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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 >> NABB Brothers Ltd v Lloyds Bank International (Guernsey) Ltd [2005] EWHC 405 (Ch) (18 March 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2005/405.html Cite as: [2005] EWHC 405 (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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NABB BROTHERS LIMITED | Claimant | |
and | ||
LLOYDS BANK INTERNATIONAL (GUERNSEY) LIMITED | Defendant |
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Miss Rosana Bailey (instructed by Cedars & Co) for the Claimant/Respondent
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Lawrence Collins:
I Parties and background
II The claim
III The transfers
Evidence before Master Bowman
(a) on about April 26, 1994 £708,738.01 (the dollar figure of $708,738.01 in the particulars and witness statement is accepted to be in error) was transferred into the Lloyds Bank sterling account, and on May 3, 1994 Mr Ansah transferred £700,000 (the dollar figure of $700,000 also accepted to be in error) into the Trust;(b) on about August 22, 1994 a supplier made a payment into the Lloyds Bank dollar account of $699,989.08, and on August 24, 1994 $677,000 was transferred into the Trust;
(c) on about September 1, 1994 a supplier made a payment of $399,989.20 into the Lloyds Bank dollar account and on about September 2, 1994 $400,000 was transferred into the Trust.
(1) On April 26, 1994 £708,738.01 was received into the Lloyds Bank sterling account. The bank statement shows the receipt as "TRANSFER 72/11 ISY/MMD RETAIL DEPOSIT REF 579." The claimant's case was that this was a payment by a supplier of the claimant.(2) On May 3, 1994 £700,000 was transferred from Lloyds Bank to the defendant. This was said to be the transfer of the bulk of the funds received from a supplier on April 26, 1994.
(3) On August 22, 1994 and September 2, 1994 there were credits to the Lloyds Bank dollar account of $699,989.08 and $399,989.20 respectively from "Independent Commodity London", which were said to be payments from suppliers.
(4) On about August 24, 1994 there was a debit of $677,000 to the Lloyds Bank dollar account with the narrative stating "J E K Ansah", which was said by the claimant to be a transfer by Mr Ansah into the Trust;
(5) On about September 2, 1994 $400,000 was debited to the Lloyds Bank dollar account with the narrative "Lloyds Bank Finance Guernsey", which was said to be a transfer by Mr Ansah into the Trust.
(6) There are a number of statements of fixed deposit in the name of Lloyds Bank Finance (Guernsey) Ltd addressed to Lloyds Bank re JEK Ansah or to JEK Ansah c/o Lloyds Bank: (a) $807,256 in May 1994; (b) $179,000 in June 1994; (c) $988,826.21 in June 1994; (d) $58,000 in July 1994; (e) $100,000 in July 1994; (f) $1,150,088.25 in July 1994; (g) $677,000 in August 1994; (h) $1,831,897.69 in August/September 1994; (i) $400,000 in September 1994. The claimant relied on these to show that the statements generated in connection with a fixed deposit account numbered 71483020 placed with the defendant by the Trust show substantial deposits, which in several cases it says can be identified as coming from the Lloyds Bank dollar account.
Evidence adduced in the course of the application
Further evidence
IV Issue of proceedings and service out of the jurisdiction
"I submit that by reason thereof that the acts of which the Applicant makes complaint occurred within the jurisdiction, as the act of transferring funds took place by the Deceased's servant or agent bankers who were based at Lloyds TSB Bank Plc situated at 32 Oxford Street, London, England. In the premises the Applicant is able to satisfy Part 6.20(8)(b), Part 6.20(14) and Part 6.20(15) of the Civil Procedure Rules 1998."
"At its simplest, the claim is an attack on the Tubuoh Trust, dressed up as a claim framed alternatively as one made in tort, against the defendant as constructive trustee and by way of restitution.
Clause 2 of the Trust Deed establishes the settlement under the laws of the island of Guernsey 'which said island shall be the forum for the administration thereof'.
Paragraph 41 of the Particulars of Claim contains a claim by the Claimant that the Tubuoh Trust is invalid and has not been set up properly or at all. The Defendant considers that that issue is best resolved by the Guernsey courts, which are familiar with how discretionary trusts are set up on the island, and by applying Guernsey law as the proper law of the Trust…"
V The arguments
Defendant's arguments
Claimant's arguments
VI The position of the beneficiaries
VII Conclusions
Applicable principles
Forum conveniens
Merits
Proprietary or restitutionary claims and service out of the jurisdiction
"The transmission of a claimant's property rights from one asset to its traceable proceeds is part of our law of property, not of the law of unjust enrichment. There is no 'unjust factor' to justify restitution (unless 'want of title' be one, which makes the point). The claimant succeeds if at all by virtue of his own title, not to reverse unjust enrichment. Property rights are determined by fixed rules and settled principles. They are not discretionary. They do not depend upon ideas of what is 'fair, just and reasonable.' Such concepts, which in reality mask decisions of legal policy, have no place in the law of property.
…
… [T]he plaintiffs seek to vindicate their property rights, not to reverse unjust enrichment. The correct classification of the plaintiffs' cause of action may appear to be academic, but it has important consequences. The two causes of action have different requirements and may attract different defences.
A plaintiff who brings an action in unjust enrichment must show that the defendant has been enriched at the plaintiff's expense, for he cannot have been unjustly enriched if he has not been enriched at all. But the plaintiff is not concerned to show that the defendant is in receipt of property belonging beneficially to the plaintiff or its traceable proceeds. The fact that the beneficial ownership of the property has passed to the defendant provides no defence; indeed, it is usually the very fact which founds the claim. Conversely, a plaintiff who brings an action like the present must show that the defendant is in receipt of property which belongs beneficially to him or its traceable proceeds, but he need not show that the defendant has been enriched by its receipt. He may, for example, have paid full value for the property, but he is still required to disgorge it if he received it with notice of the plaintiff's interest."
Limitation
Territorial link