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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 Conduct Authority v Exall & Anor [2023] EWHC 1130 (Ch) (17 May 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2023/1130.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 1130 (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 :
____________________
THE FINANCIAL CONDUCT AUTHORITY |
Claim No. BL-2023-000196 Applicant |
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- and - |
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(1) SAMUEL ANTHONY EXALL (trading as Synergy Group) (2) SYNERGY LAND GROUP LIMITED |
Respondents |
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And Between: |
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THE FINANCIAL CONDUCT AUTHORITY |
Claim No. BL-2020-000644 Applicant |
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- and - |
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(1) 24HR TRADING ACADEMY LIMITED (2) MOHAMMAD FUAATH HAJA MAIDEEN MARICAR |
Respondents |
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No appearance for the Respondents
Hearing date: 18 April 2023
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Crown Copyright ©
This judgment will be handed down remotely by circulation to the parties' representatives by email and release to The National Archives. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 10 am on 17 May 2023
Master McQuail:
Background
Service
FSMA - Restitution and distribution orders
"(1) The court may, on the application of the appropriate regulator … make an order under subsection (2) if it is satisfied that a person has contravened a relevant requirement, or been knowingly concerned in the contravention of such a requirement, and –
(a) that profits have accrued to him as a result of the contravention; or
(b) that one or more persons have suffered loss or been otherwise adversely affected as a result of the contravention.
(2) The court may order the person concerned to pay to the regulator concerned such sum as appears to the court to be just having regard -
(a) in a case within paragraph (a) of subsection (1), to the profits appearing to the court to have accrued;
(b) in a case within paragraph (b) of that subsection, to the extent of the loss or other adverse effect;
(c) in a case within both of those paragraphs, to the profits appearing to the court to have accrued and to the extent of the loss or other adverse effect.
(3) Any amount paid to the regulator concerned in pursuance of an order under subsection (2) must be paid by it to such qualifying person or distributed by it among such qualifying persons as the court may direct."
(i) the "regulator concerned" or "appropriate regulator" is in this case the FCA, (section 382(12)-(14)); and
(ii) a "qualifying person" for distribution purposes is (section 382(8)):
"…a person appearing to the court to be someone (a) to whom the profits mentioned in subsection (1)(a) are attributable; or (b) who has suffered the loss or adverse effect mentioned in subsection (1)(b)."
(i) the court should have regard to the purpose of the order for disgorging profits or compensating for loss which is to compensate those affected by the contraventions consistent with the FCA's regulatory objective of the protection of consumers: Anderson at [9] and Paradigm at [30(a)];
(ii) where there is a shortfall between the losses suffered by "qualifying persons" and the FCA's recovery and where the underlying facts have not been fully established or agreed the court has to do its best and that will generally be on a rough-and-ready basis: Anderson at [4-5] and Paradigm at [30(b)-(c)]
(iii) any method of distribution should be as simple as possible consistent with being fair and having regard to the expense of the available options: Anderson at [13] and Paradigm at [30(f)];
(iv) the Court should be satisfied that (a) the FCA has taken reasonable steps to identify all the persons who are potentially within the definition of qualifying person; (b) to identify their losses and (c) the proposal is reasonably fair having regard to the sum available for distribution and the FCA's limited resources: Paradigm at [32].
FCA's Resources
Synergy
Jurisdiction
Proposed qualifying persons
Proposed per capita distribution
(i) The recoveries represent less than 2% of the losses claimed by the 32 investors identified to date. There has been no determination of losses, because settlement terms were reached in 2012. A rough-and-ready type of distribution is therefore appropriate;
(ii) The FCA has real concerns about any distribution on a pro rata basis because it has no way of verifying the investors' losses. In several cases the amount an investor has claimed to have lost is a significant multiple of the amount that Mr Slavin has identified from Synergy's records;
(iii) The FCA has no means of verifying the claims. Synergy's records are incomplete and investors hold incomplete records. Any adjudication process would be costly and very likely inconclusive.
(iv) It is not certain that investors realised they could address the question of quantum when responding to the FCA rather than assume the sums identified by the FCA were determinative of their losses and that might lead to unfairness.
Conclusions - Synergy
Maricar
Jurisdiction
Proposed qualifying persons
(i) customers who paid 24HRTA in cash, unless they used 24HRTA's links to sign up with the forex brokers. Identities of investors paying in cash are not recorded in 24HRTA's banking records, so it would not be possible to verify the claims of any customers who fall into this category (were any to come forward);
(ii) those who traded other than through the identified forex brokers and/or signed up with those brokers by a route other than the links provided by 24HRTA. Mr Poole's fourth witness statement of 11 April 2023 explains that a further investor in this category recently came forward, but the person in question failed to provided any further information when asked.
The justification for the exclusion of those who paid cash is the evidential uncertainty. The justification for the exclusion of those who traded other than through use of the 24HRTA links is the fact that the enforcement action was targeted at arrangements made through use of the links which generated commission and thus profit for Mr Maricar, which would not apply to investors who never used the links.
(i) the totality of the information in Maricar is more comprehensive because of the availability of the third party information. The FCA therefore has greater confidence that it has identified the vast majority of investors.
(ii) the FCA issued a press release drawing attention to this Application on 24 February 2023. Mr Poole's fourth witness statement explains that five potential qualifying persons identified themselves after the Application was made, but none have produced the additional information that he sought from them and it is therefore not proposed they be added to the class of qualifying persons. The FCA has no reason to consider that a further press release would identify any further investors.
Proposed pro rata distribution with cut off at £500 losses
Conclusions
Post Script