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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Motorola Credit Corporation v Uzan & Ors [2002] EWCA Civ 989 (26 June 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2002/989.html Cite as: [2002] 2 All ER (Comm) 945, [2002] EWCA Civ 989 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
(MR JUSTICE DAVID STEEL)
The Strand London |
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B e f o r e :
(The Lord Woolf of Barnes)
LORD JUSTICE WALLER
and
LORD JUSTICE SEDLEY
____________________
MOTOROLA CREDIT CORPORATION | Respondent/Claimant | |
and | ||
CEM CEGIZ UZAN | First Appellant | |
KEMAL UZAN | ||
MURAT HAKAN UZAN | ||
AYSEGAL AKAY | Second Appellant(Defendants) |
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Smith Bernal, 190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2HD
Telephone 020 7421 4040
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
& Manges, London EC2M 2WG) appeared on behalf of THE APPELLANT FIRST DEFENDANT
MR K MACLEAN QC (instructed by Messrs Weil Gotshal & Manges, London EC2M 2WG) appeared on behalf of THE APPELLANT FOURTH DEFENDANT
MR M CRAN QC and MR M BOOLS (instructed by Messrs Steptoe & Johnson, London EC2V 7JE) appeared on behalf of THE RESPONDENT
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Crown Copyright ©
Wednesday 26 June 2002
"When business deals go sour, both sides are apt to cry 'fraud' and courts know better than to take such claims at face value. But here we have the unusual case where every preliminary indication is that the defendants, behind a facade of legitimacy, engaged in repeated acts of fraud and chicanery, and thereby perpetrated, and continue to perpetrate, a rather massive swindle."
Part of the order made by the judge on that day was that certain shares were to be deposited with the court in order to restore the security which the claimants alleged had been destroyed. In argument before him on that occasion it was said that there were difficulties in putting up the shares as security, having regard to the requirement of Turkish ownership and the possibility that if Turkish ownership fell below 50%, there was a risk of a loss of licence. Indeed expect evidence appears to have been given on that aspect. But despite that argument, the judge made the order. It is clear from the judgment that he was dismissive of that point. It seems that, in addition to such argument as may have been put to the judge on that day, certain proceedings may have been taken in Turkey by distributors seeking injunctions to prevent these shares being lodged. Mr Cran QC, on behalf of the Motorola, suggests that the same answer as was given by the judge in the United States can be given to that application, that is to say that in reality there is no basis on which the ownerships of the shares would be destroyed by putting them up as security and no basis on which there is a risk to any licence. This application in Turkey looks like a contrived application to make it more difficult for the defendants to put up the security ordered by the United States court.
"I recognise that an ancillary jurisdiction ought to be exercised with caution, and that care should be taken not to make orders which conflict with those of the court seised of the substantive proceedings. But I do not accept that interim relief should be limited to that which would be available in the court trying the substantive dispute; or that by going further we would be seeking to remedy defects in the laws of other countries. The principle which underlies article 24 is that each contracting state should be willing to assist the courts of another contracting state by providing such interim relief as would be available if its own courts were seised of the substantive proceedings: see Alltrans Inc v Interdom Holdings Ltd [1991] 4 All ER 458, 468, per Leggatt LJ. By going further than the Swiss courts would be prepared to go in relation to a defendant resident outside Switzerland, we would not be seeking to remedy any perceived deficiency in Swiss law, but rather to supplement the jurisdiction of the Swiss courts in accordance with article 24 and principles which are internationally accepted."
".... that the granting of provisional or protective measures on the basis of article 24 is conditional on, inter alia, the existence of a real connecting link between the subject matter of the measures sought and the territorial jurisdiction of the contracting state of the court before which those measures are sought."
"Put shortly, D1's grounds for seeking a stay of the disclosure provisions are:
(1) Unless a stay is granted, the claimants will obtain the benefit of this part of the Order (arguably the most important part) before the merits of their application have been adjudicated upon, information once given cannot be retrieved.
(2) This would only be justifiable in circumstances in which the stay would cause the claimants extreme prejudice, exceeding the prejudice which would be caused to D1 by the refusal of the stay, but in fact no prejudice at all would be caused by a stay.
(3) The grounds on which continuation of the Order is opposed are substantial, and D1's application to discharge it has a reasonable prospect of success."
"I cannot accede to those submissions. It is notable that it is accepted in principle that the freezing order itself should stand pending the outcome of the inter partes hearing and the requirement for disclosure is a standard and, in my judgment, important part of the order. It is prima facie inappropriate to carve the order up in a way which the Defendants seek to invite the court to do, so as to allow what might be described as the restraints to stand but the mandatory requirements for disclosure to be put on hold. In any event the submission that the passage of time since the application for a domestic order was first made in January would have allowed the Defendant, if so disposed, to dissipate or hide his assets seems to me to fortify the proposition that the Claimants may sustain irreparable harm if matters are allowed to go into limbo pending a judgment on the inter partes hearing or indeed judgment on any appeal from that hearing. Whether or not he is in fact minded to obey the existing order for disclosure, from the court's perspective it must assume that there will be a proper, full and frank response by the first Defendant and that if, given what the New York judge has concluded about the propensity of the Defendant and his colleagues, then it may well be that funds have been transferred, dissipated, hidden or otherwise rendered more difficult to trace. In my judgment the sooner the matter is put clear on paper the better."
"Certainly it would not be useful to inquire whether different shades of meaning are intended to be conveyed by words such as 'blatant error' used by the resident in the present case, and words such as 'clearly wrong', 'plainly wrong' or simply 'wrong' used by other judges in other cases. All these various expressions were used in order to emphasise the point that the appellate court should only interfere when they consider that the judge of first instance has not merely preferred an imperfect solution which is different from and alternative imperfect solution which the Court of Appal might or would have adopted, but has exceeded the generous ambit within with a reasonable disagreement is possible."
"Mr Andrew Smith QC who appeared for Sheik Fahad, submits that Waller J misdirected himself in two respects. First, he submits that the judge misdirected himself as to the nature of his discretion. He says in fact that the discretion is a narrow one. He put it this way: Where the court, as in this case, can see that there is, or is likely to be, a serious challenge to its jurisdiction it should, in normal circumstances, refuse any sort of relief which cannot be undone if the court has no jurisdiction. It should only grant such relief if there are exceptional circumstances justifying it. He says the basic error made by Waller J was to require disclosure in the absence of such circumstances. I am not sure what the phrase 'exceptional circumstances' in this submission means. After all, it is already the law that a worldwide Mareva to which a disclosure Order is ancillary should only rarely be made and only if there are exceptional circumstances. Presumably, the submission means that something more is required to obtain a disclosure order if there is a challenge to jurisdiction.
....
The consequences of accepting Mr Smith's submission must be considered. If the direction to make a disclosure order is as narrow as Mr Smith says the worldwide Mareva injunction will be [a] relatively toothless procedure in the fight against rampant transnational fraud. In many such cases, despite a cogent case of fraud, the connections of transactions with different countries will enable a defendant to raise jurisdictional challenges which may take months to resolve at first instance, many months to determine in the Court of Appeal and even longer to decide in the House of Lords. And there may be a reference to the European Court. During such a lengthy delay it would be impossible to 'police' the Mareva injunction, and that is the purpose of the disclosure order.
....
Despite Mr Smith's attractive and careful arguments, I consider that the power to order a disclosure order is not limited in the way he submits. When rarely and in exceptional cases a worldwide Mareva is granted, a disclosure order will usually follow. On the other hand, I would emphasise that a disclosure should only be made for a purpose for which the power exists, namely to 'police' the Mareva injunction. But when one bears in mind the exceptional nature of the remedy of a worldwide Mareva injunction, I do not find it at all surprising that Waller J said that such disclosure orders are commonly annexed to worldwide Mareva injunctions. In my view the judge did not misdirect himself in respect of the nature of his discretion."
"I am firmly of the view that it was wrong for the application to be made ex parte. It is a basic principle of justice that an order should not be made against a party without giving him an opportunity to be heard. The only exception is when two conditions are satisfied. First, that giving him such an opportunity appears likely to cause injustice to the applicant, by reason either of the delay involved or the action which it appears likely that the respondent or others would take before the order can be made. Secondly, when the court is satisfied that any damage which the respondent may suffer through having to comply with the order is compensatable under the cross-undertaking or that the risk of uncompensatable loss is clearly outweighed by the risk of injustice to the applicant if the order is not made.
There is, I think, a tendency among applicants to think that a calculation of the balance of advantage and disadvantage in accordance with the second condition is sufficient to justify an ex parte order. In my view, this attitude should be discouraged. One does not reach any balancing of advantage and disadvantage unless the first condition has been satisfied. The principle audi alterem partem does not yield to a mere ultimate calculation. It can be displaced only by involving the overriding principle of justice which enables the court to act at once when it appears likely that otherwise injustice will be caused."
ORDER: (Not part of judgment)