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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 >> Sandhu v Kaur [2012] EWHC 2679 (Ch) (04 October 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2012/2679.html Cite as: [2012] EWHC 2679 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
IN THE MATTER OF THE INSOLVENCY ACT 1986
AND IN THE MATTER OF PALMIER PLC (IN LIQUIDATION)
7 Rolls Buildings, Fetter Lane, London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
KALVINDER SINGH SANDHU |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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DR SUKHVENDER KAUR |
Respondent |
____________________
Mr Rupert Butler (instructed initially by Winckworth Sherwood LLP, later by ieLaw) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 20-22 & 26-28 March and 18, 20, 23 & 24 July 2012
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Newey :
The context
i) He owned 72,000 shares in Wimpy International Limited ("Wimpy"); and
ii) He had sold 10,000 shares in Kewal Investments Limited ("Kewal") to his wife, Dr Kaur, on Friday 21 November 2008 for £240,387.
"54. During the early afternoon of the 21 November 2008 a meeting was held at J S Gulati and Co (Mr Sidhu's accountants' offices), attended by Mr Gulati, Mr Sidhu and myself. The purpose of the meeting was to facilitate the share transfer. A stock transfer form was executed by Mr Sidhu transferring ten thousand ordinary shares of £1 each to me. I saw Mr Sidhu sign the stock transfer form at this meeting.
55. The accountant explained that for the purpose of completing the share transfer form £240,387 would be the share transfer value on the basis that this was the value of the advances I could recall I had made to Mr Sidhu in respect of his costs. I understood that a 20% share in that company reflected the total amount owed to me in relation to both outstanding and future loans to Mr Sidhu".
As for why stamp duty was not paid until 26 February 2009, Dr Kaur said this (in paragraphs 58 and 61 of the statement):
"58. Mr Gulati did tell me that £1,205.00 stamp duty would need to be paid before the shares could be registered in my name and I had assumed that he would deal with this. I could not pay this amount at the time as I had paid £35,000 to [Thompson] and Lilley [i.e. solicitors acting for Mr Sidhu] in the preceding five days .
61. During Mr Sidhu's trial I attended court every day. This was a particularly emotional time for me and as well as the financial strains I was under I was also emotionally exhausted and consequently paying the stamp duty on the transfer of shares completely escaped my mind".
"Our client confirms that the transfer of the Wimpy shares in 2001 was made in respect of financial support and assistance given prior to the transfer date of those shares and not after. Her assistance to Mr Sidhu dates back over 40 years and she has shown incredible generosity and loyalty to him throughout. She has supported him financially and assisted him in many ways over the years at a great cost. Although she finds it distasteful to put a value on what she has done she has no doubts that it is well in excess of what she has received in return".
"Therefore, the only relevant documents that I have in my possession, or am aware of existing, and which I am entitled to obtain are the following :
a. copy of share transfer form dated 9 March 2001;
b. copy of letter signed by myself and my husband addressed to Wimpy dated 5 September 2001;
c. copy of letter signed by myself and my husband addressed to Wimpy dated 8 December 2004;
d. copy of segregation form, dated 6 November 2007;
e. copy of share transfer form dated 26 August 2001".
Dr Kaur had said this in paragraph 13(c) of her statement:
"On the 17 and 18 of November 2009 I spoke to my nephew G S Khatra . He is a director of [Wimpy] and he witnessed the first share transfer form on 9 March 2001 at which my sister was also present. This was an internal routine transfer and he has confirmed to me that everything was approved by the Board of Directors and all share transfers, allotments and segregation of shares complied with the applicable law and procedures and were duly approved in Board of Director's meetings. All relevant returns were filed with the Registrar of Companies".
"by 24 December 2009 (i) to use reasonable endeavours to procure from Wimpy International Limited and disclose copies of documents relating to the matters set out in paragraph 1 b i an[d] 1 b ii below (including, without limitation, the relevant board approvals and returns sent to the Indian Companies Registry) and (ii) make available for inspection the originals of the documents so disclosed including:
i. the share transfer forms dated 9 March 2001 and 26 August 2001;
ii. the letters signed by Dr Kaur and Mr Sidhu addressed to Wimpy dated 5 September 2001 and 8 December 2004; and
iii. the share segregation form dated 6 November 2007".
"With respect to the proposed inspection of original records of Wimpy International Limited in India, you or your client will need to write to Wimpy International Limited directly".
"7. Relevantly, Dr Kaur undertook in the Order [of 8 December 2009] to '(i) use reasonable endeavours to procure from Wimpy and disclose copies of documents relating to [the share transfers]...and (ii) to make available for inspection the originals of the documents so disclosed..'. Dr Kaur also consented to an order that she disclose the documents in her possession relating to the alleged share transfers. I observe that:
7.1 undertaking (ii) is an absolute (not a reasonable endeavours undertaking); and
7.2 inspection of the original documents was required because of the very strong indications that the alleged share transfers had been fabricated and backdated after judgment had been entered against Mr Sidhu .
8. I now produce this witness statement because Dr Kaur has failed to comply with her undertaking in the Order (she has not procured inspection of the Wimpy documents) and, indeed, she appears to be adopting a strategy designed to frustrate attempts to view the original Wimpy share transfer documents. This statement is therefore produced in support of an application that unless Dr Kaur comply with her undertaking forthwith her opposition to the granting of the final charging order be struck out ".
The allegations
i) She knowingly produced a false witness statement containing a statement of truth dated 19 August 2009, with deliberate intent to disobey and frustrate the judgment given against Mr Sidhu on 8 May 2009 and the freezing order made against him on the same date;
ii) She knowingly produced a false statement of truth dated 1 December 2009, with deliberate intent to disobey and frustrate the judgment of 8 May 2009; and
iii) She has with deliberate intent disobeyed the order made on 8 December 2009, by failing to comply with her obligations as to specific disclosure.
The witness statement of 19 August 2009 (Allegation 7)
"As we understand the position, our client has a shareholding of 20% of the Shares in [Kewal]".
In response to a request from Coffin Mew LLP for the position to be confirmed, Walkers said in a letter of 16 January:
"So far as concerns the shareholding in Kewal Investments Limited, when we met our client, he indicated to us that he owned 20% of the Company".
They also said:
"Those shares are unencumbered as we have explained to our client that unless he actually disposes of all or any part of the shares, he cannot encumber them in any other way as it is unlikely that any Bank will advance monies on the strength of a shareholding which could at any time be sold to a third party and leave the Bank without any security".
"I told them [i.e. Mr Sidhu and Dr Kaur] that they were going to lose in court; so I told her to buy the [Kewal] shares. I even gave her the stock transfer form and I said 'buy the shares'. They nevertheless went to an Indian accountant who said that they should back-date it by 2 months because then it looks more genuine. I said 'it is genuine'".
Mr Wiseman also said, among other things, that Mr Sidhu was "completely mad", that "everyone is fed up with him [i.e. Mr Sidhu]" and that Mr Sidhu blamed him for his losing the proceedings.
"I told them that they MIGHT lose in Court. I had no knowledge of the details of the action to venture an opinion. I gave them a stock transfer form, which I already had, (probably downloaded but I have no record now) and I believe this was in February. They subsequently told me (I cannot remember when) that they had registered the transfer earlier. I replied that there was no necessity to do that".
In a further email, Mr Wiseman said:
"I am fairly certain that I downloaded the transfer form because a) I usually do and b) I do not remember obtaining one from elsewhere.
I provided it blank to Mr. Sidhu.
I did not know it had been backdated until the matter was raised at a later date. I asked Mr. Sidhu/Dr Kaur WHY it had been backdated as, in my opinion, Dr. Kaur had been paying the legal costs and the transaction was genuine. Their answer was confused but they had seen 'an accountant' who had suggested doing so . I suggested the Share transfer even before November but until February I had no knowledge of it being done or not".
i) Allegations of contempt need to be proved to the criminal standard, i.e. beyond reasonable doubt;
ii) Mr Singh was the only witness on either side to give direct evidence about the key events. The evidence on which Mr Sandhu relies (viz. what Mr Sidhu told Walkers and what Mr Wiseman said to Mr Upson) is hearsay. That fact is the more significant since (a) Mr Sandhu himself alleges that Mr Sidhu has been untruthful in other contexts and (b) Mr Wiseman told Mr Upson that he (in common apparently with others) was "fed up with [Mr Sidhu]";
iii) Mr Singh adhered to his account in cross-examination and was not, in my view, shown to be an obviously untruthful witness; and
iv) Mr Singh is known to have carried out company searches on Kewal on 13 October 2008. That indicates that Kewal was being thought about before 21 November, when the share transfer was purportedly executed.
The witness statement of 1 December 2009 (Allegation 11)
i) Dr Kaur exhibited five documents (viz. the Disputed Documents) purporting to show beneficial transfer of shares in Wimpy. The documents in question had, however, been backdated. The aim was to defeat Proudman J's judgment of 8 May 2009. A particular point on which Mr Sandhu relies is that the version of the letter dated 5 September 2001 is not identical to the version of the document that was sent by Dr Kaur's then solicitors as a certified copy on 19 May 2010;
ii) Dr Kaur asserted in the witness statement that "[a]ll relevant returns had been filed with the Registrar of Companies". That was not in fact the case.
"at some point after the commencement of his claim against Mr [Sidhu], and most likely after Judgment was given on 08.05.09, Mr [Sidhu] created the story which is now being questioned by [Mr Sandhu] in relation to the 2% and 98% split in beneficial ownership as between Mr [Sidhu] and [Dr Kaur]".
i) A form dated 9 March 2001 by which 2,618,250 shares in Wimpy were purportedly transferred to Mr Sidhu and Dr Kaur jointly with beneficial ownership divided on a 2%:98% basis. The form appears to be signed by both Mr Sidhu and Dr Kaur, and also by Mr G.S. Khatra, a nephew of Dr Kaur, as a witness;
ii) A form dated 26 August 2001 by which 10,100 shares in Wimpy were purportedly transferred to Mr Sidhu and Dr Kaur jointly with beneficial ownership divided on a 2%:98% basis. The form appears to be signed by both Mr Sidhu and Dr Kaur, and also by a Mrs Rajinder Kaur Khatra, a sister of Dr Kaur, as a witness; and
iii) A letter to Wimpy dated 5 September 2001 in which Mr Sidhu and Dr Kaur say this:
"Please convert the following 10100 equity shares held by me, in the joint name of myself (2% share) and in the name of my wife, Dr. (Mrs.) Sukhvender Kaur (98%) share). The said equity shall be held by us in the joint name(s) in the manner and proportion as above.
Share Certificate No. WIL/002, Distinctive Nos. 101-200. Total 100 equity shares
Share certificate No. WIL/022, Distinctive Nos. 736551-746550. Total 10000 equity shares
This letter is being signed by both the proposed undersigned joint shareholder(s) towards the said instructions in terms of their mutual arrangement / consent. Duly executed share transfer deed is enclosed herewith. The original share certificates are already on record in context with the transfer of the same from Mr Charanjit Singh to Mr Kanwaljit Singh Sidhu".
The letter appears to be signed by both Mr Sidhu and Dr Kaur.
i) A letter to Wimpy dated 8 December 2004 in which Mr Sidhu and Dr Kaur ask for 974,700 shares to be allotted in their joint names in the following manner:
"Dr. (Mrs.) Sukhvender Kaur (98% share) jointly with Mr. Kanwaljit Singh Sidhu (2% share)".
The letter appears to be signed by both Mr Sidhu and Dr Kaur;
ii) A "share segregation form" dated 6 November 2007 by which 73,150 shares in Wimpy were purportedly transferred into the sole name of Mr Sidhu. The form appears to be signed by both Mr Sidhu and Dr Kaur, and also by a Dr R.S. Pandya of New Malden, Surrey as a witness. The signatures of Mr Sidhu and Dr Kaur are seemingly confirmed by a Mr Harsuhinder Brar of Thompson & Lilley, a firm of solicitors in Mayfair, London.
i) A document purporting to be a letter to Wimpy from Mr Sidhu and Dr Kaur dated 9 March 2001 reads:
"Please convert 2618250 equity shares of Rs. 10/- each, fully paid-up, held by me, as per the details as per annexure, in the joint name of myself (2% share) and in the name of my wife, Dr. (Mrs.) Sukhvender Kaur (98% share). Henceforth the said entire equity shall be held by us in the joint name(s) in the manner and proportion above.
This letter is being signed by both the said joint shareholder(s) towards the said instructions in terms of their mutual arrangement/consent. Duly executed share transfer deed along with the original share certificates, as per the details contained in annexure, are enclosed herewith for the needful";
ii) Wimpy's minute books contain what purport to be minutes of a board meeting on 17 March 2001 at which the transfer of 2,618,250 shares into the joint names of Mr Sidhu and Dr Kaur was approved;
iii) There are also to be found in Wimpy's minute books what purport to be minutes of a board meeting on 4 October 2001 at which approval was given to the 10,100 shares referred to in the letter dated 5 September 2001 being converted into a joint shareholding;
iv) A document purporting to be a letter to Wimpy from Mr Sidhu and Dr Kaur dated 3 October 2002 refers to the letter dated 5 September 2001 and states:
"It is once again requested to please record the conversion of 2628350 equity shares of Rs. 10/- each, fully paid-up, held by me, as per the details as per annexure, in the joint names of myself (2% share) and the name of my wife, Dr. (Mrs.) Sukhvender Kaur (98% share). The said entire equity shall be held by us in the joint name(s) in the manner and proportion as above".
It is said that, "although the conversion in the joint names was approved in the board of director's meeting held on 17.03.2001 and 04.10.2001", "the entries of said conversion were not recorded due to clerical oversight". A "[d]uly executed share transfer deed" is stated to be enclosed "once again for the needful";
v) A form dated 9 October 2002 purports to transfer 2,628,350 shares in Wimpy to Mr Sidhu and Dr Kaur jointly with beneficial ownership divided on a 2%:98% basis. The form appears to be signed by both Mr Sidhu and Dr Kaur, and also by a Mr Suresh Gupta as a witness;
vi) Wimpy's minute books include what purport to be minutes of a board meeting on 25 November 2002 at which it was resolved that "the effect of the conversion be once again taken on record and be incorporated in the returns to be filed to the concerned Registrar and also so recorded in the resp. share certificates";
vii) A document purporting to be a letter from Wimpy to the Registrar of Companies dated 29 June 2004 states:
"We are sending herewith the revised annual returns of the Company made up to 30.09.2002 and 31.12.2003 for your perusal and record. The annual return made up to 30.09.2002 has been revised to include the details of transfer of share effected by the company in October, 2001, which was not given effect in the original return, due to clerical oversight. The consequent effect has also been given in the annual return made up to 31.12.2003";
viii) Wimpy's minute books include what purport to be minutes of a board meeting on 21 December 2004 at which it was resolved that 974,700 shares be allotted to "Mrs. (Dr.) Sukhvender Kaur (98% share)/ Mr. Kanwaljit Singh Sidhu (2% share)"; and
ix) Wimpy's minute books include what purport to be minutes of a board meeting on 21 November 2007 at which approval was given to the segregation of shares formerly held in the joint names of Mr Sidhu and Dr Kaur.
i) Mr Arun K Gupta, a forensic document examiner of great experience who gave careful evidence, concluded that Mr Sidhu's signatures on the Disputed Documents identified in paragraphs 37 and 38(i) above, and also some of the documents referred to in paragraph 40, date from 2007 or later and not from the period during which the documents in question were purportedly created (viz. between March 2001 and December 2004). Mr Gupta based this conclusion principally on the evidence of tremor he perceived in the relevant signatures. The essence of his reasoning can be found in the following passages from his report:
"A study of these signatures reveals that KSS [i.e. Mr Sidhu] was having free and fluent writing movement till 2006. He started showing debility of movement and hampering of muscular control resulting in appearance/onset of slight tremors in his signatures of 2007 which got aggravated as seen in the signature of 2008 .
The deterioration in his writing skill became highly pronounced subsequently as seen in the signature of 2009 so much so that he could not even properly write the word 'Director' below his signature. The highly pronounced nature of tremor in 2009 indicates that KSS has aged significantly and/or suffered from severe illness in the intervening period of 2007 to 2009.
[A]ll the questioned signatures/initials of KSS, which are purported to be of the period March 2001 to November 2007 show presence of tremors in their strokes throughout, which are not seen at all in the standard signatures of KSS pertaining to the period 2000 to 2006";
ii) Mr Charanjit Singh, who was a director of Wimpy until 2001 or 2002, said that he believed certain of the documents mentioned in paragraph 40 above to be "false and back-dated documents". A particular point he made was that he had not himself transferred his 10,100 shares by 2001, when they were purportedly transferred on to Mr Sidhu and Dr Kaur. Mr Singh accepted that he had stated in an affidavit sworn on 1 September 2001 that he had "resigned as Director of [Wimpy] w.e.f. 01.09.2001 and transferred [his] entire share holding in the said company", but said that no transfer had been intended to take effect until he received payment for the shares, which did not happen. Mr Singh said that he had given his affidavit to a Colonel Kalyan Singh, who was looking after Wimpy's affairs on a day-to-day basis, so that he (Mr Charanjit Singh) would be in a position to say that he had dissociated himself from the company, which appeared to have been engaging in improper activities;
iii) Mr Pawan Sharma, who is an expert in company secretarial matters, gave evidence that he had personally conducted a physical inspection of the Wimpy files at the Office of the Registrar of Companies and found that they did not contain either the letter from Wimpy dated 29 June 2004 (see paragraph 40(vii) above) or the revised returns supposedly enclosed with it;
iv) Mr Gaganpreet Singh Puri, a partner in KPMG, explained that he would normally expect the Registrar of Companies to provide a stamped acknowledgment in such cases, and the copy of the letter dated 29 June 2004 has on the face of it been stamped twice by the Office of the Registrar. Wimpy could thus be expected to hold a version of the letter bearing one or more original stamps. Nonetheless, no document with an original stamp has been produced;
v) Not only are the revised returns allegedly sent to the Office of the Registrar not to be found there, but they are not available in any form. Not even copies have been produced;
vi) Dr Kaur neither gave evidence herself nor called anyone else with direct personal knowledge of the relevant events;
vii) A number of the documents mentioned in paragraph 40 above did not emerge until they were exhibited to the report of Justice Vijender Jain, a former Chief Justice of the Punjab and Haryana High Court, that was served shortly before the start of the hearing; and
viii) The copy of the letter of 5 September 2001 that Dr Kaur exhibited to her witness statement of 1 December 2009 is not identical to the certified copy disclosed in May 2010. While the text of the letter has not changed, the signatures can be seen to be different.
i) While he said that he had been kept informed as to the company's affairs by Colonel Singh, Mr Charanjit Singh said that did not think he had attended any Wimpy board meetings after April 2000, when his son had an accident. It is also potentially relevant that he has himself been concerned in Indian legal proceedings relating to Wimpy for some years;
ii) Tremor can arise not only from ageing but from illness or medication; as Mr Gupta accepted, antidepressant drugs, in particular, may impair some people's muscular coordination. As a result, the extent to which a person's signatures show signs of tremor may decrease as well as increase over time (if e.g. the person recovers from an illness or ceases to take a medication). That means that a signature showing signs of tremor will not necessarily post-date one that is free of tremor; in fact, Mr Gupta noted that signatures of Mr Sidhu dating from 2010 and 2012 have shown a lesser degree of tremor than earlier signatures. In the present case, there is evidence that Mr Sidhu was taking drugs for both hypertension and, perhaps more significantly, depression in the years after 1999. It is conceivable that the tremor Mr Gupta observed in the signatures at issue could be attributable to Mr Sidhu's health and/or treatment. Mr Gupta's evidence is also weakened slightly through no fault of his own by the fact that he did not have available to him samples of Mr Sidhu's signature dating from 2003 or 2004;
iii) Dr Subhash Mittal, a forensic document examiner called on behalf of Dr Kaur, expressed the view that the fluorescence of documents at issue tends to confirm that they are of the dates attributed to them. Mr Gupta disputed the value of fluorescence evidence in the present context, but I do not think I can dismiss Dr Mittal's views as clearly without foundation; and
iv) As was pointed out by Mr Rupert Butler, who appeared for Dr Kaur, it is possible to conceive of circumstances in which two copies of the letter of 5 September 2001 might have been signed at the time.
The order of 8 December 2009 (Allegation 12)
"This is with reference to your two letters both dt. 11.12.2009 wherein you have asked the company to hand you over the originals of certain share transfer deed (s), certain instructions / letters in context with and forming part of share transfer deed (s) / share allotments and some annual returns for certain years and certain records as mentioned in the said letter.
You would please appreciate that the original records are the property of the company and it is a statutory obligations of the company to have such records in its possession. Therefore, the original (s) cannot be given to any shareholder in specific.
Please let us know in case certified copies of any such documents are desired which would be provided with reasonable notice".
In their own letter, Dr Kaur's solicitors said:
"You will note that Wimpy is under a statutory duty not to release original company documentation and can only provide certified copies. Our client has requested these and we shall provide copies to you as soon as these are available".
"Turning to your letter of 11 February 2010, we note that you say Wimpy is unable to release original documentation. We observe, however, that the 8 December 2009 Order refers to inspection of documents which can be arranged in India.
We have also been advised that our client (or his representative) is entitled to inspect the original records of Wimpy during its business hours and can take extracts of the relevant information once inspected (section 163 of the Companies Act 1956). Accordingly, our client's representatives will attend at Wimpy's offices in the week commencing 19 April 2010 to inspect the original documents in respect of the alleged share transfer to Dr Kaur. Please confirm that, pursuant to her undertaking, Dr Kaur has (as a director) arranged for such inspection to take place.
In the interim, please provide us with the certified copies of the original company documentation referred to in your letter as soon as possible".
"Your request to attend the offices of Wimpy in India is refused.
It appears that your client is seeking to obtain advantage in the Indian litigation through the use of the UK proceedings. There are only a handful of documents our client has agreed to procure relating to Wimpy which our client will allow you inspection of here in the UK. You or your client or their agents have no express authority from our client with regards to attendance at the Wimpy offices. There are Company procedures that need to be adhered to".
"We find it extraordinary that Dr Kaur refuses to: i) disclose copies of the Wimpy records and ii) make available for inspection the original of those records. Dr Kaur gave an undertaking to the Court (enshrined in the 8 December 2009 Order) in respect of these matters yet Dr Kaur is now flatly refusing to abide by her undertaking. Dr Kaur is in contempt of court".
"With respect to the proposed inspection of original records of Wimpy International Limited in India, you or your client will need to write to Wimpy International Limited directly".
Conclusion