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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 >> Scenna & Anor v Persons Unknown Using the Identity "Nancy Chen" & Ors [2023] EWHC 799 (Ch) (05 April 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2023/799.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 799 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
BUSINESS LIST (ChD)
B e f o r e :
(sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge)
____________________
(1) DANIEL CARLOS SCENNA (2) HOST GROWTH INC (a company registered in Ontario) |
Claimants |
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- and – |
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(1) PERSONS UNKNOWN USING THE IDENTITY "NANCY CHEN" (2) PERSONS UNKNOWN USING THE IDENTITY "VERA" (3) PION MARKET LTD (a company incorporated in England) (4) QS TRADING LTD (a company incorporated in Hong Kong) (5) WIN FY PTY LTD (a company incorporated in Australia) (6) TECO INDUSTRIAL PTY LTD (a company incorporated in Australia) (7) AUSTRALIA AND NEW ZEALAND BANKING GROUP LTD (a company incorporated in Australia) (8) WESTPAC BANKING CORPORATION (a company incorporated in Australia) (9) DAH SING BANK LTD (a company incorporated in Hong Kong) |
Defendants |
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Edward Harrison (instructed by Farrer & Co LLP) for the Seventh Defendant
Edward Levey KC (instructed by Herbert Smith Freehills LLP) for the Eighth Defendant
Hearing date: 27 January 2023
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Crown Copyright ©
James Pickering KC:
PART I: INTRODUCTION
PART II: THE BACKGROUND
PART III: THE CONTINUATION APPLICATION
PART IV: THE DISCLOSURE ORDER APPLICATIONS
PART V: THE JURISDICTION APPLICATIONS
PART VI: THE COSTS APPLICATION
PART VII: CONCLUSION
PART I: INTRODUCTION
(1) the return date of the Claimants' application for the continuation of the worldwide freezing orders as against the First to Sixth Defendants ("the Continuation Application");
(2) the applications of the Seventh and Eighth Defendant banks challenging the grant of the disclosure orders ("the Disclosure Order Applications");
(3) the applications of the Seventh and Eighth Defendant banks challenging the jurisdiction of the English court in respect of the substantive claim ("the Jurisdiction Applications"); and
(4) a short point regarding costs ("the Costs Application").
PART II: THE BACKGROUND
(1) an account in the name of the Fourth Defendant held at the Ninth Defendant bank in Hong Kong;
(2) an account in the name of the Fifth Defendant held at the Seventh Defendant bank in Australia; and
(3) an account in the name of the Sixth Defendant held at the Eighth Defendant bank, also in Australia.
"(1) the transaction history starting from the respective dates of transfer of the Relevant Sums onwards to the date of service of this Order, including:
(i) the deposit history;
(ii) the withdrawal history;
(iii) the access logs;
(iv) the approved devices; and
(v) know-you-client information relating to the respective bank and/or online account holders (including name, address, email addresses, and any other contact details available).
(2) the final balance, meaning the balance on the date of service of this Order…"
PART III: THE CONTINUATION APPLICATION
PART IV: THE DISCLOSURE ORDER APPLICATIONS
Approach
Should I simply discharge the disclosure order?
(1) there must be good grounds for concluding that the property in respect of which disclosure is sought belongs to the applicant;
(2) there must be a real prospect that the information sought will lead to the location or preservation of the relevant property;
(3) the order should not be wider than necessary;
(4) the interests of the applicant in getting the disclosure must be balanced against the detriment to the respondent; and
(5) appropriate undertakings must be given in respect of the use of the disclosed information and/or documents.
"In principle and on authority it seems to me that the court should not, save in exceptional circumstances, impose such a requirement upon a foreigner, and, in particular, upon a foreign bank. The principle is that a state should refrain from demanding obedience to its sovereign authority by foreigners in respect of their conduct outside the jurisdiction… (493G)
The need to exercise the court's jurisdiction with due regard to the sovereignty of others is particularly important in the case of banks. Banks are in a special position because their documents are concerned not only with their own business but with that of their customers. They will owe their customers a duty of confidence regulated by the law of the country where the account is kept… (494B-D)
International law generally recognises the right of a state to regulate the conduct of its own nationals even outside its jurisdiction, provided that this does not involve disobedience to the local law. But banks, as I have already said, are in a special position. The nature of banking business is such that if an English court invokes its jurisdiction even over an English bank in respect of an account at a branch abroad, there is a strong likelihood of conflict with the bank's duties to its customer under the local law. It is therefore not surprising that any bank, whether English or foreign, should as a general rule be entitled to the protection of an order of the foreign court before it is required to disclose documents kept at a branch or head office abroad… (496)
It seems to me that in a case like this, where alternative legitimate procedures are available, an infringement of sovereignty can seldom be justified except perhaps on the grounds of urgent necessity… (499F)"
(1) Compliance with the disclosure order would put them in breach of Australian law. Keeping the disclosure order in place would therefore expose them, so the Banks say, to potentially severe financial and reputational damage in Australia.
(2) There is nothing to stop the Claimants from applying to the Australian courts where a similar procedure for disclosure relief is available. Indeed, the Banks have both confirmed that if the Claimants were to make such an application to the Australian courts, neither would oppose the making of a disclosure order and (unsurprisingly) both would comply with any such order made. Discharging the English disclosure order, so the Banks say, would therefore not cause the Claimants any real prejudice – they could simply apply for the equivalent relief in Australia.
(3) Given the above, the only potential exceptional circumstance which would justify the keeping of the disclosure order was if this was a "hot pursuit" case. This, however, is not such a case; on the contrary, so the Banks say, there has been considerable delay on the Claimants' part.
(a) Would compliance with the disclosure order put the Banks in breach of Australian law?
(b) Availability of an alternative procedure
(c) Hot pursuit
(d) The balancing exercise
Should I set aside the permission to serve out the disclosure order?
(1) there must be a good arguable case that the claim falls within one of the relevant jurisdictional gateways;
(2) there must be a serious issue to be tried on the merits; and
(3) in all the circumstances, England must be clearly or distinctly the most appropriate forum.
Conclusion
PART V: THE JURISDICTION APPLICATIONS
Gateway
Serious issue
(1) an equitable proprietary claim;
(2) a claim in unconscionable/knowing receipt; and
(3) a claim in unjust enrichment.
(a) The equitable proprietary claim
(b) The claim in unconscionable/knowing receipt
"In short, a continuing proprietary interest in the relevant property is required for a knowing receipt claim to be possible. A defendant cannot be liable for knowing receipt if he took the property free of any interest of the claimant…"
(c) The claim in unjust enrichment
"The point is also recognised in judicial authority. In Jeremy Stone Consultants Ltd v National Westminster Bank plc [2013] EWHC 208 (Ch) Sales J addressed a claim to recover from the defendant bank money which it was induced by a third party to pay into a company's bank accounts when the company, unbeknown to the claimants, was part of the third party's fraudulent Ponzi scheme. One of the claims against the bank was for restitution of the moneys in those accounts on the basis of NatWest's unjust enrichment as a result of the moneys having been paid on the basis of a mistake. Sales J rejected the claim based on unjust enrichment on two grounds. First, he held that the defendant bank had not been enriched. He stated (para 242):
"it is true that when the claimants paid sums to NatWest for the account of SEWL, NatWest received those sums and added them to its stock of assets as moneys to which it was beneficially entitled. However, the increase in its assets was matched by an immediate balancing liability, in the form of the debt which NatWest owed SEWL reflected in the increase in SEWL's bank balance as a result of the payments."
He held that the claimants' unjust enrichment claim properly lay against the company, whose assets were increased by the payments into its bank accounts…"
"Secondly, even if there had been enrichment, he held that the bank had a defence of good faith change of position and a defence of ministerial receipt, because it had a contractual obligation to pay out the sums in SEWL's account in accordance with its customer's instructions and had done so."
Forum
Conclusion
PART VI: THE COSTS APPLICATION
PART VII: CONCLUSION
(1) I will continue the worldwide freezing order relief as against the First to Sixth Defendants.
(2) I will discharge the disclosure order insofar as it relates to the Banks; alternatively, I will set aside the order permitting to serve out in relation to the same.
(3) I will set aside the service of the Claim Form on the Banks on the basis that the court does not have (or should not exercise any) jurisdiction in relation to the claim.
Note 1 Deriving from the judgment of Lord Denning in Bankers Trust v Shapira [1980] 1 WLR 1274 [Back]