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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 >> Barclays Bank PLC v Citibank NA [2024] EWHC 53 (Ch) (16 January 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2024/53.html Cite as: [2024] EWHC 53 (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 :
____________________
BARCLAYS BANK PLC |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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CITIBANK, N.A. |
Respondent |
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- and - |
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GLOBAL INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT HOLDINGS INC |
Interested Party |
____________________
The Respondent did not attend
Philip Galway-Cooper (instructed directly) for the Interested Party
Hearing dates: 30 November 2023, 16 January 2024
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
David Mohyuddin KC:
i) The first purported to transfer the ownership and control of eight of the subsidiaries which made the payments to a Belizean national called Allex Heredia who, when asked, said that the relevant (and, Barclays says, backdated) filings at Companies House had been made without his knowledge or consent.
ii) The second purported to further transfer the ownership of those eight subsidiaries from Mr Heredia to Stephen Linchel.
iii) The third, which is said to have occurred after the commencement of the Proceedings and in breach of a freezing injunction, involved the purported transfer of the majority of the assets of the Group (and nearly all of the companies below FTG) out of the jurisdiction to two companies in the BVI.
Applications for non-party disclosure orders
i) account opening forms, 'know your customer' documents, account mandates, and/or account mandate changes relating to GIMH;
ii) correspondence between Citi and GIMH and/or any third party relating to account opening and/or operations for GIMH;
iii) account statements for GIMH;
iv) documents recording or referring to payments made by GIMH and/or to GIMH including without limitation:
a) written payment instructions; and
b) transaction and beneficiary details;
v) if any document(s) disclosed under this Order record or refer to a payment beneficiary being ultimately beneficially owned or controlled by any of the Defendants, and Citi holds any document(s) which would be disclosable under paragraphs 1(a)-(d) if those paragraphs referred to that payment beneficiary instead of GIMH, any such documents.
Hearing of the applications for non-party disclosure orders
i) Mr Galway-Cooper conceded that the first category (account opening forms, etc) were "technically Citi's documents";
ii) as for the second category (correspondence), Mr Galway-Cooper submitted that any letters sent by GIMH to Citi remained GIMH's property because GIMH wrote them. He was unable to produce any authority to support that proposition which I reject;
iii) as for the third category (account statements), Mr Galway-Cooper submitted that the information about a customer's account was information belonging to the bank and the customer jointly. But, he said, if the information was printed and sent to the customer the documents became the customer's documents. That was at odds with the submission he made in respect of letters sent by GIMH to Citi and with the fact that exhibited to one of the four witness statements were copies of the statements of what GIMH said was its only account with Citi. In any event, Barclays was not seeking account statements from GIMH but from Citi, taken, no doubt, from Citi's electronic records and it was irrelevant that printed statements of account might have been sent to GIMH or that GIMH might have accessed electronically information held about its account(s) by Citi. There was nothing in the objection raised by Mr Galway-Cooper on GIMH's behalf;
iv) as for the fourth category (documents recording or referring to payments made by GIMH), Mr Galway-Cooper accepted that they belonged to Citi;
v) Mr Galway-Cooper had no objection in respect of the fifth category.
Evidence on the non-party disclosure applications
i) Mr Adam West dated 29 November 2023 ('West') without any exhibit. Mr West describes himself as an "Authorised Officer" of GIMH and stated that he presented his witness statement in support of "the Second Respondent's application." I have assumed that to be an error and to have been lifted from his statement that was put before Miles J. I was told by Mr Galway-Cooper that this statement had been prepared by Mr Feld, the paralegal who attended the hearing with him;
ii) a second statement of Ms Shirley Kerkhove dated 29 November 2023 ('Kerkhove 2') with exhibit SK1 comprising some bank statements for an account held by GIMH with Citi; a certified certificate of standing; and Citi's account confirmation provided when the account was opened. Ms Kerkhove says that she is "a Director" of GIMH, that Mr West "is also a Director of GIMH" and that she is "the only shareholder of GIMH which is registered in the books and records;"
iii) a first statement of Ms Julie Chi dated 29 November 2023 ('Chi 1') without any exhibit. Ms Chi says that she is "a Director and Shareholder" of the two BVI companies involved in the third purported restructure;
iv) a first statement of Mr Daryl Dylan ('Daryl Dylan 1') dated 29 November 2023 without any exhibit. He describes himself as "a Director" of GIMH.
Principles
"(1) This rule applies where an application is made to the court under any Act for disclosure by a person who is not a party to the proceedings.
(2) The application must be supported by evidence.
(3) The court may make an order under this rule only where—
(a) the documents of which disclosure is sought are likely to support the case of the applicant or adversely affect the case of one of the other parties to the proceedings; and
(b) disclosure is necessary in order to dispose fairly of the claim or to save costs.
(4) An order under this rule must—
(a) specify the documents or the classes of documents which the respondent must disclose; and
(b) require the respondent, when making disclosure, to specify any of those documents—
(i) which are no longer in his control; or
(ii) in respect of which he claims a right or duty to withhold inspection.
(5) Such an order may—
(a) require the respondent to indicate what has happened to any documents which are no longer in his control; and
(b) specify the time and place for disclosure and inspection."
Master McQuail's order
Barclays' case on the applications
i) Barclays' case is that part of the alleged conspiracy involved an overall scheme to use the monies extracted to purchase assets which were then placed beyond its reach by being restricted out of the group, there being no justifiable commercial purpose for the various restructures;
ii) the draft list of issues for disclosure which was put before the court at the case management conference (and which had been agreed by Mr Scott Dylan and not objected to by the other individual Defendants) included the use of what steps were taken in respect of the third purported restructure;
iii) the evidence obtained to date suggests that GIMH was involved in the third purported restructure, providing lending to the group (secured by 28 debentures and 68 guarantees) and possibly to the BVI Companies (Mr Scott Dylan having stated in a letter dated 4 July 2023: "It seems to me that GIMH is the funding partner and Investments Holdings [one of the BVI Companies] is the owner of the companies." I also note that on the next page of the letter, he said that: "From companies house, Investments Holdings Ltd owns Inc & Co Group Ltd and GIMH is the funding partner");
iv) the documents sought may well shed light on who is ultimately behind and/or connected to GIMH and/or the BVI Companies (including whether it is any of the Defendants), their relationship to the Group, and the nature of and reasons behind the Third Purported Restructure. If and to the extent that the Defendants are involved in the ownership and/or control of GIMH, or the BVI Companies, it will evidence their involvement with, and in, the Third Purported Restructure and, potentially, their economic benefit in relation to the same, and therefore support the Claimant's case regarding the nature of the alleged conspiracy and the relevant Defendant's economic benefit;
v) evidence showing the connection between GIMH and at least Mr Scott Dylan and Mr Mason includes:
a) Mr Mason being listed at Companies House as the person with overall responsibility for due diligence for GIMH;
b) Mr Mason was the statutory director of 21 of the companies when each of them granted debentures in favour of GIMH in April 2022;
c) documents relating to the out of court appointment of administrators over a company called SKCO Limited in August 2022 including emails from Mr Scott Dylan from his email address at incadvisory.co.uk which refer to "a simple secured charge holder appointment" and "We're the secured lender under Global Investment Management Holdings Inc under a debenture." Mr Scott Dylan also obtained the consent of a prior-ranking charge holder and signed the Notice of Appointment, describing himself as "a director of Global Investment Management Holdings Inc;"
d) the administrators' report for a company called COLDCO1 Limited, dated 3 January 2023, states that Mr Scott Dylan approached the administrators' firm on behalf of a secured creditor which intended to call on its security and appoint an administrator. The only secured creditors were Glenville Walker & Partners Limited (a firm of solicitors) and GIMH. Barclays says that it is inherently unlikely that those solicitors would have appointed Mr Scott Dylan to make that approach and it is to be inferred that he did so on behalf of GIMH;
e) in January 2023, GIMH issued possession proceedings in the High Court against Mr Scott Dylan's next door neighbour who himself had previously sought to intervene in possession proceedings brought by a mortgage lender in respect of the neighbour's property. Barclays says that it is implausible that GIMH would have any claim in respect of the property unless Mr Scott Dylan had some form of interest in GIMH;
f) debentures used in the third purported restructure are in the same template prepared by Glenville Walker & Partners, as used by Mr Scott Dylan, the solicitors themselves and other group companies including, in places, the same unfilled square brackets;
g) actual or potential lending by GIMH to the individual defendants to provide moneys for legal fees. An email from Mr Mason to Eversheds dated 10 May 2023 refers to negotiations with GIMH "for a high interest facility to fund legal fees. This will be at a 3000% interest rate;"
h) the bank statements exhibited by Ms Kerkhove show some entries where the beneficiary is recorded as "Glenville Walker Partners" and where the Customer Reference includes "DYL0015". Barclays says that Glenville Walker and Partners are the solicitors on the record for Mr Scott Dylan from which it is to be inferred that GIMH are making payments directly to Mr Scott Dylan's solicitors and that such an arrangement is most unusual;
vi) the information revealed at the hearing before Miles J on 28 November 2023 shows that Mr Scott Dylan and his half-brother Mr Daryl Dylan were (together with Ms Kerkhove and Mr West) directors of GIMH at its incorporation in April 2022 (during the third purported restructure) and that Mr Daryl Dylan was a previous director of two of the subsidiary companies;
vii) the witness statements produced by GIMH dated 29 November 2023 beg further questions:
a) the bank statements show a credit entry "By Order Of 185008" which, Mr Knott told me on instructions, is a Citi sort-code suggesting that another unnamed entity (which might be GIMH itself) which holds an account at Citi paid monies into GIMH's account. I note also that some similar entries bear a Customer Reference which includes "GIMH";
b) the account opening information exhibited by Ms Kerkhove states that the "Citidirect BE Definition" is "Inc (Management Ops) Ltd" and there are other entities with "Inc" at the start of their names which feature in this matter;
c) the account opening information shows that the account was opened on 22 November 2022, some six months after GIMH was incorporated;
viii) an independent expert who resolved a dispute between a third party complainant and GIMH about the ownership of a domain name concluded that Inc & Co Group Limited (of which Mr Mason and Mr Antrobus are the sole statutory directors), Investment Holdings (BVI) Limited (which is one of the BVI Companies) and GIMH were "clearly connected with each other;"
ix) in some other delivery-up proceedings before HHJ Worster, the judge observed that "there is plainly some link between GIMH and BVI." It is said in Parry 3 at paragraph 3.8.2 that the reference to "BVI" is to one of the two BVI Companies.
i) on the basis that the relevant Defendants claim to have no ownership or control over GIMH, it is not likely that the documents sought will be disclosed by the Defendants in the ordinary course of disclosure in these proceedings;
ii) it is in the nature of conspiracies that their origins are concealed from a claimant, and that because it is usually impossible to prove an express agreement between defendants to a conspiracy claim, the extent or scope of the alleged conspiracy will usually be a matter for inference, to be arrived at by scrutinising the actions and evidence relied upon as matters of inference (see e.g. Kuwait Oil Tanker Co SAK v Al Bader [2000] 2 All ER (Comm) 271 at 312-313 and AstraZeneca UK Ltd v Albemarle International Corp [2011] 1 All ER (Comm) 510 at [78]). To the extent that there are documents in the hands of third parties that enable a case of conspiracy to be evidenced (in relation to a defendant's involvement in and/or benefit from it), an order for their disclosure in the proceedings ought, in principle, to meet the test of necessity, as the issue in question is one that goes to the heart of the case;
iii) further or alternatively, the disclosure is necessary to save costs in the proceedings on the basis that the disclosure of the material sought is likely to reduce the issues in dispute by providing contemporaneous evidence in relation to one element of the alleged conspiratorial scheme, which may limit the need for further evidence and/or cross-examination at trial.
i) Ms Chi had previously submitted a witness statement in insolvency proceedings concerning FTG and ITG in which she claimed to be an authorised officer of one of the BVI Companies but did not say that she was a director or shareholder. I was not shown the other statement and this submission was made on instructions;
ii) again on instructions, when a search had been done at the BVI Financial Services Commission, the only director listed as at March 2022 was Ms Kerkhove, not Ms Chi;
iii) in paragraph 6 of her statement, Ms Chi referred to herself as "a" shareholder, not "the" shareholder of the BVI Companies. Mr Knott adopted my observation that she made no mention of the beneficial ownership of the shares;
iv) it was unclear on what basis Ms Chi's evidence was tendered and the weight it should have on this application;
v) there are mistakes about the assertions made in the Proceedings themselves.
i) another tribunal (Master McQuail) has previously been satisfied that making the order sought was appropriate on the basis of the evidence filed and no further evidence (including in opposition) has been filed;
ii) the non-party whose documents are sought, Citibank, has no objection to the order sought being made (and, indeed, was content for the matter to be dealt with on the papers).
GIMH's case on the applications
i) she describes herself as "a Director" of GIMH (paragraph 1);
ii) she states that Mr Scott Dylan was a director of GIMH for a short period of time but has since resigned (paragraph 9);
iii) she confirms that she is the only shareholder of GIMH "which is registered in the books and records" and that none of Mr Scott Dylan, Mr Mason, Mr Antrobus, Mr Gareth Dylan or Ms Glover have ever been a shareholder of GIMH now or in the past (paragraph 10);
iv) she confirms that no companies associated to Inc & Co Group Ltd are shareholders or "Ultimate Beneficiary Owners" [sic] of GIMH (paragraph 11);
v) she confirms that Mr Scott Dylan, Mr Mason, Mr Antrobus, Mr Gareth Dylan and Ms Glover are "not the Ultimate Beneficiary Owners" [sic] of GIMH (paragraph 12);
vi) she says that GIMH has never been involved in an apparent purported restructure and she is unsure how being a secured lender could mean that it had been when it does not hold any shares (paragraph 18);
vii) she says that the relationship only started nearly a year after the claim was brought (paragraph 19);
viii) she asserts that GIMH "has never had any monies from Barclays Bank Plc enter its accounts with [Citi] of any other bank" (paragraph 20). Mr Galway-Cooper confirmed that Ms Kerkhove's meaning was that GIMH has never had any of the £13.7m said to have been extracted from Barclays;
ix) she confirmed that GIMH had offered high interest loans to the Defendants which, because Barclays will not consent to the granting of the security GIMH requires, have not been drawn down (paragraph 21);
x) she confirmed that GIMH does not own any shares in the BVI Companies and the BVI Companies do not own any shares in GIMH (paragraph 22);
xi) she observed that there was no pre-application correspondence with GIMH (paragraph 23) but instead Barclays has "unlawfully conspired" with Citi to gain access to private information through the back door (paragraph 24). She says that the privacy and proprietary rights and the extremely private data of GIMH should not be ignored (paragraph 25);
xii) she does not believe that Barclays should have access to GIMH's bank accounts but exhibits copies which show that "the accounts at Citibank do not hold any monies that have come from Barclays Bank, and have never held substantial monies. (paragraph 27);
xiii) she exhibits account opening information which shows that GIMH only held one back with Citi and the date upon which it was opened, which corresponds with the date of the bank statements (paragraph 28);
xiv) she asks for the applications to be dismissed (paragraph 32).
i) he describes himself as an "Authorised Officer" of GIMH rather than a director (paragraph 1);
ii) he directs much of his statement to the underlying Proceedings in which, given its stated position, GIMH is not concerned;
iii) he himself (as I confirmed with Mr Galway-Cooper) refutes the fact that GIMH has anything to do with these proceedings (paragraph 14);
iv) he asserts that Citi is no longer GIMH's banker because, he says, of Barclays' interference (paragraph 16);
v) he himself (as I confirmed with Mr Galway-Cooper) does not believe that Barclays have substantiated anything (paragraph 18);
vi) he says that full bank statements have been exhibited by Ms Kerkhove for the only bank account that GIMH holds with Citi but then goes on to say that GIMH is quite happy to disclose all the bank statements if asked (paragraph 23). He expresses a grave concern about the misuse of the documents by Barclays and Eversheds;
vii) he says that the bank statements show that "there has been no monies paid in form Barclays, totally discrediting the claimants claim of a conspiracy" [sic] (paragraph 24);
viii) he says that GIMH is happy to agree to any disclosure the court orders "in the usual manner" but disagrees with "forced disclosure" from Citi as a way to "short cut a Disclosure hearing … on 20th March 2024" (paragraph 25);"
ix) he says that GIMH would want strict guidelines to be imposed as to what data would be requested and the manner in which Barclays may or may not disseminate information (paragraph 26);
x) he asserts that Citi has had access to privileged legal documents from GIMH's solicitors and GIMH would like to ensure that that is also protected (paragraph 27);
xi) he asks that the applications be dismissed (paragraph 29).
i) she confirms that she is the director of Investments Holdings BVI Ltd and International Travel Holdings BVI Ltd (the BVI Companies) and that the Defendants are not the directors (paragraphs 2 and 5);
ii) she confirms that she is "a" shareholder and that she owns three classes of shares in each BVI company (paragraph 6). She confirms that the Defendants are not shareholders of the BVI Companies and that the BVI Companies are the only shareholders of the group companies (paragraphs 7, 8). She makes no distinction between legal and beneficial ownership of the shares;
iii) she confirms that GIMH has never been involved in the purported restructure and that it would not be something in which they would involve themselves (paragraph 15);
iv) she says that the relationship is between GIMH as a "funding company to the group and others and no other reason" (paragraph 24);
v) she suggests that the non-party disclosure order should not be granted as it will serve no benefit to Barclays and will instead simply provide them with access to private information (paragraph 28). It is unclear why she, as a director of the BVI Companies, felt is appropriate to include this comment in her witness statement.
i) he describes himself as "a Director" of GIMH (paragraph 1);
ii) he confirms that GIMH is not and never has been a shareholder of the group (paragraph 6) and that its "sole role is as a secured charge holder that provides funds to the group" (paragraph 7);
iii) he says that he is not aware that GIMH would ever involve itself in any purported restructure (paragraph 8);
iv) he confirms that GIMH has never received any monies from Barclays (paragraph 11) or from the Defendants (paragraph 12);
v) he says that the applications are being made in an attempt to cause harm to the commercial relationships that GIMH and the group has with banks and other third parties (paragraph 24).
"GIMH is willing to permit a neutral third party to examine:
1. Bank statements to confirm that no such £13 million deposit has been made to GIMH's account during or after any relevant periods.
2. The Shareholder Register to affirm that the Ultimate Beneficial Owners ("UBOs") are not the Defendants.
3. A copy of the registration documents for GIMH
4. A copy of the certificates of good standing in relation to GIMH signed by the Secretary of State
This will mean that the various parties will not be put to any necessary costs."
Barclays' submissions in reply
i) the applications are not a fishing expedition;
ii) there is no basis in the evidence as to what material is said to be privileged or commercial sensitive and it is not clear on what basis privilege would remain in a document which has been sent through a number of parties to Citi. The draft order already includes provision for Citi to identify documents over which it asserts a duty or a right to withhold inspection;
iii) the evidence does not say in terms that GIMH never had any of the £13.7m and there remains a degree of ambiguity about what precisely is being said about what if anything GIMH received and from whom;
iv) the loans from GIMH to the Defendants are term loans.
Conclusions
Disposition