
approval in Buttes
Gas and Oil Co v Hammer (No 3)
[1982] AC 888
, 933, and R v Jones
(Margaret)
[2006] UKHL 16
;
[2007] 1 AC 136
, 163).
The principle that the
courts will not sit in judgment on the sovereign acts of a foreign
state includes a prohibition against adjudication
on the legality,
validity or acceptability of such acts, either under domestic law or
international law:
Kuwait Airways Corpn v Iraqi Airways Co
(Nos 4 and 5)
[2002] UKHL 19
;
[2002] 2 AC 883
, 1080, para 24. The rationale for this
principle, is, in part, founded on the proposition that the attitude
and approach of one
country to the acts and conduct of another is a
matter of high policy, crucially connected to the conduct of the
relations between
the two sovereign powers. To examine and sit in
judgment on the conduct of another state would imperil relations
between the states:
Buttes Gas
case
[1982] AC 888
, 933.”’
[77]
Lord Sumption concluded:
[102]
‘
225.
The English decisions have rarely tried to articulate the
policy on
which the foreign act of state doctrine is based and have never done
so comprehensively. But it is I think possible to
discern two main
considerations underlying the doctrine. There is, first and foremost,
what is commonly called “comity”
but I would prefer to
call an awareness that the courts of the United Kingdom are an organ
of the United Kingdom. In the eyes of
other states, the United
Kingdom is a unitary body. International law, as Lord Hoffmann
observed in
R v Lyons
[2002] UKHL 44
;
[2003] 1 AC 976
at para 40, “does
not normally take account of the internal distribution of powers
within a state.” Like any other
organ of the United Kingdom,
the courts must respect the sovereignty and autonomy of other states.
This marks the adoption by the
common law of the same policy which
underlies the doctrine of state immunity. Secondly, the act of state
doctrine is influenced
by the constitutional separation of powers,
which assigns the conduct of foreign affairs to the executive. This
is why the court
does not conduct its own examination of the
sovereign status of a foreign state or government but treats the
Secretary of State’s
certificate as conclusive:
Government
of the Republic of Spain v SS “Arantzazu Mendi
”
[1939] AC 256
, 264 (Lord Atkin). It is why Lord Templeman graphically
described the submissions of the claimants in the Tin Council case as
involving
“a breach of the British constitution and an invasion
by the judiciary of the functions of the Government and of
Parliament”:
see p 476. To that extent the rationale of the
foreign act of state doctrine is similar to that of the corresponding
doctrine applicable
to acts of the Crown, as Elias LJ observed in
Al-Jedda v Secretary of State for Defence
[2011] QB 773
, paras
209-212.
226. When one turns to
the ambit of the doctrine, the first point to be made is that there
are many cases involving the sovereign
acts of states, whether
British or foreign, in which the action fails, not on account of any
immunity of the subject matter from
judicial scrutiny, but because
the acts in question are legally irrelevant. They give rise to no
rights as a matter of private
law and no reviewable questions of
public law. It is on this ground that the court will not entertain an
action to determine that
Her Majesty’s government is acting or
proposes to act in breach of international law in circumstances where
no private law
status, right or obligation depends on it:
R
(Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament) v Prime Minister
[2001] EWHC
1777
(Admin);
R (Al-Haq) v Secretary of State for Foreign and
Commonwealth Affairs
[2009] EWHC 1910
(Admin). Unlike Mr Khan,
who contended that his father had been killed as a result of breaches
of English domestic law, the claimants
had, as Cranston J put it in
the latter case, at para 60, no “domestic foothold”;
cf
Shergill v Khaira
[2015] AC 359
at para 43. By comparison Mr Khan
did have a domestic foothold. He had standing to apply for judicial
review, and he contended
that his father had been killed because of a
breach by British officials of English law, but the court declined to
treat the matter
as governed by ordinary principles of English law
because of its subject-matter. The same is true of the present cases.
They are
concerned with the effect of a foreign act of state in a
case where private law rights are engaged, because the claimants rely
on the acts of the relevant states as ordinary torts under the
municipal law of the countries in which they were committed. The
question that we have to decide on this appeal is whether they can do
so consistently with the law relating to foreign acts of
state.
227. As Lord Wilberforce
observed in
Buttes Gas
, at p 930F-G, the main difficulty in
identifying a principle underlying that law arises from the
“indiscriminate use of ‘act
of state’ to cover
situations which are quite distinct and different in law.” It
is always possible to break down the
cases into different factual
categories, and deconstruct the law into a fissiparous bundle of
distinct rules. But the process is
apt to make it look more arbitrary
and incoherent than it really is. I think that it is more productive
to distinguish between
the decisions according to the underlying
principle that the court is applying. The essential distinction which
Lord Wilberforce
was making in
Buttes Gas
was between (i)
“those cases which are concerned with the applicability of
foreign municipal legislation within its own territory
and with the
examinability of such legislation” (p 931A-B), and (ii) cases
concerning “the transactions of sovereign
states” (p
931G-H). This distinction is supported by the case-law extending over
more than three centuries which I have reviewed
above. It is possible
to extract two related principles from it. The first is concerned
with the application to a state of its
own municipal law, and the
second with the application of international law to that State’s
dealing with other states.
Municipal law act of
state
228. The first principle
can conveniently be called “municipal law act of state”.
It comprises the two varieties of
foreign act of state identified in
the judgment of Lord Mance at paras 11(iii)(a) and (b) of his
judgment, although he would limit
it to legislative or executive acts
against property. The principle is that the English courts will not
adjudicate on the lawfulness
or validity of a state’s sovereign
acts under its own law. Municipal courts, as Lord Sumner put it in
Johnstone v Pedlar
[1921] UKHL 1
;
[1921] 2 AC 262
, 290, “do not control
the acts of a foreign State done within its own territory, in the
execution of sovereign powers, so
as to criticise their legality or
to require their justification.” In
Yukos Capital Sarl v
OJSC Rosneft Oil Co
(No 2), supra, at para 110, Rix LJ formulated
the principle as involving a distinction
“
between referring
to acts of state (or proving them if their occurrence is disputed) as
an existential matter, and on the other
hand asking the court to
inquire into them for the purpose of adjudicating upon their legal
effectiveness, including for these
purposes their legal effectiveness
as recognised in the country of the forum. It is the difference
between citing a foreign statute
(an act of state) for what it says
(or even for what it is disputed as saying) on the one hand,
something which of course happens
all the time, and on the other hand
challenging the effectiveness of that statute on the ground, for
instance, that it was not
properly enacted, or had been procured by
corruption, or should not be recognised because it was unfair or
expropriatory or discriminatory.”
229. Municipal law act of
state is by definition confined to sovereign acts done within the
territory of the state concerned, since
as a general rule neither
public nor private international law recognises the application of a
state’s municipal law beyond
its own territory. It has commonly
been applied to legislative acts expropriating property: examples
include
Carr v Fracis Times
,
Luther v Sagor
and the
general principle which served as the starting point of the
House
of Lords in Kuwait Airways Corpn v Iraqi Airways Co
(Nos 4 and 5)
[2002] UKHL 19
;
[2002] 2 AC 883
(see paras 257-258 below). In these cases, title will
have passed under the lex situs and the expropriation will be
recognised
in England on ordinary choice of law grounds unless,
exceptionally, its recognition would be contrary to public policy. In
this
context, it is difficult to see that anything is added by
calling the expropriation an act of state. However, the fact that the
act of state doctrine and ordinary choice of law principles lead to
the same result in the case of the legislative expropriations
of
property, does not entitle one to press the analogy any further. In
particular, it cannot follow that municipal law act of state
is
limited to legislative acts expropriating property. Property is of
course special for some purposes. It is likely to be under
the
exclusive jurisdiction of the state where it is located. It is
marketable and may be tradeable internationally. It gives rise
to
policies favouring certainty of title. Considerations like these go
some way to explaining why the lex situs of property is
generally
regarded as the law with the closest connection to an issue about
title, and is for that reason designated as the proper
law. But it is
difficult to see that they have any bearing on the very different
problems with which the act of state doctrine
is concerned. The rules
governing the choice of law are concerned with the law to be applied
in determining an issue assumed to
be justiciable, while the act of
state doctrine in all its forms is concerned with the proper limits
of the English court’s
right to determine certain kinds of
issue at all.
230. Thus it is well
established that municipal law act of state applies not just to
legislative expropriations of property, but
to expropriations by
executive acts with no legal basis at all. Examples include
Duke
of Brunswick v King of Hanover
and
Princess Paley Olga v
Weisz,
and the United States decisions in
Hatch v Baez
,
Underhill v Hernandez
, and
Oetjen v Central Leather Co
.
These transactions are recognised in England not because they are
valid by the relevant foreign law, but because they are acts
of state
which an English court cannot question. Strictly speaking, on the
footing that the decree authorising the seizure of Princess
Paley
Olga’s palace did not extend to her chattels, the acts of the
revolutionary authorities in seizing them were Russian
law torts. But
once the revolutionary government was recognised by the United
Kingdom, it would have been contrary to principle
for an English
court to say so.’
[78]
The English law thus does not limit the sovereign state acts to
property and the conduct of the
Iranian government, in my view, would
be classified as a municipal act of state.
[79]
Finally, Lord Sumption said:
[103]
‘
240.
The act of state doctrine does not apply, in either form,
simply by
reason of the fact that the subject-matter may incidentally disclose
that a state has acted unlawfully. It applies only
where the
invalidity or unlawfulness of the state’s sovereign acts is
part of the very subject matter of the action in the
sense that the
issue cannot be resolved without determining it. . . .’
[80]
The doctrine applies equally to matters unrelated to property.
[104]
[81]
The implementation of government policy, places the entire
transaction within the public law
sphere. The fact that officials or
government departments acted on behalf of the government, does not
alter the matter. Schutz
JA said that the adjudication of a tender by
an organ of state constituted administrative action.
[105]
Cameron JA said:
[106]
‘
[10] The case is
thus not authority for the general proposition that a public
authority empowered by statute to contract may exercise
its
contractual rights without regard to public duties of fairness. On
the contrary: the case establishes the proposition that
a public
authority's invocation of a power of cancellation in a contract
concluded on equal terms with a major commercial undertaking,
without
any element of superiority or authority deriving from its public
position, does not amount to an exercise of public power.
[11] In the present case,
it is evident that the province itself dictated the tender
conditions, which McLaren J held constituted
a contract once the
tenderers had agreed to them. The province was thus undoubtedly, in
the words of Streicher JA in
Cape Metropolitan
, “acting
from a position of superiority or authority by virtue of its being a
public authority” in specifying those
terms. The province was
therefore burdened with its public duties of fairness in exercising
the powers it derived from the terms
of the contract.’
[82]
The superior position of the government of Iran can be seen at the
outset of the tender regulations
where it said in the introduction:
‘
It is hereby noted
that the Ministry reserves the right to modify or cancel this process
of competitive bidding at any time and
without prior notice, without
any right of compensation resulting to Applicants, Bidders or any
Shareholders of such Applicants
or Bidders. Further, the Government
and Ministry are under no obligation to provide explanations to any
Applicant as a result of
rejecting or accepting any particular
Qualification Application or Bid.’
[83]
The finding that the conduct complained of occurred in Iran, is
supported by the
Playa
Larga
case
[107]
where the question
was asked whether acts of state are limited to action taken by a
sovereign State within its own territory.
[108]
The answer furnished by Ackner LJ was as follows:
‘
We consider the
view he expressed he was right and finds support in the speech of
Lord Wilberforce in
Buttes Gas & Oil Co. v Hammer
[1981] 2
W.L.R. 787.
He accepts, at p. 806H that “Act of State” in
its normal meaning is action taken by a foreign sovereign state
within
its own territory and he cites
Duke of Brunswick v King of
Hanover
[1844] EngR 95
;
(1844) 6 Beav. 1
, where the acts in question were
performed within the territory of the sovereign concerned. He also
cites the American case of
Underhill v Hernandez,
(1893) 65
Fed. Rep. 577, and the much quoted words of Chief Justice Fuller at
p. 252, where he said:
Every sovereign State is
bound to respect the independence of every other sovereign State, and
the courts of one country will not
sit in judgment on the acts of the
government of another done within its own territory.
He also quoted with
approval a letter from the legal advisor to the department of state
to the United States Attorney-General which
was attached to an amicus
curiae brief filed by the United States in 1978 when the claim by
Occidental Petroleum Corporation went
to the 5
th
Circuit
Court of Appeal in 1978. This describes the Act of State doctrine as
–
. . . traditionally
limited to governmental actions within the territory of the
respective States.
The point did not have to
be decided in
Buttes
’ case, which had much of the
character of a boundary dispute between States. To attack the decree
of 1969/70 extending the
Arab Emirates of Sharjah’s territorial
waters upon the ground that the decree was extra-territorial, would
have been to beg
the question. Where, however, it is clear that the
acts relied on were carried out outside the sovereign’s own
territory
there seems no compelling reason for judicial restraint or
abstention. In this case, although the plan may have been made in
Cuba,
it was carried into effect outside. Accordingly the defence of
Act of State would not apply.’
[84]
I find that, based on the pleadings, a South African court is
required to inquire into the conduct,
and in this case unlawful
conduct, of the government of Iran. It is also the distinguishing
feature of the cases referred to above
and the
Kirkpatrick
and Co
Inc et al v Environmental Tectonics Corp, International
[109]
case on which EAC relied. When I say prohibited, it is meant in the
sense as set out by Joffe J in
Swissborough
as approved in
Cherry
Blossom
.
[110]
EAC argued that the allegations contained in the particulars of claim
which underlie the unlawful conduct of the Iranian government
are
‘not necessary’ allegations. I disagree. As long as the
allegations, as summarised earlier, form the basis of the
claim, they
are not to be wished away and the conduct of the Iranian government
is to be scrutinised and judged as they are legally
relevant to the
plaintiff’s cause of action.
[85]
In the circumstances, I am of the view that I should decline to
exercise jurisdiction in the
matter. The result is that the claim
falls to be dismissed.
[111]
State
Immunity
[85]
The scheme of the Immunities Act provides immunity to all foreign
states from the South African
court. Section 2 provides:
‘
(1) A foreign
state shall be immune from the jurisdiction of the courts of the
Republic except as provided in this Act or in any
proclamation issued
thereunder.
(2) A court shall give
effect to the immunity conferred by this section even though the
foreign state does not appear in the proceedings
in question.
(3) The provisions of
this Act shall not be construed as subjecting any foreign state to
the criminal jurisdiction of the courts
of the Republic.’
[86]
The principle is applied in South African law in circumstances as
follows:
[112]
‘
This immunity is
available when it is sought to implead a foreign state, whether
directly or indirectly, before domestic courts,
and also when action
is taken against state officials acting in their capacity as such.
They enjoy the same immunity as the state
they represent. This is
known as immunity ratione materiae (immunity attaching to official
acts). In addition, heads of state and
certain other high officials
of state enjoy immunity ratione personae (immunity by virtue of
status or an office held at any particular
time). This form of
immunity terminates when the individual demits or is removed from
office. The country concerned may waive either
form of immunity.’
[87]
In
East
Timor (Portugal v Australia)
[113]
it was held that:
‘
Whatever the
nature of the obligations invoked, the Court could not rule on the
lawfulness of the conduct of a State when its judgment
would imply an
evaluation of the lawfulness of the conduct of another State which is
not party to the case. Where this is so, the
Court cannot act, even
if the right in question is a right erga omnes.’
[88]
In the matter under consideration the acts relied upon were carried
out in Iran by the government
of Iran. The
East Timor
judgment
continues:
‘
Were the
arbitrators and/or Commercial Judge being asked to sit in judgment on
the acts of the Cuban government done its sovereign
or governmental
capacity?
We think there are two
answers to this question. Firstly, to establish the claims, Iansa did
not have to prove anything against
the Cuban government. Iansa relied
entirely upon Cubazucar having acted in a certain manner. Cubazucar’s
defence was: We
did not so act. Cubazucar was not believed. The
facts, as found by the arbitrators, that the decisions implemented by
Cubazucar
were joint decisions of Cubazucar and the Cuban government
does not involve the English Court sitting in judgment on the Cuban
government. Iansa never impugned the validity of any of the Cuban
government’s acts – except Law 1256, said to be
confiscatory
and discriminatory – and accordingly the Court was
not in a judicial no-man’s land (see the speech of Lord
Wilberforce
in
Butte’s
case at p. 810 F).
The second answer is that
if the Courts were being asked to sit in judgment on the conduct of
the Cuban government, then that conduct
was not immune from the
Jurisdiction of the English Courts since its activity was a trading
rather than a governmental activity.
What the Cuban government did
was to induce breaches of contract by Cubazucar. It is the nature of
the act that matters, not the
motive behind it. That motive cannot
alter the nature of the act. Thus, in
Trentex Corporation Ltd v
Central Bank of Nigeria
[1977] 1 Lloyds Rep. 581;
[1977] Q.B.
529
, which related to Nigerian cement purchases, the relevant act was
simply a breach of a commercial contract and was treated as such,
though committed by a state, or a department of state, for reasons of
government. The purpose for which the breach was committed
could not
alter its clear character, (per Lord Wilberforce in the
I Congreso
case, at pp 373 and 337.)
The case of
Alfred
Dunhill of London Inc. v The Republic of Cuba
,
(1976) 426 U.S.
682
, was a case on the United States’ doctrine of Act of State.
The view of four of the five Judges, who held that no Act Of State
had occurred, was approved by Lord Wilberforce in his speech in the
I
Congreso
case, and had been quoted on a number of previous
occasions in the Court of Appeal (see the judgment of Lord Denning,
M.R., in
the
I Congreso
case in the Court of Appeal, [1980] 1
Lloyd’s Rep. 23, at p. 31 and the Trendtex case (cit sup. At
pp. 593 ands 556)). The
Court decided that immunity should be granted
only with respect to causes of action arising out of a foreign
state’s public
or governmental action and not with respect to
those arising out of its commercial or private action. This
“restrictive theory”
to the principle of immunity is
dealt with in detail by Lord Wilberforce in the
I Congreso
case.’
[89]
The immunity is to be given effect also in matters where the foreign
state does not appear. In
the matter under consideration, the State
of Iran was not cited to appear, but the Act declares that a foreign
state is immune
from the jurisdiction of our courts. In my view the
clear wording of the Act is such that it applies even if a party
before this
court does not raise it by way of a plea. A court is
required to apply the Act regardless of what a defendant may plead.
If the
matter falls within the provisions of the Act, a court is
enjoined to apply it. The word ‘appear’ in my view, does
not include cite and appear.
[90]
In
The
Cherry Blossom
[114]
the
court cited
Belhaj
and endorsed the use of the 2004 United Nations Convention on
Jurisdictional Immunities of States and their Property (the
Convention).
[115]
This
convention provides:
‘
Article 6 (2)
provides:
“
A proceeding
before a court of a State shall be considered to have been instituted
against another State if that other State:
(a) is named as a party
to that proceeding; or
(b) is not named as a
party to the proceeding but the proceeding in effect seeks to affect
the property, rights, interests or activities
of that other State.”’
The
Cherry
Blossom
reasoned that one looks to the decisions of international courts for
guidance and thus applied the Convention as it was applied,
inter
alia, in
Belhaj
.
In this regard, the words of Lord Mance
[116]
are apposite:
‘
Even so, concerns
were expressed at the drafting stage by both Australia and the United
States about the potential width of article
6(2)(b): see the Report
of the Secretary General of the United Nations A/47/326 of 4 August
1992. But academic commentators have
concluded that any uncertainty
in its scope should be addressed by recognising that “interests”
should be limited to
a claim for which there is some legal foundation
and not merely to some political or moral concern of the State in the
proceedings”:
Fox and Webb, The Law of State Immunity, 3
rd
ed (2015 revision), p 307; and O’Keefe, Tams (eds), The United
Nations Convention on Jurisdictional Immunities of States
and Their
Property (2013), pp 110-111, indicating that some specifically legal
effect should be required as distinct from social,
economic or
political effect.’
[91]
The
Cherry Blossom
concluded that athough the state of Morocco was not impleaded, if the
claim would have had an effect on Morocco’s legal rights
and
interests, state immunity would preclude the claim.
[117]
[92]
EAC argued that the facts show that the government of Iran was
involved in a commercial transaction
and that the commercial
exception applies. The onus in on EAC to establish that an exception
to the immunity applies.
[118]
Despite the argument of behalf of EAC, the conduct of the Iranian
Government falls squarely into the category of
acta
jure emperii
and can, on the pleadings, not be described as falling into any of
the exceptions contained in the Immunities Act. I have found
that the
conduct of the Iranian government fell into the public law arena.
Based on the allegations in the pleadings, it was not
a commercial
exception as the character of the rights which Iran granted was not
of the kind that any private citizen would offer.
Its indirect
impleading results in the fact that its interests would be adversely
affected by findings of the nature that a court
would be required to
make regarding its unlawful conduct. In this regard
Dynasty
held:
[119]
‘
[116]
In my judgment, the entry into by the KRG of the PSC’s
were
“sovereign or public acts”, or acts jure imperii, and not
“private acts”. There is no doubt that those
resources
were publicly, and not privately, owned, whatever the precise meaning
which is given to Article 111 of the Constitutions;
and only a
government, acting on behalf of the public, could enter into
contracts such as these in relation to the exploitation
of such
resources. They were entered into pursuant to powers which, as I have
found, were allocated to the KRG under the Constitution,
and under
the KROGL, which was enacted to give effect to those powers.
Moreover, the terms of those contracts contain a number
of provisions
which it is apparent that no private person could make, including
promises in relation to such matters as compulsory
purchase, planning
consents, customs, tax exemptions and pipeline rights. The parties to
those agreements also considered it expedient
to include a waiver of
the KRG’s sovereign immunity. Consistently with the decision of
Burton J in realtion to the “Heads
of Agreement” with
which he was faced in
Pearl Petroleum v KRG
, I conclude that
the entry into of the PSC’s was in the exercise of sovereign
authority.
[117] Dynasty contends,
however that even of the entry into of the PSC’s was a
sovereign act, the same does not apply to decisions
to sanction, or
not sanction or consent to, a transfer of control of the contracting
entities. I do not consider that this is correct.
A decision as to
whether or not a new party should be permitted to become a
replacement party to a long-term contract for the exploitation
of
natural resources which, as I have said, contains a series of
stipulations by the KRG which a private citizen could not make,
would
seem to me to partake of the sovereign nature as the making of the
contract at the outset. Consent to whether there can be
a change of
control over a contracting entity is the functional equivalent to
consent to novation of the contract because in relation
to
arrangements of the present kind, the exercise, integrity and
financial position of those standing behind the contracting entity
will be of great importance.’
In
the absence of the foreign state, the Act applies as it would have if
it appeared in the matter. The Iranian government being
absent, ie
not appearing, has no limiting effect on the immunity provided for in
s 2(1). The question that arises is whether the
unlawful conduct of
the Iranian government is equally protected as was said in
Empresa
Importadora
.
[120]
The respect goes to ‘
‘
the independence
of every other sovereign State, and the court of one country will not
sit in judgment on the acts of the government
of another done with
its own territory.’
[93]
In this matter, the court will be required to make adverse findings
regarding the unlawful acts
of Iran as a finding will affect the
interests or activities of Iran. In my view the provisions of the
Immunities Act result in
this court having no jurisdiction to
entertain the matter as pleaded by EAC and the special plea is to be
upheld.
Costs
[94]
There was some argument before me regarding a delay of two days
during the hearing of the separated
issues. The defendants produced
additional heads of argument and a file containing documents that
were taken from the existing
documents and improved or re-typed to be
more legible. But in so far as the illegible documents emanated from
EAC, it too is responsible
for the delay that occurred. I am of the
view that no special order regarding the costs of those two days
should not be made and
that costs should follow the award to the
successful party.
[95]
Although I make orders in relation to costs of the hearing, the
separation order provides that
the costs of ‘this application
are costs in the cause’. The parties did not address me as to
whether that costs are
costs in the present application or in the
trial. I asked all the parties to advise me of their views and EAC
submitted that these
proceedings form that cause, and the remainder
of the parties submitted that the main trial would be the place where
the costs
are to be dealt with. I am, however, of the view that
current proceedings are well suited to deal with the costs of the
application
to separate issues out.
[96]
Different orders follow upon the jurisdictional issues. As far as the
first jurisdictional issue
(exclusive jurisdiction of the Iranian
Courts) is concerned, a stay of proceedings is the appropriate
order.
[121]
Order
in relation to the choice of laws
[97]
The following order is issued:
1.
The law of Iran applies to the delict as alleged in paras 1.1 of the
separation order.
2.
The law applicable to the issues contained in paras 1.2.5, 1.2.7 and
1.2.10 is uncertain at this stage
and I decline to issue any order.
3.
EAC is to pay the costs of the application of MTN (as defined) in
relation to the choice of laws including
the costs of three counsel,
where so employed.
Order
in relation to the exclusive jurisdiction point
4.
The special plea that the Iranian courts have jurisdiction to hear
this matter, is upheld.
5.
The proceedings in this court are stayed pending a decision by an
Iranian court.
6.
EAC is ordered to pay the costs of the special plea including the
costs of three counsel where so employed.
Order
in relation to State Immunity
7.
The special plea that the court lacks jurisdiction to hear the matter
is upheld.
8.
EAC’s action is dismissed.
9. EAC
is to pay the costs of the action including the costs of three
counsel where so employed.
Order
in relation to the Act of State Doctrine
10. The
court declines to exercise jurisdiction due to the involvement of the
State of Iran.
11.
EAC’s claim is dismissed.
12. EAC
is to pay the costs of the action including the costs of three
counsel where so employed.
W.L.
Wepener
Judge
of the High Court of South Africa
Counsel
for the Plaintiff: A.E. Franklin SC with J.P.V. McNally SC and J.J.
Meiring and B.T. Moretlwe
Attorneys
for the Plaintiff: Vasco de Oliveira Incorporated
Counsel
for the MTN Defendants: W.H. Trengove SC with S. Symon SC and
P.M.P.
Ngcongo
Attorneys
for the MTN Defendants: Webber Wentzel Attorneys
Counsel
for the Fifth Defendants: M.D. Kuper SC with J.M.A. Cane SC and L.
Sisilana
Attorneys
for the Fifth Defendants: Werksmans Attorneys
Counsel
for the Sixth Defendants: D.M. Fine SC
Attorneys
for the Sixth Defendants: Glynn Marais Incorporated
[1]
I refer to the applicants for separation, who are defendants in the
main action as MTN. Fifth and sixth defendants made common
cause
with MTN and reference to MTN is also a reference to these
defendants.
[2]
Uniform Rules of Court.
[3]
Footnotes omitted.
[4]
Licence for a global system for mobile communications.
[5]
Ministry of Communication and Information Technology of Iran.
[6]
A reference to the particulars of claim or pleadings in this context
includes a reference to the pleas and further particulars.
[7]
C F Forsyth Private International Law: The Modern Roman-Dutch Law
Including the Jurisdiction of the High Courts 5 ed (2012).
[8]
Burchell
v Anglin
2010 (3) SA 48 (ECG).
[9]
Forsyth
pp 363-4.
[10]
At paras 47-48.
[11]
Particulars of claim para 332.
[12]
Particulars of claim para 40.6.
[13]
Particulars of claim para 41.
[14]
Particulars of claim para 43.
[15]
Particulars of claim para 44.
[16]
Forsyth p 364.
[17]
Tolofson
v Jensen
(1995) 120 (DLR) (4
th
)
289 (Supreme Court of Canada) and
John
Pfeiffer Pty Ltd v Rogerson
[2000] HCA 36
;
(2000)
172 ALR 625
(High Court of Australia).
[18]
The plaintiff in this matter was formerly referred to as Turkcell
Iletsim Hizmetleri A.S.
[19]
In
clause 34.
[20]
The parties agreed that the law of Switzerland governs the Turkcell
Consortium Agreement – see para 1.2.2 of the order
read with
para 3, supra.
[21]
See Court order para 4.
[22]
Foreign States Immunities Act 87 of 1981 (‘the Immunities
Act’).
[23]
Harms
Amler’s
Precedents of Pleadings
(9Ed)
at p 233.
[24]
On the force and effect of jurisdiction see also
The
Master of the High Court v Motala N.O. and Others
2012 (3) SA 325
(SCA) paras 11-13.
[25]
Or rather invalidly of an order – See
Department
of Transport v Tasima
(Pty) Ltd
2017 (2) SA 622
(CC) at footnote 156.
[26]
2016 JDR 1776 (SCA) para 16; and see
Seleka
v Fast Issuer SPV (RF) Ltd
2021 JDR 0562 (GP) para 15. This was again confirmed in
Gallo
Africa Ltd and Others v Sting Music (Pty) Ltd And Others
2010 (6) SA 329
(SCA) para 6.
[27]
See
Gcaba
v Minister for Safety & Security & Others
(2010) 31 ILJ 296 (CC). See also
Chirwa
v Transnet Ltd & Others
(2008)
29 ILJ 73 (CC) paras 155 and 169.
[28]
Gcaba
ibid.
[29]
Reference to EAC may be technically incorrect as the pleadings
referred to a consortium of which the plaintiff was a member,
but
nothing turns thereon.
[30]
The particulars of claim also refer to MCIT as the party
representing the Iranian government. MCIT was the Iranian Ministry
of Communication and Information Technology, but all parties
accepted, or at least did not argue differently, that its conduct
is
also the conduct of the Iranian government. For example see s 239 of
the Constitution: ‘organ of state’ means
–
(a) ‘any
department of state or administration in national, provincial or
local sphere of government; or
(b) any other
functionary or institution –
(i) exercising a
power or performing a function in terms of the Constitution or a
provincial constitution; or
(ii) exercising a
public power or performing a public function in terms of any
legislation, but does not include a court
or a judicial officer.’
[31]
At para 22.
[32]
The licence agreement is Annexure POC 12 to the particulars of
claim.
[33]
Or the alternative enforceable rights in favour of EAC.
[34]
At para 30.2.
[35]
At para 34.
[36]
At para 44.
[37]
At para 50.
[38]
At para 51.
[39]
POC 2 to the particulars of claim: Executive summary.
[40]
Alfred
Dunhill of London Inc v Cuba
66 ILR p 212.
[41]
Which forms part of the particulars of claim.
[42]
See for example articles 10, 11, 13, 20, 21 and 22 which support the
BOT principle, build, operate and transfer after 15 years.
[43]
As an example, the Timetable for the Tender Procedure makes this
plain.
[44]
1975 (4) 334 (WLD) at 336A.
[45]
[1969] 2 All ER 641
(PDA) ([1969]
1 Lloyds Rep 237
at 645C –
E.
[46]
G.N. Barrie,
The
Eleftheria
(1969) 2 All ER 641
p 96.
[47]
In
Transvaal
Alloys (Pty) Ltd v Polysius (Pty) Ltd
1983 (2) SA 630
(T) at 641A.
[48]
Metallurgical
& Commercial Consultants (Pty) Ltd v Metal Sales Co (Pty) Ltd
1971 (2) 388 (W) at 391E-F.
[49]
The onus on EAC ‘. . . is a heavy onus and not easily
discharged, because it is the party trying to avoid its contractual
obligation.’ See LAWSA: Arbitration (Vol 2 - 3
rd
Ed) DW Butler, Professor of Law, University of Stellenbosch, para 95
and the authorities cited in footnotes 11-17.
[50]
2013 (3) SA 91
(SCA) para 21.
[51]
LAWSA: Arbitration (Volume 2 – Third Edition) Author: DW
Butler Professor of Law, University of Stellenbosch. Para
96 and the
authorities cited in footnotes 1 and 2.
[52]
Foize
para 29.
[53]
Foize
paras 27-29.
[54]
See
Polysius
supra
at footnote 47.
[55]
Per Wessels ACJ in
The
Rhodesian Railways Ltd v Mackintosh
1932 AD 359
at 369.
[56]
In this case the fifth and sixth defendants
[57]
QBE
Europe SA/NV & Anor v Generali Espana De Seguros Y Reaseguros
[2022] EWHC 2062
(Comm). para 15.
Schiffahrtsgesellcchaft
Detlev von Appen v Voest Alpine Intertrading (The Jay Bola)
[1997] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 279 paras 24 to 25.
[58]
Anti-suit injunction which is an application to restrain proceedings
in foreign jurisdictions in contravention of a clause agreed
to by
parties.
[59]
Saharawi
Arab Democratic Republic and Another v Owners and Charterers of The
Cherry Blossom and Others
(
The
Cherry
Blossom)
2017 (5) SA 105
(ECP) para 56.
[60]
1999 (2) SA 279
(T) at 334D-F.
[61]
2008
(3) SA 294
(SCA),
[2008]
1 All SA 102
(SCA)
para 5.
[62]
[1995]
3 All E.R. 694
at 715d.
[63]
[1897] USSC 197
;
168 U.S. 250
(1897) at 252g.
[64]
[2017] UKSC 3
para 118. And see the remarks of Lord Brown –
Williamson in
Ex
Parte Pinochet
(No. 3)
[1999] UKHL 17
;
[2000] 1 AC 147
, 201; 119 ILR p 152:
‘
It
is a basic principle of international law that one sovereign state
(the forum state) does not adjudicate on the conduct of
a foreign
state. The foreign state is entitled to procedural immunity from the
processes of the forum state.’
[65]
Cherry
Blossom
paras 86 to 88.
[66]
2019
JDR 1518 (WCC) para 66.
[67]
The
Cherry Blossom
at paras 90 to 98.
[68]
See paras 63 – 65 and 70 of the
Obiang
judgment.
[69]
Kuwait
Airways Corp
.
v Iraqi Airways
[1995] 3 All ER 694 (HL).
[70]
See note 26 above.
[71]
See note 64 above
[72]
[2021] UKSC 57
(‘
Venezuela’
)
[73]
The
third rule is that a court abstains from adjudicating upon the
lawfulness of an act of a foreign state that concerns international
relations and foreign affairs. See
Belhaj
para 123. The fourth rule, if it exists, prevents a court from
investigating acts if such investigation would embarrass the
government of the court seeking to exercise jurisdiction. In
England, the fourth rule is in practice engaged by a letter
from the
foreign office, presumably to the court, stating the potential for
such embarrassment. In other words, the fourth
rule is
attentive to political sensitivities to which the executive might
draw the court’s attention. That is also
the reason for
its controversial status: courts do not on the whole like what may
appear as political interference from the executive.
[74]
Belhaj
para 121.
[75]
Venezuela
para
172.
[76]
Belhaj
para 122.
[77]
At
para 121.
[78]
Venezuela
para
38.
[79]
Venezuela
paras
140 - 146.
[80]
At paras 139 -143.
[81]
See
Belhaj
para 199.
[82]
Belhaj
paras 141 & 156.
[83]
Para
148.
[84]
At
paras 121 and 135.
[85]
Or secret tender, as is alleged in para 50 of the particulars of
claim.
[86]
Foreign States Immunities Act No. 87 OF 1981
s 1(2)
‘Any
reference in this Act to a foreign state shall in relation to any
particular foreign state be construed as including
a reference to—
(a)
the head of state of that foreign state, in his capacity as such
head of state;
(b)
the government of that foreign state; and
(c)
any department of that government, but not as including a reference
to—
(i)
any entity which is distinct from the executive organs of the
government of that foreign state and capable of suing or being
sued;
or
(ii)
any territory forming a constituent part of a federal foreign
state.’
[87]
At p 180.
[88]
See
Parkin
v Government of the Republique Democratique du Congo and Another
1971 (1) SA 259
at 261C.
[89]
In
Leibowitz
and Others v Schwartz and Others
1974 (2) SA 661
(T), Nicholas J held that the courts will not by
their process make a foreign state a party to legal proceedings
against its
will.
[90]
[2021] EWHC 952
(Comm) paras 105-108
.
[91]
At para 112.
[92]
At para 115.
[93]
At p 399.
[94]
At para 116.
[95]
At para 117.
[96]
Having regard to the purpose of the conduct, it shows that the
nature of which was done being jure imperii. See
I
Congreso
at 272.
[97]
Police
and Prisons Civil Rights Union and Others v Minister of Correctional
Services and Others
(2006) 27 ILJ 555 (E) para 53.
[98]
See the cases referred to by G. Quinot: State
Commercial
Activity : A Legal Framework
(2009) at p 107 footnote 401.
[99]
Ramburan
v Minister of Housing (House of Delegates) and Others
1995 (1) SA 353 (D).
[100]
At p 361-362.
[101]
R (Noor
Khan) v Secretary of State of Foreign Affairs
[2014] 1 WLR 872.
[102]
At paras 225 – 230.
[103]
Belhaj para 240.
[104]
Venezuela
para 140.
[105]
Transnet
Ltd v Goodman Brothers (Pty) Ltd
[2000] ZASCA 151
;
2001
(1) SA 853
(SCA). Also see
Quinot
at p 226.
[106]
In
Logbro
Properties CC v Bedderson NO
2003 (2) SA 460
(SCA) paras 10-11.
[107]
Empresa
Importadora de Azucar v Industria Azucarera Nacional SA (The ‘Playa
Larga’ and ‘Marble Islands’)
[1983] 2 Lloyd's Rep. 171 Court of Appeal.
[108]
Playa
Larga
at 194.
[109]
29 ILM 182 (1990). In this matter the learned judge concluded that
he did not have to rule on the conduct of the government.
[110]
Para 46 supra.
[111]
Benkharbouche
v Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs
[2017] UKSC 62
paras 16 and 18. ‘Such dismissal without
determining the merits “leaves intact the claimant’s
legal rights
and any relevant defences, which remain available for
example, to be adjudicated upon in the courts of the state itself.”’
[112]
Minister
of Justice and Constitutional Development and Others v Southern
African Litigation Centre and Others
2016 (3) SA 317
(SCA) para 66.
[113]
[1995] ICJ Rep 90 para 29.
[114]
At para 78.
[115]
Both parties before me accepted that the Convention is a relevant
interpretation aid.
[116]
Belha
j
para 26. See also Lord Sumption’s remarks at para 196. And see
The
Cherry
Blossom
para 80.
[117]
The
Cherry Blossom
paras 82-85.
[118]
Malcolm N. Shaw: International Law 9
th
Ed pp 649-650.
[119]
Dynasty
Company for Oil and Gas Trading Limited v The Kurdish Regional
Government of Iraq, Dr Ashti Hawrami
[2021] EWHC 952
(Comm) para 105 to 117.
[120]
Empresa
Importadora de Azucar v Industria Azucarera Nacional SA (The ‘Playa
Larga’ and ‘Marble Islands’)
[1983] 2 Lloyd's Rep. 171 Court of Appeal.
[121]
Foize
Africa (Pty) Ltd v Foize Beheer BV and Others
2013 (3) SA 91
(SCA) para 21.
sino noindex
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