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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 >> Dubai Islamic Bank PJSC v PSI Energy Holding Company BSC & Anor [2013] EWHC 3781 (Comm) (06 December 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2013/3781.html Cite as: [2013] EWHC 3781 (Comm) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
DUBAI ISLAMIC BANK PJSC |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) PSI ENERGY HOLDING COMPANY BSC (a Bahraini corporation) (2) RYAN CORNELIUS (3) CHARLES RIDLEY (4) EREN NIL (5) CCH EUROPE GMBH (a German corporation) |
Defendants |
____________________
Max Mallin (instructed by Archerfield Partners LLP) for the First and Second Defendants
David Mills (with the permission of the Court) represented the Third Defendant
Hearing dates: 8-10, 14-16, 21, 23 and 24 October 2013
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
The Honourable Mr Justice Flaux:
Introduction and background
(1) The second and third defendants formally still deny the underlying fraud. For reasons which are set out at the end of the next section of the judgment, to the extent that that defence is persisted in, it is not open to the second and third defendants.(2) The second and third defendants deny that there was an Event of Default under the RSA entitling the Bank to accelerate the debt.
(3) The second and third defendants contend that any default was engineered wrongfully by the Bank, which procured the arrest of those defendants and of Mr Fitzwilliam (whose significance in this context appears hereafter) and then served notices of default on the second and third defendants and Plantation, knowing that the default could not be cured as they were all in prison. It is contended that the Bank is disentitled from relying upon the default.
(4) It is contended by the second defendant (but not the third defendant) that the Bank was in repudiatory breach of the RSA in failing to provide a Standby Loan Facility to Plantation and/or in taking steps to enforce its security over the lease owned by Plantation of certain land in Dubai in circumstances where there was no Plantation Enforcement Event within the meaning of the RSA. It is contended by the second defendant that he accepted the repudiation as terminating the RSA and that, having done so, any obligations he was under pursuant to the RSA came to an end.
(5) The second and third defendants contend that because the Bank took steps to enforce its security over the lease owned by Plantation in circumstances where there was no Plantation Enforcement Event within the meaning of the RSA, the second and third defendants were discharged from their liability as guarantors and from their liability to indemnify the Bank under the RSA.
(6) It is contended that the Bank was in breach of its duty as mortgagee in possession of the Plantation land, thereby giving rise to a counterclaim or cross-claim by the second and third defendants.
(7) The first and second defendants contend that the Bank is not entitled to trace monies into the Afren shares.
The fraud on the Bank and its discovery
The RSA
INTRODUCTION
(D) In settlement of any potential claims against them in respect of the application of the Advances, the CCH Individual Guarantors have agreed to each provide a guarantee and indemnity to the Bank ("the CCH Individual Guarantees") in respect of the Company and the Parent's obligations under the Agency Agreements and this Restructuring Agreement and on the terms described herein.
(E) In settlement of any potential claims against it (or its directors and officers) in respect of the application of the Advances, Plantation has agreed to provide a guarantee and indemnity to the Bank ("the Third Party Guarantee") in respect of the Company and the Parent's obligations under the Agency Agreements and this Restructuring Agreement and on the terms described herein.
IT IS AGREED as follows:
1 Definitions
Earmarked Plantation Proceeds
those amounts of Plantation Villa Proceeds that are: (a) Escrow Proceeds; or (b) required by law to be applied for building or other specified purposes
Escrow Proceeds
those amounts of Plantation Villa Proceeds required by Law to be retained on escrow, but only for so long as they must remain in escrow or approved in accordance with Law
Event of Default
any one of the events mentioned in clause 18.1 (Events)
Law
any federal, state, local or foreign law (including common law and equity), statute, code, ordinance, rule or regulation
Lease
the lease agreement in respect of land at Dubailand in the United Arab Emirates dated 25 January 2004 between Arthur Fitzwilliam and Dubai Development and Investment Authority (or as subsequently amended or assigned)
Plantation Enforcement Event
breach of the provisions of the following sub-paragraphs of clause 18.1(Events): sub-paragraph (a) and, where such breach is caused by the default of Plantation, sub-paragraphs (c) - (k), in the case of sub-paragraphs (a), (c) - (e) or (h) - (k) subject to the provisos at clause 18.1(a) (Events)
Plantation Villa Proceeds
the proceeds, when collected, of sale of plots in the residential villa element of the Plantation but excluding: (a) Earmarked Plantation Proceeds and (b) those Plantation Villa Proceeds received in respect of sales of plots made prior to the Effective Date.
Proceeds Asset
any asset with a realisable market value of US$10,000 (or equivalent in any other currency), whether held by the CCH Corporate Guarantors, the CCH Individual Guarantors or otherwise, materially funded by the Advances, whether directly or indirectly and whether or not in accordance with the terms of the Agency Agreements
Standby Loan Facility
a standby loan facility of up to US$50 million at any time to be used principally for the building of infrastructure for the Plantation Project in accordance with the master development plan in place for the Plantation Project as at the Effective Date.
Standstill Period
the period commencing on the Effective Date and ending upon the later of notification of:
(a) a Standstill Termination Event to the Company and the Parent; and
(b) in accordance with clause 3.5,
provided that the Standstill Period shall automatically end upon the occurrence of any of the events referred to in clauses 18.1(f), (g), (h) or (j) in respect of the Company or the Parent regardless of whether any notification is given.
3 Standstill
3.1 Subject to the terms of this Restructuring Agreement, the Bank agrees with the Company and the Parent that, during the Standstill Period, it will not:
(a) exercise as against the Company and the Parent any rights which it may have under the Agency Agreements as a consequence of or in relation to any Agency Defaults;
(b) petition for or initiate any insolvency or reorganisation procedure in relation to the Company or the Parent: or
(c) make any claim or demand on the Company or the Parent in an amount such that such claim or demand would cause the Company or the Parent to become insolvent on a cash flow or balance sheet basis.
3.2 Upon the expiry of the Standstill Period the Bank will be entitled forthwith and without further notice to any party to this Restructuring Agreement to exercise any and all rights which it may have against the Company or the Parent, subject in either case to such releases arising under clause 12 as have at the time in question become unconditional.
4 The Rescheduling Amount
Amount
4.1 The Rescheduling Amount as at the date of this Restructuring Agreement is US$501,284,616.56 representing all the Advances made by the Bank under the Agency Agreements and profit thereon and whether or not such Advances were applied in accordance with the terms of the Agency Agreements. Additionally, the Bank's costs (recoverable under clause 22.1 from parties other than the Parent) shall form part of the Rescheduling Amount.
Amounts fully drawn
4.2 The Rescheduling Amount does not represent a loan facility and subject to any arrangements made pursuant to clause 11 (Additional Funding), the Bank shall not be obliged to commit or make available for drawing any further amounts under this Restructuring Agreement or the Agency Agreements.
No redrawing
4.3 Any amounts repaid pursuant to this Restructuring Agreement (except in relation to repayments made under the Standby Loan Facility) shall be applied by the Bank towards satisfaction of the Rescheduling Amount and shall not, for the avoidance of doubt, be available for redrawing, save with the consent of the Bank (such consent not to be unreasonably withheld) in circumstances where the Company or the Parent as the case may be justifies to the Bank that such redrawing is necessary to achieve collection of CCH Agency Receivables identified in the schedule to be produced in accordance with clause 17.7. Such redrawn sums shall not count towards repayment.
Advances due and payable
4.4 All of the Advances shall, notwithstanding any provision of the Agency Agreements but subject to clause 3 (Standstill) be immediately due and payable and, to the extent necessary, the Agency Agreements shall be deemed to have been so varied.
5 Acknowledgement of debt
The Guarantors acknowledge the Rescheduling Amount as being due and payable to the Bank by the Company and the Parent as follows:
(a) the Company in full, including for the avoidance of doubt both the Company Advances and the Parent Advances; and
(b) the Parent, as to an amount of US$50m in respect of Parent Advances only,
and in each case without set-off or deduction in any regard and in accordance with the terms of this Restructuring Agreement.
6 Guarantee and Indemnity
6.1 In consideration of the various releases set out in clause 12 (Release from liability) the Guarantors:
(a) jointly and severally and as continuing security guarantee the repayment of the Rescheduling Amount on the terms set out herein; and, as an additional and independent obligation; and
(b) jointly and severally indemnify the Bank as principal debtors in respect of any failure or inability to recover the Rescheduling Amount as provided for herein,
provided that the liability of the Parent under this clause 6.1 shall not exceed US$100m and shall reduce by the amount paid by the Parent and/or the Company from proceeds of the CCH Agency Receivables or, in the case of sums paid by the Parent only, from any other source available to the Parent.
6.2 The terms set out in Schedule 5 shall apply.
7 Repayment
Repayment in instalments
7.1 Subject to the provisions of clauses 7.2 and 7.3 the Company and the Parent will repay the Rescheduling Amount to the Bank in instalments on each Repayment Date. The amount that shall be repaid to the Bank on or before each Repayment Date is the amount set out in Schedule 2 (Repayment Schedule) corresponding to such Repayment Date and in the case of the Parent limited to the Parent Advances.
Application of certain asset proceeds
7.2 The Guarantors shall take reasonable steps to procure that all of the following proceeds and any proceeds derived from the following sources (in each case net of any associated transaction costs including without limitation necessary and incidental amounts to third parties) shall be applied forthwith upon receipt and in mandatory prepayment of the Rescheduling Amount:
….
(d) the Plantation Villa Proceeds so far as they exceed US$150,000 per month provided that such sum has been disbursed or committed to the purposes of the development of Plantation Project;
8 Security
8.1 As security for their respective obligations under this Restructuring Agreement, the Guarantors shall grant security as set out below.
8.2 Plantation shall (and Arthur Fitzwilliam shall procure that Plantation shall) grant to the Bank:
(a) a first ranking charge, by way of conditional assignment, of the Lease. For the avoidance of doubt such security shall not encompass assets of Plantation not forming part of the development contemplated in the Lease; and
(b) a first ranking charge by way of assignment of the benefit of:
(i) the Plantation Villa Receivables;
(ii) the Plantation Villa Proceeds; and
(iii) the Earmarked Plantation Receivables,
provided that:
(iv) prior to the enforcement of the charge:
(A) Plantation Villa Receivables may be collected in by Plantation in the ordinary course and dealt with in accordance with the terms of this Restructuring Agreement; and
(B) the Earmarked Plantation Proceeds shall be available to be applied for those Earmarked Plantation Proceeds purposes; and
(v) the charge shall not be enforceable against Escrow Proceeds for so long as they are held by Plantation in escrow.
11 Additional Funding
11.1 Subject to such consideration, based on due diligence in respect of the Plantation Project, as a commercially reasonable lender would be expected to have (acting consistently with Sharia law), the Bank agrees to make available to Plantation the Standby Loan Facility.
11.2 Any such Standby Loan Facility shall be on commercially reasonable terms (having regard to the requirement that any terms are consistent with Sharia law) to be agreed between the Bank and Plantation and shall include a drawdown ratio such that:
(a) in the first 120 days and up to a maximum of US$l5million after the facility is made available US$1 shall be available for drawdown against each US$1 actually repaid against the Rescheduling Amount; and
(b) thereafter US$1 shall be so available for each US$3 so repaid subject to air overall maximum facility limit of US$50million.
11.3 The purpose of any such Standby Loan Facility shall be principally to finance the building of infrastructure for the Plantation Project so as to facilitate timely and full repayment of the Rescheduling Amount, and accordingly it shall be an event of default under the Standby Loan Facility (requiring immediate repayment of the Standby Loan Facility) if a Plantation Enforcement Event occurs.
12 Releases from liability
Company, Parent and CCH Individual Guarantors
12.4 In consideration of the CCH Corporate Guarantees, the CCH Individual Guarantees and the covenants to enter into the Security Documents the Bank hereby agrees, to irrevocably waive and compromise any and all claims, whether existing or future, known or unknown, it has or may have against each of the Guarantors arising from or in connection with the Agency Agreements and the transactions contemplated by the Agency Agreements whether or not funds were appropriated in accordance with the terms of the Agency Agreements, provided that any claims in respect of Proceeds Assets shall not be waived or compromised unless expressly done so in writing by the Bank.
13 Proceeds Assets
13.1 The parties agree that insofar as any Proceeds Asset is within their ownership or control they will:
(a) disclose it to the Bank;
(b) at the Bank's request, grant the Bank security over that Proceeds Asset ranking behind any security existing at the Effective Date except in favour of the Guarantors; and
(c) at the Bank's request, sell or permit the Bank to sell the Proceeds Asset and apply the net proceeds of sale against the Rescheduling Amount.
13.2 The parties agree that nothing in this Restructuring Agreement shall prevent the Bank from advancing and enforcing any proprietary claim against any Proceeds Asset which has not been disclosed to the Bank pursuant to this Restructuring Agreement.
18 Events of Default and Enforcement Events
Events
18.1 Each of the following will be an Event of Default:
(a) if any amount payable in respect of a Repayment Date is not paid in the manner and at the time provided in this Restructuring Agreement save that:
(i) there shall not be an Event of Default under this clause 18.1(a) if the amount paid to the Bank in respect of a Repayment Date represents 90% or more of the amount due on such Repayment Date and any such shortfall is paid to the Bank within 3 months after the Repayment Date to which it relates; and
(ii) no Plantation Enforcement Event shall arise consequent upon an Event of Default under this clause 18.1(a) if, during the 240 day period immediately following the Effective Date the amount paid to the Bank in respect of a Repayment Date falling within that period represents 50% or more of the amount due on such Repayment Date and any such shortfall is paid to the Bank within 3 months of the Repayment Date to which it relates; and
(iii) in relation to the Repayment Date occurring at the end of the third year after the date of this Restructuring Agreement and as to repayment of amounts in excess of the first $180 million required to be paid by such date:
(A) Plantation Villa Receivables shall, for the purposes only of providing accommodation in circumstances which would otherwise amount to payment default be regarded as notional, but not actual, repayments;
and;
(B) Escrow Proceeds (in each case net of all transaction costs) for the purpose only of providing accommodation in circumstances which would otherwise amount to payment default shall be regarded as notional, but not actual, repayments.
…
(d) if any Guarantor fails to perform any of its obligations other than those described in paragraph (c) under this Restructuring Agreement or any of its Security Documents or any other Security Provider fails to perform any of its obligations under any of its Security Documents and, in either case such failure (if capable of remedy in the opinion of the Bank) remains unremedied to the satisfaction of the Bank for 15 Business Days after notice requiring its remedy has been given by the Bank to the relevant Guarantor or the relevant Security Provider;
…
Plantation Enforcement Event
18.2 Without prejudice to any other remedy of the Bank, the Bank may not exercise its rights under the Plantation Security until the occurrence of a Plantation Enforcement Event.
Remedies
18.4
(a) if an Event of Default occurs pursuant to a breach of clause 18.1(a) or (h)-(k) for any reason or pursuant to a breach of clause 18.1(b)-(g) in relation to a failure by Plantation to perform its obligations the Bank may:
(i) by notice to all or any of the Guarantors ('Notified Guarantors"), demand and declare the Rescheduling Amount and all other sums owed by the Notified Guarantors under this Restructuring Agreement to be immediately due and payable by the Notified Guarantors, and the same will become so immediately due and payable by the Notified Guarantors; and/or
(ii) subject to clause 18.2 (Plantation Enforcement Events) take steps to enforce all or any of the Security Documents to which Notified Guarantors are party (without prejudice to such rights as it may already have had to take such steps prior to the occurrence of an Event of Default).
21 Termination
21.1 Unless otherwise required by Law, this Restructuring Agreement shall terminate only upon the occurrence of the later of:
(a) the repayment in full to the Bank of the Rescheduling Amount;
(b) payment to the Bank of the Profit.
21.2 Upon termination pursuant to clause 21.1 the Bank shall be required to surrender and or return guarantees, indemnities, options, property or security granted to it, pursuant to this Restructuring Agreement, by any of the parties or any third party prior to the date of termination.
21.3 Upon the termination of the entire Restructuring Agreement, otherwise than by clause 21.1, (including any termination of the Restructuring Agreement being required by operation of Law, notwithstanding clause 25.2 (Severability), due to invalidity, illegality or unenforceability) the parties shall cease to have any further obligations to each other hereunder, provided always that:
(a) the provisions of the following clauses shall remain in full force and effect: 1 (Definitions), 2 (Interpretation), 4 (Rescheduling Amount), 5 (Acknowledgement of Debt), 6 (Guarantee and Indemnity), 8 (Security), 13 (Proceeds Assets), 22 (Costs), 23 (Payments), 25.1 (Delays), 25.2 (Severability), 25.3 (Confidentiality), 25.4 (Reservation of Rights), 25.5 (Specific Performance), 27 (Governing Law, Jurisdiction and Arbitration);
(b) the Bank shall not be required to surrender, refund or return any:
(i) payments made to it; or
(ii) guarantees, indemnities, options, property or security granted to it,
pursuant to this Restructuring Agreement or otherwise, by any of the parties or any third party prior to the date of termination; and
(c) such termination will be without prejudice to any accrued rights of any party against any other party arising under or reserved notwithstanding this Restructuring Agreement.
25 Miscellaneous
Entire Agreement
25.6 This Restructuring Agreement (including the schedules and appendices hereto), the Fitzwilliam Comelius Agreement and the Rescheduling Documents whether in existence at the execution hereof or executed subsequently represents the entire understanding and agreement between the parties with respect to the subject matter hereof and, except as otherwise expressly provided in this Restructuring Agreement, can be amended, supplemented or changed and any provision hereof can be waived only by written instrument making specific reference to this Restructuring Agreement and signed by each party.
27 Governing Law, Jurisdiction and Arbitration
Governing law
27.1 This Restructuring Agreement is governed by and shall be construed in accordance with English Law, save in so far as inconsistent with the principles of Sharia Law.
Jurisdiction
27.2 The parties submit to the exclusive jurisdiction of the English Courts with respect to all disputes arising out of or in connection with the terms of this Restructuring Agreement. The parties agree that the courts of England are the most appropriate and convenient courts to settle disputes and accordingly no party to this Restructuring Agreement will argue to the contrary.
Period (from Effective Date) | Amount | Cumulative Amount |
Within 120 days | $25 million | $25 million |
Within 240 days | $25 million | $50 million |
Within 365 days | $70 million | $120 million |
Within 2 years | $110 million | $230 million |
Within 3 years | $270 million | $500 million |
1. Preservation of Guarantor's Liability
Action or inaction by Bank:
1.1 Without notice to any Guarantor and without releasing any Guarantor's liability the Bank may:
(a) allow to the Company and/or the Parent or to any other person any time, indulgence or other concession:
(b) enter into, vary, release or refrain from taking, perfecting or enforcing any right or security which the Bank holds or is to hold from the Company and/or the Parent or any other person: or
(c) do or neglect to do anything which (but for this Clause) might operate to release or reduce a Guarantor's liability under this Restructuring Agreement.
Other defences
1.3 No Guarantor's liability under paragraph 1.1 shall be affected by anything which would not have released or reduced such liability had the liability been as a principal debtor instead of as a guarantor.
Estoppel/Rectification
"I repeatedly asked all the lawyers – Clifford Chance for me, Mr Timothy Taylor (now QC) of SJ Berwin for Mr Cornelius and Mr Ridley and Mr Lyons at Lovells for DIB whether the RSA would work in the way I understood, including that the value would be assessed at the time of security. They all, including DIB, said that this was the case."
"The party seeking rectification must show that:
(1) the parties had a common continuing intention, whether or not amounting to an agreement, in respect of a particular matter in the instrument to be rectified;
(2) there was an outward expression of accord;
(3) the intention continued at the time of the execution of the instrument sought to be rectified;
(4) by mistake, the instrument did not reflect that common intention."
The Conditional Assignment
Investigations following the signature of the RSA
"The following cases and incidents are considered financial violations that require investigation therein, whether detected by the [FAD] or by the Party subject to audit:
[…]
4. Any action, negligence or default that results in the payment of amounts unrightfully from funds subject to audit….
5. Embezzlement of money under audit, or breach of trust, or fraud for the purpose of embezzlement, stealing or waste."
"The Director General or any employee authorised by him may audit any document, record or papers which he deems necessary for performing the audit duties completely, and he will have the right at any time to contact directly with the employees who work for the Party subject to audit, whether for the purposes of audit or investigation in the financial violations, and he may also get acquaintance with any document, record or papers that might be necessary for the investigation, and keep copies thereof, and interrogate any of the employees who may have relation to the detected financial violation."
"In case investigation in the financial violation has revealed the existence of a penal offence, the Director General should refer the papers to the Public Prosecution for taking whatever action it deems appropriate in this respect."
The souring of relations and the events leading to the arrests and prosecutions
Were the arrests procured by the Bank?
"We were supplied information from the Financial Audit Department that [Mr Marooj] received monetary transfers from CCH … In addition, the information [from FAD] provides that he was aware of the fraudulent transactions and false invoices that were provided to Dubai Islamic Bank.
Based on your request, we refer [Mr Marooj] to you and attach the previous incident report, the permission of the prosecution and the investigation report conducted with [Mr Marooj] by the Financial Audit Department of the Ruler's Court so you may complete your necessary legal procedures"
"It was found out that CCH-GMBH Company, the Bank's agent, had carried out fictitious operations through fictitious Murabaha through investing the Bank funds in some projects for the agent and by parties related to it … and the matter was referred to the Public Prosecution in case no. 12842 of 2008."
"Whereas the incident in this respect constitutes a financial violation that falls under the provision of Article 19 of Law No. 3 of 2007 on Establishing the [FAD] and whereas this violation involves a criminal offence, and in accordance with Article 20 of this Law, it was decided to refer the matter to the Esteemed Public Prosecution to take the necessary procedures in accordance with the provision of the law."
"Please find below statements that DIB needs to make today with regards to the below 2 points:
- With regards to point 1, I don't have in my records that DIB has filed any complaint against any of the CCH parties or Arthur, also I have double checked that with Mr Abdulla Al Hamli through Mr Al Sharif and the answer was negative. I am checking with Tamini if they have lodged any case. Please let me know if there is any information that you would like to let me know about on this..
- With regards to point 2, it is a tricky one as we have been dealing with the Diwan on the case and I don't know if we have been in touch with the prosecutor or any authorities with regard to the CCH. I need information on this."
"As confirmed to you verbally and to the best of our knowledge DIB or its officials had no contact with the prosecutor or any authorities with regard to CCH. I understand that now there is a case with the Public Prosecutor; however, we are unaware of the party who has filed it."
It would have required a level of deviousness of which, in my judgment, the officials of the Bank would have been incapable, to have sent that exchange if the truth were that the Bank had filed a criminal complaint and was acting "hand in glove" with the Public Prosecutor.
The meeting in Istanbul
"After that, the incident was discovered by the Financial Audit Department. The matter was scrutinized and referred to the authorities which investigated the issue and it was revealed that the bank was defrauded by CCH."
The cure notices
Subsequent events
"…it seems to me that the short passage in Ms Caldicott's witness statement, to which I have referred is really a wholly inadequate basis upon which the court could be satisfied that there is an arguable case that the bank has itself broken a contractual obligation to Plantation which has in turn prevented performance by Plantation of its obligations to pay over the sales proceeds as and when they were received…it seems to me that there is no serious issue to be tried on the merits on the question of whether or not Plantation is in breach of the underlying agreement in, at any rate, the principal respect alleged;"
"Meanwhile, I think we need to have a decision on whether this project shall be sold or developed. It is important to know whether a gain in addition to the outstanding amount can be realised by us or we are only entitled to the debt amount. In the [latter] case, we need to be clear on whether the gain that may potentially be realised will be the entitlement of the Government or Arthur. I am sure we all agree that we do not want to work hard to make Arthur rich".
"given the unique circumstances surrounding the…development it would not be possible to establish a hypothetical buyer/market and the level of return/value they would be taking on if purchasing the subject site in comparison to other sites which are not affected by the same constraints. In other words, any evidence we may have from valuing other development sites cannot be applied to the subject site with any degree of reliability. As we believe we will not be able to defend our assumptions/inputs/rates and therefore our final valuation assessment, we therefore must decline this particular instruction."
"Given the complexity of the different legal interests and the fact that there are disputes on various issues across jurisdictions we are unable to proceed with this instruction, in terms of the time limits you require and also the impact there may be on our Professional Indemnity Insurance cover."
"This is a difficult financial time with diminished market activity that is expected to continue into 2009 as banks tighten their lending standards on property loans. A restriction on the availability of finance will impact on a buyer's ability to purchase assets. Until greater stability returns to the financial markets it is difficult to predict property values, particularly with the limited availability transactional evidence.
In this report Asteco has provided a professional opinion of value using available transactional data and the Valuer's knowledge of the market. It is difficult to predict how values will be affected in the longer term; however the current trend shows a down turn in values.
We would stress the importance of the valuation date as we are seeing a significant change in values over a relatively short period."
"The property comprises a development site extending to 20 million sq ft … and is currently an expanse of largely un-improved desert. There is one complete polo pitch and a second which is under harvest. There is a series of ancillary and temporary buildings on site. There is an intermittent road network running throughout the development. A number of residential plots have been levelled and retaining walls constructed, ready for development."
"As I understand it, Mr Mills, the bank did keep the polo fields alive for a while. They tried to run it as a polo school but effectively discovered they were losing money hand over fist. It was not as if having taken occupation in November 2008 they kicked everyone off the site and sprinkled weedkiller on the grass."
"But I mean I act for a number of banks who have invested in property in this country…Effectively the choice which is facing those banks is do you sell the property, do you try and develop it out or do you take the view that in fact actually the market is in such turmoil that one has to just sit there and see what happens a few years down the line. That is a three way choice. I think it is a choice which all financial institutions, whether they are in Dubai, whether they are in England or elsewhere, face when they have got security over property."
"The bank were able to take security over a very valuable asset which was, certainly in Mr Fitzwilliam's estimation, worth as much as $2 billion at that time. Then things changed and discounted cashflow off the cashflow that's never going to happen, even I can work out, is typically zero….[the Bank] were not to know that their $1billion or $2 billion asset was going to be suddenly worth nothing when there was blood on the streets in 2009."
The Event of Default
Was there a Plantation Enforcement Event?
The effect of acceleration of the debt
Was there a repudiatory breach by the Bank?
"It is now possible to turn directly to the first issue posed, namely whether non-performance of an obligation is ever as a matter of law capable of constituting an act of acceptance. On this aspect I found the judgment of Phillips J. entirely convincing. One cannot generalise on the point. It all depends on the particular contractual relationship and the particular circumstances of the case. But, like Phillips J., I am satisfied that a failure to perform may sometimes signify to a repudiating party an election by the aggrieved party to treat the contract as at an end. Postulate the case where an employer at the end of a day tells a contractor that he, the employer, is repudiating the contract and that the contractor need not return the next day. The contractor does not return the next day or at all. It seems to me that the contractor's failure to return may, in the absence of any other explanation, convey a decision to treat the contract as at an end. Another example may be an overseas sale providing for shipment on a named ship in a given month. The seller is obliged to obtain an export licence. The buyer repudiates the contract before loading starts. To the knowledge of the buyer the seller does not apply for an export licence with the result that the transaction cannot proceed. In such circumstances it may well be that an ordinary businessman, circumstanced as the parties were, would conclude that the seller was treating the contract as at an end. Taking the present case as illustrative, it is important to bear in mind that the tender of a bill of lading is the pre-condition to payment of the price. Why should an arbitrator not be able to infer that when, in the days and weeks following loading and the sailing of the vessel, the seller failed to tender a bill of lading to the buyer he clearly conveyed to a trader that he was treating the contract as at an end?"
In my view therefore the passage from the judgment of Kerr L.J. in the Golodetz case [1989] 2 Lloyd's Rep. 277, 286, if it was intended to enunciate a general and absolute rule, goes too far. It will be recalled, however, that Kerr L.J. spoke of a continuing failure to perform. One can readily accept that a continuing failure to perform, i.e. a breach commencing before the repudiation and continuing thereafter, would necessarily be equivocal."
Furthermore, no response was required from the second defendant under the RSA to the Bank relying upon a Plantation Enforcement Event, so that acceptance of a repudiatory breach cannot be spelt out from the second defendant's inactivity and silence.
The effects of termination
Were the defendants discharged from liability as guarantors or indemnifiers by the Bank's actions?
"If the creditor chose to exercise his power of sale over the mortgaged security he must sell for the current market value but the creditor must decide in his own interest if and when he should sell. The creditor does not become a trustee of the mortgaged securities and the power of sale for the surety unless and until the creditor is paid in full and the surety, having paid the whole of the debt is entitled to a transfer of the mortgaged securities to procure recovery of the whole or part of the sum he has paid to the creditor.
The creditor is not obliged to do anything. If the creditor does nothing and the debtor declines into bankruptcy the mortgaged securities become valueless and the surety decamps abroad, the creditor loses his money. If disaster strikes the debtor and the mortgaged securities but the surety remains capable of repaying the debt then the creditor loses nothing. The surety contracts to pay if the debtor does not pay and the surety is bound by his contract. If the surety, perhaps less indolent or less well protected than the creditor, is worried that the mortgaged securities may decline in value then the surety may request the creditor to sell and if the creditor remains idle then the surety may bustle about, pay off the debt, take over the benefit of the securities and sell them."
Furthermore, even if the law were not as set out by Lord Templeman, under paragraph 2.3(f) of Schedule 5 of the RSA, any right of the defendants to be subrogated to the Bank's rights is expressly postponed until the Rescheduling Amount has been repaid in full.
Alleged breach of duty as mortgagee in possession; the counterclaim
"A mortgagee "is not a trustee of the power of sale for the mortgagor". This time-honoured expression can be traced back at least as far as Sir George Jessel MR in Nash v. Eads (1880) 25 Sol. J. 95. In default of provision to the contrary in the mortgage, the power is conferred upon the mortgagee by way of bargain by the mortgagor for his own benefit and he has an unfettered discretion to sell when he likes to achieve repayment of the debt which he is owed: see Cuckmere Brick Co v. Mutual Finance Limited [1971] Ch 949 at 969G. A mortgagee is at all times free to consult his own interests alone whether and when to exercise his power of sale. The most recent authoritative restatement of this principle is to be found in Raja v. Austin Gray [2002] EWCA Civ 1965 paragraph 95 per Peter Gibson LJ. The mortgagee's decision is not constrained by reason of the fact that the exercise or non-exercise of the power will occasion loss or damage to the mortgagor: see China and South Sea Bank Limited v. Tan Soon Gin [1990] 1 AC 536. It does not matter that the time may be unpropitious and that by waiting a higher price could be obtained: he is not bound to postpone in the hope of obtaining a better price: see Tse Kwong Lam v. Wong Chit Sen [1983] 1 WLR 1349 at 1355B.
"I accept, of course, that a mortgagee who goes into possession must effect reasonable repairs - in particular, where he is proposing to sell the property in circumstances in which (i) the price to be realised will be affected by the property being out of repair and the cost of effecting repairs would not exceed the diminution in the value of the property by reason of it being out of repair. I do not accept that there is any obligation on a mortgagee to repair in circumstances in which the cost of effecting repair would exceed the increase in the value of the property which would result from repairs being effected. Indeed, it seems to me that a mortgagee who effected repairs in circumstances in which the cost will not be recovered by an increase in the price obtainable on a sale of the property would be acting irresponsibly.
"The remedy for breach of this equitable duty is not common law damages, but an order that the mortgagee account to the mortgagor and all others interested in the equity of redemption, not just for what he actually received, but for what he should have received…."
The claim against the first defendant
Conclusion
(1) The second and third defendants' defences to the Bank's claim to be paid the sums outstanding under the RSA all fail and the Bank is entitled to judgment against each of them for those sums outstanding.(2) The fourth defendant has not defended the claim and, having heard the trial of the claim against the second and third defendants, I am satisfied that he could have been in no better position than they were and the Bank is likewise entitled to judgment against him for the sums outstanding under the RSA.
(3) The Bank is entitled to a declaration that the Afren shares are held on trust for the Bank.
(4) The counterclaims are dismissed.