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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 >> SP Commodities Ltd, Re [2024] EWHC 2747 (Ch) (29 October 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2024/2747.html Cite as: [2024] EWHC 2747 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
INSOLVENCY & COMPANIES LIST
RE SP COMMODITIES LIMITED (IN LIQUIDATION)
Rolls Building, Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
SITTING AS A HIGH COURT JUDGE
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MARK REYNOLDS AND ADAM HARRIS (as joint liquidators of SP Commodities Ltd) |
Applicants |
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- and – |
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PRIYESH PAREKH |
Defendants |
____________________
Mr Michael Phillis (instructed by BBS Law Ltd) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 29 October 2024
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr David Halpern KC :
(1) The initial application for a freezing order which was heard by Richard Smith J on 28 August 2024;
(2) The application for substituted service of the freezing order, which was heard by Zacaroli J on 4 September 2024; and
(3) The costs of the second hearing of the freezing application , which took place before Miles J on 18 September 2024.
(1) That R should pay the costs of the application for substituted service;
(2) That the need for an order for substituted service was brought about by R's conduct, that the decision was made on the merits, and hence that his client should pay the costs (Accordingly I need say nothing more about that those costs); and
(3) That the law has been clarified by Dos Santos. Nevertheless he maintained that there was no general rule that a successful application for a freezing order should have his costs and that in the present case R had not opposed the application "tooth and nail".
"116. In so far as there is a general rule as to the costs of contested interlocutory or procedural applications, it is that a party who contests an application and fights it tooth and nail on every point, thereby causing the successful party to incur costs which would not otherwise be incurred, should be ordered to pay the successful party's costs at the conclusion of the application. This is clear from CPR 44.2(2) and is the general rule applied in the Business and Property Courts in relation to contested interlocutory applications. The Court will not usually reserve costs to the trial judge of, for example, a contested jurisdiction or disclosure application which the defendant has lost, merely because the defendant points out that it might succeed in defeating a claim at trial. Were it otherwise trial judges and, in turn costs judges, would be inundated with having to make rulings on costs of interlocutory applications which had been reserved by the judges who heard the applications.
117. Of course the Court has a discretion to make a different order on a contested interlocutory application, including reserving the costs to the trial judge, as CPR 44.2(b) provides. One situation in which the Court will usually make an order that the costs be reserved is in the case of an American Cyanamid interim injunction as the authorities from Desquenne onwards establish. However, that is because, on the balance of convenience, the Court is prepared to grant an interim injunction which allows a party to rely upon a right or obligation, the existence of which has yet to be established, effectively holding the ring pending the trial. If at trial the right or obligation is established then the injunction can be made final and permanent or other relief granted. However if the claimant's case fails at trial, then it can generally be said that the interim injunction should not have been granted, since the right or obligation did not exist or was not established. Hence it is generally more appropriate for the costs of the application for the interim injunction to be reserved to the trial judge.
118. However, the position is different in the case of a freezing injunction. If the claimant establishes the three criteria referred to in [6] above: (1) a good arguable case on the merits; (2) a real risk that a future judgment would not be met because of an unjustified dissipation of assets; (3) that it would be just and convenient in all the circumstances to grant the freezing injunction, then the Court will grant the injunction. When granted it is not "interim" or dependent on the balance of convenience like an American Cyanamid injunction, nor will the Court make the injunction final at trial, as in the case of an interim American Cyanamid injunction. As Edwin Johnson J pointed out at [29] of his costs judgment in Harrington there is no such thing as a final freezing order. Subject to any subsequent application to vary or discharge it, the freezing injunction remains in place until trial. If the claim succeeds the Court may continue the injunction post judgment but that is not the making of a final injunction. The purpose of the freezing injunction remains as set out at [85] of Convoy Collateral : "to facilitate the enforcement of a judgment or order for the payment of a sum of money by preventing assets against which such a judgment could potentially be enforced from being dealt with in such a way that insufficient assets are available to meet the judgment."
119. Another important distinction between a freezing injunction and an American Cyanamid injunction is that whereas, in the case of the latter, if the relevant right or obligation is not established at trial it can generally be said that the interim injunction should not have been granted, in the case of the former even if the claim fails at trial, it does not follow that the freezing order was not correctly granted on the basis that the claimant satisfied the three criteria for the grant of the freezing injunction. …"
(1) A brought these proceedings for misfeasance against R, a former director of the Company. The trial was listed for July 2024 but was adjourned at the last minute because R had changed solicitors and claimed to be ill. R was ordered to pay the wasted costs but has failed to do so.
(2) In the course of investigating what assets R might have, A discovered activity at the Land Registry which led them to apply for a freezing order on 28 August. They gave prior notice to R on 23 August, but R did not respond until 29 August, after the order had been made. He then failed to respond to further correspondence.
(3) He gave an address in Dubai but it became apparent that he was not living there, which is why it was necessary to obtain an order for substituted service.
(4) He was served with notice of the intended return date but again failed to respond, leaving A with no option but to prepare for a contested hearing.
(5) He attended the hearing on the return date by video-link and instructed the CLIPS representative to act for him. Mr Christopher Snell, who appears for A, also appeared on that occasion. He informed me that the CLIPS representative applied in the alternative either to discharge the freezing order, on the ground that there was no risk of dissipation, or to adjourn the return date so that R could put in evidence in opposition.
(6) In the event Miles J continued the order until trial but added: "The Respondent shall have liberty to apply to discharge or vary the Freezing Injunction on notice to the Applicants. For the purposes of any such application, the Respondent shall not need to show a material change in circumstances between the date of this order and the date of his application to vary or discharge the Freezing Injunction."
(1) He says that A could have sought an undertaking from R but failed to do so. I am satisfied that R has behaved evasively throughout and has failed to communicate with A. A had no reason to think that R would agree to give an undertaking, nor did R offer to do so.
(2) He says that the injunction is unusual in that A's undertaking in damages is limited to the assets in their hands as liquidators. Mr Snell accepts that the principal asset is the benefit of the claim against R and hence in practice the undertaking is unlikely to be of much value if R is ultimately successful. In my judgment the fact that this makes the order particularly Draconian does not make any difference to the application of the analysis in Dos Santos. It remains the case that A have satisfied the test for a freezing order.
(3) He says that there was no full-blown opposition at the hearing before Miles J. However in my judgment it is clear that (i) R did not consent to the order before it was made and (ii) he did seek to oppose it at the hearing, but realised that he did not have sufficient evidence. Miles J's order, no doubt made at R's request, preserved R's right to keep alive his opposition to the order.
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