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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 [2024] EWHC 2674 (Ch) (25 October 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2024/2674.html Cite as: [2024] EWHC 2674 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
BUSINESS LIST
IN THE MATTER OF HARRINGTON & CHARLES TRADING COMPANY LIMITED, BRAMHALL & LONSDALE LMITED, HOLDWAVE TRADING LIMITED, OC305234 LLP, OCEANROAD GLOBAL SERVICES LIMITED, CONNECOR (UK) LIMITED AND DOCKLANDS INVESTMENT LIMITED (EACH IN LIQUIDATION)
AND IN THE MATTER OF THE INSOLVENCY ACT 1986
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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(1) HARRINGTON & CHARLES TRADING COMPANY LIMITED (IN LIQUIDATION) (2) BRAMHALL & LONSDALE LIMITED (IN LIQUIDATION) (3) HOLDWAVE TRADING LIMITED (IN LIQUIDATION) (4) OC305234 LLP (IN LIQUIDATION) (5) OCEANROAD GLOBAL SERVICES LIMITED (IN LIQUIDATION) (6) CONNECOR (UK) LIMITED (IN LIQUIDATION) (7) COLIN DISS (AS JOINT LIQUIDATOR OF THE FIRST TO SIXTH AND NINTH CLAIMANTS) (8) NICHOLAS STEWART WOOD (AS JOINT LIQUIDATOR OF THE FIRST TO SIXTH AND NINTH CLAIMANTS) (9) DOCKLANDS INVESTMENT LIMITED (IN LIQUIDATION) |
Claimants |
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- and – |
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(1) JATIN RAJNIKANT MEHTA (2) SONIA MEHTA (3) VISHAL JATIN MEHTA (4) SURAJ JATIN MEHTA (5) HAYTHAM SALMAN ALI ABU OBIDAH (6) IIA TECHNOLOGIES PTE LIMITED (7) POLISHING TECHNOLOGIES PTE LTD (8) APURVA KOTHARI |
Defendants |
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Jonathan Dawid, Stephen Ryan, and Mark Baldock (instructed by Gardner Leader LLP) for the First to Fourth and Sixth Defendants
The Fifth, Seventh and Eight defendants did not attend or participate in the hearing.
Hearing dates: 10, 11, 12 June 2024
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Crown Copyright ©
Master Kaye sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge :
i) The claimants' restored application dated 14 July 2023 for an order that the Family Defendants provide disclosure in relation to what the parties refer to as the Ahli Receivables ("the Ahli Application");
ii) The claimants' application dated 1 March 2024 for an order that Jatin provide an affidavit and information about the funding of his Indian proceedings ("the Indian Funding Application") and ("the Indian proceedings");
iii) The claimants' application dated 20 May 2024 restoring the Ahli Application and seeking further or related relief and disclosure in relation to both the Ahli Application and the Indian Funding Application and particularly further disclosure/information about payments routed through an intermediary in the UAE, Shouq Al Kathiri Advocates and Legal Consultants ("Shouq Al Kathiri"). ("the additional disclosure application")
Summary of the Alleged Fraud
RFI Application:
"The court may at any time order a party to-
(a) clarify any matter which is in dispute in the proceedings; or
(b) give additional information in relation to any such matter,
whether or not the matter is contained or referred to in a statement of case."
1.1 Before making an application to the court for an order under Part 18, the party seeking clarification or information [the active defendants] should first serve on the party from whom it is sought [the claimants] a written request for that clarification or information (a Request) stating a date by which the response to the Request should be served. The date must allow [the claimants] a reasonable time to respond.
1.2 A Request should be concise and strictly confined to matters which are reasonably necessary and proportionate to enable [the active defendants] to prepare [their] own case or to understand the case [they have] to meet.
The Disclosure Applications
The history of the Ahli Application:
i) the provision of information relating to Mr Ahli and his businesses.
ii) disclosure of "all documents representing or evidencing direct or indirect communications between any of the Family Defendants (on the one hand) and Mr Ahli (on the other) in connection with any of the Ahli Receivables."
iii) a direction that the Family Defendants instruct Shouq Al Kathiri to provide them with copies of any due diligence documentation prepared by, or obtained from Mr Ahli by, Shouq Al Kathiri.
"By 4pm on [date to be inserted], the Family Defendants shall disclose and provide the Claimants with copies of all documents (in native format in a manner which preserves metadata) representing or evidencing direct or indirect communications between any of the Family Defendants (on the one hand) and Mr Ahli (on the other) in connection with any of the Ahli Receivables (as defined in the sixth witness statement of Colin Diss) or the loan originally made to Eco Diamonds FZE on 30 June 2016."
Background to the Indian Funding Application:
"In the hope that a line can now be drawn under this matter, and without prejudice to the contention that your clients are not entitled to this information, we have been further instructed to confirm that since our second letter dated 4 November 2023 the First Defendant has obtained third party funding in respect of the Indian proceedings.
As you will appreciate, the terms of the third-party litigation funding arrangement are confidential and commercially sensitive, and our client is under no obligation to disclose them to you. Having reviewed the terms of the third-party funding agreement, we consider that there is no basis on which it could be suggested that the arrangement falls within the scope of the notification provisions of the WFO; our clients have no control over monies advanced for the purposes of the Indian proceedings and there is no basis on which it could be said that such monies are our clients' "assets" as defined in paragraph 7 of the WFO."
"… I confirm that [GL] have reviewed this, and have written to the Claimants to confirm that …: (i) the terms are confidential and commercially sensitive; and(ii) under the terms of the funding agreement, [Jatin] does not have any control over the monies advanced for the purposes of funding the Indian proceedings and therefore the payments are not [the Family Defendants] "assets" requiring notification under the WFO."
"A disclosure order invades a defendant's privacy. Before judgment, a defendant is normally entitled to keep his financial affairs confidential. But this confidentiality may be overridden. Disclosure may be required if the information is relevant to the resolution of the issues in the case, or if it is needed to make Mareva relief effective. Confidentiality may have to give way to doing justice between the parties or to the advancement of the public interest."
Applicable Legal Principles:
"The importance of disclosure in rendering freezing orders effective has often been emphasised. … Unless proper disclosure is given, it is impossible to police the freezing order, and if it cannot be policed, then fraudulent defendants are able to ignore the order and to breach it with impunity. Disclosure is, in almost all cases, essential in order to render effective a worldwide freezing order. The importance of disclosure is reinforced where a claimant has a proprietary claim and is seeking to recover specific sums or their traceable proceeds. Again, an order freezing such sums will be ineffective if the claimant cannot know what has happened to them. It is essential to the protection of the claimant's rights to pursue its proprietary claim that full disclosure is given of what has happened to the money so that the claimant may take steps to freeze the proceeds and then to establish its right to recover those traceable proceeds. That is all part of the substantive claim which has to be adjudicated on in the proceedings."
"26. First, it is trite law that the court can make orders ancillary to a freezing injunction, for example for disclosure of information or documents, to ensure the freezing injunction is effective.
27. In JSC BTA Bank v Ablyazov [2011] EWHC 2664 (Comm), Christopher Clarke J described, at [47], the jurisdiction to order disclosure as "essentially protective: its purpose is to ensure that assets are not disposed of in (disguised) breach of the freezing order. The order may be made if it is just and convenient to make it in order to ensure that the injunction is effective." The purpose has been expressed, in numerous cases, as "policing" the injunction: see, for example, PSJC Commercial Bank Privatbank v Kolomoisky [2018] EWHC 482 (Ch), per Joanna Smith QC (as she then was) sitting as a deputy High Court judge, at [33], citing Steyn LJ in Grupo Torras SA v Sheikh Fahad Mohammed Al-Sabah, unreported, 1994.
28. Where, as here, a further disclosure order is sought subsequent to the date of the original freezing order, the reasons why an order may be justified, under the umbrella of "policing" the order, include:
(1) So as to ensure that there are no continuing breaches of the order, as in JSC BTA Bank v Ablyazov [2014] EWHC 2788 (Comm), per Popplewell J at [53] to [54], where the purpose was to ensure that the frozen funds were not being used to fund the legal fees of a party in breach of the order;
(2) Where there is an obvious discrepancy between assets which were at one time held by the defendant and the current assets disclosed in response to a freezing order, which might indicate a real possibility that there are further assets to which the freezing order may apply: Public Institution for Social Security v Al Rajaan [2020] EWHC 1498 (Comm), per Jacobs J at [25];
(3) Where further information might reveal that assets currently outside the scope of the freezing order ought to be included within it: JSC Mezhdunarodniy Promyshlenniy Bank v Pugachev [2015] EWCA Civ 139, at [58].
29. Hildyard J, in a subsequent decision in the Pugachev case ([2015] EWHC 1694 (Ch)), in the context of an application for further evidence in relation to a non-proprietary freezing order, said:
"As it seems to me, the court must be persuaded that there is practical utility in requiring such evidence and that it is necessary to enable the freezing order properly to be policed. It will be vigilant to prevent the abuse of seeking further evidence for some other purpose: such as to expose further inconsistencies, unduly pressurise a defendant who has already been cross-examined, yield ammunition for an application for contempt, or provide further material which might be of assistance, even if not actually deployed, in the main (foreign) proceedings."
30. At [23] of Al Rajaan (above), Jacobs J noted a debate between the parties as to whether the test was that further disclosure was "necessary", as in Hildyard J's formulation in Pugachev (above) or "just and convenient", as in Christopher Clarke J's formulation in Ablyazov (above). In reality I do not think there is a material difference between requiring the claimant (to quote the full sentence from Hildyard J's judgment) to establish a "practical utility" in requiring the evidence "necessary" to police an injunction, and a requirement that it is just and convenient to order the further evidence to ensure that the injunction is effective.
31. As Hildyard J noted in the paragraph from Pugachev set out above, the court will not order further evidence if the purpose of obtaining it is to establish past breaches of the order so as to found an application for contempt: see Bhimji v Chatwan (No.2) [1992] 1 WLR 1158, per Knox J at 1166 to 1169, citing Bekhor v Bilton [1981] QB 923. In that case, Stephenson LJ, at p.955 said:
"Parker J. described the plaintiffs' application and his order for discovery as in aid or support of the Mareva injunction and so in a sense they were. But in so far as they relate to the defendant's assets at past dates as distinct from their present whereabouts their purpose seems to be not so much to help the court or the plaintiffs to locate and freeze particular assets now, as to open the way to incriminating and ultimately punishing the defendant for contempt of court in formerly disobeying the Mareva injunction and/or breaking his undertaking. This purpose emerges not only from the wide terms of the order but from the judge's comments at the end of his judgment. To that extent the order goes beyond the legitimate purpose of an order for discovery in aid of a Mareva injunction and Robert Goff J.'s order in A v. C and is not necessary for the proper and effective exercise of the Mareva injunction."
32. Second, while there is no particular threshold for a claimant to cross in order to obtain a disclosure order, at least where an order is sought subsequent to the making of the original order on the grounds that there was a concern that the defendant was committing breaches of it, there must in general be "grounds to believe that there is a real risk that the injunction may be being broken. Whether the order is in fact made is likely to depend on the strength of those grounds and the considerations which militate in favour and against making such an order": Ablyazov (above), per Christopher Clarke J at [47]."
"There is a fine line between a genuine scepticism about the veracity of asset disclosure and a refusal to accept the truth of any statements made by a mistrusted defendant. This case has epitomised that line. The claimants in this case have seemingly refused to accept the truth of anything the defendants have said, querying everything and demanding documents to support every point."
95. In the present case, Mr Wojakovski has no entitlement to direct that the funds be used for any purpose at all. He could not, for example, direct that they be paid to him or to anybody else. Mr Fulton accepted that if the solicitors' retainer was terminated leaving a surplus in the funds held on account, then the funds would be returned to the relevant third-party funder. Insofar as the funds were to be used to discharge the solicitors' fees, that was not at the direction of Mr Wojakovski, but was at the direction of the third party who provided the funds: the funds had been provided for that sole purpose.
96. I reject the submission that because the solicitors would only do work, and thus incur an entitlement to payment, if Mr Wojakovski instructed them to do work, that was sufficient to demonstrate that the funds were held, even indirectly, in accordance with his instructions. That conflates Mr Wojakovski's ability to direct what work his solicitors carry out with the ability to direct to what use the funds are to be put.
102. The court has a discretion to order further disclosure, whether from a respondent to a freezing order or a third party such as the respondent's solicitor, if it is just and convenient to do so in order to ensure the effectiveness of the order: see JSC BTA Bank v Solodchenko (No.3) [2011] EWHC 2163 (Ch), per Henderson J at [26]. At [38], Henderson J set out six considerations to be taken into account. Those included, where disclosure was sought from a solicitor, the importance of confidentiality and legal professional privilege. That is of less relevance here, however, where the order sought against Mr Wojakovski is for details relating to payments made by third party funders (as to which no legal professional privilege attaches) and the orders sought against the solicitors merely mirror that which is to be ordered against Mr Wojakovski.
103. The essential reason for seeking further disclosure is in order to ensure that none of the monies being used to fund Mr Wojakovski's solicitors are in fact subject to the WFO or are the proceeds of monies wrongfully extracted from the Tonstate group of companies, over which the applicants have a proprietary injunction (dated 16 January 2020).
111. It is of course possible, as Mr Wojakovski adamantly maintained, that his legal fees are being funded by friends concerned to ensure that he is afforded access to justice in relation to the ongoing disputes with the applicants and with his trustee in bankruptcy. That is not something that I could resolve on this application, however. Provided that I am satisfied, as I am, that the various matters to which Mr Fulton has referred give rise to a real risk that the ongoing funding of his legal expenses may be in breach of the WFO or the proprietary injunction, then I consider that on the facts of this case it is just and convenient to make the orders sought.
"I do not think, however, that when set against the factors identified above, this disentitles the applicants from obtaining the orders sought in order effectively to police the WFO and the proprietary injunction of 16 January 2020."
Conclusions
i) procure from SS Hora and Vikram Sutaria an explanation of the redactions on the Shouq Al Kathiri ledgers as referred to in this judgment.
ii) ask for copies of his client ledgers for each of the Indian proceedings from each of the Indian legal representatives. By that I mean the client ledgers going back to the inception of the claims that are in his name and if there are none, he will need to provide an explanation in his evidence. If it is considered that some redaction is necessary, no doubt that can be explained in Jatin's affidavit.
iii) It is possible some payments may have been made directly to an office account in relation to any of the client matters. If such direct office account payments have been made, Jatin should seek copies of those ledgers on the same basis which can also be appropriately redacted provided he includes an explanation in his affidavit.
Note 1 (Continuation and discharge or the Worldwide Freezing Order) [2022] EWHC 2960 (Ch) (22 November 2022); (Jurisdiction Challenge Applications) ([2023] EWHC 307 (Ch) (14 February 2023); [2023] EWHC 609 (Ch); (Joinder Application) [2023] EWHC 998 (21 April 2023); and (Abuse, Strike out and Summary Judgment applications) [2023] EWHC 2420 (Ch) (3 October 2023). [Back] Note 2 [2023] EWHC 2420 (Ch) [Back] Note 3 [2022] EWHC 2960 at [293] [Back] Note 4 [2022] EWHC 1810 (Ch) at [26] and [2022] EWHC 2960 at [293] [Back] Note 5 [2022] EWHC 2960 at [289] [Back] Note 6 [2022] EWHC 1810 (Ch) at [26] to [32] [Back]