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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 >> Old Park Capital Maestro Fund Ltd v Old Park Capital Ltd & Ors [2023] EWHC 3057 (Ch) (28 November 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2023/3057.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 3057 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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OLD PARK CAPITAL MAESTRO FUND LIMITED (a Cayman Islands company, in liquidation) |
Claimant |
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- and – |
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(1) OLD PARK CAPITAL LIMITED (in liquidation) (2) MR. HUGO VAN KUFFELER (3) MR. BRUNO PANNETIER |
Defendants |
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Mr William Edwards and Ms Pia Dutton (instructed by Fieldfisher LLP) for the Second Defendant
The Third Defendant appeared in person
The First Defendant did not appear and was not represented
Hearing date: 10 November 2023
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE RICHARDS :
Whether the Offer was beaten
1 There shall be judgment for the Claimant against the Third Defendant in fraudulent misrepresentation in the sum of $4,175,182.99 (and the Third Defendant do pay that sum, or the sterling equivalent as at the date of payment, to the Claimant) plus a figure to be determined in accordance with paragraph 3 of this order.
3 The issues of whether there should be any award for pre-judgment interest or consequential loss and, if so, in what sum(s) are adjourned to [what ultimately became the hearing on 10 November 2023].
The comparison in money terms is made at the date of judgment. Accordingly, a judgment in a foreign currency falls to be converted to sterling at the exchange rate applicable at judgment: Barnett v Creggy [2015] EWHC 1316 (Ch) (David Richards J) and Novus Aviation Ltd v Alubaf Arab International Bank [2016] EWHC 1937 (Comm); [2016] 4 Costs L.R. 705, Comm (Leggatt J).
Whether it is "unjust" for the consequences in CPR 36.17(4) to apply
i) I will consider all the circumstances of the case and, in particular, the specific matters raised in CPR 36.17(5).
ii) Since I am being invited to make an order that departs from the norm set out in CPR 36.17(4), I should not make an exception simply because I consider the CPR 36.17(4) regime harsh or unjust. Rather, there must be something about this particular case which takes it outside the norm (see Downing v Peterborough & Stamford Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust [2014] EWHC 4216 (QB)).
iii) Since I am not exercising an unfettered discretion in relation to costs when I consider departing from the CPR 36.17(4) consequences, the question is not whether or not BP had reasonable grounds for declining to accept the Offer but whether the usual order would be unjust (see Matthews v Metal Improvements [2007] EWCA Civ 215).
The orders I will make under CPR 36.17(4)
i) interest on the amount of USD4,175,182.99 from 25 April 2023 until today at a rate not exceeding 10% above base rate;
ii) BP must pay the Fund's costs of the claims against BP (including any recoverable pre-action costs) on the indemnity basis from 25 April 2023;
iii) interest on those costs at a rate not exceeding 10% above base rate;
iv) an additional amount of £75,000 (CPR 36.17(4) specifies this to be a maximum, but the arithmetic by which the actual sum is computed means that the maximum is achieved in this case).
Matters relating to the period before 25 April 2023
Costs
i) The Fund was the successful party in its claim against BP and therefore the starting position is that BP should have to pay the Fund's costs of the claims against BP.
ii) However, the Court has power to make a different order, including a "percentage order" that BP pay the Fund only a proportion of its costs.
iii) The Fund does not seek indemnity costs for the period before 25 April 2023 and therefore any award should be on the standard basis.
i) The various claims that the Fund asserted against BP were largely different ways of putting essentially the same grievance. Even if it had been known in advance that the claims in dishonest assistance and for procuring breach of contract would fail, in my judgment the case would still have been put in broadly the same way. In that case it would still have been alleged that BP's decision to invest in KAM CP was not the disinterested application of ordinary investment management criteria, but rather involved something else including a pre-existing arrangement with Kingsway, not disclosed in the Offering Memorandum, to the effect that KAM CP would be acquired. Therefore, I attach relatively little weight to the failure of the claims in dishonest assistance and procuring a breach of contract.
ii) The arguments as to the nature of the misrepresentations that he made and as to the meaning of the Offering Memorandum were minor victories on the road to overall defeat on the question of fraudulent misrepresentation. They do not themselves justify any percentage reduction.
iii) The allegation that there was an "Undisclosed Purpose" did not fail altogether since the allegation of a pre-existing arrangement, undisclosed in the Offering Memorandum, to invest in the KAM CP was an aspect of the Undisclosed Purpose which the court accepted to be present. However, material aspects of the case on the Undisclosed Purpose did fail. The attempt to construct what was in effect a conspiracy to use the Fund's money to "cash flow the Consortium" must have incurred significant cost and, since that attempt failed, it would not be right to require BP to meet the full costs associated with it.
iv) A reduction for the costs of the unsuccessful "Undisclosed Purpose" argument is applicable only from the beginning of January 2023 (when the Fund decided to plead fraud) to 25 April 2023 (when indemnity costs take over). That will certainly have been a busy and expensive time, but the period is self-contained. There are also considerations of BP's disclosure. He provided little disclosure indeed. I make no finding that he has withheld documents but it is relevant to point out that the Fund obtained little from him which might quite reasonably have fuelled its concern as to the existence of a wide "Undisclosed Purpose". While I quite accept that the Fund ultimately chose not to pursue its allegation that BP obtained a personal benefit, it probably had little choice given the relatively small amount of disclosure that BP provided. In saying this, I am not, of course, finding that there was a personal benefit. I am simply looking at matters from the Fund's perspective.
Pre-judgment interest on costs and damages
Other matters
Payment on account
i) 90% of 85% of 50% of the Fund's approved budgeted costs. (The 90% figure reflects the high degree of likelihood that the Fund will recover its approved budgeted costs. The 85% reflects the reduction to the Fund's recoverable total costs. The 50% reflects the assumption that the Fund spent 50% of its costs on the claim against BP). PLUS
ii) 70% of 85% of 50% of the Fund's total incurred costs, other than those approved as part of the costs budgeting exercise. (The 70% figure reflects an assumed discount to recovery of those costs following assessment. That figure takes into account that costs after 25 April 2023, which will include the costs of the trial itself, are calculated on the indemnity basis and so is a reasonable pre-estimate of what the Fund will recover, allowing for a discount for uncertainty. The 85% and 50% figures are included for the reasons above). PLUS
iii) £75,000 (this being the uplift provided for by CPR 36.17.4).
Post-judgment interest
Stays