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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Michael Wilson & Partners, Ltd v Emmott [2015] EWCA Civ 1028 (14 October 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2015/1028.html Cite as: [2015] EWCA Civ 1028 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Mr Justice Andrew Smith
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LEWISON
and
LADY JUSTICE GLOSTER
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MICHAEL WILSON & PARTNERS, LTD |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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JOHN FORSTER EMMOTT |
Respondent |
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AND |
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Between : MICHAEL EARL WILSON |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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JOHN FORSTER EMMOTT |
Respondent |
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Mr Lance Ashworth QC & Mr Dan McCourt Fritz (instructed by Michael Wilson) for the Appellant (Michael Wilson)
Mr Philip Shepherd QC (instructed by Kerman & Co LLP) for the Respondent
(Mr Emmott)
Hearing date : 30 September 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Lewison:
"This order does not prohibit the Respondent from dealing with or disposing of any of its assets in the ordinary and proper course of business."
i) A payment of US$1,856,500 to Kazholdings Inc, a BVI company ("the KHI payment") andii) A payment of US$1,232,515 to Kazholdings LLP, a subsidiary of KHI ("the LLP payment").
"Repayment of part of the principal of the Secured Loan, advanced to cover the costs incurred (in mediation, arbitration, the SCCO, the QBD and the Court of Appeal, paying costs orders and in providing for security for costs) in chasing and recovering the debt from the Assaubayevs/Hawkinson/Gold Lion, given their default from February 2011 until March 2015."
"Office Rental, Service and Maintenance (including VAT at 12%)"
"Almost all foreign investors in Kazakhstan, including MWP… structure their affairs in an appropriate and tax-efficient manner, typically funding their operations not through injections of cash equity, but instead through financing and loans. …
Thus, indeed, KHI financing MWP was always, and still is, an appropriate, robust, compliant and tax efficient solution. This is especially the case because law firms and business consultants cannot borrow from local banks, who prefer to lend only against physical assets, and not to mere service providers, and even if they could … borrow from local banks, interest rates are penal…"
i) Was the loan from KHI bogus as Mr Emmott alleged, or was it genuine as Mr Wilson alleged;ii) Was the rent for the Almaty offices inflated as Mr Emmott alleged, or was it the market rate as Mr Wilson alleged?
Everything else was an evaluation of the facts.
i) as he had previously asserted, he did not own or control KHI;ii) KHI's sole shareholder, a Liechtenstein Anstalt, WFA –Windsor Fine Arts Establishment ("WFA"), was the same as MWP's sole shareholder;
iii) WFA was owned by the Settignano Foundation, which was not owned or controlled by Mr Wilson, but his family were "ultimately, potential discretionary beneficiaries of any distributions from the Settignano Foundation";
iv) as from some time after October 2008, KHI had taken "significant investment and loans" from a third party, Seven Seas Corporation, and a Mr Patrick O'Mara, who controlled Seven Seas Corporation, had been appointed a director of KHI to represent such interests;
v) consequently, after that date, KHI "could no longer be run solely for the benefit of the originating Wilson Family Foundation, but emerged to expand its operational contacts and revenue generating capabilities; thus, Third party funders' and investors' interests, including those relating to Mr O'Mara/Seven Seas, should be considered."; see KHI's letter to MWP dated 6 August 2015.
"Of course a settlement of this kind is not something that happens every day. But that does not mean that when it does happen it is not in the ordinary course of business."
"As Robert Goff J recognised in The Angel Bell, freezing orders … are not in terms limited to disposals or dealings with assets which amount to dissipation. That qualification would render the order practically useless and its policing impossible. Instead, the form of order now contained in the annex to the CPR and in the Commercial Court Guide imposes a blanket restriction on dealings with or disposals of assets up to a stated value but caters for the principles enshrined in the Angel Bell by containing an express exception for disposals in the ordinary and proper course of business and a general right for the defendant to apply to the court for permission to carry out a particular transaction not falling within that exception. It was under a general liberty to apply of this sort that the order in the Angel Bell was made."
"We do not, however, accept that any transaction (even if not dissipatory in nature) can properly be described as one in the ordinary course of business. As explained earlier, the standard exception on which paragraph 9(b) is modelled provides a limitation on the scope of the injunction thereby enabling routine business transactions to be conducted without reference to the court. But dealings or disposals which are not part of the ordinary business of the defendant in that sense do not necessarily fall foul of the purpose of the freezing order. They merely require the approval of the court or the claimant before they are carried out and so enable the court to scrutinise what, on its face, may not appear to be a routine or regular transaction."
"This format points, in our view, to the standard exception about disposals in the ordinary course of business being given a narrower rather than a wide meaning. Transactions in the ordinary course of business in the case (e.g.) of a trading company will include all its usual purchases and disposals and the payment of its trade and other liabilities as they fall due."
"The circumstances in which this occurred make it clear beyond doubt that the object was not to pay bona fide debts in the ordinary and proper course of business but was the latest device in a strategy to evade the reason for the grant of the Freezing Order." (Emphasis in original)
Lady Justice Gloster:
Lady Justice Black: