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England and Wales High Court (King's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (King's Bench Division) Decisions >> Osbourne v Persons Unknown & Ors [2023] EWHC 2974 (KB) (30 October 2023 Before:) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/KB/2023/2974.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 2974 (KB) |
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KING'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(Sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge)
____________________
LAVINIA DEBORAH OSBOURNE | Claimant | |
- and - | ||
(1) PERSONS UNKNOWN CATEGORY A | ||
(being the natural and/or legal persons who on 17 January 2022 unlawfully gained access to and removed from the Claimant's cryptoasset wallet ending 7456 Non-Fungible Tokens titled | ||
'Boss Beauties #680' and/or 'Boss Beauties #691') | ||
(2) PERSONS UNKNOWN CATEGORY B | ||
(being the natural and/or legal persons who are in possession | ||
and/or control of the Non-Fungible Tokens titled | ||
'Boss Beauties #680' and/or 'Boss Beauties #691') | ||
(3) THEMBANI DUBE | Defendants |
____________________
No attendance or representation on behalf of the Defendants
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
If this Transcript is to be reported or published, there is a requirement to ensure that no reporting restriction will be breached. This is particularly important in relation to any case involving a sexual offence, where the victim is guaranteed lifetime anonymity (Sexual Offences (Amendment) Act 1992), or where an order has been made in relation to a young person.
NEIL MOODY KC:
"3. The Claimant describes herself as a Blockchain, Fintech and Welltech specialist consultant and thought leader, whose work entails speaking, training and consulting internationally. In November 2020 the Claimant opened an account with the cryptoasset management platform, MetaMask. Her account included four wallets, one of which I will refer to as the MetaMask Wallet. This wallet was linked to the Claimant's account with Ozone Networks Inc, an online cryptoasset marketplace trading as Opensea ('Opensea').
4. This case concerns non-fungible tokens ('NFTs'). The Claimant was given two NFTs, entitled 'Boss Beauties #680' ('BB#680') and 'Boss Beauties #691' ('BB#691'), which I will call 'the Two NFTs'. They were part of a set of 10,000 NFTs representing unique digital works of art depicting inspirational women, each of which also entitles its holder to attend exclusive virtual events and confers other benefits on its holder. The Two NFTs are said to be worth between £3,000 and £5,000.
5. The Two NFTs were deposited in the MetaMask Wallet on 25 September 2021, but on 17 January 2022 the Two NFTs were transferred out of the MetaMask Wallet without the Claimant's knowledge or consent by an unidentified person or persons, whom I will call 'the Alleged Hackers', and who had deposited approximately £150 worth of the cryptocurrency Ethereum in the MetaMask Wallet. It is suggested that a failure in the system architecture may have enabled this unauthorised transaction.
6. The Claimant discovered this on 17 February 2022 and retained an investigator, Robert Moore, of M to M (Mitmark) Limited, to trace the Two NFTs. As set out in a report dated 4 March 2022, his findings were as follows:
(1) The Two NFTs were initially transferred to a wallet which has been referred to as 'the Wallet ending Cd32'.
(2) Each of the Two NFTs was then transferred two or three more times to wallets which were linked to separate accounts with Opensea.
(3) By 4 March 2022:
(a) BB#680 was in a wallet which has been referred to as 'the E29269 User Wallet'; and
(b) BB#691 was in a wallet which has been referred to as 'the jawwn.eth User Wallet'.
7. On 10 March 2022 HHJ Pelling QC granted an interim injunction to restrain the First Defendants (then described as 'PERSONS UNKNOWN (being the individuals or companies who on 17 January 2022 unlawfully gained access to and removed from the Claimant's wallet ending 7456 Non-Fungible Tokens titled 'Boss Beauties #680' 'Boss Beauties #691') from dealing with or disposing of the Two NFTs. HHJ Pelling's order also provided that the Claimant could serve the Claim Form and his order on the First Defendants out of the jurisdiction and by an alternative means, namely service by email on Opensea, the Second Defendant, addressed to various Opensea email addresses.
8. Also on 10 March 2022 HHJ Pelling made a Bankers Trust disclosure order against Opensea. Opensea disclosed some email addresses, but the Claimant has received no answer to emails sent to those addresses. On 25 April 2022 Master Cook made an order by consent dismissing the Claimant's claim against Opensea.
9. The Claimant's Particulars of Claim are dated 28 March 2022. The causes of action pleaded against the First Defendants were unjust enrichment, misuse of private information and constructive trust.
10. HHJ Pelling continued his injunction on the return date, 31 March 2022. Lavender J granted an extension to that injunction on 12 September 2022.
11. As set out in three more reports, Mr Moore subsequently found evidence that:
(1) At some point before 26 August 2022 BB#691 was transferred out of the jawwn.eth User Wallet and through several intermediary wallets into the wallet referred to as 'Wallet 8f3C', which is associated with a certain social media handle and a certain email address ('the Email Address'). There is evidence linking the Email Address with an individual by the name of Thembani Dube. Various social media posts suggest that Thembani Dube lives in South Africa.
(2) As at 26 August 2022, BB#691 was being advertised for auction on the Looksrare cryptoasset market place, with the auction set to remain open until 24 September 2022.
12. On 20 September 2022, Mitmark, on the instruction of Duane Morris, minted NFTs to be airdropped into the Wallet ending Cd32, E29269 User Wallet and Wallet 8f3C (the 'Service NFTs'). The URL (which linked to a website hosting the redacted version of the service documents) can be seen in the front page of the cover letters which were tokenised to create the Service NFTs, being accessible by the custodians of each wallet into which the Service NFTs were airdropped (i.e. only the front page of each letter was tokenised). The documents for service and full copies of the cover letters (noting that the same URL was used for each of the Service NFTs) were uploaded in folders specific to each wallet custodian. Where further documents were to be added, a new folder would be created thereafter. Prior to facilitating the airdrop, Mitmark had uploaded the redacted documents listed in the cover letter (including the order granted previously by Lavender J and the full cover letter) to the document repository.
13. The Service NFTs were airdropped into the Wallet ending Cd32 (at 14:50 UTC/15:50 BST), E29269 User Wallet (at 14:59 UTC/15:59 BST) and Wallet 8f3C (at 14:59 UTC/15:59 BST).
14. Also on 20 September 2022, the Claimant's solicitors served the Third Defendant, Mr Dube, with an unredacted version of the cover letter already served on Persons Unknown Category B by way of NFT along with the following unredacted documents via email: a) the order granted by Lavender J on 12 September 2022; b) the signed (but unsealed) Amended Claim Form (as lodged at Court); c) the signed Amended Particulars of Claim (as approved by Lavender J); d) the signed (but unsealed) Amended Application Notice (as lodged at Court); e) a Response Pack; and f) a Note of the Hearing on 12 September 2022. Mr Dube was also served with the following unredacted documents, via secure transfer: a) the Bundle from the Hearing on 12 September 2022; b) the skeleton Argument from the Hearing on 12 September 2022; and c) the authorities Bundle from the Hearing on 12 September 2022. The Claimant's solicitors had not received any response or contact from the custodians of the Wallet ending Cd32, E29269 User Wallet and/or Wallet 8f3C in advance of the hearing on 10 October 2022.
15. The Claimant's solicitors received sealed copies of the
Amended Application Notice and Amended Claim form on 22 September 2022 and 26 September 2022. These documents, along with the Amended Particulars of Claim (as approved by Lavender J and filed at Court) were sent to Mr Dube via email by way of service on 26 September 2022. On 27 September 2022, the sealed Amended Application Notice, sealed Amended Claim Form and approved Amended Particulars of Claim were also uploaded (by Mitmark) to the website hosting the documents to which the URL in the Service NFTs directed in a new folder entitled 'Service Documents – 26 September 2022'. These further documents were therefore made available to the custodians of the Wallet ending Cd32, E29269 User Wallet and Wallet 8f3C by way of service.
16. It is not suggested that BB#680 has been removed from the E29269 User Wallet. Mr Recker (one of the Claimant's solicitors), in his second witness statement of 4 October 2022 confirmed that the NFTs appeared to still be located in the same wallets that they were in at the time of order granted by Lavender J – the E29269 User Wallet and Wallet 8f3C.
17. In the same witness statement, Mr Recker also confirmed that NFT BB#691 was listed for auction on the Looksrare platform, due to expire on 25 September 2022, and was held by the custodian of Wallet 8f3C. There was some unusual activity surrounding BB#691 with three bids to purchase that NFT by the custodian of Novastar1 Wallet, notable since the Novastar1 Wallet held BB#691 for a short time on 13 July 2022, prior to transfer to Wallet 8f3C."
"16. In form, the order which I was asked to make included injunctions against both the First Defendants and the Third and Fourth Defendants, prohibiting them from dealing with either of the Two NFTs in any way. In substance, however, I was really being asked to extend the injunction made by HHJ Pelling KC against the First Defendants so as to apply to the Third and Fourth Defendants.
17. I concentrate, therefore, on the application for an injunction against the Third and Fourth Defendants. Subject to the issue as to jurisdiction, to which I will return, I considered that it would be appropriate to grant the injunction sought, applying the principles laid down in American Cyanamid Co v Ethicon Ltd [1975] AC 396."
18. I see no reason to depart from HHJ Pelling KC's conclusion, in paragraph 13 of his judgment of 10 March 2022 (cited as [2022] EWHC 2021 (Comm)), that there is at least a realistically arguable case that NFTs are to be treated as property as a matter of English law. I note that, amongst others, Bryan J reached a similar conclusion in relation to cryptoassets such as Bitcoin in paragraph 61 of his judgment in AA v Persons Unknown [2020] 4 WLR 35, as did Butcher J in paragraph 11 of his judgment in Ion Science Ltd v. Persons Unknown (unreported) 21 December 2000 and HHJ Pelling in paragraph 9 of his judgment in Fetch.ai Ltd v Persons Unknown [2021] EWHC 2254 (Comm).
19. I am satisfied that there is a serious issue to be tried whether the Third and Fourth Defendants hold one or more of the Two NFTs on constructive trust for the Claimant. There is evidence that the Two NFTs are property which was obtained by the First Defendants by fraud and which has been transferred by them in breach of trust and has been transferred into the hands of the Third and Fourth Defendants in circumstances which are, as yet, unexplained.
20. In paragraph 18 of his judgment of 10 March 2022, HHJ Pelling KC said as follows:
'The next question that then arises is whether or not damages would be an adequate remedy so far as the claimant is concerned. I am satisfied that damages would not be an adequate remedy for two reasons. First, as things currently stand there is no information available concerning the standing of the persons unknown, and therefore, there can be no confidence that they have the means to meet even the relatively modest damages claim that is likely to arise in the circumstances of this case. The second reason why I am satisfied that damages are not an adequate remedy derive from the nature of the assets themselves. They are given a modest value in these proceedings of about £4,000, give or take. The evidence demonstrates, however, that these are assets which have a particular, personal and unique value to the claimant which extends beyond their mere 'fiat' currency value. The Court will readily grant injunctions to protect assets in such circumstances. In those circumstances, I am satisfied that the claimant has demonstrated to a realistically arguable level required that damages would not be an adequate remedy so far as she is concerned.'
21. I agree. I also agree with what HHJ Pelling KC said in paragraph 19 of his judgment:
'As far as the persons unknown are concerned, I am satisfied that damages would be an adequate remedy in the sense that a cross-undertaking in damages is offered by the claimant, and they have no reason to suppose that she does not have the means to meet any liability that might arise, because, of course, if there were any reasons to suppose that the cross-undertaking could not be honoured in full against any orders made by the Court subsequently, then it would be a material nondisclosure to reveal that fact.'
22. I add that the evidence from Mr Moore that BB#691 was being offered for sale suggests that whoever then possessed or controlled it did not regard it as having a value which extended beyond its financial value.
23. Applying the American Cyanamid principles, what I have said so far is sufficient to justify the grant of the injunction sought without considering the balance of convenience, but I agree with HHJ Pelling KC that the balance of convenience also favours the grant of the injunction."
"The purpose of this is twofold. First, it would save administrative time in that: (1) the Court and/or the Judge would not be required to approve further significant redactions (although for completeness, the October Injunction does not include a clear provision for Court permission to be sought for all redacted documents) and (2) the Claimant would not be required to prepare redacted and unredacted versions of substantive procedural documents, for example, a court bundle. Second, due to the nature of service by NFT, whereby the documents in the repository are publicly accessible, it would help to preserve the privacy of those involved in the dispute, including the Claimant".
"No detriment or prejudice would be suffered by the Defendants as they would still be able to access the documents but it would just require them to obtain a password from this firm which we would provide upon them satisfying this firm that they are the relevant custodian of a particular wallet. Moreover, there is provision in the draft order for the Defendants to contact myself and my colleagues instructed in this matter directly by email to request documentation subject to verification checks to cater for scenarios where the documents cannot be accessed, such as where any technical issues are experienced".