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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> North Shore Ventures Ltd v Anstead Holdings Inc & Ors [2010] EWHC 1485 (Ch) (21 June 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2010/1485.html Cite as: [2011] 1 All ER (Comm) 81, [2010] 2 Lloyd's Rep 265, [2010] Bus LR D116, [2010] EWHC 1485 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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NORTH SHORE VENTURES LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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ANSTEAD HOLDINGS INC. RUSLAN FOMICHEV VASILY PEGANOV |
Defendants |
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Mr Michael Swainston QC and Mr John Machell (instructed by Cooke, Young & Keidan) for the Second and Third Defendants
Hearing dates: 19, 22-26, 29 and 30 March and 14-16 and 19-20 April 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Newey:
The parties
"I knew the projects that they were delegating to me to do, and about these projects I knew everything. I was not aware about some other businesses …."
The Claimant's witnesses
"If I have secrets, it's just because I'm afraid of Russian authorities which try to fish everywhere."
The Defendants' witnesses
Representation
The loan
i) Clause 2.2 provided as follows:"The proceeds of each Advance shall be used for the business undertaken by [Anstead] and the Related Entities [i.e. four other companies associated with Mr Fomichev and Mr Peganov] and such business comprising the sale or purchase of processed meat and meat products primarily for supply in the Russian Federation and the sale and purchase of petroleum products in the Russian Federation and for no other purpose";ii) Clause 3.1 stated that an advance would be made by North Shore to Anstead provided that, among other things, "not later than 11.00 a.m. on the third Business Date before the proposed Drawdown Date [North Shore] has received a completed Notice of Drawdown" (clause 3.1.1). The expression "Notice of Drawdown" was defined in clause 1.1 as "a notice of [Anstead's] wish to borrow an Advance in or substantially in the form set out in Schedule 2". Paragraph 8 of that form was in the following terms:
"We request that the Advance be made available to us on the date specified in the Schedule to this letter, by payment to account no. 603.274 of Anstead Holdings Inc. at CIM Banque s.a. (Geneva) Switzerland";iii) Clause 4.1 provided for Anstead to pay interest at the rate of 15% on the first business day of each month;
iv) Clause 4.2 provided as follows:
"If a default is made in the payment of any amount under this Agreement, interest will accrue on the amount in respect of which that default has been made as if that amount were an Advance made from the date of default until payment (as well after as before judgment), and that interest will be calculated at the rate (as determined by [North Shore]) which is the aggregate of the Interest Rate [viz. 15%] and 5% (five per cent)";v) Clause 12.5 barred Anstead from, among other things, disposing without North Shore's consent of any of its assets except for full value on arm's length terms in the normal course of business;
vi) Clause 18.1 provided as follows:
"All payments required to be made by [Anstead] hereunder shall be calculated without reference to any set-off or counterclaim and shall be made free and clear of and without deduction for or on account of any set-off or counterclaim";vii) Clause 21.1 provided as follows:
"No failure to exercise, nor any delay in exercising, on the part of [North Shore], any right or remedy under the Finance Documents [an expression defined to include the Loan Agreement] shall operate as a waiver thereof ….";viii) Clause 24 stated that the Loan Agreement was governed by English law; and
ix) Clause 25.1 provided for the Courts of England to have jurisdiction to determine disputes.
"I refer to the proposed loan arrangement between Anstead Holdings Limited and North Shore Ventures Limited and the intended assignment of the same to the Itchen Trust. In this regard, I can advise that the monies received from the loan will be used to finance various trade exports of meat to the Russian Federation and to also purchase diesel oil for subsequent trading on the markets.
In summary, Anstead Holdings Limited has an arrangement with Boston Agrex regarding meat exports into Russia. Boston Agrex holds various sub accounts for, inter alia, all of the main meat producers based in Brazil. On this basis, Anstead pays monies in advance for the purchase of a meat quota which is utilized by Boston Agrex as a type of guarantee and in essence helps finance the trade of meat to Russia through the use of various associated Russian companies. These companies including Kruglyigod (and Vnesheconomgruppe) have contracts with the Brazilian meat suppliers to export meat to Russia (pursuant to a state quota) which are approved by the Russian authorities and in which they have three months to sell the meat and pay the Brazilian supplier.
In addition, we are also planning to purchase diesel oil from BP in order to sell the same on the market and to Vitoil. The majority of the funds under the loan agreement will be used in this regard.
I also understand you need independent confirmation from me regarding the use of the monies and can confirm that they will not be used in the fulfilment of criminal or illegal activities (inclusive of tax evasion activities) whether conducted in the UK or any overseas countries. I also confirm that the payments of interest and capital repayments of the loan will not include the proceeds of any criminal or illegal activity inclusive of tax evasion activities."
"In order to facilitate the loan arrangement, Katia Berezovskaia ("KB") agreed to be appointed as a beneficiary of the Itchen Trust and to receive a distribution in the sum of $50 million. It was also agreed that this sum would immediately be loaned by a company which is beneficially owned by KB to Anstead Holdings Inc. (which we understand from Ruslan Fomichev is beneficially owned by himself and his partner Vasili Peganov) upon the terms agreed between the parties in the Loan Agreement. The mechanism agreed for the distribution to KB was particularly important insofar as the Trustees felt uncomfortable loaning the money directly from the Trust to Anstead Holdings Inc. and did not believe that, taking into account their duties especially to the beneficiaries, it was a good investment for the Trust.
As KB had agreed to the distribution, it was then agreed that the Loan Agreement would be assigned back to the Trust and that the funds to be repaid would be resettled as trust funds into an offshore account to be set up by the Trustees. Although the security provided under the Loan Agreement is deemed by all to be insufficient (and with no due diligence having taken place) BB [i.e. Mr Berezovsky] has nonetheless agreed to this arrangement and it was important to receive his consent to this action as he was the original settler of the funds of the Trust…."
The Guarantee
"In consideration of North Shore executing the Loan Agreement the Guarantors [namely, Mr Fomichev and Mr Peganov] hereby jointly and severally guarantee to pay to North Shore on demand (and upon the event of a default of any payment by the Principal [viz. Anstead] under the Loan Agreement) all money and discharge the Indebtedness as primary obligor and not only as guarantor, and also agree to indemnify North Shore on demand from and against any loss it may incur as a result of or in connection with its having now or hereafter advanced any money to the Principal together with interest thereon and all other sums due under this Guarantee."
"all the Principal's present or future indebtedness to North Shore under the Loan Agreement and all the Principal's other liabilities to North Shore whatsoever and wheresoever together with interest, commission, bank charges and any other costs, charges and expenses (on a full indemnity basis) charged or incurred by North Shore in enforcing this Guarantee and any other security held by North Shore from time to time"
"This Guarantee shall be governed by and construed in accordance with English law and shall be subject to the exclusive jurisdiction of the English courts."
Drawdown of the loan
"Please also can you ensure that Anstead opens up a separate sub account for it to receive monies from our client account and that, from that account, enough money should be retained to settle the interest payments under the loan agreement. We will also need confirmation that all interest payments are to be paid from this account and that the funds have not been inter mingled. By this process we will be able to track the source of funds.
When it comes to the capital repayment, full due diligence will need to be done on the source of the monies being repaid."
"I need to transfer the remaining sum on our client account (held on behalf of North Shore) to Anstead.
I would suggest that Anstead opens a sub account at CIM Banque in which this sum can be deposited and from that account the payment of interest can be made to the Itchen Trust. In addition, no other funds should be intermingled with the funds in the new account and subsequent payments should only be made from the account (and not to the account)."
"Can you make sure that the monies are placed in a separate Anstead account in order that the interest (payable under the loan) can be paid from this account. Please also ensure that no other funds are inter mingled with these funds.
In this regard, I will need a new account number today in order to make the transfer. Please confirm the details."
Mr Jacobson was subsequently sent a fax giving new details of a new account with C.I.M Banque (number 604.869), and on 7 August 2003 the $23 million was transferred to that account.
The freezing of some of the loan in Switzerland
"- a formal declaration as to the Beneficial Owners of the Company and their personal profile;
- documentation with respect of the origin of the funds that served to extend a loan to your Company."
Mr Fomichev having told C.I.M Banque that the required information could be obtained "from James Jacobson from Curtis and Co … or through Mr Houman", C.I.M Banque copied their letter to Curtis & Co on 15 August. In response, Mr Jacobson sent to Mr Fomichev on 5 September, with a view to their being forwarded to C.I.M Banque, a number of documents, including:
i) a letter from FG Management Limited (which at that stage held North Shore's shares) confirming that Mrs Berezovskaya was the beneficial owner of the shares; andii) a letter from Curtis & Co in which they stated that they could "advise that the funds transferred from Clydesdale Bank were ultimately derived from a transaction involving the sale of beneficial interests in shares of a Russian oil company".
"could provide … the following information if possible today:
- all the information about the beneficial owner of the funds (nationality, date of birth, occupation, etc.)
- origin of funds of the beneficial owner
- all the information about the diligence duty that have been done"
Curtis & Co replied the next day:
i) naming Mrs Berezovskaya as the beneficial owner of the funds, and giving details of her nationality, date of birth and passport number; andii) stating:
"The funds emanated from a distribution from a Gibraltar Trust of which Ms. Berezovskaya is the beneficiary. In turn, the settled funds in that Trust derived from the proceeds of a transaction relating to the sale of the beneficial interests in shares in an oil company.… The funds which were remitted by the Trust to our client originally came from Clydesdale Bank (UK Bank) and had been held there from June 2001. You will appreciate that Clydesdale Bank would have effected their own due diligence relating to the origin of the funds. In addition, we acted as the solicitors for the purchaser in this particular transaction and we have retained all of the original transactional documents at our offices. For reasons of confidentiality we cannot release the documents to you (or copies thereof) but are more than willing to let you view the documents at our offices."
"By way of assistance, we can advise that the loan sum ultimately derived from the proceeds of the sale of beneficial interests in the shares of a well known Russian oil company. In this regard, we acted for the purchaser of the shares (and the guarantor) in the oil transaction and can advise that the guarantor was a member of a Middle Eastern Royal Family. We also received confirmation from the guarantor that the ultimate proceeds of the funds emanated solely from his personal accounts. In addition, we can confirm that the funds received were paid by instalments (between June and August 2001) into a Gibraltan Trust's account held with the Clydesdale Bank (London) and were treated as settled funds into the Trust. The funds remained in the Trust's account until they were transferred to our client account (held at Clydesdale Bank) in April 2003. The funds were then remitted from our client account to CIM Banque in accordance with the terms of the Loan Agreement.
You will appreciate that both Clydesdale Bank and ourselves undertook the relevant due diligence on the source of the funds at the time of the oil transaction and both parties were satisfied with the information provided.
With regard to the Loan Agreement, we can advise that as it is governed by English law we consider that the beneficial ownership of the loan sum would have passed to Anstead Holdings upon the receipt of the relevant drawdown notice (from Anstead) and transfer request from this firm to the Clydesdale Bank being implemented. In effect, we can confirm that at the time of the Loan Agreement BB [i.e. Mr Berezovsky] was not a beneficiary of the Trust and that, further, EB [i.e. Mrs Berezovskaya] is one of a number of beneficiaries, as the Trust is discretionary in nature. We do however consider that BB's status has no relevance in relation to the legality of the loan agreement and ownership of the funds. As a matter of interest, BB was granted political asylum by the British authorities on 10th September 2003."
Mr Bionda appears to have relayed this letter to C.I.M Banque.
"[T]he 23rd September 2003 the Communications office (Money Laundering Reporting Office Switzerland) transmitted to the Prosecutor a communication under Article 9.
[F]rom this communication Anstead Holdings Inc. received on 7th August 2003 US$23 million from North Shore Ventures Limited into account no. 604 869 which was opened especially for this purpose at CIM Banque in Geneva.
[T]he [documentation] transmitted to confirm this transaction confirms that Ekaterina Berezovskaya is the beneficial owner of North Shore Ventures which is the company lending US$50 million to Anstead Holdings.
[T]he above mentioned person is the daughter of BB [i.e. Mr Berezovsky] who is under criminal investigation concerning a suspicion to participate in a criminal organisation to launder money under Articles 260 and 305 of the Criminal law.
[T]he beneficial owners of Anstead Holdings are Vassili Peganov and Ruslan Fomichev and Ruslan Fomichev is considered notably as a political and commercial partner of BB.
… BB is considered a politically exposed person subject to proceedings in many countries.
[F]rom the law firm of Curtis & Co. in London the funds transmitted derived from benefits obtained from sale of participations in a Russian oil company.
[A]t this stage it is not possible to determine exactly the origin of the funds transferred on 7th August 2003 in conformity with the Loan Agreement dated 14th March 2003.
[W]e can doubt that Ekaterina Berezovskaya is the real owner of the funds in question and therefore the criminal origins cannot be excluded.
[I]t is necessary to investigate more clearly the legitimacy of such transactions so an investigation will be conducted considering the amount that is in question."
"of the judicial consequences regarding a false declaration, such statements being made with the aim of misleading justice, and of the impediment to criminal proceedings…."
The record also discloses that Mr Fomichev gave evidence as follows:
i) Having referred to Mrs Berezovskaya, Mr Fomichev said:
"To my knowledge, she is the beneficiary of the trust. I was told this by the lawyer S. CURTIS when he negotiated the deal with myself and Mr. V. PEGANOV…. I do not know the name of the trust…."
ii) Asked whether he had any business or contractual links with Mr Berezovsky, Mr Fomichev said:
"I never had any business or contractual dealings with Mr. B. BEREZOVSKI…. Nevertheless, I must specify that when I was the Vice-President of the OBEDINENNY BANK, Mr. B. BEREZOVSKI was the President of the Supervision Committee appointed by the shareholders of the bank. I had a very good relationship with him. My contact with him was not hierarchical, due to our positions in the bank. Upon leaving the bank I remained in touch with him. We met from time to time for a drink. I still have a good relationship with him. We cross paths, we occasionally meet. We speak about business";
iii) In response to a further question about whether he had business dealings with Mr Berezovsky, Mr Fomichev said:
"I did not do any business with Mr. B. BEREZOVSKI. I never asked him for money, nor did I lend him any money.
I have no knowledge of the activities of Mr. B. BEREZOVSKI. I read the papers in order to understand what he is doing on a political level. Mr. B. BEREZOVSKI is not interested in my dealings, he is more interested in politics";
iv) Asked whether Mr Berezovsky had been the subject of investigations, Mr Fomichev said:
"I do not know, I know that he was granted political asylum in Great-Britain";
v) Asked about the origin of the $50 million lent to Anstead, Mr Fomichev said:
"This money came from the CLYDESDALE BANK in London. According to statements made by Mr. S. CURTIS, this money came from the sale of shares in a Russian petroleum company. It is Mr. S. CURTIS himself who told me so.
I do not know the circumstances surrounding the sale of the shares of a petroleum company. For me it was sufficient to know that this money was deposited in a European bank and that measures of due diligence had been taken. I initially thought that obtaining a loan from that family could draw a lot of attention, but I was reassured by all the verifications which had been confirmed to me by Mr. S. CURTIS, as well as the fact that substantial due diligence had been carried out in the context of this deal."
"Prosecutor requested that S. L. Curtis attend only on basis that client confidentiality waived. Neither Sheikh [i.e. Sheikh Sultan, mentioned in paragraph 54 above] or Trust agree to do so."
The notes proceeded to provide information about the origin of the funds and the basis of the loan to Anstead.
i) Confirmed that she was the sole beneficial owner of North Shore;ii) Explained that the funds lent to Anstead "derived from a distribution made to [her] from a Gibraltan Trust of which [she was] one of the named beneficiaries"; and
iii) Said:
"I can further advise that the funds which were derived from the Gibraltan Trust emanate from the personal funds of His Highness Sheikh Sultan Bin Khalifa Al Nahyan who is head of the Crown Prince Office in Abu Dhabi and are the proceeds of sale of the beneficial interests in shares in a Russian oil company. I am advised that the source of the funds were reviewed by the Gibraltan Trust's bankers (Clydesdale Bank plc based in London, England) and Curtis & Co who were solicitors acting for His Highness Sheikh Sultan Bin Khalifa Al Nahyan."Curtis & Co said that they were unable to provide other affidavits "at this stage". Mr Peclard responded that he was expecting more than the sole affidavit of Mrs Berezovskaya.
"… [B]efore taking a decision on your request to lift the attachment, I still need to receive an information I requested from a judicial authority through a Rogatory Commission; the requested authority indicated that the elements will be provided by the end of this week, at [which] point [in] time I will issue my decision."
"[O]n the 21st October 2003, Ruslan FOMICHEV made a deposition by way of providing information;
[H]e stated on several occasions that 'he never had any commercial or contractual business relations with BEREZOVSKI Boris' … , that he had no knowledge of the activities of the above named … and that he had only periodic contacts with said person … ;
[T]he documents obtained following a request for mutual judicial assistance of the Tribunal de Grande Instance at Marseilles revealed that said court had opened proceedings relating to the financing of very expensive property in the Cote d'Azur by the Societe d'Investissement France Immeubles (SIFI);
[T]he French investigation tends to show that Boris Abramovitch BEREZOVSKI is the true owner of one or more of said properties, SIFI being in reality a front company;
[T]he notes of Jean-Louis Bordes, director of SIFI, which were seized during the investigation carried out at the head office of the company and at his private residence, mention that Ruslan FOMICHEV is the treasurer of Boris Abramovitch BEREZOVSKI;
… Ruslan FOMICHEV appears to this date to be the only person appearing in both the Swiss and French proceedings, and who also has business links with Boris Abramovitch BEREZOVSKI;
[T]his new evidence reveals the deceitful contents of the statements made by Ruslan FOMICHEV during his testimony, and imposes the greatest caution as to his version of the facts;
[T]o this date, Ruslan FOMICHEV has given numerous explanations as to the use of the disputed sums, but has failed to provide any proof as to the legitimacy of the funds whilst taking care not to mention his business relations with Boris Abramovitch BEREZOVSKI;
[T]herefore it is possible that the sum of USD 50 million, transferred from NORTH VENTURES LTD, BVI, to ANSTEAD HOLDINGS INC. BVI, is not a simple loan as claimed by the requesting parties … ."
i) Notes made by Mr Bordes naming Mr Fomichev as Mr Berezovsky's "New treasurer"; and
ii) Correspondence dating from 2001, either sent to Mr Fomichev or referring to him, from which it appears that Mr Fomichev was involved with matters relating to SIFI and, more specifically, its funding.
"… both the statements of Ruslan Fomichev and the hand written document drafted by Stephen Curtis [doubtless, the manuscript notes referred to in paragraph 73 above] or the information provided by the latter at the time when he refused to comply with the summons to testify issued by the MPC [i.e. the Confederation Public Prosecution Office] … raise doubts as to the legitimate origins of the funds."
"in a request for mutual judicial assistance dated 27th September 2005 sent to the Confederation Public Prosecution Office, the Dutch judicial authorities explain that they are at this moment in time carrying out investigations relating to the financial affairs of Boris BEREZOVSKI. They consider that certain substantial funds are of a criminal origin, in particular the financial movements relating to the sale of SIBNEFT, a transaction…. In particular, they reveal that the CLYDESDALE BANK would have terminated its links with Boris BEREZOVSKI in 2001, and that the said banking institution, despite repeated requests from Stephen Curtis deceased, never wanted to certify in writing that the termination of the relationship with Boris BEREZOVSKI was not due to 'money laundering concerns' after the presentation by the above mentioned lawyer to Boris BEREZOVSKI of the SIBNEFT transaction…."
In November the Dutch authorities apparently stated that Mr Berezovsky was "not regarded as a suspect in the Dutch investigation … or in the request for assistance to the Swiss authorities". However, on 5 December the Federal Court dismissed Anstead's appeal.
"They wouldn't be completely straightforward in their response, because the understanding that I had was that they didn't want other banks relying on their due diligence and relying on their correspondence."
"[U]ntil the final release I was a bit anxious but, frankly, unless something really material in substance would come before the end of the year, I was quite confident that we would be able to put an end to this saga."
"I confirm that I wish to hear your client, Ruslan Fomichev, regarding the facts of the case before taking any decisions which the criminal proceedings and its developments may now justify."
"Referring to our recent conversations/correspondence, I hereby request, on behalf of and on account of ANSTEAD, immediate release, after fifty months of investigations and in the absence of any new cogent evidence of a nature to justify continuation of the sequestration of its accounts in CIM Bank, Geneva, immediate release from this measure.
In the context of release from sequestration, I confirm to you that our clients have no objection to a sum of the order of CHF 75,000 being withheld by the Confederation for its costs and emoluments."
Mr Lamon replied on 6 December with a request that Anstead pay CHF 73,310.45 in respect of his costs and expenses, which Mr Peclard immediately agreed. Mr Lamon then, on 10 December, formally lifted the sequestration order.
"[Anstead] had to agree (i) to abandon the idea of seeking damages against the Swiss Confederation because of the attachment of Anstead's account for more [than] 4 years and (ii) to reimburse the Swiss Confederation its [costs] and expenses amounting to CHF 73,310.40 in order to have Federal Prosecutor Lamon releasing their account. Their renunciation to act against the State is implicit from my exchange of correspondence with Federal Prosecutor Lamon while in recognising that my clients were indebted to the State up to CHF 73,310, I was admitting that they had no claim against it."
Mr Peclard said (and again I accept) that he and Mr Lamon had spoken explicitly about Anstead abandoning any claim against the State and that the agreement of which that was part had its genesis in the Bern meeting in the middle of the year. Mr Peclard further said:
"[T]he purpose was not to battle against the State; the purpose was to release the funds as quickly as possible."
For this reason, Mr Peclard said, no detailed consideration was given to any possible claim against the State.
Use of the frozen money
Repayments
Anstead: new shares, migration, conversion and dissolution
"Where a multiform foundation is dissolved pursuant to the provisions of subsection (1), a person shall be appointed … to supervise the dissolution of the multiform foundation (and such person is referred to in this Ordinance as the 'liquidator'), and who shall have all authority, powers and discretions to do all things that are necessary or desirable for the orderly supervision of the dissolution of the multiform foundation and the winding up of its affairs, and shall collect the assets and property of the multiform foundation and, after discharging or making adequate provision for the discharge of the liabilities or obligations of the multiform foundation, shall distribute the remaining assets and property of multiform foundation …."
"… in 2007, because the BVI corporate regulations were changing so that issued bearer shares would require to be cancelled and re-issued, to be held by licensed custodians, Trusban took the decision to cancel all the bearer shares that had been issued in respect of those BVI companies for which it was responsible and to issue replacement shares. These shares would thereafter be held in Trusban's own nominee trust company known as Aberdeen Foundation.
What happened was that we instructed our agent in BVI … to arrange for all our managed BVI companies to be reviewed and where those companies had issued bearer shares, the shares were to be cancelled and substitutes issued to be held in the name of Aberdeen Foundation …. I certainly did not check which companies were involved at the time. Furthermore, we did not inform the individual beneficiaries of the shares affected …."
Mr Houman said in cross-examination, "we took the decision to change the bearer shares into Aberdeen shares on a mass way and we didn't make any specific study about each company."
Assignment of Mrs Berezovskaya's interest in North Shore
Certificate
The present proceedings
The issues
Non-disclosure
The alleged non-disclosure
"North Shore failed to disclose to [them] that (in summary):
(a) Mr Berezovsky, and companies with which he was associated, were the subject of investigations by the Swiss authorities, including into embezzlement and other matters relating to the Russian company Aeroflot.
(b) The Swiss authorities had frozen bank accounts of Mr Berezovsky and the companies with which he was associated and had supplied a substantial number of documents to the Russian authorities.
(c) Consequently, there was a very substantial risk that the proposed Advances (associated as they were with Mr Berezovsky) might be frozen if they were paid to Switzerland."
The legal principles
"if [the employer] knew himself to be cheated by an agent, and concealing that fact, applied for security in such a manner, and such circumstances, as held out to others as one whom he considered as a trust-worthy person, and any one, acting under the impression that the agent was so considered by his employer, had become bound for him; it appeared to him [Lord Eldon] that he [the employer] could not conscientiously hold that security."
"I think the effect of Lord Eldon's judgment in that case is, that it was so little to be expected that a bank would continue in their service an agent who had already by breach of trust run into their debt, that the application for security amounted, as he says, to 'holding him forth to the sureties as a trustworthy person',"
and Blackburn J continued:
"I think that it must in every case depend upon the nature of the transaction, whether the fact not disclosed is such that it is impliedly represented not to exist...."
Earlier in his judgment, Blackburn J had said (at 503-504):
"But I think, both on authority and on principle, that, when the creditor describes to the proposed sureties the transaction proposed to be guaranteed (as in general a creditor does), that description amounts to a representation, or at least is evidence of a representation, that there is nothing in the transaction that might not naturally be expected to take place between the parties to a transaction such as that described."
"It seems to us an incorrect proposition, that the same rule prevails in the case of guarantees as in assurances upon ships or lives, in which it is a settled rule that all material circumstances known to the assured are to be disclosed, though there be no fraud in the concealment. This is peculiar to the nature of such contracts, in which in general the assured knows, and the underwriter does not know, the circumstances of the voyage or the state of health."
In Lee v Jones, Blackburn J commented (at 503) that "great practical mischief would ensue if the creditor were by law required to disclose everything material known to him, as in a case of insurance."
"If the defenders had facts within their knowledge which it was material the surety should be acquainted with, and which the defenders did not disclose, in my opinion the concealment of those facts, the undue concealment of those facts, discharges the surety; and whether they concealed those facts from one motive or another, I apprehend is wholly immaterial."
"Your Lordships must particularly notice what the nature of the contract is. It is suretyship upon a cash account. Now the question is, what, upon entering into such a contract, ought to be disclosed? And I will venture to say, if your Lordships were to adopt the principles laid down, and contended for by the appellant's counsel here, that you would entirely knock up those transactions in Scotland of giving security upon a cash account, because no bankers would rest satisfied that they had a security for the advance they made, if, as it is contended, it is essentially necessary that every thing should be disclosed by the creditor that is material for the surety to know. If such was the rule, it would be indispensably necessary for the bankers to whom the security is to be given, to state how the account has been kept: whether the debtor was in the habit of overdrawing; whether he was punctual in his dealings; whether he performed his promises in an honourable manner;– for all these things are extremely material for the surety to know. But unless questions be particularly put by the surety to gain this information, I hold that it is quite unnecessary for the creditor, to whom the suretyship is to be given, to make any such disclosure; and I should think that this might be considered as the criterion whether the disclosure ought to be made voluntarily, namely, whether there is anything that might not naturally be expected to take place between the parties who are concerned in the transaction, that is, whether there be a contract between the debtor and the creditor, to the effect that his position shall be different from that which the surety might naturally expect; and, if so, the surety is to see whether that is disclosed to him."
Lord Campbell continued:
"[The case] rests merely upon this, that at most there was a concealment by the bankers of the former debt, and of their expectation, that if this new surety was given, it was probable that that debt would be paid off. It rests merely upon non-disclosure or concealment of a probable expectation. And if you were to say that such a concealment would vitiate the suretyship given on that account your Lordships would utterly destroy that most beneficial mode of dealing with accounts in Scotland."
"A man may have the misfortune to be robbed by his servant in the course of his business: if he is, it is a mischance; but it is perfectly legitimate and usual for a man to carry on his business on borrowed money, including money borrowed from his bankers by way of overdraft, and the surety knows this, and becomes surety for the very purpose of enabling him to do so. There is nothing in such a case which the surety does not know as well as any other member of the community, and nothing therefore which needs to be disclosed to him. The surety may well complain 'I did not know that your servant was a thief'; but he cannot be heard to complain 'I did not know your customer had been overdrawing his account or what the nature of his business was.' ... No surety asked to guarantee a banking account is entitled to assume that the customer of the bank has not been in the habit of overdrawing; the proper presumption in most instances is that he has been doing so, and wishes to do so again."
"There is apparent, at the outset of the comparison [between Railton v Mathews and Hamilton v Watson], according to Story's useful discrimination (see Story's Equity Jurisprudence, § 210), the difference between intrinsic and extrinsic circumstances, the first forming the very ingredients of the contract, and the latter forming no part of it, but only accidentally connected with it, or rather bearing upon it, so as to enhance or diminish the price of the subject-matter, or to operate as a motive to make or decline the contract. In regard to such extrinsic circumstances, no class of case occurs to my mind in which our law regards mere non-disclosure as a ground for invalidating the contract, except in the case of insurance."
Kennedy LJ went on to express the view (at 86) that in both Railton v Mathews and the case before him "the honesty of the servant, which is the subject-matter of the suretyship bond, is plainly an intrinsic circumstance". On the other hand, said Kennedy LJ (at 87-88):
"in the case of the suretyship or guarantee of a financial account, the previous pecuniary dealings between the creditor and the person whose future liability the surety is invited to secure constitute only extrinsic circumstances. They may be material circumstances, such as might affect the judgment of the person who is asked to be surety. But, in the language of Sir Frederick Pollock (Principles of Contract, 8th ed., p.568), 'the creditor is not bound to volunteer information as to the general credit of the debtor or anything else which is not part of the transaction itself to which the suretyship relates: and on this point there is no difference between law and equity.' The bank or other creditor cannot reasonably be taken as affirming, by mere silence respecting earlier dealings, the financial ability of the person whom the proposed surety is asked to guarantee. I say 'cannot reasonably be taken,' because ... the probable reason for requiring a guarantee is dissatisfaction with the customer's credit. The law will rightly refuse to find in mere silence an implied representation to the surety, in circumstances where the surety cannot reasonably contend that he inferred, in the absence of any statement to the contrary, that a particular state of facts existed different from that which did in truth exist."
"Lord Campbell, it is true, takes as his example of what might not be naturally expected an unusual contract between creditor and debtor whose debt the surety guarantees, but I take it this is only an example of the general proposition that a creditor must reveal to the surety every fact which under the circumstances the surety would expect not to exist, for the omission to mention that such a fact does exist is an implied representation that it does not."
"I think that the non-disclosure by the plaintiffs of the fact that to their knowledge the clerk had been guilty of defalcations in their service before the bond was executed constituted a representation that he had not been guilty of such dishonesty."
Farwell LJ said (at 82), "it is a case of relief from a contract into which the surety was induced to enter by a misrepresentation made by the person taking the suretyship bond, either wilfully or through forgetfulness". Kennedy LJ said in a passage quoted above that the law would "refuse to find in mere silence an implied representation to the surety" in the circumstances he mentioned. (The emphasis has been added in each instance.)
"It is a well-established principle that, stated shortly, a creditor is obliged to disclose to a guarantor any unusual feature of the contract between the creditor and the debtor which makes it materially different in a potentially disadvantageous respect from what the guarantor might naturally expect. The precise ambit of this disclosure obligation remains unclear."
Lord Scott of Foscote, after citing the passage from the judgment of Vaughan Williams LJ quoted in paragraph 109 above, said (in paragraph 188):
"The general proposition expressed by Vaughan Williams LJ was somewhat extended by King CJ in Pooraka Holdings Pty Ltd v Participation Nominees Pty Ltd (1991) 58 SASR 184. The duty of disclosure, said King CJ, extends to any unusual feature surrounding the transaction between the creditor and the surety (a) of which the creditor is or ought to be aware, (b) of which the surety is unaware, and (c) which the creditor appreciates, or in the circumstances ought to appreciate, might be unknown to the surety and might affect the surety's decision to become a surety. This statement of the extent of the disclosure obligation may be too wide. But at least, in my opinion, the obligation should extend to unusual features of the contractual relationship between the creditor and the principal debtor, or between the creditor and other creditors of the principal debtor, that would or might affect the rights of the surety...."
"346 In my opinion, the ranking agreement between the company, the bank and SWIFT falls within the general proposition expressed by Vaughan Williams LJ in London General Omnibus Co Ltd v Holloway.... A surety who pays off the creditor is entitled to be subrogated to the rights of the creditor in respect of the debt in question. And if the creditor, in order to discharge the debt, has recourse to security provided by the surety, the same applies. So, in the present case, if Mrs Bennett had paid the bank the £150,000, or if the bank had obtained payment by realising its security over 15 Elthiron Road, Mrs Bennett would have been entitled to the benefit of the Bank's rights against the company in respect of the £150,000. These rights would have included the bank's rights under its fixed and floating charges. But those rights were subject to the ranking agreement.
347 Moreover the ranking agreement reduced the amount of the company's assets that would be available for the payment of the company's debts to the bank and correspondingly increased the likelihood that the bank would make a call on ... Mrs Bennett ... under the guarantee and would enforce its security over 15 Elthiron Road. The ranking agreement did affect the rights of Mrs Bennett as surety.
348 In my opinion, the bank ought to have disclosed to Mrs Bennett, or to the solicitor acting for her, the existence of the ranking agreement.
349 The deputy judge thought that the facts regarding the valuation of the factory premises should also have been disclosed by the bank. Here, I do not agree. It is, I think, up to an intending surety to satisfy himself about the value of the principal debtor's assets or the principal debtor's credit worthiness.
350 The bank's obligation to disclose the existence of the ranking agreement arose, in my opinion, under the general law applicable to suretyship contracts. Mr Jarvis, counsel for the bank, accepted that if the bank had an obligation to disclose the ranking agreement and if Mrs Bennett [was] ... unaware of it, Mrs Bennett was entitled to have the legal charge set aside."
"[40] There is, moreover, an obligation on a creditor to disclose to an intending surety, per Lord Campbell in Hamilton v Watson ... –
". . . anything that might not naturally be expected to take place between the parties who are concerned in the transaction, that is, whether there be a contract between the debtor and the creditor, to the effect that his position shall be different from that which the surety might naturally expect"
Vaughan Williams LJ in London General Omnibus Co Ltd v Holloway ... cited the above passage from Lord Campbell's judgment in Hamilton v Watson and continued (at 79):
"Lord Campbell, it is true, takes as his example of what might not be naturally expected an unusual contract between creditor and debtor whose debt the surety guarantees, but I take it this is only an example of the general proposition that a creditor must reveal to the surety every fact which under the circumstances the surety would expect not to exist, for the omission to mention that such a fact does exist is an implied representation that it does not."
[41] It appears to their Lordships that these dicta are relevant to the question whether the court should exercise its power to validate the securities which have become unenforceable by virtue of s 8(1). The fact that Mr Salter's liability [Mr Salter being the principal debtor] in respect of the $160,000 part of the $250,000 related to a sum he had not been lent and from which he had had and would have no benefit, a sum owing to Cornerstone [i.e. the moneylender] by a third party whose default would trigger the liability of the ladies under their guarantee and mortgage, ought to have been made known to them. Mrs Gallimore's [Mrs Gallimore being a guarantor] unchallenged evidence at trial was inconsistent with any knowledge by her of that fact. It is impossible to know whether, if the fact referred to had been known to her and her co-guarantors and mortgagors, they would have been willing to give the security that they did."
"I have always considered it to be a rule of equity, that where a party relies on his ignorance of facts, he must shew, not only that he had not the information, but that he could not with due diligence obtain it. Here he obtained the information with perfect ease when he applied for it.
Believing that he did not know it until the beginning of 1850, I must still hold that he is in the same situation in equity as if he had had the information in 1848, because he was then referred to persons who were willing to give it, and did give it when applied for."
The other case was the New Zealand case of Shivas v Bank of New Zealand [1990] 2 NZLR 327, where Tipping J said the following (at 364):
"It must not be overlooked in the present case that one of the plaintiffs was not only an intending surety but also the accountant of the company whose bank account was to be guaranteed. To suggest in those circumstances that the bank had a wider duty of disclosure is an unattractive proposition because the bank would have had every reason to expect that Mr Falloon [one of the plaintiffs] in his capacity as accountant of the company was fully familiar with the company's financial position or could make himself familiar if he wished. The bank was also entitled in my view to take the view that Mrs Shivas [the other plaintiff] as the co-trustee could, if she had wished, have made an appropriate inquiry of Mr Falloon as to the company's position and as to the risks inherent in the transaction of guarantee into which she was being requested to enter.
What I am saying is that the bank's duty of disclosure must be assessed against what the bank might reasonably have expected the intending guarantors to know already or to be able to ascertain without difficulty should they have been minded to do so."
"In the light of the primary judge's finding … that the appellant and Mr Freeburn [i.e. the surety with no assets] were negotiating as co-venturers and that Mr Freeburn was authorized to negotiate on behalf of the two of them, Obelon [i.e. the creditor] was entitled to assume that the appellant was aware of Freeburn's financial position and that, being aware of it, she was prepared to enter into the guarantee. And, quite apart from the finding made by the primary judge, there is the circumstance that, generally speaking, a co-surety as well as the creditor may reasonably be expected to make his or her own inquiries about the financial worth or standing of another co-surety and to form an opinion on the basis of those inquiries. In this situation information possessed by the creditor concerning the financial worth or standing of one co-surety could not ordinarily be regarded as information about an unusual and unexpected feature of the transaction which would require disclosure by the creditor to the other co-surety."
"The question for judge or jury to put to himself or themselves seems to be, Would the surety have entered into this contract of suretyship if the non-disclosed fact had been disclosed to him?"
Accordingly, a guarantor who in fact knows something cannot escape his guarantee merely because the creditor, ignorant of the guarantor's knowledge, ought to have told him of it.
i) Notwithstanding that the matters of whose non-disclosure Mr Fomichev and Mr Peganov complain are not features of the Loan Agreement (i.e. the contract between creditor and principal debtor), they are matters that North Shore could, in principle, have been obliged to disclose to Mr Fomichev and Mr Peganov. Were it the case, say, that Mr Fomichev and Mr Peganov had been wholly ignorant of the risks referred to, then (subject to the implications of clauses 5.4 and 5.5 of the Guarantee, as to which see below) it would, in my judgment, have been incumbent on North Shore to make disclosure. The "very substantial risk that the Proposed Advances … might be frozen if they were paid to Switzerland", especially in circumstances where drawdowns were prima facie to be deposited with a Swiss bank, would, as it seems to me, have represented an unusual and highly relevant feature of a kind that a creditor ought to have disclosed to prospective guarantors (subject to clauses 5.4 and 5.5 of the Guarantee);ii) North Shore will nevertheless have had no duty to disclose the matters in respect of which complaint is made (a) if and to the extent that Mr Fomichev and Mr Peganov could each reasonably be expected to know of the matters or of the relevant risks in general terms and (b) any other matters were not material; and
iii) Mr Fomichev and Mr Peganov would not in any event be entitled to avoid the Guarantee unless a non-disclosure was in fact significant to them (so that disclosure of the relevant information would have made a difference to them).
Investigations and proceedings in Russia and Switzerland
"Is it conflict of interest or not? From the classical point of view, yes. From the point of view what happened that time in Russia, could be no."
"When Mr Primakov took chair of prime minister of Russia [in 1998], I was absolutely opposite of that, and Primakov have direct order to prosecutor to open case against of me …. Then Primakov was fired and the pressure to me become less, and their case was closed, dropped. Then Putin took power and I broke relations with him, and Putin gave order again to general prosecutor to open the case."
Press coverage
"The Supreme Court of Switzerland has refused Boris Berezovsky's request to unfreeze his accounts in Swiss banks. As a representative of the Swiss Court said, 'Berezovsky's request, submitted through his lawyers, was considered by the Court and has been left unsatisfied.'
To remind you, Berezovsky's accounts were frozen after Switzerland opened a large-scale investigation into cases of corruption. The Swiss Prosecution Service is currently conducting an investigation into the fact of large sums from 'Aeroflot' passing through the Companies Forus and Andava SA in Lausanne.
On the 26th June the Russian investigator Nikolai Volkov is flying to Switzerland where he will be shown over 800 documents concerning the 'Aeroflot Case'. RBK announces that he will be permitted to take about 200 documents to Moscow."
"THE RUSSIAN businessman Boris Berezovsky has been put on the country's most wanted list accused of corruption and money laundering.
The general prosecutor's office has charged Mr Berezovsky in absentia, according to reports in the Russian press at the weekend….
Mr Berezovsky is accused of embezzling millions of pounds from Russia's national airline, Aeroflot, during 1990."
"Yesterday proceedings began in the 'Aeroflot' case and yesterday the French newspaper 'Le Monde' announced that the baton of the Russian investigators who discovered the laundering of 'Aeroflot''s money through the firms Andava and Forus has been taken up by the Prosecution Service of Marseilles which is mainly interested in what role Boris Berezovsky played in the money laundering….
The beginning of the Court proceedings [in Moscow] coincided surprisingly with an article in the newspaper Le Monde under the sensational sub-heading 'After Switzerland and Russia, France is starting its own investigation into the case of the misappropriation of the funds of the Russian airline 'Aeroflot'.'"
In the same issue, Kommersant reported on an interview with Mr Berezovsky, quoting Mr Berezovsky as saying (in English translation):
"In the French newspaper there is a gross distortion of what the situation is really like in reality. Beginning from its first paragraph, in which it says that apparently at some time Switzerland investigated the 'case of the misappropriation of the Russian airline 'Aeroflot''s funds'. Switzerland never carried out any investigation – neither into 'Aeroflot' nor into Andava and Forus. An investigation is being conducted in one country – Russia – and it is purely political…."
"Last month, after years of investigation at home, Berezovsky was arrested by London police at the request of Russian prosecutors and released on £100,000 bail. A London court is beginning proceedings on bringing Berezovsky back to face trial in a Moscow court."
Clydesdale Bank
Knowledge of Mr Fomichev and Mr Peganov
"I know for certain that Mr Fomichev was well aware from about 1999 of the investigations in Switzerland and the fact that bank accounts there were frozen. Mr Fomichev was very closely involved in assisting me in my financial dealings. He was the person who operated my finances at the time. I described him in my last statement as my 'right hand man'. It was of critical importance that he knew all about the investigations against me and whether it was safe to transfer money to different accounts in different jurisdictions. This was a constant source of discussion for me and the small group of trusted individuals I dealt with which included, at the time, Mr Fomichev."
"... I know that Fomichev was deeply involved, much better than me, in everything what happened in Switzerland, because everything what happened in Switzerland connect to money, to business, and Fomichev knew well that I don't know almost anything about that and it's a reason why he took care of that."
"In 1999, following the freezing of my bank accounts in Switzerland, I recall meeting Ruslan Fomichev at my apartment on Sretensky Boulevard in Moscow. I discussed with him arrangements for moving bank accounts in Switzerland which were in the names of two individuals who were close to me and who remain in Russia.... Ruslan offered his help with the process of moving accounts from Switzerland....
Again I specifically recall another meeting with Ruslan Fomichev at an apartment on Bagrationovsky Street, Moscow, towards the end of 2000. I told Ruslan that I thought I would definitely be going to prison and that I wanted to ensure the financial security of two individuals...."
"At least when I was listening to the presentation of Mr Samuelson, the reasoning was that this structure that he proposed would give defence against any attacks and so on ... – obviously it was this concern that led to this presentation"
"Ruslan Fomichev explained that after the problems with Clydesdale, he had asked Christopher Samuelson to make arrangements to accept payments."
"Aside from his position at [Consolidated] Bank [Mr] Fomichev and I were part of the group of people who advised and assisted [Mr Berezovsky] in relation to his wider business ventures. In this capacity [Mr Fomichev] was also party to discussions which took place within this group of people in respect of the Aeroflot investigations and the actions of the Swiss authorities."
When asked in cross-examination what basis there was for saying that Mr Fomichev should have assumed that problems in Switzerland were continuing in 2003, Mr Jenni said:
"Because we were informing him, I was informing him about the developments in Switzerland. I was talking with him about our appeals, recourses that have been rejected. I have been informed him that we ... had enquiries, that we had testimonies to give and so on. All these things have been always discussed. So he knew that in Switzerland things were not quiet, there were things happening."
"In 1999 I had a number of meetings with Ruslan Fomichev, the Chairman of the Executive Board of [Consolidated] Bank, in order to discuss the difficulties which Aeroflot faced after the investigation started. The situation around Aeroflot and its Swiss partners was very sensitive for [Consolidated] Bank as the aftermath of the 1999 actions of Russian and Swiss authorities caused difficulties for the partner companies and people with whom we worked close for a number of years. Of course, we were all in contact and shared the news of the course of events and had the information about the freezing of the Andava's, Forus's, and other, bank accounts in Switzerland by the Swiss authorities. Ruslan Fomichev being on the Board of Directors of [Consolidated] Bank, was more informed than myself of the whole situation around the mentioned companies."
However, as I have already said (paragraph 33), I do not think I can place significant weight on Ms Krokhina's evidence when there has been no opportunity to cross-examine her.
"[Mr Fomichev] was operating [Mr Berezovsky's] finances; he was setting up bank accounts for him with banks. He was instructing lawyers; he was paying the legal bills. He knew everything that was going on."
Elsewhere, she said:
"[Mr Fomichev] was generally involved because he was managing the finances here – he was involved in setting up ... offshore structures, where the monies were flowing, big amounts of money. He was involved with setting up accounts with Clydesdale Bank in the Sibneft transaction. He was involved on everyday basis."
Even after 2003, Mrs Nosova said, Mr Fomichev "was still working for Mr Berezovsky and [Mr Patarkatsishvili] but on investment projects".
"[Mr Fomichev] was also quite an inquisitive fellow, he was asking everybody about it."
"... [I]t was at the request of Ruslan Fomichev that the loan was not given directly by Boris [Berezovsky] but through his daughter Katya. It was at the request of Mr Fomichev that the loan was made through Katya, because Mr Fomichev wanted to distance Boris from this loan. It shows that he knew the risks and he took the risk."
"Why he send the money to Switzerland? I couldn't understand that. Because he was completely aware of the investigations. He knew there was a risk, and he still took this risk and sent the money there.... Mr Fomichev made a mistake in judgment apparently. He took the risk, he made a mistake."
Her evidence in this respect is consistent with her remark, in an email to Mr Fomichev of 1 November 2004, that she "never understood how [he] could send [the money] there [i.e. to Switzerland]".
"I spoke to Ruslan Fomichev after the Anstead account had been frozen and told him that he should have considered more carefully the risk of having the funds associated with Boris paid to an account in Switzerland. Ruslan's response was that it was his money and Anstead was his business and had nothing to do with Boris. He thought, wrongly as it turned out, that the connection with Boris was remote enough that there was no risk of the funds being frozen."
"Although I am informed that the destination of the loan payments in Switzerland was in one of the schedules to the Loan Agreement, I did not know at the time of the Loan Agreement that Anstead had asked for the monies to be paid there. When I found out that the monies had been transferred to Switzerland and had been frozen I remember being amazed that Mr Fomichev and Mr Peganov had taken this risk. I regarded them as completely to blame for what had happened. I remember saying to Mr Fomichev words to the effect: 'Are you crazy paying the money into Switzerland?'"
During his oral evidence, Mr Berezovsky said:
i) "… Ruslan asked me to take in consideration that money were frozen and I didn't accept that, because it's fault not mine, it was fault of Ruslan. He gave address where to send money and I even … was not informed about that";ii) "… I never accept not to pay interest for frozen money, because it was not my fault".
"[Mr Fomichev] was a trustee of the Itchen Trust, and the Itchen Trust was asked to move their accounts, and it all fell under the same umbrella."
"I have only recently learned that [Mr Berezovsky] had been investigated by the Swiss as far back as 1999 and I understand now that the Swiss Courts had previously seized money held by or on behalf of [Mr Berezovsky]."
Mr Fomichev expanded on the point slightly in a further witness statement of 8 February 2010:
"I was aware of the Aeroflot allegations and the fact that Mr Berezovsky had been investigated by the Russian authorities, but I had no idea of the Swiss involvement."
"Having reviewed the press materials which have been produced in these proceedings, I believe I was aware in very general terms in 1999 that the Swiss authorities had provided assistance to the Russian investigation and had frozen accounts of the Andava and Forus groups of companies in Switzerland in relation of the Aeroflot case. I have always considered this assistance by the Swiss authorities at the Russian authorities' request to be part of the Russian investigations, as opposed to a separate criminal investigation instigated by the Swiss authorities themselves ….
By the time of the loan in 2003, I had assumed that the Swiss assistance had long since ended. The assistance was given four years before the loan and I was aware that the Russian investigation against Mr Berezovsky was dropped in 2000 …."
"Maybe business was like an instrument, but I think it was only politics and I still think that it was only politics."
He said:
"Mr Berezovsky is so bright a person that his career going up and down so many times, it was very difficult to understand in a particular time where he is now, he is under the ground or in the space, so it was very difficult to identify what's going on with him. Even now it's still the same."
Conclusions in relation to Mr Fomichev's and Mr Peganov's knowledge
i) As a general matter, I prefer the evidence given by North Shore's witnesses to that given by Mr Fomichev;ii) Mr Fomichev was particularly closely involved with Mr Berezovsky's business and financial affairs up to about September 2002, when Mrs Nosova moved to London. His role then diminished, but he worked with Mrs Nosova into 2003, and he was still very much abreast of Mr Berezovsky's business and financial affairs when the Loan Agreement was concluded;
iii) The defence of non-disclosure was not raised until late last year. At that stage, and afterwards, Mr Fomichev maintained that he knew of investigations in Russia but not of any in Switzerland or that the Swiss Courts had seized money associated with Mr Berezovsky. In March of this year, he accepted that he had, after all, known that the Swiss authorities had assisted with the Russian investigation, but he claimed that he had assumed that the Swiss assistance had come to an end and that he was not aware of the separate investigation instituted in Switzerland. The truth, in my judgment, is that Mr Fomichev will have known of both the Swiss assistance with the Russian investigations and of the investigation initiated in Switzerland in 2002. I also consider that Mr Fomichev knew that Swiss accounts linked to Mr Berezovsky remained frozen;
iv) On balance, I think that Mr Berezovsky and (especially) Mrs Nosova are probably correct that Mr Fomichev wanted the loan to be made through Mrs Berezovskya because he appreciated that Mr Berezovsky was (in Mr Berezovsky's phrase) a "politically exposed person" and thought it advisable to distance him from the transaction;
v) As regards the Russian attempts to extradite Mr Berezovsky in April 2003, the chances are that Mr Fomichev knew that they were in prospect by the time he entered into the Guarantee. In any event, the extradition proceedings did not alter the risks appreciably. Confirmation of that is to be found in subsequent events. There can be no doubt that Mr Fomichev was aware of the extradition proceedings by April 2003 and, hence, well before the $23 million drawn down. The $23 million was nonetheless paid to C.I.M Banque in Switzerland;
vi) A similar point can be made as regards the searches that took place in Switzerland in April 2003. Mr Fomichev will have known of the searches when they happened (aside from anything else, they were reported in the press), but they did not deter him from having the loan moneys paid to Switzerland;
vii) The reality must be, as Mrs Nosova in particular said, that Mr Fomichev miscalculated. He must have reckoned, as Mr Jenni noted (paragraph 165), that the connection with Mr Berezovsky was sufficiently remote for there to be no risk of the money being frozen. In the event, that assessment proved wrong;
viii) Mr Fomichev knew, and could reasonably be expected to know, about the substance of the Swiss investigations. In particular, he knew, and could reasonably be expected to know, that the Swiss authorities had assisted with the Russian investigation, that they had opened an investigation of their own and that accounts associated with Mr Berezovsky had been, and continued to be, frozen. It is doubtless the case that Mr Fomichev's knowledge will have been less detailed than, say, Mr Jenni's, but he knew enough to be able to evaluate the risks, and he may well have had a better grasp of the detail than Mr Berezovsky did. The details of which Mr Fomichev may have been unaware were not material and would not have made a difference to him;
ix) Mr Peganov probably knew relatively little about events in Switzerland. It is true that Mr Peganov would sometimes read about Mr Berezovsky in the press and that some of the press coverage referred to Switzerland, but I cannot infer from that that Mr Peganov had any real understanding of what was happening in Switzerland;
x) However, Mr Peganov could reasonably be expected to have been told of the position in Switzerland by Mr Fomichev, the friend and co-venturer whom he had left to pursue the negotiations relating to the Loan Agreement and Guarantee (see further in this respect paragraphs 203, 228 and 231 below);
xi) Although the Loan Agreement referred (in the draft "Notice of Drawdown" set out in a schedule) to payment being made to a Swiss account, the likelihood is that Mr Berezovsky was not conscious that the money was being paid there. I do not accept Mr Fomichev's evidence that he specifically recalled discussing with Mr Berezovsky the fact that the loan money was to be sent to Switzerland. For his part, Mr Peganov spoke in a witness statement about "the intention that the money would be used from Switzerland" being discussed when he met Mr Berezovsky, but he (Mr Peganov) rather backed away from the suggestion during cross-examination.
Clauses 5.4 and 5.5 of the Guarantee
"The liability of the Guarantors shall not be affected nor shall this Guarantee be discharged or diminished by reason of:
…
5.4 the doing or the omitting to do anything on the part of North Shore that but for this provision might operate to exonerate or discharge the Guarantors from any of their obligations under this Guarantee;
5.5 and this Guarantee shall not be discharged or affected by anything that would not have discharged or affected the Guarantors liability if the Guarantors had been a principal debtor to North Shore instead of a guarantor."
i) As Gross J observed in Frans Maas (UK) Ltd v Samsung Electronics (UK) Ltd [2005] 2 All ER (Comm) 783 (at paragraph 130), "words, even in exclusion clauses, mean what they say and the parties will be held to the bargain into which they have entered";ii) If their words are given their natural and ordinary meaning, clauses 5.4 and 5.5 are both wide enough to cover pre-contractual non-disclosure. There is nothing in the language of the clauses to indicate that they are concerned only with events post-dating the conclusion of the Guarantee;
iii) The law "does not permit a contracting party to exclude liability for his own fraud in inducing the making of the contract" (per Lord Bingham in HIH Casualty and General Insurance Ltd v Chase Manhattan Bank [2003] 1 All ER (Comm) 349, at paragraph 16); fraud, as is said, "unravels all". It doubtless follows that clauses 5.4 and 5.5 do not extend to fraudulent non-disclosure. However, fraud is not alleged in the present case;
iv) It is by no means inherently improbable that the parties to the Guarantee should have intended to exclude liability for (non-fraudulent) non-disclosure by North Shore. Anstead was a vehicle for Mr Fomichev and Mr Peganov. Although not directors, it was in practice they who managed its affairs, and it was they who stood to benefit from its activities. In the circumstances, it would not be surprising if the parties to the Guarantee intended Mr Fomichev and Mr Peganov to be in no better position than Anstead as regards obligations of disclosure;
v) That the clauses may extend to cases other than pre-contractual non-disclosure is not important. The fact that a clause may cover one situation does not preclude it from covering another as well;
vi) In short, clauses 5.4 and 5.5 would reasonably be understood to extend to the non-disclosure alleged by Mr Fomichev and Mr Peganov and they are therefore to be so construed;
vii) Even, therefore, if I had not arrived at the conclusions set out in paragraphs 175 and 176 above, I would have held that clauses 5.4 and 5.5 prevented Mr Fomichev and Mr Peganov from avoiding the Guarantee for non-disclosure.
Conclusion in relation to the alleged non-disclosure
Other issues
The effect of the certificate
"A certificate signed by North Shore of the amount for the time being of the Indebtedness and/or the amounts due to North Shore shall be conclusive evidence for all purposes against the Guarantors unless manifestly incorrect."
"A certificate in writing signed by a duly authorised officer or officers of the Lender stating the amount at any particular time due and payable by the Guarantor under this Guarantee shall, save for manifest error, be conclusive and binding on the Guarantor for the purposes hereof."
It was held that summary judgment had rightly been given against the Defendants, Mr and Mrs Van Der Merwe, for money which had been certified as due pursuant to clause 4.2. Waller LJ, with whom the other members of the Court agreed, explained as follows:
"[30] The question at the end of the day is what on the true language of these deeds of guarantee did the Van Der Merwes agree. I accept there is a presumption against these being demand bonds or guarantees; I also accept that the documents must be looked at as a whole. I accept that cl 3 which would only be necessary if the deeds were or might be undertaking a secondary liability, points in favour of the presumption and that there are other terms which appear in what I would call normal guarantees given to banks in relation to a customer's indebtedness. It will thus only be if clear language has been used in the operative clauses that the presumption will be rebutted.
[31] I turn thus to the operative language of the deeds of guarantee. By condition 2.1 the guarantor (Mr or Mrs Van Der Merwe) agreed 'as principal obligor … not merely as surety' that 'if … the Guaranteed Moneys are not paid in full on their due date … it [the guarantor] will immediately upon demand unconditionally pay to the Lender (IIG) the Guaranteed Moneys which have not been so paid'. The guaranteed moneys are defined as 'all moneys and liabilities … which are now or may at any time hereafter be due, owing, payable, or expressed to be due, owing or payable, to the Lender from or by the Borrower' (my emphasis). The obligation to pay moneys 'expressed to be due' 'upon demand' 'unconditionally' as 'principal obligor' 'not merely as surety' would indicate that the Van Der Merwes were taking on something more than a secondary obligation.
[32] Clause 4.2 then provides that '[a] certificate in writing signed by a duly authorised officer … stating the amount at any particular time due and payable by the Guarantor … shall, save for manifest error, be conclusive and binding on the Guarantor for the purposes hereof'. I agree with the judge that that clause puts the matter beyond doubt. Any presumption has by the language used been clearly rebutted. Apart from manifest error, the Van Der Merwes have bound themselves to pay on demand as primary obligor the amount stated in a certificate pursuant to cl 4.2."
"[26] I am not persuaded that the company [i.e. the principal] would not be bound to indemnify the Van Der Merwes. It seems to me that where a loan agreement requires the giving of guarantees whether on demand guarantees or only secondary liability guarantees of that loan, a call and payment of what is found to be due from the guarantors will lead almost certainly to a right of indemnity from the company if the guarantee has to be paid.
[27] Furthermore I am inclined to the view that even if there is no express contract negotiated between the Van Der Merwes and the company it is strongly arguable that the Van Der Merwes will have a remedy against the company and in my view if the company refused to seek return of the overpayment, the guarantors would have a right of subrogation by which they could force IIG [i.e. the creditor] to pay back sums found to have been overpaid.
[28] But it seems to me that strictly what precise mechanism there might be for repayment is not the most relevant question when considering what the guarantees themselves require. If of course they do not require payment of the certified sum, then no difficulty arises. Leave to defend must be given so that the defences that the company could raise could be considered at a trial. If the guarantees by their clear language do require payment, then it was for the Van Der Merwes to protect themselves against that eventuality."
"[Counsel for Mr and Mrs Van Der Merwe] fastened on the phrase in cl 4.2 'save in the case of manifest error'. A 'manifest error' is one that is obvious or easily demonstrable without extensive investigation. [Counsel for Mr and Mrs Van Der Merwe] referred to the decision of Thomas J in Invensys plc v Automotive Sealing Systems Ltd [2002] 1 All ER (Comm) 222. That was a case in which a certificate made by an expert was to be conclusive save in the case of manifest error. Thomas J held that the expert's reasons could be examined in order to determine whether he had made a manifest error. But since the contract in that case provided for the expert to give reasons, Thomas J was undoubtedly right to say that the parties must have contemplated that those reasons could be examined to see whether any manifest error had been made. By contrast, in the present case the certificate was not required to contain any reasons. I did not derive any assistance from the Invensys case."
Waller LJ expressed the view (in paragraph 34) that Lewison J's conclusion on manifest error was clearly right.
"Upon advice received which we believe to be correct, we hereby advise that the sum outstanding and due and payable by Anstead Holdings Inc to Northshore Ventures Limited is US$34,894,207.73."
"If Mr Fomichev and Mr Peganov are right that interest is not payable on the Frozen Loan Monies and/or that interest should be calculated on the basis of annual compounding (with a two week grace period) and without a default rate of 20% the certificate is manifestly incorrect."
Mr Swainston further maintained that it could not be suggested that the guarantors were not entitled to ask the Court to determine the true terms of the Loan Agreement before considering whether the amount stated in the certificate was manifestly incorrect.
Conclusions on the Guarantee
Issues relating to the Loan Agreement
i) The Loan Agreement should be rectified by the deletion of clause 4.2;ii) Clause 4.2 of the Loan Agreement is void as a penalty;
iii) The Loan Agreement contained implied terms as to the availability for use of money advanced under it;
iv) The Loan Agreement contained an implied term as to the availability of a North Shore account into which payment could be made;
v) The Loan Agreement was varied in November 2004 and February 2006;
vi) The Loan Agreement was varied in late 2007 or, alternatively, an estoppel arose at this stage;
vii) The Loan Agreement was discharged wholly or in part by frustration.
I shall take these points in turn.
Rectification
Introduction
The pleaded case
"It was agreed between, and the continuing common intention of, North Shore (acting by Mr Berezovsky) and Anstead (acting by Mr Fomichev) that the interest rate payable on the Advances would be simple interest at 15% per annum. It was not intended or agreed that interest would be compounded or that there would be a default rate of interest. Consequently, the Loan Agreement fails to record the true agreement between North Shore and Anstead and falls to be rectified by the deletion of clause 4.2."
Law
"The party seeking rectification must show that: (1) the parties had a common continuing intention, whether or not amounting to an agreement, in respect of a particular matter in the instrument to be rectified; (2) there was an outward expression of accord; (3) the intention continued at the time of the execution of the instrument sought to be rectified; (4) by mistake, the instrument did not reflect that common intention."
Facts
"I do not remember the detail of [Mr Fomichev's] negotiations with [Mr Berezovsky], and it is quite possible that I was not given full details, because, in line with our general practice, I would have left [Mr Fomichev] to deal with the matter."
"I remember well 50 million, perfect; 15 per cent compound rate, definitely; and we discussed, I don't remember, 20/25 per cent, I don't remember well, what happened if Ruslan will not be in time. This is exactly my understanding I present to Curtis."
Elsewhere, he remarked, "I don't remember really I discuss with Ruslan or I discuss that with lawyers".
"Further to the meeting with BB [i.e. Mr Berezovsky] on Wednesday afternoon, I attach a list of the commercial terms which I believe to have been agreed in relation to the loan.
Terms
1) Loan sum: of $50 million;
2) Period: 1 year
3) Interest on Loan payable at 15% per annum (but to be paid monthly);
4) Provision for RF [i.e. Mr Fomichev] to draw down in instalments for the first month but with an obligation to draw down the full amount by 1st March – interest to be charged pro rata on the sums drawn down in the first month.
Security
1) Personal guarantee to be given by Ruslan Fomichev;
2) Personal guarantee to be given by Vasily Peganov;
3) Pledge of all the shares held by Ruslan Fomichev and Vasily Peganov in Anstead Holdings;
4) Pledge of all the shares over any other relevant trading companies involved;
5) Fixed and floating charge over assets of Anstead;
6) Fixed and floating charge over assets of relevant trading companies;
7) Appointee of BB to be appointed to the Board of Directors of Anstead;
8) Appointee of BB to be appointed to the Board of Directors of the relevant trading companies;
9) BB to have an appointee as a signatory on all the accounts including Anstead Holdings and the trading companies and all accounts to be signed jointly.
I would be grateful if you could both confirm the above terms as it will then make it easier to draft the appropriate agreements….
There seems to be quite a lot of documentation work to do in relation to bringing this matter to a conclusion but, subject to receiving the above, I believe that we can put this together relatively quickly…."
In his evidence, Mr Jacobson said that this email gave the "main terms". He also said that he was not aware at the time of any other term regarding the payment of interest and, in particular, of the provisions for default interest ultimately included in the Loan Agreement.
"And just to let You know that Natalia [Nosova] is not [involved] in the process of this transaction".
"Not realistic at all. We can provide all the information about money and account transactions to the appointee of BB but we can not lock ourself with the obligation to repay the loan and interest and at the same time not to be able to conduct any business if appointee blocks the transaction. Or if Appointee blocks the transaction than we don't pay any interest and all the consiquences of than blocking relays to BB."
"I refer to the proposed Loan arrangement in the sum of $50 million to Anstead Holdings Inc. which we understand is to be sourced from a company or entity in which Mr Berezovskiy has an interest or connection. As you are an established client of this firm, there is a potential conflict of interest arising and, as we have advised, we are not able to act on your behalf in relation to this matter. In this regard and as you are aware, we are instructed by Mr Berezovskiy who is aware of the potential conflict.
In view of the above, I have an obligation to recommend that you seek separate independent legal advice in relation to the Loan (including all of the Loan documents / security documents relating thereto)…."
Mr Jacobson proceeded to ask that Mr Fomichev countersign the letter to acknowledge its contents, which Mr Fomichev did.
"Alan Jones, who has assisted in drafting the Loan Agreement has suggested that we meet up during the course of Monday afternoon to finalise all of the documentation and to accommodate any amendments you may have. Please let me know if you (and your lawyers) can attend that meeting."
"Sorry that you couldn't make the meeting today (4.00pm) and confirm that we will see you at Interpark House at 10.00am tomorrow. In the meantime, do you or your lawyers have any comments on the drafts that we can deal with or address before the meeting tomorrow?"
"I understand from Ruslan Fomichev that you are his/Anstead's legal representative in relation to the proposed loan arrangements which Anstead is entering into with ancillary securitising documentation. We have already forwarded to your client a draft of the loan agreement, debenture(s) and pledge agreement(s) which he has discussed with us. We hope to send to you tomorrow a number of revised documents for your review and approval. You will need to instruct BVI counsel to provide an opinion in due course…."
Mr Fomichev agreed in cross-examination that he had discussed the terms of the loan agreement with Mr Jacobson. Mr Jacobson said, and I accept, that he had been told by Mr Fomichev that Mr Houman would be his and Anstead's legal representative.
"Further to my email yesterday, I thought it would be appropriate to forward to you the template debenture and pledge agreement as security provided by Anstead that were briefly discussed with Ruslan Fomichev at our meeting on Tuesday. These agreements are presently governed under English law and we would need to take local law advice (BVI) to ensure that the documents are applicable under BVI law. Could I ask you to discuss these with your client and to thereafter approve the documents (subject to any changes agreed with Ruslan Fomichev) in order that they may then be adapted to BVI law."
"we acknowledge receipt of your two messages, and will contact you as soon as we will receive the instructions of Mr. R.F."
"In addition, I note that bearer shares are in issue. I presume these are held by RF and VP. Please confirm that these will be deposited and held by our office once execution of the documentation has taken place.
In the meantime, we are intending to proceed with the granting of options (in our clients favour) of the shares held in the various Russian trading companies. We have drafted a format enclosed that will need to be adapted to Russian law. Can you review on behalf of your client and confirm in principal its contents.
We have also drafted a short form of Guarantee which may have to be executed by your clients and which is also enclosed. Please also review this document and revert with any comments."
On the next day, Mr Jacobson sent Mr Houman a further email, in which he said:
"I now enclose a revised format for the loan agreement for your review which was discussed with Ruslan Fomichev at our recent meeting."
Both emails were copied to Mr Fomichev and Mr Jones.
"I refer to my earlier emails and note that I have not heard from you in relation to the documentation previously forwarded.
If you have any queries in relation to the documents then please let me know as I understand that we are hoping to complete this matter very shortly."
Mr Jacobson noted that, once Mr Houman had approved the documents, he would need to arrange for BVI counsel to confirm Anstead's ability to enter into the Loan Agreement.
"Further to the meeting with Ruslan Fomichev yesterday I enclose a new draft of the loan agreement … for your review which I hope reflect the amendments discussed yesterday. I have also enclosed a Summary of the main terms (as requested by Ruslan) together with a Schedule."
The email was copied to Mr Fomichev.
"The Trustees then considered the Loan Agreement and the proposal for the Loan Agreement to be assigned to the Trust and for the proceeds received thereunder (including interest) to be treated as a re-settlement of funds into the Trust. It was noted that the main terms of the Loan Agreement provided that the principal sum would be repaid at the earliest on expiry of the 16th Month after execution of the Loan Agreement and that interest would be paid on the sum at a rate of 15%/annum to be paid monthly."
Those present (by telephone) were Mr Keeling and Mr Jenni.
"You are calculating compound interest + penalty!!
The penalty should be calculated from end of august because before that the lender was not ready to receive the interest …. . So we had an amount to pay agreed with Mr Jacobson as of end of May 2004 and we will continue to respect the agreement in this case. The loan was at 15 % but not 20% Compound!!! …"
"In my opinion, what you still have to negotiate with [Mr Berezovsky] is:
1. Whether you pay or not on the frozen money
2. Whether the interest is only compounded or we also have to increase the interest rate as provided for by the agreement.
As to my position, I am not prepared to say anything about the frozen money, I never even told B.my opinion about it as, apparently, he has his own, though to you I can say that I never understood how you could send it there either, but I am willing to support that if the rate is compounded that we do not have to apply the increase of the interest rate as the Parties probably did not mean it and the wording of the credit agreement just does not correspond to their intentions."
Conclusions
The default rate
"Where the rate of interest payable on a loan is liable to increase in the event of default by the borrower, the increased rate may be penal if it operates with retrospective effect or if the increase is exceptionally large. But where the increase is modest and operates prospectively, it will not be struck down as a penalty."
"It is clear that, if a loan agreement were to provide that upon the happening of a default in payment by the borrower the rate of interest were to be increased with retrospective effect, that which would be payable on default would be a sum in addition to the amount of principal and interest outstanding which would be calculated by reference to a period of time during which the borrower was entitled to the use of the principal and which might vary in length depending upon when the default in payment occurred in relation to the period of borrowing. Moreover, the amount of interest which would be payable would be unrelated to the extent of default. If therefore default in payment triggered a retrospective increase in the rate of interest, it would be impossible to say in advance how much extra interest would become payable and what arithmetical relationship it would have to the amount of time during which the principal was outstanding. Moreover, assuming that any increase in the rate of interest was to continue into the future, the period of time during which the default was continuing would be compensated by the continuing increased rate, but also by the accumulated increase in the interest derived from the period before default. Such a provision would therefore have all the indicia of a penalty.
Where, however, the loan agreement provides that the rate of interest will only increase prospectively from the time of default in payment, a rather different picture emerges. The additional amount payable is ex hypothesi directly proportional to the period of time during which the default in payment continues. Moreover, the borrower in default is not the same credit risk as the prospective borrower with whom the loan agreement was first negotiated. Merely for the pre-existing rate of interest to continue to accrue on the outstanding amount of the debt would not reflect the fact that the borrower no longer has a clean record. Given that money is more expensive for a less good credit risk than for a good credit risk, there would in principle seem to be no reason to deduce that a small rateable increase in interest charged prospectively upon default would have the dominant purpose of deterring default. That is not because there is in any real sense a genuine pre-estimate of loss, but because there is a good commercial reason for deducing that deterrence of breach is not the dominant contractual purpose of the term."
Implied terms relating to availability for use
"(a) the money advanced under the Loan Agreement would be free and clear to be used by the borrower; and/or
(b) the money so advanced would be free and clear to be used by the borrower for the express commercial purpose for which it was advanced; and/or
(c) no interest would become due in respect of any part of the Advances that was frozen by a relevant authority, acting reasonably, by reason of matters concerning or connected to North Shore or the principals behind it (namely, Mr Berezovsky and/or Ms Berezovsky)."
"21 … [I]n every case in which it is said that some provision ought to be implied in an instrument, the question for the court is whether such a provision would spell out in express words what the instrument, read against the relevant background, would reasonably be understood to mean. … [T]his question can be reformulated in various ways which a court may find helpful in providing an answer - the implied term must 'go without saying', it must be 'necessary to give business efficacy to the contract' and so on - but these are not in the Board's opinion to be treated as different or additional tests. There is only one question: is that what the instrument, read as a whole against the relevant background, would reasonably be understood to mean?
22 There are dangers in treating these alternative formulations of the question as if they had a life of their own. Take, for example, the question of whether the implied term is 'necessary to give business efficacy' to the contract. That formulation serves to underline two important points. The first, conveyed by the use of the word 'business', is that in considering what the instrument would have meant to a reasonable person who had knowledge of the relevant background, one assumes the notional reader will take into account the practical consequences of deciding that it means one thing or the other. In the case of an instrument such as a commercial contract, he will consider whether a different construction would frustrate the apparent business purpose of the parties. That was the basis upon which Equitable Life Assurance Society v Hyman [2002] 1 AC 408 was decided. The second, conveyed by the use of the word 'necessary', is that it is not enough for a court to consider that the implied term expresses what it would have been reasonable for the parties to agree to. It must be satisfied that it is what the contract actually means.
23 The danger lies, however, in detaching the phrase 'necessary to give business efficacy' from the basic process of construction of the instrument. It is frequently the case that a contract may work perfectly well in the sense that both parties can perform their express obligations, but the consequences would contradict what a reasonable person would understand the contract to mean. Lord Steyn made this point in the Equitable Life case, at p 459, when he said that in that case an implication was necessary 'to give effect to the reasonable expectations of the parties'.
24 The same point had been made many years earlier by Bowen LJ in his well known formulation in The Moorcock (1889) 14 PD 64, 68:
'In business transactions such as this, what the law desires to effect by the implication is to give such business efficacy to the transaction as must have been intended at all events by both parties who are business men …'
25 Likewise, the requirement that the implied term must 'go without saying' is no more than another way of saying that, although the instrument does not expressly say so, that is what a reasonable person would understand it to mean. Any attempt to make more of this requirement runs the risk of diverting attention from the objectivity which informs the whole process of construction into speculation about what the actual parties to the contract or authors (or supposed authors) of the instrument would have thought about the proposed implication. The imaginary conversation with an officious bystander in Shirlaw v Southern Foundries (1926) Ltd [1939] 2 KB 206, 227 is celebrated throughout the common law world. Like the phrase 'necessary to give business efficacy', it vividly emphasises the need for the court to be satisfied that the proposed implication spells out what the contact would reasonably be understood to mean. But it carries the danger of barren argument over how the actual parties would have reacted to the proposed amendment. That, in the Board's opinion, is irrelevant. Likewise, it is not necessary that the need for the implied term should be obvious in the sense of being immediately apparent, even upon a superficial consideration of the terms of the contract and the relevant background. The need for an implied term not infrequently arises when the draftsman of a complicated instrument has omitted to make express provision for some event because he has not fully thought through the contingencies which might arise, even though it is obvious after a careful consideration of the express terms and the background that only one answer would be consistent with the rest of the instrument. In such circumstances, the fact that the actual parties might have said to the officious bystander 'Could you please explain that again?' does not matter."
"Purpose and Application
The proceeds of each Advance shall be used for the business undertaken by the Borrower and the Related Entities and such business comprising the sale or purchase of processed meat and meat products primarily for supply in the Russian Federation and the sale and purchase of petroleum products in the Russian Federation and for no other purpose."
Mr Swainston also drew an analogy with contracts for the sale of goods and of hire. Mr Swainston pointed out that a contract for the sale of goods will contain implied terms as to quality and fitness for purpose. As regards contracts of hire, Mr Swainston suggested that a horse hired out must not be lame. Mr Swainston argued that a contract for the loan of money must contain comparable terms. It is, he maintained, of the essence of any loan agreement that the money loaned should be available to be used by the borrower.
"The decided cases show that normally, in a hiring or hire-purchase agreement, the person who lets goods on hire assumes some contractual responsibility for the fitness of the goods for the purpose for which the hirer requires them, but that the existence and the extent of this obligation depends upon the contractual intention of the parties, which is to be ascertained from the provisions of the particular agreement and from the relevant facts of the situation in relation to which the agreement was made."
Implied term as to availability of a North Shore account
The alleged implied term
Facts
"As indicated previously (see email dated 12th May 2003) the Bank/Trustees will require confirmation of the source of funds from your remitting bank before payments can be made. As soon as you can provide this I will then be authorised to release the Bank details to you…."
"We note that Anstead has not paid any interest to date. We therefore advise you that unless the outstanding interest payments are made within 14 days of the date of this letter with confirmation of their source of funds our client will have no alternative other than to issue a default notice for the repayment of the capital sum and all interest sums due…."
Replying on 18 February, Mr Peclard said that there was no reason for Anstead to pay interest on the blocked funds, but that interest of $3,627,082.37 would be paid before the end of the month. He concluded:
"The payment will be made either with a banking check from CIM Bank to the order of your client which will be sent by DHL to you or by a transfer to your account for which I would need the details."
"We are trying to set up the account but the bank need some new ID documents from the beneficial owner. In addition the company will need a confirmation from Anstead or its lawyers on the source of funds."
"I can advise that North Shore has a bank account but the directors of North Shore still require written confirmation on the source of funds…."
In an email to Mrs Rapp of 23 April, Mr Jacobson said, "Can you let me see a format for the source of funds letter." On 15 June, Mrs Rapp sent Mr Jacobson an email in which she said:
"I'm ready to pay interest for the ill-fated Loan….
You wanted to sent me a draft of letter to be signed by our BVI directors…."
On 22 June, Mr Jacobson sent Mrs Rapp an email in which he referred to a meeting they had had the previous Friday and proceeded:
"With regard to our discussions, please confirm that the interest will be paid from the Company's account with UBS London. In this regard, we would like to receive a bank reference from UBS on the Company and also a source of funds letter signed by the directors of the Company. I have prepared a draft for your review based on the discussions we have had…."
On 7 July Mr Jacobson sent Mrs Rapp a further email, in which he said:
"… I am now under pressure this end to get matters finalised as soon as possible.
Can you please try and give me a time frame as to when I can expect the documents and release of the funds from UBS."
"Sorry for delay, but I've just arrived. Pls, find enclosed power of attorney and resolution from directors."
On the same day, Mr Jacobson provided Mrs Rapp with details of North Shore's account with FCIB, and Anstead made its first repayment (of $250,000) on 30 July.
"We have to inform you that at present we cannot continue paying interest, as, after your refusal to accept the money into your account in the spring, most of the money was invested in real estate and land."
"They did not want to accept money in March, and I don't remember already now what purpose was for it, and we were kept waiting for about two months … – we kept this money and let's say did not have a chance to transfer somewhere for North Shore and then we just used this money for some purposes."
"The fact that James [Jacobson] asked for the source of funds docs did not give you the right to invest the money due to the Principal into the real estate and other things from where you cannot exit fast."
Conclusions
"Where a debtor is obliged to pay a specific sum of money to a creditor a successful plea of tender does not discharge the debt, but if the creditor subsequently sues for the debt, the debtor may, by paying the money into court and by proving the tender and his continued willingness to pay the debt since the tender, bar any claim for interest or damages after the tender; the creditor will also be liable to pay the debtor his costs of the action, on the ground that the action should not have been brought."
i) For Anstead to avoid default interest it must at least have made an unconditional offer of payment (by whatever means) which North Shore refused; andii) Anstead would be relieved of liability for default interest for no longer than the refusal to accept payment continued.
The alleged 2004 and 2006 variations
Introduction
"(a) interest would be payable once a year (in arrears) from the date of drawdown of the relevant tranche at the rate of 15% per annum;
(b) if the interest was not paid within 2 weeks of the end of the relevant year, the interest would be added to the capital outstanding and would thereafter accrue interest at 15% per annum; but
(c) compounding would only commence in August 2004 (given that North Shore's only notified its account details to Anstead on 28 July 2004)."
"At a meeting in the Berkley Hotel in London in early February 2006, Mr Fomichev (on behalf of Anstead) and Mr Berezovsky and [Mr Patarkatsishvili] (on behalf of North Shore) agreed that, in consideration of Anstead continuing to seek to obtain the release of the Frozen Loan Monies, Anstead would not have to pay interest on the Frozen Loan Monies."
Law
Facts: the alleged November 2004 variation
"... what you still have to negotiate with [Mr Berezovsky] is:
1. Whether you pay or not on the frozen money
2. Whether the interest is only compounded or we also have to increase the interest rate as provided for by the agreement."
"Could you, please, ask to recalculate the interest on 50 mio loan on the following principles:
Interest to be paid once a year 15 % p.a. depending on the dates of disbursements and their corresponding amounts, two weeks of delay of paying the interest – grace period, after 2 weeks – 15 % to be accrued also on the amount of overdue interest.
The issue of whether interest will be charged or not on the frozen money will be addressed later."
"... goodwill of Mr Berezovsky that didn't find any response because ... they still didn't pay the monies they were owing".
Similarly, Mr Berezovsky said that he "did not intend to forego North Shore's right to interest on the frozen money or to finally agree the interest rate but thought these issues should be 'parked' so that undisputed money could at least start to be paid". He said that he did not remember what had happened in November 2004, but that he knew what was not agreed – and that was "not to make step back". For his part, Mr Fomichev thought that he must have spoken to Mr Berezovsky but could not remember exactly what was said.
Conclusions on the alleged November 2004 variation
Facts: the alleged February 2006 variation
"The agreement reached on 01.02.06 with Mr. Berezovskiy was that we should repay 10,000,000 USD of unfrozen moneys including interest and capital, there would be no interest on frozen moneys, there going to be no interest compounded."
Some 20 minutes later, Mr Fomichev told Mr Landi in a further email:
"Sorry, just checked and the agreement was reached on 24.02.06".
A few minutes after that, Mr Fomichev sent Mr Landi an email reading:
"Sorry Damian to mess you around but I will come back to you with all the agreements tomorrow if I may, I need to remember some things".
Conclusions on the alleged February 2006 variation
Late 2007: variation/promissory estoppel
Introduction
Mr Fomichev's evidence
"I understand that Mr Lamon spoke with Mr Peclard sometime in November 2007 and offered to release [the remaining frozen money] provided that (i) Anstead paid his costs of dealing with the investigation and (ii) Anstead did not pursue the FPO for any interest that could have been earned on the monies whilst they were frozen.
… [B]efore I agreed to the above offer with Mr Lamon to secure the release of the frozen monies, I wanted [Mr Patarakatsishvili] to agree that Anstead could accept Mr Lamon's offer and confirm that North Shore (or himself as the owner of North Shore) would not seek to claim interest from Anstead (compounded or otherwise) in respect of the unfrozen monies.
Accordingly, I telephoned [Mr Patarakatsishvili] in late November/early December 2007. I said to him that in order to get the money released I needed to give an indemnity to the FPO. He was happy for me to do so and told me that North Shore would not claim interest from Anstead in respect of the frozen monies.
As a result of my telephone conversation with [Mr Patarakatsishvili] I informed Mr Peclard to tell Mr Lamon that Anstead agreed to his offer and Anstead would not pursue the FPO for interest on the loan."
"Economic divorce"
"Could you imagine that having this scale of business which Badri and I have together for long time, it take just less than a year to finalise economic divorce?"
"we [i.e. Mr Berezovsky and Mr Patarkatsishvili] almost don't have any joint business cos' about one year ago we decided that he would purchase all my business. And we are almost to the end of this process."
"It's not answering for British police, it's answering for Russian prosecutor office"
and:
"Understanding that I was questioned by prosecutor office of Russia, definitely I want present impression that we made economic divorce …."
"I would be a little miffed, to say the least, that nobody bothered to tell me that a company for which I was responsible was included in this restructuring."
Other evidence of Mrs Nosova
"I remember that when the final tranche of frozen monies were released by the Swiss authorities and paid over to Anstead in early 2008, I discussed with [Mr Berezovsky] and [Mr Patarkatsishvili] the best way to get Anstead to pay the outstanding interest. [Mr Patarkatsishvili] suggested taking it one step at a time. He suggested sending an email to Mr Fomichev thanking him for the money that had been paid and then proposing a further meeting to discuss when the interest would be paid."
"... in the end of January 2008 when these so-called frozen monies were paid, I discussed it both with Boris and Badri, how we proceed further to collect the debt, and I took advice from Badri, and Badri advised me to write to Ruslan to thank him for the loan, because Badri was very polite person, and to agree a meeting to discuss further how he pays the outstanding interest, including on the frozen funds."
Conclusion
Frustration
"The proceeds of each Advance shall be used for the business undertaken by [Anstead] and the Related Entities and such business comprising the sale or purchase of processed meat and meat products primarily for supply in the Russian Federation and the sale and purchase of petroleum products in the Russian Federation and for no other purpose."
"I think that you first have to ascertain, not necessarily from the terms of the contract, but, if required, from necessary inferences, drawn from surrounding circumstances recognised by both contracting parties, what is the substance of the contract, and then to ask the question whether that substantial contract needs for its foundation the assumption of the existence of a particular state of things. If it does, this will limit the operation of the general words, and in such case, if the contract becomes impossible of performance by reason of the non-existence of the state of things assumed by both contracting parties as the foundation of the contract, there will be no breach of the contract thus limited."
On the facts, he concluded as follows (at 750):
"In my judgment the use of the rooms was let and taken for the purpose of seeing the Royal procession. It was not a demise of the rooms, or even an agreement to let and take the rooms. It is a licence to use rooms for a particular purpose and none other. And in my judgment the taking place of those processions on the days proclaimed along the proclaimed route, which passed 56A, Pall Mall, was regarded by both contracting parties as the foundation of the contract; and I think that it cannot reasonably be supposed to have been in the contemplation of the contracting parties, when the contract was made, that the coronation would not be held on the proclaimed days, or the processions not take place on those days along the proclaimed route; and I think that the words imposing on the defendant the obligation to accept and pay for the use of the rooms for the named days, although general and unconditional, were not used with reference to the possibility of the particular contingency which afterwards occurred."
"[T]here is not merely the purpose of the hirer to see the coronation procession," Vaughan Williams LJ said (at 751), "but it is the coronation procession and the relative position of the rooms which is the basis of the contract as much for the lessor as the hirer."
" … Mr. Hutton, in hiring this vessel, had two objects in view: first, of taking people to see the naval review, and, secondly, of taking them round the fleet. Those, no doubt, were the purposes of Mr. Hutton, but it does not seem to me that because, as it is said, those purposes became impossible, it would be a very legitimate inference that the happening of the naval review was contemplated by both parties as the basis and foundation of this contract …. On the contrary, when the contract is properly regarded, I think the purpose of Mr. Hutton, whether of seeing the naval review or of going round the fleet with a party of paying guests, does not lay the foundation of the contract within the authorities."
Similarly, Romer LJ said (at 690):
" … it is a contract for the hiring of a ship by the defendant for a certain voyage, though having, no doubt, a special object, namely, to see the naval review and the fleet; but it appears to me that the object was a matter with which the defendant, as hirer of the ship, was alone concerned, and not the plaintiffs, the owners of the ship",
continuing (at 691):
" … so far as the plaintiffs are concerned, the objects of the passengers on this voyage with regard to sight-seeing do not form the subject-matter or essence of this contract."
Stirling LJ, agreeing, referred specifically to the fact that part of the stated purpose, the "day's cruise round the fleet", had remained possible. He said (at 692):
"It seems to me that the reference in the contract to the naval review is easily explained; it was inserted in order to define more exactly the nature of the voyage, and I am unable to treat it as being such a reference as to constitute the naval review the foundation of the contract so as to entitle either party to the benefit of the doctrine in Taylor v Caldwell. I come to this conclusion the more readily because the object of the voyage is not limited to the naval review, but also extends to a cruise round the fleet. The fleet was there, and passengers might have been found willing to go round it. It is true that in the event which happened the object of the voyage became limited, but, in my opinion, that was the risk of the defendant whose venture the taking the passengers was."
This passage suggests that a partial failure of a contractual purpose will not frustrate a contract.
"Since the effect of frustration is to kill the contract and discharge the parties from further liability under it, the doctrine is not to be lightly invoked, must be kept within very narrow limits and ought not to be extended".
"wholly distinct, separate, and severable adventures between which there was no interdependence in the sense that the carrying out of any one of them was made to depend in any way upon the carrying out or abandonment of any of the others".
In the present case, in contrast, it cannot be said that the $23 million drawdown which was frozen (for the most part, as to $18 million) was "wholly distinct, separate, and severable" from the remainder of North Shore's $50 million loan.
"The essence of frustration is that it should not be due to the act or election of the party seeking to rely on it"
and:
"A frustrating event must take place without blame or fault on the side of the party seeking to rely on it."
Further, "fault" in this context should include negligence (see Treitel, "Frustration and Force Majeure", 2nd edition, at paragraph 14-003). Here, the $23 million would not have been frozen but for the fact that, as a result of a miscalculation on Mr Fomichev's part, Anstead gave instructions for the money to be paid to C.I.M Banque in Switzerland.
Implications of the default judgment against Anstead
Postscript: proceedings in Russia
" … the Plaintiff [i.e. Mr Peganov] has never signed or otherwise concluded the Agreement [i.e. the Guarantee], he had never agreed with its conditions and displayed no will to assume liabilities specified in it."
Overall conclusion