BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just Β£5, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Liverpool Victoria Insurance Company Ltd v Yavuz & Ors [2017] EWHC 3088 (QB) (06 December 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2017/3088.html Cite as: [2017] EWHC 3088 (QB) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
LIVERPOOL VICTORIA INSURANCE COMPANY LTD |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
||
(1) MEHMET YAVUZ (2) EYLEM YAVUZ (3) HASAN SEL (4) AYSE SEL (5) SALMAN GULBUDAK (6) MATO HUSEYIN GULBUDAK (7) ERCAN KAYA (8) AYTEN KAYA (9) GUNES KAYA |
Defendants |
____________________
Adam Gersch (instructed by Ronald Fletcher Baker LLP) for Defendants 1 - 6
Oliver Newman (instructed by Ersan & Co Solicitors) for Defendants 7 - 9
Hearing dates: 20-25 November 2017
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Warby :
"False statements
32.14
(1) Proceedings for contempt of court may be brought against a person if he makes, or causes to be made, a false statement in a document verified by a statement of truth without an honest belief in its truth.
(Part 22 makes provision for a statement of truth.)"
"3.7 Where a party is legally represented, the legal representative may sign the statement of truth on his behalf. The statement signed by the legal representative will refer to the client's belief, not his own. In signing he must state the capacity in which he signs and the name of his firm where appropriate.
3.8 Where a legal representative has signed a statement of truth, his signature will be taken by the court as his statement:
(1) that the client on whose behalf he has signed had authorised him to do so,
(2) that before signing he had explained to the client that in signing the statement of truth he would be confirming the client's belief that the facts stated in the document were true, and
(3) that before signing he had informed the client of the possible consequences to the client if it should subsequently appear that the client did not have an honest belief in the truth of those facts (see rule 32.14)."
Paragraph 3.8 creates a presumption, but it is clearly not an irrebuttable one. In principle, a party can rebut the presumption by giving evidence to the contrary.
"(i) A person who makes a statement verified with a statement of truth or a false disclosure statement is only guilty of contempt if the statement is false and the person knew it to be so when he made it.
(ii) It must be in the public interest for proceedings to be brought. In deciding whether it is the public interest, the following factors are relevant:
(a) the case against the alleged contemnor must be a strong case (there is an obvious need to guard carefully against the risk of allowing vindictive litigants to use such proceedings to harass persons against whom they have a grievance);
(b) the false statements must have been significant in the proceedings;
(c) the court should ask itself whether the alleged contemnor understood the likely effect of the statement and the use to which it would be put in the proceedings;
(d) "[T]he pursuit of contempt proceedings in ordinary cases may have a significant effect by drawing the attention of the legal profession, and through it that of potential witnesses, to the dangers of making false statements. If the courts are seen to treat serious examples of false evidence as of little importance, they run the risk of encouraging witnesses to regard the statement of truth as a mere formality ... "
" consistent with the jurisprudence of the European Court of Human Rights, a flexible approach to the admission of hearsay evidence was appropriate, rather than its exclusion on principle; that, in a committal application, the decision was a matter for the judge, giving reasons, from which the significance, or lack of it, of the hearsay evidence would be apparent, as would the reasoning on which its admission and the weight given to it by the judge was based; "
The cast of characters
Essential factual picture
Before any of the crashes
(1) On 4 June 2011, the DVLA registered a Thomas Cerlinksy of 31 King Street, London E13 as the keeper of a Renault Megane, registration X253 LMJ ("the Megane"). This is the vehicle later alleged to have driven into the BMW driven by Salman Gulbudak, with Mato Gulbudak as his passenger.(2) On 31 August 2011, an insurance policy was taken out with LVI in respect of a Renault Laguna, registration DU52 RUY ("the Laguna"). The insured was Roman Lukasek, whose address was given as Flat 1, 15 Harold Road, Margate. His date of birth was given as 10 April 1958, making him 53 at the time. His occupation was given as "cleaner". A deposit was paid using a card ending in ** 0941. The card was in the name of Roman Lukac. An email address with a Czech Republic suffix was given: [email protected]. Mr Lukazec was not the registered keeper of the Laguna at this or any time. It was registered to a Stanislav Valent of 70 Derwent Road, London, some 85 miles away from Margate.
(3) On 3 September 2011, an insurance policy was taken out with LVI in respect of a Vauxhall Vectra, registration EV55 KBZ ("the Vectra"). This was a Third Party, Fire and Theft ("TPF&T") policy, incepted online. The insured was Tomas Cerlinksy, of 18 Harold Road, Margate. His date of birth was given as 17 May 1955, making him 56 at the time. His occupation was given as "cleaner". A deposit was paid using a card ending in ** 5751, in the name of Filip Kotas. An email address with a Czech Republic suffix was given: [email protected]. Another Tomas Cerlinksy was a named driver on this policy. His date of birth was given as 30 August 1977, making him 34 at the time.
5 September 2011: the first 'Crash' [aka Accident no 5]
9 September 2011: the second 'Crash' [aka Accident no 4]
29 September 2011: the third 'Crash' [aka Accident no 1]
9 October 2011: the fourth 'Crash' [aka Accident No 3]
23 October 2011: the fifth 'Crash' [aka Accident No 6]
6 November 2011: the sixth 'Crash' [aka Accident No 2]
Attempts to trace the drivers
The statements complained of
Some claims are discontinued
November 2015: Mayor's and City of London Court
January 2016: Central London County Court
" difficult to accept that the occurrence of [the four 'accidents' before the court at that stage] in such a short space of time is a pure coincidence It is for that reason that LV have serious concerns over the actual occurrence of any of these accidents at all, or at the very least, that they were accidents in the true sense of the word."
"I am not, however, although I accept and it is admitted that there was a fraud, I am not satisfied to the relevant standard degree of probability that the Claimant was part of the fraud. There is no indication that I can see that he knew of any of the First Defendants, or indeed was in with Park View Claims before the accident. I also note that, in his favour, that he did not have any poor insurance claim history."
The claimant's case
(1) There were six "accidents" within a period of 2 months with these features: (a) each policyholder incepted the policy of insurance with LVI within days (1-12 days) of each alleged accident; (b) each policyholder stated in his proposal form that he was over the age of 50, employed as a cleaner and living in a seaside town outside London; (c) three of the policies (those for the first, second and fifth Crashes) used the same road & postcode for the risk address and of those three, two (the first and fifth) had exactly the same house number, 18 Harold Road); (d) two of the policies were incepted using the same email address, [email protected]; (e) where an email address was given, all of the policies were incepted using an email address with the suffix cz (including the two mentioned above); (f) the same name (Filip or F Kotas) was used to set up payment details in four polices and in the other two (the first and third Crashes) the name of Roman Lukac was used; (g) none of the premium instalment payments was made on any of the policies; (h) three of the six alleged accidents / policies (the second, fifth and sixth) featured the same named driver (Tomas Cerlinsky) for the same period of time, despite the named policyholders being different; (i) five of the six insured vehicles had as their registered keeper a person other than the insured, according to the DVLA database.(2) LVI was unable to trace any of the named Policyholders with the contact details provided to incept each policy. LVI invites me to find that the policyholders do not exist.
(3) All twelve of the vehicle occupants who intimated proceedings by serving CNFs were examined by the same medical expert on the same date.
(4) All twelve prospective claimants sought the services of PVC, who referred them all onto Goldsworth Solicitors and from them to the Nesbit Law Group.
(5) Five out of the six alleged non-fault drivers brought a claim for compensation for credit hire charges due to DSA.
(6) Each of the alleged accidents occurred all in a small area of North London over 80 miles away from each of the alleged home addresses of the insured.
(7) The Yavuz, Sel, and Gulbudak families are related to one another.
(8) The alleged link by address between Mr Kaya and Hasan Urger, a former director of PVC (of which more below).
(9) Mr Yavuz, both the Messrs Gulbudak, and Mr Kaya each discontinued proceedings on the first day of a 5-day multi track trial listed before a single Judge to hear the first four of the six accident claims consecutively.
The defendants' cases
"No. Eighty per cent of patients say the same. This is how the system works. People do exaggerate in their statements about accidents, when you see them 6 months later or a year later. That is what people tell you. It is why they are there."
Mr Yavuz
(1) In the January 2012 Statement Mr Yavuz said "I have had one previous insurance claim in the last 5 years", which he described as having taken place in Basingstoke. He referred to another, older, accident in Enfield, when he was the driver at fault. In fact, he had claimed involvement as passenger in a RTA said to have occurred on 15 November 2010 and, remarkably, he had made and signed a witness statement about this, claiming to have suffered whiplash injuries, on 10 January 2012, just two days before he met Mr Moseley and made his statement. He did not mention this injury when asked by Dr Chohan about his past medical history; he said he had one previous accident "about 5 years ago." He said the same in his August 2012 statement. This November 2010 event may have been genuine injury, as there are GP notes about it. At all events, the matter was relevant. When told about it, Dr Chohan changed his assessment of the alleged injuries of 2011 to one of "exacerbation".(2) Mr Yavuz' January 2012 Statement said his injuries were "whiplash injuries which just made me uncomfortable and I did not go to work for 1 or two days but apart from that it did not stop me going about my normal business". Less than a month later, he told Dr Chohan that he had severe, ongoing pain in his neck, shoulders, upper and central back, the latter made especially painful when bending and sitting. The account given to Dr Chohan was then relied on, over a statement of truth, in the Particulars of Claim. These accounts of Mr Yavuz's injuries cannot both be true, nor can both be honest. In my judgment, both were lies. Mr Yavuz' attempt to blame the interpreter he says was present when he was examined by Dr Chohan lacks any credibility.
(3) As to the Chrysler, some photographs of the car showing damage to the rear end were produced as an exhibit to Mr Yavuz's statement in these proceedings. He gave evidence to me that these photos were probably taken by him. He claimed never to have seen the car again after it was damaged in the accident and taken away for storage. But the photos had been taken in a residential street, and not the enclosed facility where it was inspected by Hoopers. The photos showed the car in daylight, so they cannot have been taken at the time of the accident, which was said to have taken place at night. It is not necessary to reach a definitive finding on the issue, but the strong suspicion must be that the car was returned to Mr Yavuz after its inspection by Hoopers.
Mrs Yavuz
Mr Sel
Mrs Sel
Mr Salman Gulbudak
Mr Mato Gulbudak
Mr Kaya
Ayten and Gunes Kaya
Postscript
On 6 December 2017, after handing down this judgment and hearing evidence and argument at a sentencing hearing, I sentenced four of the defendants to immediate imprisonment: Mr Yavuz received 16 months, Mr Salman Gulbudak 12 months, Mr Ercan Kaya 9 months, and Mr Hasan Sel 4 months. Each of the remaining five defendants was sentenced to 4 months imprisonment suspended for 1 year. Each of the defendants was ordered to pay £9,000 towards LVI's costs of the application, making a total of £81,000.