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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 >> XX & Ors v YY & Ors [2021] EWHC 3014 (Ch) (19 October 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2021/3014.html Cite as: [2021] EWHC 3014 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS
OF ENGLAND AND WALES
BUSINESS LIST (ChD)
Fetter Lane London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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XX & Others |
Claimants/Respondents |
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- and – |
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YY & Others |
Defendants/Applicants |
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MR THOMAS GRANT QC and MR CALEY WRIGHT (instructed by Grosvenor Law) appeared on behalf the Defendants/Applicants.
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE MILES:
Introduction
Procedural history
"If and to the extent that [D2] and/or [D10] no longer hold the same, or the traceable proceeds thereof, the first claimant seeks equitable compensation against each of them jointly and severally for knowing receipt."
"If and to the extent that [D10] no longer holds the same, or the traceable proceeds thereof, the first claimant seeks equitable compensation against her for knowing receipt."
"Rather, as explained above, the applicants' claims against [the tenth defendant] consist of: (1) a proprietary claim to recover monies and other assets held by her on constructive trust; and
(2) a personal claim for equitable compensation for knowing receipt."
"69. Instead the applicants' application for a Worldwide Freezing Order against [the tenth defendant] is advanced on two grounds.
70. First the applicants submit that their concerns about a risk of dissipation in the case of [the second defendant] apply equally to his wife. The evidence indicates that [the second defendant] and [the tenth defendant] operated as a single financial unit and that [the second defendant] is effectively the decision-maker. The [second defendant] seems to have decided how much should be paid to [the tenth defendant] and by which entities. Further some of the misappropriated bondholder monies were paid into accounts in their joint names. The applicants are concerned that [the second defendant] controls the finances of [the tenth defendant] and that he is able, in practice, to dissipate her assets.
71. Secondly the applicants asked the court to make a worldwide freezing injunction against [the tenth defendant] on the basis of the Chabra jurisdiction, i.e. on the basis that [the tenth defendant] holds assets for the second defendant which would be amenable to a process of enforcement to satisfy a judgment against [the second defendant]."
"The applicants invite the court to freeze assets held by [the tenth defendant] on this basis. In summary, although [the tenth defendant] had no role in the claimants, or in any of the connected borrowers, [the second defendant] arranged for her to receive £5,969,400 in her own name and £9,896,916 in their joint names. It is submitted that there is good reason to suppose that [the second defendant] was involving his wife as a nominee for himself in respect of these dealing with money."
"My Lord, in terms of miscellaneous matters, the first, I think, is the position of the tenth defendant, which I think I do need to address your Lordship on separately because the applicants do not allege that she was knowingly a party to any fraudulent trading or that she dishonestly assisted in any breach of fiduciary duty. So it is not possible in her case to say that the nature of the claims entitled the court to infer that there's a real risk of dissipation. Similarly, in the case of her alone, there are no further factors that can be relied on, like backdating documents or entering into transactions with no commercial rationale to disguise reality. Instead, we make the application against her for a freezing injunction on two different grounds and separately for the proprietary injunction to catch the monies that she received. In terms of the freezing injunction, the first point is that the concerns about the risk of dissipation applicable to the second defendant we say apply equally to his wife. As your Lordship will have seen from the evidence, the second defendant seems to be the one who decides whether money goes to him or to his wife. She receives money from these entities when she had no business dealings with them, so it can only be the case that he was directing her receipt of those monies and, in fact, some went into accounts in joint names. So we submit, first of all, in light of the way in which their finances are arranged, the risk of dissipation applicable to him applies equally to her. Secondly, really in the alternative, we ask the court to make the freezing injunction against her on the basis of the Chabra jurisdiction; in other words, if the freezing injunction is not made against her as a cause of action defendant, as defined in the authorities, it would be as a non-cause of action defendant on the basis that she holds assets which are amenable to execution as against the second defendant because, as your Lordship will have seen, although she had no role in any of those companies, the second defendant arranged for her to receive almost £6 million in her own name and also £10 million in their joint names and there is good reason to suppose that the second defendant was involving her as a nominee for himself in respect of those dealings with the monies."
Again, the reference to the second sum of £10 million was, as is common ground, a mistake. It should have been c.£7 million.
"Of course the proprietary injunction is different because that just catches the sums that each of them received individually. For the tenth defendant, she is not a defendant for a fraudulent trading claim so the maximum sum for her freezing injunction would be the amount of the knowing receipt claim, which is of course in her case going to be the same as the amount that she received because the knowing receipt claim is, if and to the extent, she does not hold the traceable proceeds then we would seek equitable compensation against her for knowing receipt."
"We do not accuse her of being knowingly party to a fraud. The claim against her is brought on a proprietary basis to recover assets held on constructive trust or for (inaudible) known receipt and so it is a smaller amount in her case."
"20. The analysis I have set out above does not necessarily apply to one of the respondents, the tenth defendant, who is the wife of the second defendant, one of the four respondents mentioned above. It is not alleged against the tenth defendant that she was knowingly party to the fraudulent trading or that she dishonestly assisted in any breach of duty. The claim against her comprises of a proprietary claim to recover monies and other assets alleged to be held by her on constructive trust, and a personal claim for equitable compensation for knowing receipt.
21. It is argued and I accept that there are two grounds upon which a Freezing Order can be made against the tenth defendant, notwithstanding the distinction in her position from that of the other four respondents.
22. The first ground is that the evidence does demonstrate a good arguable case for saying that the second defendant has had and has some element of control over the finances of the tenth defendant, including the payment of funds alleged to have been misappropriated from the first claimant to the tenth defendant.
23. The second ground is that I accept that this is a case where there is good reason to suppose that assets held in the name of the tenth defendant would be amenable to enforcement in order to satisfy a judgment against the second defendant; see the so-called Chabra jurisdiction summarised by Popplewell J in PJSC Vseukrainskyi Aksionernyi Bank v. Maksimov [2013] EWHC 422 (Comm), at [7]."
"The first, second and fifth respondents do file and serve, if so advised, any application and supporting evidence to discharge the Worldwide Freezing Order by no later than 4.30 p.m. on 2 November 2020, with such application to be listed and heard at the CMC. For the avoidance of doubt, they will not be required to show a material change of circumstances."
The parties' positions concerning the application
(a) What was the basis of the original WFO?
(a) The POC contained personal claims, as I have already said. There was no correction of that.
(b) The skeleton for the ex parte hearing set out the two grounds for the application. Paragraph 67 said there was a personal claim in knowing receipt. Paragraph 69 said there were two grounds for the WFO. Paragraph 70 said that the factors that made the second defendant a dissipation risk applied to the tenth defendant because they were a single financial unit. Paragraph 71 started with the word, "secondly," and relied on Chabra. There was no mention of Chabra in the earlier paragraphs. Paragraph 72 set out the Chabra principles and para 73 asked for a Chabra order concerning the amounts pleaded in paras 70 and 73 of the POC (albeit the latter was wrongly overstated by some £3 million).
(c) The position was repeated by counsel orally. He explained the two bases "in the alternative". Counsel submitted before me that those words naturally meant in the alternative to the basis on which the WFOs were sought against the other respondents. I cannot accept that submission. It is clear from the context that the Chabra ground was being advanced as an alternative to the first ground; namely that there was a personal claim against the tenth defendant and that the second defendant, who controlled her finances, was a dissipation risk.
(d) Things were made clearer still by other parts of the submissions. Counsel explained to the judge twice that the maximum sum in the order was the amount claimed by way of equitable compensation. That necessarily entailed the assertion of a personal claim.
(e) The Deputy Judge recorded in his judgment that there was a personal claim against the tenth defendant and then set out the two grounds for the WFO against the tenth defendant in a way that reflected the way the matter had been put to him in submissions. There was no suggestion by the claimants then or later that he had made an error and he was not in any way put right.
(b) Does the order of Meade J prevent the tenth defendant from making this application to discharge the WFO?
"... although there are cases where the rule or order does not expressly state a sanction and the court by a process of interpretation nevertheless construes the rule or order as impliedly containing one, there are also cases where there is no intention to create a sanction but the law for policy reasons treats the case as one analogous to an application for relief from sanctions, and applies the Denton/Mitchell principles."
(c) Is the WFO independently justifiable on Chabra grounds (in whole or part)?
"... Since the purpose of granting such an injunction against the co-defendant is to preserve the assets of the principal defendant so as to be available to meet a judgment against him, the form of order made against the co-defendant should be as specific as the circumstances permit in respect of the principal defendant's assets of which he has possession or control. Thus, generally, the form of injunction will be tailored to that purpose and should be no wider than is necessary to achieve it.
However, subject to that requirement, if a co-defendant is mixed up in an attempt to make the principal defendant judgment-proof and the assets or their proceeds are not readily identifiable in his hands, it is open to the court, where it is just and convenient to do so, to make an order which catches the co-defendant's general assets up to the amount of the principal defendant's assets of which he appears to have possession and control."
CERTIFICATE Opus 2 International Limited hereby certifies that the above is an accurate and complete record of the Judgment or part thereof. Transcribed by Opus 2 International Limited Official Court Reporters and Audio Transcribers 5 New Street Square, London, EC4A 3BF Tel: 020 7831 5627 Fax: 020 7831 7737 [email protected] This transcript has been approved by the Judge |