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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 >> Bank St Petersburg PJSC & Anor v Arkhangelsky & Ors [2015] EWHC 2997 (Ch) (23 October 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2015/2997.html Cite as: [2016] WLR 1081, [2015] WLR(D) 428, [2015] EWHC 2997 (Ch), [2016] 1 WLR 1081 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
BANK ST PETERSBURG PJSC ALEXANDER SAVELYEV |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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VITALY ARKHANGELSKY JULIA ARKHANGELSKAYA - and - OSLO MARINE GROUP PORTS LLC |
Defendants Additional Party |
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The Defendants appeared by their McKenzie friend, Mr Pavel Stroilov
Hearing dates: 22 and 23 September 2015
Further written submissions 30 September, 9, 16 and 19 October 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Hildyard :
Scope of this judgment
Disclosure
(1) the arrangements between the Bank and OMG in December 2008 for the restructuring of OMG's indebtedness, partly recorded in a "Memorandum" dated 30 December 2008 recording at least some of its terms;
(2) the arrangements recorded in that "Memorandum" for OMG to transfer by way of security (for a nominal consideration) to seven "special companies" ("the Original Purchasers") nominated by the Bank (five in the so-called "Renord Group") of 100% of the shares in two of its group companies, namely Western Terminal (which owned a 7.4 hectare site with two berths in the Port of St Petersburg) and Scandinavia Insurance ("Scan"), a marine insurance and reinsurance company which also (together with another OMG entity, LPK Scandanavia) owned another terminal in the Port of St Petersburg, called the Onega Terminal, and the "repo" arrangements for such shares to be returned to OMG following repayment of the loans;
(3) the further arrangements also recorded in such "Memorandum" whereby the Bank agreed (a) not to interfere in the management of OMG, (b) not to increase interest rates on the loans or demand early repayment and (c) not to transfer the shares transferred as security ("the pledged shares") to any third party, provided that OMG complied with its obligations to the Bank;
(4) the alleged breach by the Bank of the terms of an alleged "Moratorium" apparently envisaged in the "Memorandum" in demanding repayment of the loans in March-April 2009, and the subsequent (a) removal of Mr Arkhangelsky as Director-General of Scan and Mr Vinarski as Director-General of Western Terminal and (b) immediate "sale" of the pledged shares for (allegedly) far less than market value to other companies ("the Subsequent Purchasers"), five in the Renord Group and the sixth a company called SKIF LLC ("SKIF");
(5) the part played by three individuals in the "repo" arrangements, namely (a) Mr Mikhail Smirnov ("Mr Smirnov") a former employee of the Bank and the owner (possibly on behalf of another) of the so-called Renord Group, (b) Mr Leonid Zelyenov ("Mr Zelyenov"), the owner and/or controller of the other two Original Purchasers and (c) Mr Valdimir Sklyarevsky ("Mr Sklyarevsky"), the legal owner of SKIF;
(6) the pledges in favour of the Bank of alleged valuable assets of OMG (in particular of Western Terminal and Scan);
(7) subsequent dealings (over the course of 2009 to 2012) with the assets of Western Terminal and Scan between various companies in the Renord Group, and then their sale at (what are alleged to be) gross undervalues at what the Claimants claim are public auctions, but which it is alleged by the Defendants were falsely so described and/or rigged.
Part 1: documents in physical possession of the Claimants
Part 2: documents allegedly controlled by Messrs Smirnov, Zelyenov and Skylarevsky
English procedural test of control
"…a party has or has had a document in his control if –
(a) it is or was in his physical possession;
(b) he has or has had a right to possession of it; or
(c) he has or has had a right to inspect or take copies of it."
"In determining whether documents in the physical possession of a third party are in a litigant's control for the purposes of CPR 31.8, the court must have regard to the true nature of the relationship between the third party and the litigant. The concept of "right to possession" in CPR 31.8(2)(b) covers a situation where a third party is in possession of documents as agent for a litigant. The same would apply in my view if the true nature of the relationship was that the litigant was to be the puppet master in the handling of money entrusted to him for the specific purpose of defeating the claim of a creditor. The situation would be akin to agency. But even if there were on a strict legal view no "right to possession", for example, because the parties to the arrangement caused the documents to be held in a jurisdiction whose laws would preclude the physical possessor from handing them over to the party at whose behest he was truly acting, it would be open to the English court in such circumstances to find that as a matter of fact the documents were nevertheless within the control of that party within the meaning of CPR 31.8(1). CPR 31.8(2) states that for the purpose of CPR 31.8(1) a party has or has had a document in his control if the case falls within paragraphs (a) to (c). It does not state that a party has or has had a document in his control if but only if the case falls within one of those paragraphs."
Defendants' submissions
"a relationship that is sufficiently akin to agency to come within the North Shore Ventures test".
(1) the acceptance by Mr Smirnov, the CEO of the Renord Group (and in particular, its parent company Renord-Invest), in his witness statement dated 28 August 2015 that he understood the purpose of the "repo" arrangements to be to provide the Bank with a means to ensure effective security until repayment of the loan, at which time the shares would be transferred back to OMG, and that he
"did not see the "repo" transaction as a big deal. Renord-Invest would simply hold the shares on an interim basis and in accordance with the Bank's instructions";
(2) Mr Savelyev's confirmation in his first witness statement made on 27 August 2015 that such "repo" arrangements were in standard use by Russian banks at the time, and that their purpose was, by ensuring that the Bank would obtain an interest in OMG, to:
"safeguard assets held by [OMG companies] from being unlawfully dissipated or otherwise transferred in such a way as to prevent the Bank from enforcing its rights against those assets, in the event that the debts were not discharged";
(3) the evidence of Mr Sklyarevsky, General Director of the SKIF group in the Russian Federation, that (a) the "key motivation" of the transfers on to the Subsequent Purchasers was to frustrate any OMG claims in the Russian courts and to protect the Bank by making it more difficult for Mr Arkhangelsky to unwind the transfers and that (b) the management changes in Scan and Western Terminal after the alleged "default" and the transfers on to the Subsequent Purchasers were at the direction and on the instructions of the Bank (showing the Bank's continuing interest and control);
(4) Mr Smirnov's evidence that the onward transfers to the Subsequent Purchasers were directed by him "due to Renord-Invest's operational needs at the time" and to make any challenge by Mr Arkhangelsky to the legitimacy and effectiveness of the pledges of shares more difficult;
(5) Mr Smirnov's evidence that after the alleged "default", and "over time",
"Renord-Invest became interested in purchasing some of the assets for its own investment projects and did so at public auctions and for the market value…";
(6) Renord-Invest and SKIF between themselves controlled all Subsequent Purchasers, most of the intermediate holders of assets, and all ultimate purchasers of pledges at purportedly "public auctions";
(7) Renord-Invest is the majority shareholder of Baltic Fuel Company, which has ultimately acquired all Western Terminal assets (pledged or unpledged), and is now utilising them in a successful seaport business, allegedly broadly similar to Mr. Arkhangelsky's.
"Simply put, the Defendants say that the Bank and Renord is controlled by the same group of people and/or members of the same conspiracy, to the extent that, for practical purposes, it is unnecessary to distinguish between them. The Bank describes Renord, SKIF and Mr. Zelyenov as its well-established clients and independent parties; and has consistently emphasised that point."
(1) Mr Smirnov (or any corporate entities owned and/or controlled by him, including, but not limited to, Renord-Invest and any nominees of Renord-Invest);
(2) Mr Zelyenov (or any corporate entities owned and/or controlled by him, including, but not limited to, Agetnstvo Po Upravleniyu Aktivami LLC, Gelios LLC, or any nominees of those companies);
(3) Mr Sklyarevsky (or any corporate entities owned and/or controlled by him, including, but not limited to, SKIF and any nominees of SKIF).
Claimants' response
"No basis has been set out and no agency has been set out that ultimately drills down to some specific documents that the bank has the right to call for without more."
(1) The individuals concerned (Messrs Smirnov, Zelyenov and Sklyarevsky) do not work for the Bank: each of them is an independent businessman.
(2) The fact that, as a favour to the Bank, they agreed that companies under their control would hold shares as part of the repo transaction does not change that. It did not give the Bank any entitlement to their documents.
(3) The Bank cannot be expected to conduct a disclosure search for documents held by "any corporate entities owned and/or controlled by" any of these three individuals, still less any held by unnamed "nominees" of particular companies. The Defendants' formulation does not even restrict the search to documents within the control of the Bank (it assumes that every document held by every one of the companies owned or controlled by these men can be searched for by the Bank); moreover, there is no explanation as to how the Bank is to know which companies fall into this category. Still further, it is not clear how and by what process the Bank is to obtain their documents.
(4) The orders sought would be impossible for the Bank to implement (or for the Court to police).
My analysis and proposed directions
Part 3: documents held by liquidator(s)/administrators
"represented in the Assembly of Creditors and probably in the Committee of Creditors, and would therefore have a right to inspect at least some documents. The bankruptcies of those three companies are clearly highly relevant to the issues in these proceedings, and appropriate searches must be carried out."
Points of detailed drafting of the Order in dispute
Expert Reports: whether translation into Russian is required
(1) In accordance with the settled EU rules of interpretation, the interpretation of the Regulation must advance its purposes. In the light of recitals (1) and (2), as well as the right to a fair trial, the purpose of Recital (12) and Article 8 is to validate service in a language which the addressee understands even if it is not an official state language. It is not an intention of the Regulation to limit an addressee's right to a fair trial by validating service of documents in a language which she does not understand.
(2) In any event, in this case the Defendants have agreed to dispense with the requirement of a French translation and a number of other onerous requirements to service under the French law on the condition that the documents would be accompanied by Russian translations. Unless that condition is satisfied, the Defendants are not prepared to waive any of their rights under the French law, such as service by authorised bailiffs and accompanied by a French translation. Alternative service would have to be ordered by the Court if, and only if, the Court is satisfied that there are sufficiently good reasons to dispense with those requirements without the Defendants' consent.
(1) On 4 September 2012, M. Ameli of BEA Avocats, representing the Defendants in France, proposed the following relevant terms:
"ii. Our clients agree to dispense with the requirement of translation into Russian of correspondence between the parties and of any court documents (orders, directions, allocation questionnaires).
iii. Save for the dispensations in point (b) and the documentary exhibits with Russian originals, all other documents served on our clients must be accompanied by a Russian translation."
(2) On 4 September, Baker & MacKenzie responded (para 4):
"(b) On the basis that translations of all court documents (including application notices, draft orders and disclosure lists in addition to those listed by you) be dispensed with, out understanding is that only witness statements, including exhibits, and expert reports will require translation. Please confirm that the above is consistent with your understanding.
(c) While our clients agree to translate exhibits as a general rule, there may be occasions where the translation of a certain document might be disproportionate (e.g. where the document is very large and only one page is relevant). In those cases the parties should cooperate to reach an agreement regarding the need to translate that document, but in the absence of such agreement the document should be translated (without prejudice to any claim for costs)."
Postscript
Conclusion