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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 >> Thunder Air Ltd v Hilmarsson [2008] EWHC 355 (Ch) (17 March 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2008/355.html Cite as: [2008] EWHC 355 (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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THUNDER AIR LIMITED (A company incorporated under the laws of the Cayman Islands) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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MR HILMAR HILMARSSON |
Defendant |
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Mr Stephen Nathan Q.C. and Mr Timothy Penny (instructed by Seddons ) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 14 and 15 February 2008
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Patten :
Introduction
The dispute
"5.1 All information relating to the operations of Thunder Air including, but not limited to, accounts, invoices, correspondence, contract, manuals, computer files and other written or recorded information shall be treated as confidential.
5.2 All information listed above shall be considered to be the property of Thunder Air. Upon termination of this agreement, Avi Jet shall immediately return any such documents that are in his possession to Thunder Air's beneficial owner."
"..
As we have received no meaningful response from you we hereby put you on formal notice that you are required to deliver up the following information within five working days from the date of this letter
- A final statement of account
- A reply to the email from Keith Laker of 10 July 2007 with supporting evidence
- Documents as detailed under the terms of the Management Agreement dated 1 March 2005, including but not limited to those items listed under clauses 5.1 and 5.2, namely:
- Accounts
- Invoices
- Correspondence
- Contracts
- Manuals
- Computer files
- Any other written or recorded information
…"
"…Perhaps you have misunderstood me; we are not expecting merely a 'final report' as you suggest, but the complete company records accumulated during your tenure as a director of the company.
…
The present directors do not wish to rely solely on a final report from you, instead they wish to examine the full records of the company to form their own opinion regarding the administration of the company whilst under your control. Any failure on your part to hold back or remove any information will be viewed as a deliberate attempt to obstruct the directors from undertaking their legal obligation in respect of the company.
Please confirm that you will comply with this request and that you will make arrangements to hand these documents over to Paul Buckle before the end of this week."
"…You will receive all the documentation and invoices we have as soon as the final accounts have been completed. We would also like to see our final invoice settled."
Conversion
"39 ….. I need not repeat the journey through the textbooks and authorities on which your Lordships were taken. Conversion of goods can occur in so many different circumstances that framing a precise definition of universal application is well nigh impossible. In general, the basic features of the tort are threefold. First, the defendant's conduct was inconsistent with the rights of the owner (or other person entitled to possession). Second, the conduct was deliberate, not accidental. Third, the conduct was so extensive an encroachment on the rights of the owner as to exclude him from use and possession of the goods. The contrast is with lesser acts of interference. If these cause damage they may give rise to claims for trespass or in negligence, but they do not constitute conversion.
40 The judicially approved description of the tort in Clerk & Lindsell encapsulates, in different language, these basic ingredients. The flaw in IAC's argument lies in its failure to appreciate what is meant in this context by "depriving" the owner of possession. This is not to be understood as meaning that the wrongdoer must himself actually take the goods from the possession of the owner. This will often be the case, but not always. It is not so in a case of successive conversions. For the purposes of this tort an owner is equally deprived of possession when he is excluded from possession, or possession is withheld from him by the wrongdoer.
41 Whether the owner is excluded from possession may sometimes depend upon whether the wrongdoer exercised dominion over the goods. Then the intention with which acts were done may be material. The ferryman who turned the plaintiff's horses off the Birkenhead to Liverpool ferry was guilty of conversion if he intended to exercise dominion over them, but not otherwise: see Fouldes v Willoughby (1841) 8 M & W 540.
42 Similarly, mere unauthorised retention of another's goods is not conversion of them. Mere possession of another's goods without title is not necessarily inconsistent with the rights of the owner. To constitute conversion detention must be adverse to the owner, excluding him from the goods. It must be accompanied by an intention to keep the goods. Whether the existence of this intention can properly be inferred depends on the circumstances of the case. A demand and refusal to deliver up the goods are the usual way of proving an intention to keep goods adverse to the owner, but this is not the only way."
Possession or control
"22. On the basis of those facts it is in my view plain that the tort of conversion of Mr and Mrs Joiner's goods was committed by Unigel UK. The goods were in its possession and control. The fact that Mr George, as managing director of Unigel UK, controlled its operations and decisions does not mean that the goods were in Mr George's possession and control. It was Unigel UK which prevented Mr Joiner from retrieving possession of the goods, and it was Unigel UK which, when asked to return the goods, did not do so. I think that Mr Joiner accepts that Unigel UK committed the tort of conversion. However, he contends either that Mr George and Mr Robinson also committed the tort of conversion, or that they are personally liable to him and his wife even if the tort was not committed by them.
23. At this point I need to examine the law as to the circumstances in which a director of a company can be personally liable for a tort committed by the company itself. There is a substantial - and growing - body of case law about this. I was helpfully referred to the relevant authorities. In this connection, although I am not accepting Mr Joiner's submissions that Mr George and Mr Robinson are personally liable, I would like to express my admiration for the thoroughness of the research which he has conducted. I add that Mr Cranfield associated himself with this sentiment. The principal cases which were referred to were the following: Rainham Chemical Works Limited v Belvedere [1921] 2 AC 465, Performing Rights Society v Ciryl Theatrical Syndicates Ltd [1924] 1 KB 1, Wah Tat Bank v Chan [1975] AC 507, Evans v Spritebrand Ltd [1985] 1 WLR 317, Williams v Natural Life Health Foods Ltd [1998] 1 WLR 830, Standard Chartered Bank v Pakistan National Shipping Corporation [2000] 1 L1 LR 218, MCA Records Inc v Charly Records Ltd (2001, Court of Appeal, unreported, neutral citation: [2001] EWCA Civ 1441), and Daido Asia Japan Company Ltd v Rothen (2001, Lawrence Collins J, unreported; neutral citation: [2001] EWCA Ch 163).
24. I am not going to review the cases in full. I believe that I need not do that, because there is a recent and authoritative exposition of the law in the judgments of the Court of Appeal in Standard Chartered Bank v Pakistan National Shipping Corporation (which I will refer to as SCB), and I can base my judgment on what was said in that case. It is a strong case on the facts. The tort involved was deceit. The director of the company caused it to make the deceitful statements, and he knew that they were false. Nevertheless, only the company was liable in damages: he was not personally liable.
25. In SCB Aldous LJ explained that there are three situations in which a director or employee who had acted as such in the course of his employment will be liable for tortious acts:
A. If he personally commits the tort.
B. If, though carrying out his duties for the company, he nevertheless assumes a personal liability.
C. If, although he does not commit the tortious act himself, he procures the company to commit it.
I now comment on each of those possibilities in the context of the present case.
26. As regards (A), the tortious act was committed by the person who detained Mr and Mrs Joiner's goods, who did not allow them to remove them, and who did not return them when Mr Joiner asked for them to be returned. For the reasons which I explained a few paragraphs earlier that person was Unigel UK. Further, in my view it was Unigel UK alone. Mr George and Mr Robinson in their personal capacities did not have possession and control of the goods and did not detain them, for all that they had control of the company which did, and for all that for most of the time Mr George was the sole director of the company which did. Therefore Mr George and Mr Robinson did not themselves commit the tort of conversion of Mr and Mrs Joiner's goods."
"For the reasons already indicated Shell Mocambique's documents are not in my opinion within the "power" of either of Shell or B.P. within the meaning of R.S.C., Ord. 24. They could only be brought within their power either (1) by their taking steps to alter the articles of association of Consolidated and procuring Consolidated through its own board of directors to take steps to alter the articles of association of Shell Mocambique, which Order 24 does not require them to do; or (2) by obtaining the voluntary consent of the board of Shell Mocambique to let them take copies of the documents. It may well be that such consent could be obtained; but Shell and B.P. are not required by Order 24 to seek it, any more than a natural person is obliged to ask a close relative or anyone else who is a stranger to the suit to provide him with copies of documents in the ownership and possession of that other person, however likely he might be to comply voluntarily with the request if it were made."
Jurisdiction
"in matters relating to tort, delict or quasi delict, in the courts for the place where the harmful event occurred".
"24 Interim relief and protective measures in cases of doubtful jurisdiction
(1) Any power of a court in England and Wales or Northern Ireland to grant interim relief pending trial or pending the determination of an appeal shall extend to a case where—
(a) the issue to be tried, or which is the subject of the appeal, relates to the jurisdiction of the court to entertain the proceedings;
…."
This is said to have given Judge Behrens jurisdiction to make the interim order for delivery up notwithstanding the proposed challenge to jurisdiction intimated by the Defendant at the hearing.