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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 >> Withers LLP v Rybak & Ors [2011] EWHC 1151 (Ch) (09 May 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2011/1151.html Cite as: [2011] BPIR 1202, [2011] PNLR 22, [2011] 3 All ER 842, [2011] EWHC 1151 (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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Withers LLP |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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1) Mariusz Rybak 2) CMC Crown Management Corporation Limited 3) Izabela Rybak 4) SCI Atol 5) Magdalena Rybak 6) Langbar International Limited |
Respondents |
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Mr David Quest (instructed by Jones Day) for the 6th Respondent
The other Respondents did not appear and were not represented
Hearing date: 9th March 2011
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Morgan:
Introduction
The facts
"1. The injunction granted in paragraph 2 below shall be conditional upon the Applicants agreeing and undertaking forthwith to transfer or to procure the transfer of the net proceeds of any sale on or before 31 December 2008 of the apartment in Monaco owned by the Seventh Defendant/Applicant ("the apartment") to a client account of their solicitors Withers LLP ("the account") on terms that:
1.1 subject to paragraph 1.2 below, the monies will be held in and not withdrawn from the account until further Order by the Court;
1.2 the Applicants may direct payments to be made from the account to the Respondent in discharge of or on account of sums due from the Applicants to the Respondent under the settlement agreements scheduled to the Tomlin Orders in these proceedings dated 21st April 2008 and 23rd October 2008.
2. [The injunction ordered by the court]
3. The Applicants and the Respondent shall each have permission to apply, and in particular (but without limitation) the Applicants shall have permission to apply for an Order permitting payments for their living and legal expenses to be made from the account pending the resolution of any dispute that may exist as to who is entitled to the monies in the account."
"1. The Claimants' application dated 5th August 2009 for release of funds held in the Withers Account ("the Account") pursuant to the order of Morgan J dated 19 December 2008 is dismissed.
2. Subject to paragraph 3 below, the monies in the Account shall be held in and not withdrawn from the Account until further Order by the Court.
3. Subject to the terms of a Restraint Order made by His Honour Judge Gordon in the Central Criminal Court on 11th September 2009, the order of Morgan J dated 19th December 2008 is varied so as to permit the Claimants to direct payments to be made from the Account, as follows:
i) all legal expenses incurred by the Claimants in relation to these proceedings shall be notified by Withers LLP to Jones Day and, upon confirmation from Jones Day that the Defendant consents to the reasonableness of those expenses (such consent being presumed in default of a response within seven days), the Claimants may direct that sufficient monies shall be released from the Account to fund those legal expenses;
ii) the Claimants shall be entitled to monthly living expenses payable from the Account on the first day of each month in the sum of €25,000. Payment of these expenses is to commence immediately with the first payment for September 2009 to be made as soon as reasonably practicable.
iii) [t]he Claimants shall be entitled to an immediate payment from the Account of €90,180 to cover outstanding expenses.
4. The Claimants may agree with the Defendant's legal representatives that the above spending limits shall be increased or that this order shall be varied in any other respect, but any agreement must be in writing.
5. The Claimants and the Defendant shall have permission to apply, and in particular (but without limitation) the Claimants shall have permission to apply for an Order permitting additional payments for their living expenses and/or for any legal expenses not consented to under paragraph 3 above and/or for any other payments arising in the ordinary and proper course of business to be made from the Account pending resolution of the proceedings. Applications for living expenses other than those identified herein at paragraph 3(ii) may be made in writing to HHJ Waksman QC where appropriate."
"All of the money in the Account shall be paid forthwith by Withers LLP to Langbar's solicitors in partial discharge of the Rybaks' liabilities under this order. Provided however that if Withers LLP give to Langbar a cross-undertaking in damages in the usual form then they may retain the amount of £410,000 in the Account until close of business on 14th July 2010. Withers LLP shall have liberty to apply on 24 hours notice to Langbar for an order extending the time for payment of the £410,000."
(1) Withers' reasonable legal costs, charges and expenses incurred acting on behalf of the Rybak parties ("the Reasonable Legal Expenses") were to be assessed by the Supreme Court Costs Office;
(2) the Reasonable Legal Expenses once assessed were to be paid to Withers out of the £410,000 currently held by Withers in the account together with interest on that sum; and
(3) any of the £410,000 currently held by Withers and remaining in the account after payment to Withers of the Reasonable Legal Expenses and interest was to be paid to Langbar.
Did Langbar have a security interest in the monies in the Withers' client account?
Does Withers have a security interest over the monies in the Withers's client account?
i) the monies in the client account can be the subject of a solicitor's retaining lien;
ii) those monies are in their possession;
iii) those monies are in their possession in the course of the employment of Withers in their capacity as solicitor for the Rybak parties;
iv) those monies are in their possession with the sanction of the Rybak parties;
v) those monies are the property of the Rybak parties;
vi) those monies did not come into their possession for a particular purpose which would prevent Withers from asserting a retaining lien;
vii) the reasonable costs and charges and expenses claimed by Withers are sums due to Withers in their capacity as a solicitor;
viii) although Withers can have no better right to the monies than the Rybak parties had, the Rybak parties had an absolute right to the monies and, in particular, Langbar did not have any prior proprietary or security interest in the monies;
ix) the assignment by the Rybak parties to Langbar was subject to the prior lien of Withers.
Conclusion