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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 >> Crypto Open Patent Alliance v Wright (WFO Application) [2024] EWHC 743 (Ch) (28 March 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2024/743.html Cite as: [2024] EWHC 743 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY LIST (ChD)
7 Rolls Buildings Fetter Lane London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
CRYPTO OPEN PATENT ALLIANCE
(for itself and as Representative Claimant on behalf of Square, Inc., Payward Ventures, Inc. (DBA Kraken),
Microstrategy, Inc., and Coinbase, Inc.)
Claimant in IL-2021-000019 (the "COPA Claim")
- and -
CRAIG STEVEN WRIGHT
Defendant in the COPA Claim
(1) DR CRAIG STEVEN WRIGHT
(2) WRIGHT INTERNATIONAL INVESTMENTS LIMITED
(3) WRIGHT INTERNATIONAL INVESTMENTS UK LIMITED
Claimants in IL-2022-000069 (the "BTC Core Claim")
- and -
(1) BTC CORE
(2) WLADIMIR JASPER VAN DER LAAN
(3) JONAS SCHNELLI
(4) PIETER WUILLE
(5) MARCO PATRICK FALKE
(6) SAMUEL DOBSON
(7) MICHAEL ROHAN FORD
(8) CORY FIELDS
(9) GEORGE MICHAEL DOMBROWSKI (a.k.a 'Luke Dashjr')
(10) MATTHEW GREGORY CORALLO
(11) PETER TODD
(12) GREGORY FULTON MAXWELL
(13) ERIC LOMBROZO
(14) JOHN NEWBERY
(15) PETER JOHN BUSHNELL
(16) BLOCK, INC.
(17) SPIRAL BTC, INC.
(18) SQUAREUP EUROPE LTD
(19) BLOCKSTREAM CORPORATION INC.
(20) CHAINCODE LABS, INC
(21) COINBASE GLOBAL INC.
(22) CB PAYMENTS, LTD
(23) COINBASE EUROPE LIMITED
(24) COINBASE INC.
(25) CRYPTO OPEN PATENT ALLIANCE
(26) SQUAREUP INTERNATIONAL LIMITED
Defendants in the BTC Core Claim
____________________
ALEX GUNNING KC (instructed by Macfarlanes LLP) appeared for the Developers (Defendants 2-12, 14 & 15) in the BTC Core Claim
TERENCE BERGIN KC (instructed by Shoosmiths LLP) appeared for Dr Wright on the applications in the COPA Claim and (instructed by Harcus Parker Ltd) for the Claimants in the BTC Core Claim.
Hearing Date: 27th March 2024
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
This judgment was handed down remotely by circulation to the parties' representatives by email. It will also be released for publication on the National Archives and other websites. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be Thursday 28th March 2024 at 10.00am.
MR JUSTICE MELLOR:
Introduction
The trigger for this hearing
COPA's costs
18.1. COPA's total costs in the COPA Claim and the BTC Core Claim are £6,703,747.91.
18.2. COPA say that 85% would be a reasonable estimated recovery in the circumstances of this case (including by reference to the hourly rates and the likelihood of an indemnity costs order).
18.3. COPA has reduced the total sum by 7.5%, to arrive at a figure half-way between the interim payment on account which it seeks (i.e. 85%) and its total costs recovery. No increment has been added for interest on paid costs (which COPA will claim in due course) or for costs which COPA will incur between now and the end of the case.
18.4. COPA say that this approach thus seeks to ensure that there will be funds to cover the interim payment on account plus an additional amount to reflect the prospect that COPA will recover more in respect of (i) costs incurred to date, (ii) interest on items of costs paid to date and (iii) costs yet to be incurred up to final order.
Applicable Principles
Have COPA shown a good arguable case?
24.1. First, in Jet West Ltd v. Haddican [1992] 1 WLR 487, the applicant had the benefit of a costs order, with those costs to be "taxed if not agreed". Lord Donaldson held (at 490) that a freezing injunction "can be granted or can be continued in support of any judgment or order of the court for the payment of money, whether or not the exact sum which will be payable has been quantified at the date of the order and the date at which the Mareva injunction is sought". Accordingly, COPA submitted that if I were to grant the costs orders which COPA is seeking there would be no question but that jurisdiction exists to grant the freezing order it now seeks.
24.2. Second, if I decline to order COPA's costs in principle now and/or were not to award an interim payment on account of costs, COPA indicated an argument might be mounted that the Court should not exercise its jurisdiction in favour of granting a freezing order, based on what Morgan J. said in Cooke v Venulum Property Investments Ltd v Cadman [2013] EWHC 4288 (Ch), at [14]:
"In the present case, the claimants do not have a relevant order for costs in their favour. They refer to the possibility that an order might be made in their favour. That seems to me to fall wholly within the rule which I have referred to, that freezing relief is not to be granted in relation to a claim which does not currently exist but might later come into existence."
24.3. Third, COPA pointed out that Cooke predates the Privy Council's decision in Convoy Collateral Ltd v Broad Idea International Ltd [2021] UKPC 24, in which the court disavowed the then conventional view that a freezing injunction is contingent on the existence of substantive (extant or prospective) domestic proceedings, or a pre-existing cause of action. Instead, the: "key question is whether the assets are or would be available to satisfy a judgment through some process of enforcement" (see [85] and [88]). Further, as Lord Leggatt JSC made clear at [89]:
'The interest protected by a freezing injunction is the (usually prospective) right to enforce through the court's process a judgment or order for the payment of a sum of money. A freezing injunction protects this right to the extent that it is possible to do so without giving the claimant security for its claim or interfering with the respondent's right to use its assets for ordinary business purposes. The purpose of the injunction is to prevent the right of enforcement from being rendered ineffective by the dissipation of assets against which the judgment could otherwise be enforced.'
24.4. On that basis, COPA submitted that once this is appreciated, there is no reason to link the grant of such an injunction to the existence of a cause of action. What matters is that the applicant has a good arguable case for being granted substantive relief in the form of a judgment that will be enforceable by the court from which a freezing injunction is sought.
24.5. Fourth, that the Court of Appeal in Re G [2022] EWCA Civ 1312, at [57]-[61] confirmed that Convoy Collateral Ltd correctly states the law in England.
24.6. Fifth, COPA also drew attention to the decision of Marcus Smith J in Santina Limited v Rare Art (London) Ltd [2023] EWHC 807 (Ch). The effects of [36(10)] and [37] of that decision were that the Court upheld as correct a prior decision of Edwin Johnson J, in which he granted a freezing order in part on the basis of "the likely costs Rare Art would recover if awarded its costs of the entire proceedings".
24.7. Accordingly, COPA submitted that, on the basis that COPA has a good arguable case for being granted substantive relief in the form of the costs orders it seeks, which will be enforceable by this court, it will meet the good arguable case test, even if the Court does not grant the costs order which COPA seeks at this juncture.
27.1. I should not determine the costs orders sought by COPA and the Developers without giving Dr Wright's legal team the time and opportunity to prepare any arguments they wish to make.
27.2. However, that should not place any obstacle in the way of the grant of freezing relief, and, for the reasons explained in the remainder of this Judgment, I hold that it does not.
Does a real risk of dissipation exist?
31.1. At the general level, COPA submit that Dr Wright has shown himself prepared to lie and to double-down on his lies, on such a grand scale that his "commercial morality" can only be assessed as being unacceptably low. Also at the general level, he showed in his evidence that his capacity for evasion is considerable. It follows from the decision announced at the end of trial that the Court has concluded that Dr Wright has given extensive and elaborate dishonest evidence under oath in multiple sets of proceedings – the present actions, the Kleiman proceedings in the USA, the McCormack proceedings in the UK and the Granath proceedings in Norway (as well as verifying dishonest accounts in statements of case in the Tulip Trading Ltd and Granath proceedings in the UK).
31.2. At a more specific level, COPA point out with justification that Dr Wright has not been candid about the means and sources of his funding of litigation, which speaks to his attentiveness to maintaining at a distance from COPA potential targets for eventual costs orders. On an application of the principles set out at paragraph 28 above, this constitutes cogent evidence of a risk of a dissipation.
40.1. The risk of dissipation is assessed objectively. Whilst a delay in seeking a freezing order may be said to be evidence that the claimant does not genuinely believe that there is a risk of dissipation – because if the claimant had thought that, he would have acted sooner – that is not a determinative factor (JSC Mezhdunarodniy Bank v Pugachev [2015] EWCA Civ 906 at [34]; Gulf International v Aldwood [2019] EWHC 1666 (QB) at [174]).
40.2. The inferences to be drawn from delay and the likelihood of a risk of dissipation are matters which depend on the facts of the case. In particular:
40.2.1. The fact that a defendant has been put on notice of the claim (even in detailed pre-action correspondence) does not necessarily preclude a finding that there is a risk of dissipation once the claim has started (Antonio Gramsci v Recoletos [2011] EWHC 2242 (Comm) at [28]-[29]).
40.2.2. Delay may mean that some assets could have been dissipated before the injunction is granted. However, the injunction may nevertheless bite on other assets which are harder to dissipate (e.g. real property or substantial business interests) or which have yet to be secreted away (Antonio Gramsci at [28]; Madoff Securities v Raven [2011] EWHC 3102 (Comm) at [156]; Pugachev at [34]).
40.2.3. Even if it does not disprove a risk of dissipation, delay is still relevant to the court's general discretion whether to grant a freezing order (Gulf International v Aldwood at [174]).
40.2.4. Although each case will turn on its own facts, in the majority of instances, delay has not established that there was no risk of dissipation such that the injunction should not be granted (see for example Pugachev, Madoff Securities, Ras al Khaimah v Bestford [2018] 1 WLR 1099, Antonio Gramsci, FM Capital Partners Ltd v Marino [2018] EWHC 2889 (Comm)).
41.1. That Dr Wright could yet argue that none of the factors addressed above sufficiently bear on and establish a risk of dissipation.
41.2. That COPA's information is not complete and that it is working to an extent on inference, or that it is misconstruing the corporate documents and/or Dr Wright's statements. In answer to such arguments, COPA relies upon the evidence it has served and maintains that the inferences being drawn are reasonable ones.
41.3. That, in circumstances in which the essence of the Court's judgment was revealed on 14 March 2024 and in which COPA has not brought its application on until now and has done so on at least some notice to Dr Wright, there is no real risk of dissipation, or that COPA does not truly believe in the existence of such a risk. It might potentially be argued that, if COPA truly thought there was such a risk, it would have proceeded on a fully ex parte basis, rather than ex parte on notice.
28: "It could be said that, in every case where there is a letter before action, the defendant is alerted to the possibility of a claim and the need for dissipation of assets if the defendant is minded so to do in order to make himself judgment-proof. However, time and again the courts have granted freezing orders on commencement of proceedings following exchanges of correspondence where the merits of the claim have been fully debated and the defendant thereby undoubtedly alerted."
29: "In my judgment it is no answer for a defendant to come to the court to say that his horse may have bolted before the gate is shut and then to put that forward as a reason for not shutting the gate. That would be to pray in aid his own efforts to make himself judgment proof - if that, indeed, is what has occurred - and to avoid the effect of any court order which the court might make. If he can show that there is no risk of dissipation on other grounds, that is one thing. If he can show that the claimants do not consider that there is such a risk by virtue of the delay in seeking the order, that again is a relevant factor. However, if the court is satisfied about those matters in favour of the claimant, there is no reason why the court should not shut the gate, however late the application, in the hope, if not the expectation, that some horses may still be in the field or, at the worst, a miniature pony."
Conclusion on risk of dissipation
Cross-undertaking in damages and fortification.
45.1. Although the guarantee was originally provided by way of security for costs, it is not limited in its use. On its terms, it could be called upon in response to any unpaid order resulting from the cross-undertaking. Dr Wright can claim on it simply by presenting a notice to Barclays Bank certifying:
45.1.1. that an amount is due and owing under a Court Order (which must be attached); or
45.1.2. that an amount has been agreed to be payable and is owing under a settlement agreement (which again must be attached); and
45.1.3. that the amount owing has not been paid.
45.2. Its expiry date is 7 March 2026. Accordingly, its duration should be more than sufficient for the purposes of fortifying the cross-undertaking.
Is it just in all the circumstances to grant a freezing order?
47.1. the inevitability of Wright's liability for COPA's costs (or, at the very least, a very substantial proportion of them);
47.2. the strength of the evidence relied upon as to the risk of dissipation;
47.3. the quantum of COPA's costs; and
47.4. the extent of the protection being afforded to Dr Wright, the remoteness of the possibility that the order sought could cause him loss notwithstanding.
48.1. First, that he has met all payment orders in the present and recent proceedings, including substantial orders for security for costs in favour of the Developers and other defendants to his various actions. He has also satisfied two costs payments to COPA (one in 2022 and one in 2024). Thus, it could be said that Dr Wright does not present a risk of defaulting on a costs order. In response, COPA say that it would be wrong to attach much weight to the fact of Dr Wright having met orders before now. Those orders (especially the security for costs orders) were made to maintain his position in the litigation; to "keep him in the game". They were not made and met at a time after he had failed at trial. The sums paid were in each case a fraction of the amounts now being claimed by way of costs against Dr Wright and his companies (including by COPA and by the Developers).
48.2. COPA also point out that all except one of the payments made were made prior to the "deal" which COPA understands was done between Dr Wright and Mr Ayre (addressed in Mr Sherrell's affidavit at [38]) which provided for Dr Wright to "fund himself". The payments were made at the time when COPA believes that Mr Ayre and/or his company nChain were funding Dr Wright's litigation (although Dr Wright disputes that position). The provision of security after the "deal" was done was made late, after Dr Wright's cheque had "bounced" (in the words of Dr Wright's solicitors). The payment to COPA in January 2024 was also significantly less substantial than the sums in issue here and made from two different accounts. COPA is not aware of Dr Wright ever having met a costs order of the magnitude claimed in the present case and the fact remains, as mentioned above, that Dr Wright has a broader prior history of significant defaults.
48.3. Second, that the veracity of Dr Wright's accounts as to the various trust structures and similarly opaque means of holding his assets has been disputed, including in these proceedings. In particular, the existence of the "Tulip Trust" (or its various iterations) were in issue at trial, as were Dr Wright's accounts of having incorporated his Seychelles companies in 2009 and 2011 (rather than acquiring them as pre-aged shelf companies in 2014). In response, COPA suggest that, on any view, the opacity and apparently unnecessary complexity of Dr Wright's asset-holding structures is established, and this is a legitimate cause for concern. Further, not all aspects of Dr Wright's apparent recourse to offshore asset-holding vehicles have been doubted by COPA – the short point is that they remain opaque to it, hence the need for asset disclosure orders.
48.4. Third, that it may be that Dr Wright's shares in RCJBR are of no real value, either (i) because of circumstances outside COPA's knowledge or (ii) in any event given that COPA's case in the main trial was that Dr Wright has a history of falsifying information in relation to company records. In response, COPA say that they rely less on the premise that RCJBR's assets are of value (albeit it would stand to reason for them to be of some value); rather, they rely on the fact that the filings indicate that Dr Wright is moving assets overseas following the Court's ruling.
Conclusion on the application for the WFO
49.1. First, COPA has a very powerful claim to be awarded a very substantial sum in costs.
49.2. Second, I consider there is a very real risk of dissipation.
49.3. Third, it is just in all the circumstances to grant a freezing order.
49.4. In the particular circumstances, it is also plain that the order must extend worldwide.
49.5. Having given careful consideration to COPA's costs arguments and attempting to anticipate the points which could be made in response on behalf of Dr Wright, I concluded the appropriate sum for the WFO was the sum of £6m.
Points on the draft Order
Other directions