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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 >> CFC 26 Ltd & Anor v Brown Shipley & Co Ltd & Ors [2017] EWHC 1594 (Ch) (28 June 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2017/1594.html Cite as: [2017] 1 WLR 4589, [2017] WLR 4589, [2017] EWHC 1594 (Ch), [2017] WLR(D) 430 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
7 Rolls Buildings, Fetter Lane London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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CFC 26 LIMITED SHG-SH20 LIMITED |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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BROWN SHIPLEY & CO LIMITED KBL EUROPEAN PRIVATE BANKERS SA CONCORD W1 GPS LIMITED CONCORD 204 GPS LIMITED WESTMINSTER CITY COUNCIL MR DIN HESSAM YEGANEH |
Defendants |
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Mr Marc Glover (instructed by Gordon Dadds LLP) for the Sixth Defendant
Hearing dates: 10 March & 4 May 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Newey :
Basic facts
i) The litigation with which I am concerned all arises out of an underlease of Sofia House;ii) On 10 October 2014, Mr Yeganeh applied for an injunction to restrain the Receivers from selling Sofia House. Sales J dismissed the application on 15 October and ordered Mr Yeganeh to bear the Receivers' and Banks' costs;
iii) Mr Yeganeh had by then issued the 2014 Claim, to which the Receivers and Banks were defendants. On 19 January 2015, however, Birss J ordered the claim form to be struck out and judgment to be entered for KBL on the counterclaim. Birss J's order also provided for Mr Yeganeh to pay the defendants' costs of the proceedings. In his judgment, Birss J said that he would "assume in Mr Yeganeh's favour that he has some arguable Claim or arguable Defence to the Counterclaim", but that there was "no alternative that has any air of justice about it other than to give judgment in default on the counterclaim and to strike out these proceedings for failure to serve the Particulars of Claim";
iv) By an application notice dated 10 February 2015, Mr Yeganeh sought an order for the applications that had been before Birss J to be re-listed and relief from sanctions;
v) At much the same time, SHG, of which Mr Yeganeh is the ultimate beneficial owner, issued the 2015 Claim against the Receivers and Banks;
vi) On 15 July 2015, Mr David Halpern QC, sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge, dismissed Mr Yeganeh's application for the matters before Birss J to be re-listed and relief from sanctions. He further ordered Mr Yeganeh to pay the defendants' costs on the indemnity basis and recorded that he considered the application to be totally without merit. On the same occasion, Mr Halpern acceded to an application in the 2015 Claim for security for costs. Mr Halpern made an order requiring SHG to give security of £174,500 to the Receivers and £225,000 to the Banks;
vii) Mr Yeganeh and SHG sought to appeal Mr Halpern's orders, but without success. On 26 November 2015, Patten LJ refused to grant permission to appeal and characterised the applications for permission as totally without merit;
viii) SHG failed to provide the security for costs that Mr Halpern had directed, with the result that the 2015 Claim was struck out;
ix) The 2016 Claim was issued on 25 February 2016 on the footing that SHG and Mr Yeganeh had on 15 February assigned their claims against the defendants to CFC, another company ultimately owned by Mr Yeganeh. The defendants comprised the Banks, Concord and the Council;
x) The defendants all issued applications in the 2016 Claim for the claims against them to be struck out and/or for summary judgment in their favour. Those applications came before me in October of last year. At the hearing, the defendants maintained that the assignment to CFC by SHG and Mr Yeganeh of their claims was invalid. On the morning of the second day of the hearing, counsel for CFC told me that it was no longer contended that the assignment was effective but that SHG was applying to be joined to the proceedings as claimant;
xi) For the reasons given in my judgment of 29 November 2016, I dismissed the proceedings as against the Banks and Concord and struck them out as against the Council. I also certified the claims against the Banks and Concord to be totally without merit and decided that, notwithstanding the fact that he was not a named claimant, the defendants' costs (as regards the Banks and Concord, on the indemnity basis) should be borne by Mr Yeganeh as well as CFC and SHG. In that connection, I concluded in a supplemental oral judgment that Mr Yeganeh was behind the litigation and particular corporate entities and had been "effectively controlling the litigation and supporting it" and had been "doing so with a view to obtaining a personal benefit if it is successful". In a further oral judgment, I said:
"It is, in effect, the third occasion on which Mr Yeganeh has sought to bring proceedings in respect of the sale of Sofia House. The earlier claims for different reasons were struck out but, undeterred, Mr Yeganeh has been responsible for a third set of proceedings being issued";xii) The order I made on 29 November 2016 provided, too, for Mr Yeganeh to be joined as the sixth defendant to the proceedings and for the application for a CRO to be considered at a later hearing.
The legal framework
Issues
i) Whether an ECRO requires there to have been at least three totally without merit claims or applications. Mr Marc Glover, who appeared for Mr Yeganeh, submitted that the word "persistently", as used in paragraph 3.1 of Practice Direction 3C, carries that implication, but Mr Boardman said otherwise;ii) Whether a CRO can be based wholly or in part on claims or applications made in the name of someone other than the subject of the CRO. Mr Boardman argued that claims or applications in the names of third parties can potentially be relevant, but Mr Glover disputed this;
iii) Whether, on the facts of the present case, it is appropriate to make an ECRO.
The meaning of "persistently"
"8 What, therefore, does 'persistently' mean in para 3.1 of the PD? In [R (Kumar) v Secretary of State for Constitutional Affairs [2006] EWCA Civ 990, [2007] 1 WLR 536] the Court of Appeal cited (at para 68) the following passage from [Bhamjee v Forsdick [2003] EWCA Civ 1113, [2004] 1 WLR 88]:
'By the time the order comes to be made the litigant for whom the further restraint has been adjudged necessary will have exhibited not only the hallmarks of vexatiousness…but also the hallmarks of persistent vexatiousness…We do not include the word "habitual" among the necessary criteria for an extended civil restraint order, but there has to be an element of persistence in the irrational refusal to take "no" for an answer before an order of this type can be made.'
At para 69 in Kumar the Court of Appeal stated that under the statutory CRO regime it was sufficient that the previous claims or applications were totally without merit, and that the litigant persisted in making them. The requirement for 'vexatiousness', or its modern equivalent, had gone.
9 What seems, therefore, to be required is a persistence in making wholly unmeritorious claims. I note that in Supperstone –v- Hurst [2009] EWHC 1271 Mr Bernard Livesey QC (sitting as a Deputy Judge of the Chancery Division) regarded three wholly unmeritorious claims or applications by Mrs Hurst as being sufficient to constitute 'persistence' (para 55). To my mind, three unmeritorious claims or applications must be the bare minimum for establishing 'persistence'. The essential thrust of decisions such as [Ebert v Birch [2000] Ch 484], Bhamjee and Kumar is that the court should engage in a graduated, and proportionate, response to the identified abuse. This would make it logical for the statutory scheme to have a higher pre-condition threshold for the making of an extended CRO as opposed to a limited CRO (and an even higher threshold as a pre-condition for the making of a general CRO). The wordings of paras 2.1, 3.1 and 4.1 of the PD clearly confirm that this is the case. If the pre-condition threshold for a limited CRO is two or more applications which are totally without merit then 'persistence' in para 3.1 of the PD must, on any logical analysis, require more than two unmeritorious claims or applications."
"It will be seen that the threshold for extended civil restraint order is higher than that for a limited civil restraint order: persistent applications or claims for the former, and two or more applications for the latter. That is because the effect of an extended civil restraint order is more draconian. It does not merely restrain the applicant in the instant proceedings; it also restrains the issue of claims or making of applications in other proceedings which may loosely be said to be related to the instant proceeding. The vice at which the extended civil restraint order is directed is the litigant who issues and makes applications in more than one set of proceedings. There is no hint in any of the appellant's actions to date that he is likely to issue other proceedings against the respondent or against other parties involving or relating to or touching upon the instant proceedings. For that reason alone, in my judgment, the decision to make an extended civil restraint order on 20th January 2006 was misconceived."
Mr Boardman submitted that, the Connah case not having been cited to him, Mr Bartley Jones had failed to appreciate in Courtman v Ludlam that what an ECRO demands is unmeritorious claims or applications in more than one set of proceedings, not more than two claims or applications.
Claims and applications in other people's names
"In general terms, however, it cannot be in the interests of justice that a person subject to a civil proceedings order should be able to avoid the effect of the prohibition contained in section 42(1A) simply by forming or joining a limited partnership and either instituting or seeking to continue proceedings with others. It is not difficult to envisage circumstances in which the other partners would be ciphers and the partnership would simply be a device to enable the person subject to the civil proceedings order to carry on vexatious litigation."
"In my judgment the evidence does support the proposition that, indeed, the presentation of this petition was an act performed by the [petitioner] by Mr Flack [i.e. the respondent to the application for a civil proceedings order] in bad faith, as part of a protracted course of action on Mr Flack's part to bring pressure to bear on the [company]."
Although ultimately holding that Mr Flack's conduct did not warrant the making of a civil proceedings order, Pill LJ (with whom Butterfield J agreed) said that the "pre-March 1999 proceedings" (which included the winding-up petition) had been vexatious.
"Where, however, the non-party not merely funds the proceedings but substantially also controls or at any rate is to benefit from them, justice will ordinarily require that, if the proceedings fail, he will pay the successful party's costs. The non-party in these cases is not so much facilitating access to justice by the party funded as himself gaining access to justice for his own purposes. He himself is 'the real party' to the litigation, a concept repeatedly invoked throughout the jurisprudence - see, for example, the judgments of the High Court of Australia in the Knight case 174 CLR 178 and Millett LJ's judgment in Metalloy Supplies Ltd v MA (UK) Ltd [1997] 1 WLR 1613. Consistently with this approach, Phillips LJ described the non-party underwriters in T G A Chapman Ltd v Christopher [1998] 1 WLR 12, 22 as 'the defendants in all but name'."
The present case
i) Mr Yeganeh's application in the 2014 Claim for the applications that had been before Birss J in January 2015 to be re-listed and relief from sanctions (see paragraph 3(iv) and (vi) above);ii) The applications by Mr Yeganeh and SHG for permission to appeal against the orders Mr Halpern made in the 2014 and 2015 Claims in July 2015 (see paragraph 3(vii) above); and
iii) The claims made against the Banks and Concord in the 2016 Claim (see paragraph 3(xi) above).
"it's been a long, hard journey. The price of financial is replaceable but discrediting people, lying.. I rather die than loose these. I believe in God. And I know there is justice in the end of the day"; and
"Over the last 3 years I have been subject to lack of energy, on and off, due to the stress I will fight to the end whatever it takes. If it means death, let it be."
Conclusion