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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Caldero Trading Ltd v Leibson Corporation Ltd & Ors [2014] EWCA Civ 935 (08 July 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2014/935.html Cite as: [2014] EWCA Civ 935 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION
COMPANIES COURT
Mr Justice David Richards
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE JACKSON
and
LORD JUSTICE AIKENS
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CALDERO TRADING LIMITED |
Respondent/Petitioner |
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- and - |
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LEIBSON CORPORATION LIMITED BELINDA CAPITAL LIMITED IGOR LAZURENKO LAWSON TRADING LIMITED SERGEY SCHEKLANOV |
Appellants/Respondents |
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WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr Robin Hollington QC and Mr Adrian Pay (instructed by Bryan Cave) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 10 June 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Rimer :
Introduction
The facts in outline
'23. the parties had agreed the basis on which finance would be provided for its purchase and renovation. There is very little further common ground on this central issue. Mr Becirovic and Mr Lazurenko differ markedly as to the time at which and the circumstances in which their agreement was made and, of course, they differ on the terms of the agreement.'
'8 consistent position has been that it was agreed that all finance for the purchase and reconstruction of the hotels would be provided as capital. Even if any part of the finance was provided as a loan, as a matter of accounting between the parties, it would be treated as capital introduced by Mr Lazurenko.'
The judge's judgment
'36. The general absence of documents has perhaps led to exaggerated reliance being placed on the few documents thought to be in point. This is therefore a case, more than most cases of a commercial type, which turns on the credibility of the two principal witnesses. Their lack of credibility in other important respects and the overall commercial probabilities may be factors of great importance.'
'47. The position therefore is that Mr Lazurenko must be taken to be a man who will prepare documents with dishonest intent and will present a deliberately false case to the court in points of defence and witness statements.'
'50. I am wholly unpersuaded by this explanation, which I find incredible . I find that the real reason for Mr Lazurenko's retreat from his originally stated position was that he realised that it was unsustainable. I am satisfied that his original case was deliberately false.'
'63 I accept that [Mr Lazurenko has no principal]. Nothing is known about Mr Scheklanov or any means or ability on his part to invest the sums amounting to approximately 50 million which have been invested in these hotels. Not a single document has been produced to support the case that he had any part at all in the project, not even any document supporting a transfer of funds for investment in the project. No documents have been produced supporting his allegation that he is the beneficial owner of Leibson and Lawson. His failure to give evidence at the trial is totally at odds with his alleged role as Mr Lazurenko's principal. I conclude therefore that Mr Scheklanov was not Mr Lazurenko's principal and that Mr Lazurenko has been repeatedly lying in his evidence to that effect. I am also satisfied that in 2002 Mr Lazurenko told Mr Becirovic that he was acting for Mr Khan.'
'65. In a case such as the present, where there is a direct conflict of oral evidence and very little documentary evidence, Mr Kitchener QC submitted that the court should attach weight to the inherent commercial probabilities. He submitted that this commercial factor strongly supported the account given by Mr Lazurenko. It was, he submitted, inherently improbable as a matter of commercial reality that Mr Lazurenko would have agreed that Mr Becirovic should have a 20% interest, later increased to a 25% interest, not just in the net profit of the venture but in the total value of the hotels with no deduction for the cost of their purchase and renovation. This would involve the investor in effect making a gift to Mr Becirovic of 20% or 25% of all the sums invested in the purchase and renovation and it was simply unrealistic to think that any investor would agree to such a deal.
66. I do not consider that I can approach the determination of this issue on the basis that Mr Becirovic's case is commercially improbable.
67. It takes no account of the role which Mr Becirovic was to play. I have earlier quoted from Mr Lazurenko's witness statement where he sets out his understanding at the relevant time of the influence which Becirovic had in Montenegro. He plainly regarded that influence as critical to his decision to invest in the acquisition and refurbishment of the Avala hotel. Moreover, Mr Lazurenko had no means of doing business in Montenegro. He needed a local partner. Mr Becirovic was to be responsible for all steps taken in Montenegro as regards the purchase of the hotels and to have overall responsibilities for their subsequent refurbishment, while not playing a day-to-day project management role. In effect, Mr Becirovic's role was as an active local partner while Mr Lazurenko was to be a more passive, financing partner.
68. It is common ground that Mr Becirovic's only return would be by virtue of the agreement he made with Mr Lazurenko. He was to receive no remuneration. It does not appear to me to be commercially implausible that he would stipulate for a return which was not restricted to net profit. It is not difficult to think of ventures where one partner provides the basic finance and another partner provides the contacts and undertakes all or most of the work where it is not just the profits but the partnership property and capital which is held on behalf of the partners in agreed proportions. As to the scale of reward to be provided to Mr Becirovic, there is no objective yardstick available to the court to determine what might be considered reasonable by a Russian investor agreeing to invest in Montenegro shortly after the end of hostilities in the former Yugoslavia.
69. I could nonetheless see some force in the submission of commercial improbability if Mr Lazurenko had been bound to provide an unlimited amount of capital. There was, however, no such obligation on Mr Lazurenko, at any rate perhaps beyond the sums provided for refurbishment by the bids for the two hotels. It is I think clear that the amounts ultimately invested in the two hotels considerably exceeded what either of the parties contemplated at the time of their acquisition. The extent of reconstruction and the amount spent was a matter for the two parties to agree. It was always open to Mr Lazurenko to scale back any proposals for reconstruction and to impose costs controls. There is abundant evidence that he did so. Simply by way of example, reference can be made to an email sent by Mr Lazurenko to Mr Becirovic on 16 March 2007 in which he directed that no further payments should be made and no contracts signed until there was a clear financial picture. Equally, he could determine that he would provide no further funds, as he did in an email sent on 17 November 2007, or determine that he was not prepared to provide further sums except on terms that they were to be provided by way of loans, to be repaid before any division between the partners as such. This follows from the absence of a commitment to provide unlimited funds.
70. I conclude that this is not a case where the commercial plausibility of either side's case will assist me in determining the issue which requires to be decided.'
'98. Moreover, I do not think that the incident of the share certificate being handed over in the street in Moscow is a detail which Mr Becirovic simply had mis-remembered. I find that it involved a deliberate embroidering of his evidence.'
'106. The Bianca spreadsheet is a critical document in Mr Lazurenko's case. It was on the basis of this document that the respondents amended their points of defence to remove the allegation that all funds provided by the investors would be repaid before Mr Becirovic received any share of the profits and to substitute their case that no account would be taken of sums up to 8.2 million in respect of the Avala and 4.5 million in respect of the Bianca. The Bianca spreadsheet says nothing about the figures for the Avala but it appears to support Mr Lazurenko's case so far as it relates to the Bianca. Mr Kitchener QC described it as the alpha and omega of his case.'
'144. I do not regard the Bianca spreadsheet as providing the level of support for which Mr Lazurenko contends. If it truly represented the shareholders' agreement, as its title states, it is inexplicable that it was not sent by Mr Lazurenko to Mr Becirovic or otherwise recorded in a document to which both were in some way parties. Mr Kitchener QC seized on Mr Becirovic saying that it was possible that he had fleetingly seen it on a computer screen in Mr Lazurenko's office in Moscow. But Mr Becirovic was clear that he did not remember seeing it and I am satisfied that he did not do so. I reject as entirely untrue Mr Lazurenko's case that the spreadsheet was modified by Mr Becirovic and himself over several weeks from the end of August 2004 and that some changes shown in red were made at Mr Becirovic's request.
145. If the spreadsheet genuinely reflected the agreement, it is extraordinary that Mr Lazurenko did not rely on it from the start of these proceedings or at the very least plead the agreement it is said to reflect. Given that the document is headed draft, and was sent to or given to Mr Becirovic, I am satisfied that it was at best nor more than a proposal being prepared by Mr Lazurenko. I have already found that Mr Lazurenko was entitled to control the level of expenditure by agreeing or not agreeing particular proposals for renovations. It follows that he was entitled to stipulate as a term for agreeing particular renovation plans that funding was to be provided not as capital but as a loan which would need to be repaid before Mr Becirovic received his share. It is entirely possible that it was such a proposal that Mr Lazurenko was putting down on the Bianca spreadsheet.'
'116 These are all substantial points but there are other matters that must be taken into consideration. First, the fact that the loans were to repaid in accordance with their terms, that is by BJM over the term of the loans, does not mean that as between Mr Becirovic and Mr Lazurenko's side the loans would not be treated when determining profits as having been contributed by Mr Lazurenko's side rather than being a deduction from profit.
117. Secondly, the absence of any direct reference by Mr Lazurenko or others to cash flow difficulties as a reason for the loans is not decisive. He indicated in one email that he wanted "all credit which we can afford". There is no evidence before the court as to the funding available to Mr Lazurenko in order to provide finance for the renovation of the Avala. There is no evidence as to whether he did or did not have access in April 2007 to funds which could have been provided instead of the two long term loans. Mr Lazurenko's emails which deal with proposals to take out the loans stress the need to control costs and to keep the amount of the loan within bounds that BJM was likely to be able to afford. This is not inconsistent with the provision of finance being his responsibility. If loans were to be taken by BJM, there had to be a proper regard for its financial circumstances.
118. Before the loans were agreed with Prva Banka in April 2007, Mr Lazurenko had emailed Mr Becirovic on 10 January 2007. Mr Kitchener placed some reliance on this email. It is an isolated email, with no prior or later communications of which this can be seen to be part. Mr Lazurenko referred to there being "a problem with taking a credit for reconstruction we will not be able to return it". He referred to the Bianca's loss of 1.6 million in 2006 and the worsening situation in 2007 and continued "We should change dramatically situation with Bianca's occupancy to have zero Pnl [profit and loss] there and cover credit with Avala's positive revenue". He questioned the ability of the relevant manager to improve the Bianca's sales and continued "Nobody let us and we cannot afford to think about credit without understanding of way to return it and written description the funds which will cover the credit". Finally, he stated "Let's take in mind our only available 4.7 million and please let's think how improve dramatically sales situation in Bianca".
119. This is not an easy email to understand. In his witness statement, Mr Lazurenko states that there had been discussions between Mr Becirovic and himself before this email in which it had been agreed that he would procure a shareholder loan of 3.5 million and Mr Becirovic would obtain about 4.7 million from the local banks. Mr Becirovic accepted in evidence that he had agreed to try and raise local bank finance but he had no recollection of the figure of 4.7 million. There is no other evidence explaining that figure or supporting Mr Lazurenko's evidence about the shareholder loan of 3.5 million.
120. It is said on behalf of Mr Lazurenko that this email supports his case that he had agreed that 5 million of the funding required for the renovation of the Avala would be provided by way of capital. That is arrived at by deducting 5 million from the budgeted figure for phase 1 being discussed at about that time of approximately 13 million. Mr Lazurenko's evidence is that the difference of approximately 8 million was agreed to be funded by the shareholder loan of 3.5 million and bank finance of 4.7 million. There is little to support this beyond Mr Lazurenko's own evidence and whether I accept it or nor will largely depend on my overall assessment of his evidence.'
'146. The bank loans taken by BJM for the renovation of the Avala hotel, although capable of being consistent with and therefore providing support for Mr Lazurenko's case, do not in my judgment provide the level of support which may be derived from the Bianca spreadsheet. They constituted only about one-sixth of the total sum spent on the renovation of the Avala hotel and indeed represented only about a third of the costs for the phase to which they related. I consider it to be quite likely that the reason for raising the loans was that Mr Lazurenko did not have available to him the requisite funds. It is a difficult issue to test because Mr Lazurenko applied for and obtained an order that the source of funds for the investment in the hotels should not be an issue for this trial and he has not put before the court any evidence as to the funds which were available to him from time to time for this investment. If he had wished to establish that there were no cash flow difficulties, there was no reason why he (or Mr Scheklanov, if he had in truth been his principal) could not have put evidence before the court, but he chose not to do so. I consider it likely that the loans were prompted by financial constraints on him. It is clear that in late 2006 and early 2007 Mr Lazurenko was anxious that the company should take out short term loans pending the release of funds held to secure the performance bond which is at least indicative of financial constraints. Mr Lazurenko's clear concern to control expenditure on the renovation does not suggest limitless resources (and also undercuts his case that he was concerned that Mr Becirovic should have an interest only in the net profits because that would provide Mr Becirovic with a strong incentive to control costs).'
'148. Having considered all these various factors, and assessing the quality of the evidence of Mr Lazurenko and Mr Becirovic overall, I cannot accept the evidence of Mr Lazurenko that limits of 8.2 million and 4.7 million were agreed for the amount of capital or sums to be treated as capital to be provided by him in respect of the Avala and Bianca hotels. I find that the agreement reached between Mr Lazurenko and Mr Becirovic was that all the sums provided for the purchase and renovation of the hotels were to be treated as capital as between them and were not to be deducted before calculation of Mr Becirovic's share.'
The appeal
Lord Justice Jackson :
Lord Justice Aikens :