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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Otkritie International Investment Management Ltd & Ors v Urumov & Ors [2015] EWCA Civ 1578 (09 December 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2015/1578.html Cite as: [2015] EWCA Civ 1578 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION, COMMERCIAL COURT
(MR JUSTICE EDER)
Strand London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
OTKRITIE INTERNATIONAL INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT LTD & ORS | Applicant | |
v | ||
URUMOV & ORS | Respondent |
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WordWave International Limited
trading as DTI
165 Fleet Street London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7404 1424
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
The Respondent was not present and was not represented
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
"On this basis, it is my conclusion that Ms Balk is liable to [the Claimants] by way of damages and/or equitable compensation for US $36,978,000 and/or an account on the basis of dishonest assistance and/or procuring breach of contract and/or knowing receipt."
"12. For present purposes, what does remain important is the point of principle with regard to allocation or appropriation of such recoveries between the Defendants."
"With regard to Mr Urumov, Mr Pineav, Mr Gersamia and Mr Jemai, the position is, in my view, straightforward. This is because on the basis of the conclusions in my judgment, they are each jointly and separately liable for 100 per cent of the loss suffered in relation to the Argentinian warrants fraud. The position is perhaps less straightforward with regard to the other Defendants, i.e. Ms Balk and various others. However, I am persuade that Mr Berry is right in saying that consistent with the principles summarised above, the Claimants have a choice has to how the recoveries are to be appropriated as long as it is not "obviously unsustainable"."
I interpolate to say that that is a quote from the Barings case:
"Further, I am persuaded that there is nothing in the facts in the present circumstances which would lead to the conclusion that the Claimants' appropriation is one which is obviously unsustainable. For these reasons, it is my conclusion that credit from the recoveries obtained must be given in accordance with the Claimants' appropriation summarised above."
"Since the hearing before the Chief Justice [Dudley] the fact of the beneficial ownership of Vandry have been clarified. The shares in Vandry were held on the trust of the Birchkey settlement ("Birchkey"). The settler of the settlement was Mr Balk, that is Ms Balk's father. The appointed class of potential beneficiaries originally consisted of Ms Balk and her sister."
"Ms Dunant made an affidavit in which she said that TNT Management Services had never considered that Yulia Balk is the beneficial owner of Vandry or Birchkey nor as she ever had any control over these companies. The impression that Ms Balk had no interest was reinforced by Ms Dunant, stating that on "26 February 2013, all the assets of the birch key trust were appointed in favour of Yunset Balk". Mr Simpson, counsel for TNT, submitted that the affidavit was literally true. That may be the case. However, the impression given by the impression by the passage as cited was, in my judgment, completely misleading... Ms Dunant went well beyond what might be permissible. She was, in my judgment, deliberately attempting to mislead the court."
"Insofar as the recovery against Dunant was made in the proprietary manner, then that is the mechanical or the legal way in which it was recovered, but that does not effect the need or otherwise to give credit for it. It is a recovery by a procedural proprietary mechanism, but the principles as to receiving payment from are not affected by that. We have not elected for a proprietary claim against Ms Balk."
Eder J in the course of argument said:
"I am not saying you are right or wrong, Mr Berry, but I keep on saying it is extraordinarily difficult. It is odd that you have recovered, if Mr Peto is right [that is counsel for Ms Balk and others], on the basis of a proprietary claim against a certain asset, the effect of which is broadly that the Claimant then recovers back the very asset in the tracing sense that it has lost. There is then a separate claim against a third party, Mr Balk, not the Defendant, who I have held liable for dishonest assistance and/or knowing receipt in respect of that very property. You tell me that you can get judgment against of the dishonest assistance, knowing receipt, in respect of that very property when you have recovered it back."
"No cogent reasons are given why Ms Balk could not have filed her appeal at the same time as her husband did and the unsatisfactory consequence of this piecemeal approach is that not only do the Claimants have to respond to this unmeritorious application at a considerable cost they will never recoup from the Urumovs, it also puts significant strain on the resources of the Court of Appeal and therefore risks causing prejudice to other court users with more meritorious claims.. The reason given by Ms Balk for filing her appeal 15 months out of time reveals no basis for granting the extension and mirror some of the reasons put forward by her husband and rejected by Gloster LJ."
They then go on to deal with the prejudice while the application is pending.
"The brevity of the time allowed reflects the clear policy decision in favour of finality. Any party seeking to challenge a judicial decision must move with expedition. In the immediate aftermath of the judgment below, both the party and their advisers are fully seized of the case. They can be expected to formulate any grounds of appeal without delay. It is particularly important that time limits in respect of appeals against judgment are observed so that the parties and the courts know when the matters adjudicated have been put beyond the reach of appellate review."
"Whether there was a good reason for the failure will depend on the particular circumstances of the case, but I do not think that the court can or should accept that the mere fact of being unrepresented provides a good reason for not adhering to the rules. That was the view expressed by the majority in Denton at paragraph 40 and, with respect, I entirely agree with it. Litigation is inevitably a complex process and it is understandable that those who have no previous experience of it should have difficulty in finding and understanding the rules by which it is governed."