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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Tchenguiz & Ors v Grant Thornton UK LLP & Ors [2016] EWHC 3727 (Comm) (16 December 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2016/3727.html Cite as: [2016] EWHC 3727 (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)Vincent Aziz Tchenguiz (2) Rawlinson and Hunter Trustees S.A. (3) Vincos Limited (4) Euro Investments Overseas Inc |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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(1) Grant Thornton UK LLP (2) Stephen John Akers (3) Hossein Hamedani |
Defendants |
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Alain Choo Choy QC and John Robb (instructed by Stephenson Harwood LLP) for the RT Claimants
Adrian Beltrami QC and James MacDonald (instructed by Simmons & Simmons LLP) for the First, Second and Third Defendants in both sets of proceedings
Robert Miles QC, Jeremy Goldring QC, Stephen Robins and Tom Gentleman (instructed by Travers Smith LLP) for the Fifth Defendant in the second set of proceedings
Hearing dates: 5, 6 and 7 October 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Knowles:
Introduction
"The [VT] Claimants maintain that they are the victims of a serious and far-reaching conspiracy, whereby the GT Defendants, together with the Fifth Defendant … made numerous false allegations of criminal misconduct against VT and his family's trust's companies … to the SFO, instigating a major investigation into their affairs. This, in turn, led to VT's arrest …, searches of his home and business premises and seizure of his personal and business property …. One of the objects of the conspiracy was to force the [VT] Claimants into a disadvantageous settlement of various proceedings pending in this Court and in Iceland. The Defendants succeeded in that objective. Given the significant personal and commercial pressure brought to bear upon them, by an agreement dated 17 September 2011 (the "Settlement Agreement"), the [VT] Claimants (other than CBG) agreed to release certain claims."
Approach to summary judgment
The Settlement Agreement
(a) Mutual representations and warranties of authority.
(b) Representations and warranties by the VT Claimants to Kaupthing and others (including what were defined as the "Kaupthing Released Parties") that save with respect to what were defined as "Specified Disputes" they were not aware of any fact or matter that gave rise to or might give rise to a cause of action by any of the VT Claimants against Kaupthing and others (including the Kaupthing Released Parties).
(c) Representations and warranties by Kaupthing to the VT Claimants that again save with respect to what were defined as "Specified Disputes" it was not aware of any fact or matter that gave rise to or might give rise to a cause of action by any of Kaupthing and others (including the Kaupthing Released Parties) against any of the VT Claimants.
(d) An acknowledgement of each party that "it has been represented by legal counsel of its own choice throughout all negotiations preceding the execution of this Settlement Agreement and that it has executed this Settlement Agreement with the consent and advice of such legal counsel".
(e) Provisions bringing proceedings in Iceland and in London to an end after the parties to the Settlement Agreement had entered into a restructuring agreement.
(f) Mutual releases by the VT Claimants of Kaupthing and others, and by Kaupthing of the VT Claimants, from any claim arising out of what was defined as "the Dispute" (effectively, any dispute subject to certain qualifications, but including the Specified Disputes).
(g) Mutual releases by the VT Claimants of Kaupthing Released Parties, and by Kaupthing of what were defined as "TFT [i.e. Trust] Released Parties", from any claim arising out of the Specified Disputes, subject to certain qualifications.
(h) Various further mutual covenants and indemnities.
"7.1 Subject to the provisions of this Clause 7, to the fullest extent permitted under law, each of the TFT Parties releases Kaupthing and each of the Kaupthing Parties from, and, as against Kaupthing and each of the Kaupthing Parties, waives, any claim or cause of action arising out of or in relation to the Dispute, whether known or unknown, howsoever and whenever arising, and whether presently existing or arising in the future.
7.2 Subject to this Clause 7, to the fullest extent permitted under law, each of the TFT Parties releases each and any of the Kaupthing Released Parties from, and, as against each and any of the Kaupthing Released Parties, waives, any claim or cause of action arising out of or in relation to the Specified Disputes whether known or unknown, howsoever and whenever arising, and whether presently existing or arising in the future.
…
7.4 This Clause 7 may be enforced by Kaupthing, the Kaupthing Parties and any Kaupthing Released Party, whether or not it is a party to this Settlement Agreement, subject always to the terms of this Settlement Agreement including, for the avoidance of doubt, but not limited to, Clauses 14 and 15."
" 'Dispute' means all actual or potential claims, controversies, demands or causes of action based upon any act or failure to act, or the existence or non-existence of any fact, matter, condition, circumstance or allegation at any time prior to the execution of this Settlement Agreement, including, but not limited to, the Specified Disputes…"
"… but, for the avoidance of doubt, shall not include any dispute or claim arising out of or in connection with this Settlement Agreement or its subject matter or formation (including non-contractual disputes or claims) or in connection with the Restructuring Agreement or the Related Documents including in relation to any dispute or claim arising out of or in relation to the same or the subject matter or formation thereof (including non-contractual disputes or claims). For the further avoidance of doubt, any actual or potential claims, controversies, demands or causes of action based upon any act or failure to act, or the existence or non-existence of any fact, matter, condition, circumstance or allegation at any time after the execution of the Settlement Agreement are not within this definition."
" 'Specified Disputes' means all actual or potential claims, controversies, demands or causes of action based upon any act or failure to act, or the existence or non-existence of any fact, matter, condition, circumstance or allegation at any time on or prior to the execution of this Settlement Agreement concerning:
(i) the TFT Icelandic Claim and the TFT London Claim;
(ii) the provision of the Pennyrock Loan by Kaupthing and the provision and validity of the security provided in relation to the Oscatello Liabilities and the Pennyrock Loan, including but not limited to any facts or issues giving rise to rights to terminate the Existing Security Documents and/or to take any other steps on the basis of a default under the Existing Security Documents existing prior to the execution of this Settlement Agreement and any such existing rights;
(iii) Kaupthing's enforcement of that security including, but not limited to, the appointment of Receivers over shares or other property within the TFT Group and/or the appointment of directors to the board of any company within the TFT Group;
(iv) Kaupthing's capacity to enter into any legal agreement or other arrangement with any or all of the TFT Parties executed prior to the execution of this Settlement Agreement;
(v) any transaction between Kaupthing and its subsidiaries and the TFT Released Parties entered into prior to the execution of this Settlement Agreement;
(vi) investigations carried out or actions taken by any authorities in relation to any of the TFT Parties or the affairs of Kaupthing or its counterparties;
(vii) the provision of any documents or information to any authority;
(viii) any claims between Kaupthing and Kaupthing's subsidiaries and the TFT Released Parties arising prior to the execution of this Settlement Agreement;
(ix) Kaupthing's accounts, internal management of Kaupthing and actions taken by the management of Kaupthing prior to the execution of this Settlement Agreement;
(x) the actions taken by the Receivers or present and former directors appointed by Kaupthing or the Receivers;
(xi) the TFT Group's accounts, internal management and actions taken by the management of the TFT Group prior to the execution of this Settlement Agreement; and
(xii) the collapse of Kaupthing;
but, for the avoidance of doubt, shall not include [there then followed, again, the Qualification]."
" 'Kaupthing Released Parties' means any and each of the former directors of Kaupthing and Kaupthing Subsidiaries, former employees and consultants of Kaupthing and Kaupthing Subsidiaries, former members of the Resolution Committee of Kaupthing, former members of the Winding-Up Committee of Kaupthing, the Receivers, Grant Thornton UK LLP and/or Grant Thornton (British Virgin Islands) Limited together with their present and former employees, partners, directors and officers to the extent of their involvement in the activities of the Receivers, former directors appointed by the Receivers, present and former advisers to Kaupthing and all present and former employees, consultants, partners and directors of such advisers."
And the "TFT Released Parties" were defined as follows:
" 'TFT Released Parties' means any and each of former employees, consultants, directors and officers of each member of the TFT Group, former employees, consultants, directors and officers of [the Second Claimant], former employees, consultants, directors and officer of ITGL, former employees and consultants of [Mr Vincent Tchenguiz], present and former advisers to each member of the TFT Group, present and former advisers to [the Second Claimant], present and former advisers to ITGL, present and former advisers to [Mr Vincent Tchenguiz], present and former employees, consultants, directors and officers of any and all advisers referred to herein."
" 'Receivers' means any and each receiver appointed by Kaupthing over shares or other property within the TFT Group, including without limitation, Stephen Akers and Mark McDonald."
Interpretation of the Settlement Agreement
Alleged illegality and the Settlement Agreement
Alleged unconscionability and "sharp practice"
"Sharp practice
32. Thus far I have been considering the case where both parties were unaware of a claim which subsequently came to light. Materially different is the case where the party to whom the release was given knew that the other party had or might have a claim and knew also that the other party was ignorant of this. In some circumstances seeking and taking a general release in such a case, without disclosing the existence of the claim or possible claim, could be unacceptable sharp practice. When this is so, the law would be defective if it did not provide a remedy.
33. … I prefer to leave discussion of the route by which the law provides a remedy where there has been sharp practice to a case where that issue arises for decision. That there is a remedy in such cases I do not for one moment doubt."
"69. … A transaction in which one party agrees in general terms to release another from any claims upon him has special features. It is not difficult to imply an obligation upon the beneficiary of such a release to disclose the existence of claims of which he actually knows and which he also realises may not be known to the other party. There are different ways in which it can be put. One may say, for example, that inviting a person to enter into a release in general terms implies a representation that one is not aware of any specific claims which the other party may not know about. That would preserve the purity of the principle that there is no positive duty of disclosure. ….
70. In principle, therefore, I agree with what I consider Sir Richard Scott V-C [2000] ICR 1410, 1421 to have meant in the passage in paragraph 30 of his judgment which I have quoted (ante, paragraph 11), and with Chadwick LJ, that a person cannot be allowed to rely upon a release in general terms if he knew that the other party had a claim and knew that the other party was not aware that he had a claim. I do not propose any wider principle: there is obviously room in the dealings of the market for legitimately taking advantage of the known ignorance of the other party. But, both on principle and authority, I think that a release of rights is a situation in which the court should not allow a party to do so. On the other hand, if the context shows that the parties intended a general release for good consideration of rights unknown to both of them, I can see nothing unfair in such a transaction.
71. It follows that in my opinion the principle that a party to a general release cannot take advantage … of what would ordinarily be regarded as sharp practice, is sufficient to deal with any unfairness which may be caused by such releases. There is no need to try to fill a gap by giving them an artificial construction."
CBG
(a) The witness statement brings in reference to a loan from CBG to Aztec Acquisitions Limited which finds no reference in the losses pleaded in the Particulars of Claim.
(b) The witness statement does offer a calculation for time wasted by CBG's management, but this is calculated by reference to salary (a liability regardless of the search of its premises). No attempt is made to show that any amount was not earned by CBG over the period of disruption caused by the search that would otherwise have been earned.
(c) The witness statement does attribute redundancy costs (including larger ex gratia payments) as a cost to CBG but does not explain or document these, or their relationship to the search of its premises, to any satisfactory degree. I am entitled to bear in mind that this is a second attempt, and it is by someone in Mr Watson's position with all the access to information that must be available to a director and Group Chief Financial Officer.
(d) The witness statement refers to fees paid by CBG for legal, strategic, investigation, reputation management, and technology services, but again (and again this is a second attempt, and from someone in Mr Watson's position) does not explain or document these, and their relationship to what CBG says was wrongly done to CBG, to any satisfactory degree.
(e) The witness statement seeks to explain an assertion in a previous witness statement made by Mr Watson that "there was a cost resulting from the inability to market and re-let [commercial premises in Park Lane] of Ł728,532". Mr Watson had previously said that CBG was a licensee of the premises that recharged the cost to other companies owned by the Trust. Mr Watson now says that the cost asserted is the rent and associated costs for a 15 month period until the premises were surrendered to the landlord. He does not show why the premises were not surrendered (or re-let) in that period, or how CBG (a licensee) was liable for rent. Also importantly, he does not say CBG's ability to re-charge ceased, or explain why it did if it did.
The Somerfield Proceeds Claim in the RT Proceedings
"… Investec, R20 and [Mr Robert Tchenguiz] were concerned to protect TDT's rights arising from an arrangement (the "Scotts Agreement") which [Mr Robert Tchenguiz] considered to have been agreed on 7 April 2008 between … the then CEO of Kaupthing (acting on behalf of Kaupthing and [another]), and [Mr Robert Tchenguiz] (acting on behalf of R20) whereby, in consideration of [Mr Robert Tchenguiz] (on behalf of R20) recommending to the trustees of the TDT the proposed sale of [an equity interest in] Somerfield [owner of the supermarket business] to the Co-operative [Group Limited], the relevant TDT Companies would receive their share of the proceeds of that sale ("the Somerfield Proceeds") free of any repayment obligation to Kaupthing, whether pursuant to the Oscatello [loan] facility or [two profit participating loans from Kaupthing subsidiaries]."
"129. The Icelandic Somerfield Claim (ie [a] claim to the Somerfield Proceeds based on the Scotts Agreement) was quantified in the Icelandic [insolvency] proceedings [of Kaupthing] …at approximately Ł153.5 million (including interest to 22 April 2009).
130. By reason of the commencement of the Investigation of the SFO on 15 December 2009 and [an] unjustified assertion of fraud against Investec in [proceedings commenced by Kaupthing against Investec in the British Virgin Islands: ["the BVI Somerfield Proceedings"], Investec (without notice to or consultation with [Mr Robert Tchenguiz] or R20) proceeded unilaterally to settle the BVI Somerfield Proceedings and the Icelandic Somerfield Claim, in the circumstances described at paragraph [42] above [i.e. by a settlement agreement defined as the June 2010 Settlement Agreement].
131. But for the … torts [of the GT Defendants, Kaupthing and Mr Jóhannsson] as aforesaid Investec would not have sought unilaterally to settle TDT's claim to the Somerfield Proceeds. By reason of the … wrongdoing [of the GT Defendants, Kaupthing and Mr Jóhannsson] therefore, TDT has lost a real and substantial chance of succeeding on its claim on more favourable terms than those contained in the June 2010 Settlement Agreement. [The Second Claimant] as trustee of the TDT has suffered loss accordingly."
"I believe that the only valid explanation for this narrative (and for the SFO's failure until after the Guernsey trial in June 2012 to appreciate the full nature and implications of Investec's role in the business of TDT) is that Investec and Grant Thornton must have come to some sort of arrangement during early 2010 and before settlement of the Somerfield Proceedings in June 2010, to the effect that Investec would co-operate with Kaupthing's, Grant Thornton's and the [Oscatello] Joint Liquidators' efforts to recover money by all possible means from TDT and from [Mr Robert Tchenguiz] (including by handing over information and by adopting stances favourable to Kaupthing and the [Oscatello] Joint Liquidators in civil proceedings in which it was involved), while Grant Thornton would use its influence with the SFO to try to implicate [Mr Robert Tchenguiz] and exonerate Investec."
(Oscatello, mentioned earlier, was a BVI company formerly held or controlled by TDT.)
"The decision to settle the claim was taken on the advice of City solicitors … and with the benefit of three pieces of written advice from leading Counsel, the last of which (dated 3 June 2010) advised that urgent steps should be taken to settle the litigation and that continuation of the proceedings was not a proper use of trust monies".
Conclusions