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England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Abramovich Berezovsky v Abramovich [2010] EWHC 1511 (Comm) (28 June 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2010/1511.html Cite as: [2010] EWHC 1511 (Comm) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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BORIS ABRAMOVICH BEREZOVSKY |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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ROMAN ARKADIEVICH ABRAMOVICH |
Defendant |
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Michael Brindle QC, Helen Davies QC and Andrew Henshaw (instructed by Skadden) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 20 May 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
(i) Approximately 86% of the issued shares in Sibneft had by December 1998 been acquired by entities on behalf of BB, AP and RA.(ii) Under the 1996 Agreement it was orally agreed between BB, AP and RA that all the shares held by BB and RA would be transferred legally to RA or to entities controlled by him and that BB and AP could continue beneficially to own the shares so transferred "which would be held on trust for them by RA" with the effect that BB and AP could continue to be entitled to dividends and to any other payments made by Sibneft to its beneficial owners on the basis of the percentage split of 50% RA and 25% each BB and AP agreed under the previous so-called 1995 Agreement.
(iii) By about August 1997 the 1996 Agreement had been implemented and BB's and AP's respective shareholdings had been transferred to RA or to companies owned or controlled by him with the "beneficial ownership" of that shareholding "held on trust" by RA for BB and AP.
(iv) From about August 2000 RA informed AP that the interests of BB and AP in Sibneft could be expropriated by the Government in view of the Kremlin's knowledge of BB's and AP's "beneficial interests" in Sibneft. From this AP inferred (as RA intended) that he and BB should sell their beneficial interests in Sibneft to him or face the consequences.
(v) BB and AP therefore agreed to sell their beneficial interests in Sibneft to RA for US$1.3 billion, the price insisted on by RA at the Munich Airport meeting in May 2001.
(vi) Sale of those beneficial interests was implemented by means of the Devonia Agreement dated 12 June 2001 under which it was recited inter alia that BB and AP were beneficial owners of the Sibneft shares to be sold, that RA held such shares as nominee in trust for and on behalf of BB and AP and that BB and AP were aware that Devonia intended to transfer the beneficial interests in the shares to RA or his companies and that the price for those interests was to be paid in instalments, completing on about 20 March 2003.
(vii) RA's conduct amounted to intimidation and was unlawful and illegitimate because inter alia it amounted to threats to act in gross breach of trust and/or in breach of fiduciary duty, in as much it was flagrantly inconsistent with his "duty as a trustee".
(viii) BB's and AP's interest in Rusal would be held on trust of them by RA as agreed at the Dorchester Hotel meeting on 14th March 2000 and the disposal without their consent by RA of shares in Rusal in which he and/or they had an interest was a breach of RA's duty to them as trustee under a trust in respect of the Rusal shares, such trust being governed by English Law, alternatively British Virgin Islands law.
"Claims in respect of Sibneft
7.1 On the facts alleged by the Claimant, Russian law would be the proper law of any alleged trust in relation to shares allegedly held in Sibneft on the Claimant's behalf (the "Sibneft Trust");
7.2 Russian law does not recognise the concepts of trust or beneficial interests. Accordingly the alleged Sibneft Trust would not be recognised and could be of no legal effect (this position under Russian law being common ground between the parties ? see paragraph 33 below);
7.3 Additionally, the suggested claims raised for the first time in paragraph R37.3 of his Reply to rights to restitution or vindication in Russian law are invalid or unsustainable as explained in Rozenberg 1 and therefore must fail;
7.4 The Claimant's version of events is factually incoherent and implausible;
7.5 Even if the Claimant's version of events were accurate, the facts alleged to have constituted intimidation are insufficient in law to amount to intimidation; and
7.6 Alternatively, the facts alleged, in so far as they could amount to intimidation, are non-justiciable on the ground of act of state, sovereign immunity and/or comity.
7.7 On the facts alleged by the Claimant, the proper law of any alleged trust in respect of shares in RUSAL (the "RUSAL Trust") would have been Russian law and, as Russian law does not recognise the concepts of trust or beneficial interest, such a purported trust would not be recognised and could be of no legal effect (as already noted, this position under Russian law being common ground between the parties ? see paragraph 33 below);
7.8 The alleged claim for breach of trust would in any event be time-barred under Russian law (this position under Russian law again being common ground between the parties ? see paragraph 65 below);
7.9 On the facts alleged by the Claimant, the alleged oral agreement that none of the Claimant, Defendant, Mr Deripaska or Mr Patarkatsishvili would sell his shares in RUSAL without the agreement of the others (the "RUSAL Contract") would also be governed by Russian law and, as such, any claim for breach of it would now be time-barred (the latter position under Russian law also being common ground ? see paragraph 69 below); and
7.10 The Claimant's version of events is factually incoherent and implausible in relation to both the alleged RUSAL Trust and alleged RUSAL Contract."
(a) RA shall pay BB's costs of defending the applications to strike out and for summary judgment dismissing the claim as from the date of issue of those applications, including the costs of such part of the 20th - 24th July 2009 hearing as related to those applications and all the costs of the 2nd - 13th November 2009 and 31st March 2010 hearings.(b) BB shall pay RA's costs of and occasioned by BB's proposed applications to re-amend the particulars of claim and amend the reply dated 13th July 2009, and of the proposed applications to amend the particulars of claim and reply dated 24th July 2009 and of the application to amend the particulars of claim and reply dated 7th August 2009 such costs to include all such costs as could have been saved had the draft amendments dated 7th August 2009 been served on or before 13th July 2009.
(c) Such costs as would in any event have had to have been incurred by either party in preparing evidence and investigating facts for the purposes of the main trial of these proceedings shall not be included in the calculation of these costs covered by the orders in (a) and (b). Such costs shall be costs in the case.
(d) There will be no order as to such costs as may have been incurred by either party since 14th November 2008 which do not fall within (a), (b) or (c) above, save for the costs of the hearing on 20th May 2010 as to which the parties may make further submissions.
(e) Such costs as may be payable pursuant to the above orders shall bear interest at Bank of England minimum lending rate plus 1 per cent from the date or dates of disbursement by the party concerned until judgment interest applies.
(f) All such costs are to be assessed if not agreed.
Application under CPR 44.3(8) has been made for a payment of costs on account prior to assessment. The quantification necessary to arrive at the appropriate amount and, indeed, necessary to identify which party will be the net paying party following assessment, requires an estimate which on the materials that have so far been put before me I regret that I am unable to make. If either or both parties believe that it is possible to make a reasonable estimate of the sums of costs under (a), (b) and (c) likely to be awarded to either party on a detailed assessment, they are invited to make further submissions within the next 21 days. I can then attempt to assess what payment of costs on account ought to be ordered.