Cayman Islands: Just and equitable winding up petitions in the face of an agreement to arbitrate
开曼群岛:有仲裁约定情况下的公正和衡平的清盘申请
In a decision that has been keenly anticipated in Asia, the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council has now handed down its decision on the appeal by Ting Chuan (Cayman Islands) Holding Corporation (Ting Chuan) against the Cayman Islands Court of Appeal's decision to set aside a stay of the winding up proceedings commenced against it by Family Mart China Holdings Co Ltd (FMCH). This addresses the interplay between arbitration agreements and winding up proceedings, an issue of particular relevance to parties in the region given the prevalence of offshore structures and the widespread incorporation of arbitration clauses into agreements between stakeholders, particularly in shareholders agreements.
枢密院司法委员会就 Ting Chuan (Cayman Islands) Holding Corporation (以下简称〝顶全〞) 针对开曼群岛上诉法院撤销中止Family Mart China Holdings Co Ltd (以下简称〝FMCH〞) 对其提起的清盘程序的裁决提出的上诉于近期做出了裁决。这一备受瞩目的裁决涉及仲裁约定和清盘程序之间的相互作用。而鉴于离岸结构的普遍性以及仲裁条款普遍被纳入利益相关者之间的协议(特别是股东协议),这一问题与亚太地区的各方当事人关系甚大。
Executive summary
The Board overturned the Court of Appeal's decision, holding that an aggrieved shareholder who has agreed to have disputes amongst the shareholders resolved by way of arbitration, must first have such disputes that fall within the ambit of the arbitration agreement determined accordingly before the threshold question of whether the company should be wound up on just and equitable grounds to obtain alternative relief may be addressed. Further it found that there is no reason, in principle, to suggest that the Court should not be bound by an arbitral tribunal's determination of the underlying dispute in making that assessment. The Board also stated that the Court continues to retain jurisdiction to determine the threshold question and an agreement to arbitrate does not amount to non-petition agreement.
Background
Briefly, Ting Chuan and FMCH are the shareholders of China CVS (Cayman Islands) Holding Corp (Company). The relationship between Ting Chuan and FMCH is governed by a shareholders’ agreement (SHA) which provided that any and all disputes in connection with or arising out of the SHA shall be resolved by arbitration.
On 12 October 2018, FMCH petitioned to wind up the Company (Petition) in the Grand Court. In the Petition, FMCH alleged, inter alia, that Ting Chuan caused, permitted and/or procured the majority directors of the Company to act in breach of their duties to the Company. In the result, FMCH lost trust and confidence in the conduct and management of the Company’s affairs and asserted that its relationship with Ting Chuan had irretrievably broken down such that it was just and equitable that the Company be wound up. In the alternative, FMCH sought an order that Ting Chuan sell its majority stake in the Company to it.
In response, Ting Chuan applied to strike out the Petition or, in the alternative, for an order dismissing or staying the Petition under section 4 of the Foreign Arbitral Awards Enforcement Act (1997 Revision) (FAAEA) or under the inherent jurisdiction of the Court on the basis that the dispute between the parties should be resolved by way of arbitration.
Appellate history
The Grand Court (Kawaley J) granted Ting Chuan’s application to stay the winding up proceedings under section 4 of the FAAEA.
The Court of Appeal, however, overturned Kawaley J’s decision and found that the assessment under section 92 of the Cayman Islands Companies Act (Act) of whether a company should be wound up is a threshold question and a gateway to relief, not one of relief.
In determining the threshold question, not only did the Court have to consider questions of primary fact, but it also had to evaluate all the circumstances of the case and decide whether the conduct of the majority directors and the breakdown of the relationship between the shareholders justified the winding up of the Company. If certain matters were hived off to arbitration, there would be a risk of inconsistent decisions where there would first be a decision of the tribunal and then a further decision by the Court taking into account the award in circumstances where some of the parties to a petition would not be bound by the tribunal's award (not being parties to the arbitration agreement). This outcome could only be avoided if the parties agreed not to present a winding up petition, which was not the case here. As neither the majority directors nor the Company were parties to the SHA, and thereby to the arbitration agreement, it was not permissible to apply the mandatory provisions of section 4 of the FAAEA to the Petition in its entirety. Further, because the allegations against Ting Chuan could not be separated from the threshold issue, section 4 could not operate to that extent. The Court of Appeal thus found the arbitration agreement to be inoperative and there was no basis for it to grant a discretionary stay in the exercise of its case management powers.
Ting Chuan appealed.
Privy Counsil's Decision
Interpretation of the FAAEA
The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council allowed Ting Chuan’s appeal.
In so doing, the Board addressed the interpretation of section 4 of the FAAEA, in particular, the meaning of (i) “legal proceedings”, (ii) “matters”, and (iii) “the arbitration agreement is … inoperative” and considered whether the Petition is an unum quid (i.e. one thing), or whether there should be a partial stay under the FAAEA so that matters within the scope of the arbitration agreement can (and should) be hived off for arbitration. The Board also considered the application for a discretionary stay of the Petition and the submission on non-petition agreements.
On the interpretation of section 4 of the FAAEA, the Board noted that it gives effect to Article II(3) of the New York Convention and considered it appropriate to, and did in fact, review the jurisprudence of jurisdictions with provisions that are worded similarly to section 4 of the FAAEA.
Turning to each question of interpretation arising out of section 4 of the FAAEA:
- The meaning of "legal proceedings" commenced by a party to an arbitration agreement
The Board concluded that legal proceedings can include a petition to wind up a company of which the parties to an arbitration agreement are members.
- The meaning and ascertainment of "matter"
The Board reviewed the international authorities and opined that there was a general consensus that where a country is a signatory to the New York Convention, its courts take a pro-arbitration approach and primacy is given to the parties' agreement to arbitrate.
In ascertaining what "matters" are referrable to arbitration, the Board noted that the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom's decision in Republic of Mozambique (acting through its Attorney General) v Privinvest Shipbuilding SAL (Holding) and others handed down on the same day adopted a similar approach to the two-stage test adopted by the Board: first, the Court determines what the matters are which the parties have raised, or foreseeably will raise, in the court proceedings and, secondly, the Court determines in relation to each such matter whether it falls within the scope of the arbitration agreement.
The approach taken involves ascertaining the substance of the dispute(s) and consideration of the defences, including reasonably foreseeable ones. A "matter" is substantial issue that is legally relevant to a claim, defence, or foreseeable defence and susceptible to be determined by the tribunal; it does not extend to a peripheral or tangential issue.
The judicial evaluation of the substance and relevance of what the "matter" entails is a matter of judgment and the application of common-sense; it is not a mechanistic exercise.
Equally, a practical and common-sense approach should be taken on an application for a stay under section 4 of the FAAEA and no juridical formula encapsulating the meaning of "matter" should be treated as if it were a statutory text. The Court must respect the agreement of the parties to arbitrate their dispute; therefore, any substantial matter in the legal proceedings which is relevant to the claim or (foreseeable) defence, and which is within the scope of the arbitration agreement, will give rise to a mandatory stay of the legal proceedings to that extent.
Such an approach may result in the fragmentation of the parties' disputes with some matters being arbitrable and others not, but the disadvantages that come with such fragmentation can be managed with effective case management by both the Court and tribunal.
- The meaning of "the arbitration agreement is … inoperative"
The Board held that the fact that a tribunal cannot make a winding up order does not render an arbitration agreement inoperable. Matters, such as whether one party has breached its obligations under a shareholders’ agreement or whether equitable rights arising out of the relationship between the parties have been flouted, are arbitrable in the context of an application to wind up a company on the just and equitable ground.
The application of the FAAEA
With the above principles of interpretation in mind, the Board considered the application of the FAAEA to the facts of the case.
The Board agreed with Moses JA in the Court of Appeal that the Court’s consideration under section 92 of the Act of whether it was just and equitable that the Company be wound up is a threshold question which is to be answered before the petitioner can get access to any of the remedies available under section 95 of the Act. The Board also accepted, as Moses JA held, that the Court had exclusive jurisdiction to make a winding up order. The Board agreed with FMCH's submissions that an arbitral tribunal does not have the power to make a ruling on whether it is just and equitable that a company should be wound up or whether the remedy of a share buyout should be granted under section 95 of the Act.
However, in an application to wind up a company where there are matters in dispute (such as allegations of breaches of a shareholders' agreement) that fall within the ambit of an arbitration agreement, such dispute may be referred to arbitration notwithstanding the fact that only a Court has jurisdiction to make a winding up order.
The Board therefore found that the question of whether (1) FMCH had lost trust and confidence in Ting Chuan and the management of the Company, and (2) the parties' relationship had irretrievably broken down (Matters 1 and 2) were controversies relating to legal or equitable rights of substance lying at the heart of the legal proceedings for an order under section 95 of the Act. They were also matters which, the parties accept, fell within the scope of the arbitration agreement.
Further, in the exercise of the equitable jurisdiction under section 92 of the Act, the Board opined that the Court must have regard to a party’s contractual obligations, which may include an agreement to refer to arbitration disputes which fall within the scope of the relevant arbitration agreement. The Board added that the Court, in exercising its jurisdiction, would be bound by an agreed statement or admission as between the parties, and therefore there was no reason in principle why it should not be so bound by a decision of an arbitral tribunal (setting out its reasoning and findings of fact) on a dispute between Ting Chuan and FMCH.
The Board therefore allowed Ting Chuan’s appeal and held that Matters 1 and 2 were substantive disputes between FMCH and Ting Chuan which provided the factual basis for a winding up petition on the just and equitable ground. Those matters fell within the scope of the parties’ arbitration agreement and must therefore be determined by an arbitral tribunal unless the parties waived their right to arbitration. They were also "matters" for the purposes of section 4 of the FAAEA mandating a pro tanto stay of the winding up proceedings.
A discretionary stay of the winding up proceedings insofar as they were formally directed against parties other than Ting Chuan was also ordered under section 95(1)(d) of the Act.
The determination of the stayed matters was an essential precursor to the assessment of whether it is just and equitable to wind up the Company.
Finally, the Board confirmed that the agreement to arbitrate did not amount to an agreement not to present a winding up petition which would otherwise trigger section 95(2) of the Act requiring a dismissal or adjournment of the petition.
Parting comments
The Board's decision is likely to be closely scrutinised across the region and stands as the latest word on this contested area of law, an area which has provoked much debate in many jurisdictions. The market will no doubt play close attention to its ramifications and any further developments.
裁决摘要
枢密院委员会推翻了上诉法院的决定,认为如果一名受害股东同意通过仲裁解决股东之间的争议,必须首先要求该等在仲裁约定范围内的争议以相应方式接受裁决,然后才能解决是否应基于公正和衡平的理由对公司进行清算,从而获得替代性救济的先决性问题。委员会进一步认定,原则上没有理由建议法院在进行这种评定时不应受仲裁庭对底层争议的裁决约束。委员会还表示,法院继续享有对该先决性问题作出裁决的司法管辖权,且仲裁条款约定不构成股东禁止申请清盘的约定。
案件背景
顶全和 FMCH 是 China CVS (Cayman Islands) Holding Corp(以下简称〝公司〞)的股东。顶全和 FMCH 之间的关系由股东协议 (以下简称〝SHA〞) 管辖,其中规定,与 SHA 有关或由其引发的任何及所有争议应通过仲裁解决。
2018 年 10 月 12 日,FMCH 在大法院申请对公司进行清盘(以下简称〝清盘申请〞)。除其他事项外,FMCH 在清盘申请中指称,顶全导致、允许和/或促使公司多数董事违反其对公司承担的义务。FMCH 因此对公司事务的处理和管理失去了信任和信心,并主张其与顶全之间的关系不可挽回地破裂,构成对公司进行清盘的公正和衡平的理由。作为替代,FMCH 请求判令顶全向其出售顶全在公司的多数股权。
作为回应,顶全申请撤销清盘申请,或依据《外国仲裁裁决执行法》(1997 年修订版)(以下简称〝FAAEA〞) 第 4 条或法院的固有司法管辖权,申请判令驳回或搁置清盘申请,理由是双方股东之间的争议应通过仲裁解决。
上诉程序
开曼大法院(Kawaley法官)批准了顶全根据 FAAEA 第 4 条中止清盘程序的申请。
但开曼上诉法院推翻了Kawaley 法官的决定,并认定,根据《开曼群岛公司法》(以下简称〝公司法〞)第 92 条的规定,评定是否应当对公司进行清盘是一个先决性问题,也是获得救济的途径,并非一种救济。
在对先决性问题作出裁决时,法院不仅必须考虑基本事实问题,还必须评估案件的所有情况,并决定多数董事的行为和股东之间的关系破裂是否构成对公司进行清盘的正当理由。如果将特定事项单独交由仲裁解决,则存在决定不一致的风险,即首先由仲裁庭作出裁决,然后在相关申请的某些当事人(非仲裁约定的当事人)不受仲裁庭裁决约束的情况下,由法院在考虑仲裁庭裁决后做出进一步决定。仅当各方当事人约定不提出清盘申请时,才能避免这种结果,但本案的情况并非如此。由于多数董事和公司均不是 SHA 的当事人,因而也不是仲裁约定的当事人,故不允许将 FAAEA 第 4 条的强制性规定适用于整个清盘申请。此外,由于对顶全的指控不能脱离先决性问题,第 4 条无法发挥作用。因此,上诉法院认定仲裁约定无效,且法院没有理由行使案件管理权准予酌情搁置清盘程序的权力。
顶全对此提出了上诉。
枢密院的决定
枢密院司法委员会准予了顶全的上诉。
FAAEA 法条的解释
在此期间,委员会对 FAAEA 第4条作出了解释,特别是以下术语的含义:(i)〝法律程序〞;(ii)〝事项〞;以及 (iii)〝仲裁约定......无效〞,还审议了清盘申请是否针对同一件事,或是否应根据 FAAEA 中止部分程序,以便仲裁约定范围内的事项可以(也应当)单独交由仲裁解决。委员会还审议了酌情搁置清盘的申请和有关禁止申请清盘约定的上诉意见。
在解释 FAAEA 第 4 条时,委员会指出,这一解释赋予了《纽约公约》第 II(3) 条效力,并认为可以审查其他司法管辖区对于与 FAAEA 第 4 条的表述类似之规定的判例,事实上其也进行了该等审查。
关于 FAAEA 第 4 条引发的各解释问题:
(a) 仲裁约定的一方当事人发起的〝法律程序〞之含义
委员会的结论是,如果仲裁约定的当事人是公司成员,则法律程序可以包括对公司进行清盘的申请。
(b) 〝事项〞之含义和认定
在审查国际判决先例后,委员会表示,国际上一致认为,如果一个国家是《纽约公约》的签署国,其法院会支持仲裁,并优先考虑各方当事人的仲裁约定。
在认定哪些〝事项〞可提交仲裁时,委员会指出,在Republic of Mozambique (acting through its Attorney General) v Privinvest Shipbuilding SAL (Holding) and others一案中,英国最高法院在当日做出的决定采用了与委员会采用的两阶段测试类似的方法:首先,法院确定各方当事人在法院程序中已经提出或预计将提出哪些事项,其次,法院确定该等事项各项是否在仲裁约定范围内。
这种方法要求认定争议的实质并审议各方的抗辩,包括合理可预见的抗辩。〝事项〞是指在法律上与索赔、抗辩或可预见的抗辩相关的实质性问题,且往往由仲裁庭裁决;其不会延伸到外围或不相关的问题。
对〝事项〞所牵涉内容的实质和相关性进行司法评估涉及到判断和常识运用;并不是一种机械的做法。
同样,对根据 FAAEA 第 4 条提出的中止申请也应采取务实的常识性方法,不应将概述〝事项〞含义的任何司法套用公式视为强制性法律规定。法院必须遵守各方当事人对其争议进行仲裁的约定;因此,法律程序中与索赔或(可预见的)抗辩相关的,以及在仲裁约定范围内的任何实质性事项,都将促使强制中止法律程序。
这种方法可能会导致各方当事人的争议分散,其中有些事项可以仲裁,有些则不可以,但法院和仲裁庭双方有效管理案件可以解决这种分散产生的不利影响。
(c) 〝仲裁约定......无效〞之含义
委员会认定仲裁庭无法作出清盘命令的事实不会致使仲裁约定无法执行。在基于公正和衡平的理由申请对公司进行清盘的情况下,一方当事人是否违反了其在股东协议项下的义务,或各方当事人之间的关系产生的衡平法权利是否被无视等事项,可以通过仲裁解决。
FAAEA法条对于本案的适用
考虑到上述解释原则,委员会审议了 FAAEA 对本案事实的适用性。
委员会同意上诉法院法官 Moses 的意见,即法院根据公司法第 92 条审议对公司进行清盘是否公正、公平的问题是一个先决性问题,必须先回答这一问题才能确保申请人能够获得公司法第 95 条规定的任何救济。 正如上诉法官 Moses 所认为的那样,委员会也认同法院享有作出清盘命令的专属司法管辖权。委员会同意 FMCH 的意见,即仲裁庭无权就公司清盘是否公正、公平或是否应根据公司法第 95 条准予股份收购之救济作出裁决。
但在公司清盘申请中,即使仅法院享有作出清盘命令的司法管辖权,如果争议事项在仲裁约定范围内(如违反股东协议的指控),则该等争议可提交仲裁。
委员会因此认定,对于公司法第 95 条项下之命令,以下问题是与处于法律程序核心的实质性普通法或衡平法权利相关的争论:(1) FMCH 是否已对顶全和公司管理层丧失信任和信心;以及 (2) 各方当事人之间的关系是否已不可挽回地破裂(以下简称〝事项 1〞和〝事项 2〞)。各方当事人认同,该等事项也在仲裁约定范围内。
此外,在根据公司法第 92 条行使衡平法司法管辖权时,委员会认为,法院必须考虑到一方当事人的合同义务,其中可能包括约定将在相关仲裁约定范围内的争议提交仲裁。委员会补充道,在行使司法管辖权时,法院将受各方当事人之间商定的声明或承认约束,因此,原则上没有理由不应受仲裁庭对顶全和 FMCH 之间的争议所做出的决定(阐述其推理和事实调查结果)约束。
因此,委员会准予顶全上诉,并认为事项 1 和事项 2 是 FMCH 和顶全之间的实质性争议,为基于公正和衡平的理由提出清盘申请提供了事实依据。该等事项在各方当事人的仲裁约定范围内,因此,除非各方当事人放弃其提交仲裁的权利,该等事项必须由仲裁庭裁决。此外,就 FAAEA 第 4 条而言,该等事项也属于要求在某种程度上中止清盘程序的〝事项〞。
根据公司法第 95(1)(d) 条的规定,其还下令酌情搁置针对顶全以外的各方当事人正式提起的清盘程序。
确定被中止的事项是评定公司清盘是否公正衡平的根本前提。
最后,委员会确认,仲裁条款约定不构成禁止提交清盘申请的约定。如果构成则会导致公司法第 95(2) 条适用,要求驳回或搁置清盘申请。
结语
委员会的决定会在整个亚太地区受到密切关注。这一法律领域在多个司法管辖区引发了大量争论,而这一决定将代表着这一争议法律领域的最新意见。毫无疑问,市场将密切关注其影响以及任何进一步的发展。