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UniCredit Bank GmbH ("UniCredit") returned to the English courts in February to ask for an anti-suit injunction, granted at its own application against RusChemAlliance LLC ("RusChem"), to be varied or discharged. In unusual circumstances, and against the backdrop of UK and EU sanctions against Russia, the English court found that it had sufficient power to vary its own final order.
UniCredit, a German company, and RusChem, a Russian company, are parties to multiple bonds entered in 2021 (the "Bond Contracts"). The Bond Contracts are each governed by English law and provide for arbitration in Paris. When UniCredit refused to pay RusChem the contractual sums, arguing EU sanctions against Russia prohibited the payment, RusChem commenced proceedings before the Russian courts. RusChem relied on a Russian law that confers exclusive jurisdiction to the Russian courts over any dispute between foreign and Russian entities arising out of foreign sanctions and renders inoperable any clause providing for arbitration outside the Russian Federation. UniCredit applied to the English courts for a final anti-suit injunction to restrain the Russian proceedings. The issue went to the Supreme Court, which granted a final anti-suit injunction in September 2024 (the "Injunction").
However, on 28 December 2024, RusChem obtained a ruling (the "Ruling") from the St Petersburg court that:
UniCredit decided that English contempt proceedings would be unlikely to have practical effect against RusChem, given that it has no assets outside Russia and its officers do not travel outside of Russia. As a result, in February 2025, UniCredit applied to the English Court of Appeal to revoke or vary the Injunction.
Males LJ ordered that UniCredit's application be heard in open court, given that it raised important issues of principle. Nothing had occurred since the Injunction was granted to suggest it was wrongly granted. The court therefore had to consider whether it had the power to revoke a final injunction and whether it should do so in circumstances where the Ruling appeared to be contrary to Russia's international obligations under the New York Convention.
The court's power to make such an order relied on the following authorities:
The court found that it had the power to revoke or vary the Injunction after considering the following five issues:
UniCredit argued that, should the court refuse to exercise its power to vary or revoke the Injunction, UniCredit was at risk of breaching the Ruling and facing draconian financial consequences. Furthermore, UniCredit stated that compliance with the Ruling required an order of the English court, not just UniCredit's application.
The court found that the Ruling depended on UniCredit's own conduct and, therefore, the Ruling did not seem to go beyond requiring UniCredit to apply to the English court. However, the risk of the St Petersburg Court imposing penalties if the application was rejected could not be discounted, given that the court could not predict how the St Petersburg Court would judge UniCredit's efforts to cancel the Injunction. Therefore, though it was not conclusive in deciding to discharge or vary the Injunction, the risk was a factor to take into account.
The court considered the leading authorities on the revocation of final orders, which outlined that the special circumstances supporting a revocation (or alteration) must be significant enough to overcome the deadweight of the finality principle on the other side of the scales. No party identified any cases that dealt with the discharge of final injunctions, but the court found that it did have requisite power to revoke or vary an anti-suit final injunction as:
The court observed that an anti-suit injunction is a coercive remedy wherever it is granted, as its objective is to require a defendant to litigate against its will in one jurisdiction rather than another. The Ruling clearly applied commercial pressure on UniCredit to apply to revoke the Injunction. However, though the threatened penalties were eye-watering, no cases were identified where coercion and duress vitiated a contract. The court factored in that UniCredit is a major bank, capable of making its own decisions when its board decides something is in its own commercial interest. Therefore, the court found that the coercion of UniCredit was not, in the unusual circumstances of the case, a weighty factor to add to the balance.
Though it would be a great concern if pressure was applied to an English court by a foreign court, the court was satisfied here that the Ruling was not made against the English courts and operated directly against UniCredit. The St Petersburg Court made a strong order enforcing its own laws, conflicting with the approach of the English courts, and the court was happy to mark its disapproval of RusChem's approach. However, this did not add up to a strong public policy reason for the English court to refuse UniCredit's application, made in its own commercial interests.
After conducting a balancing exercise, the court decided to grant UniCredit's application for four reasons:
The court opted to vary the order granting the Injunction, rather than discharge the Injunction. This allowed the parts of the order reflecting the decisions of the English courts to remain in place, given that the courts did have jurisdiction to make their determinations. Therefore, only the injunctive parts of the order were discharged.
This case provides an interesting analysis of the extent of an English court's power when faced with a request to revoke or vary its own final orders. The extent of a court's power could not be decided in isolation: the Court of Appeal had to weigh up the commercial practicalities of the applicant's position and the significance of a foreign court's actions. The decision to vary the Injunction illustrates a degree of flexibility possessed by English courts when informed of a significant change of circumstance.