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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 >> Financial Services Authority v Sinaloa Gold Plc & Ors [2011] EWHC 144 (Ch) (25 January 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2011/144.html Cite as: [2011] EWHC 144 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
Sitting as a Judge of the High Court
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FINANCIAL SERVICES AUTHORITY | ||
and | ||
SINALOA GOLD PLC and 2 OTHERS |
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Clifford's Inn, Fetter Lane, London EC4A 1LD
Tel: 020 7269 0370
MR JAMES DINGEMANS QC and MR TOM POOLE appeared on behalf of Sinaloa Gold PLC and Mr Hoover
MISS TAMARA OPPENHEIMER appeared on behalf of Barclays Bank PLC, intervening
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Crown Copyright ©
JUDGE HODGE QC:
1. The Proceedings
'The defendants are and have been involved, albeit in different capacities, in a scheme designed to persuade private individual consumers in the UK to subscribe for penny-shares in the first defendant. Consumers have paid out money for the shares, which appear to be of little or no value. Their money is then transferred into at least two accounts overseas. The various activities of the defendants in this scheme constitute contraventions of Sections 19, 21 and 85 of the FSMA. In addition, the entire scheme may be fraudulent and designed in order to persuade private individuals to pay far more for the shares in the first defendant than what, if anything, those shares are in fact worth. If so, this is a fraud of the kind sometimes described as a "boiler-room" or "share-sale scam" fraud. In the circumstances the claimant seeks injunctive relief under the court's jurisdiction pursuant to Section 380(1) and (3) of the FSMA, rule 25.1(f)(ii) of the Civil Procedure Rules 1998 and Section 37(1) of the Senior Courts Act 1981, [therein mis-described as the Supreme Court Act] against the defendants listed above. The claimant also seeks restitution orders under Section 382 of the FSMA against the defendants.'
I should indicate that Mr Hoover is a US citizen, resident in the United States.
'The applicant will pay the reasonable costs of anyone other than the respondents which have been incurred as a result of this order including the costs of finding out whether that person holds any of the respondent's assets and if the Court later finds that this order has caused such person loss and decides that such person should be compensated for that loss, the applicant will comply with any order the Court may make.'
2. The Assertion of a Boiler-room Fraud or Share Sale Scam
'3. The FSA considers that there are grounds to believe that the entire scheme may be fraudulent and that it has been designed in order to persuade individuals to pay far more for the Sinaloa shares that what, if anything, those shares are in fact worth. If that is so, this is a fraud of a kind sometimes described as a boiler-room or share-sale scam fraud.
4. However, for the purposes of this application it is not necessary for the Court to be persuaded that the scheme is fraudulent, although the possibility that the scheme might be fraudulent will no doubt be a matter that the Court considers when deciding whether, and if so how, to exercise its discretion.'
'In addition, the entire scheme appears to have been designed in order to persuade private individuals to pay far more for the shares in the first defendant that what, if anything, those shares are in fact worth. If so this is a fraud of a kind sometimes described as a boiler-room or share-sale scam fraud',
were deleted. However Mr Vineall submitted that it was perfectly proper, on an application for interim injunctive relief, when the applicant's cause of action did not depend on an allegation of fraud, to say to the Court, as a matter of the Court's discretion, that when features of the evidence gave rise to a suspicion of fraud, those were matters which could be taken into account by the Court. Mr Vineall emphasised that there was a good arguable cause of action which had been made out, and which did not depend on any allegation of fraud. He submitted that the suspicions about the good faith and the honesty of the underlying scheme, and the fact that they might indicate fraudulent activities, went to the exercise of the Court's discretion, and were proper to be placed before the Court. That did not mean that the Court was being asked to make any finding of dishonesty or fraud on an interim application; the breach of the provisions of the FSMA and the Regulated Activities Order were sufficient to trigger the FSA's entitlement to interim freezing relief. The assertion of a fraud went only to the exercise of the Court's discretion. As a result of interventions from the bench, Mr Vineall eventually, I think, accepted that, in addition to being relevant to the exercise of the Court's discretion, the assertion of fraud was also relevant to the question whether the anterior threshold condition of a risk of dissipation of assets had been established to the Court's satisfaction. Under the terms of Section 380(3) of the FSMA, if on the FSA's application,
'…the Court is satisfied that any person may have:
(a) contravened a relevant requirement, or
(b) been knowingly concerned in the contravention of such a requirement,
it may make an order restraining… him from disposing of or otherwise dealing with any assets of his which it is satisfied he is reasonably like to dispose of or otherwise deal with.'
3. A Serious Issue to be Tried
4. A Risk of Dissipation
'I assumed after that that it had stopped being used as a vehicle for the raising of funds for the company. I do not know what exactly they did about it, however I was left with a clear impression that they had put a stop to it'.
I would have expected Mr Hoover to have done rather more, and to have been rather more exact and precise about what it was he did do. I accept Mr Vineall's submission that that is not a credible response for a reputable director to make.
5. The Amount of the Freezing Order
6. The Cross-undertaking as to Damages in Favour of the Respondents
7. A Cross-undertaking in Damages in Favour of Third Parties
'Where the effect of service of the injunction on the third party substantially interferes with the third party's business, the rights of the third party must in my view always prevail over the desire of the plaintiff to secure the ultimate recovery of debts or damages from the defendant with which the third party is in no way concerned.'
The Court of Appeal went on to hold that only in exceptional cases, such as when the third party was not innocent, should the third party be deprived of the undertaking.