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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Bataillon & Anor v Shone & Anor [2016] EWHC 1174 (QB) (20 May 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2016/1174.html Cite as: [2016] EWHC 1174 (QB) |
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QUEENS BENCH DIVISION
LONDON MERCANTILE COURT
B e f o r e :
(sitting as a Judge of the High Court)
____________________
(1) MARC BATAILLON | ||
(2) CYRIL MARQUAIRE | Claimants | |
and | ||
(1) MICHAEL SHONE | ||
(2) ESTLYN SHARON SHONE | Defendants |
____________________
Asa Jack Tolson (instructed by Benchmark Solicitors) for the Second Defendant
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
INTRODUCTION
THE ASSETS MORE PARTICULARLY DEFINED
(1) properties at 69 Sheet Street, Windsor ("Sheet Street") and at 1 Chapel Hill, Budleigh Salterton, previously in the name of a Panamanian Foundation called Fundacion Pawnee and which were transferred into the name of Mrs Shone on 10 October 2013;(2) properties at 1 West Terrace and 1 Chapel Hill, Budleigh Salterton, Devon previously in the name of another Panamanian Foundation called Fundacion Connaught ("Connaught"), also transferred to Mrs Shone on 10 October 2013;
(3) a further property in Oakley Grove Road Windsor known as "High Trees" which had previously been in the name of Mr and Mrs Shone but which was transferred into the sole name of Mrs Shone in July 2014;
(4) the proceeds of sale of various cars paid over to Mrs Shone between February and September 2014 in a total amount of £212,500;
(5) cash with a sterling value of around £140,000 paid by Commercial Intelligence South-East Asia PTE ("CISEA") to Mrs Shone in March 2014;
(6) the proceeds of the surrender of a life-insurance policy taken out by Mr Shone in favour of Mrs Shone of which about £70,000 was paid to her in November 2014;
(7) monthly remuneration due to Mr Shone from CIFG Mateen Capital Limited over a six-month period from May 2014 with a total value of about £45,000;
(8) monies with a sterling value of about £45,000 paid to Mrs Shone from the cashing in of Mr Shone's Singapore pension on 27 June 2014.
BACKGROUND
THE ISSUES
(1) although no consideration is expressed to have been given on the face of the property transactions in particular, there was consideration because they were made pursuant to a prior albeit informal separation agreement in return for which Mrs Shone did not take divorce proceedings or claim financial relief from him, in particular in respect of the properties;(2) indeed, in the case of Sheet Street and Budleigh Salterton, she and Mr Shone had agreed that they should go into her sole name back in late 2012 and their eventual transfer into her sole name was only giving effect to that earlier agreement; in any event the prior legal owner thereof was not Mr Shone but rather the Panamanian Foundations referred to above. Accordingly there was no actual transfer of assets to her from him anyway;
(3) equally on High Trees, although it had originally been purchased in joint names, the intention from the outset was that it should be in her name only and the later transfer to this effect was thus only giving effect to that earlier agreement;
(4) furthermore, even if there was no consideration for some or all of the transfers, they were effected in order to protect Mr Shone and Camille and not with the intention of defeating creditors;
(5) further, even if the court had jurisdiction to make an order under s423 it should not do so, or not do so with full effect, as a matter of discretion, having regard to the role of Mrs Shone and her personal circumstances.
THE LAW
"(1) This section relates to transactions entered into at an undervalue; and a person enters into such a transaction with another person if:
(a) He makes a gift to the other person or he otherwise enters into a transaction with the other on terms that provide for him to receive no consideration;…
(2) Where a person has entered into such a transaction, the court may, if satisfied under the next subsection, make such order as it thinks fit for-
(a) Restoring the position to what it would have been if the transaction had not been entered into, and
(b) Protecting the interests of persons who are victims of the transaction
(3) In the case of a person entering into such a transaction, an order shall only be made if the court is satisfied that it was entered into by him for the purpose-
(a) of putting assets beyond the reach of a person who is making, or may at sometime make, a claim against him, or
(b) of otherwise prejudicing the interests of such a person in relation to the claim which he is making or may make."
"(1) An application for an order under section 423 shall not be made in relation to a transaction except-
(a) In a case where the debtor has been adjudged bankrupt....by the official receiver, by the trustee of the bankrupt's estate or... (with the leave of the court) by a victim of the transaction;…
(c) In any other case, by a victim of the transaction."
"(2) Without prejudice to the generality of section 423, an order made under that section with respect to a transaction may (subject as follows)-
(a) require any property transferred as part of the transaction to be vested in any person...
(d) require any person to pay to any other person in respect of benefits received from the debtor such sums as the court may direct."
(1) for the purposes of s423 it is the intention of the transferor which matters; see e.g. Moon v Franklin [1996] BIPR 196 at p202E; the transferee's belief or understanding as to the reason for the transfer is irrelevant at this stage save insofar as it could cast light on the transferor's intention;(2) it is sufficient if the transaction was entered into for the purpose of putting assets beyond the reach of or prejudicing any creditor or creditors ("the Statutory Purpose"); it does not have to be directed against the particular creditor who is now making the claim under s423 – see Fortress Value v Blue Skye [2013] EWHC 14 at paragraph 111;
(3) the Statutory Purpose does not have to be the only or even the dominant one, so long as it is a real and substantial purpose and not merely trivial or simply a by-product or consequence of the transaction; often, for example, a parallel purpose might be to secure the financial interests of members of the family concerned - see the observations of Arden LJ in IRC v Hashmi [2002] BCC 943 at paragraphs 23-25 and Williams v Jones [2012] EWCA 1443 at paragraph 9 of the judgment of Lloyd LJ;
(4) it is therefore not necessary to show dishonesty on the part of the transferor - see, for example, the observations of Jonathan Parker J in Re Brabon [2000] BCC 1171 at 1199E;
(5) So far as the lack of consideration is concerned, if the transferee was already, by the imposition of a constructive trust or otherwise, the beneficial owner of the whole of the asset transferred, then all that is being transferred is the bare legal title which has no real value; in that event, there is in truth no transfer at an undervalue at all. See the observations of Launcelot Henderson QC (as he then was) in Kubiangha v Ekpenyong [2002] EWHC 1567 at paragraph 15.
THE EVIDENCE
GDAF
TRANSFER OF BUDLEIGH SALTERTON AND SHEET STREET
The Panamanian Foundations
"The Foundation Council shall manage the assets or property comprised in the Foundation assets.
Both the management of funds and the investments made therewith shall be conducted in good faith and subject to the rules governing the concept of a prudent paterfamilias.
The Foundation Council may dispose of the assets of the Foundation, and also encumber them by way of security for the Foundation's own obligations or for obligations of third parties.
The Foundation Council is under a duty of care in respect of looking after and preserving the assets of the Foundation."
".. Part of the financial package involves the transfer of Fundacion Pawnee to my name of 69 Sheet Street and the land cert is with your office. Walton is the protector of the Foundation and Panamanian lawyers act as the Trustees. Please arrange for a deed of gift by the Trust to me thereby minimising stamp duty. Separately 1 West Terrace, Budleigh Salterton, is also in the name of the Foundation and should be gifted to me."
"please send letter to Alan Taylor the Certificates of Title for Sheet Street and for 1 West Terrace are with Walton.… The certificate for 1 Chapel Hill is with John Orchard in Exmouth.… Has anyone asked John Orchard to transfer this to Sharon's name? If not this should be done immediately."
(1) it was clearly done on the direct instruction of Mr Shone who, strictly, is not the Founder;(2) but in any event, while the Founder has a power to change a beneficiary he does not have a power to effect transfers of the Foundation's assets;
(3) indeed, while the Foundations' Regulations contemplate the possibility that assets might be disposed of they do not suggest that they can be simply gifted whether to a beneficiary or not during the lifetime of the Founder.
(1) Quijano replied as follows:"We would like to let you know that the act of transfer by Foundation Pawnee, in favour of Sharon Shone, should have been previously approved by the members of its foundation council. Therefore, it shall be necessary to prepare the relevant council resolution, to be dated retroactively, in order to basically ratify the aforementioned transfer…Furthermore, we would like to point out that our fees and expenses for the preparation of the required opinion, for the elaboration of the required council members resolution and related services shall amount to approximately U.S. S 1,400.00."(2) And then Mr Shone replied:
"Thank you for your mail. The fee quote is acceptable. Please transmit the invoice to Singapore as usual, for my attention."
(1) in the light of my findings above, both Mr and Mrs Shone knew that in reality, both of them were and remained the beneficial owners of the properties to do with them, as they saw fit;(2) they are the key parties because in this case the "real rights" said to be obscured or disguised by the sham i.e. the Panamanian Foundations and their documents, are theirs as beneficial owners of the properties; I quite take the point that in the context of a bilateral agreement like a contract or what is in truth a lease (as opposed to a licence) the two parties to the underlying "real" transaction must both share the relevant intention; but this is not a case about such contracts;
(3) insofar as it is necessary for the other parties in the Panamanian Foundations who have any active role i.e. other than Camille and Samantha who are beneficiaries only, Quijano, the Panamanian lawyers were prepared to issue backdated documents obviously designed to give the impression of a proper resolution which it was not, and Mr Eddlestone or his firm appears to have been willing (and able) to do Mr Shone's bidding to transfer the properties outside the terms of the Foundations without regard to them at all; so if necessary I would find that they too, knew that the Panamanian Foundation and its terms did not represent the reality of the position as to the beneficial ownership of the properties notwithstanding that, as a matter of English property law, the Foundations were unquestionably the legal owners and even if qua Panamanian Foundations, they clearly existed.
(4) For all those reasons, I treat the transfer of Budleigh Salterton and Sheet Street as a transfer by or on behalf of Mr Shone to Mrs Shone of his beneficial interest therein namely 50%.
Consideration
Intention
Nominee
HIGH TREES
(1) there is no reason to suppose that Mr and Mrs Shone were not each beneficially entitled to 50% of High Trees, they being joint legal owners initially;(2) the transfer of Mr Shone's 50% interest in High Trees to Mrs Shone was clearly at an undervalue; I reject any suggestion of consideration being provided because of an earlier agreement between them or forbearance from divorce etc;
(3) a real and substantial purpose on the part of Mr Shone was plainly to put High Trees beyond creditors and by now there were very visible and pressing creditors in the form of the Claimants at least. The emails make clear the linkage between Mr Shone's own financial circumstances and the transfer.
OTHER ASSETS
General Points
Cars
CISEA Payments
Insurance Policies
CIFG Mateen Payments
Pension Payments
HEALTH INSURANCE PAYMENTS AND OTHER PAYMENTS INVOLVING MR SHONE
DISCRETION
(1) Mrs Shone is effectively an innocent party, and has got caught up in Mr Shone's illicit activities and moreover was placed in a financially precarious position by him;(2) She was not actually complicit in any of Mr Shone's wrongdoing and acted at all times in good faith in reliance upon transfers of assets to her to give her and Camille some security;
(3) The money she spent was wholly or mainly to pay expenses and liabilities of her or Mr Shone as opposed to extravagant living;
(4) There was innocent "change of position" on her part in reliance upon the assets she received;
(5) At one stage at least, Mr Shone had agreed to give her Budleigh Salterton and Sheet Street and/or she could have had more than a 50% beneficial interest in them anyway as a matter of constructive trust on Stack v Dowden principles.
(1) While she may not have been actually complicit she knew or must have known what was going on with Mr Shone's financial position certainly from early 2014 and she participated in the transfer of High Trees after she became aware of these proceedings;(2) She has not always been frank with the Court and was prepared at one point to flout a court order;
(3) The Claimants are individuals who have lost a great deal of money - it is not as if they are a corporation which can write off the loss in its accounts and there is no prospect of a full recovery against Mr Shone on any view;
(4) According to Mrs Shone, Mr Shone has other assets in other parts of the world and she has the chance to make some recovery here with the Singapore divorce proceedings.
RELIEF
(1) The Claimants will receive 50% of the net equity in High Trees left after its present sale; the net equity is thought to be about £455,000 so 50% is £227,500;(2) Equally they will receive 50% of the net equity in Sheet Street and Budleigh Salterton after their sales, the net equity is expected to be about £925,000 so 50% is £462,500;
(3) Mrs Shone must pay a further sum of £434,500 in respect of the other claims, plus interest;
(4) The sum payable of £434,500 will be reduced by £100,000 to £334,500.