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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> CPOD SA v De Holanda Jr & Ors [2020] EWHC 1247 (Ch) (20 May 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2020/1247.html Cite as: [2020] EWHC 1247 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Rolls Building, Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
(sitting as a Deputy Judge of the Chancery Division)
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CPOD SA (a company incorporated in Portugal) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) CHRISTIANO NOGUEIRA DE HOLANDA JUNIOR (2) UPCITY LIMITED (3) BURGUIMEXIS UNIPESSOAL LDA (4) LUIS MENEZES (5) CNH ASSOCIATES LIMITED (6) AIRTOWN LIMITED |
Defendants |
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Mr Edward Bennion-Pedley (instructed by gunnercooke LLP) for the First and Sixth Defendants
Hearing date: 13 May 2020
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Crown Copyright ©
MR MICHAEL GREEN QC:
Introduction
Background
(1) Clause 1.1 described the services to be provided and included:
"...i) supervision of labour, supplier supervision and payments; (ii) tracking and verification of delivery of materials at the Property…"
(2) By clause 6.1 the parties acknowledged:
"that the relationship between them established in this Agreement is of independent contracting parties and nothing contained in this Agreement shall be interpreted as establishing a relationship of employment, association, partnership, joint venture or similar relationships"
(3) Clause 6.3 contained an entire agreement clause and stated:
"This Agreement constitutes the entire agreement between the parties and replaces and cancels all agreements and understandings maintained until then between the parties, whether written or oral, in relation to the subject matter of this Agreement."
(4) By clause 6.5 any modifications or changes to the Service Agreements:
"shall be valid through a written instrument signed by the parties";
(5) Clause 6.9 stated that the Service Agreements:
"shall be governed by and interpreted in accordance with the laws of Portugal"
(6) Clause 6.10 provided for the exclusive jurisdiction of the Courts of Lisbon:
"The Parties elect the jurisdiction of Lisbon, Portugal to settle any disputes arising from this Agreement, waiving any other jurisdiction, however privileged it may be."
(1) Upcity or Burguimexis would receive a supplier invoice, normally from one of the main suppliers: Tetrapod Construcao Civil (Tetrapod); or Viterbo Interior Design (Viterbo);
(2) Upcity or Burguimexis would then prepare an invoice from them to CPOD, referring to the supplier invoice and adding their commission to it;
(3) Upcity or Burguimexis would then upload their invoice, together with the supplier invoice to a Dropbox account accessible to CPOD; Mr Menezes, the Fourth Defendant, who was an employee of Mr Holanda or his companies, would normally email CPOD to notify it that the invoices had been uploaded and were now ready for payment;
(4) CPOD would pay Upcity or Burguimexis the value of their invoice and then they in turn would either pay the supplier the amount of the supplier's invoice or use the funds to reimburse themselves if they had paid the supplier in advance;
(5) If a credit note was provided by a supplier and Upcity or Burguimexis had been reimbursed by the supplier, such reimbursements would be passed on to CPOD.
(a) purported supplier invoices which had never been issued by the supplier and did not actually exist (called "Category A Invoices");
(b) purported supplier invoices which had been inflated by doctoring or recreating the original invoice to show a higher liability to the supplier (called "Category B Invoices");
(c) supplier invoices but where subsequent credit notes were issued by the suppliers in respect of those invoices but these were not passed on to CPOD (called "Category C Invoices").
No. Date of transfer Amount Invoice (Purported) supplier invoice [and credit note] 1. 06-Nov-17 €173,902.86 UP 498 FT F/380 2. 06-Nov-17 €131,038.50 UP 499 FT F/382 3. 06-Nov-17 €63,960.00 BURG 032 VITERBO2017/109 4. 01-Dec-17 €36,900.00 BURG 036 VITERBO2017/129 5. 17-Jan-18 £52,578.44 UP 521 FT J/399 6. 08-Feb-18 £100,988.51 UP 528 FT F/434 7. 14-Mar-18 £25,424.89 UP 535 FT F/446 8. 16-Apr-18 £109,125.58 UP 542 FP VITERBO2018/2
[NC 2018/9]9. 16-Apr-18 £238,904.78 UP 543 FT F/409 10. 18-May-18 £112,542.31 UP 549 FT F/417 11. 20-Jul-18 £11,198.08 UP 569 FT VITERBO2018/88
[NC 2018-15]12. 20-Aug-18 £104,531.84 UP 585 FT VITERBO2018/100
[NC 2018-14]13. 07-Aug-18 £8,256.04 UP 580 FT J/399 and J/417 14. 15-Oct-18 £86,950.80 UP 599 FT F/443 15. 23-Nov-18 £68,539.15 UP 614 2018/FP/401 16. 18-Dec-18 £56,566.62 UP 626 2018/FP/405 17. 26-Feb-19 £184,577.24 UP 801 FT 2019/7
[NC 2019/1]18. 27-Feb-19 £179,776.38 UP 802 FT 2019/8
[NC 2019/2]
"I tried many times to defend myself and explain what happened but unfortunately they were not willing to listen. I met with Sampaio more than 3 times to explain and prove that things did not happen the way he was trying to present…"
"I had issues with some invoices but it was something related to my company, of tax related adjustments. I know I was wrong but at the time I thought it was the easiest way to solve the money issues to meet payment deadlines. But I have explained each invoice and it was never to take advantage. In the end, they were all reconciled and I had sent all invoices to the auditors because I didn't think they would take into consideration the invoices altered and would only take into consideration the invoices sent to CPOD."
"I appreciate that CPOD's solicitors are suspicious of that but since the loss of the Dias Family as a client, I have limited liquidity and must trade with what I have."
And in a letter of 16 April 2020, gunnercooke provided further details as to the date, price and purchaser of the Ferrari. I am not in a position to decide whether Mr Holanda is telling the truth about this or not and I do not see that it can have any bearing on the outcome of this application.
The Substantive Claims
"The Claim is for damages or an account of profits, declarations, an account and inquiry and interim relief arising out of a fraudulent scheme in relation to the recharging of supplier invoices:
(1) against all the Defendants, damages or an account of profits for deceit and conspiracy to injure by unlawful means;
(2) against the Second and Third Defendants, damages or an account of profits for breach of fiduciary duties and/or breach of contract;
(3) against the First, Second and Third Defendants, restitution of payments made under mistake giving rise to unjust enrichment and declarations of constructive trust and an account and inquiry;
(4) against the First Defendant, damages or an account of profits for knowing receipt and procuring or instigating breach of contract, asset preservation orders and/or freezing injunctions;
(5) against the First and Fourth Defendants, damages for dishonest assistance;
…"
The Application
Relevant Legal Principles
"As my Lord said, it is a strong order, but the plaintiff's case is that there is a trust fund of $3,500,000. This has disappeared, and the gentlemen against whom orders are sought may be able to give information as to where it is and who is in charge of it. A court of equity has never hesitated to use the strongest powers to protect and preserve a trust fund in interlocutory proceedings on the basis that, if the trust fund disappears by the time the action comes to trial, equity will have been invoked in vain. That is why orders of this sort were made long before the recent orders for discovery and they are at the heart of the Chancery Division's concern, and it is the concern of any court of equity, to see that the stable door is locked before the horse has gone."
"Now these case provide ample authority that, in an action in which the plaintiff seeks to trace property which in equity belongs to him, the court not only has jurisdiction to grant an injunction restraining disposal of that property; it may in addition, at the interlocutory stages of the action, make orders designed to ascertain the whereabouts of that property. In particular, it may order a bank (whether or not party to the proceedings) to give discovery of documents in relation to the bank account of a defendant who is alleged to have defrauded the plaintiff of his assets; and it may make orders for interrogatories to be answered by the defendants or their employees or director."
It actually appears from the end of the note of the judgment that the disclosure sought in relation to the sum in the bank account at the Sixth Defendant was, as against the Sixth Defendant, which was the innocent third party bank against whom there was no allegation of fraud, limited to "discovery of documents". This was what essentially became the Bankers Trust v Shapira type of Order.
"In order to enable justice to be done – in order to enable these funds to be traced – it is a very important part of the court's armoury to be able to order discovery."
And at p.1282B, Lord Denning MR continued:
"It should only be done when there is a good ground for thinking the money in the bank is the plaintiff's money – as, for instance, when the customer has got the money by fraud – or other wrongdoing – and paid it into his account at the bank. The plaintiff who has been defrauded has a right in equity to follow the money."
"Where, as in those three cases, the defendant against whom an order is sought is, albeit wholly innocently, 'mixed up in' the wrongdoing of other defendants, there is a risk of some conflation of the two types of jurisdiction…However, this does not seem to me to alter the fact that there are, in reality, two separate jurisdictions, albeit that in many cases they will overlap."
"12. The Bankers Trust jurisdiction arises where there is strong evidence that the claimant's property has been misappropriated. The case decided that where there is such evidence the court will not hesitate to make strong orders to ascertain the whereabouts of property and to prevent its disposal, and those orders may intrude into what would otherwise be confidential customer information."
"In my judgment it remains the basic principle that disclosure of information occurs by the familiar procedures applicable to proceedings commenced between the relevant parties. Rule 31.16 provides for the exceptional circumstances to which it refers, but again in an adversarial or potentially adversarial context between applicant and respondent. Norwich Pharmacal relief is the third and last port of call restricted in its application in the respects I have sought to summarise."
26 …In my judgment, it is not possible to make an application for disclosure, either standard disclosure or specific disclosure, ahead of its proper time, merely because it will cause no damage to the defendants. The claimant has to have some proper basis for invoking the powers and discretion of the court."
"26.1 Inability of the claimant to plead a case without this relief
This is the main purpose of this application, says Mr McGregor. As a matter of fact I am not able to accept that that is the case. The 24 witness statements already exchanged, the exhibited documents and the summaries that I have already referred to in the claimant's two skeleton arguments suggest to me that there is already a case, and after all the claimants themselves currently call it a good one, against these defendants which could be pleaded now. It would, of course, be incomplete and partial, but it would serve to set in motion the proceedings within which, dependent on the terms of any defences forthcoming, disclosure and further information can be sought in the normal way. I see no reason here to subvert the normal accusatorial basis of our litigation, where the horse precedes the cart, into an inquisitorial one starting from an assumption that guilt has been proved, and saying to the defendants, "Tell us everything you and others have done which was wrong." I remind myself that all that has been shown to date is a good arguable case, no more no less."
(a) it is necessary for such an order to be made now in order to assist CPOD in tracing its assets or money, so as to protect such assets;
(b) it is otherwise just and convenient for such an order to be made now.
Necessity for a disclosure order at this stage
Just and Convenient
(1) Jurisdiction of this Court to try the claim;
(2) Pre-judging the substantive dispute;
(3) Prejudice to the Defendants;
(4) CPOD's conduct in obtaining the freezing order.
(1) Jurisdiction of this Court
(2) Pre-judging the substantive dispute
(3) Prejudice
(4) Conduct of CPOD
Conclusion