BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £5, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Abood v Tayeb [2005] EWHC 1687 (Ch) (27 July 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2005/1687.html Cite as: [2005] EWHC 1687 (Ch) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
CHANCERY DIVISION
ON APPEAL FROM THE DECISION
OF MASTER MONCASTER
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
IN THE MATTER OF SECTION 50 OF THE ADMINISTRATION OF JUSTICE ACT 1985 AND IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF MR SHAKER AL ABOOD (DECEASED 22 FEBRUARY 1986) KAWTHER AL ABOOD |
Claimant/Appellant |
|
- and - |
||
NEZHET TAYEB |
Defendant/Respondent |
____________________
Mr Max Mallin (instructed by Simons Muirhead & Burton, 50, Broadwick Street, Soho, London W1F 2AG) for the Defendant/Respondent
Hearing dates: 26th July 2005
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Lightman:
THE PROCEEDINGS
BACKGROUND FACTS
"1. Mrs Al Abood is the widow of the testator, Mr Al Abood, who died in Boston, Massachusetts, USA on 22 February 1986.
2. Mr Al Abood was an extremely wealthy Iraqi businessman. In the weeks and months prior to his death, he took some steps to organise his financial affairs. Mr Tayeb, a chartered accountant and experienced businessman with whom Mr Al Abood had had dealings since at least the early 1960s, was present in Boston during those weeks and assisted in taking those preparatory steps.
3. Mr Al Abood established a family trust in January 1986, the SMA Settlement, a Jersey discretionary trust under the management of BNP Jersey Trust Corporation Limited. Mr Al Abood had a longstanding banking relationship with BNP in London, France, Monaco and Luxembourg.
4. Mr Al Abood took preparatory steps to establish the Shake Trust (a Liechtenstein trust) in late January and early February 1986. This trust was to be established by the agency of Lloyds Bank's Geneva branch, acting by Mr Georges Klonis, who had a longstanding relationship with Mr Tayeb. Mr Klonis and Mr Tayeb at various times took deathbed instructions from Mr Al Abood concerning the proposed Shake Trust as well as other matters. Mr Klonis' evidence in the Landglaze Proceedings described at paragraph 10 below is that while he was in Boston, he sought instructions and guidance from Mr Tayeb by telephone in relation to the establishment of the trust. In the event the Shake Trust was not established until after Mr Al Abood's death, although Mrs Al Abood did not know this fact [until 1997]. Mr Tayeb was a member of the managing committees of each of the trusts, as was Mrs Al Abood.
5. Mr Al Abood also made a will, dated 30 January 1986 (the "Will"), which named Mr Tayeb as sole executor. The Will dealt with the disposal of two flats in Knightsbridge, but made no provision in relation to Mr Al Abood's movable property in England.
6. Probate was granted on 24 October 1986. The two flats which were the subject of specific bequests in the Will were assented to Mrs Al Abood on 20 March 1987. Mr Tayeb also participated in proceedings to recover a debt owed to the estate. Certain steps were taken in France, Monaco, Morocco and (albeit some time after Mr Al Abood's death) Iraq to deal with assets belonging to Mr Al Abood in those jurisdictions. The steps in those jurisdictions of which Mrs Al Abood is aware are summarised at paragraphs 61 to 70 of her 3rd witness statement.
7. Mrs Al Abood [who was some 20 years younger than her husband] was largely ignorant of her husband's business and financial affairs prior to her husband's death and, indeed, for many years thereafter. Following her husband's death, she was principally reliant upon her close friends and advisers, such as Mr Tayeb and his sister Mrs El Shamari, and those responsible for the administration and maintenance of the trusts.
8. From the early 1990s, Mrs Al Abood's relationship with Mr Tayeb deteriorated. At the time, it seemed to Mrs Al Abood that the deterioration arose primarily out of disagreements between them about the performance and investment strategy of the trusts, and Mr Tayeb's resistance to Mrs Al Abood's suggestions for changes to be made to improve the performance of the trusts. Mrs Al Abood made requests for documentation which were ignored or refused by both Mr Tayeb and Lloyds Bank. At around the same time, Mrs Al Abood's relationship with Mr Tayeb's sister, Mrs El Shamari, also deteriorated.
9. In 1998, Mrs El Shamari commenced criminal proceedings in Nice and Monaco against Mrs Al Abood, alleging that Mrs Al Abood had misappropriated several million dollars of money entrusted by Mrs El Shamari to Mrs Al Abood, and obtained pre-trial attachment orders for the seizure of Mrs Al Abood's bank accounts, cars and furniture. Mrs Al Abood successfully defended those proceedings and successfully brought proceedings against Mrs El Shamari and her son (Hisham El Shamari) in the United States ("the US Proceedings"), in respect of a series of frauds perpetrated by them. Mr Tayeb gave evidence in support of his sister in both sets of proceedings and provided his sister with confidential documents belonging to the Al Abood family trusts.
10. In late 1998, Mrs Al Abood discovered that, since 1992, a substantial unauthorised quarterly commission had been paid by Lloyds Bank out of the Shake Trust funds held by it to a company called Landglaze Holdings SA ("Landglaze"). It transpired that Landglaze was a corporate vehicle controlled by Mr Tayeb for his own benefit and that the commission payments had been made with the full knowledge of Lloyds Bank but without the authorisation of both trustees of the Shake Trust. Those commission payments were successfully recovered following proceedings in England commenced in April 2000 (the "Landglaze Proceedings"), judgment on the merits being given by Mr Justice Rimer in July 2002 (reported at [2003] WTLR 21). [The ground on which the Claimant succeeded was lack of authority to make the payments: the allegation by the Claimant against the Defendant of fraud was rejected.]
11. By the late 1990s, therefore, the relationship between Mrs Al Abood and Mr Tayeb had broken down irretrievably.
12. Since then, Mrs Al Abood has been engaged in substantial enquiries in a number of jurisdictions to ascertain the full extent of her husband's assets and wealth. Mrs Al Abood has, however, been unable to conclude those enquiries to her satisfaction and remains of the view that some of her husband's assets remain unaccounted for."
THE JUDGMENT
THE APPEAL
"Upon the Claimants undertaking to issue and serve a New Claim Form in respect of the relief sought."