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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 >> HM Revenue & Customs v Egleton & Ors [2006] EWHC 2313 (Ch) (19 September 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2006/2313.html Cite as: [2007] 1 All ER 606, [2007] Bus LR 44, [2006] EWHC 2313 (Ch), [2007] BusLR 44 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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HM REVENUE & CUSTOMS |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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(1) CLAYTON EGLETON (2) TRADE EAZY LIMITED (3) SHAHEED VALI (4) FRAKHHAMEED RAHMAN |
Respondents |
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Miss Marion Smith (instructed by Dass) for the 2nd, 3rd and 4th Respondents.
Hearing dates: 14th September 2006
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Briggs:
"…to ensure that there will be a fund available within the jurisdiction to meet any judgment obtained by a Plaintiff in the High Court against a Defendant who does not reside within the jurisdiction and has no place of business here."
Subsequent cases have made it clear that the purpose extends also in relation to defendants resident or carrying on business within the jurisdiction. In the words of Aikens J. in C Inc. –v- L [2001] 2 Lloyds Law Reports 459 at 467, the purpose "remains the protection of assets so as to provide a fund to meet a judgment obtained by the claimant in the English Courts". More generally, its purpose is so that the court can "ensure the effective enforcement of its orders": per Sir Thomas Bingham MR in Mercantile Group (Europe) AG –v- Aiyela [1994] QB 366 at page 377E.
"In the context of a s459 petition I can well understand that it may be appropriate to grant Mareva relief against the company itself, in order to preserve the value of the interests of the members of the company. The petition, if it has a respondent, is primarily the company itself."
"What then is the principle to guide the courts in determining whether to grant Mareva relief in a case such as the present where the activities of third parties are the object sought to be restrained? In our opinion such an order may, and we emphasise the word 'may', be appropriate, assuming the existence of other relevant criteria and discretionary factors, in circumstances in which:
(i) the third party holds, is using, or has exercised or is exercising a power of disposition over, or is otherwise in possession of, assets, including 'claims and expectancies' , of the judgment debtor or potential judgment debtor; or
(ii) some process, ultimately enforceable by the courts, is or may be available to the judgment creditor as a consequence of a judgment against that actual or potential judgment debtor, pursuant to which, whether by appointment of a liquidator, trustee in bankruptcy, receiver or otherwise, the third party may be obliged to disgorge property or otherwise contribute to the funds or property of the judgment debtor to help satisfy the judgment against the judgment debtor."
"To secure an asset preservation order in a case such as the present, it will be necessary for the party seeking it to show, in addition to the conditions ordinary to the grant of relief injunctive in nature that (1) there is a danger that the non-party will dispose of relevant assets or property in its possession or under its control; and (2) that the affairs of the actual or potential judgment debtor and the non-party are closely intermingled and that the actual or potential judgment creditor has a vested or accrued cause of action against the non-party or may otherwise become entitled to have recourse to the non-party, its property and assets to meet the claim. Clearly, on the preliminary findings made by the primary judge, these preconditions were established in the present case."
"It seems to me that the High Court of Australia has stated that, in Australia, the assets of a third party can be frozen in aid of enforcing a pending or actual judgment, even where those assets are not beneficially owned by the actual or potential judgment debtor. The necessary precondition for power to make a freezing order over the third party's assets is that the actual or potential judgment creditor should have some legal right to get at the third party's funds. However, on my reading of the judgments, particularly pars. 57 and 121, the High Court of Australia is stating that there must be some casual link between the fact that the claimant has obtained a judgment against the principal defendant and thus has a legal right, as a consequence of the liability giving rise to the judgment, to go against the assets of the third party. I will delay deciding whether English law permits the exercise of the freezing order jurisdiction where there is such a casual link until I have considered the remaining two factors I have identified. "
"(5) If there is a claim for substantive relief by A against B (whether or not in the English Court), or A has obtained a judgment against B (in the English Court), then the English Court can grant a freezing order against the assets of C. But, generally, it must be arguable that those assets, even if in C's name, are, in fact, beneficially owned by B.
(6) The crucial question is whether the Court can go one stage further. Does it have the power to grant a freezing order against the assets of C when: (i) A has a substantive right against B (e.g. in the form of a judgment); (ii) the assets of C are not, even arguably, beneficially owned by B. The answer, to my mind, depends on how one interprets the phrases 'ancillary' and 'incidental to and dependent upon' used by Lords Browne-Wilkinson and Mustill in the Channel Tunnel case. In the Cardile case the High Court of Australia has, effectively, given those phrases a broad interpretation. But, critically, the High Court of Australia held that the right of A to a freezing order against C is dependent upon A having a right against B and that right itself giving rise to a right that B can exercise against C and its assets. Therefore the freezing order sought by A against C is 'incidental to' A's substantive right against B and it is also 'dependent upon' that right."