In the 2023 edition of the Yearbook we noted an uptick in sanctions-related commercial litigation before the English courts. That trend has since continued, and financial institutions have been at the forefront of those disputes as they seek to balance their obligations under the UK sanctions regime with their contractual obligations to clients and counterparties.
As the English commercial courts have delivered more judgments in international sanctions disputes, various themes have emerged. Broadly, these demonstrate that the English courts:
- are prepared to expedite the case management and hearing of sanctions-related cases, to minimise the prejudice to innocent parties caused by the state of affairs and to provide certainty to all affected parties;
- try to reach commercial outcomes, for example, to uphold payment obligations affected by sanctions, provided of course that the payment will not make funds (or “economic resources“) available to a sanctioned entity during the currency of the sanctions regime, and provided further that the proposed method of performance is in accordance with the terms of the contract; and
- place no or low weight on submissions as to the prejudice that will or may be caused to a sanctioned party, in circumstances where the prejudice is principally caused by the imposition of the sanctions regime and not the judgment per se.
This nonetheless remains a developing area, and several judgments have recently been overturned on appeal as the courts seek to develop a clear and consistent body of precedent to guide affected parties. We explore some of the key recent case law below.
The period 2020 to 2023 has seen a dramatic increase in commercial international sanctions disputes in the High Court:
Source of data: Solomonic Year in Review 2023, p20
What are the UK’s Russia Sanctions?
The UK Government has described the sanctions imposed against Russia,1 following its invasion of Ukraine, as the “most severe package of sanctions ever imposed on a major economy“.2 Their core purpose was and is to restrict Russia’s access to global capital and financial markets, thereby undermining its ability to finance the war. Key measures have included:
- A prohibition on UK banks processing payments to, via, and from the Russian central bank and other designated banks;
- Asset freezes targeted at approximately 2,000 designated persons (including entities) connected with Russia, which have resulted in over £22 billion of Russian assets being frozen;3 and
- Internationally coordinated sanctions by the UK, EU, US and other partners freezing approximately €300 billion of Russia’s central bank foreign reserves.4
For over two years, UK banks have had to grapple with issues arising from the implementation and expansion of these sanctions. These are very serious matters and the consequences of even a minor or inadvertent breach may include monetary penalties and adverse publicity.
How are the UK’s Russia sanctions implemented?
In 2014, the EU (including the UK) and its international partners imposed sanctions against Russia following the annexation of Crimea. This cooperation has continued post-Brexit. The UK’s domestic sanctions regimes, including the relevant Russia (Sanctions) (EU Exit) Regulations 2019, sit within a post-Brexit legislative framework established by the Sanctions and Anti-Money Laundering Act 2018 (“SAMLA“). In response to Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, the UK imposed additional financial, trade, aircraft, shipping and immigration sanctions on designated persons (including individuals and entities) and specified ships connected with Russia.
What scenarios have arisen so far?
The UK’s sanctions regime can make performance of a contract extremely difficult, unlawful or impossible. Faced with a choice between breach of sanctions and breach of contract, parties have looked to the English courts to endorse pragmatic (and, crucially, legal) solutions.
1. Do sanctions apply in the first place?
The threshold question will often be whether sanctions apply at all. As explored further below, the question may arise where the parties’ competing positions are aligned with their preferred commercial or strategic interests.
2. If so, does the doctrine of foreign illegality apply?
Where sanctions do apply, parties have sought a solution to the breach of contract versus breach of sanctions dilemma in the doctrine of foreign illegality – namely, the principle that an English court will not enforce an obligation which requires a party to do something which is unlawful under the laws of the country in which the act has to be done. However, the courts assess the application of the doctrine with care. In Celestial Aviation v UniCredit, for example, UniCredit alleged that making the payments through a correspondent bank in USD would contravene US sanctions. Both the High Court and the Court of Appeal held that the doctrine of foreign illegality did not assist UniCredit. However, the Court of Appeal did not endorse the High Court’s reasoning to the effect that UniCredit was not relieved from performance as it could perform in another way under the contract (i.e. by making payment in cash or a different currency). Instead, the Court of Appeal found that because UniCredit had framed its application for a US licence in a way that linked payment to the EU beneficiaries under the letters of credit to payment from the issuing Russian bank, it had not made “reasonable efforts” to obtain the relevant licence.
3. Or is it possible for a party to deliver substitute contractual performance?
The question arising in Celestial of whether a substitute form of contractual performance can be rendered which does not fall foul of the sanctions regime is a common one in sanctions-related disputes. The starting point under English law is that a party cannot unilaterally decide to substitute its performance under the contract for something different, even if the substituted performance might seem to be equivalent to or better than what was originally agreed. This starting point is subject to the terms of the contract under consideration; for example, a clearly worded clause could expressly require a party to accept an offer of non-contractual performance of an obligation from the other party in certain circumstances. The English courts have sought to reach commercial outcomes by the application of orthodox legal principles, emphasising that reasonable business people expect predictability and certainty in commercial transactions, as the following cases demonstrate.
What scenarios might arise in future?
Litigation may be less likely to arise in circumstances where transacting parties have factored the potential imposition and consequences of sanctions into their contractual framework. By way of example, it has become commonplace for loan finance documentation to include provisions aimed at mitigating the risk of a borrower becoming subject to sanctions. In our experience, such provisions are now relatively standard and rarely the subject of detailed negotiation.
By contrast, a more complex issue can arise where, instead, it is one of the lenders or payment intermediaries (e.g. a facility agent) that becomes the subject of sanctions. In our experience, loan documentation is generally not designed to cater for the range of consequences that may result. Nevertheless, sanctions impose a material risk on large capitalisation cross-border loan transactions, which commonly feature a wide and frequently changing lender group.
- For instance, where one lender in the group becomes the target of sanctions, the borrower may not be able to make the necessary payment in full to the agent in respect of a forthcoming debt repayment instalment. Given the inflexibility of loan documentation, such non-payment could nevertheless result in an ‘event of default’ in relation to the debt, allowing the lender group (as a whole) to exercise acceleration and enforcement rights. A waiver may not be technically possible without the intervention of the sanctioned lender.
- In an extreme scenario, a borrower might take the view that no payment at all should be made to the agent in cases where there is a risk of breaching sanctions if some portion of that instalment might be paid forward to the sanctioned lender.
- In another ‘sanctioned lender’ scenario, it is conceivable that payment from the borrower is not constrained by sanctions but that the facility agent (being in another jurisdiction) is itself prohibited from making onward payment to the sanctioned lender.
- There is also the potential for sanctions to intervene between a lender of record and an entity (a participant) to whom the lender has entered into a contract to reduce its exposures under the loan (a ‘funded participation’ or ‘risk participation’). It may be difficult for the innocent party to exit the trade.
In such cases, there may be no easy solution within the framework of the existing contractual matrix. Accordingly, parties may wish to assess their exposure to such risks and take action to mitigate such risks, where possible, in existing contracts and when negotiating new transactions. The alternative is likely to be that parties may need to have recourse to the courts to resolve such issues, as in the selected case examples above.
Conclusion
There has been a relatively constant flow of financial sanctions-related cases through the English courts over the past couple of years as new disputes arise and existing cases are appealed, which is unlikely to slow in the short-term. The case law has demonstrated the inherent challenges of balancing contractual duties and considerations under English law against a varied and often conflicting set of regulatory obligations across multiple jurisdictions. Due to the nature of the business conducted by financial institutions, which will often involve a number of stakeholders and is typically cross-border, this is a particular challenge in the sector.
Given the potentially serious consequences of breaching sanctions but also of erring too far on the side of caution and being found to have acted unreasonably, it is vitally important for financial institutions to keep abreast of this case law and of new regulations that are implemented, to ensure that they make operational decisions which strike the correct balance between these two – sometimes conflicting – aims. This should include seeking legal advice on the potential applicability of sanctions across the various relevant jurisdictions prior to making commercial decisions relating to: (i) entry into international contractual arrangements which may involve entities from sanctioned jurisdictions; (ii) the exercise of rights and performance of obligations under those arrangements; and (iii) the termination of existing arrangements.
Footnotes
- The UK and international partners have also imposed sanctions against Belarus for supporting and facilitating Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, and against Iran and North Korea for supplying armaments to Russia. ↩︎
- Post_Legislative_Scrutiny_Memorandum_Sanctions_and_Anti_Money_Laundering_Act_2018 (publishing.service.gov.uk), pg 53. ↩︎
- Sanctions against Russia – House of Commons Library (parliament.uk); Post_Legislative_Scrutiny_Memorandum_Sanctions_and_Anti_Money_Laundering_Act_2018 (publishing.service.gov.uk), pg 54. ↩︎
- Impact of sanctions on the Russian economy – Consilium (europa.eu). ↩︎
- Celestial Aviation v UniCredit [2023] EWHC 663 (Comm) (High Court – Principal judgment); (2) Celestial Aviation v UniCredit [2023] EWHC 1071 (Comm) (High Court – Consequential judgment); (3) Celestial Aviation v UniCredit [2024] EWCA Civ 628 (Court of Appeal). ↩︎
- [2023] EWHC 2866 (Comm). ↩︎
- Mints v PJSC National Bank Trust [2023] EWCA Civ 1132. ↩︎
- MUR Shipping v RTI Ltd [2022] EWHC 467 (Comm) (High Court); (2) MUR Shipping v RTI Ltd [2022] EWCA Civ 1406 (Court of Appeal); (3) RTI Ltd v MUR Shipping [2024] UKSC 18 (Supreme Court). ↩︎
- [2023] EWHC 131 (Comm). NB: The Supreme Court in RTI Ltd v MUR Shipping distinguished this case at paras. 100-101. ↩︎
- [2023] EWHC 1165 (Ch). ↩︎
- In conjunction with relevant licences from the UK Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation and US and EU equivalents. ↩︎