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England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions >> Richardson-Ruhan v Ruhan [2017] EWHC 2739 (Fam) (09 November 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2017/2739.html Cite as: [2017] EWHC 2739 (Fam) |
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FAMILY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
Sitting in Public
____________________
Tania Jane Richardson-Ruhan |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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Andrew Joseph Ruhan |
Respondent |
____________________
Martin Pointer QC and Richard Sear (instructed by Miles Preston Solicitors) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 9-20 October 2017
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Mostyn:
i) Orb A.R.L. & Ors v Ruhan & Ors [2015] EWHC 262 (Comm) (11 February 2015: Cooke J)
ii) ORB a.r.l.; & Ors v Ruhan [2015] EWHC 3638 (Comm) (14 December 2015: Walker J)
iii) ORB a.r.l.; & Ors v Fiddler [2015] EWHC 3683 (Comm) (14 December 2015: Walker J)
iv) ORB A.R.L & Anor v Fiddler & Anor [2016] EWHC 361 (Comm) (26 February 2016: Popplewell J)
v) ORB a.r.l. & Ors v Ruhan & Ors [2016] EWHC 850 (Comm) (15 April 2016: Popplewell J)
vi) Phoenix Group Foundation v Cochrane & Anor [2017] EWHC 418 (Comm) (06 March 2017: Popplewell J)
vii) Grenda Investments Ltd v Barton [2017] EWHC 2371 (Comm) (20 September 2017: Picken J)
viii) Grenda Investments Ltd v Barton [2017] EWHC 2372 (Comm) (20 September 2017: Picken J)
"The underlying public interest is the same: that there should be finality in litigation and that a party should not be twice vexed in the same matter. This public interest is reinforced by the current emphasis on efficiency and economy in the conduct of litigation, in the interests of the parties and the public as a whole. The bringing of a claim or the raising of a defence in later proceedings may, without more, amount to abuse if the court is satisfied (the onus being on the party alleging abuse) that the claim or defence should have been raised in the earlier proceedings if it was to be raised at all."
"In our legal system generally, the silence of one party in face of the other party's evidence may convert that evidence into proof in relation to matters which are, or are likely to be, within the knowledge of the silent party and about which that party could be expected to give evidence. Thus, depending on the circumstances, a prima facie case may become a strong or even an overwhelming case. But, if the silent party's failure to give evidence (or to give the necessary evidence) can be credibly explained, even if not entirely justified, the effect of his silence in favour of the other party may be either reduced or nullified"
"The modification to which I have referred concerns the drawing of adverse inferences in claims for ancillary financial relief in matrimonial proceedings, which have some important distinctive features. There is a public interest in the proper maintenance of the wife by her former husband, especially (but not only) where the interests of the children are engaged. Partly for that reason, the proceedings although in form adversarial have a substantial inquisitorial element. The family finances will commonly have been the responsibility of the husband, so that although technically a claimant, the wife is in reality dependent on the disclosure and evidence of the husband to ascertain the extent of her proper claim. The concept of the burden of proof, which has always been one of the main factors inhibiting the drawing of adverse inferences from the absence of evidence or disclosure, cannot be applied in the same way to proceedings of this kind as it is in ordinary civil litigation. These considerations are not a licence to engage in pure speculation. But judges exercising family jurisdiction are entitled to draw on their experience and to take notice of the inherent probabilities when deciding what an uncommunicative husband is likely to be concealing. I refer to the husband because the husband is usually the economically dominant party, but of course the same applies to the economically dominant spouse whoever it is."
Judgment No. (i).
i) At para 6: There was a serious issue to be tried as to whether on 6 May 2003 an oral profit-sharing agreement was made between Dr Smith (and his cohorts) and the husband. He thought that the existing evidence militated against such an agreement but stated "I cannot see how the court can resolve a dispute of this kind about an oral agreement without hearing the evidence of the individuals concerned, tested by cross-examination."
ii) At paras 22 to 39: On the untested evidence then before the court there was a serious issue to be tried about Mr Stevens' beneficial ownership of Cambulo Madeira and whether he was in truth a nominee for the husband. There was a specific issue whether the sum of just under £92 million paid by Sentrum Holdings Ltd to Euro Estates Ltd and as thereafter disbursed by Mr Stevens can be properly seen as a substitute asset, representing the profit from the proceeds of sale of the hotels.
iii) At paras 47 and 51: Dr Smith (and his cohorts) had already recovered by self-help more than their best prospective entitlement. Although the claimants (i.e. Dr Smith and his cohorts) may have realistic prospects of success (against Mr Stevens and his cohorts) on certain causes of action, the court should not countenance permitting service out of the jurisdiction (on Mr Stevens et al) when full recovery has already been made in respect of the claim for the profit shares alleged. It was unacceptable ("remarkable") for Dr Smith et al to seek a proprietary remedy against third parties without revealing the extent of recoveries made already in respect of the claims made against the husband and the basis upon which those recoveries were made, by reference to all relevant documents.
iv) At para 57: This was hard fought litigation with no holds barred between parties who were at enmity with one another and where a war of attrition was being waged in the shape of this action and other litigation being waged by the claimants against the husband.
v) At para 62: The husband had realistic prospects of success on his counterclaim. The evidence of Mr Cooper and Mr McNally that they were the beneficial owners of all the assets acquired through the husband's entrepreneurial skills, whether they were in the Arena Settlement or outside it, and that there was no nominee arrangement of any kind (or other similar understanding), was implausible.
vi) At paras 80, 96 and 131: The husband had been deliberately misleading (i.e. dishonest) in his initial defence by not mentioning the nominee arrangements in order to give the impression that he had no interest of any kind in the Arena Settlement after 21st March 2012. This stance had been taken on the suggestion of Mr Cooper and Mr McNally. Notwithstanding his dishonesty the husband should be allowed to pursue his new case. His proprietary claim was not shut out because Messrs Cooper and McNally were no more than discretionary beneficiaries of the Arena Settlement.
Judgment No. (v)
"7. The First Claimant ("Orb") is a private limited company registered in Jersey. Following a corporate reorganisation in August 2002, it became the holding company of a group with interests in hotels, commercial and warehouse properties, transport and logistics businesses and venture and private capital. Its shares are held by a company as trustee of a Jersey settlement, of which Dr Cochrane, the former wife of the Sixth Party (Dr Smith), and their two daughters, are the sole beneficiaries. Dr Cochrane is a GP who practises full time in Jersey. Pro Vinci Ltd ("Pro Vinci"), a company of which Ms Dawna Stickler is the managing director and sole shareholder, provides family office services to Dr Cochrane's family, including investment management in respect of the investments owned by her.
8. Between August and November 2002, Dr Smith who was then Chief Executive of Orb, stole approximately £35 million from Izodia plc, a company in which Orb held a 29.9% shareholding, and misapplied the bulk of those monies for Orb's benefit. Of the total sum of £35 million stolen, only about £2.8 million was returned, leaving a balance of about £32.2 million owing to Izodia. In December 2002, the Serious Fraud Office raided Orb's offices in London and Jersey. As a result of the SFO's investigations, Dr Smith personally faced criminal sanctions. By early 2003, Izodia had also brought proceedings against Orb and Dr Smith for recovery of sums transferred from Izodia's bank account. Once Dr Smith's Izodia theft had been discovered, those in control of Orb resolved to sell a substantial proportion of Orb's assets.
9. During the early part of 2003, negotiations took place between Dr Smith on the one hand, and Mr Ruhan and Mr Campbell on the other hand, resulting in an agreement for the sale of various of Orb's assets to Mr Ruhan and companies associated with and/or controlled by him ("the Orb Assets"). At the time the Second Claimant, Mr Taylor, was the group property director of the Orb group. The Third Claimant, Mr Thomas, was a businessman with whom Dr Smith had had previous business dealings. The Orb Assets comprised:
(1) A portfolio of 37 hotels ("the Hotel Portfolio"), of which:
(a) 32 were formerly part of the Thistle group of hotels; these included three hotels, the Thistle Lancaster Gate Hotel, the Thistle Kensington Park Hotel and the Thistle Kensington Palace Hotel, (collectively "the Hyde Park Hotels") which were regarded as having valuable development potential for conversion to residential use.
(b) 5 were country house hotels, including the Cannizaro House Hotel in Wimbledon.
(2) A portfolio of development, commercial and warehouse properties and businesses ("the Orb Securities Portfolio");
(3) A minority shareholding in Izodia.
10. Although the sale of the Orb Assets was recorded in documented agreements, it is the Orb Parties' case that the documents did not fully reflect the deal agreed orally at a meeting between Dr Smith, Mr Taylor, Mr Ruhan and Mr Campbell on 6 May 2003. In particular the Orb Parties allege that it was agreed amongst other things that Mr Ruhan would redevelop, restructure, manage and/or dispose of the Hotel Portfolio and the Orb Securities Portfolio; he would pay Orb, Mr Taylor and Mr Thomas (in agreed proportions) 40% of the profits thereby generated from the Hotel Portfolio; and he would pay Orb 50% of the profits thereby generated from the Orb Securities Portfolio, with Orb retaining a 50% interest in any assets retained within the Orb Securities Portfolio. It is alleged that Mr Thomas subsequently negotiated a further 7.5% share of the profits and retained assets in respect of the Orb Securities Portfolio. Mr Ruhan denies any such oral agreement. The written agreement dated 7 May 2003 by which the Hotel Portfolio was transferred (as varied on 13, 14 and 23 May 2003) provided that Orb group should receive interest bearing loan notes in the principal sum of £35 million issued by Atlantic Hotels (UK) Ltd, which following completion would be the holding company of subsidiaries through which the Hotel Portfolio would be held, and that these should be assigned by Orb to Izodia in settlement of the claim brought by Izodia against Orb and Dr Smith, amongst others.
11. Following the acquisition, in 2004 or 2005 the Orb Assets were transferred by Mr Ruhan into a complex structure involving numerous companies ultimately owned by the trustee of an Isle of Man settlement established by deed of settlement dated 29 March 2004 known as "the Arena Settlement". The trustee was Atticus Trust Co Ltd. Between 2005 and 9 April 2014, there were over 100 companies within the Arena Settlement. It is the Orb Parties' case that Mr Ruhan, in breach of the May 2003 agreement and his fiduciary duties, sold on the Orb Assets to third parties for his personal profit and concealed such sales behind an opaque arrangement with, principally, a Mr Anthony Stevens.
12. Whilst Mr Ruhan originally denied it in his Defence, he now avers in his amended Defence and Counterclaim that he was at all material times the ultimate beneficiary of the Arena Settlement, by virtue of his former solicitors and trusted business advisors, Mr Simon Cooper and Mr Simon McNally, who were discretionary objects thereunder, holding such interest as nominee for him. He also maintains that he was in ultimate control of all of the companies within the Arena Settlement.
13. In April 2006, Dr Smith pleaded guilty to a number of charges relating to the transfer of Izodia's monies and was subsequently sentenced to eight years in prison. This was not his first conviction: in 1993 he was convicted of fraud in relation to a sum of £2 million and sentenced to 2 years' imprisonment. In 2007, a confiscation order was made against Dr Smith in the sum of approximately £41 million and enforcement receivers were appointed to recover the debt."
Mr Justice Popplewell went on to hold:
i) At paras 19 and 88: notwithstanding additional evidence and argument, it remained very likely, to put it at its lowest, that the Orb Parties had indeed recovered more than the maximum amount of their claim (inclusive of interest and costs), as Mr Justice Cooke had held, and that it was the husband who was out of the money. This was confirmed by the words used by Dr Smith on 8 January 2016 as referred to in paras 63 to 64 of Judgment No. (iv): "The money has already gone. We have recovered the money from Ruhan. This is all tidying up. He can't recover this. … What we are interested in is stopping the case. I don't want to deal with AR again – I have spent 10 years on this."
ii) At para 47: according to a later judgment of Mr Justice Cooke given on 20 March 2015 (not on Bailii) the Orb parties had seriously misled the court at the hearing in February 2015 about the safeguarding of the Arena Assets.
iii) At para 107: the court could not determine the unclean hands case against the husband summarily. The case in this regard had been expanded to include further accusations of serious litigation misconduct. That case or issue would be tried at, or shortly before, the main trial of the action.
The rest of the judgment is concerned with the modification of the then existing freezing orders.
Judgment No. (vi)
i) At paras 3 and 8: The Orb proceedings had settled shortly after delivery of Judgment No. (v) of 15 April 2016. A loan note dated 29 April 2016 between Dr Smith's ex-wife Dr Cochrane and Phoenix, a creature body of Mr Stevens' was "one of the documents by which the Orb proceedings were settled".
ii) At para 10: There were other claimants to Arena assets or their derivatives which Dr Smith had placed in the name or control of his ex-wife. These were (a) the liquidators of some of the companies in the Arena structure; (b) a litigation funder of the Orb parties in the Orb proceedings who claimed to be out of pocket and (c) the Serious Fraud Office which claimed that sums under Dr Cochrane's apparent ownership or control would arguably be available to meet the confiscation order.
The balance of the judgment concerns the question whether a freezing order should be made over a sum of £2m received by Stewarts Law and is not relevant to the matters which I have to decide.
The transfer of £92m on 15 November 2012
"The formal contracts executed in the form of the Sale and Purchase Agreement (the SPA) and the Headstay Agreement militate against the existence of such oral agreement by reason of their general contents, leaving aside the entire agreement clause which is said by the claimants not to apply to an agreement with Mr Ruhan personally. Dr Smith has given inconsistent evidence about the oral agreement in criminal proceedings and gives no evidence about it in the context of these proceedings. No evidence appears from Mr Taylor and the evidence of Mr Campbell and Dr Cochrane is both limited and open to question. In particular Mr Campbell's evidence is open to the interpretation that the Headstay Agreement did document the oral agreement allegedly made."
"16. Mr Stevens was originally the named 100% beneficial owner of Euro Estates which in turn owned Cambulo Madeira which entered into a Business Sale Agreement (BSA) of 1st March 2005 under which the three hotels, the Thistle Lancaster Gate, the Thistle Kensington Park and the Thistle Kensington Palace were to be purchased by it from HPII (at prices which resulted in no profit to Atlantic in which Mr Ruhan had, at the time a one third interest, the proceeds being used to pay off the Morgan Stanley loans inherited under the SPA). At a later stage, 20% of the shares in Cambulo Madeira were transferred to Wellard, a company owned by Mr Stevens' brother. It is the claimants' case that these shareholdings in Cambulo Madeira are held as nominees for Mr Ruhan so that profits received by that company are subject to the alleged profit-sharing oral agreement.
17. Cambulo Madeira's rights under the BSA with regard to the Thistle Lancaster Gate Hotel were novated to its subsidiary Cambulo Lancaster Gate which borrowed about £58.5 million from Investec and completed the purchase of the hotel in March 2006. Cambulo Madeira agreed to sell its shareholding in Cambulo Lancaster Gate to independent third parties for £67.5 million (as compared with the £56 million it had agreed to pay under the BSA). Completion did not take place until August 2006 at a gross profit of £11.5 million to Cambulo Madeira, as pleaded by the claimants, but £7.76 million on a net basis, according to Mr Stevens.
18. Cambulo Madeira's rights under the BSA with regard to the other two hotels were novated to two further subsidiaries, Cambulo Kensington Palace and Cambulo Kensington Park and in April 2006 completion of the purchase of the long leasehold interest in the Thistle Kensington Palace and of the freehold interest in the Thistle Kensington Park took place for a total consideration of £69 million.
19. The Candy brothers entered into a joint venture with the Cambulo companies through the incorporation of Cambulo Property Holdings Ltd (CPHL), a company in which the Candy brothers had directly or indirectly a 50% interest and Cambulo Madeira the other 50%. CPHL, through the Candy brothers' contacts, obtained funding from the Bank of Scotland for £75 million to fund the purchase. It was a term of the Debenture over the assets that they should not be used as security for any other transaction without the Bank's consent. The freehold of the Thistle Kensington Palace was purchased as was the freehold of 8 De Vere Gardens, which adjoined it, as part of a scheme of development, so that the hotels could be refurbished and sold as residential accommodation.
20. In March 2008, the Thistle Kensington Palace and the Thistle Kensington Park were sold by CPHL for a total of £320 million to third parties following the obtaining of planning permission and development by CPHL. The claimants allege that profit of approximately £250 million was thereby made on that sale but have failed to take into account the Candy brothers' interest of 50%, about which there is in reality no dispute.
21. On the evidence which has emerged from Mr Stevens, there is in fact little real doubt about the figures, a matter to which I will revert later. The profit to Cambulo on the Lancaster Gate Hotel amounted to £7.76 million net after deduction of expenses from the sale price of £67.5 million, as compared with the purchase price of £56 million. So far as the Kensington Park and Kensington Palace Hotels were concerned, additional expenditure was involved in relation to the purchase of other land and the development of social housing in order to fulfil the terms of a section 106 agreement with the local authority which was necessary in order to obtain planning permission. There is no reason to doubt Mr Stevens' evidence that the total profit on the Kensington Hotels for Cambulo Madeira amounted to £114.6 million, as its half share of the net profit.
….
28. On the evidence produced to the Court, which is in reality undisputed, the profit from the sales of the two Kensington hotels did not become available to Euro Estates until March 2008. By this time, Mr Ruhan, using companies outside the Arena Settlement, namely Bridge Towers Holdings 1 Ltd, Bridge Towers Holdings 2 Ltd and six subsidiary Bridge Towers companies, was involved in property development in Qatar in two separate projects. In pursuing this, Bridge Tower Holdings 1 obtained a loan of $143 million from Investec, secured on the Qatar assets themselves, and on the Sentrum assets also (rather than vice-versa). Investec was however looking for additional security and Mr Stevens' evidence is that, for a fee and a small profit participation, he was prepared to assist Mr Ruhan in this respect. On 21 December 2007, although the Kensington Hotels had not yet been sold, profits were expected when they did sell and Mr Stevens allowed Euro Estates 80% shareholding in Cambulo Madeira to be used as collateral in respect of the Investec loan to Bridge Tower Holdings 1, it being a term required by Investec that, if there was a relevant sale of the Kensington Hotels which preceded the realisation of the proceeds of the Qatar development or other refinancing, the proceeds from such disposal would be used to repay the outstanding Investec loan facility.
29. When the Kensington Hotels were sold in March 2008, the proceeds were then used to discharge the Investec loan with Euro Estates concluding a direct facility agreement with Bridge Tower Holdings 1 on virtually identical terms as the facility agreement previously in place with Investec. There was no room therefore for Euro Estates to make the Kensington Hotel profits or its shareholding in Cambulo Madeira available for Sentrum's business.
30. A further £19.9 million was then made available by Euro Estates which could be taken up either by Bridge Towers Holdings 1 or Bridge Towers Holdings 2 in respect of the two distinct Qatar development projects. No evidence is before the court as to where that sum went, as to which company took up the money and in which development it was utilised.
31. Following the financial crisis in late 2008, the Qatar development "turned into something of a disaster" on Mr Stevens' evidence. The Euro Estates loans fell into default in 2009 and 2011 respectively and the Bridge Tower companies were engaged in litigation in Qatar without cash or immediately realisable assets which could give rise to recovery by Euro Estates on the loans.
32. It was in November 2012 that Euro Estates entered into a Termination and Settlement Agreement ["TSA"] under which just short of £92 million, representing the loan capital advanced by Euro Estates was to be paid to it on behalf of the borrowers, together with 10% of the recoveries to be made by those companies from the investments in Qatar. The £92 million approximately was paid to Legion Management Corporation, a company outside the Arena Settlement but administered by Messrs Cooper and McNally in the same way as the Bridge Tower companies (as nominees for Mr Ruhan, on the claimants' case). The shares of Legion Management Corporation were then transferred to Mr Stevens.
33. The sum of £92 million approximately, which was paid to Euro Estates as a compromise sum in respect of the debt owed to it by Bridge Tower Holdings 1, derived from the £160 million which was part of the profits on the sale of Sentrum to Digital."
"There is a serious issue to be tried about Mr Stevens' beneficial ownership of Cambulo Madeira and whether he was in truth a nominee for Mr Ruhan. Reliance is placed by the claimants on a MacDonald Partnership Attendance Note of 6th May 2006, on the first and second affidavits of Mr Thomas and the letter from Mr Hunter exhibited to it, on the evidence of Mr Trachtenberg and on a letter from Mr Ruhan to Sheikh Tamin Al Thani of 30th September 2012. Mr McNally's first affidavit also supports the proposition."
i) I am not satisfied that the husband was under any serious pressure from the lenders such that he had to agree to relinquish the anticipated very large profits, which, in time, duly eventuated.
ii) The husband habitually uses nominees for his business dealings. The essence of his defence and counterclaim in the Orb proceedings is that Messrs Cooper and McNally were his nominees. His home and prized personal possessions, namely his boats, are (or were) all held by nominees. For the reasons given below I am strongly satisfied that Mr Stevens was the husband's nominee in the arrangements made for settling the Orb litigation.
iii) In 2007 the husband was an investor in an antimony mine in Newfoundland. The documents show that he did this under the mantle of Cambulo.
iv) In that same year the husband was closely involved in resisting a spurious judicial review application which had been made seeking to challenge the grant of planning consent for the joint venture with the Candy brothers.
v) On 30 September 2012, the husband wrote a letter to Sheikh Tamin, the Crown Prince of Qatar, in which he stated: "when I sold the 37 Thistle Hotels I owned in London to the Abu Dhabi Royal family, instead of investing in Abu Dhabi, I invested a substantial amount from this sale in Qatar".
vi) The transfer of the £92m from Arena to Legion took place on 15 November 2012, a week after the husband was served with the Orb proceedings on 8 November 2012.
vii) It is highly significant that Mr Stevens has not intervened in the proceedings, or at the very least appeared as a witness, in order to defend his ownership of Cambulo and Euro Estates and the authenticity of the TSA.
viii) I am satisfied that the wife has given me truthful evidence about admissions made to her by the husband concerning the nomineeship of Mr Stevens. I deal with this in more detail below.
ix) The use subsequently made of the £92m, plainly shows that it was the husband's money. I deal with this below.
"Yes, and I did witness pieces of paper over the years between AES [Mr Stevens] and AJR [the husband]. There is no piece of paper that I can produce but I have seen them, 2 separate agreements. In 2006 the paper was at our home in our safe for a period of time. It was a document between AES and AJR. The gist was that there was an agreement between the two of them that was how he worked. It was an agreement that AES was his nominee.
The second document was on the side in our dressing room in an unsealed A4 envelope with a single piece of A4 paper printed in type. It was between AJE and AES. It was a nominee agreement. This was in 2013.
I put it in the safe; AJR came back to house in a rush looking for something and I took it out of the safe and said is this what you looking for. It was in Spring 2013."
i) $25 million (c£17m) was invested and lost in a property development in New York City at 57th Street. It is true that there is nothing particularly to connect the husband to this development, beyond the fact that at the relevant time he was himself investing in another development in New York City.
ii) Mr Stevens is said to have made an unsecured interest-free loan to the husband of £4.2 million in respect of which no demands for payment have been made whatsoever. That money has been spent.
iii) In paragraph 3 of judgment No. 7 Mr Justice Picken records how Grenda has lent to an erstwhile associate of the husband, Philip Barton, around £10 million. It must be very doubtful that it will be recovered.
iv) The evidence was that €3 million had been spent by Mr Stevens on a boat. Again, there is nothing to connect the husband specifically to this purchase.
v) Just over £1 million was paid by Mr Stevens in discharge of a loan made to him by a company within the Arena structure namely Unicorn. It is noteworthy that Mr Stevens who is portrayed as a man of substance needed to make this borrowing.
vi) £3.5 million was spent by Mr Stevens and his companies in the Orb litigation.
vii) The total, excluding Gravity, is just under £40m. Most of it was spent for the benefit of the husband.
"On 26th June 2012 Digital Stout Holdings LLC purchased the shares in Sentrum Holdings which gave rise to a figure, after repayment of the external lenders of a balance of £220 million, which was paid to Glen Moar, a company within the Arena Settlement. A dividend of £160 million was then paid by Glen Moar to its shareholders, namely the trustees of the Arena Settlement."
The documents before me show that in fact £212.4m went to Glen Moar rather than £220m. The £92m came from the dividend payment. What happened to the balance of £68m? Or for that matter the sum that was not dividended out? The husband says that they stayed in Arena, or were invested in business ventures held within Arena. And that accordingly they were the subject of the appropriation by Dr Smith in 2014. I have no reason to doubt that. There is no evidence at all that these sums are within the husband's reach save to the extent that they may form part of the settlement monies, to which I turn next in this judgment.
The settlement of the Orb proceedings in April 2016.
"To date nearly £8 million has been spent on legal costs alone, of which there remains a significant amount outstanding. As a result, the level of liabilities has significantly increased. Despite going to court on 14 separate occasions and winning each one, I have been unable to find funding for the remaining costs, which are estimated at £8 million, and therefore I reluctantly had to discontinue my case in April 2016, on the proviso that I did not have to meet costs for Orb and Mr Gerald Smith. These were estimated at £12 million and would have definitely resulted in my bankruptcy."
i) Orchard turned down the request on 18 April 2016;
ii) Calunius turned down the request on 21 April 2016;
iii) Therium turned down the request on 25 April 2016; and
iv) SP Angel did not turn down the request at any point in April 2016; indeed they were asking for a non-disclosure agreement and additional information as late as 3 May 2016.
"Mr Ruhan's pre-condition/requirement to settlement is that it be structured in a manner that transfers the majority of any cash sum to Mr Stevens; namely that a comparatively large sum of cash be transferred to Mr Stevens against a comparatively much smaller sum of cash to Mr Ruhan. Leaving aside whether this is commercially acceptable, it is structurally unworkable and possibly illegal. Our clients have sought and received advice that a settlement on such a basis, where a payment demanded by Mr Ruhan had to go to Mr Stevens which is not commensurate with Mr Stevens' claims, is potentially criminal."
"Anthony Stevens was owed interest on the said sum of £92 million. That unpaid interest has formed the basis of the loan note for £73,750,000 between Gail Cochrane and Phoenix Group Foundation dated 29 April 2016."
"Under the 2012 settlement, Stevens was entitled to a share on any successful claim against the developer of the Qatar properties. This claim had come to fruition; and in the event was successful. Messrs Cooper & McNally were due to account to Stevens for his share of the recovery; but did not.
When in 2016 the settlement of the Orb litigation was under discussion, Cooper & McNally were insistent that their potential liability to Stevens should be included in the settlement. The deal that was forged involved Gail Cochrane (who had as Smith's ex-wife taken control of the Arena assets under the IoM Settlement) giving a promise to pay £73 millions to Phoenix, being the money due to Stevens from the Qatar compromise."
i) £43m being the difference between £135 million in November 2012 pursuant to loan agreements dated 2 April 2008 and 16 April 2008 and the £92 million paid pursuant to clause 3.2 of the TSA dated November 2012.
ii) £12m being a fee of £2m for each of six towers in Qatar.
iii) £15.2m being interest on the above.
iv) £3.5m being the value of extant costs orders in favour of Stevens parties in the Orb litigation.
v) Total: £73.7m
"The £92 million represented the sterling equivalent of the principal on the two loans that Euro Estates provided for the investments in Qatar. Euro Estates essentially forgave its right to be paid interest and penalties under its loans, in exchange for it having the right to 10% of any monies recovered by Mr Cooper, Mr McNally and another party to the TSA, Legion Recoveries Ltd, through their efforts to recoup the investments they have made in Qatar"
Minardi
The £500,000 gift
The BAE arbitation
Other assets
Next steps
______________
ENTITY/INDIVIDUAL |
EXPLANATION |
Ainos Shipping |
Limited company registered in Malta and owned by the husband Owns Lady K Owned Pegasus Court |
Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld LLP |
Solicitors acting for AS in Orb proceedings |
Alan Campbell ['AC'] |
Associate of the husband who introduced him to Qatar project along with PB |
Anthony Edwards Stevens ['AS'] |
Business associate of the husband and alleged by applicant and Orb claimants to be a nominee for the husband Holds following positions: - Owner Legion Asset Management - Owner Euro Estates Holdings - Director of Grenda Investments - Corporate member of Foundation Council for Phoenix - Bluestone Securities |
Arena Holding Companies |
Include: i. Glen Moar Properties Limited ii. Sulby Investment Holdings Limited iii. Ballugh Holdings Limited iv. Unicorn Worldwide Holdings Limited v. Lezayre Holdings vi. Unicorn Management Limited vii. Seafield Logistics Limited viii. Bridgehouse (Cannizaro House) Limited |
Arena Managers |
Simon McNally Simon Cooper |
The Arena Settlement ['Arena'] |
Discretionary trust known as The Arena Settlement created on 29 March 2004 by Cooper and McNally who are named as discretionary beneficiaries The husband added as a discretionary beneficiary between November 2994 and 19 March 2012 when his name was removed by a deed of exclusion dated 21 March 2012 |
Arena Trustees |
Atticus Trustees |
Arthur Becker |
Former CEO of Navisite Business associate of the husband in respect of NYC property development deals |
Atlantic Hotels (UK) Limited |
H appointed Director in May 2003 Atlantic purchased a 29.9% shareholding in Izodia and 37 hotels from Orb |
BAE Systems PLC |
Party to agreement with BB2 which they terminated by notice dated 2 June 2016 Issued a claim under number HC-2016-003116 against BB2 dated 1 November 2016 for a declaration that they validly terminated the agreement BB2 denies the agreement has been validly terminated BB2 applied and obtained a stay of these proceedings to allow for arbitration to take place Directions were given in relation to the arbitration on 19 July 2017 The hearing is listed on 9 April 2018 with an ELH of two weeks |
|
A company beneficially owned and controlled by AS |
Bradford UK Ltd |
Incorporated on 21 November 2012 by the husband , McNally and Cooper to undertake the purchase of 7 development sites from BAE Systems PLC As a result of transfer of Arena assets, SM and SC became shareholders and BAE terminated contract Liquidated |
Bremen Finance |
Company beneficially owned and controlled by AS AS alleges that the 5,500,000 euros invested in Nord Finance was on behalf of this company |
Bridge Tower Companies ['BTC'] |
Incorporated in IOM in November 2007 by Simon McNally for the purposes of investment in the Qatar project and structured as follows: - Bridge Tower Holdings No 1 Limited (Bridge Towers 1,2,3,4,5,6 Limited) ['BH1'] formed for Al Arrab Qatar Project - Bridge Tower Holdings No 2 Limited (Bridge Towers 7,8,9,10,11,12 Limited) ['BH2'] formed for Al-Jufairi Qatar project |
Bridgehouse Bradford IOM Ltd ['BB IOM'] |
A company originally incorporated by the husband, McNally and Cooper on 2 October 2012 (as Cooch 1115 Limited) to undertake the purchase of a large portfolio of land and airport assets from BAE Systems PLC Liquidated |
Bridgehouse Bradford No 2 ['BB2'] |
A company incorporated by the husband , McNally and Cooper to undertake the purchase of a portfolio of land and airport assets from BAE Systems PLC under an agreement dated 20 December 2012 for the following sites: i. Filton ii. Bristol iii. Broughton |
Bridgehouse Partners LLP |
Manx Law Firm of which Simon McNally and Simon Cooper were the principals |
Cambulo Madeira ['CM']:
Cambulo Lancaster Gate Cambulo Kensington Palace Cambulo Kensington Park |
Group of companies that entered into a business sale agreement to purchase the Hyde Park hotels from HPII CM sold Lancaster Gate in August 2006 for £67.5M CM completed the purchase of the two remaining Kensington hotels in April 2006 for £69M |
Cambulo Property Holdings Limited ['CPHL]
|
A company formed as a joint venture between CM and the Candy Brothers to purchase and redevelop the two remaining Kensington hotels with the assistance of £75M funding from Bank of Scotland The two Kensington Hotels were sold by CPHL in March 2008 for £320M |
Property development company in which the husband has a 50% interest Mike Hargreaves owns other 50% |
|
The commercial ongoing proceedings |
Claim Number CL-2016-000392/CJA No.73 of 2005 - The principal claim (amongst others) was issued by Phoenix against GC for £73,750,000 pursuant to the loan note; - Phoenix and Minardi claim damages for conspiracy against all the assets of GC, GS, DS, AS, and LCL - The SFO and Enforcement Receivers have now issued an application under the CJA 1988 in the proceedings relating to GS for a determination if the extent to which various assets in dispute within those proceedings are the realisable property of GS; - The SFO/ER's application will be determined first and is listed for a directions hearing not before 1 January 2018 |
Dawna Stickler ['DS']
|
Sole director and shareholder of Pro Vinci Limited |
Dr Gail Cochrane ['GC'] |
Former wife of Gerald Smith and owner of: - SMA Investment Holding Ltd a company registered in the Marshall Islands; - GAC - Current controller of Arena assets Now bankrupted in Jersey (en desastre) |
Dr Gerald Smith ['GS'] |
Former business associate of the husband Pleaded guilty in April 2006 to a number of charges of fraud and jailed for 8 years By a consent order dated 13 November 2007, GS agreed to a confiscation and compensation order in the sum of £41M Orb claimants overtly agreed with GS that in return for his 'cooperation and assistance with the proposed action' they would transfer to him 50% of any sums recovered in the proceedings (less costs) up to the amount owing under the confiscation order |
Euro Estates Holdings Limited ['EE'] |
A company legally owned by Anthony Stevens (80%) and his brother Michael Stevens (20%) Parent company of Cambulo Madeira group of companies and therefore ultimately owner of the Hyde Park Hotels Receives profit on hotels in March 2008 |
Gabriel Ruhan ['GR']
|
The husband 's brother Former CEO of Global Marine Described as co-founder of Global Switch |
GAC Holdings Limited ['GAC'] |
A company of which GC sole Director and shareholder GAC purchased Minardi from Philip Barton in September 2014 |
Genii Capital |
A company owned by Messrs Lopez and Luz which owned the majority of Gravity |
Glen Moar |
Arena company Pays dividend of £160M to shareholders - the trustees of Arena - following receipt of Sentrum monies |
Global Marine Systems Limited ['GMSL']
|
Company purchased by the husband out of administration in June 2003 CEO formerly Gabriel Ruhan The husband sold shares |
Global Switch Limited ['GS']
|
Company established by the husband in 1997 using proceeds from a previous company Kingspark H sells 65% of his shares in 2000 |
Gravity Motorsports S.a.r.l ['Gravity'] |
Registered in Luxembourg Holding company for 90% of the issued capital of Lotus F1 the husband co-chairman The husband retains a 2% interest |
Greensill |
On 14 December 2012 a payment of AUS$5,642,616 made to this Australian financial services company from Legion bank account Orb claimants allege the husband has purchased a shareholding in the same |
Grenda Investments Limited ['Grenda']
|
A company incorporated in the BVI and beneficially owned and controlled by AS |
Harry Harvey ['HH']
Blackbuck Capital Limited |
Former business associate of the husband Alleges he introduced the BAE deal to the husband The husband sues HH for £2m and settled for £750K Company owned by HH |
Hotel Portfolio II UK Limited ['HPII']
|
Owned Hyde Park Hotels prior to CM purchase The husband CEO and minority investor in HPII Heavily indebted to Morgan Stanley who forced a sale of the Hyde Park Hotels to reduce the indebtedness |
Hok Lee Chan |
Partner in Chan Fiduciary, based in same offices in IOM as SC and SM Respondent to first disclosure order made by in IOM proceedings in 2012 re: Arena documents |
The Hyde Park Hotels |
Thistle Lancaster Gate Thistle Kensington Palace Thistle Kensington Park Hotel |
Isle of Man Settlement |
On 27 March 2014, Cooper and McNally entered into an agreement with Orb, Dr Cochrane and the trustees of the Arena Settlement under which the parties agreed to transfer the entire share capital of the Arena Holding Companies and BT1 to the Claimants of the Orb litigation. The entire share capital was subsequently transferred to SMA Investment Holdings Limited (a Marshall Islands company). |
John Raymond |
A friend of the husband who he alleges lent him £500,000 in 2015. The husband alleges loan is in default but no formal demand has been made |
Lady K |
Boat owned by the husband Valued by SJE at £750,000 the husband alleges various charges/costs outstanding in relation to boat Allegedly on market with Solent Refit |
Chief Operating Officer of Pro Vinci Asset Management Limited, a subsidiary of Pro Vinci Previously transitional director of other Arena company under the control of GC Former business associate of the husband and involved in the CM deal |
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Legion Management Corporation ['LM']
|
A company held outside Arena and administered by McNally and Cooper It was to this company that the £92M was paid, and the shares then transferred to AS |
Lotus F1 Team Limited |
Formula One racing team in which the husband had arranged to acquire a personal stake, and it is said that through nominees has a controlling shareholding On 15 November 2012 £35M transferred from Legion's RBS bank account to the client account of Arendt and Medernach, Luxembourg |
Memery Crystal ['MC'] |
The husband 's solicitors in Orb proceedings |
Metrolinx |
A Swiss development company who the husband alleges owe him 2.4m CHF in respect of a loan he made to them which fell due for repayment in January 2016 The husband alleges loan attracts interest of 20% pa The husband has given a personal guarantee in respect of this deal |
Michael Stevens ['MS']
|
AS's brother: lent the husband £3m routed through his company Wellard to Unicorn for the husband 's benefit. |
Minardi Investments Limited ['Minardi'] |
A company incorporated and registered in the BVI in May 2007: i. From incorporation to August 2014 PB the beneficial owner of Minardi; ii. In September 2014, PB sells entire issued share capital to GAC Holding Limited (GC) iii. On 22 May 2015 Allan Rankin became the majority shareholder following an issue of new shares iv. Rankin alleges that Minardi is a shell company used by the husband and PB (as the husband 's nominee) to move funds with primary purpose of defeating Orb litigant's claims |
Navisite LLC |
A US based IT company the husband undertook a number of property development deals with this company |
Nicholas Thomas ['NT'] |
Former business associate of the husband 'an experienced businessman' Introduced GS to the husband |
Nord Finance Bank |
the husband subscribed for 5,500,000 B shares in the capital of this bank in his own name on 29 November 2012 On the same date the sum of €5,500,000 was transferred to Nord Finance from the Legion Bank account |
Odessey Partnership Limited |
Manx accountancy and business service owned by Simon McNally and Simon Cooper Companies within Arena Settlement were managed under a management agreement with Odessey |
Orb ARL |
A Jersey private limited company. The ultimate holding company of the Orb group |
Headstay Agreement |
Claim for breach of contractual and/or fiduciary duties in respect of an alleged oral profit-sharing agreement made on 6 May 2003 A call option agreement dated 29 May 2003 between Headstay Limited and Alan Campbell as the husband 's nominee intended to provide some protection for Orb in respect of a share of the profits of the hotel profits only |
The Orb claimants
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i. Orb ARL ii. Roger Taylor iii. Nicholas Thomas iv. Simon Cooper v. Simon McNally vi. Gail Cochrane vii. Gerald Smith viii. SMA Investment Holdings |
The Orb defendants
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i. the husband ii. Anthony Stevens iii. Grenda Investments Limited iv. Phoenix Group Foundation v. Bluestone Securities Limited |
Patriot Coal |
US company who have obtained a judgment against the husband personally for $3m the husband alleges that this arises out of a commercial dispute between Patriot Coal and Sentrum The husband was not a party to the litigation but appears to have consented to judgment being entered against him personally The husband is in default of payment on 31 October 2013 |
Paul Whyte |
Friend of the husband who he alleges has advanced him £500,000 for 'property introductions which failed to materialise' the husband alleges that Paul Whyte is 'continue to wait and moreover will not charge any interest by virtue of the Respondent's difficult circumstances' The husband has apparently used these monies in part payment of his outstanding Memery Crystal bill |
Pegasus Court |
Retirement apartment owned by Ainos Shipping Limited and occupied by the husband 's father the husband sold this property on 9 June 2017 for £239,470 |
Philip Barton ['PB'] |
May 2007-August 2014 majority shareholder of Minardi Long standing associate of the husband Described by Orb claimant's as the husband's 'fixer', 'arranger' and 'nominee' Claims to have loaned Minardi $181m which he then assigned to the husband |
Phoenix Group Foundation ['Phoenix']
|
A company beneficially owned and controlled by AS |
Pro Vinci Limited ['Pro Vinci'] |
Provides family office services to high net worth families and individuals, including but not limited to managing third-party contractors on behalf of its clients Dawna Stickler sole director and shareholder |
Two separate construction projects in Qatar with: i. Al Arrab Construction (one of Saudi Arabia 's largest construction groups); and ii. Abdulla Al-Jufairi PB introduces the husband to Qatar project |
|
Richard Ashford ['RA'] |
The son of an old business associate of the husband called Martin Ashford Identified the Sentrum Rugby site for Sentrum and the husband in 2008/9 |
Richard Slade ['RS'] Richard Slade & Co |
Represents Phoenix and Minardi in ongoing commercial litigation Represents BB2 in BAE arbitration The husband discloses outstanding fees of £325,000 |
Roger Taylor ['RT'] |
Property Director of Orb Group |
Ruhan v Minardi
|
The husband 's claim against Minardi in respect of four loans advanced to Minardi and then assigned to him: i. The Barton loan - $181m said to have been advanced by PB to Minardi. PB assigned debt to the husband on 17 November 2015; ii. The Peltz loan - $4,597,371 advanced by UP to Minardi iii. Loan A iv. Loan B The Orb claimants allege that these loans are not genuine |
Sean Upson |
Solicitor with conduct of Orb claimant's case at Stewart's law |
Sentrum Holdings Limited ['Sentrum']
|
An Arena Company Shares sold to Digital Stout Holdings LLC on 26.06.12, realising £220m which was paid to Glen Moar Paid £92M to LMC in November 2012 |
Sentrum Rugby Ltd |
A company registered in the UK; a company of the same name is registered in the IOM Richard Ashford is a shareholder of both companies The company owns one of the unsold Sentrum sites in Rugby originally purchased by Sentrum in 2008/9 |
Simon Cooper ['SC'] |
Former trusted advisor of the husband Arena Manager Nominee for the husband |
Simon McNally ['SM'] |
Former trusted advisor of the husband Arena Manager Nominee for the husband |
Skypark UK Limited ['Skypark'] |
English company owned by Unicorn Owner and operator of a private aircraft (tail number 'M-Zumo') Now known as Steephill Aviation Limited |
Stewarts Law |
Solicitors who acted for Orb claimants |
SMA Investment Holdings['SMA'] |
A company registered in the Marshall Islands owned by GC |
Franek Sodzawickzny ['FS']
Julia Sodzawickzny |
Former business associate of the husband Acted as the husband 's nominee for Sentrum Claims to be owed monies by the husband due on sale of Sentrum Frank's wife. The source of documents provided to the wife |
A property development business owned by the husband The husband contends that it ceased to trade several years ago and that only asset a loan to Unicorn of £1,146,000 |
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Subserv Pro |
Company formerly owned by Celia Chandler who is the husband 's sister the husband alleges that this company paid the staff of Babylon for him throughout 2015, and that Celia Chandler cleared this debt when she sold Subserv to new owners The husband pleads the £194K as a debt to Celia Chandler |
Team Nero Limited |
Company formed by the husband to hold vehicles including E Type Jaguar racing car In liquidation, Jaguar taken by liquidators |
Termination and Settlement Agreement ('TSA') |
An agreement dated 17 November 2012 between EEH, BTH1, and AS pursuant to which AS receives £92M (paid through Legion Management) in purported repayment of EEH's loans of US $143m to BTH1 |
Ulricht Peltz ['UP'] |
Claims to be a debtor of Minardi in the sum of $4,597,37, a debt which he has assigned to the husband Described by Orb litigants as a 'businessman' who was involved in Qatari project Alleged to be a friend of PB |
Unicorn Worldwide Investmentts Limited ['Unicorn'] |
A company under control of the Arena Managers Lent $50m to BHT1 for Qatar project |
Wellard Limited ['Wellard'] |
Company incorporated in BVI Owned by MS |