Слайд 1 THE IMPORTANCE OF ENGLISH LAW IN RUSSIA AND INTERNATIONALLY
Moscow
State Law Academy – named after O.E. Kutafin
1 October, 2018
Luke
Conner, Managing Partner
Слайд 2Moscow based
Corporate, M&A, arbitration, and private client focus
Flexible working practices
Exploring
new frontiers – artificial intelligence
Genuinely entrepreneurial
Expanding rapidly
Exclusive Russian Member of
Cicero
First Russian member of Select Counsel
Please check out our website at www.connerco.ru
Our firm
Слайд 3Managing Partner
Luke Conner, Managing Partner, Conner & Company
Graduate of the
University of Manchester and Nottingham Law School
English qualified solicitor
2003 –
2005: trained in the City of London with CMS Cameron McKenna LLP
2005 – 2007: Associate Solicitor at Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher LLP in London
2007 – 2011: Associate at Linklaters CIS in London and Moscow
2011 – 2015: Senior Associate and International Counsel at Chadbourne & Parke LLP in Moscow
2015: founded Conner & Company
January 2017: appointed President of the British Business Club in Moscow
Слайд 4Introduction and background
The Importance of English law in Russia and
Internationally
The background to, and history of, English law
The constitution
The reasons
for English law’s pre-eminence
Some statistical proof
Geographical reach
What the future holds for English law, here and elsewhere
Слайд 5The background to, and history of, English law
A few points
to note:
Laws of England and Wales……..
Scotland and Northern Ireland have
different legal systems
Scotland has a civil law legal system
Avoid using the term “U.K. law”…………..
Слайд 6The background to, and history of, English law 2
The Magna
Carta 1215…..
Common law since 6 July, 1189…….
……no codification, judge-made law,
binding judicial precedent – stare decisis and ratio decidendi
Statute law
The Crusades and the law of trust and equity
Слайд 7The background to, and history of, English law 3
Distinction between
the legal and beneficial ownership, between those who held the
title, and those to whom the benefit of, and income from the, land would accrue.
The key thing to remember – the settlor settles the assets to be managed on trust by the trustees for the beneficiary(ies).
Court of the Chancery; the Earl of Oxford’s Case.
Habeas Corpus 1679
Freedom of Contract: Sir Edward Coke in Semayne’s case, 1604.
The legacy of The East India Company – limited liability and export assistance
Слайд 8The constitution
Often said to be unwritten………………….. In actual fact, it
is largely written, but not contained in a single unified
document.
4 sources: (i) statute law; (ii) common law; (iii) parliamentary convention; and (iv) works of authority.
Constitutional conventions……
No “entrenchment” i.e. Parliament can’t be said to have made a law that is “unconstitutional” and laws can’t be granted extra protection to stop them from being overturned.
Legislation made by the Queen in Parliament i.e. the Commons, the Lords and the Royal Assent of the monarch.
Parliament is sovereign.
Слайд 9The reasons for English law’s pre-eminence
Judge-made law; reliable judiciary; independent
and impartial
Huge experience in dealing with commercial matters, including some
very specific and specialist areas
Additional vast experience in dealing with international disputes
Case law developed over centuries, with constant ongoing legal refinement, and associated flexibility
English law has certain distinguishing features which make it popular with business people
English law allows the courts and arbitral tribunals to enforce contracts to reflect the intentions of the parties and the commercial bargain which they intended to make when signing the contract
Trusts and equitable remedies i.e. solutions based on “fair principles” rather than formality
No duty of good faith
Слайд 10The reasons for English law’s pre-eminence 2
Russian companies are able
to enter into English law-governed agreements with any foreign party,
where foreign assets or where transaction entered into abroad
Ideal jurisdiction to use where both parties desire genuine neutrality
Perfect for use with many of the offshore jurisdictions i.e. share purchase agreements and shareholders’ agreements for Cypriot entities and holding structures
Can be used in conjunction with a Russian law governed share purchase agreement to acquire assets in a Russian company e.g. it is common to have an English law Framework Agreement, which contains key financial terms, warranties, indemnities etc.
Sensible choice of law where complex financial provisions are required – the intentions of the parties will be upheld in court
Allows use of English structures: trusts, shareholders agreements, options etc.
Слайд 11The reasons for English law’s pre-eminence 3
English law allows for:
- legal privilege
- knock for knock indemnities;
- waivers of consequential
loss;
- pay when paid clauses
- liquidation of anticipated damages;
- implied terms; and
- reasonable time bars and limitations.
Слайд 12The reasons for English law’s pre-eminence 4
Other reasons:
- London
as a pre-eminent financial centre;
- stability;
- services oriented economy –
80 per cent. of U.K. GDP;
- local expertise;
- size of local legal market;
- top 100 firms GBP 24 billion turnover plus (2017);
- overall GBP 30 billion plus.
Слайд 13Some statistical proof…….
40% of global corporate arbitration clauses use English
law as a governing law (Queen Mary University)
London is the
recognised leading international centre for dispute resolution
Statistics by the LCIA and HM Tribunal – 81% involve a foreign party; 49% entirely foreign
U.K. legal market biggest in Europe and second in the world;
Bigger than Gemany, France, Italy, Spain and Netherlands put together;
200 foreign law firms in the U.K.
Слайд 14Geographical reach…..
A relic of the Empire……..
25% of the world’s 320
plus legal jurisdictions have English law as their base
They are
referred to as common law legal systems
These jurisdictions are typified by their:
- adversarial court systems;
- precedential, judge-made law;
- the law of equity and trusts.
Some examples:
- most of the U.K. and the U.S.;
- India, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Ireland, Singapore, Hong Kong, Pakistan, Bangladesh;
- the major offshore financial centres, such as Cyprus, the Channel Islands, the Isle of Man, the British Virgin Islands, the Cayman Islands, Bermuda.
Слайд 15What the future holds….
Brexit
Technology
AI
??????
But probably more of the same, merely
in a different way……
Слайд 16Sources
Wikipedia
Queen Mary University (report)
The City UK (report)
QLTSchool website
The Lawyer
The Law
Society – Legal Services Sector Forecasts
All rights reserved Conner &
Company, LLC, and Luke Conner ©
Слайд 17Luke Conner
Managing Partner
+7 968 756 31 68
lconner@connerco.ru
www.connerco.ru
Thank you!