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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Mattos Junior & Ors v Macdaniels Ltd. & Ors [2003] EWHC 1173 (Ch) (22 May 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2003/1173.html Cite as: [2003] EWHC 1173 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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LUIS VICENTE BARROS MATTOS JUNIOR AND OTHERS |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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MACDANIELS LIMITED AND OTHERS |
Defendants |
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Mr. Romie Tager QC and Mr. Philip Kremen (instructed by Messrs Brecher Abram) for the 42nd Defendant
Hearing dates : 13th, 14th and 15th May 2003
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Crown Copyright ©
The Vice-Chancellor:
(i) setting aside the world-wide freezing orders, releasing the undertakings and returning the security on the grounds that the claimants were guilty of material non-disclosure and misrepresentation when applying for the order made on 3rd February 2003; and
(ii) setting aside the claim form and service thereof and staying the claim as against Mr Vaswani on the ground that this court is not the appropriate forum.
"As this case has evolved and information has emerged and been passed round the worldwide litigation team, our understanding of the scam has taken a certain shape. It has become increasingly apparent that the characters involved at the heart of the scam were the two Nigerian self-styled Chiefs, Anajemba and Odinigwe (and possibly Chief Nwandu) and that they had two principal acolytes:
1. Sakaguchi, as the "mole" at the Bank (who may loosely be described as the accessory before and during the fact); and
2. Naresh Asnani, the money-launderer par excellence (or the accessory after the fact).
These two acolytes involved others as they worked. Naresh Asnani's connections are, for obvious reasons, those whom the claimants are interested in chasing down."
"The case against the proposed Vaswani Defendants
21) The Claimants are aware that there is either a familial or a close friendly relationship between the Asnanis and Sunil Vaswani. Sunil Vaswani is the chairman of and a major shareholder in Reliance Bank Limited, a Nigerian Bank based in Lagos. He is also the CEO and managing director of the Stallion group of companies in Nigeria, which (amongst its other interests) has the franchise there for the importation of Honda cars, and to that extent is in the same way of business as Naresh Asnani, in what is a close-knit community. For this reason it may – at the very least – readily be imagined that Sunil Vaswani would have sufficient knowledge of the extent of Naresh Asnani's legitimate activities to realize that he did not generate enough money himself to act as an unofficial bank; more than that, that acting in that way was of questionable legality under the laws of Nigeria.
22) Against that backdrop, Sunil Vaswani received into a Swiss Bank account (codenamed "Sarina"), a few months after it was first opened, at least $6.5m in traceable funds from the Landmark/Evershine and the Excel accounts. The Claimants submit that they have a prima facie case against him for moneys had and received, and knowing assistance and knowing receipt.
Risk of dissipation
23) The Claimants' case is that Sunil Vaswani was party to a dishonest, elaborate and large-scale money laundering exercise. It is to be emphasized that the money in question was received between October 1996 and August 1997, and no freezing injunctions have yet been sought or made. However, he does have assets in this jurisdiction (and no doubt elsewhere) against which personal remedies may be enforced. There is a bank account at Barclays Bank in London containing some £90,000 and the real property at 16 Beverley House. In the light of the nature of the case, the Court is entitled to infer that there is a risk that (in the absence of a freezing order) he will seek to dispose of his assets both here and elsewhere."
"It might be said that an ordinary man in the street would not think anything very wicked about that, but this gentleman of course is a chief executive and chairman of a Nigerian bank and for him to be engaging in black market Forex transactions is, on the face of it, a little surprising. Beyond that, we would simply say that it is a serious obstacle to anyone seeking to establish that he is 'equity's darling' that the transaction was an unlawful transaction."
There was a further exchange between counsel and the judge relating to similar decided cases. The matter was concluded by the statement of Lightman J:
"But, in any event, having read the skeleton, I have no difficulty in granting this relief at this stage on an ex parte application. It has always been a matter, it seems to me, for this defendant to apply to have it discharged, setting out the full facts of the case."
Counsel then addressed various issues relating to service, the form of order and the proposed amendments.
Should the orders etc be set aside for material non-disclosure?
a) whether the judge had been shown or read the relevant evidence;
b) failure to disclose to the judge that the relevant facts had been known to the claimants for two years before the application had been made;
c) failure to disclose to the judge that Mr Vaswani had bought a third flat in London for more than the equivalent of $6.5m on 28th December 2001, namely ten months after the investigating magistrate had frozen the Sarina Account with Citibank, Geneva;
d) failure to bring to the judge's attention internal memoranda of Lloyds Bank, Zurich concerning the operation of the Landmark account;
e) the misdescription in paragraph 21 of counsel's skeleton argument of the similarity of the businesses of Mr Naresh Asnani and Mr Vaswani and of their relationship;
f) the reference by counsel in his oral presentation to Lightman J on 3rd February 2003 to the position of Mr Vaswani as the Chief Executive and Chairman of a Nigerian bank;
g) the failure to disclose the fact that the Sarina account had been frozen by the investigating magistrate in Geneva on 5th February 2001 and was still frozen.
I will deal with them in that order.
"For your records [Mr Asnani] has very large trading activities in Lagos, Nigeria (he himself is a "Sindhi"). For his imports, which he has to finance from outside Nigeria because Nigerian L/Cs are not accepted, he needs lots of USDs. As you probably know, it is not very easy to get USDs in a country like Nigeria and such foreign currency, very often, needs to be bought outside official markets. On the other hand from his sales in the local markets he is getting lots of Nairas. These Nairas are then sold to a "partner/friend" who has need for such currency in the local market and, because of this trading activities [sic] has USDs outside the country."
In the second memorandum the description of the partner suggests that Mr Wasmer had Chief Odinigwe in mind. Reference was also made to another friend. Neither document referred to Mr Vaswani by name or necessary implication.
"over the years Naresh and I and our families developed a social relationship but not one that could accurately be described as close".
Accordingly the only issue is how close that relationship is. It is by no means established that the inference the claimants drew is wrong. In any event the question is what Mr Vaswani knew about Mr Naresh Asnani and his business not how close their relationship was.
"It will however always be necessary for the court, in deciding what should be the consequences of any breach of duty, to take account of all the relevant circumstances, including the gravity of the breach, the excuse or explanation offered, and the severity and duration of the prejudice occasioned to the defendant (which will include the question whether the consequences of the breach are remediable and have been remedied). Above all the court must bear in mind the overriding objective and the need for proportionality. As Balcombe L.J. said in Brink's Mat Ltd. v Elcombe [1988] 1 W.L.R. 1350, 1358, this judge-made rule cannot itself be allowed to become an instrument of injustice. The relative degrees of culpability of the client and of his lawyers are not irrelevant but will seldom if ever be determinative."
"It cannot be emphasised too strongly that at an urgent without notice hearing for a freezing order, as well as for a search order or any other form of interim injunction, there is a high duty to make full, fair and accurate disclosure of material information to the court and to draw the court's attention to significant factual, legal and procedural aspects of the case. It is the particular duty of the advocate to see that the correct legal procedures and forms are used; that a written skeleton argument and a properly drafted order are prepared by him personally and lodged with the court before the oral hearing; and that at the hearing the court's attention is drawn by him to the unusual features of the evidence adduced, to the applicable law and to the formalities and procedure to be observed."
"An English Court has power to order a stay of proceedings on the basis that England is an inappropriate forum (forum non conveniens) if:
(a) the defendant shows there to be another court with competent jurisdiction which is clearly and distinctly more appropriate than England for the trial of the action, and
(b) it is not unjust that the claimant be deprived of the right to trial in England."
"...a stay will only be granted on the ground of forum non conveniens where the court is satisfied that there is some other available forum for the trial of the action, i.e. in which the case may be tried more suitably for the interests of all the parties and the ends of justice."
92. So far as I am concerned I have no wish to challenge any of the Claimants' allegations which they have made against those who they refer to as the substantive Defendants in these proceedings and those who they have identified as the Conspiracy Defendants.
93. In other words, in relation to the claims which have been brought against me, I am prepared to accept that the USD 6.5 mil had been stolen from Banco Noroeste, and that prior to the transfer of the various sums totalling this amount into the Sarina account, those sums were held by Naresh Asnani – and (if relevant) other members of his family associated with his bank accounts – at Lloyds International in Zurich and Citibank in Geneva on a constructive or resulting trust in favour of the Claimants.
94. However, my defence to the Claimants' claim as against me is that I purchased the monies totalling USD 6.5 mil in good faith, believing that these dollars belonged to him and without having any reason to suspect that they represented the proceeds of a bank fraud, or were otherwise being laundered by him or through his bank accounts.
95. I have been advised that if this defence is accepted it represents a complete answer to the Claimants' claims against me.
96. I contend that all of the relevant witnesses and other evidence that I would have to call and adduce are in Lagos, Nigeria and, indeed, it is only in that jurisdiction that I could have a fair trial of what is effectively a single and narrow issue as between the Claimants and me. I live most of the time in Nigeria where I operate my very substantial business empire. My visits to London are essentially for holiday purposes. It would be far more convenient for me to deal with lawyers in Nigeria than having to instruct solicitors and counsel in England.
97. The witnesses who I would wish to call include a number of long-standing employees of my companies, who include Mr. Krishna and Mr. Prakash. It would cause a serious disruption to the financial operation of my Nigerian companies if they would have to travel to England to give evidence especially if I was having to attend here at the same time, during the trial of these proceedings.
98. There are a large number of witnesses who I would wish to call in order to corroborate that part of my evidence that relates to my standing and reputation in the Lagos commercial community, and the practice of obtaining foreign currency on the parallel market as an everyday feature of import/export and related business activities in Nigeria.
99. I would also wish to call a substantial number of witness who would corroborate my evidence as to the business reputation and standing of Naresh Asnani and his father in Nigeria in 1996 and 1997, and the fact that (as I firmly believed at the time) all who dealt with the Asnani family in parallel market transactions had every reason to be confident that there were dealing with reputable businessmen and with money that was not "tainted" in any way.
100. I very much doubt that such witnesses could be persuaded to come to London to give evidence of these matters, and because of the seriousness of the Claimants' allegations against me I am most anxious that the Judge who tries this case will have the benefit of seeing in the witness box all of the witnesses who are in a position to give this evidence and to corroborate what I say about these aspects of my defence.
101. In addition, I have been advised that expert evidence will probably be required in order to deal with the Claimants' suggestion that the parallel market transactions which I participated in with Mr. Asnani in 1996 and 1997 were illegal under Nigerian law. Quite clearly, it will be preferable for such matters to be dealt with by a Nigerian judge who would be (so I have been advised) in a far better position than an English Judge to determine whether or not these transaction were illegal, and the extent to which any illegality is to be treated as relevant when judging the question of good faith in my dealings with Mr. Asnani."
"It is my experience that, were the Lagos High Court to embark on the trial of the claims made in this action against Mr Vaswani, such a trial is unlikely to commence for at least three years after the filing of the claims, and the trial itself is unlikely to be concluded within two years of commencement (i.e. five years in total), given the manner in which trials in the Lagos State High Court are conducted. Evidence is recorded manually and in long hand by the judge. Due to the congested nature of the lists of all judges, the case itself would be listed on several different days over a period of at least two years. During this time, the judge would probably only be able to permit hearings of about an hour on each occasion that the case was listed for hearing. This procedure will result in several hearings and increase the costs of the litigation which costs....are not awarded on an indemnity basis."
Conclusion
a) the order of 3rd February 2003 and the subsequent orders and undertakings which replaced it should be set aside for non-disclosure or misdescription; or
b) the claim against Mr Vaswani should be stayed on the ground that England is not the appropriate forum for its trial.
In those circumstances I dismiss this application.