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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 >> GFH Capital Ltd v Haigh & Ors [2020] EWHC 1269 (Comm) (19 May 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2020/1269.html Cite as: [2020] EWHC 1269 (Comm) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Fetter Lane London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
GFH CAPITAL LIMITED (a company incorporated in the Dubai International Financial Centre of the Emirate of Dubai) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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DAVID LAWRENCE HAIGH THE COVE ESTATES LIMITED (FORMERLY KNOWN AS ELIA ENTERPRISES) HOTEL COVE LIMITED COVE LAMORNA LIMITED (dissolved on 22 May 2018) MONT FLEURY LIMITED CLOATLEY HOSPITALITY LIMITED SPORT CAPITAL LIMITED ALISON LOUISE THOMAS |
Defendants |
____________________
The First Defendant (acting in person) for himself and the Second, Third, Fifth and Sixth Defendants
Hearing dates: 10 and 14 February 2020.
Further written submissions received 19 and 21 February 2020 and 8 March 2020
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Crown Copyright ©
Covid-19 Protocol: This judgment was handed down by the judge remotely by circulation to the parties' representatives by email and release to Bailii. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 19 May 2020 at 3:30 pm.
Mr Justice Henshaw:
(A) INTRODUCTION | 1 |
(B) FACTUAL BACKGROUND | 11 |
(1) The parties | 11 |
(2) The DIFC Claim | 15 |
(3) Other proceedings | 32 |
(C) LEGAL BACKGROUND | 33 |
(1) Enforcement of DIFC judgments | 33 |
(2) Applications under the CPR | 37 |
(D) PRINCIPAL ISSUES | 40 |
(E) CLAIM AGAINST MR HAIGH | 41 |
(1) Final and conclusive | 41 |
(2) Definite sum of money | 44 |
(3) Court of competent jurisdiction | 46 |
(a) Presence | 49 |
(b) Counterclaim | 50 |
(c) Submission by voluntary appearance | 62 |
(d) Position under UAE / Dubai law | 64 |
(4) Impeachability | 66 |
(a) Fraud | 68 |
(b) Public policy | 102 |
(c) Natural justice | 112 |
(F) MR HAIGH'S DEFENCE AND COUNTERCLAIM | 127 |
(G) GFH'S PROPRIETARY CLAIMS AGAINST THE FIRST, SECOND, THIRD, FIFTH AND SIXTH DEFENDANTS | 135 |
(1) The DIFC Judgment | 135 |
(2) GFH's proprietary claims | 139 |
(3) Legal principles: constructive trust | 144 |
(4) Legal principles: privity | 149 |
(5) Application to facts | 154 |
(H) ANY OTHER COMPELLING REASON FOR A TRIAL | 160 |
(I) CONCLUSIONS | 165 |
(A) INTRODUCTION
"I note that Males J in his order of 11.12.18 (Judgments bundle tab 58] § 11) directed that in future Mr Haigh must provide independent medical evidence concerning any inability to attend any hearing in person if he wishes to attend by telephone, setting out the details of his medical condition(s) and why he needs to attend by telephone.
Having reviewed Mr Haigh's witness statement dated 6.2.20 and its exhibits, I am not persuaded that he has provided such evidence. However, given the history of this matter, I am willing to take the pragmatic view that (rather than risking Mr Haigh's non-attendance) he should be permitted to attend by telephone subject to the following provisos:
1 Mr Haigh will be responsible for ensuring that he is available and equipped at 10.30am on Monday 10 February, the time listed for the hearing, to attend the hearing by telephone.
2 Mr Haigh must ensure he has telephone equipment sufficiently powered so as to able him to remain connected for whole duration of the hearing, which is listed for a full day. In practice that may is likely to require the use of a land line rather than relying on a mobile phone, and it is also likely to involve having a back-up phone to hand in case of any failure.
3 If, as it appears has occurred in past, the Court is unable to reach or remain in contact with Mr Haigh by telephone, the hearing will proceed nevertheless. In other words, if Mr Haigh wishes to seek to attend by telephone, he does so at his own risk."
(B) FACTUAL BACKGROUND
(1) The parties
(2) The DIFC Claim
i) against GFH for commission and referral fees, and other sums, said to be due under his employment contract;ii) against GFH, and Mr Al Reyes and Mr Patel of GFH, for luring him back to Dubai in breach of his contract of employment and/or by deceit;
iii) against GFH and Mr Al Reyes for malicious prosecution, false imprisonment and conspiracy;
iv) against GFH and Mr Patel for libel and slander;
v) against the United Arab Emirates for unlawful arrest, false imprisonment, personal injury, torture, misfeasance in public office, and numerous breaches of the UN Declaration of Human Rights/the UAE Constitution, all relating to his imprisonment and mistreatment in Dubai for around 20 months in 2014/15.
i) a gateway existed under DIFC law because the claimant, GFH, was a DIFC entity;ii) under the procedural rules, any jurisdiction challenge had to be made within 14 days of filing an acknowledgement of service and supported by evidence with a statement of truth, which had not been done; and by filing an acknowledgement without having taken such steps Mr Haigh was deemed to have accepted the court's jurisdiction;
iii) that point was not simply a technical one, because:
"Mr Haigh has not only filed a defence in this matter but has made numerous applications and appeals to this court for it to exercise its jurisdiction in his favour. Although in his original defence he purported to reserve his right to challenge the court's jurisdiction, not only do the rules not provide for that but, in taking all the steps that he has, Mr Haigh has unequivocally submitted to the jurisdiction of this court for the purposes of this action."iv) there was no basis for Mr Haigh's assertion that the Criminal Court in 'onshore' Dubai (a convenient expression for referring to Dubai excluding the DIFC) had determined any civil claim for compensation; and
v) it might be the case that the DIFC Court of Appeal had already effectively decided the point against Mr Haigh.
(3) Other proceedings
i) Dubai Criminal Proceedings. As noted earlier, Mr Haigh was arrested by the Dubai authorities on 18 May 2014. In August 2015 he was convicted of breach of trust, the court having found that he misappropriated funds from GFH. That conviction which was upheld on appeal in October 2015. Mr Haigh was re-arrested and further detained on a charge of 'cyberslander' by Twitter towards GFH in November 2015 and acquitted in March 2016. He was released on 24 March 2016.ii) High Court claim. Mr Haigh brought a claim in the High Court (QBD) in October 2014 against GFH and related persons for alleged misconduct in his return to Dubai. I have not been directed to any evidence of this claim having been pursued.
iii) Private prosecution. Mr Haigh brought a private prosecution against GFH and related persons in January 2015, which he ceased to pursue in June 2015 (by reason, he says, of ongoing duress as he was in prison in Dubai at this time). By an order on 30 September 2015, Mr Haigh was ordered to pay the costs of those proceedings. Mr Haigh applied for judicial review of the costs order in the High Court; in February 2017 the court reduced the costs order by 15% but otherwise dismissed Mr Haigh's application.
(C) LEGAL BACKGROUND
(1) Enforcement of DIFC judgments
"10. In order to be sued upon in the Commercial Court, a judgment of the DIFC Courts must be final and conclusive. It may be final and conclusive even though it is subject to an appeal.
11. The Commercial Court will not enforce certain types of DIFC Court judgments, for example judgments ordering the payment of taxes, fines or penalties.
12. The DIFC Courts must have had jurisdiction, according to the English rules of the conflict of laws, to determine the subject matter of the dispute. The Commercial Court will generally consider the DIFC Courts to have had the required jurisdiction only where the person against whom the judgment was given:
a. was, at the time the proceedings were commenced, present in the jurisdiction; or
b. was the claimant, or counterclaimant, in the proceedings; or
c. submitted to the jurisdiction of the DIFC Courts; or
d. agreed, before commencement, in respect of the subject matter of the proceedings, to submit to the jurisdiction of the DIFC Courts.
13. Where the above requirements are established to the satisfaction of the Commercial Court, a DIFC Court judgment may be challenged in the Commercial Court only on limited grounds. Those grounds include (but are not limited to):
a. where the judgment was obtained by fraud;
b. where the judgment is contrary to English public policy; and
c. where the proceedings were conducted in a manner which the Commercial Court regards as contrary to the principles of natural justice.
14. The Commercial Court will not re-examine the merits of a DIFC Court judgment. The judgment may not be challenged on the grounds that it contains an error of fact or law. A DIFC Court judgment will be enforced on the basis that the defendant has a legal obligation, recognised by the English court, to satisfy a judgment of the DIFC Courts.
26. In most cases, a party will be entitled to apply to obtain summary judgment without trial under Part 24 of the Civil Procedure Rules 1998 (as amended), unless the debtor can satisfy the Court that it has a real prospect of establishing at trial one of the grounds set out in paragraph 13 above. Applications for summary judgment are dealt with swiftly, without the need for oral evidence."
(footnote omitted)
(2) Applications under the CPR
"CPR 3.4(2) The court may strike out a statement of case if it appears to the court
(a) that the statement of case discloses no reasonable grounds for bringing or defending the claim;
(b) that the statement of case is an abuse of the court's process or is otherwise likely to obstruct the just disposal of the proceedings; or
(c) that there has been a failure to comply with a rule, practice direction or court order.
CPR 24.2 The court may give summary judgment against a claimant or defendant on the whole of a claim or on a particular issue if
(a) it considers that
(i) that claimant has no real prospect of succeeding on the claim or issue; or
(ii) that defendant has no real prospect of successfully defending the claim or issue; and
(b) there is no other compelling reason why the case or issue should be disposed of at a trial."
"The court may strike out a statement of case if, amongst other things, it appears that it discloses no reasonable grounds for bringing the claim: CPR 3.4(2)(a). It may grant reverse summary judgment where it considers that there is no real prospect of the claimant succeeding on the claim or issue and there is no other compelling reason why the case should be disposed of at trial: CPR 24.2(a)(i) and (b). In order to defeat an application for summary judgment it is only necessary to show that there is a real as opposed to a fanciful prospect of success. Although it is necessary to have a case which is better than merely arguable, a party is not required to show that they will probably succeed at trial. A case may have a real prospect of success even if it is improbable. Furthermore, an application for summary judgment is not appropriate to resolve a complex question of law and fact."
i) the court must consider whether the claimant has a "realistic" as opposed to a "fanciful" prospect of success: Swain v Hillman [2001] 1 All ER 91;ii) a "realistic" claim is one that carries some degree of conviction. This means a claim that is more than merely arguable: ED & F Man Liquid Products v Patel [2003] EWCA Civ 472 § 8;
iii) in reaching its conclusion the court must not conduct a "mini-trial": Swain v Hillman;
iv) this does not mean that the court must take at face value and without analysis everything that a claimant says in his statements before the court. In some cases it may be clear that there is no real substance in factual assertions made, particularly if contradicted by contemporaneous documents: ED & F Man Liquid Products v Patel § 10;
v) however, in reaching its conclusion the court must take into account not only the evidence actually placed before it on the application for summary judgment, but also the evidence that can reasonably be expected to be available at trial: Royal Brompton Hospital NHS Trust v Hammond (No 5) [2001] EWCA Civ 550;
vi) although a case may turn out at trial not to be really complicated, it does not follow that it should be decided without the fuller investigation into the facts at trial than is possible or permissible on summary judgment. Thus the court should hesitate about making a final decision without a trial, even where there is no obvious conflict of fact at the time of the application, where reasonable grounds exist for believing that a fuller investigation into the facts of the case would add to or alter the evidence available to a trial judge and so affect the outcome of the case: Doncaster Pharmaceuticals Group Ltd v Bolton Pharmaceutical Co 100 Ltd [2007] FSR 3;
vii) on the other hand, it is not uncommon for an application under Part 24 to give rise to a short point of law or construction and, if the court is satisfied that it has before it all the evidence necessary for the proper determination of the question and that the parties have had an adequate opportunity to address it in argument, it should grasp the nettle and decide it. If it is possible to show by evidence that although material in the form of documents or oral evidence that would put the documents in another light is not currently before the court, such material is likely to exist and can be expected to be available at trial, it would be wrong to give summary judgment because there would be a real, as opposed to a fanciful, prospect of success. However, it is not enough simply to argue that the case should be allowed to go to trial because something may turn up which would have a bearing on the question of construction: ICI Chemicals & Polymers Ltd v TTE Training Ltd [2007] EWCA Civ 725; and
viii) a judge in appropriate cases should make use of the powers contained in Part 24. In doing so he or she gives effect to the overriding objective as contained in Part 1. It saves expense; it achieves expedition; it avoids the court's resources being used up on cases where this serves no purpose; and it is in the interests of justice. If the claimant has a case which is bound to fail, then it is in the claimant's interest to know as soon as possible that that is the position: Swain v Hillman [2001] 1 All ER 91 § 94.
(D) PRINCIPAL ISSUES
Claim against Mr Haigh:i) Does Mr Haigh have a real prospect (in the sense outlined above) of successfully arguing that:
a) the DIFC Judgment is not final and conclusive;b) the DIFC Judgment is not for a definite sum of money (other than a sum payable in respect of taxes or other charges of a like nature);c) the DIFC Court was not a court of competent jurisdiction; ord) the DIFC Judgment is impeachable on the basis that it is i) obtained by fraud,ii) contrary to public policy, oriii) contrary to the principles of natural justice?ii) If not, is there any other compelling reason for a trial?
Mr Haigh's counterclaim: does Mr Haigh have a real prospect of avoiding the conclusion that the allegations set out in his counterclaim are barred by issue estoppel, by reason of having been decided against him by the DIFC either in the January 2018 Order with Reasons or in the DIFC Judgment? If not, is there any other compelling reason for a trial?
Claims against Second, Third, Fifth and Sixth Defendants: do any of these defendants have a real prospect of defending GFH's claims for declarations? If not, is there any other compelling reason for a trial?
(E) CLAIM AGAINST MR HAIGH
(1) Final and conclusive
(2) Definite sum of money
(3) Court of competent jurisdiction
i) was, at the time the proceedings were instituted, present in the foreign country;ii) was claimant, or counterclaimed, in the proceedings in the foreign court;
iii) submitted to the jurisdiction of that court by voluntarily appearing in the proceedings; or
iv) had before the commencement of the proceedings agreed, in respect of the subject matter of the proceedings, to submit to the jurisdiction of that court or of the courts of that country.
"33. Certain steps not to amount to submission to jurisdiction of overseas court
(1) For the purposes of determining whether a judgment given by a court of an overseas country should be recognised or enforced in England and Wales or Northern Ireland the person against whom the judgment was given shall not be regarded as having submitted to the jurisdiction of the court by reason only of the fact that he appeared (conditionally or otherwise) in the proceedings for all or any of the following purposes, namely -
(a) to contest the jurisdiction of the court;
(b) to ask the court to dismiss or stay the proceedings on the ground that the dispute in question should be submitted to arbitration or to the courts of another country;
(c) to protect or obtain the release of property seized or threatened with seizure in the proceedings.
(2) Nothing in this section shall affect the recognition or enforcement in England and Wales or Northern Ireland of a judgment which is required to be recognised or enforced there under the 1968 [Brussels] Convention or the Lugano Convention or the [Brussels I] Regulation ."
(a) Presence
(b) Counterclaim
"In Carrick v. Hancock, 12 T.L.R. 59, the principle of territorial dominion was again referred to. In that case an action was brought upon a monetary judgment obtained in Sweden by an Englishman domiciled in Sweden against a defendant who resided and carried on business at Newcastle. The writ was served on the defendant during a short visit he was paying to Sweden and he duly appeared to answer it. Though he did not himself remain in Sweden, he was represented throughout the subsequent proceedings. He put in a defence and counterclaim and on three separate occasions appealed to the Court of Appeal at Gota. It may be that in those circumstances, notwithstanding his protestations that he had "only appeared under pressure, duress and compulsion of law," the English court could properly have enforced the foreign judgment on the ground that the defendant had submitted to the jurisdiction of the Swedish court." (pp. 516-517)
albeit, as the Court of Appeal in Adams went on to note, the court in Carrick decided the issue based on territorial presence.
"It is obvious that a person who applies to a tribunal as claimant is bound to submit to its judgment, should that judgment go against him, if for no other reason than that fairness to the defendant demands this. It is no less obvious that a claimant exposes himself to acceptance of jurisdiction of a foreign court as regards any set-off, counterclaim or cross-action which may be brought against him by the defendant.256 By the same token, a defendant who resorts to a counterclaim or like cross-proceeding in a foreign court clearly submits to the jurisdiction thereof." (footnote omitted)
"161 The characterisation of whether there has been a submission for the purposes of the enforcement of foreign judgments in England depends on English law. The court will not simply consider whether the steps taken abroad would have amounted to a submission in English proceedings. The international context requires a broader approach. Nor does it follow from the fact that a foreign court would have regarded steps taken in the foreign proceedings as a submission that the English court will so regard them. Conversely it does not necessarily follow that because the foreign court would not regard the steps as a submission that they will not be so regarded by an English court as a submission for the purposes of the enforcement of a judgment of the foreign court. The question whether there has been a submission is to be inferred from all the facts."
" the party concerned must not be put in the invidious position of having to choose between losing his right to challenge the jurisdiction and losing his right to defend himself. If he has no choice but to participate in the hearing of the substance of the dispute and to wait to appeal a decision on jurisdiction until after the decision on the merits has been reached, his appearance at the substantive hearing will not, without more , be characterised as voluntary: see e.g. AES Ust-Kamenogorsk Hydropower Plant LLP v AES UST-Kamenogorsk Hydropower Plant JSC [2012] 1 WLR 920 On the other hand, a party who is seen to be "playing the system" by litigating the merits in the hope of getting a judgment in his favour and then cynically turning round to challenge the validity of the judgment on grounds of want of jurisdiction if he loses, will get short shrift from the English courts." (§ 67)
" The general thrust of the authorities, which were all examined in AES Ust-Kamenogorsk Hydropower Plant LLP v AES Ust-Kamenogorsk Hydropower Plant JSC is that for so long as the defendant asserted, and is obviously still asserting, as his primary defence that the court has no jurisdiction over him in relation to the merits of the claim, then even if he also takes steps which are purposeful in relation to the merits of the claim, his doing so should not be taken to mean that he has submitted to the jurisdiction for the purposes of the common law of submission, and has abandoned his challenge for the purpose of s.33. The real question for the English court should not be whether the defendant has taken a step in proceedings which prepare for the trial of the merits, but whether he has chosen to abandon his challenge to the jurisdiction. In answering this, the English court is not bound to follow the law of the foreign court on whether a defendant has succumbed to its jurisdiction; and if the defendant had "no real option but to act as it did", as it was put in AES Ust-Kamenogorsk Hydropower Plant LLP v AES Ust-Kamenogorsk Hydropower Plant JSC, the court may be reluctant to find that it has submitted to the jurisdiction." (§ 14-073, footnotes omitted)
"However, even if all those steps were to be regarded as no more than compulsory defensive steps (which I do not accept they were) Kader also raised a counterclaim and a cross-claim. In some foreign jurisdictions the rules of procedure may require affirmative defences to be brought by way of counterclaim for example, set-off or abatement. It is therefore relevant when looking at a counterclaim to consider whether it is purely defensive in nature, or whether the party concerned is invoking the jurisdiction of the court to decide claims in its favour, in a manner that goes beyond what is reasonably necessary to defend itself. As I have mentioned, Kader's primary line of defence was that it had been released from liability as surety by material variations to the Lease without its consent. It did not need to make a counterclaim in order to run that argument, but if the counterclaim did no more than repeat what was in the defence, or raise affirmative arguments that, if accepted, would reduce or extinguish Kader's liability as guarantor, it would probably not suffice to indicate a voluntary appearance for the purposes of enforcement of a foreign judgment." (§ 82)
i) there is no evidence that they were compulsory steps, in the sense that Mr Haigh was required or had no realistic option but to advance those arguments on the merits pending the outcome of a jurisdiction challenge;ii) he did not pursue any jurisdiction challenge after putting forward his Amended Defence and Counterclaim; and
iii) his other Counterclaims went well beyond what could on any view be regarded as 'defensive' pleadings. Even though they were later disallowed on the grounds of lack of realistic prospects of success, by making them Mr Haigh submitted to the merits jurisdiction of the DIFC Court.
(c) Submission by voluntary appearance
"This case rests on the simple and universally admitted principle that a litigant who has voluntarily submitted himself to the jurisdiction of a court by appearing before it cannot afterwards dispute its jurisdiction. Where such a litigant, though a defendant rather than a claimant, appears and pleads to the merits without contesting the jurisdiction there is clearly a voluntary submission. The same is the case where he does indeed contest the jurisdiction but nevertheless proceeds further to plead to the merits, or agrees to a consent order dismissing the claims and crossclaims, or where he fails to appear in proceedings at first instance but appeals on the merits." (Dicey § 14-069)
i) he did not take the steps necessary to preserve his challenge to the DIFC court's jurisdiction (albeit I note that Mr Haigh was in prison in Dubai at this time when his acknowledgment of service was filed, and he says in his 23rd witness statement that it was signed on his behalf by a pro bono lawyer whom he had met only briefly and in difficult circumstances);ii) there is no evidence that he was required to defend the case on the merits in order to challenge jurisdiction, or that he had no realistic option but to advance arguments on the merits pending the outcome of a jurisdiction challenge; and
iii) Mr Haigh continued to contest the DIFC Claim on the merits after his release from prison in Dubai and his return to England, by which stage he could not realistically be said to have been subject to any duress (even assuming he had previously been subject to duress).
(d) Position under UAE / Dubai law
(4) Impeachability
(a) Fraud
"The principles are, briefly: first, there has to be a 'conscious and deliberate dishonesty' in relation to the relevant evidence given, or action taken, statement made or matter concealed, which is relevant to the judgment now sought to be impugned. Secondly, the relevant evidence, action, statement or concealment (performed with conscious and deliberate dishonesty) must be 'material'. 'Material' means that the fresh evidence that is adduced after the first judgment has been given is such that it demonstrates that the previous relevant evidence, action, statement or concealment was an operative cause of the court's decision to give judgment in the way it did. Put another way, it must be shown that the fresh evidence would have entirely changed the way in which the first court approached and came to its decision. Thus the relevant conscious and deliberate dishonesty must be causative of the impugned judgment being obtained in the terms it was. Thirdly, the question of materiality of the fresh evidence is to be assessed by reference to its impact on the evidence supporting the original decision, not by reference to its impact on what decision might be made if the claim were to be retried on honest evidence." (footnotes omitted)
"The question is whether there is a prima facie that the particular foreign court was defrauded in the particular case. According to Habib Bank Ltd v Ahmed [2001] EWCA Civ 1270, [2002] 1 Lloyd's Rep 444, an allegation of fraud has eventually to be proved "to a high degree of probability". There must, therefore, be a prima facie case that this demanding standard can be reached at trial".
i) There is a general principle that a decision by a foreign court that a judgment from the courts of that country was not obtained by fraud can create an estoppel in English proceedings to enforce that judgment: Owens Bank Ltd v Bracco [1992] 2 A.C. 443 (Court of Appeal) per Parker LJ at pp 470 and 472, commenting upon House of Spring Gardens Ltd v Waite [1991] 1 Q.B. 241.ii) It may also be an abuse of process of the English court to raise for a second time an argument which was raised and disposed of in the foreign court: House of Spring Gardens Ltd v Waite [1991] 1 Q.B. 241 per Stuart-Smith LJ at pp 254-255. In Owens Bank Ltd v Etoile Commerciale SA [1995] 1 WLR 44 a French court gave judgment in favour of Etoile on a bank guarantee, rejecting the bank's allegation of fraud and forgery on the part of the plaintiff. A claim brought by the bank in St Vincent against Etoile for damages for fraud was struck out by the court. In subsequent proceedings in St. Vincent to enforce the French judgment, the Privy Council struck out, as an abuse of process, the bank's attempt to plead fraud as a defence.
i) he received considerable sums from GFH as legitimate commission/salary/expenses (and that others were paid in the same way);ii) he was in a position to 'whistle-blow' on alleged illegal activity by GFH, and also in a position to cause GFH financial harm;
iii) GFH fabricated an audit trail in order to allege in the DIFC proceedings that these legitimate payments to him were in fact fraudulent; and
iv) GFH lured Mr Haigh to return to Dubai, then knowingly supplied false information to the Dubai police to secure Mr Haigh's arrest and imprisonment, and commenced a knowingly fictitious claim against him in the DIFC in order to freeze his assets, leaving him unable to defend himself properly.
"The cross-claims have all hallmarks of a fictitious invention of a desperate defendant seeking to find some way of challenging sums which are indisputably due from him as a result of his own fraud. No credence can be given to any of the allegations made by the Defendant in this regard. No evidence has been adduced to make good any claims against LUFC or the Claimant for any part of the entitlement claimed and the cross claims must therefore be dismissed."
('LUFC' referred to Leeds United Football Club, into which GFH had made an investment and by which Mr Haigh was employed as managing director.)
"When the Defendant's bank statements are examined what is shown is a series of interbank transfers made for no apparent reason other than to obfuscate and hide the source from which the original payments came."
"David Haigh struck me as an honest intelligent witness who gave his evidence with calm dignity. He was obviously a man who had been significantly physically and psychologically damaged by his ordeal in the UAE and was in the process of what I consider will be a long recovery. I cannot reach any conclusion about the merits of the commercial dispute he has with his former employers because I have only heard his side of the story and the present case is not about that. The focus of his evidence before me related to why he was in Dubai in May 2014 and what happened to him, in police detention, during the trial process there and in prison custody after his conviction. With regard to these matters, I believed him when he said he was lured to Dubai. I believed his evidence when he indicated that high ranking Emiratis have influence over and access to the police and other aspects of civil society. I have no doubt he was telling the truth about seeing a civilian lawyer who acted for his former employers, in Bur Dubai Police Station in the company of a police officer pointing at him, before being questioned and beaten by police. The clear inference that that civilian lawyer had influence as to how he was badly treated and abused by the police, is irresistible. I fully accept he was repeatedly seriously assaulted by Dubai police officers and Tasered while detained at Bur Dubai Police Station. I accept he was interrogated and forced to sign a document in Arabic the content of which he could not understand. Thereafter, I believed the account he gave of squalid, overcrowded and insanitary detention conditions in Bur Dubai Police Station. I further believe he was sexually assaulted and raped in the car park of that Police station during his detention. I am also satisfied that the evidence he gave about poor consular access and no consular protection while in custody is true. In addition I believed him when he said the police authorities were both actively engaged in institutionalised racism against non-Muslims and non-Emiratis within the detention block and complicit in the racial abuse administered to non-Muslims by local prisoners within the detention centre. Albeit, I held Lord Rowbotham's document inadmissible in evidence, if I had to judge between its content based upon a single day's observation in one detention centre/prison in Dubai and the sustained ordeal endured by David Haigh who was held in 4 different custodial settings in Dubai over almost two years, I would have had little hesitation in preferring the direct tested evidence of David Haigh over the untested and limited narrative in the Lord Rowbotham document." (§ 71)
i) (in part) contrary to the general principle that a decision by a foreign court that a judgment from the courts of that country was not obtained by fraud creates an estoppel in English proceedings to enforce that judgment;ii) an abuse of process of the English court, since the issues were raised and disposed of in the foreign court;
iii) hopeless on the merits; and
iv) immaterial to the DIFC Judgment having been obtained on the terms that it was.
i) GFH's witness statements to the DIFC Court in May 2014 "all conceal the fact that jurisdiction had been asserted before the onshore court and accepted by that court; and, worse, they conceal the criminal conduct leading to [Mr Haigh's] incarceration in Dubai"; andii) GFH concealed relevant evidence before Justice Sir Jeremy Cooke in July 2018.
"multiple reports from PWC, forensic accounts Samuels LLP finding use of false invoices in payment of other Claimant staff and multi millions were due to me, and IT expert report of BR Consult and Robert Bradley [sc. Radley] forensics laboratories who I believe to be the leading handwriting expert in the country confirming my signature had been forged multiple times with attempts to cover up those forgeries on transfer forms none of these witness reports were referred to at all in the judgment of Justice Cooke. I cannot say if they were included as I was not served the hearing bundle and I was also in hospital."
(b) Public policy
i) where a judgment is inconsistent with a previous decision of a competent English court in proceedings between the same parties or their privies, res judicata being capable of expression as a rule of public policy (Dicey § 14-156 citing Vervaeke v Smith [1983] 1 A.C. 145, 160G);ii) where a judgment has been obtained in disobedience of an injunction not to proceed with the action in a foreign court, in circumstances of evidently discreditable behaviour on the part of the court concerned (Dicey § 14-156 citing AK Investment CJSC v Kyrgyz Mobil Tel Ltd [2011] UKPC 7);
iii) where enforcement of a foreign judgment would be contrary to the European Convention on Human Rights (that being the effect of the Human Rights Act 1998). There is arguable authority in support of the proposition that where a foreign court (such as the DIFC Court) is not a party to the Convention, such shortcomings must be "flagrant" (Government of USA v Montgomery (No.2) [2004] UKHL 37, discussed at Dicey § 14-160); and
iv) (possibly) where the foreign judgment is exemplary or punitive or for manifestly excessive damages (Dicey § 14-157).
i) the circumstances of his detention and criminal prosecution in Dubai violated his human rights; andii) the DIFC Court was not independent and impartial, either in general or given Mr Haigh's role as a human rights activist.
i) The Divisional Court concluded in Lodhi v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2010] EWHC 567 (Admin) that there was a real risk that if a national of Pakistan were extradited to the United Arab Emirates, his human rights would be breached either before trial or during imprisonment after conviction, as the general conditions of custody encouraged harsh treatment, especially of foreigners, and brutality in punishments.ii) The US State Department Country Report in the section on Civil Judicial Procedures and Remedies refers to the civil courts' lack of independence including by reason of the involvement of the local rulers' "diwans" who report to the Minister of the Interior.
iii) The DIFC is a Dubai court established in the name of the Ruler of Dubai, Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid al Maktoum, and whose judges swear an oath of office to the Ruler. Dubai is a dictatorship.
iv) At present a third of the judges of the DIFC courts are Emirati from the onshore Dubai courts. Mr Haigh makes specific reference to three DIFC judges. First, H.E. Justice Omar al Muhairi, who became Deputy Chief Justice of the DIFC courts in November 2018, had previously served as a Dubai Public Prosecutor. Secondly, H.E. Justice Shamlan al Sawalehi, who became a DIFC Court of Appeal judge in 2017, had served as Director of Strategic Affairs at the Executive Office of Sheikh Maktoum, as well as having worked as a Dubai Public Prosecutor and represented the Dubai Government in high value cases. Thirdly, H.E. Ali Shamis al Madhani, a judge of the DIFC Court of Appeal since 2008, had previously served as a Dubai Public Prosecutor.
v) Jurisdiction disputes between the DIFC Court and the onshore Dubai courts are decided not by individual courts but by the Joint Judicial Committee (on which H.E. Ali Shamis al Madhani, among others, has served). Mr Haigh says he tried to refer his case to the Committee but could not pay for the required Arabic translation by reason of the asset freezing order which GFH obtained in the DIFC.
vi) Mr Haigh refers to Articles 149, 175, 176, 180 and 182 of the Dubai Penal Code. These provisions include prohibitions on damaging the sovereignty, independence or unity of the State (Article 149), and deliberately and publicly insulting the State President, flag or national emblem (Article 176). Mr Haigh refers to a Human Rights Watch report on Emirati human rights defender Ahmed Mansoor, which he says shows that the provisions of the Penal Code are interpreted as making it an offence to criticise the UAE, Dubai, the DIFC, the courts or the Ruler, and are often used to jail human rights defenders and even judges.
vii) Mr Haigh notes that after he pointed out the Penal Code provisions to Mr Ali Malek QC, who had been listed to hear the present application in December 2019, Mr Malek recused himself on conflict grounds by reason of his position on the Dubai Financial Markets Tribunal (and thus, Mr Haigh says, ultimately employed by Sheikh Maktoum).
viii) The Freedom House 2019 report on the UAE states inter alia that "[t]he judiciary is not independent, with court rulings subject to review by the political leadership. Judges are appointed by executive decree, and the judiciary as an institution is managed largely by executive officials. Many judges are foreigners working on short-term contracts." (section 17 § F1).
i) The Lodhi decision about treatment of detainees in the UAE has no direct bearing on the DIFC Judgment and cannot amount to a public policy ground for declining to enforce it.ii) The US State Department Country Report relates to the Dubai onshore courts, not the DIFC.
iii) It is common for judges to be appointed formally in the name of, and swear an oath to, a head of state. That fact does not impair judges' ability to make rulings against the state's government or ministers, and cannot constitute a public policy objection to enforcement.
iv) Even if the fact that some DIFC judges have previously worked as Dubai public prosecutors, or (in one case) for the Executive Office of the Ruler of Dubai, were capable of making it inappropriate for them to sit in certain cases, there is no reason to believe that would be the case in the present case. Still less could that fact arguably mean that Justice Sir Jeremy Cooke lacked independence or impartiality in relation to the present case.
v) The constitution of the Joint Judicial Committee, and Mr Haigh's apparent attempt to seek from it a ruling that the onshore Dubai court should hear the case, have no bearing on the independence or impartiality of Justice Sir Jeremy Cooke.
vi) Even if one assumes for present purposes Mr Haigh's submissions about the practical impact of the Dubai Penal Code to be correct, they provide no public policy reason to decline to enforce the DIFC Judgment. The claimant, GFH, is neither the Dubai State nor its Ruler, nor an emanation of either. Counsel for GFH told me that GFH is a publicly owned company in which a stake is held by the state investment vehicle of Abu Dhabi, another member of the UAE (though the documents also contain reference to the state of Bahrain having a stake in GFH). Mr Haigh's main point in this context was that the Penal Code would mean that Justice Sir Jeremy Cooke could not safely criticise Dubai or its Ruler in connection with the circumstances and conditions of Mr Haigh's arrest and detention in Dubai. However, Mr Haigh's complaints in that regard were not relevant to the merits of GFH's claim against him, and (following Justice Sir Jeremy Cooke's ruling referred to in § 27 above) they formed no part of the DIFC trial in July 2018. In these circumstances, any alleged inhibition on the judge's ability to criticise the State or Ruler of Dubai cannot provide any arguably public policy objection to the enforcement of the DIFC Judgment.
vii) The reasons for Mr Malek's decision to recuse himself have no bearing on the independence or impartiality of Justice Sir Jeremy Cooke.
viii) It is unclear whether the quotation from the Freedom House Report has any application to the DIFC. There is no evidence that the DIFC Court's decisions are subject to political review, and so the comments are presumably directed to the onshore Dubai courts. It may well be the case that many DIFC judges are foreign nationals working on short-term contracts. That would not, however, amount to an arguable independence-based public policy objection to the enforcement of its judgments. A fortiori I do not consider that the short-term nature of the appointment of a person, such as Justice Sir Jeremy Cooke, who has already had a full career as a High Court judge in England and Wales (or the equivalent in another jurisdiction outside Dubai), and accepts appointment to the DIFC as a follow-on career, arguably impairs that person's independence such as to found a public policy ground for declining to enforce his or her judgments.
(c) Natural justice
"In a celebrated passage in his judgment in Pemberton v Hughes (a case on the recognition of a foreign divorce decree), Lord Lindley observed: "If a judgment is pronounced by a foreign court over persons within its jurisdiction and in a matter with which it is competent to deal, English courts never investigate the propriety of the proceedings in the foreign court, unless they offend against English views of substantial justice." This passage refers to irregularity in the proceedings, for it is clear that a foreign judgment, which is manifestly wrong on the merits or has misapplied English law or foreign law, is not impeachable on that ground. Nor is it impeachable because the court admitted evidence which is inadmissible in England or did not admit evidence which is admissible in England or otherwise followed a practice different from English law. In Jacobson v Frachon Atkin L.J., after referring to the use of the expression "principles of natural justice," said: "Those principles seem to me to involve this, first of all that the court being a court of competent jurisdiction, has given notice to the litigant that they are about to proceed to determine the rights between him and the other litigant; the other is that having given him that notice, it does afford him an opportunity of substantially presenting his case before the court.
Adams v Cape Industries Plc appears to have been the first English case in which the defence of breach of natural justice was established in relation to a judgment in personam. The Court of Appeal held that the defence of breach of natural justice was not limited to the requirements of due notice of the hearing to a litigant and opportunity to put a case to the foreign court. It confirmed that the basic question was that stated in Pemberton v Hughes, namely whether there was a procedural defect which constituted a breach of the English court's view of substantial justice, which would depend on the nature of the proceedings under consideration. The principle was applied in Masters v Leaver, where the Court of Appeal considered that a substantial failure to follow its own procedure for an assessment of damages meant that proceedings before a Texas court had led to a judgment in denial of substantial justice.
A mere procedural irregularity would not offend English concepts of substantial justice. In Adams v Cape Industries Plc the foreign judgment was for damages in default of appearance, and notice was given to the defendants of the application for a default judgment on an unliquidated claim. Under United States law (as under English law) the assessment of damages is effected (even in cases of default) by the court, but the United States judge did not hold any form of hearing, and the judgment was not based on an objective assessment by the judge of the evidence. The Court of Appeal did not decide that a lack of judicial assessment of damages is per se a breach of natural justice; but it is a breach where the foreign legal system contains provision for judicial assessment and the judgment debtor therefore has a reasonable expectation that there will be a judicial assessment." (§§ 14-163 to 165, footnotes omitted)
i) he was deprived of legal representation;ii) he was unable to participate in the proceedings before the DIFC Court and the hearing; and
iii) he was medically unable to participate in those proceedings.
"1. This litigation has a protracted procedural history, the details of which appear in Appendix 1 to this Judgment. The Defendant, who has throughout the proceedings failed to comply with orders of the Court and sought to adjourn hearings, did not appear at the trial, did not give disclosure of documents and did not put in any evidence. As had occurred on previous occasions with interlocutory hearings, he also requested an adjournment of the hearing at the last moment and made an application to do so on the second morning of the trial. He produced no contemporary medical evidence of unfitness to attend despite it being made plain in previous pronouncements of the Court in orders and directions that this would be required for any adjournment to be considered on such grounds.
2. On 9 June 2018 the Defendant was, in accordance with the Court's previously expressed statements, offered the option of appearing in court in person, or if that was not possible because of immigration or other issues, of appearing by video conference call, skype or telephone. He had appeared by telephone in the Court of Appeal hearing last year. He chose not to avail himself of any of these options.
3. Following various exchanges of emails in which the Defendant claimed, contrary to all the evidence, that he had not received various orders made by the Court nor documents from the Claimant and the failure of his last minute email request for an adjournment, the Court, at his request, attempted to contact the Defendant by telephone on the number given by him but received on three occasions, following two rings of the ordinary ringing tone a tone which ordinarily signals that the number is not an accessible number or is otherwise unobtainable. Further emails followed. This was followed by an application for an adjournment made on the proper form (but without paying fees) sent by email with supporting witness statements. That was refused for reasons given separately. The Court had made it plain and has continued to make it plain that the Defendant could participate in the trial by telephone or other means, should he wish to do so. The Court was not however prepared to adjourn the hearing on the basis of unsubstantiated assertions of illness and hospitalisation without proper medical evidence. In consequence the trial took place in his absence with Counsel for the Claimant accepting the responsibility owed to the Court of explaining the points which it would have been open for the Defendant properly to take by way of defence and drawing attention to the points he had previously taken in witness statements and affidavits filed in interlocutory proceedings and in the Defence and Amended Defence and Counterclaim.
4. The Court is entirely satisfied that the Defendant has had full and proper notice of these proceedings, has been served with the Court's orders and all the trial documents. He has chosen not to appear by any of the means offered and has over the period since the decision of the Court of Appeal following the hearing last year, ignored Court orders and chosen not to produce any evidence which could properly support an application for, or justify, an adjournment of the trial. He has had every opportunity to present his case and has elected not to do so.
5. During the course of these proceedings and in particular in the first 6 months thereof following the grant of a freezing injunction on 3 June 2014, the Defendant was represented by no less than 4 firms of solicitors and two leading counsel, who acted for him in seeking variations of the freezing order. He has instructed accountants and received a report and advice from them. When the English proceedings are taken into account, the total number of lawyers and accountants instructed exceeds those figures. Whilst seeking to enunciate some form of defence in both jurisdictions, no-one has ever come forward with a coherent explanation for the fact that large sums of money found their way into the bank accounts of the Defendant and that false invoices were created with payment instructions which disguised the receipt of those sums by the Defendant. If there was any real defence to the claim, it would have been put long since and the Defendant would be able, with or without lawyers, to put it now. Instead he has embarked on a series of delaying tactics and made extravagant allegations against the Claimant.
6. Notwithstanding constant complaints about unavailability of documentation, the Defendant has, as the evidence shows and his current solicitors in February 2015 stated, access to a computer outside Dubai containing documents upon which he has been able to draw. He has not been slow to put forward documents which are said to support his position and drafts of supposedly agreed contracts.
7. The Court, bearing in mind the seriousness of the allegations made, is satisfied on the evidence that the Defendant is a fraudster who caused to be paid into his own bank accounts and that of his close friend, monies belonging to the Claimant in the sums of £2,039,793.70, AED8,735,340 and US$50,000. Moreover, his conduct throughout these proceedings has been entirely consistent with that finding, in seeking to delay matters, in failing to give disclosure and in seeking to manipulate or play fast and loose with the court's procedures. This course of conduct is evident from previous judgments given by judges of this court and from the procedural history set out in Appendix 1.
8. The Court heard evidence from Mr Jinesh Patel, the former Senior Executive Officer of the Claimant appointed just over a month before the resignation of the Defendant from his position as Deputy Chief Executive Officer on March 14 2014. It also received in evidence affidavits and witness statements, as appears hereafter, and extensively examined the documents, invoices, bank statements and accounting information in the trial bundles. It has borne in mind the statements made by the Defendant and witness statements produced by him for the Court of Appeal hearing even though not put in evidence at the trial. It has taken account of every explanation the Defendant has offered in the course of these proceedings for the fact that so much of the Claimant's money was transferred to his bank accounts."
i) On 27 June 2018 Mr Haigh wrote a letter to the DIFC court complaining inter alia that the court had failed to telephone him for the progress monitoring hearing on 7 June 2018. Mr Haigh stated that he wished to attend the trial in person, but had "some questions and requirements for reassurances before I fly". Among other things Mr Haigh requested (a) confirmation that he would be able to enter and leave the UAE, and that there was no warrant out for his arrest, (b)"a pardon from the ruler of Dubai for acts in relation to my work for Princess Latifa and his undertaking that I will be entitled to enter and leave the country"; (c) the cost of a business class ticket and hotel accommodation (or permission to use his frozen funds to pay for them), (d) information about the appointment and activities of DIFC judges including whether Justice Sir Jeremy Cooke or other judges had "raised the illegal kidnapping and torture by the ruler of Princess Latifa with the ruler or any other party since my reporting o[f] it, if not why not" and (e) the answer to the question "Where is Princess Latifa and is she alive or was she murdered by or on instruction of the ruler". Mr Haigh also asked a series of questions about the alleged blocking of his email and other attempted communications with the DIFC Court.ii) The DIFC sent a response the same day with the approval of the trial judge. Among other things the response stated:
"2. The Court has made every effort to contact you at every stage of this litigation to ensure that you are able to participate in the litigation in which you are a party, taking account of both the evidence about, and your own statements about, effective means of communication with you, in the interests of justice between the parties.3. You were not locked out of the Registry system as has been made plain to you in protracted correspondence with you.4. The demands and questions in your letter are misplaced It is not for the Court to respond to such demands or questions.5. The DIFC Court is an independent Court with statutory jurisdiction. It cannot secure your attendance at the trial fixed for 1 July and has no powers whether in relation to immigration matters or criminal matters in Dubai or the UAE.6. You have been given the option of attending the trial in person at the DIFC Court or if you so wish (or if it is not possible/practicable for any reason) of attending by video, skype or telephone, as set out in the Registry email of 9 June 2018. You attended the Court of Appeal by telephone."iii) A few hours later on 28 June 2018, Mr Haigh emailed GFH and the DIFC Court requesting an adjournment of at least two weeks on the ground that a close friend had just been killed in London in tragic circumstances and Mr Haigh was "certainly now in no emotional or mental state to take part in any trial, even if it were fair and I was allowed in the court room which this is not. I will be travelling to London tomorrow to assist with required arrangements. Whilst I have every expectation your client and the court will carry on I want to give you the option".
iv) On 30 June/1 July 2018, Mr Haigh sought an adjournment of 6 weeks, stating:
"I have not received a response to my previous letterFurther to my letter of last week seeking an adjournment following a deteriorating mental and physical state following tragic death of my fe if and harassment of me by the DUbai state, I am being hospitalised in an emergency basis. I have written notes and asked a friend to email this after putting it in a letter. Application. tomorrow I have also asked them to send a letter from the hospital once recivedI will be in hospital for at least 1 to two weeks maybe 1 month. I will know more in TuesdayI will be allowed no access to emails or persons involved in the harassment and torture of me which includes the claimant and Dubai state as before. Full copies of previous medical this court has.I fully anticipate the court to continue whilst I am in hospitals which is a result of the Dubai state and claimants illegal acts. Not least due to my defending the brave Princess Latifa from her murdered of a father. In whose names your Cour and judges act. All this will be bought to English and European courtsYou are requested to adjourn for 6 weeks. Here is no presumed Prejudice in so doingA fuller letter will be sent by my friend tomorrow.I will have no email access"v) The court registry responded that any application for an adjournment must be made formally with supporting evidence, otherwise the court would proceed with the hearing "which has commenced this morning in the absence of attendance by you in any of the ways put forward in this Court's email of 9 June."
vi) At 10.29 on 1 July 2018, Mr Haigh sent a further email stating:
"As my treatment does not commence until the new week I have been allowed to keep my phone today for a couple of hours given the distress the court sitting on my case in total violation of the concept of a fair and public hearing has causedI have tried to Call the court on my phone this morning but could not get through, I refer to my previous note that the Dubai state security has banned my number in Dubai and the DIFC courts comedy response stating that the DIFC court hadn't banned it, implying they know state security has.I note no attempt was made to contact me on any number to dial me into the court .. As pre the previous hearing.When every attempt is made to contact an involve the Claimant. I note I have been banned from coming to the Court as well unless I wish to risk torture and inhumane an degrading reatment1. I have not received a response to my email of last night or to my email of June requested an adjournment following the tragic death of my gay friend2. I am equally surprised (although really I'm not Dubai, the court and Cooke are corrupt) the court has sought to :a. Lock me out the online system so I cannot engage in the courtb. Block and ban my phone numbers from calling Dubaic. Prevent me from coming to the court, whilst the court invites me, knowing I would be tortured and possibly murdered.3. I understood from the latest order of Mr Cooke that GFH had to copy any emails from the Court to me and as such can only presume there has been no response as no emails have been received4. I have spoken with my Dr and medical team and they have allowed me a short call today at 11 to 1 UK time. I may have up to one hour call in that time provided I am monitored, should I become visibly distressed the call will be terminated. I am on high doses of medication and unable to focus. The court has details of this medication. This is because my treatment will not commence until tomorrow.5. I wish to understand why I have even prevented from enegeing in the process, including from discusloe6. I have not been served the court bundles in accordance with last order of cooke. I have advised gfh of this. No response so even if I were well I could not enege with court7. As such please there call me without fail during those house. I would propose 12 GMT8. I wish to covera. Preventing me from enegeing in Court processb. Preventing me from attending courtc. Refusal of court to contact me to dial me into repeated hearingd. Murder / Kidnap of Sheikh Latifae. Illegal acts of Dubai state hacking my computer and recordsf. Conflict of Dubai Courtg. Casei. I wish to cross examine all witnesses of GFH in court and to bring verbal evidence from myself and all my witnesses1. Including [followed by a list of 15 named witnesses]There is no other option for the court given its gross impotence at best and at worse shear corruption to adjourn thisfarcical hearing until I am out of hospitalThe court is on notice that even engeing in this email is damaging my recory.My partner has an application to adjourn that they are working on, however it may be better that this is made verbally by me."vii) At 10.59 on 1 July 2018 Mr Haigh sent an email stating inter alia "I have access to my phone for another hour and am waiting the courts call".
viii) At 11.23 on 1 July 2018 the court registry emailed Mr Haigh stating that the court had attempted to telephone him three times on the number he had provided, but had been unable to get through, adding: "The phone has rung twice on each occasion, before the Court then heard a tone indicating that the number is unobtainable. Should you wish to participate in this trial, please call the Court on [number stated]. Should you wish to make an application to adjourn the trial, please file this at once, supported by evidence."
ix) Mr Haigh replied that his phone was working perfectly well and he had tested it three times. He added "It is noted that you waited until the end of my period to say this and only after I had reminded you. I will ask the dr for a further period later today or tomorrow morning before treatment commences."
x) The court registry at 12.29 on 1 July 2018 indicated that the court was continuing with the hearing and repeated the number Mr Haigh should call. The email added "Should you wish to make an application to adjourn the trial, please file this at once, supported by evidence. The Court will not be ringing you again."
xi) At 1.05am on 2 July 2018 four emails were sent on Mr Haigh's behalf, which included the following message:
"This email is sent on behalf of David Haigh by way of service on the Claimant and the Court. Please acknowledge safe receiptI understand that David indicated this would come today.Please find attached:1. Application notice2. Witness statement David Haigh and DH 203. Witness statement Herve Jaubert4. Draft OrderDavid will be allowed to speak with the court from 11 GMT till 12 GMT tomorrow Monday and only that time by his medical team. David has asked me to inform the court that all of his numbers are working. We have video of these numbers working.We have equally videoed Davids number calling the court and been unable to connect. This was set out by David on various occasions and it is noted that the DIF Court has not confirmed the the Dubai site has not blocked such numbers. The same is the case for the published number of Radha Stirling. Both David and Radha are working against the UAE and the Dubai Ruler for their torture and kidnap of HRH Sheikh Latifa - who has publicly accused Sheikh Mohamed of murder. The UAE and Dubai state have commenced a campaign of intimidation against Radha and David.Further David has indicated that even if he could connect to the court, he does not have the funds to pay for an intentional call of any length and it is unreasonable and unjust to expect him to do so given the lack of fund is the actions of the court and the Claimant.David will have no access to email or his phone at any other time.David reiterates that he wishes to attend court in person when he is released from hospital and renege fully in the court processDavid has sent these in hard copy as he has previously been locked out of the online system and despite reputed rests and email for the registry saying they have done so he has not removed a new password."xii) An email sent on Mr Haigh's behalf at 2.52am on 2 July 2018 repeated the suggestion that "clearly the DIFC Court has been barred from calling Davids number and vice versa".
"1.This Court has received overnight and early this morning about 4 emails coming from Mr. Haigh's email address at [email protected]. Those emails all have the sender as a Mr. L Lopez. The first of such email timed at 5:25am this morning, the beginning of words "this message bounced back so sending in four emails". The email was said to be sent on behalf of Mr Haigh quote by way of service on the Claimant and the Court, and attached the application notice and a draft order. It also says that Mr. Haigh would be allowed to speak to the Court on 11 GMT until 12 GMT on Monday, that is today.
2.A second email said to be two of four came in exactly the same terms as the first other than that numbering, also sent at 5:28 am containing Mr. Haigh's witness statement and an exhibit to it which is a redacted letter dated the 4 of April 2018 of a Dr Muller- Pollard. The Witness statement was dated the 30 of June 2018 and throughout to some 49 pages and is apparently signed by Mr. Haigh.
3.The third email of 5:29am in identical terms save it was said to be 3/3 was accompanied by a witness statement of a Mr. Herve Jaubert also dated 30th of June 2018 signed by him.
4.A fourth email timed at 5:52am refers to an early email sent to the Registry in relation to the application to adjourn and asserted that DIFC Courts had been by calling Mr Haigh's number and vice versa.
5.All of this has to be seen in the context of the prior history of this matter. In particular, following the production of a draft amended defence of the counterclaim which is the subject of this Court's consideration in some time ago, the Defendant, Mr. Haigh, has failed to engage with the Court in any way until the 28 of June, the last business for a date fixed for trial of which Mr Haigh was well aware, and Mr. Haigh had chosen to claim no task In the proceedings in terms of providing disclosure, in terms of providing any witness statements, of submitting hearsay notices or doing anything to indicate that he would participate in the trial process.
6.The reality of the matter is, as submitted by Mr Bodnar, is that Mr Haigh only engages with proceedings when he wishes to do so and as the matter of almost invariable practice seeks adjournments of hearings rather interlocutory hearing or other hearings at the last moment.
7.There is only one conceivable basis on which this Court could consider and grant an adjournment of the hearing which has now been proceeding for a day in this Court and that would be on the basis of genuine medical unfitness to attend the hearing.
8.The Court has gone out of its way in the past to seek to pursue the attendance of Mr. Haigh at this hearing whether in any way which he chose, he could come personally to this Court if he were able to do so, though this Court has no control of the immigration processes of Dubai or the UAE.
9.Bearing that in mind, the Court was willing to facilitate attendance by Mr. Haigh by Video Conference, by Skype or by telephone. It is noteworthy that Mr. Haigh did attend the Court of Appeal hearing last year by telephone and was able to participate in the hearing in that way and to make such submissions as he wished to make, despite protestations to the country in the latest witness statement that had just been received from him."
" I am also satisfied because I am told I will be shortly receiving a witness statement to this effect that Mr. Haigh has received all the trial documents in hard copy and he has had full notice of the proceedings and all the material which has been presented in these proceedings." (§ 24)
(F) MR HAIGH'S DEFENCE AND COUNTERCLAIM
i) the foreign judgment must be:a) of a court of competent jurisdiction in relation to the party who is to be estopped;b) final and conclusive; andc) on the merits, i.e. a decision which establishes certain facts as proved or not in dispute, states what are the relevant principles of law applicable to such facts, and expresses a conclusion with regard to the effect of applying those principles to the factual situation concerned (DSV Silo und Verwaltungsgesellschaft mbH v Owners of the Sennar (The Sennar) (No.2) [1985] 1 W.L.R. 490, 499F-G per Lord Brandon);ii) the parties to the English litigation must be the same parties (or their privies) as in the foreign litigation;
iii) the issues raised must be identical; and
iv) the decision on the relevant issue must have been necessary for the decision of the foreign court and not merely collateral (Good Challenger Navegante SA v Mineralexportimport SA [2003] EWCA Civ 1668, per Clarke LJ at §72).
i) Mr Haigh's claims for commission and/or referral fees and/or for breach of his contract of employment, save insofar as the latter related to his allegations of fabrication of evidence/luring him to Dubai, were considered and rejected in §§ 58-73 of the DIFC Judgment.ii) His claims for breach of his contract of employment, insofar as related to his allegations of fabrication of evidence/luring him to Dubai, were struck out by Justice Sir Jeremy Cooke for the reasons given in the January 2018 Order with Reasons.
iii) Mr Haigh's deceit and conspiracy allegations relating to luring him to Dubai (Defence and Counterclaim §§ 159-208) were struck out by Justice Sir Jeremy Cooke as having no realistic prospect of success for the reasons given in §§ 128-142 of the January 2018 Order with Reasons.
iv) His allegations of malicious prosecution, false imprisonment and conspiracy to injure in respect of the Twitter charges (Defence and Counterclaim §§ 209-226) were struck out by Justice Sir Jeremy Cooke as having no realistic prospect of success for the reasons given in §§ 108-118, 101-107 and 143-146 respectively of the January 2018 Order with Reasons.
(G) GFH'S PROPRIETARY CLAIMS AGAINST THE FIRST, SECOND, THIRD, FIFTH AND SIXTH DEFENDANTS
(1) The DIFC Judgment
"What emerges from the evidence is a clear picture of the Defendant procuring payments of the Claimant's funds to himself or to his order with the creation of false invoices in an attempt to conceal the reality of his defalcations. Despite a number of risible explanations, there is no gainsaying the fact that money belonging to the Claimant ended up in the bank accounts of the Defendant, who was a senior employee in what he admits was a fiduciary position. None of the funds have been returned and there is, despite attempts to justify the receipt of funds, no proper basis for the Defendant having received them or for retaining them.
It is common ground, as shown by the Defence which was drafted by lawyers and the Amended Defence and Counterclaim which was evidently drafted with the assistance of lawyers, that the Defendant, as Deputy Chief Executive Officer of the Claimant, owed the Claimant duties as a fiduciary to act at all times in the best interest of the Clamant, and to act honestly towards the Claimant and that his contract of employment contained implied terms to the same effect." (§§ 9 and 10)
"In these circumstances and for these reasons, [GFH] succeeds in both its claim for the payment of the sums in question and its claim that, as fiduciary, [Mr Haigh], when receiving such sums himself or for his benefit as payments to his order, held them on constructive trust for [GFH]." (§ 75)
"56. In that witness statement [the third witness statement of Mr Patel] the following (inter alia) is evidenced, in addition to matters to which I have already referred:
a. The Defendant had no significant sources of income apart from what came from the Claimant by way of salary and defalcation.
b. Just over 88% of the funds deposited between December 2012 and January 2014 in the Defendant's HSBC Dubai accounts (approximately AED 9,696,341) can be attributed to fraudulent invoices and a figure corresponding to that total (within AED 75,000) was transferred to the Defendant's HSBC UK accounts or paid to Lincoln Associates.
c. 23 transfers were made from the Defendant's Co-Op accounts in the UK to his HSBC UK accounts totalling £1,686,926.55, representing over 80% of the total funds paid into the Co-Op accounts which were supposedly supported by false invoices from GPW and false fee notes from FCC.
d. Large amounts of the funds paid to the Defendant and attributable to the fraudulent invoices were used by the Defendant to:
ii. Acquire and refurbish real estate in Cornwall, UK using the services of solicitors Chan Neill.
i. The use to which the money was put can be summarised as follows:
ii. £1,600,000 was transferred to Chan Neill Solicitors
vii. £54,000 was transferred to the Defendant's sister and brother-in-law to fund building work, which is obviously connected to the Cornish properties purchased through Chan Neill.
"
(2) GFH's proprietary claims
i) Trevorian Farm, a freehold farmhouse with land outside Penzance whose full address is Trevorian Farm, Sancreed, Penzance, Cornwall TR20 8RP. It is registered under title number CL303990 in the name of Mr Haigh. The Land Registry records that Mr Haigh purchased the property on or about 20 December 2013 for a stated price of £598,000.ii) The freehold and leases of several of the Lamorna apartments.
iii) The amount of £980,000 paid on behalf of Leeds United Football Club to the client account of Guise Solicitors for the benefit of the Seventh Defendant.
i) against Mr Haigh, declarations that he holds:a) Trevorian Farm on constructive trust for GFH;b) his interest in the assets of the Second to Seventh Defendants on constructive trust for GFH, andc) his interest in the Second to Seventh Defendants on constructive trust for GFH;ii) against the Second Defendant, a declaration that it holds the freehold of The Cove on constructive trust for GFH;
iii) against the Third Defendant, a declaration that it holds Apartments 1 and 2 of The Cove on constructive trust for GFH;
iv) against the Fourth Defendant, a declaration that it holds Apartment 7 of The Cove on constructive trust for GFH;
v) against the Fifth Defendant, a declaration that it holds Apartments 9 and 12 of The Cove on constructive trust for GFH;
vi) against the Sixth Defendant, a declaration that it holds Apartments 14 and 15 of The Cove on constructive trust for GFH;
vii) against the Seventh Defendant, a declaration that it holds the sum of £980,000 on constructive trust for GFH; and
viii) against the Eight Defendant, a declaration that she holds Apartments 4 and 5 of The Cove on constructive trust for GFH.
i) Mr Haigh purchased Trevorian Farm for £598,000 with title registered in his name in or about December 2013;ii) Mr Haigh purchased Apartments 4 and 5 of the Cove, and on 4 August 2013 transferred title in those apartments to his sister, the Eighth Defendant;
iii) Mr Haigh made loans to the Second, Third, Fifth and Sixth Defendants for the purposes of acquiring Apartments 1, 2, 9, 12, 14 and 15 of The Cove; and
iv) in each of those case, those purchases, loans and/or advances were made by Mr Haigh with funds misappropriated from GFH as described in the DIFC Judgment.
(3) Legal principles: constructive trust
"I agree that the stolen moneys are traceable in equity. But the proprietary interest which equity is enforcing in such circumstances arises under a constructive, not a resulting, trust. Although it is difficult to find clear authority for the proposition, when property is obtained by fraud equity imposes a constructive trust on the fraudulent recipient: the property is recoverable and traceable in equity. Thus, an infant who has obtained property by fraud is bound in equity to restore it: Stocks v. Wilson [1913] 2 KB 235, 244; R. Leslie Ltd. v. Sheill [1914] 3 KB 607. Moneys stolen from a bank account can be traced in equity: Bankers D Trust Co. v. Shapiro [1980] 1 W.L.R. 1274, 1282C-E: see also McCormick v. Grogan (1869) L.R. 4 H.L. 82, 97." (p.715C-D)
" a plaintiff who brings an action like the present must show that the defendant is in receipt of property which belongs beneficially to him or its traceable proceeds, but he need not show that the defendant has been enriched by its receipt. He may, for example, have paid full value for the property, but he is still required to disgorge it if he received it with notice of the plaintiff's interest.
An action like the present is subject to the bona fide purchaser for value defence, which operates to clear the defendant's title."
" a straightforward case of a trustee who wrongfully misappropriated trust money, mixed it with his own, and used it to pay for an asset for the benefit of his children. Even on the traditional approach, the equitable tracing rules are available to the plaintiffs." (p.129 B-C)
(4) Legal principles: privity
" it seems to me that the substratum of the doctrine is that a man ought not to be allowed to litigate a second time what has already been decided between himself and the other party to the litigation. This is in the interest both of the successful party and of the public. But I cannot see that this provides any basis for a successful defendant to say that the successful defence is a bar to the plaintiff suing some third party, or for that third party to say that the successful defence prevents the plaintiff from suing him, unless there is a sufficient degree of identity between the successful defendant and the third party. I do not say that one must be the alter ego of the other: but it does seem to me that, having due regard to the subject matter of the dispute, there must be a sufficient degree of identification between the two to make it just to hold that the decision to which one was party should be binding in proceedings to which the other is party. It is in that sense that I would regard the phrase 'privity of interest'. Thus in relation to trust property I think there will normally be a sufficient privity between the trustees and their beneficiaries to make a decision that is binding on the trustees also binding on the beneficiaries, and vice versa." (p515)
That formulation was approved by Lord Bingham in Johnson v Gore Wood & Co [2002] 2 AC 1, 32.
"29. It can be seen that Sir Robert Megarry's test: "having due regard to the subject matter of the dispute, there must be a sufficient degree of identification between the two" embraces two concepts. The first is concerned with the interest which the subsequent litigant has in the subject matter of the first action. In Gleeson, Wippell was very interested, in one sense, in the subject matter of the action against Denne, as its design of shirt was impugned in that action. But that was not a sufficient interest in circumstances where there was what Sir Robert Megarry described as "a trade relationship between the two, in the course of which Denne, at Wippell's request, copied a Wippell shirt: but that is all". The second concept concerns the identity of the parties. Thus in Zeiss No 2 [1967] 1 AC 853 at pages 9112 Lord Reid suggested:
"A party against whom a previous decision was pronounced may employ a servant or engage a third party to do something which infringes the right established in the earlier litigation and so raise the whole matter again in his interest. Then, if the other party to the earlier litigation brings an action against the servant or agent, the real defendant could be said to be the employer, who alone has the real interest, and it might well be thought unjust if he could vex his opponent by relitigating the original question by means of the device of putting forward his servant."
30. In this example the new party has no interest in the previous litigation, but would be estopped because, in effect, he represents the party in the first action. That party has the identical interest in the previous action. In Gleeson, there was no identity of parties in this sense.
31. It is not necessary for the purposes of this appeal to seek to define precisely what interest in the subject matter of the previous litigation is required. The sort of interest dismissed by Sir Robert Megarry in Gleeson in his first principle is clearly inadequate. ... At one level Arrow and Resolution had the same legal interest in the revocation of the Patent, but that was a legal interest which they shared with all the world. If Resolution is to be bound, it must I think be possible to identify some more concrete consequence for its business which revocation of the Patent would have achieved. Unless that is so, although it can be said that Resolution could have joined the 2005 proceedings, there is no reason to hold that they should.
32. Drawing this together, in my judgment a court which has the task of assessing whether there is privity of interest between a new party and a party to previous proceedings needs to examine (a) the extent to which the new party had an interest in the subject matter of the previous action; (b) the extent to which the new party can be said to be, in reality, the party to the original proceedings by reason of his relationship with that party, and (c) against this background to ask whether it is just that the new party should be bound by the outcome of the previous litigation."
" WWH was the corporate embodiment of Mr Johnson. He made decisions and gave instructions on its behalf. If he had wished to include his personal claim in the company's action, or to issue proceedings in tandem with those of the company, he had power to do so...."
" not enough to show that SCBHK was "in reality party to the proceedings" against their parent company in tort. As the judge said, that would be a failure to recognise the distinct corporate personalities in the case and lead to a piercing of the corporate veil contrary to the limited scope ascribed to that doctrine in Prest v Prest [2013] 2 AC 415. " (§ 33)
(5) Application to facts
" the First Defendant denies that the Second to Sixth Defendants are vehicle interposed to conceal the fact that he was "the true actor in the purchase of the various properties within The Cove Cornwall". It is averred that the Claimant was fully aware of the involvement of the First Defendant in the Cove, him having repeatedly chased the Claimant for payment of amounts due to him in salary and commission, the reason for the payment of the disputed sums, in order that he may provide finance for the acquisition and management services. Further, it is averred that the First Defendant offered to the Claimant and certain of its senior executives investment. The structure of the Second to Sixth Defendants, of which the First Defendant is not the owner was established for clear wealth and property estate management and acquisition purposes as part of an established trust structure administered by Swiss regulatory fiduciary service providers and English solicitors."
i) The Second, Third, Fifth and Sixth Defendant are to be regarded as corporate embodiments of Mr Haigh for issue estoppel purposes, and there was a sufficient degree of identification between each of them and Mr Haigh to make it just to hold that the DIFC Judgment should be binding against them in the present proceedings.ii) Even if I am wrong about (i) above, based on the parties' statements of case and other evidence before me, I consider the Second, Third, Fifth and Sixth Defendants to have no realistic prospect of persuading this court at trial that the relevant findings in the DIFC Judgment were incorrect in any material respect.
iii) Mr Haigh is liable to account in equity for the sums found in the DIFC Judgment to have been misappropriated from GFH, and holds those sums, or the assets now representing them (including Trevorian Farm), on constructive trust for GFH.
iv) Based on the parties' statements of case and other evidence before me, the Second, Third, Fifth and Sixth Defendants' interests in properties at The Cove were purchased with funds misappropriated from GFH by Mr Haigh, and those defendants have no bona fide purchase or other defence available to them. They accordingly hold those interests on constructive trust for GFH.
(H) ANY OTHER COMPELLING REASON FOR A TRIAL
(I) CONCLUSIONS