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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 >> Bilta (UK) Ltd & Ors v Nazir & Ors [2012] EWHC 2163 (Ch) (30 July 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2012/2163.html Cite as: [2013] BCC 235, [2012] STC 2424, [2013] 1 All ER 375, [2013] 2 WLR 825, [2012] WLR(D) 236, [2012] STI 2554, [2012] EWHC 2163 (Ch), [2014] 1 Ch 52 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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BILTA (UK) LIMITED (In liquidation) KEVIN JOHN HELLARD (liquidator of Bilta (UK)Ltd) (3) DAVID ANTHONY INGRAM (liquidator of Bilta (UK) Ltd) |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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(1) MUHAMMAD NAZIR (2) CHETAN CHOPRA (3) PAN 1 LIMITED (4) AMAN ULLAH KHAN (5) SHEIKH ZULFIQAR MAHMOOD (6) JETIVIA S.A. (7) URS BRUNSCHWEILER (8) TRADING HOUSE GROUP LIMITED (a company formed in the British Virgin Islands) (9) MUHAMMAD FAYYAZ SHAFIQ (also known as Fayyaz Shafiq Rana) |
Defendants |
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Alan Maclean QC and Colin West (instructed by Macfarlanes LLP) for the 6th and 7th Defendants
Hearing dates: 17 - 18 July 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
The Chancellor :
(a) The purchases were from traders carrying on business outside the UK, including Jetivia S.A. ("Jetivia") a company incorporated in Switzerland, and were therefore zero-rated for purposes of VAT.
(b) The sales were to persons in the UK registered for the purposes of VAT, including Pan 1 Ltd ("Pan"), none of whom had any use for an EUA in the conduct of its business, such supplies being subject to VAT at the standard rate.
(c) The price payable by Pan and the other purchasers net of VAT was less than that paid by Bilta to Jetivia and the other suppliers and was paid to them in full directly or through Bilta.
(d) Consequently Bilta was unable to pay the VAT due on its supplies because it had made no profit and the proceeds of its sales had been paid away to the overseas traders.
"14. (a) During at least the period 22 April 2009 to 21 July 2009 a conspiracy existed to defraud and injure a company (and thereby to engage in fraudulent trading with an intention to defraud and injure that company) by trading in carbon credits and dealing with the proceeds therefrom in such a way as to deprive that company of its ability to meet its VAT obligations on such trades namely to pass the money (which would otherwise have been available to that company to meet such liability) to accounts off-shore, including accounts of Jetivia and THG ("the Conspiracy").
(b) As the conspirators knew, the fraudulent scheme involved breaches of fiduciary duty by a director or directors of such company.
(c) Bilta was the defrauded company. This claim concerns Bilta's purchase and sale of EUAs between 22 April 2009 and 21 July 2009.
(d) The parties to the conspiracy included Mr Brunschweiler and Jetivia….
(e) It is not known on what date or dates the conspiracy was formed."
"15. (1)(a) Mr Brunschweiler and Jetivia agreed to supply Bilta with EUAs, and to enter into documentation which showed Jetivia as having supplied Bilta even though in a number of cases the EUAs had been transferred direct to a First Line Buffer (see paragraph 22(8) below), for onward sale, knowing that Bilta would not be paying the VAT due on its onward sales.
[(b)-(e)]
(2) Bilta would then sell the EUAs on (or, where Bilta had not itself received the EUAs, produce paperwork showing the EUAs to have been sold on) at a price inclusive of VAT. In at least 46 cases Bilta sold the EUAs at a price which was less (net of VAT) than it had paid. Bilta sold to companies that had no legitimate use for the EUAs and whose role was to sell on the EUAs for a small profit ("the First Line Buffers"), which they were only able to do because Bilta had sold for a price net of VAT less than it had paid, (save that on at least 25 occasions Pan 1 immediately sold on at a loss – see Schedule 1). The First Line Buffers were not engaged in legitimate trading but were dishonestly participating in the fraudulent scheme.
(3) The First Line Buffers would themselves often sell on to companies that had no legitimate use for the EUAs and whose role was to sell on the EUAs for a small profit ("the Second Line Buffers") (which they were only able to do because Bilta had sold for a price net of VAT less than it had paid). (Sometimes the First Line Buffers would sell onto the Second Line Buffers at a loss). The Second Line Buffers were not engaged in legitimate trading but were dishonestly participating in the fraudulent scheme.
(4) The money payable to Bilta by its purchasers (inclusive of the VAT element) would almost all be paid by the purchasers either (a) to Bilta and then paid by Bilta to Jetivia or (b) directly to Jetivia or to THG, or (c) to offshore accounts the account-holders of which have yet to be identified.
(5) Jetivia…'s participation in the fraudulent scheme was not limited to transactions in which Bilta actually acquired EUAs from Jetivia….
(a) In a good number of transactions Jetivia…entered into paperwork with Bilta which showed that Bilta had acquired and sold on EUAs from Jetivia…which EUAs the Registry showed as being transferred from ….Jetivia directly to Bilta's purchaser or through a different intermediary company before transfer to Bilta's purchaser or through a different intermediary company before transfer to Bilta's purchaser (see paragraph 22(8) below).
(b) Jetivia…would receive payments directly from the First Line Buffers depriving Bilta of the means of meeting its VAT liabilities.
(6) The First Line Buffers included Pan 1…. The aforementioned First Line Buffers' participation in the fraudulent scheme was not limited to transactions in which EUAs were actually transferred at the Registry. In a good number of transactions the aforementioned First Line Buffers produced paperwork for the sale or purchase of EUAs when no transfer of EUAs was made at the Registry.
(7) The design and effect of the fraudulent scheme was to render Bilta insolvent and unable to discharge its VAT liability.
(8) The First Line Buffers and the Second Line Buffers (and the directors of each) knowingly participated in the fraudulent scheme and were parties to the Conspiracy."
"42. At all material times Mr Nazir and Mr Chopra as the directing will and mind of Bilta failed to file any VAT return in respect of the period 1 April to 31 July 2009 on behalf of Bilta nor have they caused Bilta to account to HMRC for any sum in respect of the VAT charged on the Sales.
43. In directing Pan 1 to pay the entirety or substantial part of the purchase price (including that element attributable to VAT) to parties other than Bilta, and in paying over its receipts to third parties without retaining the VAT element for payment to HMRC Mr Nazir and Mr Chopra as the directing will and mind of Bilta were depriving it of funds with which to discharge its liabilities, including its VAT liability in relation to the Sales.
44. At all material times Mr Nazir and Mr Chopra owed fiduciary duties to act in the way they considered in good faith, would be most likely to promote the success of Bilta for the benefit of its members as a whole.
45. Pursuant to and in furtherance of the Conspiracy Mr Nazir and Mr Chopra, in breach of the aforesaid duties, conducted the Company's affairs as set out in paragraphs 11 to 43 above. The dishonest breaches of fiduciary duty were the deliberate arranging of the Company's affairs such that no part of its VAT liabilities would be discharged. The effect of the said trading arrangements as set out was that Bilta incurred VAT liabilities in respect of the Sales in the sum of not less than £38,733,444.04 none of which has been paid to HMRC. Mr Nazir and Mr Chopra failed to apply Bilta's funds for the purpose of discharging its lawful liabilities."
"61. Further or in the alternative, Jetivia is liable to Bilta in equity for knowing receipt in the amount of the sums it received from Pan 1.
62. Further or in the alternative, Jetivia and/or Mr Brunschweiler are liable to account to Bilta in equity for dishonestly assisting breaches of fiduciary duty by Mr Nazir and/or Mr Chopra. They knowingly and dishonestly assisted in the diversion of book debts due to Bilta or, alternatively, the VAT element thereof away from it.
63. Jetivia and Mr Brunschweiler knew or were reckless as to the fact that the receiving of payments by Jetivia from Pan 1 would lead to Bilta being unable to discharge its VAT liability….
64. Jetivia and/or Mr Brunschweiler are liable to account for the sum of £38,733,444.04 for dishonestly assisting each of Mr Nazir and/or Mr Chopra's breaches of fiduciary duty."
"In this appeal, by contrast, the issue is the attribution to S & R of a dishonest state of mind. Where that is the issue the notion of a one-man company does become meaningful, as Royal Brunei demonstrates. In this context I would treat the expression as covering cases where there is one single dominant director and shareholder (such as Mr Tan in Royal Brunei, Mr Golechha in Berg, or Mr Stojevic in the present case) even if there are other directors or shareholders who are subservient to the dominant personality (such as Mr Tan's wife in Royal Brunei, the inactive solicitor-director in Berg, or S & R's nominee directors). I would also treat it as covering cases where there are two or more individual directors and shareholders acting closely in concert, such as the anonymised directors in Attorney General's Reference (No 2 of 1982) or Mr Chappell and Mr Palmer in Brink's-Mat. It may be simplest to propose a test in negative terms, on the lines of what Hobhouse J said in Berg, that is a company which has no individual concerned in its management and ownership other than those who are, or must (because of their reckless indifference) be taken to be, aware of the fraud or breach of duty with which the court is concerned."
"In the case of a one-man company (in the sense indicated above) which has deliberately engaged in serious fraud, I would follow Royal Brunei (and the strong line of United States and Canadian authority) in imputing awareness of the fraud to the company, applying what is referred to in the United States as the "sole actor" exception to the "adverse interest" principle."
"In particular I would apply the "sole actor" principle to a claim made against its former auditors by a company in liquidation, where the company was a one-man company engaged in fraud, and the auditors are accused of negligence in failing to call a halt to that fraud…..On the assumption that the auditors did owe a duty of care to S & R, it was a duty owed to that company as a whole, not to individual shareholders, or potential shareholders, or current or prospective creditors, as this House decided in Caparo Industries plc v Dickman [1990] 2 AC 605. If the only human embodiment of the company already knew all about its fraudulent activities, there was realistically no protection that its auditors could give it."
"173. There is in my opinion a clearer and firmer basis on which to determine what (if any) significance to give to the notion of a company being the secondary victim of the fraud (aimed at a third party) of one or more of its directors. It is necessary to keep well in mind why the law makes an exception (the adverse interest rule) for a company which is a primary victim (like the Belmont company, which was manipulated into buying Maximum at a gross overvaluation). The company is not fixed with its directors' fraudulent intentions because that would be unjust to its innocent participators (honest directors who were deceived, and shareholders who were cheated); the guilty are presumed not to pass on their guilty knowledge to the innocent. But if the company is itself primarily (or directly) liable because of the "sole actor" rule, there is ex hypothesi no innocent participator, and no one who does not already share (or must by his reckless indifference be taken as sharing) the guilty knowledge. That is consistent with the analysis by Rix J in Arab Bank. In that case Mr Browne was not the directing mind of JDW, which was not a one-man company; Rix J accepted that the position might have been different if it had been.
174. I would therefore limit my ground of decision in this appeal to the proposition that one or more individuals who for fraudulent purposes run a one-man company (in the sense described above) cannot obtain an advantage by claiming that the company is not a fraudster, but a secondary victim."
"It was argued for the appellants that the public policy defence should not bar claims brought by a company in insolvent liquidation, where the creditors were innocent parties who had been defrauded by Mr Stojevic. If that were right, it would create a very large gap in the public policy defence, since most fraudsters (individual and corporate) become insolvent sooner or later and have liabilities to those whom they have defrauded. Mr Brindle conceded that if Mr Stojevic had carried out his frauds directly (and not through a one-man company) neither he nor his trustee in bankruptcy could have resisted the public policy defence. That conclusion was reached by Langley J. (para 65(2)) and is clearly correct (see Fry LJ in Cleaver v Mutual Reserve Fund Life Association [1892] 1 QB 147, 156). There is no good reason to apply a different rule to a company in liquidation. Apart from special statutory claims in respect of misfeasance, wrong trading and so on, it cannot assert any cause of action which it could not have asserted before the commencement of its liquidation, as Mr Brindle concedes. That is especially true in the context of the duties of an auditor, which are not owed to a company's creditors."
"(1) Under the principle of ex turpi causa the court will not assist a claimant to recover compensation for the consequences of his own illegal conduct.
(2) This appeal raises the question of whether, and if so how, that principle applies to a claim by a company against those whose breach of duty has caused or permitted the company to commit fraud that has resulted in detriment to the company.
(3) The answer to this question is not to be found by the application of Hampshire Land or any similar principle of attribution. The essential issue is whether, in applying ex turpi causa in such circumstances, one should look behind the company at those whose interests the relevant duty is intended to protect.
(4) While in principle it would be attractive to adopt such a course, there are difficulties in the way of doing so to which no clear resolution has been demonstrated.
(5) On the extreme facts of this case it is not necessary to attempt to resolve those difficulties. Those for whose benefit the claim is brought fall outside the scope of any duty owed by Moore Stephens. The sole person for whose benefit such duty was owed, being Mr Stojevic who owned and ran the company, was responsible for the fraud.
(6) In these circumstances ex turpi causa provides a defence to the claim."
"67. For the reasons that I have already given, I consider that the real issue is not whether the fraud should be attributed to the company but whether ex turpi causa should defeat the company's claim for breach of the auditor's duty. That in turn depends, or may depend, critically on whether the scope of the auditor's duty extends to protecting those for whose benefit the claim is brought.
68. One fundamental proposition appears to me to underlie the reasoning of Lord Walker and Lord Brown. It is that the duty owed by an auditor to a company is owed for the benefit of the interests of the shareholders of the company but not of the interests of its creditors. It seems to me that here lies the critical difference of opinion between Lord Walker and Lord Brown on the one hand and Lord Mance on the other. Lord Mance considers that the interests that the auditors of a company undertake to protect include the interests of the creditors."
"The scope of Moore Stephens' duty is not directly in issue on this appeal. What is in issue is whether ex turpi causa provides a defence to S&R's claim that Moore Stephens was in breach of duty. That is not, however, a question that I have been able to consider in isolation from the question of the scope of Moore Stephens's duty. I have reached the conclusion that all whose interests formed the subject of any duty of care owed by Moore Stephens to S&R, namely the company's sole will and mind and beneficial owner Mr Stojevic, were party to the illegal conduct that forms the basis of the company's claim. In these circumstances I join with Lord Walker and Lord Brown in concluding that ex turpi causa provides a defence."
"The fact that S & R was insolvent at each audit date is, in contrast, in my opinion critical. The powers of directors and shareholders in circumstances of insolvency or potential insolvency are qualified (as described in paras 235 to 240 above). The issue as between the company and its auditors is whether the auditors' duty to the company extends, like the directors', beyond the protection of the interests of shareholders in a situation where the auditors ought to have detected that the company was (in fact, as a result of the fraud which the auditors ought to have discovered) insolvent. Despite the immense and highly skilled attention that the appeal has had generally, both prior to and during its presentation before the House, I fear that the centrality of this point may have been a little obscured by the spread of argument over other issues."
He concluded [271] that Moore Stephens could not invoke the maxim ex turpi causa or deny causation by reference to the knowledge of and involvement in the fraud of Mr Stojevic if Moore Stephens ought, with proper skill and care, to have detected that Stone was subject to a continuing scheme of fraud in circumstances in which Stone was insolvent and being made increasingly so. Lord Scott of Foscote was in general agreement with Lord Mance.
(1) The turpis causa relied on by Stone was the fraud practised on the Czech bank by Stojevic.
(2) The duty of the auditors did not, in the view of the majority, extend to the protection of creditors where the company was or was becoming insolvent.
(3) Stone was a one man company within Lord Walker's formulation.
"(1) A director of a company must act in the way he considers, in good faith, would be most likely to promote the success of the company for the benefit of its members as a whole, and in doing so have regard (amongst other matters) to–
(a) the likely consequences of any decision in the long term,
(b) the interests of the company´s employees,
(c) the need to foster the company´s business relationships with suppliers, customers and others,
(d) the impact of the company´s operations on the community and the environment,
(e) the desirability of the company maintaining a reputation for high standards of business conduct, and
(f) the need to act fairly as between members of the company.
(2) Where or to the extent that the purposes of the company consist of or include purposes other than the benefit of its members, subsection (1) has effect as if the reference to promoting the success of the company for the benefit of its members were to achieving those purposes.
(3) The duty imposed by this section has effect subject to any enactment or rule of law requiring directors, in certain circumstances, to consider or act in the interests of creditors of the company."
"(1) In a case where–
(a) section 175 (duty to avoid conflicts of interest) is complied with by authorisation by the directors, or
(b) section 177 (duty to declare interest in proposed transaction or arrangement) is complied with, the transaction or arrangement is not liable to be set aside by virtue of any common law rule or equitable principle requiring the consent or approval of the members of the company.
This is without prejudice to any enactment, or provision of the company's constitution, requiring such consent or approval.
(2) The application of the general duties is not affected by the fact that the case also falls within Chapter 4 (transactions requiring approval of members), except that where that Chapter applies and–
(a) approval is given under that Chapter, or
(b) the matter is one as to which it is provided that approval is not needed, it is not necessary also to comply with section 175 (duty to avoid conflicts of interest) or section 176 (duty not to accept benefits from third parties).
(3) Compliance with the general duties does not remove the need for approval under any applicable provision of Chapter 4 (transactions requiring approval of members).
(4) The general duties–
(a) have effect subject to any rule of law enabling the company to give authority, specifically or generally, for anything to be done (or omitted) by the directors, or any of them, that would otherwise be a breach of duty, and
(b) where the company's articles contain provisions for dealing with conflicts of interest, are not infringed by anything done (or omitted) by the directors, or any of them, in accordance with those provisions.
(5) Otherwise, the general duties have effect (except as otherwise provided or the context otherwise requires) notwithstanding any enactment or rule of law."
Counsel for Bilta relies on s.180(5) as demonstrating that there is no limitation on the duty imposed by s.172(3) in cases of 'one man' companies.
"If the only human embodiment of the company already knew all about its fraudulent activities, there was realistically no protection that its auditors could give it."
Lord Brown [205] agreed with Lord Walker. The fifth proposition enunciated by Lord Phillips [18] and the further statements made by him in [67], [68] and [86], which I have quoted in paragraphs 19 to 21 above, emphasise the need to consider the scope of the duty alleged to have been infringed. None of them referred to s.172 Companies Act 2006.
"(1) If in the course of the winding up of a company it appears that any business of the company has been carried on with intent to defraud creditors of the company or creditors of any other person, or for any fraudulent purpose, the following has effect.
(2) The court, on the application of the liquidator may declare that any persons who were knowingly parties to the carrying on of the business in the manner above-mentioned are to be liable to make such contributions (if any) to the company's assets as the court thinks proper."
(1) S.133 Insolvency Act 1986 (orders for the public examination of officers of a company in liquidation) was held to have extra-territorial effect in Re Seagull Manufacturing Co Ltd. [1993] Ch 345.
(2) S.238 Insolvency Act 1986 (orders setting aside transactions at an undervalue) was held to have extra-territorial effect in Re Paramount Airways [1993] Ch 223.
(3) S.423 Insolvency Act 1986 (transactions defrauding creditors) was held to have extra-territorial effect in HMRC v Begum [2010] EWHC 1799.
(4) S.214 Insolvency Act 1986 (wrongful trading) was assumed to have extra-territorial effect in Re Howard Holdings Inc [1998] BCC 549.
(5) S.213 was assumed to have extra-territorial effect in Carman v The Kronos Group SA [2006] BCC 451; Stocznia Gdanska SA v Latreefers Inc [2001] 2 BCLC 116.
"Although a winding up in the country of incorporation will normally be given extra-territorial effect, a winding up elsewhere has only local operation. In the case of a foreign company, therefore, the fact that other countries, in accordance with their own rules of private international law, may not recognise our winding up order or the title of a liquidator appointed by our courts, necessarily imposes practical limitations on the consequences of the order. But in theory the effect of the order is world-wide. The statutory trusts which it brings into operation are imposed on all the company's assets wherever situate, within and beyond the jurisdiction. Where the company is simultaneously being wound up in the country of its incorporation, the English court will naturally seek to avoid unnecessary conflict, and so far as possible to ensure that the English winding up is conducted as ancillary to the principal liquidation. In a proper case, it may authorise the liquidator to refrain from seeking to recover assets situate beyond the jurisdiction, thereby protecting him from any complaint that he has been derelict in his duty. But the statutory trusts extend to such assets, and so does the statutory obligation to collect and realise them and to deal with their proceeds in accordance with the statutory scheme."
"In my view the solution to the question of statutory interpretation raised by this appeal does not lie in retreating to a rigid and indefensible line. Trade takes place increasingly on an international basis. So does fraud. Money is transferred quickly and easily. To meet these changing conditions English courts are more prepared than formerly to grant injunctions in suitable cases against non-residents or foreign nationals in respect of overseas activities. As I see it, the considerations set out above and taken as a whole lead irresistibly to the conclusion that, when considering the expression "any person" in the sections, it is impossible to identify any particular limitation which can be said, with any degree of confidence, to represent the presumed intention of Parliament. What can be seen is that Parliament cannot have intended an implied limitation along the lines of Ex parte Blain, 12 ChD 522. The expression therefore must be left to bear its literal, and natural, meaning: any person."