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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 >> Tidewater Marine International Inc v Phoenixtide Offshore Nigeria Ltd & Ors [2015] EWHC 2748 (Comm) (06 October 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2015/2748.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 2748 (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 :
____________________
TIDEWATER MARINE INTERNATIONAL INC |
Claimant/ Applicant |
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- and - PHOENIXTIDE OFFSHORE NIGERIA LIMITED |
Defendant/ First Respondent |
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- and - |
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H.H. THE OTUNBA AYORA DR BOLA KUFORIJI-OLUBI, OON OLUTOKUNBO AFOLABI KUFORIJI |
Respondents |
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Mr Sa'ad Hossain QC (instructed by Mishcon de Reya) for the Second and Third Respondents
Hearing date: 4th September 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Males :
Introduction
"This Order does not prohibit either the Second or the Third Respondent from each spending £500 a week towards her/his ordinary living expenses, and it does not prohibit any of the Respondents from spending a reasonable sum on legal advice and representation. But before spending any money the Respondent must tell the Applicant's legal representatives where the money is to come from."
The parties
Tidewater's claim against PhoenixTide
The mandatory order
"2. The Defendant must send, by each of the methods stipulated in paragraph 3 below, by no later than 1800 hrs (West Africa Time) on Monday, 16 December 2013, to [Total] a letter in the form set out in Schedule 2 of this Order, signed by the Managing Director or other duly authorised representative of the Defendant and copied to the Claimant, instructing and authorising them to make payment forthwith of the undisputed hire and other sums payable in respect of the [named vessels]."
The default judgment
"The Defendant was under obligations as trustee and as a matter of contract to procure that the Claimant received the time charter remuneration, in particular but without limitation by instructing and authorising the charterers to make payment to the Claimant of all remuneration due under the Time Charters"
and that PhoenixTide had wrongfully breached those obligations.
Committal for contempt
"29. Mr Slade further says that the imposition of the default judgment, which has effectively ended the proceedings, which was granted as I described in my earlier judgment, on 7 March 2014, has overtaken the need to enforce my Order and thus rendered it unnecessary. He may put it even higher, in terms of some kind of merger. I am not satisfied as to that at all. The Order that was made was not until trial or further order. It has not been set aside. It has not been discharged. It has not run out of time. It was an order that a letter be sent, admittedly giving a date for expected compliance, but the Order expected continued compliance if the letter was not served by 16 December, and it remained in place. As for the default judgment, what there now is is a declaration that the Claimant is beneficially and legally entitled to the monies presently held by Total, and any method of obtaining those monies will only be part and parcel of an enforcement of that declaration."
"36. The last point that is raised is that in some way the Defendant or Respondents apologise. It is not clear what this means, because it would have been, and still is, so easy for them to have purged the contempt by signing the letter, even now. As I have indicated, the default judgment has led to recognition by the English Court that the Claimant is entitled to the monies held by Total. There has been no attempt to set aside that judgment, no attempt to seek an extension of time for an acknowledgement of service in order to seek to do so. The position is that the Defendant and Respondents have simply just refused to recognise the jurisdiction of this court, as they did when they sought unsuccessfully to challenge it, and the Order made by this Court. In those circumstances I am satisfied that they are and remain in contempt."
The claim against the Otunba and Toks
The worldwide freezing order
The Respondents' asset disclosure
This application
Legal principles
"In the Mareva case, since the money is the defendant's subject to his demonstrating that he has no other assets with which to fund the litigation, the ordinary rule is that he should have resort to the frozen funds in order to finance his defence."
"… in the Mareva case, in order to be allowed to spend frozen monies, the defendant must show that he has no other assets which he can use."
"… it is incumbent on a defendant, like any applicant, to put the facts fully and fairly before the court."
"43. … The question for the judge was whether X discharged the burden of proof or, as I would prefer to put it, the burden of persuasion. That depends upon an analysis of the facts. As I see it, on an application to vary a restraint order in a case of this kind, where the order relates to all the defendant's assets, the position in principle is that it is for the defendants to satisfy the court that it would be just to permit him to use funds which are identified as being caught by the order. If the court concludes that there is every prospect of the defendant being able to call on assets which are not specifically identified in the order, or assets which others will provide for him, I do not think that the court is bound to vary the order in the terms sought."
"20.054 … Therefore, the principle is that a defendant can use his own money which is frozen under a Mareva injunction to fund the defence provided that it is apparent that there are no other funds or source of payment which should as a matter of objective fairness be used to pay for the defence rather than the frozen funds. This may require the defendant to adduce 'credible evidence' about his other assets before the court can be satisfied that it is just that he should be able to use the particular frozen assets.
…
20.056 The same principle of objective fairness applies when an injunction is granted worldwide and the question arises whether the defendant should be at liberty to pay an expense using his English assets or assets safely frozen outside the jurisdiction by a local court, or whether he should be left to make the payment from assets which are not effectively frozen or may not be available for execution or satisfaction of the judgment."
"In exercising the discretion whether or not to grant an application to vary an injunction the court acts in accordance with what is 'just and convenient'. This is the test laid down in s.37(1) of the Supreme Court Act 1981. On an application for a variation, the claimant has already established a real risk of dissipation and a good arguable case. The principles which apply in considering whether to grant a variation are the same as those which apply when considering whether or not to grant Mareva relief. …
The correct test is to consider objectively the overall justice of allowing the payment to be made including the likely consequences of permitting it on the prospects of a future judgment being left unsatisfied, and bearing in mind that the assets belong to the defendant and that the injunction is not intended to provide the claimant with security for his claim or to create an untouchable pot which will be available to satisfy an eventual judgment."
Availability of other sources of funds
Overall justice of the case