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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 >> Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ, Ltd v Baskan Gida Sanayi VE Pazarlama AS & Ors [2008] EWHC 659 (Ch) (09 April 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2008/659.html Cite as: [2008] EWHC 659 (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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THE BANK OF TOKYO-MITSUBISHI UFJ, LTD KBC BANK NV LIMITED |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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BASKAN GIDA SANAYI VE PAZARLAMA AS AHMET BASKAN CEVET BASKAN ISMET BASKAN MELIH BASKAN AKSU GIDA SANAYI VE TICARET LTD INDO-MEDITERRANEAN COMMODITIES LTD FERRERO INDUSTRIAL SERVICES GEIE FERRERO SpA (10) FERRERO OHGMBH (11) FERRERO FRANCE SA (12) SHABBIR ABIDALI (13) ALANVAR ESTABLISHMENT (14) RIDGEBEACH LIMITED |
Defendants |
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Mr Raymond Werbicki (of Steptoe & Johnson, 99 Gresham Street, London EC2V 7NG) for the Twelfth Defendant
Hearing dates: 2nd – 3rd April 2008
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Briggs :
INTRODUCTION
(1) The RAPOC is "unreasonably vague, wanting in particularity and discloses no reasonable grounds for bringing the claims against the twelfth defendant".
(2) The Claimants have no real prospect of success against the twelfth defendant.
(3) It would be oppressive and unfair to require the twelfth defendant to defend the claims.
(4) There is no compelling reason for a trial of the claims against the twelfth defendant.
THE PLEADED CLAIM AGAINST MR ABIDALI
(1) A debt claim against Baskan Gida.
(2) A conversion claim against Ferrero in relation to hazelnuts obtained by them allegedly contrary to the Banks' security.
(3) Claims in deceit against Ferrero, alternatively in negligent misrepresentation.
(4) Claims in conspiracy against Mr Abidali and a company controlled by him, the seventh defendant Indo-Mediterranean Commodities Ltd ("Indo-Med"), and also against members of the Baskan family, Baskan Gida and Aksu Gida.
(5) Knowing receipt and tracing claims against Ferrero in relation to hazelnuts received contrary to the Banks' security.
"From about November or December 2001, Ahmet Baskan, Cevat Baskan, Ismet Baskan, Melih Baskan, Baskan Gida, Aksu Gida, Mr Abidali and/or Indo-Med and/or any two or more of them wrongfully and with the intention to injure the Banks conspired, combined together and agreed to procure by unlawful means the advances from the Banks to Baskan Gida and/or to defeat by unlawful means the rights of the Banks and other creditors of Baskan Gida by transferring all the assets of Baskan Gida including hazelnuts purchased with the Banks' funds to a nominee company which was held out as being entirely independent from Baskan Gida."
"It is the Banks' case that, from late December 2001/early January 2002 onwards, Mr Abidali and through him Indo-Med knew (i) that the loan facility had now come into existence, (ii) that hazelnuts stored at Warehouse 2 were subject to a security interest in favour of the Banks, (iii) that Baskan Gida were in the process of drawing down loans under the facility to purchase hazelnuts, (iv) that they were then selling or proposing to sell those hazelnuts on with a view to defeating the Banks' security interests in the proceeds of sale, (v) that they intended to defraud their creditors (and in particular the Banks) by transferring their assets to nominee companies under purportedly legitimate (but actually sham) agreements."
REAL PROSPECT OF SUCCESS?
(a) Mr Abidali accepts that he was aware that the loan facility from the Banks, in the negotiation of which he had briefly participated in 2001, had borne fruit by the end of the year, such that from the beginning of 2002 Baskan Gida was funding its hazelnut purchases with substantial assistance from the Banks by way of loan.
(b) Even his own account of the circumstances in which the proposed asset transfer scheme was first mentioned to him suggests a real prospect that Mr Abidali was aware that Baskan Gida was in some form of financial difficulty by mid-January 2002, albeit that on his case the difficulty was said to have been explained to him as arising in relation to Baskan Gida's Turkish lenders.
(c) An email from Mr Abidali to Mr Dahod in February 2002 shows that Mr Abidali knew that the asset transfer scheme was being prepared and implemented in secret.
(d) Every one of the documents prepared for the purpose of recording the asset transfer scheme was, to the knowledge of Mr Abidali, backdated. This included, most importantly, a Protocol Agreement between Baskan Gida and Indo-Med providing in terms for US$8 million Baskan Gida's debt to Indo-Med to be settled by the transfer of hazelnuts, which was prepared in January 2002, but backdated to 5th November 2001, so as to suggest falsely that Baskan Gida had a contractual obligation to transfer hazelnuts to Indo-Med which ante-dated its borrowing facility with the claimant Banks.
(e) Promissory notes from Baskan Gida to Indo-Med which were also provided for in the Protocol Agreement were similarly backdated, and then used in January 2002 as the basis for an entirely collusive bankruptcy claim by Indo-Med against Baskan Gida in late January which was purportedly settled on the same day, albeit that the settlement agreement was in fact prepared only many months later. On the assumption which no-one has challenged that Turkish insolvency law is broadly to the same effect as English law, it is well arguable (to put it at its lowest) that the only discernable purpose of the bankruptcy claim and its almost simultaneous settlement was to pretend some semblance of creditor pressure as a means of justifying what would otherwise appear to have been a fraudulent preference of Indo-Med and Mr Dahod over Baskan Gida's other creditors. Other documents, such as the assignment agreement between Baskan Gida and Aksu Gida were prepared in about August or September 2002, many months after the asset transfers were in fact implemented, at the end of January.
(f) Mr Abidali had the prime responsibility for the conduct of Indo-Med's defence in these proceedings, before his joinder as a party in his own right. He caused Indo-Med to rely in its defence and in further information provided on request upon the documents purporting to record the asset transfer transactions as if they were in all respects entered into on the dates which they bear, and as if the bankruptcy claim made by Indo-Med against Baskan Gida was a genuine adversarial claim by a pressing creditor. The fact (which is now undisputed) that the documents were all backdated, in some cases by many months, and that the bankruptcy claim was, as even Mr Wewrbicki was constrained to concede, "co-operative" emerged mainly from disclosure given by Indo-Med after it went into administration (and thereby fell out of Mr Abidali's control). That disclosure included a waiver of privilege in relation to documents held by Indo-Med's then solicitors and accountants. The evidence before me discloses a real prospect, but not necessarily an unanswerable case, that Mr Abidali caused Indo-Med to fail to provide the disclosures which would have revealed these matters, and also gives rise to a real prospect that he actively concealed important aspects of the January 2002 asset transfer transactions in which he had participated. There is evidence which gives rise to a real prospect that Mr Abidali did much the same in proceedings brought in the Turkish courts in 2002 by one of Baskan Gida's Turkish bank creditors.
(f) There is significant evidence tending to suggest, if not contradicted by credible evidence to the contrary, that by contrast with the appearance created by the backdated documents of an asset transfer to a company in which the Baskan family had no interest of any kind, the reality is that the Baskan family retained some concealed form of ownership or control of the affairs of Aksu Gida, such that the claimants have a real prospect of showing that the assets were removed from Baskan Gida to an entity which can properly be described as another nominee of the Baskan family. The evidence consists of emails, memoranda and other documents suggesting that members of the Baskan family, and in particular Melih Baskan, continued to have an influential and, in certain respects governing, role in the conduct of the ongoing hazelnut business after its transfer to Aksu Gida. A memorandum from Mr Dahod dated 24th October 2002 which, while confirming the continued value placed by Mr Dahod in the relationship which had been developed with Melih Baskan and his family in connection with the hazelnut business, also appears to assume, on one interpretation, that the true commercial interest of Mr Dahod in the business after its transfer to Aksu Gida continued to be a right to a US$140 per mt profit share on sales to Ferrero, just as it had been prior to that transfer, pursuant to the Dahod Agreement. By contrast, the backdated transactional documents suggest that from the end of January 2002, Mr Dahod via Indo-Med was the 80% beneficial owner of the business itself. An email from Mr Abidali to Mr Dahod in October 2002 describes a conversation between him and Melih Baskan which treats Mr Dahod's money as if it continued to constitute an investment in a Baskan family business, long after the asset transfer at the end of January.