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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 >> Hotel Portfolio II UK Ltd & Anor v Ruhan & Anor [2022] EWHC 1695 (Comm) (04 July 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2022/1695.html Cite as: [2022] EWHC 1695 (Comm), [2022] Costs LR 1285 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
(1) HOTEL PORTFOLIO II UK LIMITED (in Liquidation) (2) ELIZABETH ALEXANDRA AIRD-BROWN (as Liquidator of Hotel Portfolio II UK Limited (in Liquidation)) |
Claimants |
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- and |
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(1) ANDREW JOSEPH RUHAN (2) ANTHONY EDWARD STEVENS |
Defendants |
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- and - |
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(1) PHOENIX GROUP FOUNDATION (2) MINARDI INVESTMENTS LIMITED (3) (1) TANIA JANE RICHARDSON |
Interested Parties |
____________________
The First Defendant in person
Sebastian Kokelaar and Stephen Ryan (instructed by Richard Slade & Company) for the Second Defendant
Joshua Viney (instructed by Clintons) for Ms Richardson
Hearing dates: 21 and 22 June 2022
Draft Judgment to the parties: 27 June 2022
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
This judgment was handed down by the judge remotely by circulation to the parties' representatives by email and release to The National Archives. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be Monday 04 July 2022 at 10:00am.
Mr Justice Foxton:
A INTRODUCTION
i) What declarations, if any, should be made to give effect to the Judgment?
ii) HPII's application to join Grenda Investments Ltd ("Grenda") to the Judgment (for the purpose of binding Grenda to the findings in the Judgment) under CPR 19.2.
iii) What the parties described as quantum issues:
a) The principal amount for which judgment should be entered against the Defendants.
b) The time for payment.
c) Whether interest should be awarded on a simple or compound basis, at what rate and (if compound interest is to be ordered), with what rests?
iv) Costs and related issues:
a) Should the costs order be joint and several?
b) What sum should the Defendants be ordered to pay by way of a payment on account of costs?
c) The time for payment.
d) Whether I should order interest on costs.
v) Applications for permission to appeal and what, if any, conditions should be imposed on any permission granted.
vi) The position so far as Ms Richardson is concerned.
B WHAT DECLARATIONS, IF ANY, SHOULD BE MADE?
The applicable principles
"49. As between the parties to a claim, the court can grant a declaration as to their rights, or as to the existence of facts, or as to a principle of law, where those rights, facts, or principles have been established to the court's satisfaction. The court should not, however, grant any declarations merely because the rights, facts or principles have been established and one party asks for a declaration. The court's power to grant declaratory relief is discretionary. The court has to consider whether, in all the circumstances, it is appropriate to make such an order: Financial Services Authority v Rourke [2001] EWHC 704 per Neuberger J:
'It seems to me that when considering whether to grant a declaration or not, the court should take into account justice to the claimant, justice to the defendant, whether the declaration would serve a useful purpose and whether there are any other special reasons why or why not the court should grant the declaration.'"
The parties' cases
i) Declaration 1: that from the moment of the Cambulo Madeira Transaction, in the subsequent sale of the Hyde Park Hotels, and in the investment of the profits, Mr Ruhan retained a secret beneficial interest in the Hyde Park Hotels and their proceeds of sale.
ii) Declaration 2: that Mr Stevens, Euro Estates, Cambulo Madeira and CLGD held their interests in property and corporate entities relating to the Hyde Park Hotels as Mr Ruhan's secret nominees.
iii) Declarations 3 and 5: as at the time of the Cambulo Madeira Transaction and as at the date of the sale of the Lancaster Gate and Kensington Hotels, Mr Ruhan was in fraudulent breach of his fiduciary and statutory duties.
iv) Declaration 4: from the moment of the Cambulo Madeira Transaction, the Hyde Park Hotels were beneficially held by Mr Ruhan on constructive trust for HPII and thereafter the relevant net proceeds of sale to which Mr Ruhan (through his nominees) was prima facie entitled were beneficially held by Mr Ruhan on constructive trust for HPII.
v) Declaration 6: that Mr Stevens dishonestly assisted Mr Ruhan's breaches of fiduciary duty as referred to in declarations three and five.
vi) Declaration 7: that Phoenix and Grenda were set up as nominee entities for Mr Ruhan and held assets beneficially for Mr Ruhan (with various sub-declarations as to the nature of Grenda's participation in certain transactions).
vii) Declaration 8: that at the time of the Geneva Settlement, Mr Stevens and Phoenix were acting as Mr Ruhan's nominees such that any benefits they stood to receive pursuant to the Geneva Settlement (including the shares in Minardi and any money paid pursuant to the Loan Note) were to be received and held for the ultimate benefit of Mr Ruhan.
Proposed declarations 3, 5 and 6
Proposed declarations 1, 2, 4 and 7
i) First, the court was concerned with the issue of whether Mr Ruhan had in fact breached his fiduciary duties to HPII, and in what respects. In particular, this required me to determine whether Mr Ruhan breached the fiduciary's duty not to place themselves in a position where their interest and duty conflict, by dealing with the company in their own interest; whether Mr Ruhan breached the fiduciary's duty not to make an unauthorised profit from property which is subject to the fiduciary relationship; whether Mr Ruhan was in breach of his duty under s.317 of the Companies Act 1985 because he was directly or indirectly interested in a proposed contract with HPII without disclosing that interest and whether there had been a breach of s.320 of the Companies Act 1985 on the basis that Mr Ruhan had acquired non-cash assets of HPII without the requisite approval.
ii) Second, the court reviewed a number of transactions whose role in the case was evidential, HPII relying on them for what they showed about the nature of Mr Stevens' relationship with Mr Ruhan (for example that entities notionally controlled by Mr Stevens were providing funding for Mr Ruhan's projects).
"The position of corporate entities alleged to be under Mr Ruhan's control
15. The only breaches of fiduciary duty pleaded by HPII are breaches by Mr Ruhan, and the only breaches of fiduciary duty which Mr Stevens is alleged to have dishonestly assisted are breaches by Mr Ruhan. There is, thus, no case that companies to whom assets or the proceeds of assets were transferred themselves owed fiduciary or equitable duties to HPII, and that Mr Stevens dishonestly assisted those breaches. Nor were such questions of analysis as might have arisen on that basis explored by the Defendants.
16. I can well understand why the case was conducted in this way. HPII's pleaded case was that the companies in question received and held the assets as nominees or bare trustees for Mr Ruhan (paras. 33 and 64 of the Re-Amended Particulars of Claim). In cases in which a company is used to hide the involvement of a fiduciary in a transaction with the beneficiary, a court may well conclude that the corporate entity was acting as nominee for the fiduciary (see for example Gencor ACP Ltd v Dalby [2000] 2 BCLC 734 and Trustor AB v Smallbone (No 2) [2001] 1 WLR 1177 as analysed by Lord Sumption in Petrodel Resources Ltd v Prest [2013] UKSC 34, [31]-[33]). To the extent that, for this reason, the findings and analysis below involve an element of simplification, that reflects the manner in which the case was argued by the parties at trial (which in turn, I am satisfied, reflected the reality of the position on the facts)."
"HPII's case that Euro Estates or Cambulo Madeira acquired the Hyde Park Hotels as Mr Ruhan's nominee (see [15]-[16] above) does not preclude the possibility of Euro Estates holding other assets in Mr Stevens' interest."
"I accept that when a director receives or disposes of the company's property in breach of fiduciary duty, the company is in principle entitled to trace the asset or its proceeds for the purposes of asserting a proprietary claim: JJ Harrison (Properties) Ltd v Harrison [2002] BCC 729, [25]-[28]. This case has been argued on the basis that, if the nominee case succeeds, there was beneficial receipt by Mr Ruhan: see [15]-[16]. Any proprietary claim by the beneficiary might be defeated because it ceases to be possible to identify the proceeds of the trust property and/or because the trust property (or property which represents it) is acquired by a bona fide purchaser for value."
"Third, if the position of the corporate recipient of the property (Cambulo Madeira) is brought into the analysis at this point, and it is treated as having received the property beneficially but with the fiduciary's notice attributed to it (cf [15]-[16] above), then the payment of the profits away by the corporate body would be a breach of the type-2 constructive trust which arose by reason of its knowing receipt, and if the dishonest assistant assisted that breach, it would be liable: see [277] above. I cannot see why a different result follows if (as is the assumed position here) the corporate vehicle receives as nominee for the fiduciary, who committed a breach of fiduciary duty in acquiring trust property, and then uses the profits for their own purposes, the dishonest assistant assisting at both stages."
i) That Cambulo Madeira, in entering into the BSA and acquiring rights thereunder, was acting as Mr Ruhan's nominee.
ii) That Cambulo Madeira, in receiving and/or disposing of the proceeds of sale of CLGD following its sale to Minerva, was acting as Mr Ruhan's nominee.
iii) That Cambulo Madeira was acting as Mr Ruhan's nominee in receiving and/or disposing of 80% of the £115.2m of dividends paid to it by CPHL following the sale of the Kensington Hotel by CPHL to De Vere.
iv) That the beneficial interest of Mr Ruhan in the rights and assets held for him by Cambulo Madeira as his nominee, as referred to in (i) to (iii) above, was subject to a constructive trust in favour of HPII.
Proposed declaration 8
"176. On 4 August 2015, following a round of settlement discussions between the Orb Claimants and Mr Ruhan, Stewarts (for the Orb Claimants) wrote to Memery Crystal (acting for Mr Ruhan) saying that 'Mr Ruhan's pre-condition/requirement to settlement is that it be structured in a manner that transfers the majority of any cash sum to Mr Stevens Leaving aside whether this is commercially acceptable, it is structurally unworkable and possibly illegal. Our clients have sought and received advice that a settlement on this basis, where a payment is demanded by Mr Ruhan to go to Mr Stevens which is not commensurate with Mr Stevens' claims, is potentially criminal'.
180. Draft agreements were produced by Akin Gump on 21 April 2016 and the various settlement agreements which constitute the Geneva Settlement were executed in Geneva on 29 April 2016. A signed consent order dismissing the Orb Proceedings with no order as to costs was sealed on 6 May 2016. The documents included a loan note issued by Dr Cochrane under which Dr Cochrane agreed to pay £73,750,000 to Phoenix by 31 December 2017 and a document entitled the 'Liquidation Inter-Creditor Settlement Agreement' (the 'LICSA') which was entered into between a company called SMA, Phoenix, Minardi and Dr Cochrane.
181. The nature of Mr Ruhan's involvement in the negotiations which culminated in the Geneva Settlement, and the true beneficiary of the rights acquired under the Loan Note and the LICSA, were issues in the proceedings between Ms Richardson and Mr Ruhan in the Family Division. In his skeleton argument for that hearing, Mr Ruhan said that the rights acquired by Mr Stevens or his companies through that settlement reflected his entitlement to 10% of any further recoveries made by Mr Ruhan from the Qatar Project pursuant to the terms of the TSA.
182. Mr Ruhan was cross-examined about these subjects in the course of the Family Division proceedings before Mostyn J. As Mostyn J records at [2017] EWHC 2739 (Fam), [55], Mr Ruhan said that he had not been involved in negotiating the figures which appeared in the Loan Note.
183 The Defendants suggest that it is inherently improbable, after his experiences with Mr Cooper and McNally, that Mr Ruhan would have used a nominee to receive any proceeds of a settlement with the Orb Claimants. However, if Mr Stevens had been acting as Mr Ruhan's nominee up to 2015, then the die was essentially cast so far as he was concerned. In any event it is not suggested that Mr Stevens (unlike Mr Cooper and Mr McNally) had done anything to show he was not worthy of Mr Ruhan's trust. Further, by this time Mr Ruhan was heavily involved in matrimonial proceedings, in which context the question of what assets Mr Ruhan had was very much a live issue. If HPII's case is made out, Mr Ruhan and Mr Stevens were essentially "bound together" by this point.
337. Mr Ruhan also relies on the Geneva Settlement of April 2016, by which he came to give up his claims against the Orb Claimants and Dr Smith, as an act of detrimental reliance. However:
iv) The structure of the Geneva Settlement under which all rights went to companies notionally controlled by Mr Stevens under what I have found to be a continuation of the nominee scheme reflected these concerns."
i) That the rights and assets acquired under the Geneva Settlement the shares in Minardi, the Loan Note and the rights under the LICSA - were acquired for Mr Ruhan's benefit, in settlement of the proceedings in which Mr Ruhan faced claims and was bringing his own counterclaims.
ii) Both to continue the nominee scheme already in place, and given that he was involved in proceedings in the Family Division in which the extent of his assets was a very live issue, Mr Ruhan wanted it to appear that the benefits derived from the settlement of the litigation were being acquired by Mr Stevens or entities connected with Mr Stevens rather than by himself.
iii) However, the reality was that this was simply a continuation of the same nominee scheme in which the recipients of the assets and rights under the Geneva Settlement were acting as Mr Ruhan's nominees (cf [15]-[16] of the Judgment). In particular, Mr Ruhan was using Mr Stevens and corporate entities ostensibly linked to Mr Stevens (in this case Phoenix) to hide the fact that he was the beneficiary of the rights acquired under the Geneva Settlement transactions which he had obtained as part of the settlement of the litigation to which he was a party.
iv) The conclusion that Phoenix and Mr Stevens were not intended themselves to acquire any beneficial interest in any assets and rights acquired under the Geneva Settlement is consistent with the fact that they gave Mr Ruhan nothing in return for such a benefit. I rejected the evidence that there had been such a quid pro quo ([168]-[175] and [188]).
v) Equally, there could be no commercial rationale for Mr Ruhan having an economic interest in assets owned by Phoenix which did not derive from his own assets or the settlement of his own litigation.
vi) In these circumstances, I am satisfied that Mr Stevens and Phoenix were acting as Mr Ruhan's nominee in acquiring rights and assets under the Geneva Settlement.
"75. My findings are as follows. Based on the evidence I have set out above I am satisfied on a strong balance of probability that in relation to the agreement reached on 29 April 2016 Mr Stevens acted as the husband's nominee. This is not a case where the husband's lies can be explained as being an example of a false bolstering of an otherwise truthful case, or where he has tried to cover up matters that would bring upon him shame or disgrace. The lies were told in order to conceal the truth. The other evidence which I have set out strongly supports this finding.
76. It follows that inasmuch as the documents proclaim that Mr Stevens (or his creatures) were genuine parties to the agreements then they are shams. I am satisfied that the test for a sham is fully met. The true agreement was made between Dr Smith and the husband, as I have sought to explain."
"In negotiating and entering into the agreements which comprises the Geneva Settlement, Mr Stevens and Phoenix were acting as Mr Ruhan's nominees such that any assets and rights acquired by Phoenix under those agreements were to be received and held for Mr Ruhan."
The wording reflects the fact that it has never been part of HPII's case that Mr Stevens directly acquired rights or assets under the terms of the Geneva Settlement (although it did contend that Mr Stevens was acting as Mr Ruhan's nominee in relation to the Geneva Settlement, which I accepted).
C SHOULD GRENDA BE JOINED TO THE PROCEEDINGS UNDER CPR 19.2?
"(2) The court may order a person to be added as a new party if
(a) it is desirable to add the new party so that the court can resolve all the matters in dispute in the proceedings; or
(b) there is an issue involving the new party and an existing party which is connected to the matters in dispute in the proceedings, and it is desirable to add the new party so that the court can resolve that issue."
i) to join a defendant to proceedings which had settled on the basis of a Tomlin order, for the purpose of court proceedings to enforce the terms of the settlement (Starlight Shipping Co & ors v Allianz Marine & Aviation Versicherungs AG [2011] EWHC 3381 (Comm), [50]-[54]); and
ii) to join a third party to proceedings in which judgment had already been given for the purposes of determining certain issues which would arise thereafter in relation to tracing relief and enforcement (Billington v Davies & Ors [2017] EWHC 1654 (Ch), [24]-[27]).
D QUANTUM ISSUES
In what principal sums should judgment be entered?
i) Mr Ruhan is to be ordered to account for £7.76m in respect of profits arising from the sale of the Lancaster Gate Hotel, and £94.5m in respect of profits arising from the sale of the Kensington Hotels.
ii) Mr Stevens is to be ordered to pay equitable compensation in the same amounts.
Time to pay
i) Mr Ruhan has been aware of the size of HPII's claim since the commencement of this litigation;
ii) Mr Ruhan has been aware of the outcome of the litigation since 14 February 2022, when the draft judgment was provided to the parties over 4 months; and
iii) Mr Ruhan has, therefore, had ample time to take whatever steps he wishes to take in response to the judgment debt.
However, there was no evidence before the court of any steps which it might be open to Mr Ruhan to take in the next 90 days which would ensure the orderly payment of the judgment debt which it would not have been possible to take before.
"Under the terms of the order sought by HPII Mr Ruhan will be required, belatedly, to account for the profits. Any sums which HPII recovers from Mr Ruhan pursuant to the order for an account will reduce its losses, and therefore Mr Stevens' liability to pay equitable compensation. Accordingly, HPII cannot simultaneously require Mr Ruhan to account for £102,260,000 plus pre-judgment interest, whilst claiming the same amounts against Mr Stevens by way of compensation for loss.
It is suggested that the appropriate way to deal with this is to stagger the orders, so that Mr Ruhan is ordered to account first, with Mr Stevens thereafter being ordered to pay as equitable compensation the difference between what HPII obtains pursuant to such an account and what it would have obtained had Mr Ruhan accounted for the profits in full upon receipt of the profits in 2006/2008."
i) it is open to Mr Stevens and Mr Ruhan to exchange information on any steps they have taken to discharge their respective judgment debts; and
ii) HPII has undertaken to inform each of Mr Stevens and Mr Ruhan of any recoveries recovered in respect of the judgment debt from the other.
Interest
i) I remind myself that HPII had ceased operations when the relevant transactions in breach of duty took place, and was seeking to achieve an orderly winding up for the benefit of its creditors and/or shareholders. I was unable to make any finding on the evidence that HPII would itself have sought to exploit the commercial opportunity presented by the Hyde Park Hotels, or indeed undertaken any alternative commercial activity "but for" the breaches of fiduciary duty which Mr Ruhan committed and in which Mr Stevens dishonestly assisted. I reject HPII's argument that I should assess compound interest on the basis that, but for the breaches of fiduciary duty, Mr Ruhan would have been deploying his commercial acumen so as to exploit the funds in question for HPII's benefit in ongoing trading.
ii) However, as I have noted at [42], compound interest reflects the commercial value of money. I have decided that in HPII's particular circumstances, an award of compound interest which appropriately reflected the commercial value of its funds, rather than a rate which assumed some alternative commercial activity with the funds on its part of which it has been deprived, is appropriate.
iii) In these circumstances, I am satisfied that a rate of 2.5% over Bank of England base rates with six-monthly rests is appropriate.
E COSTS
Should the costs order be joint and several?
i) The claims arose out of, and concerned, a dishonest scheme, with Mr Ruhan and Mr Stevens being "in it together" from the outset to the end. The common front that Mr Ruhan and Mr Stevens maintained throughout the litigation inevitably required HPII to sue both of them together.
ii) The Defendants adopted a common position on the key issues throughout the litigation including at trial, each adopting the other's evidence for the purposes of his own case.
iii) The defence of the litigation, like the fraud which gave rise to the litigation, was essentially a joint endeavour, which the costs order should reflect.
iv) In any event, those issues on which a particular Defendant ran a discrete point were very limited in their scope and in the time they took.
Payment on account
"Necessarily, the determination of a "reasonable sum" involves the court in arriving at some estimation of the costs that the receiving party is likely to be awarded by the costs judge in the detailed assessment proceedings or as a result of a compromise of those proceedings. In a case of any complexity, the evidence and submissions arguably relevant to that exercise may be extensive. The court has to guard against the risk that it may be drawn into costly and time-consuming "satellite" litigation. There is no rule that the amount ordered to be paid on account should be the "irreducible minimum" of what may be awarded on detailed assessment (Gollop v Pryke, (Warren J)) . [A] reasonable sum would often be one that was an estimate of the likely level of recovery subject, to an appropriate margin to allow for error in the estimation. This can be done by taking the lowest figure in a likely range if the range itself is not very broad. In determining whether to order any payment and its amount, account needs to be taken of all the relevant factors including the likelihood (if it can be assessed) of the claimant being awarded the costs they seek or a lesser and if so what proportion of them; the difficulty, if any, that may be faced in recovering those costs; the likelihood of a successful appeal; the means of the parties; the imminence of any assessment; any relevant delay and whether the paying party will have any difficulty in recovery in the case of any overpayment."
i) excluding in their entirety HPII's costs in unsuccessfully seeking to resist applications for security for costs and in seeking fortification;
ii) splitting certain heads of costs on a 50:50 (or in some cases 75:25) basis as between these proceedings and the SFO Proceedings;
iii) allowing for costs recovered from the respondents to certain s.236 applications; and
iv) excluding the costs of preparing material which in the event was not deployed.
i) The hourly rates are in line with current Commercial Court guidelines.
ii) While Mr Ruhan has suggested that the percentage of partner time at 45% is too high, it is necessary to have regard to the use of a small, boutique, firm of solicitors by HPII, with Mr Russell as an ever-present in a lean team. That model can sometimes involve a higher proportion of partner time but a lower overall level of costs than using a medium or large city firm. Viewed in this context, I am not persuaded the 45% figure is too high (and I note that it is considerably less than the 69% of partner time incurred by Mr Stevens, who also instructed a small, boutique, firm of solicitors).
iii) I accept that the post-judgment costs of £383,238.22 seem high given the relative lack of activity over that 4 month period and I have concluded it would be appropriate to make an adjustment in my starting point to allow for a potential reduction in this figure on detailed assessment (reducing it to £2.9m).
i) Mr Ruhan will be required to pay £108,000 (90% of £120,000) by way of a further interim payment in respect of the costs of the Deed of Indemnity provided in his favour; and
ii) Mr Stevens will be required to pay £162,000 (90% of £180,000) by way of a further interim payment in respect of the costs of the Deed of Indemnity provided in his favour.
Time for payment
Interest on costs
i) Simple interest on costs will be paid at 2% over the Bank of England base rate from the date of payment of such costs by the claimants to their legal representatives until 28 days from the hand-down of this judgment.
ii) Interest under the Judgments Act 1838 is payable on the overall outstanding balance of the amount ordered to be paid on account, to run from 28 days from the date of hand-down of this judgment to the date of payment.
iii) Simple interest will continue run on the balance of costs recoverable by the claimants (above the payment on account) at 2% above the Bank of England base rate for a period of 12 weeks from the date of hand-down of this judgment and at the Judgments Act 1838 rate thereafter.
Release of the Deeds of Indemnity
F PERMISSION TO APPEAL AND CONDITIONS ON ANY APPEAL
Permission to appeal
i) Grounds 1 and 2 challenge my conclusion that Mr Stevens could be ordered to pay equitable compensation for dishonest assistance in relation to Mr Ruhan's failure, in breach of fiduciary duty, to account to HPII for the profits made from the on-sale of the Hyde Park Hotels
ii) Ground 3 seeks to challenge my conclusion that, if HPII elects to seek such relief, Mr Stevens is obliged to account for the amounts of £1,000,000 and £500,000 paid to him by Mr Ruhan as the quid pro quo for his dishonest assistance.
iii) Ground 4 seeks to challenge my conclusion that the claim against Mr Stevens is not time-barred
iv) Ground 5 seeks to challenge my decision that compound interest can be awarded against someone who dishonestly assists a breach of fiduciary duty.
Grounds 1 and 2
"I have not found the answer entirely satisfactory or wholly intuitive:
i) It might be said that the success of the argument elides many of the distinctions between claims for an account of profits and claims for equitable compensation, despite the very different nature of those two remedies and the legal regimes which govern them.
ii) In substance, HPII's complaint here is that Mr Ruhan abused his position as a fiduciary to make a profit which HPII would not have made for itself, and that Mr Stevens dishonestly assisted him in that. It might be said that, as a matter of substance, that is a claim for an account, and it should carry whatever legal consequences follow from that categorisation.
iii) In certain factual scenarios, including this one, the argument might be said to come close to rendering the dishonest assistant liable for the profits made by the fiduciary even though English law has not chosen to render dishonest assistants directly so liable, and to permit such a claim "as of right", notwithstanding the "strong" discretion which exists in determining whether to order the dishonest assistant to account for their profits and (perhaps) without the benefit of the more exacting causation test which would have applied to such a claim.
iv) The result might be thought particularly strict, because of the consequences which follow from applying the causation test set out in [293] above to claims for dishonest assistance in the breach of purely custodial duties (as opposed to a test considering the effect on the beneficiary of the acts of dishonest assistance)."
Ground 5
Ground 3
Ground 4
"There was some debate before me as to whether the fact that HPII was under the control of a liquidator for part of the relevant period had any effect on what constituted 'due diligence', it being the Defendants' submission that the liquidator's statutory duty to make enquiries as to what claims the company may have effectively imposed a higher standard. I observed in Granville Technologies Ltd v Infineon Technologies Ltd [2020] EWHC 415 (Comm), [56] that the fact that a company was in liquidation, and hence no longer trading, might well be relevant in some cases to the issue of whether it was put on enquiry as to the possibility of a claim (because, as in that case, the existence of potential claims of the relevant kind were a matter of discussion among those active in the relevant industry). The argument in this case was the rather different one that the liquidator (in effect) had to do more to reach the 'reasonable diligence standard. Whatever the position might be in a case in which the liquidator's special powers offered avenues of investigation not open to ordinary litigants, I am not persuaded on the facts of this particular case that the liquidator's statutory duty to investigate claims makes a meaningful difference to the issue of whether HPII was reasonably put on notice of something which merited investigation (by whatever means)."
(emphasis added).
Conditions on the appeal and stay of execution
i) That Mr Stevens be required to provide security for the Judgment debt (with full disclosure as to source of funds).
ii) That Mr Stevens be required to pay the payment on account of costs which I have ordered.
iii) That Mr Stevens be required to provide security for HPII's costs of the appeal.
i) The court has an unfettered discretion;
ii) No authority can lay down rules for its exercise;
iii) It is relevant that the appellant may be unable to recover from the respondent the sum awarded in the event of judgment being set aside on appeal;
iv) The proper approach is to make the order which best accords with the interests of justice;
v) The court has to balance the alternatives to decide which is less likely to cause injustice; and
vi) Where the justice of letting the general rule take effect is in doubt, the answer may well depend on the perceived strength of the appeal.
i) The same risk of lack of repayment of the Judgment sum arises whether it is paid as a condition of being permitted to bring an appeal or in response to enforcement. In my view, HPII's concession in the context of its conditions application reflected a recognition of a risk of prejudice to Mr Stevens which applies equally in the present context, and my refusal of a stay of execution of the Judgment is conditional on any recoveries in respect of the Judgment debt obtained from Mr Stevens (but not from Mr Ruhan) being paid into court. If HPII is not willing to offer such an undertaking, then a stay of execution will be imposed so far as Mr Stevens is concerned.
ii) However, I am not persuaded that there is a sufficient risk of HPII (which is under the management of officers of the court) failing to comply with any order the court might make to repay the payment on account if Mr Stevens' appeal succeeds for that to constitute a sufficient reason to stay execution of the costs order, which involves a much lower amount. In any event, the prospect of Mr Stevens reversing that costs order in full, in circumstances in which he will have lost on the issue of liability, time-bar and been held liable for an account of profits, is remote.
i) The power will only be exercised where there is a compelling reason for doing so: see CPR 52.18(2). It has been noted that it is likely to be an "unusual, and perhaps rare, case in which it will be appropriate to make" such an order: Dumford Trading AF v OAO Altantrybflot [2004] EWCA Civ 1265, [9].
ii) Guidance on relevant factors to be taken into account by the court was given by Christopher Clarke LJ in Merchant International Company Limited v Natsionalna Aktsionerna Kompaniia Naftogaz Ukrainy [2016] EWCA Civ 710, [37]:
"(a) The essential question is whether or not there is a compelling reason to make payment in of the judgment sum, plus costs and interest (or some part thereof) a condition for further pursuit of the appeal hereafter "a security payment order";
(b) Whether there is a compelling reason is a value judgment to be made on the particular facts of the case under consideration
(c) The fact that a judgment has been entered against the appellant and no stay has been sought or granted does not mean that, as a matter of course, compliance with the judgment should be made a condition of appeal nor does it alone, afford a compelling reason for a payment order
(d) On the contrary, the power was not designed to be no more than an alternative means of securing enforcement and is only to be exercised with caution;
(e) Whilst every case depends on its particular facts the court is likely to find there to be a compelling reason to make a security payment order which has the effect if the judgment debtor has in the past (Dumford Trading) or is likely in the future (Wittman) to take steps to denude itself of assets or to put assets beyond the reach of normal enforcement processes.
The fact that a defendant takes such steps or adopts such stratagems may itself be something from which the court can infer that he is likely (if need be) to put asset out of reach for the sole purpose of avoiding having to satisfy the judgment.
(f) There may be a compelling reason to make a security order even if it is not established that the appellant has acted as in (e) above. This may be the case if there are considerable practical difficulties in effecting execution."
iii) In Sebastian Holdings Inc v Deutsche Bank AG [2014] EWCA Civ 1100, [34] Tomlinson LJ stressed that:
" it is inappropriate to use the power to impose conditions on an appeal simply as a means of securing enforcement of the judgment debt. That plainly is not the touchstone of the jurisdiction. The touchstone is rather the taking of steps out of the ordinary course of business with a view to frustrating the normal enforcement process."
i) I have found that Mr Stevens was a key party to a dishonest scheme to help Mr Ruhan make and apply profits in breach of fiduciary duty, which scheme was adhered to over a very lengthy period. However, no finding has been made that he has taken steps in relation to his own assets to render them less susceptible to execution. HPII has at no stage sought freezing order relief against Mr Stevens.
ii) The equitable compensation award made against Mr Stevens does not relate to amounts received by him (and, on the contrary, HPII accepted that there had been no beneficial receipt by Mr Stevens).
iii) While I have no evidence as to Mr Stevens' wealth, the effect of the evidence at trial, and my findings accepting HPII's case on this issue, were that Mr Stevens was not a man of any particular financial substance, and that he was very much the junior partner to Mr Ruhan, reduced at times to borrowing relatively small amounts of money from him, and to making plaintive complaints at Mr Ruhan's delay in reimbursing him for relatively small expenses. The suggestion that he would be able to discharge the full amount of the judgment debt for principal and compound interest in order to pursue an appeal which I have found to be clearly arguable is highly improbable. I am not persuaded this is a "could pay but won't pay" case.
iv) I am satisfied that the overall effect of the orders I have made refusing a stay of execution which will allow HPII to proceed down the enforcement path, but allowing Mr Stevens to pursue his appeal for which he has been granted permission in the meantime fairly balances the competing interests of the parties. If HPII's enforcement efforts reveal evidence of steps taken by Mr Stevens to make enforcement more difficult, or if Mr Stevens defaults on the payments on account of costs I have ordered, it will be open to HPII to seek relief from the court to address the risk of dissipation, and to make an application to the Court of Appeal in relation to Mr Stevens' appeal.
v) I am not persuaded that it would be appropriate in this context to distinguish between the costs liability and the principal and interest liability. HPII will be able to move to execution of both.
vi) For these reasons, I am not persuaded that a compelling reason for imposing either of the disputed conditions has been made out.
G THE POSITION OF MS RICHARDSON
H CONCLUSION