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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 >> Rasmala Trade Finance Fund v Trafigura PTE Ltd [2022] EWHC 2860 (Ch) (12 October 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2022/2860.html Cite as: [2022] EWHC 2860 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
BUSINESS LIST (ChD)
7 Rolls Buildings Fetter Lane London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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RASMALA TRADE FINANCE FUND | Claimant | |
- and - | ||
TRAFIGURA PTE LIMITED | Defendant |
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Unit 1 Blenheim Court, Beaufort Business Park, Bristol, BS32 4NE
Web: www.epiqglobal.com/en-gb/ Email: [email protected]
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR N KITCHENER, KC and MS E JONES appeared on behalf of the Defendant
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Crown Copyright ©
(1) It alleges that the five payments were impressed with a constructive trust in Rasmala's favour, of which Trafigura was the trustee.
(2) It alleges that Trafigura has been unjustly enriched by the Rasmala Payments at Rasmala's expense.
Rasmala alleges it is entitled, under either claim, to repayment of the entirety of the sums paid out.
(i) a payment of $3.9 million by IIG in December 2017;
(ii) a payment of $3.08 million by FIM in April 2018;
(iii) a payment of $5.36 million by FIM in May 2018;
(iv) a payment of $1.52 million by FIM in May 2018; and
(v) a payment of $3.92 million by NBF in June 2018.
In my judgment, it is critical to the outcome of these applications that the terms of these payments were wholly different to the terms of the Rasmala Payments.
During the period in question, Trafigura, acting via Mr Gupta, Mr Gokhale and Mr Jasani, systematically applied financiers' advances (including, insofar as Rasmala is currently aware, advances by each of NBF, FIM, and IIG Bank (Malta) Limited ('IIG')) against Farlin's historic debts rather than against the fresh,
assignable, shipments which the financiers believed they were funding. In essence, Trafigura was maintaining, for its insolvent customer, a Ponzi scheme whereby new advances, procured fraudulently, were used to pay off old debts that Farlin could not have properly or honestly serviced. In paragraph 49 of its Defence, Trafigura complains that the foregoing allegations are inadequate. In answer to that complaint, Rasmala pleads the best particulars it currently can as to Trafigura's practices, but Rasmala must and does reserve the right to amend and/or plead further herein following disclosure by Trafigura.
Then what follows are, as I say, ten pages odd of particulars in relation to those other transactions involving the three banks identified and Farlin and Trafigura which are said to be similar fact evidence of Trafigura's practices.
"Rasmala will rely on the foregoing as evidence of Trafigura's actual knowledge that the Payments were sought by Farlin in order to maintain a credit line with Trafigura, alternatively that Trafigura wilfully turned a blind eye to the obvious likelihood that Farlin was deceiving financiers into advancing sums to be allocated other than against the liabilities which the financiers believed they were financing".
(i) whether the trial would be distorted and the attention of the decision-maker distracted;
(ii) whether the probative value of the facts outweighs the potential for causing unfair prejudice; and
(iii) whether there would be a substantial burden on the resisting party.
(See also in this connection JP Morgan Chase Bank & Ors v Springwell Navigation Corporation [2005] EWCA Civ 1602 at [76]-[82].)
(i) on the basis that they do not advance a properly-pleaded case that Farlin perpetrated a fraud on the banks, of which Trafigura was on notice;
(ii) they are not supported by any or any credible evidence which establishes a sufficiently arguable case that the allegations are correct;
(iii) they are not relevant to any issues in the proceedings; and
(iv) they would, if permitted, distort the entire proceedings and impose an unfair and prejudicial burden on Trafigura.
"Mr Bitcon suggests that 'good practice' required the individuals at Trafigura to seek the Banks' agreement to apply the Pleaded Non-Party Payments to shipments other than those referenced in Trafigura's undertakings. It is unclear what is meant by 'good practice', or in what industry this practice is said to exist. Trafigura was a seller of commodities and typically had no direct relationship with any of Farlin's financiers. It is not obvious why 'good practice' would require Trafigura to make contact with its counterparty's financier. The individuals at Trafigura are not, and were not, aware of any such 'good practice': Summerfield 2, §5. There is, in any event, no suggestion that non-compliance with any such 'good practice' would have been dishonest".
"All this threatens either to overburden the trial or, if steps are taken that are directed simply to avoiding that burden, to deprive Chase of effective scrutiny of the case put against it. Neither outcome is acceptable. There is in the end an unavoidable choice to be made between trying one case -- the present case -- and trying three."
Those comments are, it seems to me, particularly apposite in the present case and I have come to the clear conclusion that the only appropriate choice is to confine the claimant to the one case as presently pleaded and not allow a further three or five (depending on how you count) to be added to the pleading.