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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 >> Group Seven Ltd v Allied Investment Corporation Ltd & Ors [2013] EWHC 1509 (Ch) (06 June 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2013/1509.html Cite as: [2014] WLR 735, [2014] 1 WLR 735, [2013] EWHC 1509 (Ch), [2013] WLR(D) 224 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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GROUP SEVEN LIMITED (a company incorporated under the laws of Malta) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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ALLIED INVESTMENT CORPORATION LIMITED (a company incorporated under the laws of Malta) MAREK REJNIAK PAUL SULTANA LARN LIMITED LUIS NOBRE |
Defendants |
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Romie Tager QC and Philip Kremen (instructed by Hughmans) for the Third Defendant
Hearing dates: 22, 23, 24 & 26 April 2013 and 9 May 2013
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Hildyard :
Nature of application and the position of relevant parties
"disposed of (or procured the disposal of) one of his most valuable assets for US$200,000 by settling one of his company's (namely, Wealthstorm Limited's) claims in relation to a debt owed to it [in the sum of US$500,000] by Digital Archives Inc and/or Ali Nasir and/or Scheherazade Nasir."
Terms of Freezing Order of which breach is alleged: issues arising
"8. Until trial or further order of the court, each of the First, Second and Fourth Respondents Marek Rejniak, Paul Sultana and Luis Nobre must not–
(1) remove from England and Wales any of their assets which are in England and Wales up to the value of €12m; or
(2) in any way dispose of, deal with or diminish the value of any of their assets whether they are in or outside England and Wales up to the same value.
9. Paragraph 8 applies to all the Respondent's assets whether or not they are in his own name and whether they are solely or jointly owned. For the purpose of this order the Respondent's assets include any asset which he has the power, directly or indirectly, to dispose of or deal with as if it were his own. The Respondent is to be regarded as having such power if a third party holds or controls the asset in accordance with his direct or indirect instructions."
Immediate procedural background
"In breach of paragraph 8(2) of the Freezing Order Mr Sultana disposed of (or he procured the disposal of) one of his most valuable assets for $200,000 by settling one of his company's (namely, Wealthstorm Limited's) claims in relation to a debt owed to it by Digital Archives Inc and/or Ali Nasir and/or Scheherazade Nasir. This is a clear breach of paragraph 8(2) of the Freezing Order and Mr Sultana and his advisers did disclose this proposed disposal to the Claimant nor seek to vary the Order. Mr Sultana has failed to provide an explanation as to why we were not made aware of these proceedings and their settlement."
"55. …To be clear, although the loan and claim was in the name of Wealthstorm Limited, I do not consider that this matters for two reasons.
56, First, in reality this loan and claim was made by Mr Sultana. The fact that the loan was recorded by Mr Sultana as one of his assets suggests that this is how he treated it. He obviously realised that it was to be treated as one of his assets for the purposes of the Freezing Order. Wealthstorm itself is an offshore (Maltese) company with very limited assets and there is little sign of any trading activity. It is 100% owned by Mr Sultana.
57. Secondly, even if the loan and claim are to be treated as formally as being the property of Wealthstorm, it is obvious that Mr Sultana has procured the breach of the Freezing Order, to the same effect. He (and therefore Wealthstorm) were obviously aware of the fact that the loan was an asset under the Freezing Order.
58. As I have explained above, it does not appear to be in dispute that this amounts to a breach of the freezing Order…"
Summary of background facts
"11. As a result of the aforementioned trust and confidence, Mr Sultana (through his wholly-owned company, Wealthstorm Limited) invested the following sums:
11.1 $500,000 in Mr Nasir's company, Digital Archives Inc on 8 December 2009; …"
Issues to be decided
(1) whether the Court should make an order dispensing with service of the Freezing Order or otherwise allow the application to proceed notwithstanding failure personally to serve the Freezing Order on Mr Sultana;
(2) whether the Application Notice is sufficiently particularised;
(3) what the effect is of (a) Mr Sultana's apparent confirmation in sworn evidence that the Debt was an asset of his and (b) Mr Sultana's own pleaded case that he made the loan giving rise to the Debt through his company, Wealthstorm Limited;
(4) whether on its true construction clause 9 of the Freezing Order applies to the Debt or requires it to be treated as an asset of Mr Sultana for its purposes;
(5) whether, having regard to the above issues, the application should be permitted to proceed.
Issue as to lack of personal service
Issue as to the sufficiency of the Application Notice
Scope of paragraphs 8 and 9 of the Freezing Order
"…it is common for a defendant to control offshore companies and their subsidiaries, and to use the assets of those companies as if they were the defendant's own. Such a situation would come within para.6 of the standard form order."
No explanation is offered as to why the observation is limited to offshore companies and their subsidiaries, although (as Mr Chapman agreed) the same would logically apply to domestic companies, if the test is exclusive ownership and control of the shares and a company's board (as he urged).
(1) As the beneficial owner of its assets only the company may deal with them.
(2) A company, being a legal creation or artifice, can only act through natural persons. The natural persons who may act for it are its primary decision-making bodies (the board of directors or the members collectively) or officers, agents or employees duly authorised by the primary decision-making bodies (or the company's constitution) to act on its behalf.
(3) Their acts are attributed to the company: in the case of the primary decision-making bodies they are for these purposes and act as the company; in the case of officers, agents or employees they act as agents.
(4) In exercising their powers, primary decision-making bodies do not, therefore, give instructions (whether direct or indirect) to the company; the company is not a "third party" and does not act in accordance with their direct or indirect instructions: they and the company are as one.
(5) The analysis is no different just because a single individual is or comprises the only primary decision-making body: that is the lesson of Salomon and the corollary of according the company separate legal status and recognising its beneficial ownership in the assets which it holds (absent contrary instruction or declaration).
(6) It inexorably follows that a person who is the sole director and only member of a company does not, in directing the company, or committing it to a transaction, give instructions to the company; the company is not a third party for these purposes; and it is not, for the purposes of paragraph 9 of the Freezing Order or paragraph 6 of the standard form, to be regarded as holding or controlling its assets in accordance with that person's direct or indirect instructions.
(7) As Mr Tager put it in his oral submissions to me, with particular reference to the act relied on as constituting a breach of the Freezing Order, that is the execution of the Settlement Agreement:
"…when Mr Sultana signed the Settlement Agreement he was not giving direct or indirect instructions to Wealthstorm; he was Wealthstorm at that moment. When he is holding the pen in his capacity as a director – signs the Settlement Agreement as a director – he is not telling Wealthstorm to settle, he is Wealthstorm, he is the director. He has the legal power and duty to manage and husband its assets. So when he settles the litigation, as a director, then, my Lord, he is not giving instructions to anyone."
(8) Of course it would be different if the company, acting by its directors or shareholders, is bound to act in accordance with instructions from another: for example, if the company is or has declared itself a trustee, or contracted to hold as nominee or bailee, or such like: but that is not the case here. Conceivably, it might apply in the case of a shadow director: but that is not the case here either.
(9) Such an analysis is also consistent with and gives effect to the condition stated in the penultimate sentence of paragraph 9 of the Freezing Order (paragraph 6 of the standard form) that assets are to be treated as a respondent's if he has the power, directly or indirectly, to dispose of or deal with them "as if they were his own". Neither a company's directors nor (it is contended) its shareholders have power to deal with a company's assets otherwise than as if they belong to the company (and not themselves).
(10) This approach accords with the interpretation of the wording consistently with the objective of a freezing order, which is to prevent the dissipation, devaluation or loss of assets against which the claimant could enforce any judgment he obtains in his favour at the end of the day. Only assets which the respondent has the untrammelled right to obtain for himself and use as his own should fall within the scope of restraint; whereas on the claimant's approach assets beneficially owned by the company and not by the claimant, and which would not be available for enforcement, would be subject of restraint: impermissibly, in Mr Tager's submission. As to that last point, Mr Tager also emphasised that the Court could not at this stage assume that the corporate veil would be pierced or lifted: that would subvert basic principles of company law.
(11) Finally, if the assets of a company of which a single person is the sole director and shareholder are to be treated as being the assets of that person for the purposes of the standard form and paragraph 9 in this case, the effect on such a company's trade (if any) would be devastating unless a proviso to enable trading in the ordinary course were implied or expressed.
(1) As indicated above, and as is well known, a freezing order is "designed to prevent injustice to a successful claimant by preserving assets and funds and guarding so far as possible against the risk that they will be disposed of or dissipated before a judgment is satisfied so as to render ineffective the claimant's attempts to recover what is due to him": per Mummery LJ in Federal Bank of the Middle East Ltd v Hadkinson and Others [2000] 1 WLR 1695 at 1709G-H.
(2) Without more, and in everyday usage, the expression "his assets" refers "to assets belonging to that person, not to assets belonging to another person" (ibid. at 1709F): and assets belonging, or at the time of the freezing order assumed to belong, beneficially to someone other than the defendant, will not be assets available to satisfy a claim against that defendant, and without words clearly extending the scope of the phrase "his assets", such assets will not be subject to the freezing order: ibid. at 1709H.
(3) That said, a freezing order is a precautionary measure taken urgently to protect the claimant against the risk of dissipation, disposal, reduction in value, or loss of assets pending a fuller examination as to what assets would in reality be available to the claimant for the purposes of enforcing a judgment. Accordingly, it may be perfectly consistent with the objectives of such relief to extend the scope of the phrase "his assets" to assets which the defendant may not appear to own but which may in truth be available to him for the purposes of enforcement; however, words extending the ordinary meaning will be strictly construed, and so as not to invest a meaning that the words cannot reasonably bear: thus, the wording must be clear and free of ambiguity: ibid. at 1710 A-B.
(4) If the words are ambiguous, or admit of a more restrictive interpretation, so that it is arguable whether or not the assets in question fall within their scope, the court is unlikely to treat a dealing with such assets as a contempt of court: ibid. at 1711 D-E; and see also per Neuberger J (as he then was) in Cantor Index Ltd v Lister [2002] CP Rep 25.
(5) Since the Hadkinson case, words to extend the meaning of "his assets" have been introduced into the standard CPR form: these are the words in paragraph 6 of the standard CPR form and paragraph 9 of the Freezing Order. Those words extend the meaning of "his assets" to cover assets which are not in the legal ownership of the defendant but in respect of which the defendant "retains the power to direct how the assets should be dealt with": per Patten LJ in JSC BTA Bank v Solodchenko and others [2011] 1 WLR 888 at para 26 on page 898.
(6) Thus, where that form is used, the phrase "his assets" is extended to include also "assets held by a foreign trust or a Liechtenstein Anstalt when the defendant retains beneficial ownership or effective control of the asset": ibid.
(7) However, it is clear that those words in the standard form do not extend to assets of which the defendant remains the legal owner but holds for the benefit of someone else: ibid.
(8) If it is desired and found appropriate to extend the scope of the injunction to assets held in trust (for example, in cases where a strong prima facie case is demonstrated that the trust is a façade or sham), additional wording must be included to make that clear: the Commercial Court now has a standard form including such wording, though the Court of Appeal made clear in the Solodchenko case that its use should be exceptional and sparing.
(9) As to piercing or lifting the corporate veil: ownership and control of a company are not themselves sufficient to provide justification for that course, even when no unconnected third party is involved and it might be perceived that the interests of justice would be served by it: see VTB Capital plc v Nutritek International Corp [2012] EWCA Civ 808 at paragraph 78. It is always necessary to show impropriety in the sense of a misuse of the company as a device or façade to conceal wrongdoing: ibid.
(10) Even where the circumstances are such as to justify the exceptional step of piercing or lifting the corporate veil the effect is not to alter the beneficial ownership of the company's assets: it is simply to provide for such asset to be available in defined circumstances to the claimant: see per Eder J in Caterpillar Financial Services (UK) Limited v Saenz Corporation and Others [2012] EWHC 2888 (Comm).
"104. ….It is heretical to suggest that the total control that a single individual is (and will always be) entitled to exercise over the affairs of his one-man company is a feature resulting in the company's assets becoming assets to which he is 'entitled', and therefore, to which the company is not entitled…The logic…[would]…be that a one-man company can never own its assets beneficially but can only ever hold its assets as the nominee of its sole controller. That is what Lord Wrenbury said is not the law [in Macaura v Northern Assurance Co Ltd [1925] AC 619 at 633].
105. The flaw in the 'power equals property' approach is that it ignores the fundamental principle that the only entity with the power to deal with its assets is the company. Those who control its affairs – even if the control is in a single individual – act merely as the company's agents. Their agency will include the authority to procure an exercise by the company of its dispositive powers in respect of its property, but those powers are still exclusively the company's own: they are not the agents' powers. When and if the agents act as such, and procure a company disposition, the property which immediately before the disposition belonged to the company will become the property of the disponee. Until then, it remains the property of the company and belongs beneficially to no one else…."
Even if the Debt is not otherwise within the scope of paragraphs 8 and 9, what is the consequence of Mr Sultana having ostensibly treated the Loan as his own asset?
(1) the confirmation of the accuracy of that list in his second witness statement;(2) the use of some of the proceeds of the monies paid on settlement of the Loan to fund his ordinary living expenses;
(3) the apparent depiction of the Loan in his own pleadings as a personal loan, and in particular the depiction in paragraph 11 of his Defence (as also in his Amended Defence) of the Loan representing an investment in Digital Archives Inc by Mr Sultana "(through his wholly-owned company, Wealthstorm Limited)", as if Wealthstorm Limited were a mere conduit;
(4) the lack of any statement or evidence to correct that depiction of the Loan.
(1) the Freezing Order should be construed in accordance with the parties' apparently shared understanding, of which each was aware, that Mr Sultana's assets included the Loan;
(2) in any event, Mr Sultana should not be permitted to depart from that shared understanding;
(3) furthermore, giving effect to that shared understanding was appropriate and necessary to give effect to the objective of the Freezing Order, since in such circumstances the Loan would be an asset available to the Claimant by way of enforcement if successful at Trial, either (a) because Mr Sultana's shares enabled indirect access or (b) because in such a factual context the Court would almost lift or pierce the veil and treat such assets as available to ensure that the benefits of incorporation should not be abused.
(1) As to (1), and the construction of the Freezing Order, the parties' shared understandings could not affect or alter the objective determination of its meaning: an order of the Court was not a contract, and its meaning should be (a) constant and (b) objectively ascertained by reference to facts available to all persons whom it might affect, and not on the basis of private understandings between the parties.
(2) As to (2), no argument based on estoppel, whether by convention or otherwise, should be available, for substantially the same reasons as above;
(3) As to (3), (a) the ultimate power of a controlling shareholder to wind up a company should not be taken as connoting that the company's assets were to be treated, without more, as prospectively available to satisfy a judgment debt; and (b) the possibility of the Court subsequently lifting or piercing the veil is not such as at this stage to warrant treating an asset which is in law the company's as the respondent's, either generally or on the particular facts of the case.
(1) an order of the Court, not being a consent order (as to which see Alexiou & Anor v Campbell [2007] UKPC 11 at para. 12), is not a contract: the familiar principles of contractual construction cannot be applied without modification. In particular, in my view, the Court will be more reluctant, at the least, to give to words a special meaning which may have been intended by the parties but which would not be their usual meaning. An order of the Court is likely to (and in the case of a freezing order almost certainly will) affect (and in some cases bind) persons other than the parties who may well be (indeed are likely to be) unaware of preceding communications between, or shared assumptions of, the parties. Although an "unswervingly literal" approach is not appropriate, and the context in which the words appear may well affect their construction, it seems to me that the Court must adopt the meaning which, in the context, the words naturally bear, rather than any special but unexplained meaning.
(2) Similarly, in my view, an order of the Court must be given a uniform meaning which can be ascertained by all persons affected by it without reference to evidence that is only available to the original parties. The fact that the parties may have chosen to adopt a meaning other than that intended by the words may well afford each a defence (whether by way of estoppel by convention or otherwise) if the other suddenly departs from their shared understanding; but, in the absence (so far as I am aware) of authority to the contrary, I consider that the Court should not enforce an order otherwise than in accordance with its objective meaning.
(3) As to (3), and as stressed by Mr Tager, the principle of corporate personality precludes treating a sole shareholder's shareholding and the assets of the company as substantially the same: the one may provide the key whereby to unlock the net assets of the other, but they are juridically different, and a right to enforce against shares is to be distinguished from a right to enforce against the company itself. As to the possibility that, if the claim is made good, and it is subsequently shown that the company was a mere façade (or, although Mr Tager counselled against the term, alter ego), the Court may at that stage lift or pierce the veil of incorporation, that is all prospective (as well as uncertain). Although that possibility may warrant an extension of the scope of the Freezing Injunction to cover the company or its assets, it does not, in my judgment, justify giving a more expansive meaning to the words used than that which they can fairly bear.
Conclusion
Observations as to standard form of order