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 >> Raja v Van Hoogstraten [2005] EWHC 2890 (Ch) (19 December 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2005/2890.html Cite as: [2005] EWHC 2890 (Ch) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
ASGHAR SABIR RAJA (REPRESENTING THE INTERESTS OF THE ESTATE OF THE LATE MOHAMMED SABIR RAJA) | Claimant | |
- and - | ||
MR NICHOLAS VAN HOOGSTRATEN | ||
STITCHACRE LIMITED | ||
RAREBARGAIN LIMITED | ||
CASTRIES LAND LIMITED | Defendants | |
IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION | ||
MRS STARBIBI RAJA | ||
(in her capacity of the Estate of Mr Mohammed Sabir Raja (Deceased) and in her personal capacity | No. HO 02 XO 2752Claimant | |
-and- | ||
NICHOLAS VAN HOOGSTRATEN | Defendant | |
IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION | No. HO 02 XO 2753 | |
IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION | ||
WAHEED ASGHAR RAJA | ||
-and- | ||
NICHOLAS VAN HOOGSTRATEN | ||
RIZVAN ASGHAR SABEER RAJA | ||
-and- | ||
NICHOLAS VAN HOOGSTRATEN | Claimant Defendant |
____________________
Mr Andrew Mitchell QC & Mr Peter Irvin (instructed by Healys, 3 Waterhouse Square, 142, Holborn, London EC1N 2SW) for the Claimants
Mr van Hoogstraten did not appear and was not represented
Hearing date: 23rd - 24th November, 28th - 30th November & 1st December 2005
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Para | |
PART 1 | |
INTRODUCTION | 1 |
HISTORY OF PROCEEDINGS | 2-26 |
PART 2 | |
CHRONOLOGY OF EVENTS | 27-42 |
PART 3 | |
LEGAL PRINCIPLES | |
A. SIGNIFICANCE OF CRIMINAL PROCEEDINGS | 43-47 |
B. NON ATTENDANCE BY MR VAN HOOGSTRATEN | 48-54 |
PART 4 | |
CLAIMANTS' EVIDENCE | |
(1) Preliminary | 55 |
(2) Previous Convictions | 56-60 |
(3) Claimants' witnesses | 61-72 |
(4) Claimants' statements | 73-81 |
(5) Miscellaneous | 82 |
POLICE INTERVIEWS | 83 |
TELEVISION INTERVIEWS | 84-89 |
TRANSCRIPTS OF CRIMINAL TRIAL | 90-94 |
NEWSPAPERS ARTICLES | 95 |
PART 5 | |
MR VAN HOOGSTRATEN'S EVIDENCE | 96-101 |
PART 6 | |
FINDINGS | 102-109 |
CONCLUSION | 110 |
Mr Justice Lightman:
PART 1 - INTRODUCTION
HISTORY OF PROCEEDINGS
"(Mr van Hoogstraten) But why should I sell anything and incur capital gains tax for these people's benefit?
(Lightman J) I will tell you this. If you have assets of £2-£3 million –
(Mr van Hoogstraten) I am not selling anything. It is as simple as that. I don't need to and I don't have to. The freezing order needs to be lifted. It was obtained by perjured evidence and it is illegal and I put in an application to have it lifted - 2½ years ago to have it lifted and the court lost it. It is up to the court to sort it out." (p.15)
"I will need legal representation. There is no dispute about it…. But there is no way I am going to get legal representation whilst there is a freezing order in place and until we've recovered some of the costs which [the Estate] owe us."
"… I have repeatedly encouraged him in his own interests once more to obtain legal representation but he has declined. He has told me that he sees it to his advantage to represent himself. The second decision was to apply to me to discharge my order. I heard that application on the 11th February 2005. In his submissions to me on that application he said that there would be no timetable without his consent and that he would abide with no timetable to which he did not agree. In my judgment dated the 11th February 2005 I dismissed his application and made plain that I intended to require both parties to abide by the timetable which I had laid down.
Mr van Hoogstraten has the funds available to obtain legal representation if he wants to, though he suggests the contrary in his evidence on this application. We explored this question at the hearing of the 11th February 2005 and I refer to paragraphs 11 and 12 of my judgment of that date. I went on in my judgment to make plain (as I made plain on subsequent occasions) that I would not allow his decisions to act in person or to spend protracted periods in Zimbabwe to derail the timetable. Mr van Hoogstraten is a very wealthy man. Whilst some of these funds are subject to a restraint order (which he tells me he is in the process of applying to discharge), this order would (if he requested) be modified to allow for this expenditure. I recorded in my judgment of the 4th March 2005 that Mr van Hoogstraten had told me at the hearing preceding that judgment that he had assets in his own name of between £2 and £3 million, but was unwilling to sell or otherwise realise any asset or expend any money necessary to have the conduct of this action in the hands of legal representatives."
i) The first ground was that there should be tried, at the same time as, or instead of, the issue as to his being party to the murder, the issue raised in the Chancery Action whether (as alleged by the Estate) Mr van Hoogstraten was dishonest in his dealings with Mr Raja.ii) The second ground put forward was that the Crown Prosecution Service had failed to produce documents which Mr van Hoogstraten said he required for the trial.
iii) The third ground was that there were currently developments regarding Mr van Hoogstraten's complaint about the police conduct relating to the prosecution of himself and Mr Knapp and Mr Croke, and that new evidence was becoming available concerning the correctness of the conviction of Mr Knapp and Mr Croke.
iv) The fourth ground was that Mr van Hoogstraten intended to instruct solicitors and counsel and that they would require six to eight weeks to prepare for the trial.
"Subject: RE: Raja v Hoogstraten
After the Judge had handed down judgment last Friday and told Mr van Hoogstraten that the Court of Appeal would hear any appeal from the Judgment together with Mr van Hoogstraten's existing appeal on Tuesday the 15th November 2005, Mr van Hoogstraten told the Judge's clerk that the appeal would not take place on Tuesday and that he would see the Judge next year. The Judge infers from this statement that Mr van Hoogstraten will not be attending the trial fixed for the 21st November 2005 or (if a successful application is made for an adjournment) the 28th November 2005. The Judge requests Mr van Hoogstraten to explain what he said to the Judge's clerk and thinks it proper to warn Mr van Hoogstraten that if he does not attend the trial to give evidence on the critical issues adverse inferences may be drawn against him."
Mr van Hoogstraten received this fax, for a "correct" transmission report was received, though later that day his fax machine was turned off. Mr van Hoogstraten evidently thought that it was in his interests not to comply with the request in my clerk's fax or to explain what he said to my clerk and he never did so. He has not since that date turned on his fax machine.
"6. The Defendant was overheard to say that he knew that Judgment had gone against [him] but that was the best thing that could happen. The Judge had fallen right into his trap. He couldn't get justice in the lower courts because he was filthy rich. He went on to say that he had no money because it was all in trust for his children so he couldn't afford to instruct counsel.
7. I am also told by Sally Collyer and verily believe that the Defendant was overheard to say, 'what the other side don't know is that I'm going tomorrow to have myself declared bankrupt so they won't get a penny out of me'.
8. I believe that these remarks, taken in the context of the Freezing Order having been discharged, indicate a clear intention on the part of the Defendant to do everything in his power to frustrate the enforcement of any Judgment that the Claimant may obtain.
…"
PART 2 – CHRONOLOGY OF EVENTS
PART 3 – LEGAL PRINCIPLES
A. SIGNIFICANCE OF CRIMINAL PROCEEDINGS
i) the burden of proof on the part of the prosecution in the criminal trial was beyond reasonable doubt or to be sure; on this civil trial it is on the balance of probabilities, but having regard to the seriousness of the allegation against Mr van Hoogstraten in these proceedings the more cogent is the evidence that is required to overcome the unlikelihood of what is alleged and has to be proved against him to discharge the burden of proof: see Re H&R (Child Sexual Abuse Standard of Proof) [1996] 1 FLR 80 at 96 B-4 per Lord Nicholls and A Local Authority v. S, W and T by His Guardian [2004] EWHC 1270;ii) important evidence is admissible in this trial which was not admissible in the criminal trial, and in particular the witness statements of Mr Hamdan and Ms Sali and evidence as to the previous convictions of the three accused and their association in prison; and
iii) Mr van Hoogstraten attended and gave evidence at the criminal trial, but has absented himself from this trial.
B. NON-ATTENDANCE OF MR VAN HOOGSTRATEN
"In our legal system generally, the silence of one party in face of the other party's evidence may convert that evidence into proof in relation to matters which are, or are likely to be, within the knowledge of the silent party and about which that party could be expected to give evidence. Thus, depending on the circumstances, a prima facie case may become a strong or even an overwhelming case. But, if the silent party's failure to give evidence (or to give the necessary evidence) can be credibly explained, even if not entirely justified, the effect of his silence in favour of the other party, may be either reduced or nullified…."
"The preferable approach is to consider the matter in the round and determine whether the evidence as a whole satisfies the standard of proof.
It was of course open to the defendants to elect to give no evidence and simply contend that the case against them was not proved. But that course carried with it the risk that should it transpire there was some evidence tending to establish the plaintiff's case, albeit slender evidence, their silence in circumstances in which they would be expected to answer might convert that evidence into proof: …"
PART 4 – CLAIMANTS' EVIDENCE
(1) Preliminary
(2) Previous Convictions
(3) Claimants' Witnesses
(a) Mr Amjad Raja ("Amjad")
(b) Mr Stephen Fairburn ("Mr Fairburn")
(c) Mr James Lightfoot ("Mr Lightfoot")
(d) Detective Inspector Sladen ("DI Sladen")
(e) Mr Gavin Philip Absolon ("Mr Absolon")
(f) Mr Anthony Browne ("Mr Browne")
i) Mr Knapp was Mr van Hoogstraten's enforcer;ii) Mr van Hoogstraten and Mr Knapp were very close in the 1980s and Mr Knapp said that he would "stop a bullet" (i.e. do anything) to protect Mr van Hoogstraten;
iii) Mr van Hoogstraten told him that for Mr Raja to allege fraud against him in the Chancery Action was a wicked thing to do;
iv) Mr van Hoogstraten threatened to kill people and to take a contract out to kill Mr Browne and that anyone who crossed him would get done (though apparently he heard no such threats against Mr Raja);
v) in respect of a leaseholder of a property which he owned (10 Gwendwyr Road, London) Mr van Hoogstraten said that he would get rid of her and "that it would be a mugging that went wrong but it wouldn't be";
vi) on Mr Knapp's release from prison in April 1999 Mr van Hoogstraten gave Mr Knapp the role of looking after security at High Cross and told Mr Browne that he intended Mr Knapp to occupy the boathouse at High Cross when works on it were completed;
vii) Mr van Hoogstraten told him that he was the caretaker of Mr Knapp's money as he was a spendthrift, and rationed it out to him;
viii) Mr van Hoogstraten spoke to him of methods of intimidation; and
ix) (verifying a passage in the transcript of his evidence at the criminal trial), Mr van Hoogstraten would use Mr Knapp, described as "a big man with a forceful character" and "a forceful presence", to "dissuade" people (tenants and others) from causing problems.
(4) Claimants' Statements
(a) Ms Sali
(b) Mr Michaal Hamdan ("Mr Hamdan")
(c) Detective Inspector Walker ("DI Walker")
(5) Miscellaneous
POLICE INTERVIEWS
TELEVISION INTERVIEWS
(a) "World in Action – The Violent World of Nick Hoogstraten" (1988)
NICHOLAS VAN HOOGSTRATEN: "I am probably ruthless and I'm probably violent. I suppose, like everybody, I regret having made certain mistakes, yes."
INTERVIEWER: "Are you saying you don't get caught anymore?"
NICHOLAS VAN HOOGSTRATEN: "You could say that, yes. If one is clever enough to organise things in such a fashion that the chickens don't come home to roost."
INTERVIEWER: "What kind of things are you not being caught at?"
NICHOLAS VAN HOOGSTRATEN: "You don't seriously expect me to answer that, do you?"
(b) "Southern Eye – Nick's World" December 1999
(c) "Hard Talk – BBC News 24" (January 2004)
(d) "Underground Britain: Hotel Hoogstraten" (27th October 2005)
TRANSCRIPTS OF CRIMINAL TRIAL
"I do over-react. I get very, very angry and take it personally if people do unacceptable things."(p.118-9);
(6) Mr Knapp was "a sort of intimidating character" and a 6 foot 2 inch "sort of giant"; and (7) he (Mr van Hoogstraten) adopted the policy of sending three or four hefty builders and Alsatian dogs into each property where he wanted the occupants to move out and (to his amusement) forced the occupants to jump out of the first and second floor windows (p.131-4).
NEWSPAPER ARTICLES
PART 5 - MR VAN HOOGSTRATEN'S EVIDENCE
"other than on one occasion at the Grosvenor House Hotel in London probably in 1992 when he put his dirty fingers in the salted nut bowl and took the only walnut";
"8. Robert Knapp has never at any time worked for me either directly or indirectly and we had nothing whatsoever in common. I would however, from time to time, at the request of his mother help or assist him in various ways when he was not in prison. On a couple of occasions I have driven his mother to visit him in prison.
9. I was never fond of Robert Knapp and was somewhat concerned that he should not influence or have any contact with my own friends and family, especially my children.
10. However, he was a superficially charming character whose speciality was playing the wealthy playboy and persisted in buying expensive gifts for my girlfriends, the mothers of my children and my children who he insisted should call him 'Uncle Bob'.
11. However, by the time of his release from his last sentence in 1999, he had become a serious drug addict and I ruled that he must stay away from me my children and my family and only visit his mother on the estate whilst I was abroad. As a result of this ruling he could only contact me by notes left via his mother and these normally related to his requests to borrow money or sell one or the other of his remaining possessions.
12. Such was our relationship in 1999/2000 that I did not even know he had married until the police told me when I reported the series of burglaries at my estate in the Summer of 2000. Knapp immediately fled to Eire and I had no direct or indirect contact with him until after he returned to England in 2001 and was arrested.
13. The suggestion that I would employ either of these low lifes to frighten or kill Mr Raja is a grotesque travesty and an insult to my intelligence…. "
PART 6 - FINDINGS
(a) Motive
(b) Character and Propensity to Violence of Mr van Hoogstraten
(c) Character of Murder
(d) Involvement of Mr Hamdan and Others
(e) Threats
(f) Recruitment of Murderers
i) Mr Knapp was Mr van Hoogstraten's long standing friend and hit-man who would do anything Mr van Hoogstraten asked of him;ii) there is no basis for the suggestion that anyone else can have recruited them;
iii) Mr van Hoogstraten provided a home for Mr Knapp first at his own home and from June 1999 at 33 Framfield Road and promised him the boathouse on his estate when works on it were completed; and he also made to him a series of payments. The payments would appear to be the return for his services: their description as loans scarcely bears scrutiny, for Mr Knapp cannot have been an acceptable credit risk on any ordinary (let alone Mr van Hoogstraten's high) standards and he accepted in cross-examination in the criminal proceedings that he never seriously expected them to be repaid. Rather Mr van Hoogstraten was acting (as he told Mr Browne) as "caretaker" of monies earned by Mr Knapp.
iv) Mr Knapp's departure to Eire in 2000 is to be explained as referable to a desire to protect Mr van Hoogstraten by removing Mr Knapp from the scene and disguising the reasons for his going abroad. The impression that there had been a breakdown in relations between them over thefts by Mr Knapp was false. The relationship continued as before. (As Ms Sali pointed out in her evidence Mr van Hoogstraten is not the sort of man who relies on the police when he has a problem.) Mr Knapp returned to this country as soon as Mr van Hoogstraten was charged;
v) Mr van Hoogstraten's response to the inquiry by Ms Sali whether he was involved in the murder and his anxious questioning of Mr Hamdan about DNA evidence point to his involvement in the murder;
vi) Mr Hamdan's conversations with Mr van Hoogstraten about 6 Brunswick Square shortly before the murder and shortly after the murder afford strong evidence that Mr van Hoogstraten knew before he went to Cannes of the pending murder and of its intended impact on dealings with Mr Raja and (after his return) of the pleasure he took in the murder and the benefits to be obtained from it and of his intention to repeat the exercise if necessary;
vii) at his first interview by the police, referring to the Crimewatch reconstruction of the murder, Mr van Hoogstraten commented that he did not understand how the attackers could have missed Mr Raja with their first shot. The reconstruction did not afford any basis for the suggestion that the first shot had missed (as suggested by Mr van Hoogstraten in his explanation of this statement). At the time he can only have known that the first shot missed if informed of it by Mr Knapp or Mr Croke.
(g) Recruitment to Murder or Frighten
CONCLUSION