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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Serious Fraud Office & Anor v LCL & Ors (Ruling) [2020] EWHC 2077 (Comm) (28 July 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2020/2077.html Cite as: [2020] EWHC 2077 (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 :
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Serious Fraud Office & Anor |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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LCL & Ors |
Defendant |
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Sebastian Kokelaar (instructed by Richard Slade and Company) for the eighth and ninth respondents
James Pickering QC and Samuel Hodge (instructed by Spring Law) for the 12th, 13th and 14th Respondents
Mr Ulrich Pelz in person
Rupert Hamilton (instructed by HFW) for the 21st to 25th Respondents
Kennedy Talbot QC for The Serious Fraud Office
Tony Beswetherick (instructed by Stephenson Harwood LLP) for the Second Applicants
Mr David Caplan (instructed by Charles Russell Speechlys Bircham LLP) for the 18th Defendant
Mr Rupert Bowers QC (instructed by Keystone Law) for Litigation Capital Ltd
Mr David Rosen (solicitor-advocate of David Rosen & Co) for Ms Sinead Irving
Sean Upson (solicitor-advocate) for Stewarts
Dr Gerald Martin Smith in person
Hearing dates: 27th and 28th July 2020
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Foxton:
a. LCL support the application.
b. In the form in which it was finally put forward yesterday, which involved the significant revision, HPII is neutral on the application.
c. Phoenix and Minardi oppose the application on the basis that it cuts across the logic of Mr Justice Popplewell's original management scheme and because it is said there simply will not be enough time, either in advance or possibly at the January hearing, to deal with the additional issues.
d. Mr Ulrich Pelz also opposes the inclusion of the IUA Claims, saying it will add to the complexity and cost of the January trial, increase the number of participants and delay the resolution of the Directed Trial. Mr Pelz also raises a separate issue, which I will come back to, which is that it has always been the collective understanding of the parties, going back to the hearings before Mr Justice Popplewell in 2018, that issues arising from the so-called Qatar project were not to be part of the first phase trial in this litigation. It has become apparent following the service of Mr Pelz's claimed submissions in relation to the IUAs yesterday that there are a number of IUAs in relation to which those issues might be relevant and that this may also be true in relation to one of the so-called Jersey properties, which is already part of the Directed Trial. I will return to the particular position of Mr Pelz in due course.
e. Ms Sinead Irving opposes the inclusion of the IUAs in the Directed Trial on the basis that, as someone who says they have not been closely involved in the underlying events and disputes, should not have to participate in the trial of any issues which do not directly concern her. Mr Rosen, on her behalf, has submitted that there should be, in effect, a three-phase trial process with Ms Irving only participating if and to the extent necessary at the end.
f. Finally Mr Sodzawiczny is neutral on the application.
"There was no developed proposal for the inclusion of specific underlying assets within the directed trial at the April 2018 CMC. Instead, a rather general proposal was put forward in the course of argument. By contrast, the Settlement Parties' application identifies specific underlying assets and the rationale for selecting them. It is clear that Mr Justice Popplewell's reasons for refusing that application were essentially pragmatic, as can be seen from the fact that the Jersey properties were included within the Directed Trial, even though they are underlying assets. It will be for the judge at the July CMC to determine whether those pragmatic considerations still hold good, or whether circumstances have changed sufficiently to make another order appropriate."
Similarly, although Mr Justice Popplewell generally excluded upstream issues from the Directed Trial, he did include those issues so far as Mr Sodzawiczny's claim is concerned.
"As I understand your claims, and I'll be corrected by others who have also looked at it carefully, I understand your claims to be claims to the underlying assets, rather than any claims to the pool of the assets that we've put into the first stage."
"Again, I would invite anyone to say if they think I've got this wrong. If I order the directed issues to be decided in the way they are, then if you [and that was a reference to Mr Pelz] don't participate, the court will reach a decision which may have an effect on your claim in the end but you don't have a direct proprietary claim in any of the assets which they are going to be a final determination of. Therefore, you can wait and see what the court decides, and that will then assist you."