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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 >> London Capital & Finance Plc & Ors v Thomson & Ors [2024] EWHC 1684 (Ch) (24 June 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2024/1684.html Cite as: [2024] EWHC 1684 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
BUSINESS LIST (ChD) AND INSOLVENCY AND COMPANIES LIST (ChD)
B e f o r e :
____________________
(1) LONDON CAPITAL & FINANCE PLC (IN ADMINISTRATION)
(2) FINBARR O'CONNELL, ADAM STEPHENS, HENRY SHINNERS,
COLIN HARDMAN AND GEOFFREY ROWLEY (JOINT
ADMINISTRATORS OF LONDON CAPITAL & FINANCE PLC (IN ADMINISTRATION))
(3) LONDON OIL & GAS LIMITED (IN ADMINISTRATION)
(4) FINBARR O'CONNELL, ADAM STEPHENS, COLIN HARDMAN AND LANE BEDNASH (JOINT ADMINISTRATORS OF LONDON OIL & GAS
LIMITED (IN ADMINISTRATION))
Claimants
-and-
(1) MICHAEL ANDREW THOMSON
(2) SIMON HUME-KENDALL
(3) ELTEN BARKER
(4) SPENCER GOLDING
(5) PAUL CARELESS
(6) SURGE FINANCIAL LIMITED
(7) JOHN RUSSELL-MURPHY
(8) ROBERT SEDGWICK
(9) GROSVENOR PARK INTELLIGENT INVESTMENTS LIMITED
(10) HELEN HUME-KENDALL
Defendants
____________________
Timothy Dutton KC (instructed by Kingsley Napley LLP) for the Fifth Defendant
Hearing date: 24 June 2024
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Miles :
Introduction
The nature of the litigation
Principles about the use of property subject to proprietary freezing orders
"In the case of proprietary injunctions, however, the position is different: see Grant and Mumford, Civil Fraud (1st edn) at §32-059 to §32-068. Here the principles are as follows:
(1) Since the basis of the proprietary claim is that the particular asset in question is said to belong to the claimant, the question is not whether the defendant should be able to use his own assets, but whether he should be permitted to use assets which may turn out to be the claimant's. There is therefore no presumption in favour of his being able to do so.
(2) There are four questions which fall to be answered: Independent Trustee Services Ltd v GP Noble Trustees Ltd [2009] EWHC 161 (Ch) ("ITS") at [6] per Lewison J. The first is whether the claimant has an arguable proprietary claim to the money.
(3) The second is whether the defendant has arguable grounds for claiming the money himself; as Millett LJ said in The Ostrich Farming Corp Ltd v Ketchell (unrepd, 10 Dec 1997):
"No man has a right to use somebody else's money, for the purpose of defending himself against legal proceedings."
(4) The third is whether the defendant has shown that he has no other funds available to him for this purpose.
(5) But even if the defendant gets over this hurdle then the Court has a discretion: Sundt Wrigley, where Sir Thomas Bingham referred to the Court having to make a:
"careful and anxious judgment … as to whether the injustice of permitting the use of the funds held by the defendant is outweighed by the possible injustice to the defendant if he is denied the opportunity of advancing what may, in course, turn out to be a successful defence."
(I have not seen a transcript of this judgment but only quotations from it, and in some of these the words "what may, in course, turn out" appear as "what may of course turn out", but nothing of course turns on this.) See also Xylas v Khanna (unrepd, 4 Nov 1992) where Hoffmann LJ referred to the decision requiring the balancing of the risks of injustice and to it being very much a matter of discretion."
Positions of the parties
The application for the unilateral notice
"(1) A person must not exercise any of the following rights without reasonable cause ... (b) the right to apply for the entry of a notice or restriction.
(2) The duty under this section is owed to any person who suffers damage in consequence of its breach.
The proprietary freezing injunction
"I had and have no other source of liquid funds over which I have any control. I attach at pages 49 to 51 of PC 3 a schedule of my assets. This was provided to Mishcon de Reya, as I describe further below, on 29 January 2024. All of these assets have been derived, at least in part, from money which came from Surge's contract with LCF. I have no assets which are not derived at least in part from this source. There has been no suggestion that this list is somehow incomplete or inaccurate. My house is the only substantial asset that I can sell in order to fund my defence. At no time during these proceedings until 4 January, as I describe further below, have Mishcon De Reya suggested that their clients should be entitled to a proprietary injunction against me, or sought undertakings as to my assets. They have not suggested that there should be any restriction on my using what I consider to be my assets in order to fund my legal fees. In fact, quite the opposite."
a. His witness statement is qualified in an important sense, in that he says that the assets which he has referred to derive "at least in part" from monies to which LCF lays claim. Moreover, in the letter of 29 January he made it clear that he did not accept that the assets were subject to those proprietary claims. He does not say that the listed assets are subject in their entirety to the claims or identify the extent to which he contends that they are not so subject.
b. There was no dispute at the trial about the very large amounts of money received by the fifth defendant from Surge deriving from LCF and the large amounts earned by Surge from Blackmore which it is reasonable to suppose led to further payments to the fifth defendant. It is striking that the fifth defendant has disclosed such a limited pool of assets, given the very substantial amounts he received in the period up to the end of 2018. He has not disclosed how it is that he has quite such a limited pool of assets as he now contends. He has not explained even in broad terms what has happened to the many millions of pounds he had at the end of 2018.
c. He has not provided details of the loans set out in the schedule, which amount to over £600,000.
d. He has not provided any evidential basis to allow the court to assess the reality of the £100,000 valuation in relation to Service Box.
"If a defendant can establish that he has no assets unaffected by proprietary claims against him on which he can draw to meet his living and legal expenses, then the court should balance considerations of justice on both sides [The Third Stage]:
(1) The court must consider where the balance of justice lies as between, on the one hand, permitting the defendant to expend funds which might belong to the claimant and, on the other hand, refusing to allow the defendant to expend funds which might belong to it: see Marino at [23].
(2) It does not automatically follow that a defendant should be entitled to draw on proprietary funds if he can show that he has no other funds with which to defend the action; see Ostrich Farming at p. 7 (per Millett LJ).
(3) The court is required to come to a "careful and anxious judgment as to whether the injustice of permitting the use of the funds by the defendant is outweighed by the possible injustice to the defendant if he is denied the opportunity of advancing what may of course turn out to be a successful defence": Marino at [19]. This balancing exercise should be carried out based on "all relevant circumstances": see Ostrich Farming at p.10, per Roche LJ.
(4) There are less strong reasons to permit the payment of incurred legal fees rather than future legal expenses. The court is concerned with the interests of the parties and not the defendant's solicitors: see Angel Group Ltd v Davey (unrep, Ch D, 21 February 2018) ("Angel Group Ltd") at [46].
(5) The court will "act cautiously so as to ensure that the funds are not wasted", which may be achieved by "limiting the amount ... even if that may cause a defendant to reassess how to pursue her case or to consider alternative funding models": see Angel Group Ltd at [44] to [45].
(6) It is not conclusive that the defendant will have to act as litigant in person. The defendant may be able to receive a fair hearing through such representation; Marino at [31].
(7) A key factor in the granting of permission to use arguably proprietary funds is the court's interest in having parties professionally represented; see Fundo Soberano de Angola v Dos Santos [2018] EWHC 3624 (Comm), per Popplewell J as he then was, at [11] and [29] to [33].
(8) It will be relevant to consider what undertakings or offers are made by the defendant. For example a defendant may offer to replenish funds taken from proprietary assets with non-proprietary assets; see Marino at [19]."
Conclusion