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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 >> Arcelormittal USA LLC v Ruia & Ors [2020] EWHC 740 (Comm) (30 March 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2020/740.html Cite as: [2020] EWHC 740 (Comm) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
ARCELORMITTAL USA LLC |
Claimant |
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- and – |
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(1) MR RAVI RUIA (2) MR PRASHANT RUIA (8) ESSAR GLOBAL FUND LIMITED (3) MR SUSHIL BAID (4) MR ANDREW WRIGHT (5) MR JOSEPH SEIFERT (6) MR UDAY KUMAR GUJADHUR (7) MR NIGEL BELL (9) ESSAR CAPITAL LIMITED (10) ESSAR CAPITAL SERVICES (UK) LIMITED |
Defendants/ Respondents Defendants |
____________________
Paul McGrath QC and Ruth Den Besten (instructed by Stephenson Harwood) for the First and Second Defendants
Paul Stanley QC and David Peters (instructed by Quinn Emmanuel Urquhart & Sullivan UK LLP) for the Eighth Defendant
Adrian Beltrami QC and Ian Higgins (instructed by Dechert LLP) for the Interested Party
Hearing dates: 3 and 4 March 2020
Draft Judgment circulated on 19 March 2020
____________________
HTML VERSION OF JUDGMENT
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 30 March 2020 at 2:00 pm.
Mr Justice Henshaw:
(A) INTRODUCTION | 1 |
(B) THE RELEVANT PARTIES | 6 |
(C) AMUSA'S CONSPIRACY CASE | 13 |
(D) THE PELLET SALE AGREEMENT AND THE ARBITRATION | 16 |
(E) SUBSEQUENT PROCEDURAL HISTORY | 24 |
(1) Minnesota | 24 |
(2) Mauritius | 27 |
(3) Cayman Islands | 28 |
(4) Delaware | 30 |
(5) England and Wales | 33 |
(F) TRANSACTIONS RELATING TO ESSAR STEEL INDIA | 36 |
(1) AMUSA's case | 36 |
(2) Origins of and Essar Steel's decision to enter into the Restructuring | 42 |
(3) Stage 1: June 2012 sale of Essar Steel shares in Essar Steel India | 57 |
(4) Stage 2: March 2013 assignments of US$1.38 billion promissory note | 59 |
(5) Stages 3 and 4: August and November 2013 sale and assignment | 72 |
(6) Stage 5: 2016 change in accounting treatment | 76 |
(7) Stage 6: VTB subordination deed | 108 |
(8) Essar Steel's failure to seek to recover the 'debt' from EGFL | 134 |
(9) Marex | 136 |
(G) ESSAR STEEL UAE | 137 |
(H) ALGOMA | 141 |
(I) ENTRY INTO AMENDED PSA | 159 |
(J) RELEVANT EVENTS IN RELATED PROCEEDINGS | 164 |
(1) The ICC Arbitration | 164 |
(2) Cayman proceedings | 185 |
(3) Mauritius proceedings | 190 |
(4) Proceedings in India | 196 |
(5) Proceedings in England and Wales | 204 |
(K) GOOD ARGUABLE CASE | 211 |
(L) RISK OF DISSIPATION | 216 |
(M) JUST AND CONVENIENT TEST | 230 |
(1) Likely impact of a worldwide freezing order on the respondents | 233 |
(a) Impact on the Essar group | 233 |
(b) Impact on the Ruias | 241 |
(2) Likely impact of a worldwide freezing order on VTB | 243 |
(3) Delay | 262 |
(4) The overall balance | 267 |
(N) CONCLUSION | 269 |
(A) INTRODUCTION
(B) THE RELEVANT PARTIES
(C) AMUSA'S CONSPIRACY CASE
"33. The Defendants (and each of them) have conspired to injure AMUSA by unlawful means. On various dates unknown in the period from January 2012 to date, the Defendants and/or any two or more of them agreed, or combined together with a common intention, to injure or cause loss to AMUSA by unlawful means, and in particular to:
33.1 Fraudulently induce AMUSA to enter into the Amended Pellet Sale Agreement;
33.2 Wrongfully procure or induce Essar Steel to breach its obligations under the ICC Award and the Judgment, including its obligations not to mislead the arbitral tribunal (the "Tribunal") and to pay the ICC Award;
33.3 Wrongfully strip Essar Steel of its assets and prevent Essar Steel from taking steps to recover them, thereby impeding AMUSA's attempts to enforce those obligations referred to at §3 above.
34. Further or alternatively, the Defendants or any two of them entered into more than one such conspiracy. References to the "Conspiracy" and the "Conspirators" are references to that conspiracy or those conspiracies, and in each case to the parties to that conspiracy or to those conspiracies.
35. The nature of the Conspiracy is such that AMUSA cannot specify with certainty on which occasions the Conspirators, or any of them, entered into the common design or combination. That they did enter into such a common design should be inferred from the fact that, as set out in this Statement of Case, (i) the Defendants are all linked to the Essar Group, (ii) the Defendants each acted in furtherance of the Conspiracy by doing one or more of the acts set out at §36 below, which are consistent with the Conspiracy, and it should be inferred did not do so independently of the other Defendants.
36. The Defendants have acted in furtherance of the Conspiracy by doing one or more of the following unlawful acts (as set out below):
36.1 Inducing AMUSA to enter into the Amended Pellet Sale Agreement by deceit, namely by falsely representing that Essar Steel intended and expected to be able to comply with its obligations thereunder, when the contrary was the case, as the Defendants or certain of them knew at the time (as set out in Part F.2 below);
36.2 Inducing or procuring that Essar Steel breach its express obligations under the Amended Pellet Sale Agreement and/or implied obligation under the Arbitration Agreement (as defined at §112 below) to comply with any award made, by putting it beyond its power to pay the sums it was obliged to pay pursuant to the Amended Pellet Sale Agreement and/or the ICC Award, by the following actions:
(a) Devised, approved, permitted or executed the plan by which assets were removed from the ownership of Essar Steel and placed under the ownership of Essar Steel Asia, for no, or no real consideration (as set out in Part F.1 below);
(b) Caused, encouraged, assisted or permitted Essar Steel to fail to seek to recover sums paid by Essar Steel to other companies in the Essar Group under an arrangement which was not lawful when made and/or in respect of which there was a total failure of consideration and/or which became unlawful by reason of supervening events (as set out in Part F.4 below);
(c) Caused, encouraged, assisted or permitted Essar Steel falsely to restate its accounts so that a debt due to Essar Steel from EGFL was concealed and no longer recognised in Essar Steel's accounts (as set out in Part F.3 below);
(d) Caused, encouraged, assisted or permitted Essar Steel to enter into a deed by which it postponed any debts payable to it from certain other Essar Group companies until VTB Bank had been repaid in full (as set out in Part F.8 below);
36.3 Misled the Tribunal, in order to avoid an award being made against Essar Steel in favour of AMUSA and in order to obtain an award on a counterclaim in favour of Essar Steel (as set out in Part F.5 below);
36.4 Sought unlawfully to disrupt or obstruct proceedings to enforce the ICC Award, and the execution of orders obtained in England, Cayman and Mauritius the purpose of which was to prevent the dissipation of assets and destruction of evidence, in order that the Judgment could be enforced (as set out in Part F.7below)."
i) A series of transactions in 2012 and 2013 by which Essar Steel was divested of its interest in Essar Steel India (an asset then worth approximately US$1.5 billion) and received nothing in return.ii) A restatement of Essar Steel's accounts in 2016 to recharacterise as an equity interest what had in the 2014 and 2015 accounts been described as a "receivable" in the sum of almost US$1.5 billion due to Essar Steel from EGFL.
iii) Essar Steel's entry into a Deed of Subordination with the Essar group's main lender, VTB, in October 2016, one effect of which was to postpone any liability EGFL might otherwise have had to Essar Steel.
iv) The alleged removal from Essar Steel in 2015, for no or inadequate consideration, of its interest in Essar Steel UAE Limited ("Essar Steel UAE").
v) Transactions in 2014 involving the assets of another Essar Steel subsidiary, Essar Steel Algoma Inc ("Algoma"), which are said to have involved stripping Algoma of assets in a manner prejudicial to the creditors of both Algoma and Essar Steel itself.
(D) THE PELLET SALE AGREEMENT AND THE ARBITRATION
(E) SUBSEQUENT PROCEDURAL HISTORY
(1) Minnesota
(2) Mauritius
i) On 12 May 2017 Essar Steel applied to set aside a statutory demand which AMUSA had served on it on 3 May 2017.ii) AMUSA on 25 May 2017 applied to have that application set aside, and the court granted AMUSA's application on 26 September 2017.
iii) On 22 February 2018 the Supreme Court of Mauritius made a provisional order granting recognition and enforcement of the ICC Award.
iv) Essar Steel on 8 March 2018 applied to set that order aside. The application was heard on 20 September 2018 and judgment was reserved.
v) On 22 October 2018 an appeal by Essar Steel from the court's decision to set aside its application to set aside the statutory demand was dismissed. Essar Steel applied to the Privy Council for permission to appeal.
vi) On 19 April 2019 AMUSA obtained a without notice order appointing a Mr Oosman as additional administrator of Essar Steel, in addition to the administrator Mr Abdoula whom Essar Steel's board had appointed on 26 March 2019 when resolving to place the company into administration.
vii) On 22 April 2019 Essar Steel's directors filed an appeal against the appointment of Mr Oosman as additional administrator. That appeal was heard on 20 January 2020 and judgment was reserved.
viii) On 6 May 2019 EGFL commenced proceedings seeking a declaration that it is not indebted to Essar Steel.
ix) On 19 December 2019 VTB filed an application for the winding up of Essar Steel.
(3) Cayman Islands
(4) Delaware
(5) England and Wales
(F) TRANSACTIONS RELATING TO ESSAR STEEL INDIA
(1) AMUSA's case
"51. At the beginning of 2012, during the negotiations prior to the Pellet Sale Agreement, but unbeknownst to AMUSA, EGFL resolved to reorganise the Essar Group's steel portfolio. This was done specifically with the Nashwauk Project in mind: in a witness statement dated 15 February 2019, Mr Baid stated that "in early 2012, ESML was contemplating a capital markets fundraising for the Nashwauk project, and the reorganisation was intended to facilitate that". The Nashwauk Project was, and must have been recognised by the Defendants to be, a significant and expensive project. The Pellet Sale Agreement involved Essar Group companies taking on very substantial obligations to AMUSA, a competitor of the Essar Group. It therefore exposed the Essar counterparties to a large potential claim by AMUSA.
52. Those controlling Essar Steel (including, Prashant, Mr Gujadhur, Mr Baid; EGFL, acting through its directors including Mr Bell; Essar Capital, acting through its directors and Mr Wright and Mr Seifert; and Essar Capital Services, acting through its directors and Mr Seifert and Mr Wright) began a process of divesting it of assets. It is inferred that process was undertaken, in whole or in part, in furtherance of the Conspiracy and in order to prevent AMUSA from being able to enforce against those assets any claim it might have in connection with the Nashwauk Project. To the best of AMUSA's knowledge, prior to the restructure Essar Steel had four main assets: Essar Steel India, Essar Steel UAE, Algoma and ESML. As set out below, those subsidiaries, or their substantial assets, were divested in turn. By 2019, Essar Steel's value had been reduced to less than US$2.5 million."
"53. Essar Steel disposed of its c.72% shareholding in Essar Steel India by way of two main transactions. The purpose of this disposal was to move Essar Steel India from being a majority owned subsidiary of Essar Steel to being a majority owned subsidiary of a separate Essar entity (also a subsidiary of EGFL, incorporated in March 2012), in which Essar Steel had no interest. Pending further disclosure, it would appear that these transactions were on paper and were part of a scheme the real intention of which was to remove assets from the balance sheet of Essar Steel, which had to be done in steps considering the large values involved."
"69.1 Essar Steel's disposal of its interest in Essar Steel India was unlawful in that it was at an undervalue;
69.2 The EGFL Assignments were unlawful at the time they were made;
69.3 The ineffective share buy-back transaction was unlawful when the Promissory Notes were assigned for that purpose or alternatively subsequently became unlawful; and/or
69.4 The purpose of (i) the disposal of Essar Steel India, (ii) the EGFL Assignments and (iii) the purported share buy-back transaction was to defraud Essar Steel's creditors, in particular AMUSA"
"95.1 Instead of plainly reflecting the real transaction, viz. a write off of the debt without any consideration, it reduced the amount of Essar Steel's recorded assets by approximately US$1.5 billion, thereby improperly concealing those assets, less than two months after AMUSA issued its Request for Arbitration against Essar Steel;
95.2 It had the effect that the financial statements for the years ended 31 March 2016 and 2017 were materially incorrect and misleading, to the disadvantage of Essar Steel's creditors, in particular AMUSA;
95.3 It was made possible only by the directors of Essar Steel who approved the inaccurate and/or misleading financial statements, acting in breach of their obligations under ss. 210 and 211 of the Companies Act 2001 of Mauritius to ensure that the financial statements of Essar Steel presented fairly the financial position and financial performance of Essar Steel."
(2) Origins of and Essar Steel's decision to enter into the Restructuring
"a) The Company will sell all of its shares in ESTL [Essar Steel India] to Essar Steel Marvel Mauritius Ltd ('MC02') and in consideration, MC02 will issue a note payable to the Company (the 'India Note');
b) [Essar Steel India] will thereafter transfer its shares in ESPF (Dubai) and PT Essar (UAE) to MC02 and in consideration MC02 shall issue a note payable to the Company (the 'Other Assets Note');
c) Algoma Coop (NL) will subsequently sell shares of Algoma BV to Coop 1 (NL) and in consideration of which, Coop 1 (NL) shall issue a note (the 'Algoma Note') payable to Algoma Coop. Algoma Coop (NL) will subsequently make a capital reduction and effect a distribution in kind of the Algoma Note to the Company;
d) The Company will thereafter distribute the Other Assets Note, the Algoma Note and the India Note (collectively the 'Notes') to EGL by way of dividend/capital reduction;
e) EGL will contribute the Notes into Essar Steel Mauritius Ltd ('MC01') and MC01 shall issue of shares for non-cash consideration;
f) MC01 will contribute the India Note and Other Assets Note to MC02 against issue of equity shares to MC01 for non-cash consideration. Furthermore, MC01 will contribute Algoma Note to Coop 1 against issue of by Coop 1 to MC01;
g) EGL will contribute the Company into MC01 and in consideration for this, MC01 will issue shares to EGL;
h) MC01 to contribute the Company into Coop (NL) and Coop (NL) to issue shares to MC01;
i) Coop (NL) to contribute the Company into List Co (Canada) and List Co (Canada) to issue equity shares to Coop (NL);
j) The Company shall distribute the shares of MN to List Co (Canada) as dividend or capital reduction;
k) List Co (Canada) will thereafter distribute shares of the Company to Coop (NL)."
The minutes record that the proposed transaction was approved.
i) Essar Steel would divest itself of its stake in Essar Steel India, in return for a promissory note, referred to in the minutes as the 'India Note', issued by the company identified as 'MCO2': see step (a) above.ii) Essar Steel would subsequently distribute the promissory note to EGFL by way of dividend or capital reduction (step (d) above): i.e. a transfer under which Essar Steel would not receive consideration, at least in an ordinary monetary sense, from EGFL in return for the promissory note.
iii) The promissory note would then be contributed by EGFL into its subsidiary MCO1, which would in turn contribute the note to MCO2 (steps (e) and (f) above): thus the note would end up with the entity which had issued it.
iv) Similar transactions would take place, in parallel, with other assets including shares in Algoma BV held by Algoma Coop (NL) (steps (c) to (f) above).
v) Essar Steel itself would temporarily become a subsidiary of List Co (Canada), and at that stage would transfer its shares in Essar Steel Minnesota ('MN') to List Co (Canada) by way of dividend or capital reduction (steps (g) to (j) above).
vi) Essar Steel would end up as a subsidiary of 'Coop (NL)' (step (k) above), and would no longer own its stakes in either Essar Steel India or Essar Steel Minnesota.
"The proposed changes in the corporate structure under the Steel Vertical in pursuance to the Project Marvel and approve the incorporation of a direct subsidiary of EGL
At the request of the Chairman, Mr. Manoj Agarwalla informed the Committee Members that there are some proposed changes which is intended to be brought under the Steel Vertical in pursuance to the Project Marvel.
He further informed that the purpose of the restructuring exercise is to make the Steel structure amenable for raising funds at respective holding companies of Essar Steel Limited, India (ESTL); Essar Steel Minnesota LLC (MN) and Essar Steel Algoma Inc. (Algoma). The funds to be used towards expansion of various assets and retirement of debt. He also stated that to proceed with the proposed Project, two direct subsidiaries under EGL will be required."
The 'Steel Vertical' was the term used to refer to the part of the corporate structure relating to holdings in steel industry interests.
i) AMUSA sought a guarantee from any company – let alone Essar Steel – for the proposed PSA with ESML (guarantee alleged to have been requested in or around August 2012);ii) the PSA was entered into (17 December 2012);
iii) significant problems emerged in the operation of the PSA (allegedly by August 2013 when work stopped at the Nashwauk Project due to lack of funding);
iv) AMUSA requested that Essar Steel become the guarantor under the PSA (December 2013); or
v) Essar Steel actually became the guarantor under the Amended PSA (10 January 2014).
"Of particular relevance to a case of fraud…is the question of motive. By and large dishonest people are dishonest for a reason. They tend not to be dishonest wilfully or just for fun. Establishing a motive for deceit, or conspiracy, is not a legal requirement, but if a motive cannot be detected or plausibly suggested then wrongful intention (to tell a deliberate lie in order to deceive) is less likely. The less likely the motive, the less likely the intention to deceive, or to conspire unlawfully. In many, if not most, fraud cases this would not be a particularly live point. The defendant is often a person who would be a direct beneficiary of the fraud, and a plausible motive is, to that extent, relatively easily propounded. The present case is, however, different."
(3) Stage 1: June 2012 sale of Essar Steel shares in Essar Steel India
(4) Stage 2: March 2013 assignments of US$1.38 billion promissory note
i) Essar Steel assigned the US$1.38 billion promissory note to EGFL in consideration of a "future capital reduction";ii) EGFL to assigned the promissory note to Essar Steel Mauritius Limited in consideration of equity shares to be issued by Essar Steel Mauritius Limited to EGFL; and
iii) Essar Steel Mauritius Limited assigned the promissory note to Essar Steel Asia Holdings. Since Essar Steel Asia Holdings was the obligor under the note, that automatically cancelled it.
"In consideration of future capital reduction, Essar Steel Limited (the 'Assignor') hereby assigns to Essar Global Limited (the 'Assignee') all its rights and interests to the amounts payable 1,388,530,158 United States Dollars (the 'Claim') by Essar Steel Asia Holding Limited (fka Essar Resources Mauritius Limited) (the 'Issuer') under this promissory note, and the Assignee hereby accepts the assignment from the Assignor of all those rights and interests. The Assignor shall have no further right in relation to the Claim, whenever and however arising, all of which shall vest in the Assignee and the Assignor shall accordingly cease to enjoy any rights in relation to the Claim. The Assignor shall promptly execute and do all such acts and things as the Assignee may reasonably require to perfect the assignment effected or intended to be effected hereunder and shall in particular (without prejudice to the generality of the foregoing) give notices to the Issuer which the Assignee may think expedient for the purpose of perfecting such assignment."
"57. … By [23 March 2013], EGFL and Essar Steel must have envisaged that ESML (and Essar Steel, as its parent company) might be exposed to a significant damages claim as a result of the Pellet Sale Agreement: as set out above at §41, long before August 2013 (when work stopped at the Nashwauk Project) it must have been clear to ESML and those controlling it that ESML would not be able to commence delivery on the contractually agreed date; and given AMUSA's request for ESML's parent company to be joint obligor, ESML and Essar Steel must have foreseen that AMUSA would seek to substitute ESML's actual parent, Essar Steel, for Essar Resources Inc, and that Essar Steel would thereby become liable for ESML's breach. …"
"6.3 ASSIGNMENT OF PROMISSORY NOTE
Mr. Soni informed the Board that pursuant to the share purchase agreement entered into between Essar Steel Asia Holdings Limited ("ESAHL") and the Company, the Company has disposed of 1,910,255,183 equity shares of INR 10 each of Essar Steel India Limited to ESAHL at a consideration of USD 1,388,530,158. He added that in this respect, ESAHL has issued a promissory note (the "Promissory Note") in favour of the Company.
Mr. Soni further informed the Board that it was now proposed to assign the Promissory Note in favour of Essar Global Limited, the sole shareholder of the Company ("EGL") and in consideration, EGL will dispose of 1,388,530,158 ordinary shares of USD 1 each held in the Company to the Company. He added that all the issued share capital of the Company are currently pledged in favour of the Raceview lenders and the latter's approval will be required to buy back the 1,388,530,158 ordinary shares of USD 1 each from EGL. He further added that in this connection, EGL is in the process of obtaining the Raceview lenders' consent.
Mr. Soni also informed the Board that since the consent of the Raceview lenders will take some time, it was proposed that the Promissory Note be assigned to EGL as advance against future share buy back.
After due considerations, IT WAS RESOLVED as follows:
a) THAT the Company be and is hereby authorised to assign the promissory note received from Essar Steel India Holdings Limited to Essar Global Limited for a consideration as advance against future share buy back.
b) THAT any one Director or Mr. Sushil Kumar Baid be and are hereby authorised to execute any necessary documents in connection with the above, on behalf of the Company."
"65. A buy-back of shares is a method by which companies that have accumulated profits reduce the outstanding shareholding by buying back shares from their shareholders. On a buy-back there is a reduction of capital of the company that is buying back its shares. It is only after the buy-back offer is made, and accepted, that the share capital is reduced when the shares are received for cancellation. The purported characterisation of the cancellation of the debt from EGFL to Essar Steel arising from the EGFL Assignments as a payment in advance by Essar Steel for the buy-back of its shares from EGFL is a ruse for removing that debt from the list of assets in Essar Steel's balance sheet. By removing that debt from the sums receivable and reducing it from the share capital, Essar Steel in effect waived recovery of the sum representing the value of shares to be transferred by it, in favour of its parent company, and thereby deprived its creditors (and AMUSA in particular) of their right to proceed against this valuable asset."
(5) Stages 3 and 4: August and November 2013 sale and assignment
(6) Stage 5: 2016 change in accounting treatment
"Receivable from related parties are unsecured, non-interest bearing and receivable on demand.
Receivable from related parties includes receivable as per Promissory Note (see note 6*)".
"On 29th June 2012 and 26th August 2013, a share purchase agreement was entered into between Essar Steel Asia Holdings Limited (a fellow subsidiary) and the Company by virtue of which the company has disposed 1,910,255,183 & 118,678,842 equity shares …INR 10 each of Essar Steel India Limited to Essar Steel Asia Holdings Limited at a consideration of USD 1,388,530,158 & USD 99,450,000 respectively. In this respect, Essar Steel Asia Holdings Limited had issued a Promissory Note in favour of the Company.
The Company has assigned the Promissory Note in favour of Essar Global Fund Limited (holding company) who in turn has assigned it in favour of Essar Steel Mauritius Ltd (a fellow subsidiary) in consideration that Essar Steel Mauritius Ltd has issued (FY 2014: 99,450,000, FY 2013: 1,388,530,158) ordinary shares of USD 1 each in favour of EGFL. Upon receipt of the promissory note from EGFL, Essar Steel Mauritius ltd has assigned the promissory note in favour of Essar Steel Asia Holdings Limited in consideration that Essar Steel Asia Holdings Limited has issued (FY 2014: 99,450,000, FY 2013: 1,388,530,158) ordinary shares of USD 1 each in favour of Essar Steel Mauritius Ltd."
"In 2013, the Company disposed of 2,028,934,025 equity shares held in Essar Steel India Limited (ESIL) to Essar Asia Holdings Limited (ESAHL) and as consideration the latter issued promissory notes for the amount of USD1,487,980,158. Subsequently, under a future buyback arrangement, the promissory notes were assigned to Essar Global Fund Limited (EGFL), the sole shareholder of the Company, as an advance against future buyback of 1,487,980,158 equity shares at USD 1 each. This amount should have been classified under equity. Accordingly, the financial statement for the years ended 31 March 2014 and 2015 have been restated to reflect the correct accounting treatment. The Company will have to satisfy the solvency test to finalise the share buyback."
"Dear Sirs,
We refer to the audited financial statements of the Company for the year ended 31 March 2016.
As stated in note 26 of the financial statements, on 29 June 2012 and 26 August 2013, a share purchase and sale agreement was entered between Essar Steel Asia Holdings Limited ("ESAHL") and the Company, whereby the Company disposed of 1,910,255,183 and 118,678,842 equity shares of Essar Steel India Limited to ESAHL for a consideration of USD 1,388,530,158 and USD 99,450,000 respectively. In this respect, ESAHL issued Promissory Notes in favour of Company for a total amount of USD 1,487,980,158.
Subsequently, under a buyback arrangement, the Promissory Notes were assigned to Essar Global Fund Limited ("EGFL"), the sole shareholder of the Company, as an equity advance against future buyback of 1,487,980,158 equity shares of USD 1 each.
The equity advance against future buyback of shares was inadvertently treated as a receivable in the financial statements of the Company for the year ended 31 March 2013 when it should have been classified under equity.
Accordingly, the comparatives in the financial statements for the year ended 31 March 2016 were restated to reflect the proper accounting treatment."
i) as at 31 March 2016 (the date to which the accounts related), Essar Steel did not satisfy the solvency test and therefore could not lawfully have finalised the intended share buy-back;ii) in addition, EGFL had not been able to obtain the consent of Essar group's lenders to the transaction;
iii) as a result, EGFL was liable to repay the US$1.5 billion face value of the promissory notes to Essar Steel, either (a) under contract and/or restitution by reason of "the condition and consideration for the transfer of the Promissory Notes having failed", or (b) because the assignment to EGFL by Essar Steel of the promissory notes in return for the putative future buy-back of shares and at a time when Essar Steel did not meet the solvency test, entitled Essar Steel as a matter of Mauritian law to recover the value of the Promissory Notes from EGFL;
iv) when the 2014 and 2015 accounts were drawn up, Essar Steel's directors and auditors must have understood that the substance of the arrangements between Essar Steel and EGFL involved a receivable in the amount stated;
v) the 2016 accounting treatment was wrong, and inadequate explanation has been provided for it;
vi) the change in accounting treatment occurred less than two months after AMUSA had commenced the ICC Arbitration against Essar Steel seeking damages in excess of US$1 billion; and
vii) it should therefore be inferred that, in furtherance of the conspiracy, and with knowledge of its valuable rights against EGFL and of AMUSA's substantial claim under the PSA, Essar Steel and EGFL agreed that: (i) Essar Steel would waive the condition that attached to the transfer of the promissory notes or waive the claim for repayment that it had when that condition and the consideration for the transfer failed, and (ii) Essar Steel would restate its accounts so as to dress this up as a correction of a mistake in the prior accounting treatment, rather than the fundamental change to the substance of the contractual arrangements that it was.
"75. There is no precise definition of what is meant by the phrase "international fraud" found in the case-law, but I do not consider that it is confined to cases where the underlying cause of action is a claim in deceit or a proprietary claim relating to the theft of assets. If there is a strong case of serious wrongdoing comprising conduct on a large or repeated scale whereby a company, or the group of which it is a member, is acting in a manner prejudicial to its creditors, and in bad faith, then I see no reason why the English court should not be willing to intervene rather than to stand by and allow the conduct to continue and, to put the matter colloquially, to let the wrongdoer get away with it. In the present case, I would regard the attempted dissipation of Essar Steel's US$ 1.5 billion asset, in the face of the commencement of arbitration proceedings, as sufficient in itself potentially to warrant intervention under the "international fraud" exception, or as constituting "exceptional circumstances". It is clear from Duvalier that the scale of the wrongdoing may be relevant to the question of whether the court should intervene: see per Staughton LJ at page 217. The other examples (Algoma, Numetal, DRI) of conduct, in different jurisdictions, which was fraudulent or prejudicial to creditors, reinforces the conclusion that there are exceptional circumstances applicable in the present case." (judgment § 75)
i) At least from October 2016 when the Deed of Subordination discussed in section (7) below was put in place, it would not have been possible for Essar Steel to take any such action.ii) In any event, as soon as EGFL had received the assignments of the promissory notes in 2013, it immediately on-assigned them to other group companies pursuant to the planned restructuring. EGFL may therefore have had – and still have – a change of position defence.
iii) EGFL has disclosed a legal opinion dated 17 May 2019 from Paul Lam Shang Leen, a retired President of the Supreme Court of Mauritius, Commercial Division, which includes reference to a number of potential defences available to EGFL to any claim by Essar Steel, including a potential change of position defence, lack of fault on the part of EGFL pursuant to the Mauritian Civil Code, good faith receipt for the purposes of the Mauritian Companies Act, as well as time bar.
iv) These are all likely to be legal points of some difficulty. It is (to put the matter at its lowest) far from obvious that as at September 2016 Essar Steel was legally entitled, by way of contractual or restitution claim, to recover from EGFL a sum that is likely – by reason of the great decline in the fortunes of Essar Steel India – to have far exceeded either (a) any gain EGFL itself made from the transaction or (b) (arguably) any loss in reality suffered by Essar Steel.
i) "reduced the amount of Essar Steel's recorded assets by approximately US$1.5 billion, thereby improperly concealing those assets, less than two months after AMUSA issued its Request for Arbitration"; andii) "had the effect that the financial statements for the years ended 31 March 2016 and 2017 were materially inaccurate and misleading, to the disadvantage of Essar Steel's creditors, in particular AMUSA".
"98. The proposed future buy-back of shares, the assignment of the Promissory Notes in anticipation of that future buy-back, and the recording of the value of the Promissory Notes as a receivable in the financial statements (the "Scheme"), if effective, would have enabled Essar Steel:
98.1 To conceal or transfer its assets, in particular the value of the Promissory Notes, worth approximately US$1.5 billion;
98.2 To present itself, and be presented, as a company (i) the assets of which included the approximately US$1.5 billion of value extracted by the EGFL Assignments, and (ii) from which its sole shareholder had not stripped a substantial proportion of the value; and
98.3 At any time to "restate" the accounts, re-classify the EGFL Assignments as a reduction of equity, rather than a debt due, and thereby reduce Essar Steel's apparent assets by US$1.5 billion at a time of its choosing."
i) The 2016 accounts made no attempt to conceal anything. On the contrary, they overtly referred to the relevant transactions before going on to state what was now considered to be their correct accounting treatment.ii) AMUSA makes no allegation that the 2016 accounts were, at any material time, proffered to or relied on by AMUSA.
iii) AMUSA does not allege that any accounts of Essar Steel were provided to AMUSA until after the Amended PSA had been terminated and arbitration proceedings were under way.
iv) AMUSA does not allege that Essar Steel sought to mislead it by producing the 2016 accounts during the arbitration itself. On the contrary, as discussed later, it alleges that Essar Steel failed to produce them. As EGFL points out, in order to further the alleged conspiracy Essar Steel would have needed to produce the 2016 accounts: the very opposite of what was done.
(7) Stage 6: VTB subordination deed
i) a Facility Agreement dated 1 August 2014 (the Energy Facility), subsequently amended and restated on several further occasions, under which more than €1.28 billion of principal remains outstanding and the borrower is Essar Oil (Cyprus) Ltd (EOCL); andii) a Facility Agreement dated 24 December 2018 (the Ports Facility), under which the total principal balance outstanding is around €1.07 billion and the borrower is Essar Sapphire Holdings Ltd (ESHL).
i) guarantees from EGFL and its subsidiaries, secured by share pledges and charges on assets, including a floating charge over all the assets of EGFL in support of the underlying lending. VTB does not, however, have security over fixed assets or revenue streams of the operating companies in the Essar Group; and
ii) assignments by way of security in respect of underlying intra-group (and cross-guaranteed) lending to, inter alia, EGFL and Essar Steel which was refinanced by VTB.
i) all intra-group debts (referred to as Junior Debt) are postponed and subordinated to all liabilities owed under the Energy Facility (referred to as Senior Debt);ii) prior to the discharge in full of the Energy Facility (which has not occurred), (i) Junior Debtors undertake not to pay, nor to allow to be discharged, any Junior Debt; (ii) Junior Creditors undertake not to demand nor to receive payment of, nor to discharge, any Junior Debt; (iii) if any Junior Creditor receives payment or distribution in respect of any Junior Debt, it must hold the same on trust and immediately pay it to the Agent for application against the Senior Debt; and (iv) No Junior Creditor may: (a) demand payment of any Junior Debt or enforce payment of any Junior Debt by attachment, set-off, execution or otherwise; (b) sue for, commence or join any legal or arbitration proceedings against any member of the Group to recover any Junior Debt; (c) bring or support any legal proceedings against any Debtor; or (d) otherwise exercise any remedy for the recovery of any of the Junior Debt.
i) the subordination of intra-group debt to the debt of a third-party lender is standard practice and very common;ii) it was VTB (and not any party within the Essar group) which required companies in the Essar group to enter into the Subordination Deed;
iii) VTB did so as part of the 2016 debt restructuring described by Mr Galkin, as part of which VTB made $2.5 billion of new facilities available to the Essar group. VTB's legitimate commercial interest in requiring Essar group entities to enter into a debt subordination is obvious, and there is no evidence (nor any basis to infer) that VTB did so in an attempt to help Essar group evade liabilities owed to AMUSA; and
iv) Essar Steel itself was prior to the 2016 restructuring liable for the entirety of certain existing facilities (known as the 'Raceview' facilities) amounting to around US$4 billion, whether as principal debtor or as guarantor. Those facilities were, in large part, refinanced in 2016. There was a clear corporate benefit to Essar Steel in the restructuring of its facilities, whether or not new monies were advanced to it.
(8) Essar Steel's failure to seek to recover the 'debt' from EGFL
"103. In implementing the Scheme, and failing to seek to recover from EGFL the sum of approximately US$1.5 billion paid out by Essar Steel for no return, the directors of Essar Steel have carried out a transaction which defrauds creditors of Essar Steel, and in particular AMUSA; and EGFL, Essar Capital and Essar Capital Services and their directors and controllers have assisted in and procured that transaction."
(9) Marex
(G) ESSAR STEEL UAE
"71. On or about 30 September 2015, Essar Steel transferred its 100% shareholding in Essar Steel UAE Ltd to Essar Middle East FZE ("Essar Middle East", the "Essar UAE Transfer").
72. The Essar Steel UAE shares were said to be worth approximately US$40 million in Essar Steel's financial statements for the year ending 31 March 2015. They were purportedly sold to Essar Middle East for US$200 million, with that price subsequently reduced by US$66 million. The US$66 million reduction was to be refunded by Essar Steel to Essar Middle East. Essar Middle East assigned its right to the refund to EGFL. Essar Middle East is not a subsidiary of Essar Steel.
73. The Essar UAE Transfer thus transferred Essar Steel's assets to a separate corporate structure in which Essar Steel had no interest. By September 2015, when the Essar UAE Transfer took place:
73.1 Essar Steel was insolvent;
73.2 AMUSA infers from the following facts and matters that ESML, Essar Steel and those controlling them knew that ESML would be unable to perform its obligations under the Amended Pellet Sale Agreement, or would be unlikely to be able to perform those obligations, that ESML would be likely to enter into insolvency and thus that Essar Steel would probably shortly be exposed to and/or would undertake significant liabilities:
(a) Essar Steel was a party to the Amended Pellet Sale Agreement;
(b) ESML had already twice requested amendments to the Amended Pellet Sale Agreement to extend the delivery date;
(c) ESML was seeking further amendments to the Amended Pellet Sale Agreement; and
(d) Work was slowing down on the Nashwauk Project (and soon thereafter essentially ceased) owing to ESML's failure to pay its contractors.
74. Pending disclosure and further information, AMUSA infers that the Essar UAE Transfer was wrongfully effected at an undervalue, for the purposes of defeating the claims of creditors of Essar Steel, in particular AMUSA. That inference is supported by the fact that after the price was agreed a further agreement was reached that Essar Steel would rebate one third of the purchase price to another entity. That suggests that Essar Steel and Essar Middle East were not concerned to ensure they had identified the arm's length market price. The purchase price was passed on by Essar Steel to a related company, Peak Trading Overseas Limited shortly after its receipt for no real consideration in connection with purported steel sale and purchase transactions which it will be contended were sham."
(H) ALGOMA
"76. By at least the end of 2013, Algoma was facing significant financial issues. These involved a liquidity crisis and upcoming debt maturity issues. Algoma was operating with very tight liquidity. Its capital structure was untenable and it would not be able to meet an upcoming coupon payment to unsecured bondholders (due in June 2014) and an approximately US$300 million loan maturity payment (due in September 2014).
77. At that time, Algoma's board was composed of eight directors; three of whom were independent, with the remaining five associated with the Essar Group. In January 2014, the three independent directors proposed that the board consult external financial advisors in an effort to resolve Algoma's financial difficulties. The directors associated with the Essar Group voted against the proposal put forward by the three independent directors, who subsequently resigned.
78. In or about November 2014 (subsequent to the resignation of Algoma's independent directors), Algoma entered into two transactions:
78.1 A recapitalisation transaction (the "Recapitalisation"). As part of this process, EGFL entered into a Restructuring Support Agreement (the "RSA") with Algoma and others. As a condition in the RSA, EGFL agreed to make a cash investment of US$250-300 million into Algoma. The RSA was approved as an arrangement under the Canada Business Corporations Act 1985 in September 2014. However, in November 2014 the RSA was amended to provide instead for a cash injection of only US$150 million, to be funded not by EGFL but by a loan from third party lenders to a new and separate entity (which was also a subsidiary of EGFL), Port of Algoma Inc ("Portco"); EGFL was released from its obligations to pay US$250-300 million to Algoma.
78.2 Algoma then entered into the "Port Transaction" with Portco. This transaction involved (i) Algoma selling to Portco its port assets (buildings and plant machinery but not land); (ii) Algoma leasing its real property to Portco for 50 years; (iii) Portco agreeing that it would provide the services necessary for the operation of the port assets in return for a monthly payment from Algoma to Portco and (iv) Algoma agreeing that it would provide to Portco the services necessary to operate the port, in return for a monthly payment from Portco to Algoma (less than the payment from Algoma to Portco). The total payable by Portco was US$171.5 million. The cash amount paid by Portco to Algoma (US$151.6 million) was largely funded by a US$150 million loan from third party lenders; the remainder (US$19.8 million) was to be satisfied by a promissory note from Portco. Portco immediately assigned its obligations under the promissory note to EGFL: it became payable in November 2015 and by March 2017 EGFL had not paid it. As part of this transaction, a cargo handling agreement between Portco and Algoma stipulated that Portco's consent was required for a change of control of Algoma.
79. On 9 November 2015, Algoma entered protection pursuant to the Canadian Companies' Creditor Arrangement Act 1985.
80. The Algoma transaction demonstrates the control exercised by EGFL, Essar Capital and Prashant over the affairs of even indirect subsidiaries of EGFL, for the benefit of EGFL not the benefit of those subsidiaries, in that:
80.1 The direction and decision making in relation to Algoma's recapitalisation and the Port Transaction was driven by EGFL and Essar Capital and led by Mr Seifert, at the request of Prashant;
80.2 Algoma management did not negotiate the terms of the Recapitalisation and Port Transaction, the negotiations were carried out by EGFL's representatives;
80.3 The Port Transaction was beneficial to EGFL, not to Algoma. It transferred Algoma's critical port asset to a wholly owned subsidiary of EGFL, with a change of control provision that benefitted EGFL, at a time when the Algoma board could have taken, and received legal advice that it should take, steps to oblige EGFL to fulfil its commitments to Algoma, which would have made the Port Transaction unnecessary, but did not do so.
81. AMUSA infers that the actions of Algoma's board were taken in the interests of EGFL and on the instruction of EGFL, Essar Capital, Prashant and Mr Seifert. AMUSA infers that EGFL and those controlling it and its subsidiaries, failed to fulfil EGFL's obligations to Algoma under the RSA, and instead stripped Algoma of its assets in order to insulate those assets, which were until then indirectly owned by Essar Steel, from the anticipated future claims of Essar Steel's creditors, in particular, AMUSA. These actions were unlawful, being committed in breach of fiduciary duties owed to Algoma or being acts of knowing assistance of such breaches and/or as being acts committed with the intention of prejudicing, oppressing or defrauding creditors."
"[123] … an exercise in self-dealing in that Algoma's critical Port asset was transferred out of Algoma to a wholly owned subsidiary of [EGFL] with a change of control provision that benefitted [EGFL] at a time that a future insolvency was a possibility. That would not have been necessary had [EGFL] lived up to its cash injection commitment. Yet the board did not take any steps to call [EGFL] on its commitment, even in the face of legal advice that it should do so." (Ernst & Young Inc. v. Essar Global Fund Ltd et al, 2017 ONSC 1366, Newbould J)
"[82] The entire Port Transaction and the GIP secured loan to Portco would not have been necessary had Essar Global lived up to its obligations under the Restructuring Support Agreement it made with Algoma and the accompanying Equity Commitment Letter dated July 24, 2014 pledging a cash investment of $250 to $300 million. However, it is quite clear from the evidence that, despite its obligations to Algoma under these agreements, Essar Global had no intention of living up to its promises. Essar Global acted in bad faith in this regard.
[83] On March 28, 2014, the Ruias made it clear to Mr. Saraf of Essar Services India Ltd in Mumbai that they did not have $ 250 million for an equity investment in Algoma, that they did not want to tell any banks or investors that they would put in $ 250 million of equity and that they could only put in $ 120 million but would just take it out to reduce liabilities of Algoma owed to Essar companies.
[84] Mr. Saraf was dealing with Goldman Sachs, who were advising on the Recapitalization that would pay out Algoma's junior unsecured noteholders. Goldman Sachs advised that up to $300 million was needed as an equity contribution. On July 29, 2014, just five days after Essar Global signed the Equity Commitment Letter obliging it to provide equity of $250 to 300 million (less $50 million in potential third party inventory financing), Mr. Saraf advised Goldman Sachs that Essar Global wanted to limit its equity contribution to Algoma to $150-160 million and asked if it could be reduced to $100 million. On his cross-examination, Mr. Seifert referred to the equity commitment in the Restructuring Support Agreement as "a temporary agreement to an ultimate refinancing". That agreement was not by its terms a temporary agreement. While the Equity Commitment Letter provided for a payment to be made if it or the RSA were breached, it did not make the agreement temporary."
"[88] It was Essar Global's decision not to fund Algoma according to the terms of the Equity Commitment Letter that made it necessary to carry out the Port Transaction. The Port Transaction was the result of the structure required by GIP to support the loan of $150 million to Portco that was advanced to Algoma net of costs. That reduced the amount of cash equity previously promised by Essar Global to be advanced to Algoma. In the amended RSA, $150 million of historical debt owed by Algoma to Essar Global was converted into preferred equity for Essar Global. That however was not cash as had been agreed to be advanced by Essar Global to Algoma in the Equity Commitment Letter. Moreover, the $150 million debt had been at the bottom of the capital structure of Algoma and its value was certainly questionable, making the conversion of debt to equity also of questionable value. On cross-examination, Mr. Seifert chose not to "speculate" on what he would pay for the $150 million debt and said the value was something in the eye of the beholder. This is confirmatory of the fact that the loans and equity conversion was of questionable value and certainly less than the cash infusion that Essar Global had previously agreed to put into Algoma and later reneged on.
[89] In my view, Essar Global's failure to inject cash equity into Algoma as agreed was the root cause of the Port Transaction and the resulting long-term effect on Algoma and its stakeholders of the transfer of control over the Port facilities from Algoma to Portco/Essar Global. The cash equity injection agreed to by Essar Global was a contractual alternative and clearly more beneficial to Algoma. That root cause was an exercise in bad faith. Had an independent committee of the board of directors of Algoma been struck, it may have been that steps may have been taken to hold Essar Global to its bargain rather than simply look to third party financing from GIP under the structure of the Port Transaction. The failure of the board of Algoma to look to some other way to effect a Recapitalization was in itself an indication of a lack of regard for the interests of stakeholders of Algoma."
…
"[122] Algoma's Board held meetings on October 30 and November 1, 2014. It is quite clear from the meeting minutes that it was Mr. Seifert who was leading the Recapitalization effort. At the November 1 meeting, Mr. Schrock of Weil, Gotschal & Manges advised that unsecured noteholders would not react well to proposed changes to the Port Transaction and would likely push for a higher infusion of cash/equity from Essar Global, as promised in the Equity Commitment Letter. The advisors said that the board should insist that Algoma press all parties to fully satisfy their commitments and this could include a letter to Essar Global setting forth its obligations regarding the equity commitments. That advice was not followed.
[123] I fail to see how the directors of Algoma can rely on the business judgment rule in the face of not following advice to go after Essar Global on its cash equity commitment. There was no issue about the validity of that commitment. If the Ruia interests had acquiesced to forming an independent committee of the board, or listened to the truly independent directors before they resigned in frustration, steps may have been taken differently including accepting and following Mr. Schrock's advice..."
"Hi Joe,
Just met PSR. He (and RNR) have made the following things clear:
1. They do not have $250 mn for equity.
2. Therefore they do not want to tell any of the banks or investors that we are looking to put a refinancing plan assuming we will put $250 mn of equity.
3. They can put in $120 mn of money in Algoma but this money will be taken out of Algoma and used to reduce liabilities (owned to Essar companies - though that will not be highlight of the external message) ...
. . . PSR wants to speak with you and me today or tomorrow. Please call me so that we can sync up before speaking with him."
i) Algoma was a troubled company: it had undergone a restructuring in proceedings under the Canadian Companies' Creditor Arrangement Act (CCAA) in 1991 and again in 2001; in late 2013 Algoma faced another liquidity crisis and was restructured in 2014 under the Canada Business Corporations Act (Newbould J judgment § 2).ii) EGFL had nonetheless evidently been supporting Algoma for some time. Newbould J said:
"By the end of 2013, it was clear that Algoma was facing significant financial issues involving a liquidity crisis and upcoming debt maturity issues. Algoma was operating with very tight liquidity, resulting in low inventory levels. Algoma's capital structure was untenable and it would not be able to meet a coupon payment to unsecured bondholders due in June 2014 and an approximately $300 million term loan maturity payment due in September 2014. While support from Essar Global had been enabling Algoma to meet its liabilities as they came due, by early 2014 Essar Global was increasingly hesitant to advance cash to Algoma".iii) Whilst Newbould J's findings on the point were (in the Ontario Court of Appeal's words) "admittedly somewhat confusing" (Ernst & Young Inc. v. Essar Global Fund Ltd et al, 2017 ONCA 1014 § 177), the Court of Appeal accepted that EGFL provided US$150 million in cash to Algoma as part of the November 2014 restructuring, in addition to the other components of the refinancing (Ontario CA judgment § 178).
iv) Thus, far from asset stripping, EGFL put a further substantial amount of its own funds into Algoma in November 2014: the criticism was that it put in less than it had initially agreed to in July 2014.
"In this case, the reasonable expectations asserted by the Monitor relate to the loss by Algoma of a critical asset and value to Portco and the change of control clause in the Cargo Handling Agreement. The Monitor contends that the reasonable expectations of the creditors of Algoma, including the trade creditors, employees, pensioners and retirees, were that Algoma would not deal with its core assets like the Port in such a way as it would lose long-term control and value over those assets to a related party on terms that permitted the related party to veto or thwart Algoma's ability to do significant transactions or restructure, as was done in this case." (Newbould J judgment § 64)
"Notwithstanding anything to the contrary herein, in the event that this Agreement is terminated as a result of a breach of this Agreement or the EGFL Commitment Letter by EGFL and, at such time, no Consenting Noteholder is in breach of its obligations under this Agreement or the EGFL Commitment Letter, then (A) any amount of the Commitment contemplated in the EGFL Commitment Letter paid to the Company by EGFL pursuant to the terms of the EGFL Commitment Letter shall be retained by the Company and, if EGFL funded all or any portion of such Commitment pursuant to a Permitted Shareholder Loan (as such term is defined in the Unsecured Notes Indenture), such Permitted Shareholder Loan shall automatically convert into common equity of the Company (the "Company Payment"), and (B) EGFL shall pay to the Unsecured Noteholders (i) the amount of interest that was due and payable on the Unsecured Notes on June 16, 2014 at the non-default rate, and (ii) interest on such past due interest at the default rate, and (iii) all other unpaid interest accruing after June 16, 2014 through and including the date such interest amount is paid by EGFL to the Unsecured Noteholders at the default rate, which amounts in clause (B) shall be applied against the amount of such accrued and unpaid and past due interest on the Unsecured Notes (such interest payment, the "Noteholder Payment" and, together with the Company Payment, the "Termination Payment"). In the event that the Noteholder Payment becomes payable it shall be paid by EGFL in immediately available funds within ten (10) Business Days after the date of termination of this Agreement or the EGFL Commitment Letter, as applicable. Solely for purposes of establishing the basis for the amount thereof, and without in any way increasing the amount of the Termination Payment or expanding the circumstances in which the Termination Payment is to be paid, it is agreed that the Termination payment is liquidated damages, and not a penalty, and the payment of the Termination Payment in the circumstances specified herein is supported by due and sufficient consideration. The Parties acknowledge and agree that the agreements contained in this paragraph are an integral part of the transactions contemplated in this Agreement and the EGFL Commitment, and that without these agreements the parties would not have entered into this Agreement and the EGFL Commitment Letter. The parties agree that upon payment of the Termination Payment, EGFL shall have no further liability to the Company, the Unsecured Noteholders, or any of their affiliates or any other person, whether at law or equity, in contract, in tort, or otherwise arising from or in connection with any breach or default by EGFL of this Agreement or the EGFL Commitment Letter or arising from any claim or cause of action that the Company, the Unsecured Noteholders, or any of their affiliates may have relating to such breach or default, and no person will have any rights or claims against EGFL or any of its affiliates relating to such breach or default. The parties agree that the payment of damages in an amount not to exceed the Termination Payment by EGFL shall be the sole and exclusive remedy of the Company and the Unsecured Noteholders for any breach of, or default under, this Agreement or the EGFL Commitment Letter by EGFL."
(I) ENTRY INTO AMENDED PSA
i) Essar Steel indeed did not expect the sum shown in its accounts prior to 2016 as due in respect of the promissory notes to be paid by EGFL. However, it is not suggested that AMUSA was shown or relied on those accounts. Further, even without that sum, Essar Steel remained an amply solvent company at the time of the alleged representation.ii) The loss AMUSA claims is said to flow from its inability to enforce the Award, or having to incur the expenses in taking investigatory or legal action to enforce it. However, but for the alleged misrepresentation AMUSA would have remained in the original PSA with ESML and Essar Resources, and would have been no better off in the end.
iii) It was clear to AMUSA from the time the Amended PSA was entered into that there was an unresolved issue about financing for the project, as reflected in clause 28 of the Amended PSA: which provided that "Essar is endeavouring to obtain financing sufficient to complete the construction of the Mine by July 1, 2015 or before" and, absent such investment or evidence of Essar's ability to make the same by 30 April 2014, gave AMUSA the option to rescind the Amended PSA and revert to the terms and conditions of the PSA.
(J) RELEVANT EVENTS IN RELATED PROCEEDINGS
(1) The ICC Arbitration
"I consider that this aspect of the arbitration proceedings provides solid and powerful evidence in support of AMUSA's case that documentation relating to ESML, and available on Mr. Vuppuluri's computer, was deliberately withheld from production, and that deliberately false information was given to the Tribunal in the 28 March 2017 letter as to the availability of that information. If, as Essar Steel now accepts, Mr. Vuppuluri did in fact have access via his computer and email, it is somewhat remarkable that the contrary should have been stated in the letter dated 28 March 2017, and then reiterated in the response to AMUSA's request for production of documentation. In saying this, I should emphasise that I am not making a definitive fact-finding that documentation was deliberately withheld and that false information was deliberately given. It is theoretically possible that, if the matter were to be investigated in detail, with the benefit of cross-examination of Mr. Baid and Mr. Vuppuluri, a court might accept the innocent explanation put forward by Mr. Baid in his Affidavit in the Mauritian proceedings and repeated in substance in his first witness statement in these proceedings. However, I do agree with Mr. Peto's submission that the account given by Mr. Baid is a "very unlikely story". At its lowest, the episode indicates a cavalier attitude on the part of Essar Steel and Mr. Vuppuluri to the production of relevant documents, since it would not have been difficult – and indeed was incumbent on both of them – to check what the position actually was."
"57. In addition, when Essar Steel withdrew, they made it clear that they were standing by their defence and counterclaim, and invited the Tribunal to "have due regard to the material that it has already submitted". That material included the 2015 accounts which Essar Steel knew to have been restated and which had been withheld from disclosure. It seems to me that AMUSA were entitled to submit, as it did, that Essar Steel thereby invited the Tribunal to proceed on a false basis, and that this is also relevant to risk of dissipation and the ancillary orders in the present proceedings."
"In May 2014, the Company transferred its contributed interest of USD 305 Million in Essar Steel Minnesota LLC to ESML Holding USA INC, a Delaware company, ESML Holding USA INC contributed interest in Essar Steel Minnesota LLC to ESML Holding INC. Subsequently, the Company acquired Essar Steel Minnesota Cooperatief U.A. from Essar Steel Mauritius Limited and contributed capital of ESML Holding USA INC to Essar Steel Minnesota Cooperatief U.A."
The corresponding note in the 2016 account provided only this information:
"Essar Steel Limited is co-guarantor along with other group companies for the USD 530 Million Facility availed by Essar Steel Minnesota LLC from ICICI bank. As Essar Steel Minnesota LLC has defaulted in payment of the loan and also has filed for bankruptcy, the Company has recognised impairment of its assets to the tune of USD370,156,685 invested."
(2) Cayman proceedings
"In all the circumstances of the present case, I am satisfied that (a) there was a risk of documents being destroyed, (b) there was a need for an Information Preservation Order and (c) it is arguable that the Defendants have directed asset dissipation actions in the past. AMUSA's belief that wilful attempts to evade enforcement of the ICC Award have been made and will likely continue to be made are sufficiently cogent to substantiate an arguable case of wrongdoing in the requisite legal sense."
Kawaley J also noted that "I regarded the historic conduct to be relied upon as evidence of a propensity for future dissipation steps being likely to happen": that being presumably a cross-reference back to the reasons he gave when initially granting relief ex parte on 15 January 2019.
(3) Mauritius proceedings
(4) Proceedings in India
"65. The Indian Directorate of Revenue Intelligence (the "DRI") produced a report dated 11 March 2015 (the "DRI Report"). The report runs to some 247 pages, but only the summary (22 pages) was contained in the exhibits. The summary does not directly concern Essar Steel, and it does not directly implicate any of the individuals who are the focus of AMUSA's case. Nevertheless, the summary provides solid evidence of what appears to be serious fraudulent activity within the Essar Group. The DRI found that Essar Group entities had conspired to create a fraudulent invoicing customs duty scheme and participated in trade-based money laundering via a UAE-incorporated company called Global Supplies (UAE) FZE ("GSF"). The DRI found GSF to be a "front company of the Essar Group" created "to act as an intermediary invoicing agent for facilitating invoice inflation" and a "dummy agent … for enabling siphoning off of money abroad".
66. If the DRI Report had been the only evidence relied upon in this case, I do not think that it would justify the grant of any of the relief sought. However, I consider that it is relevant as an additional piece of evidence which shows a pattern of wrongdoing, in this case fraudulent activity, within the Essar Group. Mr. Baid's evidence that the report is being challenged by certain companies is not in my judgment an answer in the present context. Even if there is a challenge to the DRI report, that does not mean that the DRI report does not provide strong and solid evidence of the matters which it addresses and describes."
"60. On 4 October 2018, the Indian Supreme Court issued a lengthy judgment in a case between ArcelorMittal India Private Ltd. (a subsidiary within the ArcelorMittal Group) and Satish Kumar Gupta and others. The case concerned the Indian insolvency of Essar India, and respective bids by an ArcelorMittal company and also a company called Numetal to bid for Essar India. The decision of the Supreme Court is relied upon by AMUSA because of the findings which the court made concerning Mr. Rewant Ruia, a member of the Ruia family who also featured in connection with the Algoma transaction.
61. One of the matters on which the Indian Supreme Court focused was a statutory provision (Section 29A (c) of the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code 2016). This provision was aimed at ensuring that, as the court said, "persons who are in charge of the corporate debtor" for whom a resolution plan is made "do not come back in some other form to regain control of the company without first paying off its debts". The section is therefore an important protection for creditors. The relevant issue in the case concerned Numetal and its alleged connection with Mr. Ruia. In substance, if this was Mr. Ruia's company, then (as the Supreme Court said) "the only manner in which Numetal could successfully present a resolution plan would be to first pay off the debts of [Essar India], as well as those of such other corporate debtors of the Ruia group of companies …".
62. The court's decision concluded, in substance, that Mr. Ruia had sought to evade this prohibition, and had done so through what the court described in paragraph [88] of the judgment as a "smokescreen in the chain of control". The smokescreen involved the use of an elaborate chain of companies and trusts. The Indian Supreme Court therefore concluded that Numetal's participation was caught by the prohibition and was ineligible.
63. AMUSA contends, convincingly in my view, that Mr. Rewant Ruia was likely to have been acting in concert with other members of his family to acquire Essar India's assets without meeting its liabilities to creditors. The case therefore provides solid evidence, in my view, of the misuse by the family of corporate structures to the prejudice of creditors of the Essar Group of companies.
64. In his witness statement, Mr. Baid submitted that there had been no attempt to shield any corporate ownership structures from the relevant authorities. But this submission is difficult in my view to reconcile with the conclusions of the Supreme Court, including that there was "one more smokescreen in the chain of control, which would conceal the fact that the actual control over AEL is by none other than Shri Rewant Ruia himself"."
"The beneficiaries of such discretionary trust are general charities and Solis Enterprise Limited, a company incorporated in Bermuda, the share capital of which is held by Mr. Rewant Ruia.
Mr. Rewant Ruia is the son of Ravi Ruia, who is one of the existing promoters of the Corporate Debtor."
"63.1. On 2 August 2017, following an application by Standard Chartered Bank and the State Bank of India, the National Company Law Tribunal, Ahmedabad Bench (NCLT) ordered a commencement of a "Corporate Insolvency Resolution Process" in respect of ESIL (2017 NCLT Order) under India's Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code 2016 (India Bankruptcy Code). This application was at the direction of the Reserve Bank of India. Proceedings filed by ESIL in the High Court of Gujarat to challenge the Reserve Bank's direction were not successful.
63.2. On 10 October 2017, following this order and in accordance with the IBC, the "Resolution Professional" appointed by the NCLT to manage ESIL's Corporate Insolvency Resolution Process (Mr Satish Gupta) invited public expressions of interest from all interested resolution applicants to present resolution plans for "rehabilitating" ESL. Mr Gupta also established a Committee of Creditors of ESIL to consider any such proposal received.
63.3. On the day the resolution plans were due (12 February 2018), Mr Gupta received proposals from an entity associated with the ArcelorMittal Group (ArcelorMittal India Private Group Ltd (ArcelorMittal India) and an entity associated with the Ruia family, Numetal Limited (Numetal).
63.4. Mr Gupta considered both plans as ineligible under Section 29A of the India Bankruptcy Code which prohibits, among other things, promoters of distressed assets with defaulted loans or their related parties from submitting a resolution plan unless such defaults are cured and called for fresh resolution plans to be submitted on 2 April 2018.
63.5. In a very broad summary, Arcelor Mittal India and Lakshmi Mittal, immediately prior to submitting the resolution plan, had sold their direct / indirect shareholding in two distressed companies in India namely (Uttam Galva Steels Ltd and KSS Petron Pvt Ltd) and claimed that due to such sale, the restrictions under Section 29A were not applicable to it. Mr Gupta while agreeing with this position, asserted that in the case of Uttam Galva Steels Ltd, ArcelorMittal India had not yet obtained stock exchange approvals relating to declassification as a promoter, and on this ground disqualified the resolution plan of Arcelor Mittal India. Accordingly Mr Gupta, therefore, the only requirement for ArcelorMittal India to become eligible to resubmit a fresh resolution plan was to obtain necessary stock exchange approvals. These approvals were obtained shortly thereafter and therefore the fresh resolution plan submitted by ArcelorMittal India on 2 April 2018 would have been considered as an eligible plan by Mr Gupta.
63.6. In the case of Numetal, Mr Gupta considered it to be ineligible on account of the fact that Rewant Ruia, who had an indirect interest in Numetal, was deemed to be acting in concert with Ravi Ruia, his father, who was one of the promoters of ESIL. It was prohibited for a past promoter of ESIL or anyone acting in concert with a past promoter to participate in the resolution process.
63.7. Numetal challenged the decision of Mr Gupta in relation to its own disqualification as well as the position that ArcelorMittal India could become qualified merely by obtaining relevant stock exchange approvals at the NCLT. Following proceedings before the NCLT, the appellate tribunal (ie the NCLAT) and the Supreme Court(and while Numetal's own resolution plan was ultimately held to be ineligible for substantially the same reasons mentioned by Mr Gupta) in relation to the resolution plan of ArcelorMittal India, it was finally held by the Supreme Court in its Judgment dated 15 November 2019 that
'…there is no doubt whatsoever that AMNLBV's shares in Uttam Galva were sold only in order to get out of the ineligibility mentioned in Section 29A(c)…', and '...the Uttam Galva transaction clearly renders AMIPL ineligible under Section 29A(c) of the code'; and
"..as in the case of Uttam Galva, there can be no doubt whatsoever that the sale of Freaseli's shareholding in KSS Global, together with the resignation of the Mittal directors from the board of directors of KSS Global, is a transaction reasonably proximate to the date of submission of the resolution plan by AMIPL, undertaken with the sole object of avoiding the consequence mentioned in the proviso to Section 29A(c).."
63.8. As a direct result of the challenge brought by Numetal, therefore, ArcelorMittal Group was eventually required to make payment of overdue loans of Uttam Galva and KSS Petron amounting to Rs 7469 crores (approximately USD 1 billion) in order to become eligible to submit a fresh resolution plan for ESIL."
(5) Proceedings in England and Wales
i) The alleged breach of the anti-tipping off provision contained in the search order occurred unknowingly, because the provision was not drawn to his attention by AMUSA's solicitors when serving it, in violation of the supervising solicitor's undertaking to the court. Furthermore, the alleged tipping off breach comprised Prashant Ruia forwarding the search order and accompanying documents to Essar's counsel for the purpose of obtaining legal advice, and to other key personnel for their information. The tipping-off provisions did not come to Prashant Ruia's attention before he forwarded the email because the covering letter did not draw attention to them, no oral explanation was provided to him by AMUSA, and he was unable to download the vast attachments. Any breach was therefore not deliberate. It is also to be measured as against AMUSA's decision to serve the search order on Prashant Ruia at his corporate service address at the administration offices of the Stanlow plant in Cheshire, where it might have been opened by any member of staff prior to or during the conduct of the search.ii) Prashant Ruia's challenge to the legitimacy of service of the search order under s.1140 of the Companies Act dictated the timing of his provision of affidavit evidence (which obligation ran from service).
iii) Prashant Ruia has explained that the difference between Mr Baid's evidence that relevant documents were held in Prashant's home, and his own evidence that they were not, was simply occasioned by further reflection on the matter, and accordingly was again not deliberate, and nothing turns on the same.
"118. This e-mail contained a typo, but it was common ground that the reference to "andres pc" was a reference to the computer (a laptop) of Mr. Wright. The evidence was that this particular email was subsequently deleted both from Ms. Popat's computer and from Mr. Radia's computer, although in due course it was possible to recover it. In an Affidavit served by Ms. Popat subsequent to the hearing, in the context of committal proceedings which AMUSA had commenced against her, Ms. Popat said that she had deleted the email both from her computer and Mr. Radia's computer.
119. AMUSA attached considerable significance to these two emails, including the deletion of the second email by Ms. Popat with the active consent of Mr. Radia. They submitted that this showed that Butcher J. was quite right in his instinct that this was an appropriate case for a search order because there was a real possibility that documents would be destroyed. They also relied upon the fact that the emails were sent by an Essar Oil employee to an ECL employee, but relating to the need to hide the documents of a different UK company Essar Capital Services. This showed that the Essar Group did not in practice draw distinctions between the various Essar corporate entities.
120. Mr. Stanley on behalf of Essar Capital Services did not seek to minimise the seriousness of what had occurred. He recognised the "forensic embarrassment" created by these documents. But he submitted that Ms. Popat was a junior employee who had acted foolishly, and that there had been equally foolish concealment of that by a more senior employee who certainly should have known better. The second email was deleted by or with the agreement of Mr. Radia because, in effect, Ms. Popat begged him to do so, having realised that it was improper for her to have sent it and having appreciated that it might have very serious repercussions for her. Therefore these events told one very little. More significant was the fact that the suggestions of Ms. Popat had not in fact been acted upon: documents were produced, and Mr. Wright's laptop was not concealed but has been imaged and is being searched.
121. As with many aspects of this case, it is not appropriate or indeed possible for me to make definitive fact-findings relating to the state of mind of these two individuals, or why they acted as they did. This is reinforced by the consideration that AMUSA have commenced committal proceedings against Ms. Popat, and are likely to do so against Mr. Radia. Indeed, on Friday 15 March (i.e. after the conclusion of the hearing to discharge the orders) I gave directions in the committal proceedings which will lead to a hearing which is presently estimated to last one and half days (to include the proposed proceedings against Mr. Radia).
122. Ultimately, the question which I am considering in the present context is whether there is a real possibility that evidence will be destroyed if the relief is not given. I consider that the content of the two emails, and the subsequent destruction of one of those emails, provides very solid evidence of that real possibility. These emails were, after all, sent after a court order had been made and served, with a penal notice attached. If such emails could be sent after a court order, it is not difficult to imagine what might have happened if there had been no court order for preservation. The suggestion that the first email was a panicked immediate reaction by Ms. Popat to the search order is a matter that is likely to arise for consideration at the committal hearing, and again it is not appropriate for me to express any views about that. However, I note that by 09.53 that morning Ms. Popat was not the senior person dealing with the search order. By that time, Ms. Samantha Chambers, who was a qualified solicitor and legal counsel to and the company secretary of Essar Oil, had arrived and was engaged in discussions with Mr. Warburton who was one of the solicitors supervising the search order. It is therefore perhaps somewhat surprising that Ms. Popat should be panicking, since a qualified lawyer was dealing with the search order. But even if the first email was sent without sufficient thought and in a panic, it is difficult to see how that explanation could apply to the second email. That was sent some 3 hours later, after there must have been time for reflection. The deletion of that email occurred some time after that.
123. It seems to me that this episode does provide evidence which reflects adversely upon the culture within the Essar Group, and that it is therefore consistent with the other evidence (already described) as to bad faith, conduct prejudicial to creditors, and the deliberate withholding or concealment of documentation."
(K) GOOD ARGUABLE CASE
"… a case which is more than barely capable of serious argument, and yet not necessarily one which the Judge believes to have a better than fifty per cent chance of success" (Ninemia Maritime Corp v Trave Schiffahrts GmbH & Co KG ("The Niedersachsen") [1983] 2 Lloyd's Rep 600, [1984] 1 All ER 398, 404, per Mustill J)
i) an allegation of conspiracy to harm by unlawful means "must be clearly pleaded and clearly proved by convincing evidence": Jarman & Platt Ltd v Barget Ltd [1977] FSR 260, 267; CEF Holdings v Mundey [2012] EWHC 1534 (QB) § 74;ii) all specific facts and matters relied upon in support of any inferences of dishonesty must be pleaded: ED&F Man Sugar v T&L Sugars [2016] EWHC 272 (Comm); and
iii) where parties may have joined the conspiracy at different times, they will only be liable for loss caused post their involvement. Accordingly, knowing when it is alleged they became knowing participants in an alleged conspiracy is critical to understanding the claim made against them.
i) AMUSA's case that the restructuring in 2012 and 2013 involving the removal of Essar Steel India from Essar Steel was done pursuant to an unlawful means conspiracy strains credibility (section (F)(2) above).ii) The allegation that the assignment of by far the larger of the two promissory notes to EGFL in March 2013 was designed to evade liabilities to AMUSA lacks any real cogency (section (F)(4) above).
iii) The same applies to the assignment of the smaller note in November 2013 (section (F)(5) above).
iv) AMUSA's case relying on the change of accounting treatment in 2016 is inconsistent with its overall case of conspiracy, and in any event I do not consider AMUSA to have put forward any realistic case that the change amounted to a dissipation or attempted dissipation of an asset, let alone of a clear debt claim (section (F)(6) above).
v) The allegation that Essar Steel's entry into the Deed of Subordination with VTB occurred pursuant to an unlawful means conspiracy is wholly lacking in evidential support or cogency (section (F)(7) above).
vi) The allegation that Essar Steel failed, pursuant to the alleged conspiracy, to seek to recover the alleged debt from EGFL adds nothing of substance to AMUSA's claim (section (F)(8) above).
vii) There is no substance in the allegation that Essar Steel's sale of Essar Steel UAE was made pursuant to the alleged conspiracy (section (G) above).
viii) There is no plausible case that the Algoma transaction occurred pursuant to the alleged conspiracy (section (H) above).
ix) AMUSA's claim for fraudulent misrepresentation inducing its entry into the Amended PSA was not argued before me in detail and appears weak (section (I) above).
i) the significant issues likely to arise about the real value of any claim Essar Steel may have against EGFL, discussed in §§ 89-98 above; andii) the unaddressed question about the effect on the value of any claim Essar Steel may have against EGFL, and hence the real value of AMUSA's claim, of the postponement of the former claim under the Deed of Subordination: see §§ 131-133 above.
(L) RISK OF DISSIPATION
"(a) The claimant must demonstrate a real risk that a judgment against the defendant may not be satisfied as a result of unjustified dealing with the defendant's assets.
(b) That risk can only be demonstrated with solid evidence; mere inference or generalised assertion is not sufficient.
(c) It is not enough to rely solely on allegations that a defendant has been dishonest; rather it is necessary to scrutinise the evidence to see whether the dishonesty in question does justify a conclusion that assets are likely to be dissipated.
(d) The relevant inquiry is whether there is a current risk of dissipation; past events may be evidentially relevant, but only if they serve to demonstrate a current risk of dissipation of the assets now held.
(e) The nature, location and liquidity of the defendant's assets are important considerations.
(f) Whether or to what extent the assets are already secured or incapable of being dealt with is also relevant.
(g) So too is the defendant's behaviour in response to the claim or anticipated claim."
"(1) The claimant must show a real risk, judged objectively, that a future judgment would not be met because of an unjustified dissipation of assets. In this context dissipation means putting the assets out of reach of a judgment whether by concealment or transfer.
(2) The risk of dissipation must be established by solid evidence; mere inference or generalised assertion is not sufficient.
(3) The risk of dissipation must be established separately against each respondent.
(4) It is not enough to establish a sufficient risk of dissipation merely to establish a good arguable case that the defendant has been guilty of dishonesty; it is necessary to scrutinise the evidence to see whether the dishonesty in question points to the conclusion that assets [may] be dissipated. It is also necessary to take account of whether there appear at the interlocutory stage to be properly arguable answers to the allegations of dishonesty.
(5) The respondent's former use of offshore structures is relevant but does not itself equate to a risk of dissipation. Businesses and individuals often use offshore structures as part of the normal and legitimate way in which they deal with their assets. Such legitimate reasons may properly include tax planning, privacy and the use of limited liability structures.
(6) What must be threatened is unjustified dissipation. The purpose of a freezing order is not to provide the claimant with security; it is to restrain a defendant from evading justice by disposing of, or concealing, assets otherwise than in the normal course of business in a way which will have the effect of making it judgment proof. A freezing order is not intended to stop a corporate defendant from dealing with its assets in the normal course of its business. Similarly, it is not intended to constrain an individual defendant from conducting his personal affairs in the way he has always conducted them, providing of course that such conduct is legitimate. If the defendant is not threatening to change the existing way of handling their assets, it will not be sufficient to show that such continued conduct would prejudice the claimant's ability to enforce a judgment. That would be contrary to the purpose of the freezing order jurisdiction because it would require defendants to change their legitimate behaviour in order to provide preferential security for the claim which the claimant would not otherwise enjoy.
(7) Each case is fact specific and relevant factors must be looked at cumulatively."
"(1) Where the court accepts that there is a good arguable case that a respondent engaged in wrongdoing against the applicant relevant to the issue of dissipation, that holding will point powerfully in favour of a risk of dissipation.
(2) In such circumstances, it may not be necessary to adduce any significant further evidence in support of a real risk of dissipation; but each case will depend upon its own particular facts and evidence."
i) The claimant should depose to objective facts from which it may be inferred that the defendant is likely to move assets or dissipate them; unsupported statements or expressions of fear have little weight (O'Regan v Iambic Productions (1989) 139 N.L.J. 1378 (per Sir Peter Pain)).ii) Where dishonesty is alleged, it is sometimes possible to infer a risk of dissipation from the fact of the dishonesty (Norwich Union v Eden (25 January 1996, unreported, Hirst and Phillips LJJ), cited in VTB Capital plc v Nutritek International Corp [2012] EWCA Civ 808 at § 177; Metropolitan Housing Trust v Taylor [2015] EWHC 2897 (Ch) § 18 per Warren J).
iii) However, it is appropriate in each case for the court to "scrutinise with care whether what is alleged to have been the dishonesty of the person against whom the Order is sought in itself really justifies the inference that that person has assets which he is likely to dissipate unless restricted" (Thane Investments Ltd v Tomlinson (No.1) [2003] EWCA Civ 1272 § 28; VTB v Nutritek International § 177 citing Jarvis Field Press v Chelton [2003] EWHC 2674 (Ch)).
iv) For example, in VTB the Court of Appeal concluded at § 178 that it would have been right to take into account a finding of a good arguable case that a defendant had been engaged in a major fraud, and that he operated a complex web of companies in a number of jurisdictions which enabled him to commit the fraud and would make it difficult for any judgment to be enforced: such factors would be capable of providing powerful support for a case of risk of dissipation.
v) Relevant factors include the nature, location and liquidity of the defendant's assets, and the defendant's behaviour in response to the claim or anticipated claim; past events may be evidentially relevant, but only if they serve to demonstrate a current risk of dissipation of the assets now held (National Bank Trust v. Yurov [2016] EWHC 1913 (Comm) §§ 69-70 per Males J).
vi) Where a defendant knows that he faces legal proceedings for a substantial period of time prior to the grant of the order, and does not take steps to dissipate his assets, that can be a powerful factor militating against any conclusion of a real risk of dissipation (see e.g. Candy v Holyoake [2017] EWCA Civ 92; [2018] Ch 297 § 62 and Petroceltic Resources Ltd v Archer [2018] EWHC 671 (Comm) §§ 58, 64-65).
vii) "A cautious approach is appropriate before deployment of what has been called one of the court's nuclear weapons", and "the risk is not to be inferred lightly. Bare or generalised assertion of risk by a claimant is not enough." (Tugushev v Orlov et al [2019] EWHC 2031 (Comm)) § 49 and 49(ii).
i) the "clear evidence (and judicial findings) of unjustified dissipation of Essar Steel's assets in order to place them (for the benefit of the Essar Group) beyond the reach of AMUSA's enforcement efforts";ii) the findings of the Ontario court in the Algoma proceedings that the strategic decisions about Algoma were made not by its board but by EGFL and Essar Capital, that the evidence given by Prashant Ruia in those proceedings was evasive, and that EGFL had acted in bad faith;
iii) the decision of the Cayman court that Norwich Pharmacal relief should be granted against EGFL emphasising the propensity of EGFL for directing the affairs of the Essar Group and Essar Steel so as to dissipate assets and evade debts: as noted by Kawaley J: "I regarded the historic conduct to be relied upon as evidence of a propensity for future dissipation steps being likely to happen";
iv) the evidence that the Essar group, and the individuals who control it, transfer assets and funds between the companies with little regard to corporate separation and deliberately in order to evade the claims of certain creditors, in which context Jacobs J found this case to be analogous to "international fraud";
v) the nature of the assets held by EGFL (shares and inter-company debt), being (AMUSA says) of a type that can be easily dissipated, given some advanced planning with the assistance or connivance of professionals;
vi) the fact that the corporate arrangements at the Essar group comprise a complex chain of companies and offshore trusts, with Ravi and Prashant Ruia holding their interests in EGFL through a series of offshore companies and trusts: which, given the other evidence of dissipation, AMUSA says is likely to have been created to obscure the manner in which assets are held;
vii) the willingness of the present respondents to obstruct and disobey court orders, and to mislead the court, as shown in particular by:
a) the way in which Essar Steel sought to conceal information about the restatement of its accounts from AMUSA, and when it withdrew from the ICC arbitration effectively inviting the ICC arbitral tribunal to proceed on a false basis;b) Essar Steel misleading the ICC tribunal and then the courts of Mauritius and England & Wales about its access to relevant documents held by ESML through Mr Vuppuluri;c) Prashant Ruia's failure to comply with his obligations under the orders made by Butcher J in January 2019;d) a failure by EGFL properly to comply with its disclosure obligations under the Cayman Norwich Pharmacal order in relation to the location of relevant material, and efforts to delay those obligations; ande) the episode involving Ms Popat and Mr Radia's reaction to the search order granted by Butcher J.
i) I do not agree that there is clear evidence of unjustified dissipation of Essar Steel's assets in order to place them (for the benefit of the Essar group) beyond the reach of AMUSA's enforcement efforts: see sections (F) to (H) and § 214 above. I do accept that there are certain judicial findings to that effect, and I must take these into account and give weight to them.ii) The findings of the Ontario court in the Algoma proceedings support the view that the strategic decisions about Algoma were made not by its board but by EGFL and Essar Capital, and I must take account of that court's findings that the evidence given by Prashant Ruia in those proceedings was evasive, and that EGFL had acted in bad faith. At the same time, as indicated in section (H) above, I note that there was no allegation or finding of asset stripping, and on the contrary EGFL had provided very high levels of financial support to its ailing subsidiary; that the allegation that the port transaction involving Algoma was at an undervalue was not pursued; and that in the circumstances I set out there, I do not consider it would be right for me to place great weight on the court's statement that EGFL acted in bad faith.
iii) As indicated in section (J)(2) above, it seems likely that the Cayman court's decision to grant Norwich Pharmacal relief was based on evidence similar to, or a subset of, that relied on before me. On that basis, I should take Kawaley J's decision into account, but consider that ultimately I must form my own view on whether on the basis of the evidence and submissions before me the necessary prerequisites for a worldwide freezing order have been made out. For my part, I do not accept that the evidence shows a historic propensity to dissipate assets.
iv) I would accept that the evidence tends to indicate that the affairs of the Essar group were to a significant degree centrally controlled. I do not, however, consider the evidence before me indicates that the Essar group, and the individuals who control it, transfer assets and funds between group companies deliberately in order to evade the claims of certain creditors; and for the reasons I have already given in section (F) above, I do not consider that the evidence relating to the transactions in respect of Essar Steel India (including the 2016 change of accounting treatment) are aptly characterised as international fraud.
v) I would agree that to the extent that EGFL's assets consist of shares and inter-company debt, they could be easily dissipated given a degree – probably a very considerable degree – of advanced planning and the assistance or connivance of professionals.
vi) I agree that, on present evidence, the corporate arrangements at the Essar group involve a complex chain of companies and offshore trusts, with Ravi Ruia and Prashant Ruia holding their interests in EGFL through a series of offshore companies and trusts. That is not, however, an uncommon situation, and I do not consider the evidence suggests that the structure is likely to have been created to obscure the manner in which assets are held.
vii) As to the respondents' approach to courts and court orders:
a) I would agree that the reasons for Essar Steel's apparently abrupt disengagement from the ICC arbitration have not been explained in detail, and might reasonably give rise to suspicion about its motives, including whether Essar Steel wished to avoid its 2016 accounts coming to the attention of AMUSA. At the same time, for the reasons explained in section (J)(1) above, I am not persuaded that Essar Steel therefore set out to mislead the arbitral tribunal.b) As indicated in § 169 above, Essar Steel's conduct in relation to its access to relevant documents held by ESML through Mr Vuppuluri is a matter of significant concern - which should be taken into account, though I do not think it would be proper to infer deliberate misstatement by Mr Baid at least without further enquiry.c) I should take account of Prashant Ruia's non-compliance with certain obligations under the orders made by Butcher J in January 2019, though in the circumstances referred to in §§ 204-206 above I do not consider that to be factor of great weight in the context of the present application.d) For the reasons given in § 189 above, I do not believe the issue relating to EGFL's late compliance with the Cayman Norwich Pharmacal order to be a significant factor in the present context.e) I must take into account the episode involving Ms Popat and Mr Radia's reaction to the search order granted by Butcher J, which showed a troubling willingness to seek to evade orders made by this court. I bear in mind also though that the proposal, made by a very junior employee, to hide materials was not acted on, in the sense that whilst the email proposing that items be hid was itself wrongfully deleted, the underlying materials themselves were not in fact hidden and were disclosed.
i) the respondents are likely to have known about both at all material times, and AMUSA's later knowledge of these matters in no sense detracts from the point that the respondents must have known since early 2018 that they were likely to be among AMUSA's targets; andii) even the period since February 2019 (when AMUSA learned of the 2016 accounts, which it regards as key to its case) to November 2019 provided a significant opportunity for assets to be dissipated.
(M) JUST AND CONVENIENT TEST
(1) Likely impact of a worldwide freezing order on the respondents
(a) Impact on the Essar group
"any asset which it has the power, directly or indirectly, to dispose of or deal with as if it were [its] own. The Respondent is to be regarded as having such power if a third party holds or controls the asset in accordance with [its] direct or indirect instructions"
and the prohibition expressly includes (a) shares in eleven named companies, (b) shares in any other direct or indirect subsidiary with assets of more than US$ 10 million, and (c) certain further property or assets, including assets within a named trust.
i) the Essar group as a whole comprises about 240 direct or indirect subsidiaries;ii) it operates in four main sectors: energy, metals and mining, infrastructure, and services;
iii) its subsidiaries employ around 7,000 staff and over 10,000 contractors;
iv) EGFL's draft 2019 Accounts show non-current assets of US$ 11.3 billion, and total liabilities of US$ 9.5 bn. The fair value of EGFL's equity portfolio at 31 March 2019 was US$ 11.2 billion; and
v) the group's debt position is complex. Its main secured creditor is (since 2016) VTB, but there remain various legacy facilities. In the years since 2015, Essar has undertaken a major exercise to reduce its debt burden: its overall external debt has reduced from US$ 28.3 billion in March 2015, which was a peak, to US$6.3 billion today. The total outstanding amounts under the facilities are around US$ 2.4 billion, and given their size, repayment of the VTB facilities is likely to require asset sales.
(b) Impact on the Ruias
(2) Likely impact of a worldwide freezing order on VTB
i) There is a real risk that the Essar group will suffer real prejudice as a result of the proposed injunction against EGFL.ii) VTB's loan to value (LTV) is very high, and the adverse effects of a freezing order on the Essar group are such that there is a real risk that VTB will suffer a shortfall under the VTB facilities.
iii) VTB is particularly vulnerable because its security is principally over shares, in circumstances where the assets and revenue streams of operating companies are secured to other lenders.
iv) In order to repay VTB, the Essar group will need to effect complex and time consuming asset sales which would be imperilled by the proposed order.
v) VTB cannot avoid this harm by simply enforcing its security.
vi) The day-to-day operation of the Essar Group requires frequent intra-group restructuring and refinancing transactions (in order to preserve value and effect repayments to VTB). That would also be imperilled by a worldwide freezing order.
vii) Having regard to the difficult commercial relationship between AMUSA and its group and the Essar group, as well as the consistent failure to respect VTB's interests to date, VTB can have no confidence that AMUSA would act neutrally or co-operatively so as to maintain the value of the Essar group or to avoid prejudice to VTB.
"[t]he court will protect third parties against exposure to unacceptable interference by an injunction with their business or other activities" (Gee, Commercial Injunctions (6th ed) § 21-075)
i) Searose Ltd v Seatrain UK Ltd [1981] 1 WLR 894:"Lastly, may I say this. It is, I believe, now generally recognised that the Mareva jurisdiction has filled a gap in the court's powers which badly needed to be filled. In the Commercial Court, certainly, a very large number of these injunctions is granted each year. But care must be taken to ensure that such injunctions are only given for the purpose for which they are intended, viz. to prevent the possible abuse of a defendant removing assets in order to prevent the satisfaction of a judgment in pending proceedings: and likewise, care must be taken to ensure that such injunctions do not bear harshly upon innocent third parties. If these principles are not observed, a weapon which was forged to prevent abuse may become an instrument of oppression." (at 897 per Goff J)ii) Galaxia Maritime SA v Mineralimportexport [1982] 1 WLR 539:
"I regard it as absolutely intolerable that the fact that one person has a claim for a debt against another, that third parties should be inconvenienced in this way, not only to affect their freedom of trading but their freedom of action generally speaking." (at p 542 per Eveleigh LJ)"But where the effect of service must lead to interference with the performance of a contract between the third party and the defendant which relates specifically to the assets in question, the right of the third party in relation to his contract must clearly prevail over the plaintiff's desire to secure the defendant's assets for himself against the day of judgment…Where the effect of service of the injunction on the third party substantially interferes with the third party's business, the rights of the third party must in my view always prevail over the desire of the plaintiff to secure the ultimate recovery of debts or damages from the defendant with which the third party is in no way concerned." (at p 542-3 per Kerr LJ)iii) Project Development Co Ltd v KMK Securities [1982] 1 WLR 1470:
"… it is an essential aspect of the jurisdiction to grant Mareva types of injunction that the position of innocent third parties should be fully protected…" (at p 1472 per Parker J)iv) Guinness Peat Aviation v Hispania Lineas Aereas SA [1992] 1 Lloyds Rep 190:
"There is much authority for the proposition that Mareva injunctions should not be obtained so as to prejudice innocent third parties." (at p 195 per Webster J).
i) As of the beginning of 2020, VTB's Credit Department assesses the loan to value of its lending to the Essar group as being over 85% assuming an orderly sale of assets for their reasonable market value (and not taking account of either the effects of a freezing order, or the risk of a further reduction in the value of the group's port assets as a result of a separate ongoing dispute with AMUSA). VTB's 'cushion' is therefore fairly thin already.ii) VTB's security is over shares in intermediate holding companies and certain operating companies within the Essar group, and not their underlying assets. Since fixed and floating charges in favour of other lenders have been granted over assets of the majority of the operating companies, in a stressed scenario the value of those assets will be removed from each operating company to the extent of those other lenders' secured indebtedness. That creates a risk of diminution or elimination of the value of the shares over which VTB has security. VTB is therefore particularly vulnerable to any measure which may affect the value of any particular group entity as a going concern.
iii) VTB relies for repayment on complex asset sales which will be imperilled by the freezing injunction. VTB states in its evidence that such transactions, while always commercially sensitive, are particularly so given the commercial hostility between the ArcelorMittal and Essar groups; and that a potential transaction in 2019 collapsed in part because of the unwillingness of the potential buyer to proceed because of the threat of a Cayman freezing order.
iv) The prospects of successful completion of these complex transactions at acceptable prices are likely to be damaged by the imposition of the proposed orders. There are a limited number of potential buyers and Mr Galkin of VTB considers it inevitable that, if there is an order, some buyers will be put off and others will offer lower bids.
v) For VTB simply to enforce its security, as AMUSA suggests it can, would be likely to lead to substantial losses. VTB's interest is not in the fact of having security but the value which can be obtained from that security. Its security is not over tangible assets but shares in underlying companies. In order to realise that security VTB would need to sell those shares. That would in turn require the co-operation of the Essar group, unless the shares were to be sold on a highly discounted 'fire sale' basis. In any event, VTB considers that the prospect of a 50% discount in an enforcement scenario (compared to an orderly sale) is entirely possible: which would obviously be highly detrimental both to VTB and to the Essar group itself.
vi) VTB's ability to receive regular loan repayments would be imperilled if intra-group restructuring/refinancing transactions were restricted.
vii) The complexity of the business and operations of the Essar group and its multi-level financing requires regular amendments to facility documents, movements of cash around the group and complex restructurings, examples of which Mr Galkin provides. Where material changes are made, VTB requires the group to provide additional/supplementary security. That process may be hindered if a freezing order is granted. In particular, the Essar group is currently raising a multi-hundred million dollar syndicated loan facility to arrange pre-sale financing in respect of certain assets, involving a group re-organisation and the taking of steps that would not be permitted under the terms of the proposed order. Mr Galkin's experience is that commercial banks would be reluctant to enter into any such transaction with a freezing order in place.
viii) In an ordinary case, a successful applicant for a freezing injunction will be concerned to ensure that the order does not operate to destroy the value of the defendant, so that it retains the ability to meet any money judgment following trial. Here, however, the AMUSA and Essar groups are competitors locked in disputes across a wide canvass. VTB is concerned that AMUSA will act in its perceived commercial best interests by putting pressure on the Essar group by preventing or discouraging proposed transactions.
"In the absence of authority it would seem to me to be clear that principle does not stand in the way of a secured creditor enforcing its security over charged assets caught by a freezing order. The whole point of a freezing order, as is now well established, is to prevent a defendant from dissipating its assets improperly in the face of a claim by the claimant. It is a remedy which operates personally against the defendant (or any other person identified as a respondent in the injunction and against whom the injunction is specifically directed). It does not operate so as to give security to the creditor; and it does not operate so as to affect the genuine rights of third parties over those assets."
Nothing in the worldwide freezing order prevents VTB from exercising its stated present entitlement to accelerate all sums due under the VTB facilities or to enforce its security over the shares of Essar group companies that fall within the definition of "Assets" in paragraph 2 of the draft freezing order.
i) VTB's right to call in all its borrowings is unlikely to be a realistic or effective way of obtaining repayment, compared to the planned orderly sale of assets over time. AMUSA's quotation from Mr Galkin's evidence is selective and has been removed from its context, which was as follows:"On 4 September 2019, I attended a credit committee meeting within VTB where the further financing (availed in October 2019) referred to at paragraph 21 above was discussed. At the time, VTB's Credit Department formed the view that the LTV of its lending to the Essar Group was 69%. By the start of 2020, this had been adjusted in light of the group's poor performance[1] to in excess of 85% which is, in my experience, very high for this type of financing (i.e. where loans are advanced to intermediate holding companies and security is not obtained against fixed assets). This means that, whilst VTB considers that, all else being equal, there should be sufficient value in the Essar Group to ensure VTB is repaid in full, the expected "headroom" is relatively speaking modest and will be further reduced if the value of the Essar Group's ports assets are reduced and will be further reduced as a result of actions of ArcelorMittal as described at paragraphs 64 to 66 of Prevezer 2 or the value of EGFL's subsidiaries are affected by the WFO as described in this statement"ii) Even if VTB could obtain repayment by calling in its facilities immediately, that course of action would be hugely and obviously detrimental to the Essar group. Indeed, common sense would suggest that it would be likely to result in the group's collapse.
"A plaintiff seeking to secure an alleged debt or damages due from the defendant, by an order preventing the disposal of assets of the defendant, cannot possibly be entitled to obtain the advantage of such an order for himself at the expense of the business rights of an innocent third party, merely by proffering him an indemnity in whatever form." (Galaxia, supra, at p 542 per Kerr LJ)
The existence of an undertaking is merely one factor in the overall balance. Moreover, VTB submits, the more complex the underlying dealings and the larger the scale of the risks of prejudice to an innocent party, the less an undertaking to the court (even with fortification, let alone without) is likely sufficiently to ameliorate the prejudice to a third party's own, consensually arranged, business dealings with its counterparty. VTB submits that the prospect of proceedings against a third party claimant with a view to establishing a compensation claim on an undertaking given to the court, followed by the process of enforcement, is an unlikely substitute for the right of an innocent commercial party to go about its business without interference. I accept those submissions.
(3) Delay
"(1) The mere fact of delay in bringing an application for a freezing injunction or that it has first been heard inter partes, does not, without more, mean there is no risk of dissipation. If the court is satisfied on other evidence that there is a risk of dissipation, the court should grant the order, despite the delay, even if only limited assets are ultimately frozen by it;
(2) The rationale for a freezing injunction is the risk that a judgment will remain unsatisfied or be difficult to enforce by virtue of dissipation or disposal of assets……In that context, the order for disclosure of assets normally made as an adjunct to a freezing injunction is an important aspect of the relief sought, in determining whether assets have been dissipated, and, if so, what has become of them, aiding subsequent enforcement of any judgment;
(3) Even if delay in bringing the application demonstrates that the claimant does not consider there is a risk of dissipation, that is only one factor to be weighed in the balance in considering whether or not to grant the injunction sought."
i) There has been no material delay in applying for the worldwide freezing order. All previous proceedings by AMUSA have been focussed on obtaining a binding ICC Award, obtaining recognition and registration of that Award, enforcing that Award against Essar Steel or obtaining information to enable it to do so. AMUSA's attempts to enforce the ICC Award have so far borne no fruit. AMUSA has been enforcing Jacobs J's search order ever since April 2019 by insisting on the continuing search of Essar Capital Services' computer images by its solicitors for documents relating to Essar Steel's assets. That enforced search is still continuing.ii) The Minnesota proceedings are materially different to the present. Worldwide freezing injunctive relief is not available in the United States. Further, no reference was made in the Minnesotan proceedings to the majority of steps AMUSA now relies on as taken in furtherance of the conspiracy, including in particular the restatement of Essar Steel's accounts and the entry into the Subordination Deed.
iii) The reference by AMUSA's Leading Counsel in the Cayman proceedings to a conspiracy claim AMUSA would bring was a passing comment made in support of a submission that information obtained pursuant to Norwich Pharmacal relief might support a conspiracy claim against the Essar group.
iv) In PJSC National Bank Trust v Mints [2019] EWHC 2061 (Comm) at § 62, the court held that in assessing whether there has been any delay, the focus should be on determining at what point in time the applicant could have brought the application in England. Jacobs J there said:
"62. The Defendants also referred, on occasions, to the possibility of the Claimants bringing proceedings in Cyprus for a WFO against the present Defendants, and to the Claimants' delay in so doing. I did not consider that this argument advanced the case based on delay. When delay is put forward as a reason for the court not granting a WFO, the focus in my view should be on such delay as occurred in seeking relief from the English court. This is particularly so in the present case, where the evidence indicates that the Defendants are domiciled here and where there is no evidence that the Defendants are domiciled or have assets in Cyprus. Moreover, the whereabouts of the Defendants were not known at the time that the Cyprus proceedings were commenced in January 2018, and the various reasons given by Mr. Tseshinskiy for the delay in commencing proceedings in England applied, at least for the most part, to potential proceedings in Cyprus."Once that approach is adopted, it is (AMUSA says) clear beyond serious argument that AMUSA has not materially delayed in bringing this application.v) AMUSA did not learn of the main planks of its claim until: (i) February 2019 when Essar Steel's restated accounts were first disclosed and the alleged US$1.5 billion debt to EGFL was discovered, and (ii) 24 April 2019 when AMUSA learnt of the existence of the Deed of Subordination.
vi) Since that discovery, AMUSA has acted with all reasonable expedition in preparing and issuing its claim and the present application. This is a complex international conspiracy claim against defendants relating to events from 2012 onwards and spanning many jurisdictions. AMUSA obtained permission to serve out on 4 November 2019, six months after it learnt of the Deed of Subordination. In the meantime, AMUSA has continued to enforce the search order in an attempt to trace assets which might be available to enforce the judgment against Essar Steel.
vii) Having obtained permission, AMUSA did not (as alleged by the respondents) tactically delay service of the present application. The timing of its service, on 30 December 2019, is explained in its evidence. The short point is that AMUSA wished to serve earlier but, due to issues with court listing, was unable to do so.
viii) In any event, the modern authorities make clear that delay is not itself a bar to relief.
(4) The overall balance
i) AMUSA has not shown a good arguable case on the merits of its substantive claim.ii) AMUSA has, moreover, not shown a good arguable case that it has a claim in or approximating to the amount claimed, or any other specific amount.
iii) There is no solid evidence of a risk of dissipation by any of the respondents.
iv) In any event, the order sought would be gravely detrimental to the business of the Essar group, a conglomerate headed by EGFL comprising multiple operations across several countries with many employees.
v) The order sought would also be seriously detrimental to VTB, the Essar group's main lender, a third party against whom no allegation of wrongdoing is advanced. I have already made the point that it is striking that in the Cayman proceedings, AMUSA withdrew its application for a worldwide freezing order following service of VTB's and EGFL's evidence of prejudice.
vi) There has been delay, at least between March and November 2019, in bringing the application.
vii) The freezing order is sought against persons out of the jurisdiction, in respect of assets outside the jurisdiction, and in relation to matters with relatively limited links with England & Wales. It is appropriate for the court to proceed with particular caution in such cases.
The factors referred to in (iv) to (vii) above, taken together, would have led me to refuse the order sought even if I had considered AMUSA had, marginally, shown a good arguable case and a risk of dissipation.
(N) CONCLUSION
Note 1 [footnote in original]Inter alia, the Stanlow oil refinery experienced a number [of] publicly documented safety incidents in 2018/19 which affected its revenues and profits. [Back]