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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 >> Yossifoff v Donnerstein [2015] EWHC 3357 (Ch) (20 November 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2015/3357.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 3357 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Rolls Building, Fetter Lane London, EC4A 2NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
YORAM YOSSIFOFF |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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SHMUEL DONNERSTEIN |
Respondent |
____________________
Hearing dates: 10-11 November 2015
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE SNOWDEN:
Background
The Israeli Proceedings
"Introduction
A1. This suit is concerned with serious violations of the Defendant's duty as the trustee of a share belonging to the Plaintiff, which is held and controlled by the Defendant by virtue of a trust for the benefit of the Plaintiff (the beneficiary) and which represents 50% of the issued and paid-up share capital of Perston … a company registered in the British Virgin Islands (hereinafter: the "Trust Assets" or the "Trust", as applicable).
The Trust
D12. In view of the demand of the … Bank and the Company's financial need to restructure the Loan, and since … relations of trust and friendship prevailed between the parties, the Plaintiff agreed to the Defendant's proposal that the Plaintiff's share be transferred to the Defendant in trust so that the Plaintiff would not be registered as a shareholder of Perston vis-à-vis the … Bank.
D13. According to what had been agreed between them, the Plaintiff transferred the share owned by him to the Defendant and/or his designee, in trust, in accordance with the Trust Agreement that was concluded between them and the share was registered in the Defendant's name.
D16. …the Defendant is grossly violating his most basic duties as a trustee and refusing to provide the Plaintiff with any information in connection with the Trust Assets, and is even performing actions with them without receiving the Plaintiff's consent…
Grounds for the Suit
E22. As detailed above, an oral trust agreement was concluded between the parties. Therefore, the Defendant, in his capacity as trustee of the Plaintiff, has a legal duty to render an accounting to the Plaintiff, periodically and/or upon request, in connection with Trust Assets."
The Application
"2. Until further order of the Court, the Respondent must not remove from England and Wales or in any way dispose of, deal with, or diminish the value of the assets listed in paragraph 3 whether they are in or outside England and Wales.
3. The assets referred to in paragraph 2 are:
3.1 The shares in Perston…
3.2 The shares in West 2… registered in the name of Perston
3.3 The Property … of which West 2 … is the sole registered proprietor.
3.4 If the Perston Shares, the West 2 Shares and/or the Property have been sold (whether before or after the date of this order, the net proceeds of sale.
…
5. The Respondent is to procure the registration of a Restriction against the registered title to the Property … that no disposition of that title is to be registered unless a Solicitor of the Senior Court certifies that the conditions set out in paragraph 9.3 below have been satisfied.
…
9. The Respondent is (notwithstanding paragraph 3 above) permitted to sell the Perston Shares, the West 2 Shares, and/or the Property provided that the following conditions are satisfied:
9.1 Any sale of the Perston Shares or the West 2 Shares must be a sale of the entirety of those shares;
9.2 No sale of the Property may take place until after registration of a Restriction in accordance with paragraph 5 above;
9.3 The sale (whether of the Perston Shares, the West 2 Shares or the Property) is not to proceed unless and until,
(i) The Applicant has confirmed in writing his acceptance that the sale is at full market value (provided that this condition will fall away if this written confirmation is unreasonably withheld);
(ii) A firm of Solicitors appointed by the Respondent (which must be solicitors practising in England and Wales) has undertaken to hold the net proceeds of sale on the terms of this Order – ("the Undertaking");
(iii) The sale is on terms that the entire proceeds of sale will be paid to the Firm of Solicitors bound by the Undertaking;
(iv) On completion the entire proceeds of sale must be paid to the Firm of Solicitors bound by the Undertaking."
Applications under section 25 CJJA
"(1) The High Court in England and Wales or Northern Ireland shall have power to grant interim relief where—
(a) proceedings have been or are to be commenced in [a foreign state]….
(2) On an application for any interim relief under subsection (1) the court may refuse to grant that relief if, in the opinion of the court, the fact that the court has no jurisdiction apart from this section in relation to the subject-matter of the proceedings in question makes it inexpedient for the court to grant it.
"On an application for interim relief under subsection (1), the court is not bound to grant relief, but may decline to do so if in its opinion the fact that it is exercising an ancillary jurisdiction in support of substantive proceedings elsewhere makes it inexpedient to grant it. It is the ancillary or subordinate nature of the jurisdiction rather than its source which is material, and the test is one of expediency. The structure of subsections (1) and (2) and the way in which their scope has been progressively widened indicate to my mind an intention on the part of Parliament that the English court should in principle be willing to grant appropriate interim relief in support of substantive proceedings taking place elsewhere, and that it should not be deterred from doing so by the fact that its role is only an ancillary one unless the circumstances of the particular case make the grant of such relief inexpedient."
"Where a defendant and his assets are located outside the jurisdiction of the court seised of the substantive proceedings, it is in my opinion most appropriate that protective measures should be granted by those courts best able to make their orders effective. In relation to orders taking direct effect against the assets, this means the courts of the state where the assets are located; and in relation to orders in personam, including orders for disclosure, this means the courts of the state where the person enjoined resides."
"Where an application is made for in personam relief in ancillary proceedings, two considerations which are highly material are the place where the person sought to be enjoined is domiciled and the likely reaction of the court which is seised of the substantive dispute. Where a similar order has been applied for and has been refused by that court, it would generally be wrong for us to interfere. But where the other court lacks jurisdiction to make an effective order against a defendant because he is resident in England, it does not at all follow that it would find our order objectionable."
"It would be unwise to attempt to list all the considerations which might be held to make the grant of relief under section 25 inexpedient or expedient, whether on a municipal or a worldwide basis. But it would obviously weigh heavily, probably conclusively, against the grant of interim relief if such grant would obstruct or hamper the management of the case by the court seized of the substantive proceedings ("the primary court"), or give rise to a risk of conflicting, inconsistent or overlapping orders in other courts. It may weigh against the grant of relief by this court that the primary court could have granted such relief and has not done so, particularly if the primary court has been asked to grant such relief and declined. On the other hand, it may be thought to weigh in favour of granting such relief that a defendant is present in this country and so liable to effective enforcement of an order made in personam, always provided that by granting such relief this court does not tread on the toes of the primary court or any other court involved in the case. On any application under section 25 this court must recognise that its role is subordinate to and must be supportive of that of the primary court."
"The jurisdiction of national courts is primarily territorial, being ordinarily dependent on the presence of persons or assets within their jurisdiction. Commercial necessity resulting from the increasing globalisation of trade has encouraged the adoption of measures to enable national courts to provide assistance to one another, thereby overcoming difficulties occasioned by the territorial limits of their respective jurisdictions. But judicial comity requires restraint, based on mutual respect not only for the integrity of one another's process, but also for one another's procedural and substantive laws. The test is an objective one. It does not depend upon the personal attitude of the judge of the foreign court or on whether the individual judge would find our assistance objectionable. Comity involves respect for the foreign court's jurisdiction and process, not respect for the foreign judge's feelings. A court which is invited to exercise its ancillary jurisdiction to provide assistance to the court seised of the substantive proceedings need feel no reluctance in supplying a want of territorial jurisdiction but for which the other court would have acted. But it should be very slow to grant relief which the primary court would not have granted even against persons present within its own jurisdiction and having assets there. Assisting a foreign court by supplying a want of territorial jurisdiction is plainly within the policy of the Act; assisting plaintiffs by offering them a lower standard of proof is not obviously within the legislative policy."
Would interim relief be granted if the substantive proceedings were in England?
"… the approach of the court in this country to an application for interim relief under s.25 is to consider first if the facts would warrant the relief sought if the substantive proceedings were brought in England. If the answer to that question is in the affirmative then the second question arises, whether, in the terms of s.25(2), the fact that the Court has no jurisdiction apart from the second makes it inexpedient to grant the interim relief sought."
The merits
The relief sought
The freezing injunction
"2. Mareva (or freezing) injunctions were from the beginning, and continue to be, granted for an important but limited purpose: to prevent a defendant dissipating his assets with the intention or effect of frustrating enforcement of a prospective judgment. They are not a proprietary remedy. They are not granted to give a claimant advance security for his claim, although they may have that effect. They are not an end in themselves. They are a supplementary remedy, granted to protect the efficacy of court proceedings, domestic or foreign: see Gee, Commercial Injunctions, 5th ed (2004), pp 77–83.
3. In recognition of the severe effect which such an injunction may have on a defendant, the procedure for seeking and making Mareva injunctions has over the last three decades become closely regulated. I regard that regulation as beneficial and would not wish to weaken it in any way. The procedure incorporates important safeguards for the defendant. One of those safeguards, by no means the least important, is that the claimant should identify the prospective judgment whose enforcement the defendant is not to be permitted, by dissipating his assets, to frustrate. The claimant cannot of course guarantee that he will recover judgment, nor what the terms of the judgment will be. But he must at least point to proceedings already brought, or proceedings about to be brought, so as to show where and on what basis he expects to recover judgment against the defendant."
"46. The point of freezing orders is to restrain dealings by the defendant with assets which, if judgment is obtained, will be available to satisfy the judgment. It is obvious, therefore, that the assets targeted by such an order are assets that belong beneficially to the defendant, since only such assets will be so available. Thus assets held by the defendant as a trustee for others will not, in the absence of words expressly extending the order to them, be caught by the order. That was made clear by the Court of Appeal in Federal Bank of the Middle East v Hadkinson [2000] 1 WLR 1695. The mere fact that a defendant controls assets is not sufficient to bring them within the reach of a freezing order unless the order expressly so provides."
The proprietary injunction
"Although I am a successful businessman, I do not have 40 million shekels in cash and I am entirely reliant on the proceeds of sale from the Property to fund the acquisition. In fact, to raise the money to pay the investors I will need all of the net proceeds of sale plus some of my own money, and there is no prospect of me raising the entire amount from other assets."
"I am still recovering from the financial consequences of the recession in 2008. I must therefore acknowledge that any cross-undertaking in damages that I give may be of limited value in practice."
Would it be inexpedient to grant such relief?
The expert evidence of Israeli law
"A court which is invited to exercise its ancillary jurisdiction to provide assistance to the court seized of the substantive proceedings need feel no reluctance in supplying a want of territorial jurisdiction but for which the other court would have acted. But it should be very slow to grant relief which the primary court would not have granted even against persons present within its own jurisdiction and having assets there. Assisting a foreign court by supplying a want of territorial jurisdiction is plainly within the policy of the Act; assisting plaintiffs by offering them a lower standard of proof is not obviously within the legislative policy."
(emphasis added)
Temporary relief until 25 November 2015
"3. My position is that [the Applicant's] application before the English court is without merit and should be dismissed. For that reason, I do not believe it would be appropriate for me to give any undertakings as to when the sale will complete. I am also extremely wary of doing so given the inaccurate account provided by [the Applicant] to the Israeli Court of the undertakings I gave to this Court in August.
4. However, I do wish to assist the English court and I therefore confirm, as previously disclosed, that the contractual completion date is not until after 25 November 2015. I confirm as well that Reynolds Porter Chamberlain, the solicitors acting for West 2 Limited on the sale, are working towards completion on the contractual date and not some earlier date. I do not know of any reason why the date for completion will or should be brought forward and it is not my intention to accelerate completion."
"My Lords, when an application for an interlocutory injunction to restrain a defendant from doing acts alleged to be in violation of the plaintiff's legal right is made upon contested facts, the decision whether or not to grant an interlocutory injunction has to be taken at a time when ex hypothesi the existence of the right or the violation of it, or both, is uncertain and will remain uncertain until final judgment is given in the action. It was to mitigate the risk of injustice to the plaintiff during the period before that uncertainty could be resolved that the practice arose of granting him relief by way of interlocutory injunction; but since the middle of the 19th century this has been made subject to his undertaking to pay damages to the defendant for any loss sustained by reason of the injunction if it should be held at the trial that the plaintiff had not been entitled to restrain the defendant from doing what he was threatening to do. The object of the interlocutory injunction is to protect the plaintiff against injury by violation of his right for which he could not be adequately compensated in damages recoverable in the action if the uncertainty were resolved in his favour at the trial; but the plaintiff's need for such protection must be weighed against the corresponding need of the defendant to be protected against injury resulting from his having been prevented from exercising his own legal rights for which he could not be adequately compensated under the plaintiff's undertaking in damages if the uncertainty were resolved in the defendant's favour at the trial. The court must weigh one need against another and determine where 'the balance of convenience' lies."
Conclusion