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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Milsom & Ors v Ablyazov (Rev 1) [2011] EWHC 955 (Ch) (08 April 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2011/955.html Cite as: [2011] ArbLR 25, [2011] EWHC 955 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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(1) JOHN MILSOM (2) DAVID STANDISH (3) JEREMY OUTEN (together the Receivers of the Property of Mukhtar Ablyazov) |
Applicants |
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- and - |
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MUKHTAR ABLYAZOV |
Respondent |
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Mr Anthony Trace QC and Mr Alexander Winter (instructed by Stephenson Harwood, One St Paul's Churchyard, London EC4M 8SH) for the Respondents
Hearing dates: 11th April 2011
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Briggs:
THE FACTS
"In all the circumstances, it is not surprising that Mr Justice Teare, who has after all been familiar with the case since August 2009 and has seen and heard Mr Ablyazov being cross-examined over a two-day period, came to the conclusion that Mr Ablyazov wanted to make it difficult for the bank to enforce the freezing order and might use the structure by which he holds his assets to deal with them in breach of the order. These are exactly the circumstances in which a receivership order will be justified."
"To take all such steps as may seem expedient to recover and preserve the Property and the Undisclosed Assets, and in particular shall have the powers set out in Schedule 4 hereto."
"to carry on the business of, or associated with, any part of the Property or any part of the Undisclosed Assets, insofar as may be necessary for the preservation of its value provided for the avoidance of doubt that where the company whose shares are receivership assets holds shares in another company, the Receivers shall not, without further order of the court, carry on any business of the other company or of any other company of which it is a shareholder."
"To do all such things as may be necessary for the preservation and maintenance of the Property and the Undisclosed Assets or any of the share certificates, securities, books, instruments, evidence of title and other documents and records, whether electronic or otherwise, that are required hereunder to be delivered up."
"The First Defendant shall:
(a) give to the Receivers such information and documentation relating to the Property and the Undisclosed Assets, and where the said Property or Undisclosed Assets consist of shares in companies used by the First Defendant as part of a structure through which to hold his interests in a business or asset, such information and documentation relating to all companies and their respective business and assets within that structure.
(b) attend on the Receivers at all such times, and
(c) do all such things (including, without limitation, using its best endeavors to procure its agents, nominees, trustees or attorneys to do all such things),
as the Receivers may reasonably require for the purposes of getting in the Property and Undisclosed Assets, and carrying out their functions."
"The receivership application is transferred to the Chancery Division, pursuant to CPR Rule 30.5, to which division all applications relating to the receivership shall be made."
Paragraph 27 provides as follows:
"The Receivers shall be permitted to use and/or disclose all information that has come, or will come, into their possession for the purposes of the receivership and no such use shall be restricted by or be a breach of, paragraph 15 of the order of Mr Justice Teare dated 12 November 2009 (and subsequently amended), and/or paragraph 5 of the order of Mr Justice Teare dated 22 April 2010; save that such disclosure (insofar as it relates to information provided by the First Defendant), if directed towards the Claimant, shall in the first instance be provided to the Claimants' solicitors, Hogan Lovells International LLP, who shall continue to comply with paragraph 15 of the order of Mr Justice Teare dated 12 November 2009, (as subsequently amended), absent further order."
THE LAW
"Three legal concepts or categories have been in play in these cases. The first is privacy, in the sense that because arbitration is private that privacy would be violated by the publication or dissemination of documents deployed in the arbitration. The second is confidentiality in the sense where it is used to refer to inherent confidentiality in the information in documents, such as trade secrets or other confidential Information generated or deployed in an arbitration. The third is confidentiality in the sense of an implied agreement that documents disclosed or generated in arbitration can only be used for the purposes of the arbitration. The distinction between the second and third cases may be illustrated by the case (not far from this one) where the relevant documents in the arbitration (such as the defence) do not contain anything in themselves which is confidential; nevertheless the parties are under an obligation not to use it for any purposes other than the arbitration, and that obligation is described in the authorities as an obligation of confidence."
"The conduct of arbitrations is private. That is implicit in the agreement to arbitrate. That does not mean that the arbitration is private for all purposes."
At paragraph 104, he noted the increasing trend for the privacy of arbitrations to be protected. At paragraph 105, he said as follows:
"But case law over the last 20 years has established that there is an obligation, implied by law and arising out of the nature of arbitration, on both parties not to disclose or use for any other purpose any documents prepared for and used in the arbitration or disclosed and produced in the course of the arbitration, or transcripts or notes of the evidence in the arbitration or the award, and not to disclose in any other way what evidence has been given by any witness in the arbitration. The obligation is not limited to commercially confidential information in the traditional sense."
At paragraph 107, he concluded:
"In my judgment, the content of the obligation may depend on the context in which it arises and on the nature of the information or documents at issue. The limits of that obligation are still in the process of development on a case-by-case basis. On the authorities as they now stand, the principal cases in which disclosure will be permissible are these:
The first is where there is consent, express or implied. Second, where there is an order, or leave of the court, (but that does not mean the court has a general discretion to lift the obligation of confidentiality); Third, where it is reasonably necessary for the protection of the legitimate interests of an arbitrating party; Fourth, where the interests of justice require disclosure; and also (perhaps) where the public interest requires disclosure."
"Unless the parties expressly agree in writing to the contrary, the parties undertake as a general principle to keep confidential all awards in their arbitration, together with all materials in the proceedings created for the purpose of the arbitration and all other documents produced by another party in the proceedings not otherwise in the public domain - save and to the extent that disclosure may be required of a party by legal duty, to protect or pursue a legal right or to enforce or challenge an award in bona fide legal proceedings before a state court or other judicial authority."
In Merkin on Arbitration Law at paragraph 17.26, the editors speak of a duty of confidentiality. The editors of Gee on Commercial Injunctions, (5th ed), make a similar distinction to that which is to be found in the Emmott case, between privacy on the one hand and confidentiality on the other. To these categories there is, of course, to be added legal professional privilege and litigation privilege; as to which the principles were not in dispute between counsel, but their application was.
ANALYSIS