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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 >> Olympic Council of Asia v Novans Jets LLP & Ors [2022] EWHC 2910 (Comm) (16 November 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2022/2910.html Cite as: [2022] EWHC 2910 (Comm) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
COMMERCIAL COURT (KBD)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
OLYMPIC COUNCIL OF ASIA |
Claimant |
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- and – |
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(1) NOVANS JETS LLP (2) NOVANS INVESTMENTS LTD (3) MR JULY GRINGUZ |
Defendants |
____________________
John Kimbell KC and Vincent Scully (instructed by Bargate Murray Ltd) for the Third Defendant
The First and Second Defendants did not appear and were not represented
Hearing dates: 3 November 2022
Further written submissions: 4, 9 November 2022
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Butcher :
Background
(1) OCA leased a Bombadier Global Express 5000 aircraft from the First Defendant ('Jets') under an agreement dated 31 August 2018. Under that agreement OCA was furnished with 1515 block hours 'for priority usage' of the aircraft from 1 October 2018 to 31 December 2022. The aircraft could be chartered by Jets to third parties when not in use by OCA, with net profits from such charters to be shared between Jets and OCA. OCA was required to make advance payments to Jets to cover block hours of use; and OCA paid the sum of US$9.675 million. A dispute arose, and Jets terminated the agreement, retaining all sums paid, including about US$7 million equal to the value of block hours that OCA had been entitled to use, but which it could not use due to the termination of its access to the aircraft.
(2) OCA commenced proceedings against Jets. OCA succeeded in its action. The judgment of Moulder J is [2022] EWHC 88 (Comm). Jets had been represented by Bargate Murray Ltd and by Mr Kimbell QC. By an order of Moulder J dated 19 January 2022 ('the January order'), Jets was (1) ordered to pay to OCA the sums of US$7,537,923.10 by way of damages and interest, and £350,000 as an interim payment on account of costs; (2) required to file submissions as to the percentage share each of it and OCA should receive of the net profits from third party charters; and (3) required to disclose, for the period from 1 September 2018 to 31 December 2021, a consolidated flight report for the aircraft, a copy of the logbook showing those flights, and the proposed net profit margin of each flight operated by the aircraft during that period, with supporting documentation. Jets applied for permission to appeal, which was refused.
(3) Jets did not comply with the order. OCA sought, and obtained ex parte from Moulder J on 18 March 2022, a worldwide freezing order and an asset disclosure order against Jets ('the March order'). The Penal Notice on the March order stated: 'If you, Novans Jets LLP, disobey this order you (and Mr July Gringuz, a director of the said Novans Jets LLP) may be held to be in contempt of court and may be imprisoned, fined or have your assets seized. Any other person who knows of this order and does anything which helps or permits the Respondent to breach the terms of this order may also be held to be in contempt of court and may be imprisoned, fined or have their assets seized.' The inclusion of Mr Gringuz was on the basis that he had described himself as such in evidence for the trial, and Moulder J had found that he had held the role of Managing Director (at [90]).
(4) Pursuant to the March order, OCA was served with a letter, sent on 25 March 2022, from Novans Aviation Ltd ('Aviation') in its capacity as one of Jets' Designated Members. The letter stated that Mr Gringuz was not a director of Jets; and further that Jets had a single asset exceeding £20,000 in value, namely a receivable due from the Second Defendant ('Investments') in accordance with an Asset Purchase Agreement dated 27 November 2020.
(5) As a result of that letter, OCA's solicitors sought to widen the freezing order to include the receivable referred to and to cover Jets, Investments and Aviation, and to include disclosure of the Asset Purchase Agreement, entities involved in chartering the aircraft and income streams from chartering.
(6) By an order dated 4 April 2022 ('the April order') Moulder J extended the freezing order to cover both Jets and Investments. Jets was ordered to provide an electronic copy of the Asset Purchase Agreement plus metadata and documents referred to in the Asset Purchase Agreement, information about entities involved in chartering the aircraft, and the terms of chartering, and details of the officers, shareholders and those who had a controlling interest in Jets or Aviation. The Penal Notice was directed to Jets and Investments, as well as having the usual provision referring to other persons who know about the order. Mr Gringuz was not referred to. This, as OCA says, is because of the letter of 25 March 2022.
(7) A petition for the voluntary winding up of Jets had been issued in March 2022. It was granted on 28 June 2022.
(8) In the meantime, on 5 May 2022, Moulder J made a further order ('the May order') whereby, inter alia, the freezing order was continued against Jets and Investments in respect of the receivable owing to Jets and the aircraft; and Investments was ordered to provide the same information that Jets had been ordered to provide under the April order to the extent that it was within its possession or control or knowledge. The Penal Notice was addressed to Jets and Investments, and to Mr Gringuz as a director of Investments.
(9) On 21 May 2022 Mr Gringuz swore his second Affidavit, in response to the April and May orders. It deposed that he could provide information about chartering entities only from 17 September 2018 to 29 November 2020, when the aircraft was sold to Investments. He stated that from 25 September 2018 to 11 March 2019 the only party which had use of the aircraft was OCA, and provided the flight log from September 2018 to December 2019. He said that he had sold Investments and had ceased acting for that company as of 31 March 2021, and that since he had ceased to act for Investments he could not provide a copy of that entity's most recent accounts. He said that he does not have a copy of the aircraft's logbook as it went with the aircraft when it was sold to Investments.
(10) On 2 September 2022 OCA obtained an extension of the freezing order against Jets and Investments as it had been due to expire on 18 September 2022.
The Contempt Application and the hearing of 5 October 2022
(1) Gave OCA permission to amend the Contempt application to provide further particulars of the contempt alleged in Box 12;
(2) Dispensed with personal service of the Contempt application on Mr Gringuz;
(3) Ordered that any issues as to (i) service out, (ii) alternative service, (iii) original service by email on Mr Gringuz of the January, April and May orders as good service for the purpose of these proceedings, and (iv) whether permission is needed for amended contempt proceedings to be brought, should be addressed at a further hearing fixed for 3 November 2022. Issues (i) and (ii) were to be treated as if an ex parte order for service out and alternative service had been made and the further hearing was to decide whether or not to set aside those orders, but without prejudice to what would otherwise have been the burden or standard of proof.
(4) Gave directions for the hearing fixed for 3 November 2022.
The Allegations of Contempt
(1) As Count 1, (a) that Jets had breached the January, April and May orders by failing to disclose information in relation to the proposed net profit margin of each flight operated by the aircraft in the period up to at least 29 November 2020; (b) that Jets had breached the April and May orders by failing to provide information about the entities involved in chartering the aircraft up to at least 29 November 2020; and (c) that Jets had breached the January, April and May orders by failing to disclose a consolidated flight report of all flights operated by the aircraft for the period 30 November 2020 to 31 December 2021. It was further alleged that Mr Gringuz was liable for contempt for those breaches of orders on the bases that he was a de facto director of Jets, alternatively that he had wilfully interfered with the administration of justice by permitting Jets to act in contempt, alternatively that he had Accessory Liability.
(2) As Count 2, that Mr Gringuz was in contempt by making a false statement in his second Affidavit, to the effect that Investments had ceased to be a part of the Jets LLP on the day it was sold. This was said to be in direct contradiction to the letter of 25 March 2022, which Mr Gringuz had signed, which had stated that Jets had two LLP Designated Members, namely Aviation and Investments.
The First Issue: Permission to Serve Out of the Jurisdiction
Service of the Contempt application
'Where it appears to the court that there is a good reason to authorise service by a method or at a place not otherwise permitted by this Part, the court may make an order permitting service by an alternative method or at an alternative place.'
(9) Cases involving service abroad under the Hague Convention or a bilateral treaty:
(a) Where service abroad is the subject matter of the Hague Convention or a bilateral treaty, it will not normally be a good reason for relief under CPR 6.15 or 6.16 that complying with the formalities of service so required will take additional time and cost: Knauf at [47], Cecil at [66], [113].
(b) It remains relevant whether the method of service which the Court is being asked to sanction under CPR 6.15 is one which is not permitted by the terms of the Hague Convention or the bilateral treaty in question. For example, where the country in which service is to be effected has stated its objections under Article 10 of the Hague Convention to service otherwise than through its designated authority, as part of the reciprocal arrangements for mutual assistance on service with this country, comity requires the English Court to take account of and give weight to those objections: see Shiblaq at [57]. In such cases relief should only be granted under Rule 6.15 in exceptional circumstances. I would regard the statement of Stanley Burnton LJ in Cecil at [65] to that effect, with which Wilson and Rix LJJ agreed, as remaining good law; it accords with the earlier judgment of the Court in Knauf at [58]-[59]; Lord Clarke at paragraphs [33] and [45] of Abela was careful to except such cases from his analysis of when only a good reason was required, and to express no view on them (at [34]); and although Stanley Burnton LJ's reasoning that service abroad is an exercise of sovereignty cannot survive what was said by Lord Sumption (with unanimous support) at [53] of Abela, there is nothing in that analysis which undermines the rationale that as a matter of comity the English Court should not lightly treat service by a method to which the foreign country has objected under mutual assistance treaty arrangements as sufficient. That is not to say, however, that there can never be a good reason for ordering service by an alternative method in a Hague Convention case: Bank St Petersburg at [26].
The Court of Appeal approved this aspect of Popplewell J's summary: [2018] EWCA Civ 1093 at [31]-[35] per Longmore LJ.
In my judgment, the current state of the law is as set out in the decisions of Mr Justice Cooke in Deutsche Bank AG v. Sebastian Holdings Inc. and Mr Justice Popplewell in Société Générale v. Goldas Kuyumculuk Sanayi and others [2017] EWHC 667 (Comm), and that in [Hague Service Convention] cases, or cases in which there is a bilateral service treaty which is exclusive in its application:
i) "exceptional circumstances", rather than merely good reason, must be shown before an order for alternative service other than in accordance with the terms of the treaty can be used; and
ii) mere delay or expense in serving in accordance with the treaty cannot, without more, constitute such "exceptional circumstances". I say "without more" because delay might be the cause of some other form of litigation prejudice, or be of such exceptional length as to be incompatible with the due administration of justice.
(1) What is at issue here is a Contempt application. Such applications should if possible be dealt with expeditiously in order to ensure compliance with and uphold the authority of court orders. Moreover, in the present case, OCA has a legitimate interest in seeking to obtain, without unnecessary delay, information which will allow it to quantify, and prove in Jets' liquidation for, the share of profits to which it has been held entitled by paragraph 2 of the January order.
(2) There is no doubt that the means which have already been used to bring the Application to Mr Gringuz's notice have been effective. There is no plausible case that alternative service would cause Mr Gringuz any prejudice.
(3) Ukraine made a declaration on 9 March 2022 in relation to the Hague Service Convention, as follows:
'In view of the ongoing aggression of the Russian Federation against Ukraine, Ukraine hereby informs the Depositary […] of the inability to guarantee the fulfilment by the Ukrainian side of obligations [under the above Convention] to the full extent for the period of the armed aggression of the Russian Federation and the martial law in place in the territory of Ukraine until complete termination of the encroachment upon the sovereignty, territorial integrity and inviolability of Ukraine.'
While this declaration clearly does not amount to a statement that Ukraine cannot fulfil its obligations under the Hague Service Convention during the Russian invasion, it is a recognition of the risk that it may not be able to do so.
(4) There seems no doubt that the Russian invasion has added to the length of time which it is taking to effect service in Ukraine in accordance with the Hague Service Convention. The evidence before me was not clear as to the amount of time which has been added. Ukrainian lawyers instructed for Mr Gringuz, Lavrynovych & Partners, acknowledge that, while the judicial and postal services are operating in Kyiv, 'there are delays in delivering the documents to and from Ukraine due to the limited transport links with other countries'. They also say that 'in normal times of peace' service of foreign court documents would take approximately three months, but now is taking approximately one-two months longer. That estimate of the additional length of time being taken is difficult to reconcile with the information supplied by the Foreign Process Section that the time for service in Ukraine is at present over a year. The evidence of the Ukrainian lawyers instructed for OCA, Ilyashev & Partners, appears entirely credible, namely that 'the whole process of executing a foreign court request seeking to serve documents on a person located in Ukraine may take a much longer time than usual', and I accept that this is so. Thus, while it is right that mere length of time to serve in accordance with the Hague Service Convention is not of itself a good reason for allowing alternative service, I consider that the delays arising from the Russian invasion are a relevant factor in considering whether there are exceptional circumstances in this case.
(5) There are grounds for considering that Mr Gringuz will attempt to avoid service and frustrate efforts to effect service. Thus, it is the evidence of Mr Blumire that an effort was made to serve a copy of the Contempt application on Mr Gringuz by post at the address used by him in his first Affidavit of 1 April 2022. The local postal service made two attempts to deliver the documentation but there was no answer at the address; and that while a note was left at the address with instructions as to how to make arrangements for delivery, no such arrangements were made. I also consider that there is force in the submission made on behalf of OCA that Mr Gringuz's conduct in instructing Bargate Murray Ltd to represent him for the purposes of this hearing but not to accept service of the Contempt application betokens a desire to make service difficult.
(6) Ilyashev & Partners' report indicates that service by the relevant authorities of a Contempt application would involve personal service by handing it or attempting to hand it to the addressee or if that is not effected, then typically by service via registered mail. In the latter case, if the addressee is not at home at the time of delivery then the postman seeks to inform the recipient by phone or by a written notification put into the addressee's letter box that a court summons has arrived and may be received at the post office. If the recipient does not receive the court summons within three days, the post office makes a note on the summons to the effect that the recipient is absent at the specified address and returns the documents to the court. Other procedures for seeking to serve documents would only be available in cases of urgency or where the place of residence of the addressee was unknown. This last situation would very possibly not be considered to apply here, given that a residential address for Mr Gringuz is known. This material gives grounds for considering that there is a real risk, especially given that Mr Gringuz may seek to frustrate the process, that service by the means available under the Hague Service Convention may not be effected, even after a possibly extended process attempting to do so.
(7) The above points are not satisfactorily answered by reliance on Article 15 of the Hague Service Convention and Ukraine's declaration of 1 February 2001, whereby Ukraine accepted that if all the conditions provided for in the second paragraph of Article 15 were fulfilled, which includes the lapse of a period of at least six months 'since the date of the transmission of the document', 'the judge … may give judgment even if no certificate of service or delivery has been received.' It is unclear when the 'date of the transmission' would be. In any event, I consider that it is fair for OCA to say that it would suffer litigation prejudice even by a six month delay. These are existing proceedings, and it may often be the case that it is desirable for there to be swifter service out in such proceedings than in the case of service of a self-standing claim (see Avonwick v Azitio Holdings [2019] EWHC 1254 (Comm), at [34]). That is particularly the case here because of the nature of the proceedings, and because of OCA's interest in obtaining the information the subject of the relevant orders, referred to in (1) above.
Service of the January, April and May Orders
'(b) the date and terms of any order allegedly breached or disobeyed;
(c) confirmation that any such order was personally served, and the date it was served, unless the court or the parties dispensed with personal service;
(d) if the court dispensed with personal service, the terms and date of the court's order dispensing with personal service…'
Permission to Bring the Contempt application
(a) interference with the due administration of justice, except in relation to existing High Court or county court proceedings;
(b) an allegation of knowingly making a false statement in any affidavit, affirmation or other document verified by a statement of truth or in a disclosure statement.'
[23] At the beginning of the hearing, I expressed some scepticism that the Defendants did not require permission in relation to ground 1. The reason for my scepticism was that, although ground 1 was formulated as an interference with the due administration of justice, it was at least well arguable that an application based on ground 1 was also "made in relation to … an allegation of knowingly making a false statement in any … document verified by a statement of truth …" so as to fall within CPR 81.3(5)(b). If that were to be the case, they would also require permission for a contempt application based on ground 1, even though there might be other categories of interference with the due administration of justice for which permission is not required.
[24] In the event, Mr Bheeroo did not pursue this submission. I think that he was right to take that course. Even if permission is not required for ground 1, the allegations of fact relied on in relation to both ground 1 and ground 2 are in all respects identical. In these circumstances, there is at least a serious possibility that the court would consider it appropriate to stay contempt proceedings based on ground 1 if permission is refused on ground 2 (cf. TBD (Owen Holland) Ltd v. Simons and others [2020] EWCA Civ 1182 ("TBD") at [239]) and, if the refusal were to be on the basis that the contempt application was being made for an improper purpose, that might be a ground for striking it out altogether (Sectorguard Plc v Dienne Plc [2009] EWHC 2693 (Ch) at [53]). It follows that I will simply determine the question of whether permission should be granted on ground 2 without regard to any consideration that an application based on ground 1 might proceed in any event.
(1) Whether there is a strong prima facie case of contempt bearing in mind that knowing falsity must be proved, taking into account the strength of the evidence going to prove:
i. that the statement is false
ii. that the maker of the statement knew it was false
iii. the significance of the false statement in the proceedings
iv. the use to which the false statement was put in the proceedings
v. the motive of the alleged contemnor;
(2) Whether it is in the public interest to bring contempt proceedings, taking into account:
i. Prosecutorial motive
ii. Whether contempt proceedings would justify the court and other resources that need to be devoted to them
iii. Whether contempt proceedings would further the overriding objective
iv. The likely penalty and whether proceedings are proportionate.
Conclusion
(1) The order for service out of the jurisdiction will not be set aside;
(2) There is an order for alternative service of the Contempt application on Mr Gringuz;
(3) Personal service of the January, April and May orders on Mr Gringuz is retrospectively dispensed with;
(4) OCA does not require permission to pursue Count 1, but permission is refused as to Count 2.