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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Koza Ltd & Anor v Akcil & Ors [2019] EWCA Civ 891 (23 May 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2019/891.html Cite as: [2019] EWCA Civ 891 |
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A3 2018 1620 |
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION
Mr Richard Spearman QC; The Hon Mr Justice Morgan
Royal Courts of Justice Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE FLOYD
and
LORD JUSTICE PETER JACKSON
____________________
(1) KOZA LTD (2) HAMDI AKIN IPEK |
Claimant/ Appellant Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) MUSTAFA AKCIL (2) HAYRULLAH DAGISTAN (3) MAHMUT HIKMET KELES (4) HAMZA YANIK (5) ARIF YALCIN (6) KOZA ALTIN ISTEMELERI AS |
Defendants Defendant/ Respondent |
____________________
Jonathan Crow QC and David Caplan (instructed by Mishcon de Reya LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 9-10 April 2019
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Floyd:
"2. …
(1) [Koza Ltd, defined in the order as "the Company"] will not dispose of, deal with or diminish the value of any funds belonging to the Company or held to the Company's order other than in the ordinary and proper course of its business.
…"
"3. These undertakings shall not prohibit the Company from spending a reasonable sum on legal advice and representation, provided that the funds spent on liabilities incurred in this connection properly relate to legal advice and representation for the Company's benefit."
The ICSID funding appeal
The judgment of Mr Spearman QC
"In these circumstances, I consider that, on the materials at present available to the court, the authenticity of the SPA is open to very serious doubt. If Koza Limited was a freezing injunction defendant, the healthy scepticism which is typically justified with regard to assertions made by such a defendant that are not firmly supported by seemingly reliable evidence might present a fatal obstacle to an application to use frozen funds for a purpose which depends on the authenticity of the SPA. However, Koza Limited is not a freezing injunction defendant, and I therefore consider that it would not be appropriate to follow this precise approach in the present case. At the same time, it would be wrong to ignore the doubts that exist concerning the SPA."
"… not an investment for the purposes of the BIT or the ICSID Convention, even applying the approach which is most favourable to Koza Limited that I consider arguable based on the ICSID cases to which I have been referred".
"Pulling all these strands together, I conclude as follows with regard to the first class of expenditure:
(1) Funding the successful pursuit of an ICSID arbitration by IIL would be of benefit to Koza Limited, and thus in the ordinary and proper course of business.
(2) However, even if its authenticity was not in issue, the SPA did not give rise to a qualifying investment under the ICSID Convention and the material BIT.
(3) Moreover, there are good grounds to doubt the authenticity of the SPA, not least in light of Mr Ipek's failure to address that in his evidence in these proceedings.
(4) Those concerns are relevant not only to whether the expenditure would be made in good faith, consonant with Mr Ipek's fiduciary duty to Koza Limited, and in the ordinary and proper course of business, but also to whether or not the ICSID tribunal would have jurisdiction based on the SPA; and it is right for the court to take them into account when determining this aspect of the application.
(5) Further, based on Mr Ipek's evidence and the lack of evidence about whether litigation funding has been explored, I am not satisfied that there is no available source of funding other than the assets of Koza Limited, and, in particular, that if this aspect of the application is refused it will not be possible to commence an ICSID arbitration to seek redress in respect of the alleged egregious conduct of the government of Turkey in respect of which Koza Altin has filed no evidence.
(6) I am not persuaded that the circumstances which are said to justify this proposed expenditure are so different from those which appear to me to have been contemplated or intended to be governed by the Undertaking at the time that it was given that it would be appropriate to release Koza Limited from the burden of the Undertaking which it chose to give as an uncontested part of the Order.
(7) In light of those factors, I do not consider that the proposed expenditure falls within the scope of the Undertaking, or that it would accord with the interests of justice overall to approve the expenditure, or that the balance of justice between the parties would make it appropriate to vary the Undertaking to permit it.
(8) Accordingly, this part of the application fails and must be dismissed."
Law on "ordinary" and on "proper" course of business
"19. The issue was whether the payments made fell within the exception to the freezing order. In order to fall within the exception a disposal of assets (including a payment) must be both (a) in the ordinary course of business and (b) in the proper course of business. These are separate and cumulative requirements. They are also highly fact-sensitive questions. What is in the ordinary and proper course of business will, of course depend on what business is carried on by the respondent in question, and how it is carried on. A payment which might be made in the ordinary and proper course of one business may not satisfy that description in the case of a different business. Likewise, a payment which might be made in the ordinary and proper course of a business carried on in one location, may not satisfy that description in the case of the same kind of business carried on in a different location. In the present case the business of MWP is that of the provision of legal and business consultancy services, principally in Kazakhstan.
20. …
21. So the question then was: were the payments made "in the ordinary … course of business". That is not necessarily the same as asking whether the payments themselves were "ordinary": it is the course of business that the exception deals with. It is thus the course of business that must be "ordinary"."
i) The question of whether a transaction is in the ordinary and proper course of a company's business is a mixed question of fact and law;
ii) "Ordinary" and "proper" are separate, cumulative requirements;
iii) The test is an objective one, making it necessary to consider the question against accepted commercial standards and practices for the running of a business;
iv) The question is not whether the transaction is ordinary or proper, but whether it is carried out in the ordinary and proper course of the company's business;
v) The questions are to be answered in the specific factual context in which they arise.
Discussion of the ICSID funding appeal
"No attempt was made to define the term "investment" given the essential requirement of consent by the parties, and the mechanism through which the Contracting States can make known in advance, if they so desire, the classes of dispute which they would or would not consider submitting to the Centre (Article 25(4))."
"For the purposes of this Agreement:
(a) "investment" means every kind of asset and in particular, though not exclusively, includes:
…
(ii) shares in and stock and debentures of a company and any other form of participation in a company"
"In cases of what may be called ordinary business expenses the court does not usually consider whether the business venture is reasonable, or indeed whether particular business expenses are reasonable. Nor does it balance the defendant's case that he should be permitted to spend such monies against the strength of the claimant's case, or indeed take into consideration the fact that any monies spent by the defendants will not be available to the claimant if it obtains judgment. As I see it, that is because the purpose of a freezing injunction is not to interfere with the defendant's ordinary business or his ordinary way of life."
The extradition expenses appeal
"Mr Ipek is unquestionably the driving force behind Koza Ltd and is involved on a daily basis. He has significant experience in mining projects from their early stages through to full production. In addition to providing valuable industry expertise and access to a wide network of business contacts in the mining sphere and beyond, Mr Ipek's work for Koza Ltd in the time since I joined the company has included: determining the vision for the company and developing a strategy consistent with this vision; setting the criteria against which projects should be assessed …; assembling a team in the UK to run the company effectively; making the key decisions, namely whether to proceed or to withdraw from an existing one; and taking the lead role in negotiations with potential business partners. I speak with Mr Ipek daily to provide an update on all matters, including issues raised by our geologists and business partners. On a day-to-day basis Mr Ipek oversees the due diligence process for each new project, evaluates the updates from existing projects, follows up with business contacts and monitors all corporate expenses. He is extremely focussed on the detail of Koza Ltd's projects and is kept abreast of all developments. I am clear that Koza Ltd would have little chance of surviving, let alone prospering, as a business without his energy, contacts, insight and judgment".
"(1) It would not be in the ordinary and proper course of the First Claimant's business, within the meaning of paragraph 2(1) of the First Schedule to the Order of Mrs Justice Asplin DBE herein dated 21 December 2016 (the Order), for the First Claimant to make payments to BCL Solicitors for fees incurred or in relation to legal advice, assistance and representation to the Second Claimant in connection with the Republic of Turkey's request that he be extradited to Turkey (BCL Payments).
(2) BCL Payments would not constitute payments that properly relate to legal advice and representation for the First Claimant's benefit within of paragraph 3 of the First Schedule to the Order."
The judgment of Morgan J
"what "ordinary" seems to be endeavouring to describe is that one is looking at something which is much more like the established course of business rather than a fundamental departure from the established course of business. That, as such, does not cause a particular difficulty in this case."
"It seems to me that if it is not proper for Mr Ipek, as a director of Koza Limited, to procure Koza Limited to make a substantial payment to him, the payment would not be in the ordinary and proper course of the company's business."
"in the sense contended for by the claimants. In other words, the paragraph does extend to legal advice and representation for someone, which is not necessarily the company, but that is subject to the proviso that the funds spent must properly, again the word "properly", relate to legal advice and representation for the company's benefit."
"35. That finding, that Mr Ipek has money available to him, adequate to fund his defence, seems to me to provide the answer to the issues which have been argued.
36. Dealing with paragraph 2.1 of the first schedule, can it be said that the company is acting in the ordinary and proper course of its business by funding Mr Ipek's legal expenses?
37. The case for the company is that it wishes to see Mr Ipek succeed. It wishes Mr Ipek to remain in this jurisdiction. It does not wish to see him extradited to Turkey. But there is no reason for the company to fund Mr Ipek's defence. On my findings, Mr Ipek can fund his own defence.
38. Of course, insofar as Mr Ipek controls Koza Limited, and Koza Limited has the necessary funds, Mr Ipek appears to be saying that he should be free to fund his defence from the company's money and not from his own money. I do not regard that as the proper course of the business of Koza Limited. It appears to be a case of a director of a company acting in breach of his fiduciary duty by using the company money for something which is not the ordinary course of the company's business but is primarily for the benefit of the director on a personal level.
…
40. So my conclusion is that the intended payment by Koza Limited to Mr Ipek to enable him to pay his legal fees, is not a payment in the ordinary and proper course of a company's business.
41. As to paragraph 3, the intended payment by Koza Limited to Mr Ipek does not "properly" relate to legal advice and representation for the company's benefit.
42. First of all, if I am right that it is not a proper item of expenditure, it does not properly relate to that matter.
43. Secondly, it is not for the company's benefit because the company does not need to make the payment to improve its prospects of retaining Mr Ipek within the jurisdiction. Mr Ipek has his own resources. There is no question of Mr Ipek not using his own resources to resist the extradition warrant. Mr Ipek will use his own resources for that purpose.
44. If he is extradited, it will not be for want of a payment by the company. If he is not extradited, again, it will not be anything to do with payment or non-payment by the company."
Discussion
"This order does not prohibit the Respondent from spending £x a week towards its, her or his ordinary living expenses and also £y [or a reasonable sum] on legal advice or representation"
Conclusion
Lord Justice Peter Jackson:
Lord Justice Patten: