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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 >> Omanovic v Shamaazi Ltd & Anor [2025] EWHC 131 (KB) (23 January 2025) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/KB/2025/131.html Cite as: [2025] EWHC 131 (KB) |
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KING'S BENCH DIVISION
Royal Courts of Justice Strand WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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ADNAN OMANOVIC |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) SHAMAAZI LTD (2) ISMAEL ABDELA MOHAMMED (also known as Ismael Dainehine) |
Defendants |
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Lower Ground 46 Chancery Lane WC2A 1JE
Tel No: 020 7404 1400
Email: [email protected]
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
DAN MCCOURT FRITZ KC and JOHN ELDRIDGE (Instructed by Russell-Cooke LLP) appeared on behalf of the Defendants
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE MARTIN SPENCER:
"4. The parties have permission to rely on the jointly instructed written evidence of an expert forensic accountant (the expert).
(a) The expert's report will be confined to the following issues:
(i) The market value of the first defendant as at (i) 7 December 2020, (ii) the date of the expert's instruction and (iii) such other dates as the expert may consider appropriate.
(ii) The appropriate minority discount (if any) to ascribe in assessing the market value of the hypothetical claim shareholdings of each of the claimants in the first defendant as at the relevant valuation dates.
(b) The parties shall use their best endeavours to agree and identify instructions to the expert by 4.00 pm on 21 June 2024. If no expert has been instructed by that date the claimants must apply to court by 4.00 pm on 28 June 2024 for further directions.
(c) The parties shall provide to the expert any business or accounting records or other documents and information that the expert reasonably requires including by responding to any requests by the expert to meet with them and/or their representatives."
"Investments in cryptocurrency.
14. We note that (per the accounts) Mr Dainehine claims to have 'invested' £2,207,379 in cryptocurrency, suffered a revaluation loss on the 2022 accounts of £544,093, and a further revaluation loss of £1,030,370, in the 2023 accounts.
15. The first point to make about this is that if Mr Dainehine wishes to invest his own money in highly speculative investments such as cryptocurrency that is a matter for him. However, as a company director, with duties to both the company and the minority shareholders, it is plainly not permissible for him to gamble away their money (whether on cryptocurrency or on the horses).
16. If the claimant investment losses are genuine the appropriate way to treat the £2,207,379 investments would be as surplus cash which should have been distributed to shareholders by way of dividend. If Mr Dainehine wishes to gamble away his dividend that would be a matter for him. The claimants would not have done so with their dividends.
17. In this scenario the revaluation losses should also be added back to the maintainable earnings.
18. The claimants sought proper disclosure of the investments in cryptocurrency said to have given rise to significant loss. The Koinly statements were eventually provided in response. The Koinly statements present a very different picture to the company accounts. Whereas the company accounts show massive losses as a result of cryptocurrency investments, the Koinly statements show massive profits. This is obviously deeply concerning.
19. The expert is asked to get to the bottom of the discrepancy. To the extent that the cryptocurrency losses are real they should be added back. To the extent that the cryptocurrency losses are not real and they are in fact profits from these investments then the company accounts will clearly need to be adjusted to reflect such profits."
And then later in the same submissions, there was the following:
"Diversion of business properties.
26. Shamaazi was set up as the corporate vehicle for a number of brands including MyTenNights, MyTenDays and GiveMatch. MyTenNights and MyTenDays appear to operate through the company. However Mr Dainehine appears to have diverted GiveMatch into his separate vehicle called Givetree (a company wholly owned by himself) presumably for the purpose of minimising the valuation of the company in this litigation ...
30. It appears to be beyond dispute that GiveMatch was originally part of the company (see paragraphs 20 to 28 of the second witness statement of Michael Ballinger).
31. It is equally beyond dispute that Mr Dainehine has transferred this brand from the company to Givetree Limited.
32. The company therefore has an obvious cause of action against Mr Dainehine for breach of his duties as a director arising out of his diversion of the company's business opportunities to benefit himself.
33. The company also has an obvious cause of action against both Mr Dainehine and Givetree Limited in respect of their unlawful means conspiracy to divert company's business opportunities."
"For present purposes it is enough to note the first and most significant of those problems which is that the claimant's wish to approach disclosure by reference to a series of roving, nebulously framed allegations of dishonesty, fraud and malfeasance as against the second defendant, none of which are pleaded in the Particulars of Claim, it is by reference to those unpleaded allegations of serious wrongdoing that the claimants seek to justify the sweeping orders for disclosure which they seek."
"In respect of the allegations of dishonesty that are made against the second defendant and lack of credibility and trust in the process of disclosure against this defendant's solicitors, it seems to me if there is going to be allegations of that sort of dishonesty they have to be put on a formal basis."
Then at paragraph 10, she said this:
"10. It seems to me that even when the valuation of a company is in issue the likelihood of all their accounting and financial documents will fall within either standard disclosure or specific disclosure is pretty limited because it is not an identifiable class of documents which is likely to assist the court in resolving a dispute. Until in fact the expert has reported it is unlikely to know what, if any, of those documents are going to be of further assistance over and above what has been disclosed already. It seems to me it is unnecessary for me to make an order at this stage, there being an expert who is going to look at these matters.
11. If there are concerns or gaps or inconsistencies, for example, in respect of the crypto trading that I have been taken to I am told there is an apparent discrepancy although I am not sure the right year are being compared, but if there is a discrepancy there that is exactly the sort of thing that I would expect that the financial expert, complying with their duty to court, will be raising and saying: well, I need to see that and take it into account.
12. If there are matters thereafter that arise of specific disclosure, or the defendants fail to provide something that the expert asked for, that is an entirely different matter and I would expect at that point for there to be specific disclosure applications. But it seems to me for those reasons even if this were a specific disclosure application I would have to reject it on that basis also. And in those circumstances I am sorry I'm not doing full credit to the argument I have heard given the time constraints but those are my core reasons. I dismiss the application."
There was no appeal from that ruling.
"In your clients' submissions to the joint expert dated 21 October 2024 your clients sought to advance the very same unpleaded 'nebulously framed allegations of dishonesty, fraud and malfeasance' upon which your clients sought to rely in support of their application dated 11 June 2024 (the disclosure application)."
Russell-Cooke then referred to the decision of Master Sullivan of 24 October and in the light of that decision stated:
"We trust that you will now (finally) cease making the improper allegations of fraud that you've been intimating since the costs and case management conference."
"In your clients' submissions to the joint expert dated 21 October 2024 your clients advance the (unpleaded) allegation that 'Mr Shamaazi appears to have treated Shamaazi as his own personal piggy bank, using Shamaazi's funds to pay for his lavish lifestyle'. For the avoidance of doubt the defendants' position is that your clients are not entitled to advance this wholly unpleaded allegation."
"2 ... Part of my judgment was that there was no pleading in respect of the Givetree issue. Givetree is mentioned in the pleadings but there was no pleading of any breach of duty in respect of amounts of money going to or from Givetree and no allegations of any breach of duty or indeed conspiracy I should say for either of them in respect of cryptocurrency and it seems to me that that remains the position.
3. That being the position the question is whether the scope of the task of the valuation single joint expert is to conduct some general investigation or indeed specific investigation into matters of the value of the company and how it was managed where there is no pleading of any particular issue in respect of how it was managed, or whether it is a valuation strictly in the terms of the order of Deputy Master Marzec to value the company at particular dates ... and following on from that the appropriate minority discount to ascribe in assessing the market value of the hypothetical claimed shareholdings of now the first claimant.
4. It seems to me that in this particular case if there was to be any investigation in respect of the valuation of any matters that the first claimant wanted to be taken into account that amount to wrongdoing on the part of either defendant then those are matters that have to be pleaded in order for them to be in issue between the parties and thus for the experts to take them into account. I accept that what is said by the expert and quoted in Mr Coppel's skeleton is based on the premise that there is an issue in dispute between the parties and properly so that this was something that she should be taking into account.
5. There is no foundation that I have been taken to for a pleading of either breach of fiduciary duty or conspiracy in respect of either Givetree or the cryptocurrency and in those circumstances it seems to me it is not within the scope of the valuer's remit to investigate those. I do not accept that it is a remit which requires the sort of wide investigatory matters or matters being pointed out to the expert in the way that the claimants suggest. If the claimants want to run specific points about the valuation and suggest that these were matters that should be taken into account the onus on the claimant was to plead those matters. In those circumstances I will grant the defendants' application."
"183. Having read and re-read the pleadings I remain of the opinion that they are demurrable and should be struck out on this ground. The rules which govern both pleading and proving a case of fraud are very strict. In Jonesco v Beard [1930] AC 298 Lord Buckmaster said at page 300:
'It has long been the settled practice of the court that the proper method of impeaching a completed judgment on the ground of fraud is by action in which, as in any other action based on fraud, the particulars of the fraud must be exactly given and the allegation established by the strict proof such a charge requires'.
184. It is well established that fraud or dishonesty, and the same must go for the present tort, must be distinctly alleged and as distinctly proved, that it must be sufficiently particularised and that it is not sufficiently particularised if the facts pleaded are consistent with innocence ... This means that a plaintiff who alleges dishonesty must plead the facts, matters and circumstances relied on to show that the defendant was dishonest and not merely negligent and that the facts, matters and circumstances which are consistent with the negligence do not do so.
185. It is important to appreciate that there are two principles in play. The first is a matter of pleading. The function of pleadings is to give the party opposite sufficient notice of the case which is being made against them. If the pleading means 'dishonestly' or 'fraudulently' it may not be enough to say wilfully or recklessly, such language is equivocal. Similar requirement applies in my opinion in a case like the present. But the requirement is satisfied by the present pleadings. It is perfectly clear that the depositors are alleging an intention of tort.
186. The second principle which is quite distinct is that an allegation of fraud or dishonesty must be sufficiently particularised and that particulars of facts which are consistent with honesty are not sufficient. This is only partly a matter of pleading. It is also a matter of substance. As I have said, the defendant is entitled to know the case he has to meet. But since dishonesty is usually a matter of inference from primary facts, this involves knowing not only that he is alleged to have acted dishonestly but also the primary facts which will be relied upon at trial to justify the inference. At trial, the court will not normally allow proof of primary facts which have not been pleaded and will not do so in a case of fraud. It is not open to the court to infer dishonesty from facts which have not been pleaded or from facts which have been pleaded but are consistent with honesty. There must be some fact which tilts the balance and justifies an inference of dishonesty and this fact must be both pleaded and proved."