Reference to other cases relating to Russian courts
25 In its submissions, Spirits referred to decisions of various courts concerning Russian courts, namely, Deripaska v Cherney [2009] EWCA 849, The Government of the Russian Federation v Yuri V Shefler, City of Westminster Magistrates' Court, 8 June 2010 (unreported) and Films by Jove. FKP submitted that none of those decisions would assist the Court in considering any question of actual or apprehended bias on the part of the Presidium in the relevant proceedings in 2001 in this case. Deripaska and Shefler involved prospective consideration of future proceedings in Russia. They did not involve a determination of the question of actual or apprehended bias in respect of any previously issued Russian court decision. According to FKP, this Court's comments as to the relevance of such decisions in FKP No 2 at [36], set out at [13] above, remain applicable in this respect.
26 Spirits made extensive submissions about another English case concerning the Russian Courts, Yukos Capital S.a.r.L v OJSC Rosneft Oil Company: at first instance [2011)] EWHC 1461 (Comm), [2012] All ER (Comm) 479; on appeal [2012] EWCA Civ 855. Spirits' reliance on Yukos appears to be twofold.
27 First, Spirits appeared to submit that as a legal matter, it is reasonably arguable that an allegation of bias is justiciable and does not offend the "act of State principle" or the principle of "judicial abstention". FKP submitted that that submission misapprehends the dispute on this application. As submitted, it may be assumed in favour of Spirits for the purposes of the leave application, that, as a matter of law, an allegation of bias does not offend the "act of State principle" or the principle of "judicial abstention". The relevant question on this application is whether the matters which Spirits has pleaded and particularised are adequate to advance a case of actual or apprehended bias on the part of the Presidium in respect of the Presidium Decision which has reasonable prospects of success.
28 Secondly, Spirits submitted that, if the Yukos pleading was permitted to go forward, Spirits' pleading in the present case should also be permitted to proceed, as the "particulars now provided by Spirits extend significantly beyond those relied upon by the claimant in Yukos".
29 In fact, according to FKP, that submission is not correct. Rather, the opposite is true.
30 In Yukos, an arbitral tribunal acting under the rules of the International Commercial Court made, in September 2006, an award in favour of the claimant (Yukos). The award was subsequently overturned by decisions of the Russian Arbitrazh Courts between May and December 2007. In proceedings to enforce the award in the Netherlands, the Amsterdam Court of Appeal allowed enforcement of the award, and refused recognition of the Russian court's decision setting aside the award on the basis that the decision was "partial and dependent". Enforcement proceedings were also commenced in England. Yukos asserted that the respondent (Rosneft) was estopped, on the basis of the Dutch decision, from asserting that the Russian decisions were not "partial and dependent". In the alternative it sought to argue positively that those decisions were not partial and dependent. In support of its positive case, Yukos made allegations which in particular included the following:
(a) "[E]ntirely unsubstantiated tax demands were made, after Yukos had previously been given a clean audit by the tax authorities; and those demands were pursued in such a manner as was intended to [impede] their discharge by Yukos. Thereafter the tax demands were upheld by the Russian courts in proceedings which were grossly unfair and involved a manifestly improper application of Russian tax law; and any judge who found in favour of Yukos was summarily removed. Enforcement of those tax demands was then carried out in a manner intended not to maximise recovery, but to ensure that Yukos' assets were transferred at the lowest possible price to Rosneft. This process included enforcing against Yukos' critical production facilities first; the admission by the Courts of manifestly unsubstantiated claims by Rosneft; and rigged auctions by the bankruptcy manager. All challenges by Yukos to these manifestly inappropriate acts were dismissed by the Courts.
(b) More generally, the Russian Arbitrazh Courts have, when adjudicating proceedings involving Yukos or companies associated with it, acted in a manner which demonstrates that the cases have not been decided in accordance with the relevant law and/or in a fair manner, but involved bias and/or deliberate misapplication of the law. …Yukos Capital shall rely on the examples set out in Annex 1.
31 As the allegations summarised above demonstrate, Yukos' case incorporated allegations of specific factual matters pertaining to the judicial process it sought to impugn, including matters such as the dismissal of judges or specified examples of unfair procedure. The present case involves no such matters.
32 In any event, the Court in Yukos was not concerned with the question before the Court in the present case, namely, whether the matters pleaded and particularised are adequate to support a case of actual or apprehended bias of the Presidium in respect of the Presidium Decision, having reasonable prospects of success. Rather, it was concerned with the different question of justiciability. Rosneft objected to Yukos' pleadings on the basis that they offended the "act of State principle" or offended the "judicial abstention" principle and were non justiciable. Hamblen J at first instance and the Court of Appeal found that those principles had not been contravened.
33 Further, in the present case, the allegation of actual or apprehended bias is raised as a defence to issue estoppel in relation to the Presidium Decision; in Yukos the question of impartiality was raised as a basis on which the Court would as a question of substantial justice refuse to recognise a series of decisions of Russian courts.
34 A further point of distinction which may be observed is that, in Yukos, the claimant relied upon a favourable decision in a Dutch appellate court. In the present case, by contrast, in cognate proceedings in the Netherlands, the Court of Appeal of the Hague has recently determined the question of succession in favour of FKP and against Spirits: Spirits International BV v FKP Sojuzplodoimport, Case No. 105.005.107/02, ruling of 24 July 2012.
35 According to FKP, it follows that Yukos does not assist Spirits in establishing that its pleading and particularisation of its case of actual or apprehended bias has reasonable prospects of success.