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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 >> Gorbunova v Berezovsky (aka Platon Elenin) & Ors [2013] EWHC 76 (Ch) (18 January 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2013/76.html Cite as: [2013] EWHC 76 (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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Helena Gorbunova |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) Boris Berezovsky (also known as Platon Elenin) (2) Société d'Investissements France Immeubles (SIFI) (3) Ovaco AG (4) Comodo Limited (5) LMC Trustees Limited (6) Fotopark Limited (7) Steelville Limited (8) Mr Lev Krant |
Defendant |
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Hearing dates: 14th and 15th January 2013
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Mann :
Background
(a) She says that Mr Berezovsky promised her that when the house in which they lived at Wentworth Park was sold (which it was, last year) he would procure that she received £5,000,000 from the proceeds of sale, and within two years he would buy a substitute home for her and the two children. In fact, when the moneys were to hand, Mr Berezovsky used them to pay various debts and she did not see any of it.
(b) Mr Berezovsky claims to be the ultimate beneficial owner of two properties in the south of France. Those properties are held through a ladder of companies and trusts. Ms Gorbunova has also been told that she is a beneficiary under those trusts. She says that Mr Berezovsky has told her that she is the owner of the properties. She regards them as an important part of her financial security. A sale of those properties is being planned, and a purchaser identified. As a result of information received from the purchaser, and other investigations, and what she regards as the unreliability of Mr Berezovsky, Ms Gorbunova is fearful that she will not receive the proceeds of any such sale because Mr Berezovsky needs the money himself. She therefore fears that he will renege on his assurances.
(c) In September 2012 Mr Berezovsky settled a claim that he was making against the estate and representatives of a Georgian man called Badri Patarkatsishvili. The terms of that settlement were confidential. Ms Gorbunova has been told in outline what those terms are, but apparently has not seen the settlement document. Because those terms are confidential I will not set out in this judgment what she knows about those terms, save to say that Mr Berezovsky has an entitlement under that settlement, part of which is deferred moneys. Mr Berezovsky promised Ms Gorbunova that she would receive certain of those moneys, subject to various matters which entitled Mr Berezovsky to retain some. In essence, she claims an interest in some future receipts. However, she alleges that Mr Berezovsky has agreed to pay his former wife some of the same moneys. Ms Gorbunova complains about this.
(d) Ms Gorbunova asserts various claims that she says their children have against Mr Berezovsky under the Children Act 1989 which she issued in the Family Division on 11th January 2013. She produces no evidence at all in support of those claims. All she does is refer to the opinion of a QC as to the range of values of such claims in aggregate. In the interests of the children, I will not, and do not need to, set out that range here.
(i) Mr Berezovsky's assets up to £200m were frozen.
(ii) Mr Berezovsky and the various other defendants were restrained from dealing with the French properties without the consent of Ms Gorbunova.
(iii) Mr Berezovsky was restrained from dealing with the net proceeds of sale of Wentworth Park or any property representing those proceeds.
(iv) Mr Berezovsky was restrained from dealing with the proceeds or value of the settlement of the litigation.
The basis of the present application
Privacy matters
The basis of Mr Berezovsky's application
(i) There was insufficient material to justify a completely without notice application, both in terms of technical shortcomings in the evidence and in terms of the quality of the evidence.
(ii) There was insufficient evidence of a risk of dissipation to justify a freezing order, even taking Ms Gorbunova's evidence at face value.
(iii) The order is wrong in that it provides for an aggregation of the £200m frozen amount and for the restraint of each of specified items of property. That was giving cover for the same claims twice over. If anything, it should have contained only proprietary restraints.
(iv) The claimant is in breach of her undertaking to serve the documentation as soon as reasonably practicable. The order was obtained on 20th December 2012. It was not served until 4th January 2013.
The "without notice" point - the law
"… Without notice if it appears to the court that there are good reasons for not giving notice."
"If the applicant makes an application without giving notice, the evidence in support of the application must state the reasons why notice has not been given."
It was a large part of his case before me that the evidence of Ms Gorbunova fell short in that respect. I shall deal in due course with the extent to which that is correct.
"It is a basic principle of justice that an order should not be made against a party without giving him an opportunity to be heard. The only exception is when two conditions are satisfied. First, that giving him such an opportunity appears likely to cause injustice to the applicant, by reason either of the delay involved or the action which it appears likely that the respondent or others would take before the order can be made. Secondly, when the court is satisfied that any damage which the respondent may suffer through having to comply with the order is compensatable under the cross-undertaking or that the risk of uncompensatable loss is clearly outweighed by the risk of injustice to the applicant if the order is not made."
"63. As a matter of principle no order should be made in civil or family proceedings without notice to the other side unless there is a very good reason for departing from the general rule that notice must be given. Needless to say, the more intrusive the order, the stronger must be the reason for the departure." (per Brooke LJ)
"25. I return then to the other requirements of the Practice Direction. Section 3.4 provides:
"where an application is made without notice to the respondent, the evidence must also set out why notice was not given."
That requirement was again not obeyed when Mr Black's witness statement was prepared. There is nothing in his witness statement to indicate why notice was not given. Again, Mr Blackett-Ord's answer was to refer us to the judgment of the judge as an explanation. The judge does not deal with that point at all. …
28…Mr Blackett-Ord submitted that it has now become the practice for parties to bring ex parte applications seeking a freezing order by pointing to some dishonesty, and that, he says, is sufficient to enable this court to make a freezing order. I have to say that, if that has become the practice, then the practice should be reconsidered. It is appropriate in each case for the court to scrutinise with care whether what is alleged to have been the dishonesty of the person against whom the order is sought in itself really justifies the inference that that person has assets which he is likely to dissipate unless restricted."
"36. Counsel says that it is normal practice to apply ex parte for an order of this sort, and he said also that it is common for no notice to be given. I am sure that may be right – I do not suggest that it is not – because the very nature of a freezing order, for the reasons he explained, is that it may be necessary to apply without notice, hence the importance of paragraph 3.4 of the Practice Direction, which requires an explanation of the reason why no notice has been given in a particular case. I would be very surprised to hear that it is common or normal practice to make an application without notice and at the same time to disregard the rules which expressly cover that situation. If that is common, and it appears to have happened here, then I sincerely hope that this judgment will do something to bring that practice to an end."
"(a) remembering that without notice applications should only be granted in very limited circumstances, which are where to give notice would enable the defendant to take steps to defeat the purpose of the injunction, such as in the case of many search or freezing injunctions, or where there is some exceptional urgency, which means literally there is no time to give notice…
(b) appreciating that in every application for an injunction sought without any or any proper notice, it is prudent to include a statement supported by facts explaining fully and honestly why proper notice could not have been given. A bland statement that the defendant might do something if warned is unlikely to satisfy this requirement without some particulars in support;" (paragraph 255).
Mr Trace drew from this the importance of complying with notice requirements save in exceptional cases. He also drew attention to the word "would" in (a), suggesting that it had a connotation of a high degree of inevitability of steps being taken to defeat the order, which is absent in the present case. In my view, while Silber J is clearly indicating that proper notice should be given, he is not moving the law on. He is not indicating some high level of inevitability. In his paragraph (a) he is, in my view, expressing in his own words what Hoffmann J had said in First Express. It is no doubt a salutary reminder, but it is not new. It should also be noted that freezing orders are treated there as paradigm cases in which it is likely, by their very nature, that giving notice will give a defendant an opportunity to thwart the order by moving assets before it is made. That is plainly right, and has to be borne in mind in considering the evidence in this case. In (b) he is indicating the need for proper evidence. Bland, unsubstantiated statements will not do. A statement, accompanied by particulars, might.
"55. I turn finally to the complaint that the application was made without notice. There is nothing in this point. If, as I have concluded, there was a real risk of dissipation, this was clearly an application which could properly be made without giving Mr McKay an opportunity to undertake such dissipation. It is said that because the application was prepared prior to the weekend and only made on a Monday, notice could have been given after banking hours on the Friday. However, even that would have allowed Mr McKay some time on the Monday and whilst the application was waiting to come on to have undertaken such activity as he might have been minded to undertake by way of dissipation of his assets if, for example, the £75,000 had already been transferred from the office account and was a sum that he was waiting to deal with. In the circumstances, I do not regard the Commission as being subject to legitimate criticism for having made the application without notice."
Mr Berezovsky's case on the without notice point
"Urgency
42. Because of the imminence of the sale of the French Properties and because Boris has been wholly unreliable in honouring any of his promises or agreements with me, this application is urgent. I am of course conscious that this application is made shortly before a holiday period and that any order made could require the defendants to take steps and provide information at a time when officers, employees and legal advisers may be away. I should stress that this timing is not of my making but is a response to the conduct of Boris and the other defendants.
43. For the reasons apparent above there is a real risk of dissipation and no notice has been given to the Defendants of this application."
"We had exactly those concerns [about hampering a sale]. If one can put it this way, the sale is imminent in the sense that there is a vendor or and a buyer, but it looks as if it may be quite difficult. There is the issue of the charges to be addressed. There are various other issues that need to be addressed. If the property is to be sold for £220 million, then I cannot believe that my client would be objecting to it."
(i) Ms Gorbunova sets out the purchase of Wentworth Park by the Elena trust, and a document indicating that she and Mr Berezovsky were in 2006 treated by the trustees as entitled to the benefit of the property while alive and unless and until the trustees were made aware of any wishes of intentions to the contrary. She signed documents in connection with a remortgage and a postponement of rights of occupation. At the end of 2011, when Mr Berezovsky was planning a sale, he told her that if a sale took place she would get a sum of cash and ultimately a similar house of her choosing. On this basis she signed the letter of postponement. A few months later she signed other documents (including the contract of sale) allowing the house to be sold, after receiving a promise that she would be paid £5m on sale and a reassurance that after 2 years Mr Berezovsky would buy "a house for me and the children in the UK similar to Wentworth Park". The house was sold in April 2012, but she was told for several months that the proceeds had not been received. Then in September she was told that the proceeds had been paid to repay loans and to pay lawyers' fees. Thus Mr Berezovsky has promised an interest, and then reneged on that promise and, apparently, did not inform her promptly of what he had done.
(ii) Next Ms Gorbunova turns to the claim in relation to the litigation settlement deed. In December 2011, in a text message, Mr Berezovsky said he would split "everything" equally as a sort of clean break agreement at a time when the relationship was deteriorating. In March 2012 he signed a deed promising her one third of the recoveries from various sets of litigation, including the Patarkatsishvili litigation. Then in September 2012 the settlement of that litigation came up. Mr Berezovsky agreed with Ms Gorbunova that she would receive the second tranche of moneys to come under a settlement agreement, subject to a retention of moneys for legal fees. She was given to understand that this tranche would take perhaps a year to come in. This agreement is said to be recorded in a letter drafted by Mr Berezovsky's solicitors, with a further manuscript addition by Mr Berezovsky. In reliance on this agreement Ms Gorbunova gave a confirmation which the litigation counterparties were seeking as part of the settlement. Having thus signed, Ms Gorbunova subsequently discovered that Mr Berezovsky had already agreed with his former wife, as part of their divorce settlement, that he would give her 30% of the proceeds of anything recovered from the same litigation.
(iii) So far as the French Properties go, Ms Gorbunova says that she was told they were hers, for her and the children, as long ago as 1997. This assertion was repeated over the years. In due course she signed a document giving Mr Berezovsky's mother the right to live in them. She received assertions from Mr Berezovsky that he had left her the properties in his will. In the summer of 2012 she was asked to agree to a sale of the properties, and in their frequent discussions (daily, apparently) she told him she would not agree. In reliance on these assertions she believed she was financially secure and did not take other steps that she might otherwise have taken in order to secure her financial future, and she performed other acts to her detriment, details of which do not matter for present purposes. The position in relation to these properties is complicated by the intricate manner in which the beneficial interest is held, through various companies and trusts, and Ms Gorbunova says there are reasons for thinking that the true ownership may not be quite as the documents suggest. There are charges affecting those properties too.
(iv) A further short section deals with certain distributions from the trusts which are not germane to the present point.
(v) There then follows a section headed "Risk of dissipation". It starts by setting out Ms Gorbunova's belief as to property that Mr Berezovsky may have (she does not know of much) and then deals with the prospective sale of the French properties. In her solicitors' dealings with the purchaser the latter is recorded as saying that she is "not safe" in relation to one but safer in relation to the other. The attendance note reads that he said she was more safe "(in relation to ownership etc)" in relation to the one rather than the other. She does not know what he means by this. However, I note that one can see from the attendance notes which she exhibits that the purchaser has some knowledge of Mr Berezovsky and his affairs. Ms Gorbunova refers to a belief that the French Properties are being sold in order to realise funds for Mr Berezovsky because he is realising the remaining assets at his disposal "and to safeguard what assets he has from his creditors. If unrestrained the likelihood is that the proceeds of sale of the French Properties will be put beyond my reach."
(vi) There then follows a section (still within the "Risk of dissipation" section) setting out findings made in litigation between Mr Berezovsky and Mr Roman Abramovich in a judgment delivered last year by Gloster J in which she found Mr Berezovsky to be an unreliable and sometimes dishonest witness who would say almost anything to support his case, and a finding that Mr Berezovsky relied on an arrangement in which he was interested and which she found to be a sham.
(vii) Last in that section is a short passage dealing with correspondence that has taken place between Ms Gorbunova's solicitors and lawyers for trustees, or former trustees, of one or other of the French Properties. The correspondence contains an indication that one of the properties will not be sold without due notice to her solicitors, but she sets out reasons why that is not satisfactory. She claims that she has received no confirmation about intentions in relation to the other. There was a debate between counsel about the effect of what she was told about this, conducted in correspondence with me after the hearing. I do not propose to develop that. Furthermore, she claims she has received indications that one of the properties has been transferred from one trust to another.
"MS HAREN: … Finally, there is the fact of whether the application without notice is justified. To give notice of the application would, potentially, defeat the object of the exercise.
THE DEPUTY JUDGE: Yes"
The effect of a breach of undertaking – the law
"28. Thirdly, it is important that undertakings given by an applicant, effectively in return for which the freezing order is granted, are complied with, and if they are not that there is a good explanation as to why. The fact that there is a failure to comply with an undertaking given by the applicant to the court, in return for which the injunction was granted, is a potentially serious matter and may, in appropriate circumstances, justify the discharge of the injunction. Bearing in mind the nature and effect of a freezing order, and the fact that it is granted initially ex parte, an applicant should be in no doubt that the court will regard any failure to comply with an undertaking given in the freezing order itself is seriously viewed. Of course, if the breach of the undertaking does not cause the respondent, or anyone else, any damage that would be a mitigating factor. But it does not discharge the gravity of failure to comply."
The alleged breach of undertaking – the facts
"In reality therefore service is unlikely to be affected before the New Year."
The scope of the order
Postscript