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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 >> Daltel Europe Ltd & Ors v Makki & Ors [2005] EWHC 2258 (Ch) (21 October 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2005/2258.html Cite as: [2005] EWHC 2258 (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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(1) Daltel Europe Limited (In Liquidation) (2) James Earp, Robert Harry Pick and Nicholas Stewart Wood (The Liquidators of Daltel Europe Limited) (3) Pacifica Limited (In Liquidation) (4) James Earp, Robert Harry Pick and Nicholas Stewart Wood (The Liquidators of Pacifica Limited Europe Limited) (5) Globenet Limited (In Liquidation) (6) James Earp and Nicholas Stewart Wood (The Liquidators of Globenet (UK) Limited) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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1) Hassan Ali Makki (2) Weybridge Management LLC (3) Daltel USA LLC |
Defendant |
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Hugo Page QC (instructed by Irwin Mitchell) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 19 and 20 July 2005
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice David Richards :
"Background
5. Each of the claimant companies is incorporated in England and Wales and carried on a telecommunications business. Each had obtained a licence from the regulatory authority under section 7 of the Telecommunications Act 1984 to offer telecommunication services. British Telecommunications plc (BT) was accordingly obliged to provide each company with interconnection facilities. This meant that their telecommunications switches were physically connected to the BT telephone network and were entitled to route incoming and outgoing calls via the BT network. This enabled the companies, in effect, to sell access to the BT network to end-users or to other telecommunications operators. Daltel Europe Limited (Daltel) did this by the sale of pre-paid telephone cards and by routing calls from the residential subscribers of an associated company, Apple Telecommunications Europe Limited (ATEL). Pacifica Limited (Pacifica) and Globenet (UK) Limited (Globenet) had no retail customers and routed calls to the BT network on a wholesale basis, directly or indirectly, from Arbinet-theexchange Limited (Arbinet). Arbinet is a New Jersey company which operates a global exchange to facilitate the sale and purchase of voice telephone minutes. It is in issue both in these applications and in the action (i) whether Pacifica and Globenet dealt directly with Arbinet or with companies which in turn dealt directly or indirectly with Arbinet and (ii) whether the intermediate companies (if any) were owned or controlled by Mr Makki or by a third party.
6. There are many references in the evidence to the sale of airtime by BT to the claimant companies and to the onward sale of airtime by them to other entities. In turn this led to submissions on behalf of the claimants based on the notion that "airtime" was an asset to be bought and sold. Mr Page QC appearing for Mr Makki submitted, correctly in my judgment, that this was not an accurate legal analysis. The interconnect agreements between the claimant companies and BT give those companies access to the BT network for which they agree to pay on a time basis in accordance with contractually binding tariff tables. In that respect it is no different from any ordinary customer's use of the BT or other networks. Essentially BT is providing a service for which it makes charges. The same was true of the companies which, by virtue of their interconnect agreements, were able to charge for access to the BT network. It is convenient to speak in terms of the sale and purchase of airtime, and I will do so in this judgment, but it is no more than convenient shorthand.
7. The businesses of these companies were straightforward. Their principal costs were the amounts due to BT, which were charged on a time basis and payable on credit terms. The income of Daltel comprised the amounts received from the sale of pre-paid cards and the amounts due from ATEL, and the income of Pacifica and Globenet comprised the amounts payable by Arbinet or the intermediate company with which they dealt. The businesses could be run from small offices with a small number of employees. Apart from the telecommunications licences and interconnect agreements, the only essential assets were capacity on a telecommunications switch, which I will describe later in this judgment, and computer facilities.
8. It is common ground that, at all material times, Mr Makki was the sole shareholder of Daltel and Pacifica and was in control of their day-to-day affairs.
9. The position as regards Globenet is different. Although Mr Makki accepts that he incorporated Globenet, he says that he had sold it before it started trading on about 28 September 2003. …
10. Mr Makki accepts that he incorporated, or purchased off the shelf, Hillside and two other Delaware companies, Weybridge Management LLC (Weybridge) and Community Technology LLC (Community). He says that he sold all three Delaware companies to Chlach Abdulazziz Al-Eid, a Syrian resident and citizen, in June 2003 under a written contract in Arabic. … Mr Makki says that Globenet, Hillside and Weybridge were after June 2003 controlled by Mr Al-Eid who directed their businesses. The truth of these claims regarding the change of control and ownership of Globenet, Hillside and Weybridge is the central issue in the committal application under CPR Part 32.14.
11. It is not in dispute that Daltel traded with BT between December 2002 or January 2003 and August 2003, resulting in unpaid indebtedness of some £1.7 million. BT suspended Daltel's interconnect services for non-payment of charges on 15 August 2004. Equally it is not in dispute that Pacifica traded with BT, resulting in substantial unpaid indebtedness. The precise amount is in dispute but it is accepted to be of the order of £3.9 million. As to the period of Pacifica's trading, although there is a difference on the statements of case, it is, I think, agreed that it was from June to August 2003. Its interconnect services were suspended by BT on 27 August 2003. Globenet traded with BT from about 28 September to about 28 October 2003, resulting in unpaid indebtedness of nearly £3.69 million. The claimants' evidence is that Pacifica and Globenet made no payments to BT and that Daltel paid approximately £280,300. There is no contrary evidence adduced by Mr Makki. The total unpaid debts from the three companies to BT are of the order of £9.3 million.
12. Daltel and Pacifica were each ordered to be wound up on 19 November 2003 on petitions presented by BT and Globenet was wound up on 10 March 2004, also on a petition by BT. None of the petitions was opposed. There are no assets available to the companies or their creditors, other than claims in the action and/or, as Mr Makki says, the claims for unpaid debts against the companies with which they dealt.
Claims against Mr Makki
13. It is the claimants' case that between 15 July and 30 October 2003 Arbinet paid sums totalling $6,278,818, which were due to one or more of the claimant companies (all references in this judgment to $ are to US dollars). Instead of being paid to the companies and used to pay debts due to BT, at least $5 million was paid to or for the benefit of Mr Makki between 15 July and November 2003. It is common ground that neither Pacifica nor Globenet maintained a bank account and the claimants allege that sums due to them from Arbinet were paid into Daltel's dollar account with Barclays Bank in London. Between 15 July and 30 October 2003 a total of $4,695,397 was paid by Arbinet into Daltel's dollar account. Between July and September 2003 sums totalling $2,152,388 was transferred from this account to accounts at various banks in Beirut held in the joint names of Mr Makki and his father. On 3 November 2003, a further sum of $1.5 million was transferred from Daltel's dollar account to an account with Barclays Bank in Geneva in the name of Daltel USA LLC (Daltel USA), a Delaware company which was at all times controlled by Mr Makki. A separate amount of $1.4 million was paid by Arbinet into Daltel USA's account in Geneva. In November 2003 a sum of $2.8 million was transferred from the Geneva account to an account in Beirut in the joint names of Mr Makki and his father.
14. Put shortly, the claimants' case is that Mr Makki carried on the business of the companies fraudulently, obtaining connection services to the BT network on credit and diverting the income of the companies to himself, leaving the companies without funds to pay BT.
15. This is denied by Mr Makki. He says that the relevant circumstances were different as regards each of the companies. He accepts that he controlled Daltel at all material times, but its business was unprofitable because he had intended that it should use Arbinet circuits for the onward transmission of calls but for technical reasons was unable to do so and so had to use the BT network at higher cost. He also accepts that he controlled Pacifica. His case is that it did not deal with Arbinet but sold airtime to Weybridge, which at all material times was owned and controlled by Mr Al-Eid. He says that Weybridge sold the airtime to Daltel USA, which remained under Mr Makki's control, but did so at a loss apparently due to errors made by Mr Al-Eid in drawing up the rate sheet for the interconnect agreement between Weybridge and Daltel USA. He accepts that Daltel USA has not paid for the airtime. Weybridge failed to pay Pacifica which was therefore left without funds to pay BT.
16. As regards Globenet, I have already mentioned Mr Makki's case that he did not control it while it was trading, but had already sold it to Mr Al-Eid or to Hillside, which was by then controlled by Mr Al-Eid. He was not privy to Globenet's arrangements with BT or with Weybridge. Again, airtime was acquired by Daltel USA from Weybridge and sold to Arbinet. Again, he accepts that Daltel USA has not paid for the airtime.
17. Mr Makki does not dispute the payments summarised above but it is his case that all the dollar sums paid by Arbinet were for airtime sold by Daltel USA to Arbinet. Daltel USA had purchased the airtime from Weybridge, which in turn had acquired it from Pacifica and Globenet. The sums paid did not therefore represent the funds of Daltel, Pacifica or Globenet, but belonged to Daltel USA. Mr Makki alleges that all sums credited to Daltel's dollar account were held for Daltel USA, as confirmed by a depository trust agreement."
"…the only proper conclusion to be drawn is that DUSA's involvement was a sham and that Mr Makki traded with Arbinet in his capacity as the owner / controller of Pacifica and Globenet and at all times dealt only with the assets of those companies."
"Airtime purchased by Daltel and/or Pacifica and/or Globenet from BT was sold by those companies, at a discount to the price at which that airtime had been purchased from BT, directly or indirectly, to Arbinet Limited ("Arbinet") which operated as a global exchange to facilitate the buying and selling of voice minutes."
Paragraph 21 details the transfers to bank accounts in Switzerland and Lebanon of funds paid by Arbinet. The effect is to ignore DUSA and treat the money as if it had or should have been paid directly by Arbinet to Pacifica and Globenet.