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England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> JSC BTA Bank v Ablyazov & Anor (Rev 1) [2009] EWHC 3267 (Comm) (11 December 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2009/3267.html Cite as: [2009] 2 CLC 967, [2010] 1 All ER (Comm) 1040, [2009] EWHC 3267 (Comm) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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JSC BTA BANK |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) MUKHTAR ABLYAZOV (2) ROMAN SOLODCHENKO (3) ZHAKSLYK ZHARIMBETOV (4) DREY ASSOCIATES LIMITED (5) ANTHONY EDWARD THOMAS STROUD (6) JOHN DOMINIC WILSON (7) SARAH JULIET WILSON |
Defendants |
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Brian Doctor QC, Adam Tolley and Alexander Milner (instructed by Clyde & Co LLP) for the First to Fourth Defendants
Hearing dates: 7 December 2009
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr. Justice Teare :
"4. Until after judgment on the next return date (see paragraph 16 below), the Respondents must not, except with the prior written consent of the Applicant's solicitors-
a. Remove from England and Wales any of their assets which are in England and Wales up to the value of £175,000,000 (one hundred and seventy five million pounds);
b. In any way dispose of, deal with or diminish the value of any of their assets whether they are in or outside England and Wales up to the value of £175,000,000 (one hundred and seventy five million pounds).
7. a. If the total value free of charges or other securities ('unencumbered value') of each of the Respondents' assets in England and Wales exceeds £175,000,000 (one hundred and seventy five million pounds) then that Respondent may remove any of those assets from England and Wales or may dispose of or deal with them so long as the total unencumbered value of the Respondent's assets still in England and Wales remains above that amount."
b. If the total unencumbered value of the Respondents' assets in England and Wales does not exceed £175,000,000 (one hundred and seventy five million pounds) then that Respondent must not remove any of those assets from England and Wales and must not dispose of or deal with any of them. If that Respondent has other assets outside England and Wales, he may dispose of or deal with those assets outside England and Wales so long as the total unencumbered value of all his assets whether in or outside England and Wales remains above £175,000,000 (one hundred and seventy five million pounds)."
a. If the total value free of charges or other securities ('unencumbered value') of each of the Respondents' assets in England and Wales exceeds £175,000,000 (one hundred and seventy five million pounds) then that Respondent may remove any of those assets from England and Wales or may dispose of or deal with them so long as the total unencumbered value of the Respondent's assets still in England and Wales remains above that amount.
b. If the total unencumbered value of the Respondents' assets in England and Wales does not exceed £175,000,000 (one hundred and seventy five million pounds) then that Respondent must not remove any of those assets from England and Wales and must not dispose of or deal with any of them.
c. If a Respondent has other assets outside England and Wales, he may dispose of or deal with those assets outside England and Wales so long as the total unencumbered value of all his assets in England and Wales remains above £175,000,000 (one hundred and seventy five million pounds)."
The Defendants' Application
The Claimant's Application
"The difficulty arises with the final sentence of sub-paragraph (2) of the standard form. That appears to give a respondent free rein to deal with his foreign assets, so long as the total value of his assets remains above £175m……..That liberty would enable a respondent to move assets from a relatively secure location from the point of view of the enforcement of an English judgment at trial (eg a bank account in Paris) to an entirely insecure location (an individual who is a nominee in a far flung jurisdiction). And (seemingly) the respondent would be entitled to make such a transfer without the consent of the claimant or the court; one infers that that the Defendants contend that they would not even have to inform either the claimant or the court that a transfer had occurred…..Thus the alarming prospect is raised that at the end of a long trial the notional claimant would turn up at the bank in Paris with his judgment and be told that the account disclosed by the respondent at the commencement of the proceedings is empty, the funds having long since been paid to X on whichever offshore island. That cannot be right – it would be an emasculation of the worldwide aspect of a freezing order. The order in reality "freezes" nothing; so long as a respondent says he is (and would remain) sufficiently wealthy overseas, he is free to deal with his assets as he wishes."
"This is done in case it should be that the defendant has assets which exceed the amount of the plaintiff's claim. If such should be the case, it is not thought right to restrain him from dealing with the excess."
He then noted that such orders are unworkable for far as banks and other third parties are concerned because banks and other third parties do not know what other assets the defendant may have or their value. In dealing with that problem he said:
"In some cases the best course may be to omit the maximum sum altogether: and to make the injunction comprehensive against all the assets of the defendant, as we used to do. This would cause the defendant little inconvenience. Because he could come along at once to the court and ask for the excess to be released- by disclosing the whereabouts of his assets and the extent of them."
"…….a maximum sum order is very often the appropriate course from the defendant's point of view to be preferred to a general order."
"6. Before considering the form of Mareva injunctions in cases where it is intended to serve copies of the order on third parties, in particular banks, I must deal with the vexed problem as to whether it is better in the first instance to freeze the defendant's assets in the jurisdiction generally, or to make what have been referred to as "maximum sum" orders, i.e. injunctions which only freeze the defendant's assets up to the level of the plaintiff's prima facie justifiable claim, leaving him free to deal with the balance. As to this, it seems to me to be plain that the latter alternative must be preferred, unless the case is exceptional, like the present one. There are two obvious reasons for this preference. First, it represents no more than what a plaintiff can justifiably request from the court. Secondly, an order which freezes all assets is, in the ordinary case, bound to lead to an outcry from the defendant and to the need for an adjustment, at any rate if he is resident or carries on business within the jurisdiction. Further, such an order cannot in my view be justified in principle, save in wholly exceptional cases, unless it is clear that (a) his assets within the jurisdiction are insufficient to meet the claim, and (b) he is neither resident nor carries on business within the jurisdiction. It therefore follows, in my view, that the norm should be the "maximum sum" order, and that an order applying to all assets should be the exception. "
"The relevant legal principle in determining whether for the purposes of granting or maintaining a freezing order a claimant has shown a sufficient "risk of dissipation" is that the claimant will satisfy that burden if it can show that:
(i) there is a real risk that a judgment or award will go unsatisfied, in the sense of a real risk that, unless restrained by injunction, the defendant will dissipate or dispose of his assets other than in the ordinary course of business: The Niedersachsen [1983] 2 Lloyd's Rep 600 per Mustill J as interpreted by Christopher Clarke J in TTMI v ASM Shipping [2006] 1 Lloyd's Rep 401 at 406 (paragraphs 24-27) or
(ii) that unless the defendant is restrained by injunction, assets are likely to be dealt with in such a way as to make enforcement of any award or judgment more difficult, unless those dealings can be justified for normal and proper business purposes: Stronghold Insurance v Overseas Union [1996] LRLR 13 at 18-19 per Potter J and Motorola Credit Corporation v Uzan (No 2) [2004] 1 WLR 113 at 153 (paragraphs 142-146) where the Court of Appeal was applying the same principle in the context of disclosure of assets by the defendant."
"………if there is a good arguable case that the First to Third Defendants engaged in the wrongful misappropriation of $295m. such conduct must, as a matter of common sense, be a cogent indicator of a risk that those same persons might seek to dissipate their assets to prevent or hinder enforcement of any judgment which the Bank may obtain. "
"14. The information provided by the First Defendant as to the whereabouts of the monies paid to the Fourth Defendant is to the effect that they were paid out within a short period of time to other companies and then paid out by those other companies to yet other companies, to a large extent ending up in accounts at the Bank. No explanation has been provided for these payments. It was suggested by counsel for the Bank that they were consistent with money laundering. The ease and speed with which these payments were made supports the suggestion that there is a risk of dissipation because they illustrated the ease and speed with which the Fourth Defendant, of which the First Defendant admits to be in control, can disperse assets.
15. The information provided by the First Defendant as to his own assets was remarkable in that he declared indirect interests in several companies in jurisdictions such as the Dominican Republic, Cyprus, the BVI, Seychelles, the Marshall Islands and Panama, (in addition to those in Kazakhstan, the Russian Federation, Ukraine and Belarus) but without any particulars as to the nature of his indirect interests. This had every appearance of being evasive. When cross-examined about such matters he indicated that in addition to holding shares in companies which owned valuable assets other companies or persons held assets for him. This latter form of indirect or beneficial ownership of assets also indicated the ease with which such assets could be hidden and dissipated. "
i) I will correct or vary the order sealed on 20 November 2009 pursuant to CPR 40.12 and CPR 3.1(7) so that paragraph 6 repeats paragraph 7 of the original freezing order.
ii) Subject to counsel providing a satisfactory redrafted version of the amendment sought by the Claimant (see paragraph 21 above) I will vary the freezing order (as corrected and varied pursuant to i) above) to give effect to the issue of principle raised by the Claimant.