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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 >> Orb A.R.L. & Ors v Ruhan & Ors [2015] EWHC 262 (Comm) (11 February 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2015/262.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 262 (Comm) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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(1) Orb A.R.L. (2) Roger James Taylor (3) Nicholas Thomas |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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(1) Andrew Joseph Ruhan (2) Anthony Edward Stevens (3) Grenda Investments Limited (4) Phoenix Group Foundation (5) Bluestone Securities Limited |
Defendant Proposed Second to Fifth Defendants |
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- and - |
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Simon John McNally Simon Nicholas Hope Cooper Gail Alison Cochrane Gerald Martin Smith SMA Investment Holdings Limited (a Marshall Islands company) |
Proposed Third to Seventh Parties |
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Richard Waller QC, Tim Jenns and Andrew Pearson (instructed by Memery Crystal) for the first Defendant
Jonathan Adkin QC and Ruth den Besten (instructed by Peters and Peters) for the proposed 6th Party
Ian Mill QC and Mark Vinall (instructed by Jones Day) for Mr McNally and Mr Cooper
Philip Marshall QC and Justin Higgo (instructed by Akin Gump LLP) for the Second to Fifth Defendants
Hearing dates: 2nd, 3rd, 4th and 5th February 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Cooke:
The claimants' applications
The relevant tests
The alleged oral agreement of 6th May 2003
Illegality
The entire agreement clauses in the SPA and Headstay Agreement
Fiduciary duties
Tracing, following, constructive trust, dishonest assistance in Mr Ruhan's breach of fiduciary duty and knowing receipt on the part of the 2nd-5th proposed defendants
Limitation
The quantum of the claim
The jurisdictional gateways
Clean hands, non-disclosure and the other requirements for service out and/or an injunction
Conclusions on the claimants' applications
Mr Ruhan's applications
The application to amend and join the Additional Parties
The Defence and further information – the first alleged lie
"39. In or about December 2004 Bridgehouse Hotels (in which Mr Cooper and Mr McNally have and Mr Ruhan had beneficial interests) acquired the Country House Hotels from Sceptre for £42 million …
…
44.(4) On or about 30 May 2003 the issued share capital of Orb Securities was transferred for a nominal sum to Conway Assets No 2 Limited (now Bridgehouse Properties in which Mr Ruhan had a beneficial interest) …
…
108(4) It is averred that Mr Ruhan was a discretionary beneficiary, but is no longer a beneficiary, of the Arena Settlement together with Mr Cooper and Mr McNally, and he was not the settlor. Mr Ruhan has not received a distribution or any benefit from the Arena Settlement …
…
112(4) Bridgehouse Hotels Ltd was incorporated on 24th August 2004 on behalf of and is beneficially owned by the Arena Settlement. Mr Ruhan repeats paragraph 108(4) above …"
"2. On 3rd November 2004, Mr Ruhan was added to the class of beneficiaries of the Arena Settlement at the request of Morgan Stanley in contemplation of the reorganisation of interests in December 2004 as further outlined below. Mr Cooper and Mr McNally were then also within the class of beneficiaries of the Arena Settlement.
3. On 22nd November 2005, Mr Cooper ceased to be discretionary beneficiary of the Arena Settlement.
4. On 19th July 2010 Mr Cooper was reappointed a discretionary beneficiary of the Arena Settlement.
5. On 21st March 2012, Mr Ruhan was excluded as a discretionary beneficiary of the Arena Settlement … having received no distribution or appointment of benefit from the Arena Settlement."
Mr Ruhan's Explanation
"4. The nature and basis of the proposed Counterclaim is evident from the draft pleading itself. In early 2004, on advice from my long-standing and trusted lawyers and financial advisers, Messrs Cooper and McNally, my businesses and their assets were transferred into an off-shore trust ("the Arena Settlement"). Messrs Cooper and McNally were named as discretionary beneficiaries of the Arena Settlement albeit on the basis that they were my nominees ("the Arrangement").
5. On 9 April 2014, I became aware for the first time that Messrs Cooper and McNally had (in or around March 2014) purported to transfer or procure the purported transfer of the Arena Assets into the First Claimant's control (or those who stand behind the First Claimant, namely Dr Cochrane and Dr Smith), through the transfer to an offshore company, namely SMA. I was shocked by this. On a personal level I feel utterly betrayed. The purpose and basis of the proposed Counterclaim is to recover the Arena Settlement Assets and other assets (namely shares in Bridge Tower companies held by Mr Cooper as my nominee but wrongly transferred by him to the First Claimant, Dr Cochrane, Dr Smith or their nominee) and/or seek damages from those involved in this gross breach of fiduciary duty.
6. The Claimants have refused to consent to the proposed amendments, including the bringing of the proposed Counterclaim, on the basis that the amendments constitute an "extraordinary change of position". They say that, if I wish to pursue the amendments, I must explain to the Court why I have changed my position as to my interest in the Arena Assets. I fully accept that the proposed amendments involve a change in position and that a full explanation is warranted.
7. In my original pleadings, both in the Defence and Response to RFI, my pleaded position was that I did not have a 'beneficial interest' in the Arena Assets with effect from March 2012 (when I was formally excluded as a named discretionary beneficiary to the Arena Settlement). The particular statements to which I refer are those made at paragraphs 39, 44(4), 108 and 112 of the Defence and Responses 5, 13, 26 and 36 of the Response to RFI ("the Statements"). I now understand, but did not at the relevant time, that the Statements are inaccurate as the nominee arrangements I had in place with Messrs Cooper and McNally, meant that I did in fact retain what the law would regard as a 'beneficial interest'.
8. The Statements were verified by statements of truth either signed by me personally (in the case of the Defence) or on my instructions (in the case of the Response to the RFI). In the latter instance, I authorised David Harvey Rands, a partner at Memery Crystal LLP ("Memery Crystal"), to sign on my behalf, as I was overseas at the time.
9. The background and circumstances relating to the making of the Statements are dealt with fully below. However, I should state at the outset that I believed that the Statements were accurate when I verified them as true. In particular, I thought that because I had been excluded as a named discretionary beneficiary of the Arena Settlement in March 2012, I could truthfully say that I no longer had a 'beneficial interest' in the Arena Settlement notwithstanding the nominee arrangements with Messrs Cooper and McNally. Whilst I always appreciated that this was a technical distinction and that my denial of a 'beneficial interest' without disclosing the nominee structure was potentially misleading, I did believe that the Statements were technically accurate as a matter of law and therefore could be truthfully made.
10. In this regard, I relied heavily on the legal expertise and advice of my Isle of Man lawyers, Bridgehouse Partners and, in particular, Mr McNally who (in conjunction with Mr Cooper) had put these structures in place. The Statements were approved as accurate by Mr McNally who I believed at the time was best placed to advise as to what I could and could not properly say both in my Defence and the Response to RFI given the trusts and arrangements in place. I understood from his input into and approval of the drafts that given my exclusion as a discretionary beneficiary I could properly deny any 'beneficial interest' and it was not incumbent on me to volunteer the nominee arrangements.
11. I should also say at the outset that I fully appreciate the importance and solemnity of a statement of truth and the consequences of knowingly submitting and relying on a false allegation and I appreciated this at the time.
12. I also fully accept, on reflection, that this was a gross misjudgement on my part not to explain the factual situation fully to Memery Crystal and Counsel so that they could have reached an informed view as to what could and could not properly be said about the nature of my ongoing interest in the Arena Assets. Instead, as I have already mentioned, in this particular regard I relied exclusively on the advice of Bridgehouse Partners and, in particular, Mr McNally and (to a lesser extent) Mr Cooper who had set up these structures for me. In hindsight I recognise that Messrs McNally and Cooper were too closely involved to give proper independent advice.
13. I am also now concerned that Mr McNally allowed his self-interest to cloud his judgment. It is now clear that Mr McNally and Bridgehouse Partners at the time they were assisting me in answering the Response to the RFI in November 2013 were being pursued in legal proceedings issued by the Claimants in the Isle of Man ("the Isle of Man Proceedings"). These were shortly thereafter settled on terms which resulted in Messrs McNally and Cooper purporting to transfer all the Arena Assets to SMA (which is said to the First Claimant's off-shore nominee) ("the IOM Settlement"). It is therefore now clear that Mr McNally had a substantial conflict of interest at the time he was providing assistance to the content of the Response to RFI. This may well explain why he did not want the Arrangement mentioned in the Response to RFI as it helped him a short time later to "buy-off" the Claimants using my assets.
14. Although I do not believe I was acting dishonestly when I verified the truth and accuracy of the original pleadings, I do accept that I knowingly concealed the existence of the Arrangement. I also accept that this meant that my original pleadings were incomplete and to that extent misleading. The fact that Bridgehouse Partners and, in particular, Mr McNally approved this approach knowing the full facts, led me to believe that I was not acting inappropriately. However, given what I now know the Statements were not only incomplete but they were also wrong in law. I therefore sincerely and unreservedly apologise for making these Statements and indeed verifying them as true.
…
32. My Defence was concluded and served on 17 April 2013. It was approved and concluded in a meeting held in the morning on 17 April 2013 attended by me, Messrs. Cooper and McNally and their solicitors, Jones Day and Memery Crystal, in respect of which I assert and do to waive privilege. The pleaded statements made about my lack of a 'beneficial interest' in paragraphs 39, 44(4), 108(4) and 112(4) were introduced at this meeting. The re-drafting of these paragraphs was done by Memery Crystal following advice given by Messrs. Cooper and McNally in their capacity as my corporate lawyers. I do not waive privilege in that advice. I was content to leave this aspect of the pleading to Messrs. Cooper and McNally given their legal expertise and their intimate knowledge of the Arena Settlement.
33. As the relevant changes to these paragraphs were made following advice received from Messrs. Cooper and McNally, I believed at the time that the Statements were accurate as a matter of law. I believed that my exclusion as a named discretionary beneficiary in March 2012 meant that I ceased to have a 'beneficial interest' in the Arena Settlement Assets in a strict legal sense. I assumed that whatever my interest was, it was not what lawyers would call a 'beneficial interest'. However I now understand that given that Messrs. Cooper and McNally were acting as my nominees, I did retain a beneficial interest as a matter of law. Hence the need to correct my original pleadings."
"From 29th March 2004 to 03 November 2004: Simon Cooper & Simon McNally
From 03 November 2004 to 22nd November 2005: Andrew Ruhan, Simon McNally and Simon Cooper
From 22nd November 2005 to 19th July 2010: Andrew Ruhan and Simon McNally
From 19th July 2010 to 21st March 2012: Andrew Ruhan, Simon McNally and Simon Cooper
From 21st March 2012 to date: Simon Cooper and Simon McNally"
(Under the terms of the trust an appointment could not be made to any person resident in the Isle of Man. Mr Cooper ceased to be a resident in the Isle of Man some time in 2004 but Mr McNally has remained resident throughout. In the middle period therefore between 22nd November 2005 and 19th July 2010, the only eligible appointee for a distribution was Mr Ruhan.)
The Defence and further information – the other alleged lies.
i) Using the wording put forward by Jones Day in paragraph 108(4) of the Defence, it was averred that Mr Ruhan had not received a distribution or any benefit from the Arena Settlement. It was of course true to say that he had not received any appointment of funds from the trustees of the Arena Settlement or any benefit directly from the trustees or trust itself. Mr McNally says as much in his witness statement. What he had received as paragraph 45 of his witness statement and the draft amendment to the further information state was fees for consultancy services from businesses within the Arena Settlement. In this fourth witness statement at paragraph 71 he referred to the consultancy agreement that he had with various companies administered by Mr Cooper and Mr McNally as a "means of deriving income" whilst the capital value of his assets remained in the Arena Settlement and unappointed to him or to his order. He stated that the advice of Mr Cooper and Mr McNally was that, because he was no longer a UK resident for tax, the Legion Consultancy arrangement was the most tax efficient way of deriving income. It also appears that loans were made to him by companies within the Arena Settlement for which the mechanism of repayment is unclear. Whether it is strictly true to say that Mr Ruhan did not receive "any benefit from the Arena Settlement" is perhaps beside the point since the impression given from this, supporting the misleading nature of what was said elsewhere, was that he had no interest in the Arena Settlement at all and had never benefited from any assets within it.
ii) As originally set out in the further information under paragraph 53(2), in September 2004 HPII UK was owned as to 66% by Mr Ruhan and the balance by Messrs Cooper and McNally, following transfer from Mr Campbell of Chester Hotels Ltd. Whilst HPII UK played a significant part in the overall history of the transaction, the point is of insignificance in the overall context where claims are made in respect of the profits gained by the Cambulo companies at a later stage in the history.
The Basis of the Objections
Joinder as a Case Management Issue
Mr Ruhan's proprietary claim against Dr Smith – is it bad in law?
"An object of a discretionary trust has no proprietary interest in the trust assets or capital and no right to a definable part of the trust income. In general, a discretionary trust has no-one in whom the beneficial interest in the trust property can be said to be vested because vesting is contingent upon the selection of an object from a nominated class." – Lewin on Trusts 19th edition paragraph 1-061.
Further disclosure
Privilege
The terms upon which Mr Ruhan has permission to amend and join the additional parties and the issue of costs