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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 >> Ang v Reliantco Investments Ltd & Anor [2020] EWHC 2529 (Comm) (24 September 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2020/2529.html Cite as: [2020] EWHC 2529 (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 :
(sitting as a Deputy Judge of the High Court )
____________________
MRS RAMONA ANG |
Claimant |
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- and – |
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RELIANTCO INVESTMENTS LIMITED - and – DR CRAIG WRIGHT |
Defendant/ Applicant Respondent |
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Nikki Singla QC (instructed by SCA Ontier LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 14 September 2020
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Covid-19 Protocol: This judgment will be 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 will be deemed to be 10:15AM on 24 September 2020.
Peter MacDonald Eggers QC:
Introduction
"The court may make an order under this rule only where–
(a) the documents of which disclosure is sought are likely to support the case of the applicant or adversely affect the case of one of the other parties to the proceedings; and
(b) disclosure is necessary in order to dispose fairly of the claim or to save costs."
(1) The documents sought are "likely" to support the applicant's case or adversely affect any of the other parties' case. The word "likely" has been interpreted to mean that the documents sought "may well" support or adversely affect a party's case; the applicant does not have to establish that the documents have a better than 50% chance of supporting or adversely affecting a party's case; in order to satisfy this requirement, the documents must be relevant (Three Rivers District Council v Governor and Company of the Bank of England (No. 4) [2002] EWCA Civ 1182; [2003] 1 WLR 210, para. 30-32, 39).
(2) Disclosure is necessary to dispose fairly of the claim or to save costs. This is not an inherently a high hurdle to be met in that it has been said that all relevant documents should be before the Court so that the trial is a fair one (Hollander on Documentary Evidence, (13th ed.), para. 3-14). However, it is the disclosure which must be necessary, because if the disclosure is available from another party to the action, such disclosure may not be considered necessary (Frankson v Home Office [2003] EWCA Civ 655; [2003] 1 WLR 1952, para. 12).
"1. The Respondent shall instruct a suitably qualified digital forensics specialist (the "Disclosure Consultant"), under the supervision of his solicitors, to collect the emails stored in all email accounts of which he has possession, custody or control.
2. The Respondent shall instruct the Disclosure Consultant, under the supervision of his solicitors, to run the following keyword searches (with Boolean operators) on an industry standard disclosure platform over those emails which have been collected under paragraph 1 of this Order:
2.1. "DeMorgan" AND "Loan"
2.2. "DeMorgan" AND "Wright Family Trust"
2.3. "DeMorgan" AND "Ramona"
2.4. "Wright Family Trust" AND "deed"
2.5. "Wright Family Trust" AND "declaration"
2.6. "Wright Family Trust" AND "benefici!"
2.7. "Wright Family Trust" AND "Ramona"
3. The Respondent shall disclose to the parties those documents responsive to the searches under paragraph 2 of this Order which fall within Issues 5 and/or 7 of the Disclosure Review Document approved by Mr Justice Bryan on 25 October 2020, by no later than [XXXX] 2020.
4. The Respondent shall, in consultation with and under the oversight of his solicitors, conduct a reasonable search for the following categories of documents within his control, and, by [XXXX] 2020, disclose such documents which are located unless they are privileged:
4.1. Documents relating to the configuration of the Respondent's home virtual private network system between 1 January and 31 August 2017.
4.2. Documents relating to the IP addresses which the Respondent held or rented from other IP address providers and access logs documenting user log-ins."
(1) Documents relating to monies said to have been received by the Claimant from DeMorgan Ltd, an Australian company, pursuant to the Claimant's alleged interest in that company as the beneficiary of the Wright Family Trust, which owned 60% of the shares in the company.
(2) Documents relevant to an alleged virtual private network ("VPN") system which the Claimant and Dr Wright alleged was installed in their home at 7 Oak Road.
(1) Documents disclosed by a search of Dr Wright's email account with the search terms "DeMorgan", "Loan" and "Ramona" (being the Claimant's first name), plus the trust deed for the Wright Family Trust, along with any relevant deeds of variation to the same, together with preservation of the relevant metadata.
(2) As to the VPN system which the Claimant and Dr Wright allege was installed at their home at 7 Oak Road,
(a) Configuration scripts and/or a network "map" or other document setting out the network architecture and/or the layout and settings by which the VPN network installed at 7 Oak Road operated over the period from January to August 2017.
(b) Invoices from BT in relation to the leasing of the IP addresses used by the VPN, as explained by Dr Wright at para. 52 of his first witness statement dated 3rd July 2020 and at para. 45 of his second witness statement dated 18th August 2020.
Documents relating to DeMorgan Ltd
(1) At para. 24-25 of the Amended Particulars of Claim, the Claimant pleaded that on 4th August 2017, the Claimant was requested by the Defendant to complete and provide certain documentation, including a Source of Wealth Form, which the Claimant completed and which stated that the source of the Claimant's investment funds were the sale proceeds of her former Australian home and the release of capital from DeMorgan Ltd. At para. 32, the Claimant pleads that further documents were provided to the Defendant on 14th August 2017, including the DeMorgan Ltd share register documentation. The Source of Wealth Form referred to and dated 4th August 2017 stated "40% of DeMorgan Ltd (Australia) holdings liquidated on move to U.K." under the heading of "Disposal of Business or other asset?".
(2) In its Defence and Counterclaim, at para. 5(viii) and (ix), the Defendant pleads that the Claimant's explanations as to the source of the monies so deposited, as provided on or about 4th August 2017 and in a later email dated 14th August 2017 (referred to at para. 24 and 32 of the Amended Particulars of Claim), were on their face problematic in that (a) by those emails, the Claimant stated that the "majority of funds" which she put into her account came from a house sale, but the relevant house sale related to the sale of a house which the Claimant owned with a Mr David Watts, who was apparently the Claimant's former husband so that it follows that there is no obvious reason why any of the proceeds of that sale should have been routed through an account bearing Dr Wright's name; and (b) the remainder of the Claimant's explanations as to the source of her funds relate to the realisation of her shareholding in DeMorgan Ltd, an Australian company which had been liquidated; there is no obvious reason why those funds should have been routed through an account in Dr Wright's name.
(3) At para. 11 of her Reply, the Claimant pleads that "On 16 June 2016 the Claimant received £437,242.80 in repayment of a loan to DeMorgan Ltd into the Lloyds Account. Those funds were initially substantially invested in the Claimant's IG account, before the Claimant withdrew £408,000 from her IG account into the Lloyds Account on 12 January 2017. The Claimant used this money as the source of her initial investment in her account with the Defendant and, as explained in paragraph 23 of the Amended Particulars, chose to re-invest most of the gains that had been withdrawn in May 2017 for the purpose of purchasing a property (which the Claimant and Dr Wright subsequently decided not to purchase)".
(4) The Claimant's case has therefore changed in that the funds sourced from DeMorgan Ltd were originally said to be a "release of capital" and now are said to be the "repayment of a loan".
(1) The Claimant attended a Board Meeting of DeMorgan by telephone on 13th May 2016, at which sales of company assets were approved ("the IP Transaction"). The Claimant "inquired about whether the loans in the names of Ramona Watts [Ms Ang's previous married name] and Craig Wright could be paid with funds from the IP Transaction (Personal Loans)". However, according to Ms Danon, no further documents relating to or evidencing these purported "Personal Loans" have been disclosed.
(2) When the Claimant had received a request for further documentation in response to her Source of Wealth form in August 2017, Dr Wright forwarded to her a copy of the DeMorgan Ltd share register (which she ultimately provided to the Defendant), stating "For the UFX ppl tomorrow first thing. 50% each of us in Wright Family Trust". According to Ms Danon, no further documents relating to or evidencing the Wright Family Trust and the Claimant's interests in the same or its interests in DeMorgan Ltd have been disclosed.
(3) A number of bank statements in respect of the Claimant, Dr Wright and DeMorgan Ltd have been disclosed, from which it is evident that there was a deposit into the Lloyds Account for £437,242.80 on 16th June 2016, with a transaction description of "F/FLOW DEMORGAN LT", but a corresponding transfer out is conspicuously absent from DeMorgan Ltd's bank statements for this period, whereas by contrast, a payment out from DeMorgan Ltd of AUD 60,000 on 21st June 2016 with the description "Withdrawal online 1209379 Intl Dr Craig S Demorgan Ltd" appears to correspond to credit of £28,949 into the Lloyds Account with the description "F/FLOW DEMORGAN LT".
(1) The Claimant has refused to state whether Dr Wright has any company records relating to DeMorgan Ltd and that Dr Wright has not consented to his emails being collected, hosted by a third party and searched.
(2) The Defendant has requested the Claimant to disclose documents evidencing the Wright Family Trust, including the declaration of trust and/or any other documents establishing the same, its legal ownership of the shareholding in DeMorgan Ltd and documents otherwise identifying trustees and beneficiaries at the relevant time.
(3) On 8th June 2020, the Claimant's solicitors (SCA Ontier LLP) informed the Defendant that the Claimant refused to provide any further documentation regarding the receipt of funds from DeMorgan Ltd and stated that the Defendant had not established that the documents establishing the Claimant's beneficial interest in DeMorgan Ltd were relevant and continued: "Ms Ang exercises no control over any documents in Dr Wright's possession and cannot give disclosure of those documents".
(1) The Defendant has not identified the documents it requires Dr Wright to search for; it has merely identified search terms with no date ranges. (The search terms are now more restricted than set out in the original application).
(2) Without identifying such documents, it cannot satisfy the jurisdictional requirement of relevance and the propensity of the documents to support the Defendant's case or adversely affect the Claimant's case.
(3) The Defendant has not demonstrated why disclosure from Dr Wright is necessary.
(4) No application was made for similar disclosure against the Claimant. At para. 57.1 of Ms Danon's third witness statement, it is said that the documents requested are more likely to be in Dr Wright's possession than the Claimant's possession. The Claimant has already disclosed some bank statements. Mr Bradley on behalf of the Defendant said in reply that the Claimant had said in April 2020 that she had no further disclosure to give.
(5) The application is made very late. Mr Bradley submitted in reply that the application was not late, as it was made three weeks after Dr Wright's first witness statement was made.
(1) There is an inconsistency in the Claimant's pleaded case in that she initially pleaded that the funds invested in her account with the Defendant were originally a release of capital from DeMorgan Ltd (in which the Trust has a 60% share), but in her Reply it is said that the funds were a repayment of a loan. If the latter, the Trust deed is of less or little relevance. Nevertheless, given this inconsistency, I consider that the jurisdictional requirements of CPR rule 31.17 are satisfied.
(2) Nevertheless, the Court's discretion should be exercised against providing such disclosure, because:
(a) The inconsistency on the statements of case has been known for some time, since October 2019, when the Reply was served. The Claimant's interest in the Wright Family Trust was revealed by the Claimant's disclosure in April 2020. The application is made relatively late.
(b) An application could and should have been made against the Claimant.
(c) I have taken into account countervailing considerations, including that (i) as the founder of the Trust, Dr Wright is likely to have a copy of the Trust deed and any deed of variation in his possession, and (ii) the documents are precisely identified and can be readily disclosed. However, these considerations do not indicate to me that the making of the disclosure order against Dr Wright is likely to advance the parties' positions at trial.
(d) Although a lesser consideration, I take into account that the documents are potentially confidential.
Documents relating to the VPN at 7 Oak Road
"Further, at Appendix 1 to Ang-1, the Claimant gave evidence that over 12 to 20 April 2017 she was in Singapore for her Father's 80th birthday celebrations. However, whilst she was in Singapore celebrating her Father's birthday, the Claimant's account with the Defendant was accessed on both 14 and 20 April 2017 from the same UK BT Openworld J.P. server address by which her account was (i) intermittently accessed over the period 7 to 15 February 2017 and (ii) consistently accessed over the period 25 February 2017 to 24 May 2017."
(1) He had extensive knowledge and experience of cyber security and took the security of the IT system deployed at his home very seriously. The network was connected to the nChain network and had access to very valuable intellectual property and research. In the simplest of terms, Dr Wright and the Claimant had high level commercial grade security systems and protection at home.
(2) A VPN is a way to connect securely with an existing network, potentially anywhere in the world. Each device directly connected to the internet has a unique address, known as an IP (Internet Protocol) address. This is used to route information between systems that has both a recipient and sender address. When accessing a website, it needs to know the sender IP address to return information. When using the VPN in full tunnel mode, the device (sender) IP address is replaced with the external address of his network. In this situation, the accessed website would see the connection as originating from the VPN network.
(3) All of Dr Wright's and the Claimant's devices were configured to connect to the Internet through the VPN for the purpose of security and anonymity. The configuration forces all network traffic through the VPN in effect making it appear that an authenticated user, such as the Claimant, is present on the home network when accessing external services, regardless of the user's actual geographical location giving the impression he or she was physically there.
(4) The Claimant's computers and iPhone were configured to be on the domain and the security policy was set and pushed to the Claimant's machine using group policy. The Claimant's devices were all set to access all Internet sites through the VPN, being an automatic process. This was subject to a number of exceptions.
(5) The net effect of the way the VPN worked was that the Claimant could log on to a website from anywhere in the world and the IP address would be shown as being inside the VPN in the United Kingdom. When using her standard equipment (her iPhone or laptop) the Claimant would enter one of the public IP addresses used by the home network at the time (which in 2017, included four addresses in the USA as exit points, 2,048 addresses in the United Kingdom on the BT commercial network via a gigabit fibre, one IP address in Singapore, one IP address in Tokyo, and eight other randomised IP addresses in the United Kingdom).
(1) The documents relating to the VPN configuration and the invoices are not relevant and so the Court has no jurisdiction to make the order. However, I understand that Mr Singla QC accepted that the documents relating to access logs would be sufficiently relevant and necessary for the fair disposal of the case. That said, and as I understand Mr Bradley clarified, the access logs were not within the Defendant's narrowed application.
(2) The Court should not exercise its jurisdiction to order disclosure, because the purpose of this request was tied to the Defendant's application to adduce expert evidence on the VPN. (During the Pre-Trial Review, at which the current application was heard, I ordered that the Defendant was permitted to adduce such expert evidence.)
(3) At para. 42-43 and 46 of his second witness statement, Dr Wright said that the configuration of the VPN hardware and software at 7 Oak Road did not of itself generate documents and Dr Wright had no reason to create and retain such documentation; that, although it is possible to review a "snapshot" of a VPN configuration and network at a particular point of time, the VPN network installed by Dr Wright at 7 Oak Road is no longer in place, because the Claimant and Dr Wright have moved to a new address, and because the network infrastructure has been rebuilt entirely on several occasions since 2017; and that he did not believe that documents relating to the VPN configuration exist and he did not keep a record of the VPN settings and configuration; that Dr Wright did not retain server or access logs documenting user log-ins. Mr Bradley replied that the Defendant's VPN expert, Dr Nedko Nedev, said that it would be "highly unusual for an enterprise-grade VPN to not have documentation of the network configuration" (para. 33 of Ms Danon's sixth witness statement).
(4) Mr Bradley indicated during his oral submissions that the invoices might disclose the IP addresses which Dr Wright leased from BT. Mr Singla QC said that it is unclear to what extent invoices issued by BT, from whom Dr Wright rented the IP addresses, would include the IP address information. The matter of invoices was first raised in Ms Danon's sixth witness statement dated 3rd September 2020 (at para. 38, 41-42), but as Mr Singla QC observed, it was not explained in the statement why the invoices would disclose relevant information. Mr Singla QC informed the Court, on instructions, that Dr Wright has searched for such invoices, but they have not materialised.
Conclusion