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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 >> Harrington & Charles Trading Company Ltd & Ors v Mehta & Ors [2023] EWHC 998 (Ch) (21 April 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2023/998.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 998 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS & PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND & WALES
BUSINESS LIST (ChD)
Royal Courts of Justice, Rolls Building Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
(sitting with Master Kaye)
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Harrington & Charles Trading Company Limited (In Liquidation) and others |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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Mehta and others |
Defendants |
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Harrington & Charles Trading Company Limited (In Liquidation) and others |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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IIA Technologies and others |
Defendants |
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Mr Thomas Grant KC and Mr Daniel Petrides (instructed by Withers LLP) for the Defendants
Mr Justin Higgo KC and Mr Paul Adams (instructed by Howard Kennedy LLP) for the Third Defendant
21st April 2023
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Miles:
Introduction
a. Claim No. BL-2022-000913 issued on 31 May 2022 (the "May Action"), in which five companies and one LLP (all in liquidation) and their joint liquidators bring claims against four members of the Mehta family (the "Mehta Defendants") who are alleged to have orchestrated the alleged fraud, and another individual ("Mr Obidah"), who is alleged to have acted in concert with the Mehta Defendants;
b. Claim No. BL-2022-001010 issued on 23 June 2022 (the "June Action"), in which an additional company in liquidation called Docklands and its joint liquidators (who are the same liquidators as in the May Action), bring the same claims against the Mehta Defendants and Mr Obidah as are brought in the May Action; and
c. Claim No. BL-2022-001515 issued on 23 September 2022 (the "September Action"), in which the same entities and officeholders as in the May and June Actions (together the "Claimant Companies" and the "Joint Liquidators") bring claims against two Singaporean companies connected to the Mehta Defendants, IIA Technologies Pte Limited ("IIA Technologies" or "IIA") and Polishing Technologies Pte Ltd ("Polishing Technologies" or "PT"), and another individual ("Mr Kothari').
Procedural history
Current application
The claimants' position
The defendants' position
a. the court should defer a decision about consolidation until defences have been served, as this would show the true extent of any overlap. Until that point, the issues in the case will not have sufficiently clearly crystallised;
b. the court should, in any case, defer a decision about consolidation until the conclusion of the hearing of the strike out or summary judgment applications as there may be nothing of the case left;
c. in any case, the question should properly be addressed at the first case management conference and not before then;
d. there was a potential increase in complexity concerning case management and costs if the two cases were consolidated. It was at least realistically possible that the September Action defendants would challenge jurisdiction or take other objections to being brought into proceedings, and if consolidation were to be ordered now, the proceedings against the existing served defendants would potentially be held up or disrupted;
e. it would, in any case, be wrong in principle to entertain the application for consolidation before the September Action defendants had had a chance to advance their arguments. This followed from the fundamental principle of justice that no order affecting them should be made before they had been heard;
f. the claimants were abusing the process of the court or acting procedurally improperly because their sole or primary purpose for seeking consolidation now was to enable them to rely on the necessary or proper party gateway of jurisdiction under CPR PD6 para 3.1(3), and this was a collateral purpose.
Analysis and conclusions
a. I consider for the reasons already given that there are independent case management grounds for making an order for consolidation at the present stage in the proceedings. I regard these as compelling. I have also explained why it seems to me appropriate that they should be made now, as it is the earliest reasonable stage for doing so.
b. If such an order is made, the claimants will be able to rely on it as an additional head of jurisdiction. I can see nothing abusive or procedurally improper in them taking that course. The claimants did not argue that the jurisdictional advantage which they would derive was of itself a reason which justified consolidation. I do not think that any advantage they might thereby obtain is collateral. It would just follow from consolidation.
c. I also agree with the claimants that Freemont provides some support for the claimants' position. In that case, Mr Justice Mance made an order for consolidation which enabled the plaintiffs to seek jurisdiction under the necessary or proper party gateway.
d. Though that case was decided before the introduction of the CPR, it appears to me still to be persuasive on the issue of abuse or procedural propriety; and the present argument does not turn on the interpretation of any the wording of any particular provision of the rules.
e. Mr Justice Mance specifically addressed an argument in that case that the plaintiffs had obtained a limitation advantage because the relation back at the date of the second writ to the first, but did not regard that as abusive or improper. That point does not arise here, as I have already explained. But Mr Justice Mance also addressed the specific submission that the plaintiffs would be able to seek to serve out under the necessary and proper party gateway if but only if the order for consolidation was made. He did not see that as a valid objection to the order for consolidation. That provides some assistance here.
f. As I have said, the claimants have accepted that they wished to pursue their application for consolidation now, as it would improve their position on service out. But it does not follow, it seems to me, that they were acting improperly any more than it did in the case of Fremont. I repeat that they have satisfied me on independent grounds that it is appropriate to order consolidation at this early stage in the two cases.
g. Moreover I note that at the time they served the September proceedings on the Mehta defendants the claimants made clear in correspondence that they would be seeking consolidation on the basis that the cases arose from the same factual allegations. I accept the submission of the claimants that they always wished to obtain consolidation and to do so at the earliest possible stage.
The application for an extension of time
Disposal