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England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> King v Tune & Ors [2004] EWHC 1505 (Comm) (26 June 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2004/1505.html Cite as: [2004] EWHC 1505 (Comm) |
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QUEENS BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Carolyn Jane King |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Malcolm Eliott Tune and Ors |
Defendants |
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David Chivers QC (instructed by Druces & Attlee) for the Eighth and Ninth Defendants
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice David Steel :
" 77A For the avoidance of doubt, in relation to the claim against Bryan and Alexander Jeeves as joint tortfeasors with Mr. Tune in fraud:
(1) The fraud includes not just Mr. Tune's deceiving Ms. King and other investors into making the investments but the making of the investments (in the case of Ms. King) by procuring her to issue recommendations (or, according to the 8th and 9th Defendants, instructions) to Bryan Jeeves to make those investments and the execution of those recommendations or instructions by Bryan and Alexander Jeeves, without which there would be no fraud.
(2) If, as is Ms. King's case, Bryan and Alexander Jeeves had sufficient knowledge that Mr Tune was deceiving Ms. King and thereafter continued to act upon and execute Ms. King's recommendations or instructions to make the investments procured by his fraud, they became parties or privy to the fraud and/or actively participated in it by acting upon and executing the recommendations or instructions.
(3) Further or in the alternative, if, as is Ms. King's case, Bryan and Alexander Jeeves had sufficient knowledge that Mr. Tune was deceiving Ms. King and thereafter continued to act upon and execute Ms. King's recommendations or instructions to make the investments procured by his fraud, Bryan and Alexander Jeeves became parties or privy to Mr. Tune's fraudulent design and/or it became a concerted action or common design and/or a design in which they joined and participated to defraud Ms. King and/or they combined with Mr. Tune to do the acts which constitute the fraud.
(4) Further or in the alternative, if, as is Ms. King's case Bryan and Alexander Jeeves were sufficiently aware of the fraudulent plan and continued to act upon and execute Ms. King's recommendations or instructions to make the investments procured by Mr. Tune's fraud and/or did nothing to stop it, they at least tacitly agreed to it and/or joined in its execution, and/or there was an unlawful combination between them and Mr. Tune to defraud Ms. King such that they have conspired with Mr. Tune to defraud Ms. King and are liable as joint tortfeasors with Mr. Tune in fraud.
(5) Bryan and Alexander Jeeves benefited from the fraud through the fees and commissions in relation to Ms. King's affairs and in relation to the affairs of other investor clients of Mr. Tune for whom they also acted. It is not presently known whether they received any other benefit from the fraud.
77B Further or in the alternative, by reason of the matters pleaded in sub-paragraph (4) above, Bryan and Alexander Jeeves are liable with Mr. Tune for the separate tort of conspiracy to defraud Ms. King, an unlawful means of conspiracy. An intention to injure Ms. King is inherent in the nature of conspiracy to defraud and/or is sufficiently established by the fact that knowing Ms. King's recommendations or instructions to make the investments to have been procured by fraud Bryan and Alexander Jeeves nonetheless deliberately continued to act upon and execute them knowing the probable consequences for Ms. King.
77C Further or in the alternative, Mr. Tune was in breach of his fiduciary duty to Ms. King, and Bryan and Alexander Jeeves are liable as constructive trustees for having dishonestly predicated in or assisted Mr. Tune's fraudulent or dishonest design and breach of fiduciary duty."
Title to Sue
a) The payments were made out of assets of the Foundation and Lemur respectively.
b) Lemur is a St. Vincent Company: the Foundation has distinct legal personality as a matter of Liechtenstein law.
c) Thus Mrs King is in a like position to a shareholder in a company which has been defrauded and is debarred from bringing an action in her own name in respect of damage that is merely reflective of loss sustained by that company: Johnson v Gore-Wood [2002] 2 AC.1.
i) While the Claimant was clearly a shareholder in Lemur, her position in regards the Foundation, if it be relevant, may be rather different. The formation deed of the Foundation pronounces that its sole purpose is to effect donations to a beneficiary. By virtue of the byelaws, the Claimant is designated as "First Beneficiary". Thereby she is solely entitled "to the Foundation's net assets and the income". Even allowing for the fact that the Foundation may have its own legal personality and hold property in its own right, the Claimant may well be able to contend that her position is more akin to a beneficiary under a trust than a shareholder.
ii) The underlying claim is in deceit against Mr Tune. It is the Claimant's case that the Jeeves' were joint tortfeasors. As pleaded the false representations were directed to and acted upon by the Claimant in the form of arranging transfer of funds on her instructions from Lemur and the Foundation whereby she sustained loss by reason of a reduction in the value of her shareholding in Lemur and in the net assets of the Foundation to which she was solely entitled. The position is (or at least arguably is) that whilst Lemur and the Foundation has sustained loss this is solely as a consequence of a wrong to the sole shareholder and beneficiary and thus there is no bar to the claim: Johnson v Gore-Wood supra per Lord Millet at p.62.
No cause of action
a) that the Jeeves knew that Mr Tune was deceiving the Claimant
b) that against that background they arranged for the investments to be made, and
c) in doing so, they participated in the fraud and assisted Mr Tune to carry it out.
i) That there was or is no more than a plea of knowing assistance,
alternatively
ii) That to the extent of active participation or joint enterprise was relied upon in the pleadings, this was dependant on inferences drawn from the knowledge of the activities of Mr Tune for which, on the facts, there was, it contended, no arguable case.
a) The Jeeves's were closely connected with Mr Tune and managed a number of entities owned by him and indeed by Mr Wheeler.
b) Brian Jeeves had attended a meeting in London with Mr Tune and the Claimant where the Claimant's policy of investing her life savings in low risk, long term investments was discussed.
c) Within 2 years half that fortune had been invested in Isosafe, a recently incorporated company with no sales and dependant on returns on licence fees payable to "Coolbox".
d) The Jeeves group had formed Mendip which was known to be used as a vehicle for owning rights in Coolbox and the money paid by Coolbox to Mendip (and to Rose a subsidiary of Mendip) derived from the original investment made by the Claimant in Isosafe.
e) The other half of the life savings were lent to BV Post for onward loan to Isosafe, such loans being wholly unsecured.
Stay
"They are at the outset exonerated for all dispositions that they shall undertake in good faith pursuant to the principal's explicit instruction…"
"Excluding recourse to the courts of law a Court of Arbitration shall be competent for disputes that may arise from this Contract…."