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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 >> Phoenix Group Foundation v Cochrane & Anor [2017] EWHC 418 (Comm) (06 March 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2017/418.html Cite as: [2017] EWHC 418 (Comm) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
PHOENIX GROUP FOUNDATION | Claimant/Applicant | |
-and- | ||
(1) GAIL ALISON COCHRANE | ||
(2) STEWARTS LAW LLP | Defendants/Respondents | |
-and- | ||
HARBOUR FUND II LP | Additional Applicant |
____________________
Mr James Drake QC (instructed by Stewarts Law LLP) for the Second Respondent
Mr Martin Evans QC (instructed by SFO) for the SFO
Ms Blair Leahy (instructed by Holman Fenwick Willan) for the Joint Liquidators of Unicorn Worldwide Holdings Limited, Glen Moar Properties Limited and Ballaugh Holdings Limited
Ms Lexa Hilliard QC (instructed by MHS Sprecher Grier Ltd) for Harbour Fund II LLP
Mr Tony Beswetherick (instructed by Stephenson Harwood LLP) for the Enforcement Receivers
Addleshaw Goddard LLP for the Viscount of Jersey
Hearing dates: 22 February 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
The Hon. Mr Justice Popplewell :
(1) The £2 million was paid by, or at the behest of, Litigation Capital Limited ("LCL") who had agreed to fund the Orb/Ruhan proceedings in 2011 and had committed to paying Stewarts Law's fees. LCL is a company beneficially owned by Mr Anthony Smith who is the brother of Dr Gerald Smith, the Second Defendant in the parallel claim (CL-2016-000392). Dr Gerald Smith was formerly Dr Cochrane's husband, and was the main protagonist behind the pursuit of the Orb/Ruhan proceedings on behalf of the Orb parties, although not himself a claimant.
(2) Stewarts Law received that sum in part payment of its invoiced fees and paid disbursements incurred in the Orb/Ruhan proceedings, which in total exceed £4.3m.
(3) Prandoty Street was an asset which had been transferred by Dr Cochrane to LCL on 6 May 2016, at a time when she was not enjoined by any court order from disposing of that asset.
(4) Under the Solicitors Accounts Rules published by the Solicitors Regulation Authority, sums received by a solicitor in payment of invoiced fees and paid disbursements are "office money", that is to say money which belongs beneficially to the solicitor, not the client, at the moment of receipt. The solicitor may determine immediately that the sums received are office money and take the money into its office account; or it may receive it into its general client account whilst determining its status, in which case it must transfer it into the office account within 14 days if it is office money.
(1) The liquidators of various companies within the Arena Settlement structure, in particular those sitting immediately beneath SMA in the structure, which were the holding companies for different parts of most of the Arena Settlement company structure ("the Arena Holdcos"). One of the Arena Holdcos, in liquidation from before April 2016, is Unicorn Worldwide Holding Inc., a BVI company ("Unicorn"). Unicorn sits above a corporate structure within which the company which is said to have owned Prandoty Street is located. On 8 July 2016 I granted a proprietary freezing order against Dr Cochrane in favour of the liquidators over assets which included Prandoty Street.
(2) The Additional Applicant ("Harbour") funded or agreed to fund the Orb parties in the Orb/Ruhan litigation from 2013, subsequently to LCL. Harbour has asserted a proprietary claim over assets which include Prandoty Street. In February 2017 Harbour issued an application to freeze the £2 million already frozen in Stewarts Law's hands, which was to be heard at the same time as Phoenix's application to continue its freezing order and Stewarts Law's application to discharge it. Prior to the 22 February hearing, Harbour's application was compromised on terms that it would be withdrawn upon an undertaking by Stewarts Law not to deal with the £2 million.
(3) The Serious Fraud Office obtained a confiscation order against Dr. Gerald Smith, who was convicted of fraud and sentenced to 8 years imprisonment. The confiscation order was supported by a restraint order, issued originally by Wilkie J and varied by my order of 20 May 2016, to cover Arena Settlement assets within Dr Cochrane's apparent ownership or control as assets which would arguably be available to meet the confiscation order. The restraint order included Prandoty Street. The SFO has appointed enforcement receivers ("the Enforcement Receivers") who have been liaising with Dr Cochrane's advisors in relation to the preservation and liquidation of various Arena Settlement assets. The SFO claims an interest in the £2 million; it did not seek to restrict Stewarts Law from applying it to the discharge of its costs if Phoenix's freezing order were discharged and not renewed; if however the freezing order were ordered to remain in place, the SFO contended, as did Phoenix and the Arena Holdco liquidators, that the convenient course would be to have the sum paid to the Enforcement Receivers to hold to the order of the Court pending the determination of the rival claims. When I announced my decision not to discharge the freezing order, Stewarts Law did not oppose such a course and I made such an order accordingly.
Chanel v Woolworth
"…..if a point is open to a party on an interlocutory application and is not pursued, then the applicant cannot take the point at a subsequent interlocutory hearing in relation to the same or similar relief, absent a significant and material change of circumstances or his becoming aware of facts which he did not know and could not reasonably have discovered at the time of the first hearing. It is based on the principle that a party must bring forward in argument all points reasonably available to him at the first opportunity; and that to allow him to take them serially in subsequent applications would permit abuse and obstruct the efficacy of the judicial process by undermining the necessary finality of unappealed interlocutory decisions."
Legal basis for relief
"The principles relevant to this application can be summarised as follows:
(1) The Chabra jurisdiction may be exercised where there is good reason to suppose that assets held in the name of a defendant against whom the claimant asserts no cause of action (the NCAD) would be amenable to some process, ultimately enforceable by the courts, by which the assets would be available to satisfy a judgment against a defendant whom the claimant asserts to be liable upon his substantive claim (the CAD).
(2) The test of "good reason to suppose" is to be equated with a good arguable case, that is to say one which is more than barely capable of serious argument, but yet not necessarily one which the Judge believes to have a better than 50% chance of success.
(3) In such cases the jurisdiction will be exercised where it is just and convenient to do so. The jurisdiction is exceptional and should be exercised with caution, taking care that it should not operate oppressively to innocent third parties who are not substantive defendants and have not acted to frustrate the administration of justice.
(4) A common example of assets falling within the Chabra jurisdiction is where there is good reason to suppose that the assets in the name of the NCAD are in truth the assets of the CAD. Such assets will be treated as in truth the assets of the CAD if they are held as nominee or trustee for the CAD as the ultimate beneficial owner.
(5) Substantial control by the CAD over the assets in the name of the NCAD is often a relevant consideration, but substantial control is not the test for the existence and exercise of the Chabra jurisdiction. Establishing such substantial control will not necessarily justify the freezing of the assets in the hands of the NCAD. Substantial control may be relevant in two ways. First, evidence that the CAD exercises substantial control over the assets may be evidence from which the Court will infer that the assets are held as nominee or trustee for the NCAD as the ultimate beneficial owner. Secondly, such evidence may establish that there is a real risk of dissipation of the assets in the absence of a freezing order, which the claimant will have to establish in order for it to be just and convenient to make the order. But the establishment of substantial control over the assets by the CAD will not necessarily be sufficient: a parent company may exercise substantial control over a wholly owned subsidiary, but the principles of separate corporate personality require the assets to be treated as those of the subsidiary not the parent. The ultimate test is always whether there is good reason to suppose that the assets would be amenable to execution of a judgment obtained against the CAD."
The Chabra basis for relief
(1) In the Schedule to the Loan Note which defined the Relevant Assets, the Prandoty Street development site was described as "unencumbered Polish real estate property" with an approximate value of £6.6m. No reliance can be placed on that valuation because it comes from Dr Cochrane whose word is not to be trusted and was unsupported by any documentary corroboration. The legal owner was said to be "Loan Interest … Radix Investments (UK) Limited", and the ultimate beneficial owner was said to be Dr Cochrane. The evidence of Mr Upson, the relevant partner of Stewarts Law, is that the owner of Prandoty Street was Bridge House Developments (Krakow) Sp Zoo, a Polish company. According to a company structure chart at schedule 1 to the Loan Note, and to a company structure chart prepared by the Liquidators, the liquidators of the Arena Holdcos, Bridgehouse Developments (Krakow) Sp Zoo ("Polish Bridgehouse") is 66.2% owned by NEPH Luxemburg S.A.R.L., a Luxemburg entity, which is in turn wholly owned by NEPH Limited (or perhaps New Europe Property Holdings Limited) a Guernsey company, which is in turn wholly owned by Bridge Properties (Central and Eastern Europe) Limited, an Isle of Man company which is in turn wholly owned by Unicorn, the BVI Arena Holdco which is in liquidation. Above Unicorn sat SMA, the Marshall Islands company wholly owned by Dr Cochrane.
(2) Radix Investments (UK) Limited, an English company, is not shown on the company structure chart, although there is a company named Radix International Limited, a Marshall Islands company, identified as a company wholly owned by Dr Cochrane outside the Arena structure.
(3) In my judgment of 15 April 2016, I recorded at paragraph 126 the evidence I had received in relation to Prandoty Street and two other Polish properties as follows:
"Ms Stickler explains that these properties were acquired by companies within the Arena structure before the Isle of Man settlement, who were in 2014 indebted to Unicredit. Unicredit had agreed to sell the debt to SMA for a discounted price of €5.5m. The vehicle which SMA used to acquire the debt and take ownership of the properties was Radix Investments UK Limited. The Stone Turn report records that between 30 September 2014 and 23 December 2014 payments totalling £4,632,964 were paid out of Dr Cochrane's Coutts' account …… and that these were for "Polish properties". It is a reasonable inference that this £4,632,964 represents the €5m used to acquire the Polish properties".
Balance of convenience/risk of dissipation
Procedural irregularities and lack of full and frank disclosure