In the recent Court of Appeal decision in Bi Xiaoqiong (in her personal capacity and as trustee of the Xiao Qiong Bi Trust and the Alisa Wu Irrevocable Trust) v China Medical Technologies, Inc (in liquidation) and another [2019] SGCA 50, the Court of Appeal dismissed an appeal against the grant of a Mareva injunction in support of foreign court proceedings.

Background

The second respondent, CMED Technologies (“CMED) was the wholly owned subsidiary of the first respondent, China Medical Technologies Inc (“CMT) (collectively “Respondents”).  Mr Wu Xiaodong had founded CMT and had run it until it was wound up in 2012.  The appellant was Ms Bi Xiaoqiong, the former wife of Mr Wu.

After investigating the affairs of CMT and CMED, the liquidators of CMT took the view that members of the former management had fraudulently misappropriated a large sum of funds from the Respondents. The Respondents then started a series of legal proceedings against these persons in Hong Kong and Singapore. including a set of proceedings against Mr Wu and Ms Bi in Singapore.  The Respondents alleged that the funds had been paid out of the Respondents’ accounts through a series of transactions controlled by CMT’s former management.  The recipients of some of the funds allegedly included Mr Wu and Ms Bi.

In the proceedings commenced in Singapore, the Respondents applied for Mareva injunctions against Mr Wu and Ms Bi preventing them from disposing of their assets in Singapore.  The judge granted the Respondents’ application for a Mareva injunction against Ms Bi accepting that the court had the power to grant a Mareva injunction in aid of foreign court proceedings.  The judge further granted the Respondents’ application to stay the legal proceedings in Singapore, as it was not disputed that Hong Kong was the more appropriate forum for the dispute.

Ms Bi appealed this decision contending that the Court did not have such power to grant a Mareva injunction against her, and that even if the Court had the power, the injunction should not have been granted.

Court’s decision

The Court of Appeal dismissed the appeal and found that the High Court did have this power which was conferred under section 4(10) of the Civil Law Act (Cap 43).  The Court’s power is broad and is subject to at least the following conditions:

  1. The court must have personal jurisdiction over the defendant.
  2. The plaintiff must have a reasonable accrued cause of action against the defendant in Singapore.

In relation to the second condition, there is no requirement that the cause of action against the defendant must be terminated in a judgment obtained from the same court that grants the injunction. Although the Respondents’ application to stay the Singapore legal proceedings carried the possibility that no judgment would eventually be granted by the Singapore Court, it did not deprive the court of its jurisdiction to grant a Mareva injunction.

Conclusion

In circumstances where a stay of action is sought, the court retains the residual jurisdiction over the underlying cause of action.  The Court of Appeal was of the view that this was a sound juridical basis on which to ground the court’s power to grant a Mareva injunction and was consistent with the recognition that a Mareva injunction in aid of foreign proceedings is still ultimately premised on, and in support of, proceedings in Singapore. The expression “in aid of foreign proceedings” in a Mareva injunction acknowledges that a plaintiff who obtains a Mareva injunction intends to employ it in aid of foreign proceedings, which will assist the plaintiff to enforce a foreign judgment over assets in Singapore.

Nandakumar Ponniya
Author

Nandakumar (Kumar) Ponniya heads the Dispute Resolution Practice of Baker & McKenzie in the Asia-Pacific. Kumar is listed as a leading international arbitration lawyer in the Legal 500 Asia Pacific 2021 and was also named a Litigation Star in the Benchmark Litigation Asia Pacific 2020. Chambers Asia Pacific 2021 quotes “the ‘well respected’ Nandakumar Ponniya for having led commercial and investment arbitrations and notes that he is especially recognised for his focus on construction and contractual issues. He has also been described by clients as being “intellectually sharp and street smart” (Legal 500) and "very savvy and well connected" (Chambers Global). Further, he has been recognised for being "sensitive to commercial realities” (Chambers Asia Pacific) and providing "practical, on the ground advice that clients need” (Legal 500). Kumar is a member of the Expert Panel of the Centre for Cross-Border Commercial Law in Asia (CEBCLA) and is also a Fellow of the Chartered Institute of Arbitrators. He serves on statutory tribunals such as the Income Tax Review Board and the Law Society’s Inquiry Panel. In addition, Kumar also serves as an adjunct assistant professor at the National University of Singapore and the Singapore Management University, where he conducts the International Projects Practice and Law as well as the International Construction Law course. Kumar has a broad focus on dispute resolution with specialist expertise in international arbitration, commercial litigation, and corporate restructuring and insolvency. His particular areas of industry focus include construction, technology, energy and financial services. With more than 20 years of experience, Kumar has an in-depth understanding of the legal and regulatory frameworks of the major Asian markets. His wealth of experience is drawn from handling disputes for government, state-owned enterprises, multi-national corporations and regional industry leads arising from a variety of commercial transactions and investments, as well as complex engineering and development projects in Singapore, ASEAN and the wider Asia Pacific region.

Author

Daljit Kaur is an associate in the Baker McKenzie Dispute Resolution team based in Singapore.