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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 >> Glenbrook Capital LP v Hamilton (t/a Hamiltons) [2014] EWHC 2297 (Comm) (11 July 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2014/2297.html Cite as: [2014] EWHC 2297 (Comm) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Rolls Building Fetter Lane London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
GLENBROOK CAPITAL LP |
Claimant |
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- and – MARK HAMILTON trading as HAMILTONS |
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Daniella Gilbert (instructed by Lawrence Stephens) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 30 June, 1-3 July 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
Jonathan Hirst QC:
- The Claimant contends:
(1) 670 ozs were delivered to the Claimant's vault no. 129 at the Silver Vaults and, as is now common ground, a further 10 ozs in the form of about 5 spoons was given to the teenage daughter of a friend of Mr Wickersham. So 680 ozs were not converted.
(2) Between 8,825.7 ozs and 8,845.7 ozs, say 8,835 ozs, were delivered to Mr Hore and subsequently to the Claimant. The difference of 20 ozs is dependent on the weight of silver in some items with non-silver blades or handles.
(3) The balance of 8,166 ozs has never been accounted for.
- The Defendant contends that ultimately all the silver was delivered to the Claimant. Some was delivered as silver bars produced from Glenbrook silver that had been melted down.
3. At a Case Management Conference held on 24 January 2014, Teare J. approved the following list of issues:
(1) What items of silverware were bought by the Defendant for the Claimant between 2006 and 2010 ("the items")?
(2) Which if any of the items had been lawfully disposed of prior to the end of April 2011?
(3) As at the end of April 2011, what was the value of the items, less the value of any Items within (2) above?
(4) Which items were delivered up by the Defendant to Mr Hore?
(5) What is/was the value of the Items within (4) above as at their time of release to the Claimant.
(6) Which if any of the items were delivered by the Defendant to the Claimant or its agents after the end of April 2011?
(7) Which if any of the Items were melted down into silver bars and delivered by the Defendant to the Claimant or its agents after the end of April 2011?
(8) What was the value of any items within (6) and (7) above at the time of their delivery to the Claimant?
(9) To what if any damages is the Claimant entitled?
(10) What if any interest on these damages should be awarded?
To these issues, I agreed to add one further issue on the first day of the hearing:
(11) To what, if any, profit share was the Defendant entitled?
The Claimant was opposed to the Court deciding this further issue but I considered that it arguably fell within (9) and that in any event it was desirable that this issue was decided now, rather than being left for further argument. I was satisfied I could do so justly.
For the Claimant:
Richard Rudgley, the former President of Glenbrook Capital Management, the General Partner of the Claimant.
Grover Wickersham, a consultant to the Claimant. He is a member of the California Bar and a director of a US public company.
Paul Frankel, a former employee of the Claimant, by witness statement only.
Robert Lishman, CEO of the Claimant, by a police statement only.
I also read statements by Trudie Protopapas and Christine Vella, solicitors employed by Swinnerton Moore
For the Defendant:
Mark Hamilton. He is an experienced silver dealer and has been in the business for many years. Hamiltons was a respected business in which his mother and brother were also involved, but for some time he has been the sole proprietor.
Richard Inglis, Mr Hamilton's deputy until 2009.
Joel Langford, another silver dealer trading in the Silver Vaults.
Casey Conway (by witness statement only). He ran businesses called Do Buy 925 Limited and 375 Live Limited and had the facilities and equipment to melt silver flatware into bars.
Additionally the Claimant called Mr Michael Hore as an independent expert witness. He also had factual evidence to give. Mr Hore is the principal behind Chester Valuation Company. He had previously run the valuations department for Sotheby's in Chester.
The principal facts
(1) He received from Mr Hamilton: approximately 8,166 ozs sterling silver plus 96 distressed wooden canteen boxes.
(2) He received from the Claimant (ex Vault 129): 670 ozs sterling silver plus about 6 wooden canteen boxes
The total weight of silver received by Mr Hore was between 8,825.7 and 8845.7 ozs, say 8,836 ozs.
The issues
(1) What items of silverware were bought by the Defendant for the Claimant between 2006 and 2010 ("the items")?
"unless the defendant did produce the jewel, and shew it not to be of the finest water, they should presume the strongest case against him, and make the value of the best jewels the measure of their damages".
[19] ... a defendant who has, in breach of duty, made it difficult or impossible for a claimant to adduce relevant evidence must run the risk of adverse factual findings.
(2) Which if any of the items had been lawfully disposed of prior to the end of April 2011?
(3) As at the end of April 2011, what was the value of the items, less the value of any Items within (2) above?
(4) Which items were delivered up by the Defendant to Mr Hore?
(5) What is/was the value of the Items within (4) above as at their time of release to the Claimant?
(6) Which if any of the items were delivered by the Defendant to the Claimant or its agents after the end of April 2011?
(7) Which, if any of the Items were melted down into silver bars and delivered by the Defendant to the Claimant or its agents after the end of April 2011?
(8) What was the value of any items within (6) and (7) above at the time of their delivery to the Claimant?
(9) To what if any damages is the Claimant entitled?
(10) What if any interest on these damages should be awarded?
(11) To what if any profit share was the Defendant entitled?