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Jersey Unreported Judgments |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Jersey Unreported Judgments >> Toorani v Toorani [2019] JRC 023 (12 February 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/je/cases/UR/2019/2019_023.html Cite as: [2019] JRC 023, [2019] JRC 23 |
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Before : |
T. J. Le Cocq, Esq., Deputy Bailiff, and Jurats Pitman and Ronge |
Between |
(1) Sameera Abdul Rasool Toorani (2) Khairiyah Abdul Rasool Toorani (3) Rouhangiz Abdul Rasool Toorani (4) Zainab Abdul Rasool Toorani (5) Maryam Abdul Rasool Toorani |
Plaintiffs |
And |
(1) Badriya Abdul Rasool Toorani (2) Markh Abdul Rasool Toorani (3) Rabab Abdul Rasool Toorani (4) Shadukh Abdul Rasool Toorani |
Interveners |
Advocate W. A. F. Redgrave for the Plaintiffs.
Advocate M. P. Cushing for the Interveners.
judgment
the deputy bailiff:
1. This is the application of Badriya Abdul Rasool Toorani ("Badriya"), Markh Abdul Rasool Toorani ("Markh"), Rabab Abdul Rasool Toorani ("Rabab"), Shadukh Abdul Rasool Toorani ("Shadukh") (hereinafter collectively referred to as "the Interveners") for the discharge or variation of a freezing injunction granted by this Court in favour of Sameera Abdul Rasool Toorani ("Sameera"), Khairayah Abdul Rasool Toorani ("Khairiyah"), Rouhangiz Abdul Rasool Toorani ("Rouhangiz"), Zainab Abdul Rasool Toorani ("Zainab"), Maryam Abdul Rasool Toorani ("Maryam") (hereinafter collectively referred to as "the Plaintiffs").
2. On 30th August, 2017, interim injunctions were granted by this Court on an ex parte application by the Plaintiffs against Red Rose Limited (named in the original proceedings as the Defendant) ("Red Rose") and Ocorian Limited (named in the original proceedings as the Party Cited). The injunctions restrained Red Rose and Ocorian Limited from disposing of the shares in Red Rose to a third party or disposing of the Burwood Estate or the net proceeds of sale of the Burwood Estate if it had already been sold. The Interveners are Red Rose's beneficial owners.
3. The injunctions granted by the Court were obtained in support of English proceedings which the Plaintiffs stated that they intended to commence. Those proceedings were to seek to recognise and enforce against the English estate of Behrooz Toorani ("BT") certain judgments obtained against BT in Bahrain by the Plaintiffs and to set aside a transfer in 2006 of the Burwood Estate ("Burwood") to Red Rose under Section 423 of the Insolvency Act 1986 on the basis that that transfer was at an undervalue and was made for the purposes of putting assets beyond the reach of BT's creditors ("the English Proceedings").
4. Mr Abdul Rasool Toorani ("Abdul") died in around 1965. He had two wives.
5. With his first wife, Abdul had five children, namely BT and the Interveners. Badriya is the sole executor of BT's will dated 1st April, 2007. The estate is being administered in England. The Interveners are beneficiaries under BT's will.
6. With his second wife, Abdul had seven children, a son (Mohammed Abdul Rasool Toorani) ("Mohammed") and six daughters, Suhaila Abdul Rasool Toorani (Suhaila) and the Plaintiffs.
7. BT and Mohammed were partners in A R Toorani and Company ("ART") in Bahrain and each of the Plaintiffs and Interveners were minority shareholders in ART.
8. Prior to BT's death in July 2017, an agreement has been reached for the sale of the shares of Red Rose for the price of £7.7 million. The proposed sale was to a neighbouring landowner of Burwood and was at a price that the directors of Red Rose considered exceeded the value which would be obtained for that property on the open market.
9. On 18th October, 2017, Red Rose sought and obtained orders varying the terms of the injunctions. That application was made with the knowledge and support of the Interveners.
10. The variation order granted by the Court permitted the proposed sale of the shares in Red Rose to proceed on the basis that the Interveners' Jersey advocates, then Messrs Bedell Cristin, provided a written undertaking to pay into Court the proceeds of sale of the shares in Red Rose less the Interveners costs of the sale to be held in Court pending further order. Following the sale of the shares and the payment of the said proceeds into Court, both Red Rose and Ocorian Limited were released from the proceedings. The sale of shares completed on 4th December, 2017, and the proceeds were paid into Court.
11. The Interveners now apply by summons for an order that the sum of £7,677,459.58 together with accrued interest held in Court pursuant to the undertakings given by Bedell Cristin be paid to the Interveners; and in the alternative £1,121,926.37 from that sum be paid to the Interveners' English solicitors for the purpose of funding the Interveners' legal costs in the English proceedings.
12. The essence of the application made by the Interveners is that the injunction should not have been granted. The Interveners argue that the manner in which the Plaintiffs have presented their application to the Court created the appearance that the Plaintiffs were being frustrated by BT with the assistance of the Interveners in the enforcement of judgments that they had obtained in Bahrain. The Interveners allege, however, that the Court was not provided with the proper context in which to view the Plaintiffs' claims. Those claims were part of a broader family dispute relating to essentially the same subject matter in which applications to recover assets from the Interveners had already been unsuccessful in Bahrain and in which the Plaintiffs had previously compromised and released claims. Lastly, it was alleged that the Interveners had obtained their own multi-million pound judgments against BT, ART and Mohammed. It is argued that had this Court been made aware of the matters referred to above, the injunctions would not have been granted and the Interveners would not have been obliged to pay the sum into Court.
13. The allegations in the Order of Justice filed in these proceedings in August 2017, and subsequently amended in October 2017 may be summarised as follows:-
(i) The Plaintiffs are BT's paternal half-sisters. BT died on 8th July, 2017, in England and his estate is accordingly being administered there;
(ii) The Plaintiffs had collectively obtained judgments in 2005 and 2014 in Bahrain against BT in the sum that cumulatively, converted into sterling amounts to approximately £15,141,579.05 together with fees and interest ("the 2005 Judgment and the 2014 Judgment");
(iii) BT had failed to pay the judgment debts prior to his death and accordingly the Plaintiffs were seeking payment of them from his estate;
(iv) The Plaintiffs, in addition had a claim to inherit from BT's estate;
(v) On or around 10th October, 2006, BT had transferred his principal asset, a property in England, Burwood to Red Rose. Burwood had a value of between £9 million and £13 million;
(vi) Red Rose is incorporated in Jersey;
(vii) The Plaintiffs' English solicitors are taking steps to have the judgment debts recognised in the English High Court and they will then be enforced against BT's estate;
(viii) If BT's estate would be insufficient, then the Plaintiffs would be applying under Section 423 of the Insolvency Act 1986 against BT's estate and Red Rose to set aside the transfer of Burwood House;
(ix) The Plaintiffs would be issuing court proceedings in England.
(x) The Plaintiffs understood that the sale of Burwood or the shares in Red Rose were imminent.
14. As indicated above, the Order of Justice contained interim injunctions which were granted on an ex parte basis.
15. A number of affidavits have been filed in connection with the various applications before the Court and in this application.
16. The Order of Justice was supported by an affidavit of Edmund Charles Beale of 29th August, 2017, ("Beale Affidavit 1") who is a partner in the firm of Trowers and Hamlins LLP who acts for the Plaintiffs. Mr Beale also filed an affidavit on 17th October, 2017, ("Beale Affidavit 2"), a third affidavit of 9th July, 2017, ("Beale Affidavit 3") which was filed in response to the Interveners' application before this Court and a further affidavit of 6th September, 2018, ("Beale Affidavit 4"), also filed for that purpose. He filed a final affidavit on 20th September, 2018 ("Beale Affidavit 5").
17. In addition, in the application for the injunction, the Court had before it an affidavit of Madeleine Paulette Le Mauviel dated 25th August, 2017 ("the Le Mauviel Affidavit").
18. The Interveners' Application was supported by the affidavit of Badriya of 7th May 2018 ("Badriya's First Affidavit") and a further affidavit of 9th August, 2018 ("Badriya's Second Affidavit"). In addition the Interveners filed an affidavit by Patrick David Gearon of 11th May, 2018 ("Gearon's First Affidavit") in support of their application. Mr Gearon is a partner in Charles Russell Speechlys LLP acting for the Interveners. He also filed a second affidavit of 9th August, 2018 ("Gearon's Second Affidavit"). There are other affidavits before the Court which, although the Court has considered them, are not referred to herein.
19. The Interveners assert that the Plaintiffs, in obtaining their interim injunction, did so on the basis of material non-disclosures which may be characterised as follows:-
(i) The Court was not informed by the Plaintiffs, that the Interveners had themselves the benefit of substantial judgments in Bahrain concerning substantially the same subject matter and against the same parties (including BT) as those obtained by the Plaintiffs ("the Interveners' Judgments");
(ii) The Plaintiffs mischaracterised the intentions of BT when he transferred Burwood to Red Rose in 2006 ("BT's Intentions");
(iii) The Plaintiffs did not inform the Court that they had entered into a settlement agreement in 2002 pursuant to which they had agreed not to make any claims for amounts due from ART which was the entity whose profits formed the subject matter of the Plaintiffs' underlying judgments in Bahrain ("the Settlement Agreement");
(iv) The Plaintiffs did not inform the Court that the 2014 judgment was not capable of recognition and enforcement in England as an execution file had not been opened in Bahrain, steps to exhaust all means of execution inside Bahrain had not been taken, and also steps to enforce against judgment debtors residing in Bahrain had not been taken. All of these were requirements of Bahraini law ("Bahrain Law Issues");
(v) The Plaintiffs failed to inform the Court that unsuccessful claims have already been made in proceedings in Bahrain against one of the Interveners seeking to reverse real estate transactions entered into with BT and that at the time of the application for an injunction there was an ongoing appeal in Bahrain in relation to that issue ("Claim against Interveners in Bahrain");
(vi) The Plaintiffs failed to inform the Court that they required litigation funding and after the event legal costs insurance to enable them to pursue the English proceedings. The Court was informed during the ex parte application for the injunction that English proceedings would be issued "shortly". They had not in fact been served until five months later ("Litigation Funding").
(vii) The Plaintiffs failed to return to Court to inform the Court of evidence provided to them by the Interveners of payments made by the Interveners to or on behalf of BT in consideration of the transfer of Burwood to Red Rose ("Further Evidence");
(viii) The Plaintiffs failed to inform the Court of evidence provided to them by the Interveners of tax advice given to BT relating to the transfer of Burwood which pre-dated the commencement of the Bahrain proceedings by the Plaintiffs ("Tax Planning").
20. The first allegation of material non-disclosure is to be found in Gearon Affidavit 1 which indicates that the Interveners, who, as we have said, are the beneficial owners of Red Rose have themselves substantial money judgments against ART, BT and Mohammed. We have been shown a translation of the Bahraini court documentation which illustrates the claims made and that they were successful. That documentation also shows that one of the Plaintiffs is named in those proceedings as an intervening party and accordingly the existence of those judgments must, it is alleged, have been known to the Plaintiffs. The date of the judgment is 30th January, 2014, and accordingly this should have been explained, it is argued, to the court when the application for an injunction was made.
21. The Interveners assert that, in failing to explain the existence of these judgments, the court considering the application for an interim injunction was left with an insufficient understanding of the family dynamics and indeed that the Interveners would have had competing claims against BT's estate.
22. The Plaintiffs, whilst accepting that they were aware of the judgment in favour of the Interveners, point out that those claims were bought in 2007 by the Interveners against BT for the Interveners' share in the profits of ART. There is no suggestion that the Interveners' claims are being enforced nor do they form part of the Interveners' defence in the English proceedings. In any event, so the Plaintiffs argue, the existence of similar judgments by the Interveners does not have any effect on the strength or otherwise of the Plaintiffs' claims nor on the merits of their application for an interim injunction. If and to the extent the Interveners are creditors of BT then they will also be able to prove as creditors of his estate. Such will not have any effect on the Plaintiffs' claim either in the UK or in Jersey that the assets should form part of BT's estate.
23. It is clear that this is a complex matter in which there are disputes between members of the same family and it would have been possible to provide the Court, when considering the injunction, with substantially more information relating to the detail of the family disputes. That is not to say, however, that the information would have been required to enable the Court to have a sufficient understanding of the basis for the application before it for interim relief. The obligation on a plaintiff is of course to provide full and frank disclosure. That does not mean, however, that full disclosure requires every detail of every issue or transaction to be included in documentation before the Court and drawn out from documentation specifically into the affidavit or affidavits filed in support. The Court must look to whether any failure in disclosure is material and by that we mean of a nature that may have caused the Court to view the order requested differently so as to refuse it or to modify it so as to grant it in different terms.
24. In our judgement, the failure to make express reference to the judgments obtained by the Interveners, in the context of the claim set out in the Order of Justice which, in essence, is to preserve the position until the Plaintiffs' application to have the assets transferred into the estate of BT had been determined, was not material to the question as to whether or not an injunction would be granted or granted in a different form.
25. In Beale Affidavit 1, filed in support of the of the interim injunction, at paragraph 48 it states:-
"On 24th August 2017, I learned further information regarding the imminent disposal of the property, including that the reason for the transfer of the property to Red Rose in 2006 was because Mr Toorani wanted to put it beyond the reach of his creditors including his paternal brother Mohammed Torrani."
26. Mr Beale was challenged on this in correspondence and in the Beale Affidavit 3 he states, at paragraph 137:-
"The reference to Mohammed Toorani was wrong because Mohammed Toorani is not a party to the Bahrain judgments. This was an inadvertent reference, when I simply intended to refer to the dispute between the two sides of the Toorani family."
27. In paragraph 138, he goes on to observe:-
"In any event, however, this was not a ground relied upon for the injunction, and does not form part of the facts relied upon in the letter before claim in respect to the second English claim, or the amended particulars of claim."
28. It is in fact submitted by the Interveners that Mr Beale's evidence is still incorrect in that Mohammed was a party to the Bahrain judgments but he was, like BT, a defendant.
29. It is argued by the Interveners that the Court must have been misled by thinking that Mohammed was a creditor of BT and that his position as creditor was behind BT's alleged intention to transfer Burwood. This is characterised by the Interveners as a serious mistake and that there was no evidence of any intention on the part of BT to avoid creditors.
30. The Plaintiffs accept that this was a mistake on Mr Beale's behalf but argue that it is irrelevant.
31. In paragraph 59 of the Beale Affidavit 1 in comment upon the intended English proceedings, Mr Beale states:-
"In that case, the Plaintiffs intend to have the 2006 transfer set aside pursuant to section 423 of the IA 1986. By that date, Mrs Sameera Toorani's legal proceedings against Mr Toorani had been underway since 2002 and she had obtained a number of court judgments against him, including the 2005 judgment and the March 2006 judgment. He would therefore have been aware of his liability to Mrs Sameera Toorani and was likely aware that Mrs Sameera Toorani's sisters would potentially bring similar claims, as they indeed did. ..."
32. The Plaintiffs argue that the Court was accordingly not misled in any material way and indeed there was additional evidence relating to the possible intention to take assets beyond the reach of creditors.
33. It is further submitted by the Plaintiffs that this mistake on the part of Mr Beale did not come to his attention until after the matter was inter partes.
34. There is reference to the intention on the part of BT to avoid Mohammed making a claim at paragraphs 36 and 42 of the Le Mauviel Affidavit. Miss Le Mauviel lived with BT and speaks amongst other things, of the period leading up to his death. There is reference to a conversation taking place in front of BT prior to his death in which reference is made that the transfer to Red Rose in 2006 was to avoid his paternal brother Mohammed from making a claim to it. This may have been the origin of the error in Beale Affidavit 1.
35. It appears to the Court that whilst this was clearly a mistake, it was minor in nature and did not mislead the Court in granting the interim injunction in any way. It was clear that the claim was being made to set aside the transfer on the ground that it was made to avoid creditors and the fact that the identity of one of those potential creditors may have been misstated is not a material non-disclosure from the Court's perspective.
36. It is alleged that the Plaintiffs failed to disclose to the Court that in 2002 they had signed an agreement with ART that they would not make a claim in relation to the amounts due pursuant to their minority shareholding for any sum before 2002. It is pointed out that the purchase of Burwood by BT started in 1984 which was some 18 years before the agreement in 2002 was signed. It is asserted in Gearon Affidavit 1 that:-
"The existence of this agreement will materially affect the claims raised by the half-sisters in the English Court as the half-sisters/Plaintiffs clearly accept that as of 2002 they would not seek to undo or query any transaction involving the company or the company's partners before that time."
37. It is accordingly argued by the Interveners that this failure meant that the Court was not alerted to a potential defence within the English proceedings.
38. In response, the Plaintiffs submit that the Settlement Agreement makes no difference to the 2005 Judgment and 2014 Judgment. We have seen a letter dated 18th January, 2002, signed by Maryam, Zainab, Rouhangiz, Khairiyah on ART headed paper which insofar as material reads as follows:-
"By signing here below we the partners of AR Toorani hereby confirm that in 1996 there was a family dispute regarding the business and we agreed on the following in the presence of Mohammed AR Toorani:-
"Each partner will receive BD200,000 as full and final settlement of their share for the period 1978 to 2001. We also agreed that we have no right in the company's profit nor are we responsible for any loss for that period.""
39. There is a paragraph after the signatures reflecting that Suhaila and Sameera had already received a similar sum.
40. It is argued by the Plaintiffs that given that this so called agreement did not affect the Plaintiffs judgments in Bahrain in 2005 and 2014, they did not think that it could affect their application in Jersey in support of the English proceedings.
41. On the face of it, it is not clear from the letter of 15th January, 2002, that it has any reach beyond the signatories' share of the profits in ART for the period set out in the letter. It certainly does not reach expressly into the assets of BT.
42. In our judgement had that letter been brought to the attention of the Court it would not have altered or had any impact on the Court's decision to grant the interim injunction and was not a material non-disclosure.
43. Exhibited to Gearon Affidavit 1 is a legal opinion dated 26th March, 2018, provided by Mr Awad Fouda who is described in Gearon Affidavit 1 as independent Bahrain counsel.
44. In his letter of advice Mr Fouda indicates that to enforce a judgment obtained in Bahrain requires the successful parties to open an execution file which the Plaintiffs have not done with regard to the 2014 judgment.
45. Similarly in his opinion, he indicates that the law of Bahrain requires Bahraini court judgments to be registered with the court of execution and that there is a requirement that the successful parties must exhaust their means of execution inside Bahrain before seeking to enforce a judgment outside of that country.
46. It is asserted by the Interveners that:-
"It is therefore clear that, as a matter of Bahrain law, the 2014 judgment is not, as matters stand, enforceable either in Bahrain, in England or indeed anywhere else because the Plaintiffs have not taken the steps which they are required to take to open an execution file in Bahrain and to exhaust their rights to enforce the judgment against Mohammed Toorani and against the company in Bahrain, before seeking to enforce the judgment outside the jurisdiction of the Bahrain courts." (Gearon Affidavit 1 paragraph 71).
47. It appears that there is disagreement between the experts in Bahraini law on these points. In an opinion dated 9th July, 2018, given by different experts, the following was contained at paragraph 11:-
"As to enforcement of a Bahrain judgment abroad, Bahrain law does not regulate or impose any restrictions on attempts to enforce judgment outside of Bahrain. Such lack of regulation or restriction is axiomatic as Bahrain law would not usually regulate or impose restrictions on extraterritorial matters. A party who seeks to enforce a Bahrain judgment abroad would therefore not be required to register the judgment with the execution court in Bahrain, issue proceedings in the execution court in Bahrain or exhaust all enforcement options in Bahrain."
48. The Plaintiffs observe that there is nothing in Bahrain belonging to the estate of BT against which the Bahraini judgments could be enforced.
49. There is some reference in the documents filed on behalf of the Interveners that criticism was raised of the Plaintiffs disclosure to the extent that it had not revealed that the 2014 judgment in Bahrain was subject to appeal. This point was not developed in argument before us and we do not therefore deal with it other than to refer to the fact that in Beale Affidavit 1 (at paragraphs 73 and 74 and 95.2) reference is made to the appeals and their existence is drawn expressly to the attention of the court considering the grant of the interim injunction.
50. It might also be noted that under the heading "Full and Frank Disclosure" of Beale Affidavit 1 at paragraph 95.3 the following statement is made:-
"There may also be reasons why Bahrain law and the judgment debt are not due and payable or under English public policy why they should not be recognised. I am not aware of any such reasons and none have been raised by Charles Russell in correspondence (though this correspondence is at an early stage)."
51. Had the points raised by the Interveners' expert been deployed before the court considering the interim injunction in Beale Affidavit 1 it would inevitably have also received the submission of the Plaintiffs' expert which is to opposite effect. Patently, it is not for a court considering competing claims of foreign law in a case such as this to seek to determine which opinion is correct for the purposes of interim relief.
52. In the circumstances of this case we do not think that reference beyond that contained in Beale Affidavit 1 to the enforceability of the 2014 judgment was required. We do not consider this in all the circumstances to be a material non-disclosure.
53. Gearon Affidavit 1 states that on 31st January, 2018, a judgment issued by the Bahraini courts dismissed Suhaila's claim that the property transactions made by BT and/or ART should be reversed. This, it is submitted would have a significant impact in relation to the strength of the Plaintiffs' claim under the Insolvency Act in the English proceedings.
54. Gearon Affidavit 1, at paragraph 122, quotes from the 2014 Judgment which says as follows:-
"With regard to the First Defendant brought into the case [Badriya] the reason for it having been involved in the claim is its purchase of real estate properties from the First Defendant [BT], given that this was done pursuant to a proper contract that has not been contested, and given that the court has doubts regarding the conclusion of the expert that the purchase of the real estate properties by the defendant was done using the funds of the Third Defendant [ART] ....... It was necessary for the expert to prove that the First Defendant had brought the real estate properties using the funds of the company, the report as well as the documents of the case are void of any such proof. Thus the court disregards it...."
55. The decision of the appeal court in Bahrain upheld that decision. Gearon Affidavit 1 goes on to make the point that the decision makes it clear that under Bahrain law a property transaction could only be set aside or reversed if a claimant could demonstrate that the property in question had been acquired by a defendant using funds from ART. A similar case is made in the English proceedings and that the Plaintiffs are in the same difficulty that appears from the judgments of the Bahrain court. Accordingly, so it is asserted, this matter should have been brought to the attention of the Royal Court in considering the grant of the interim injunction.
56. Further, it is asserted that the fact that the Plaintiff did not disclose to the Royal Court that a claim had been pursued unsuccessfully in Bahrain against one of the Interveners prevented the Court from understanding a matter that was material to the merits of the English proceedings and that the English Court might be reluctant to exercise any discretion under the Insolvency Act to overturn a property transaction to satisfy a Bahrain judgment in circumstances where the Bahrain court itself would not do so.
57. In response the Plaintiffs observe that the claim in Bahrain was made by Suhaila and not by any of the Plaintiffs. Accordingly no res judicata arises. Furthermore, the English court in considering the application will not be applying Bahraini law. More importantly, however, the case in Bahrain did not refer to the same property. In Beale Affidavit 3, at paragraph 144 et seq, the matter is stated as follows:-
"144. Further, and in any event, Suhaila Toorani's attempt to join Badriya Toorani did not rely upon or involve the transfer of Burwood House. This is made clear in 31st January 2018 judgment. At its page 3... it refers to these matters, stating:-
"... The First Respondent [BT] purchased real estate of the property of the Third Respondent Company [ART] and sold them to the Sixth Respondent [Yousef Dawood Nono Ibrahim], without depositing the sale proceeds in the account of the Third Respondent Company. He also sold some of his properties to his mother, who in turn sold them to the Seventh Respondent [Badriya]."
145. The same matters are repeated in the seven final lines on page 6 of the judgment.
146. It is evident from this that these references are not to Burwood House. As explained in section A of my first affidavit, this was property which Mr Toorani purchased personally in the 1980s, before transferring it to Red Rose shortly before the 2005 judgment was confirmed by the Bahrain court of appeal. It was not a property which he purchased from the company [ART] and sold to Yousef Dawood Nono Ibrahim. It also was not a property which he sold to his mother who then sold it Badriya Toorani."
58. In our judgement, the dissimilarities between the transaction that formed the subject matter of the case in Bahrain and the issues relating to Burwood make the decision of the Bahraini courts of 2018 of marginal if any significance in considering whether or not an injunction should be granted in support of a claim made in connection between different properties by different parties where English law would be applied.
59. It may have been appropriate to make reference to it within Beale Affidavit 1 but in our judgment any failure to do so does not amount to a material non-disclosure.
60. The Plaintiffs did not in applying for the interim injunctions disclose to the Court that they were in the process of seeking litigation funding and indeed after the event (ATE) insurance to make their claims in the English proceedings. It is also clear that there was significant delay between when the court granted the interim relief in August of 2017 and the eventual issue of the proceedings on 30th November, 2017, and their service on 31st January, 2018.
61. The Plaintiffs point to the fact that at the hearing of the ex parte application before the Deputy Bailiff on 30th August, 2017, when discussing the fortification of the undertaking in damages the Plaintiffs' advocate noted that they would "struggle to provide further funds".
62. This, it is suggested by the Plaintiffs, meant that the need for litigation funding and ATE insurance was in effect raised before the court in considering the grant of the injunction.
63. In our view, that interpretation of the submissions of the Plaintiffs' legal adviser before the Deputy Bailiff is not justified.
64. The Court was not alerted to the fact that there was any impediment which might cause a delay to the commencement of the English proceedings and, in the view of the court, that is something that should have been brought to the court's attention.
65. Had such been done, it is likely that the court would have explored this in some detail and considered imposing a deadline on the commencement of proceedings in England and Wales as was, indeed, done when the matter was returned before the court on 18th October, 2017, before Sir Michael Birt, Commissioner where an order was made requiring the substantive proceedings to be issued by 30th November, 2017. Criticism was made of the Plaintiffs' attitude to service of the English Proceedings when, in dealing with Badriya's application for security for costs there was correspondence from the Plaintiffs' legal advisers in January 2018 in which it is said "Our clients are not required to serve their claims. They are entitled to allow the claim forms to expire. In that case there would be no proceedings in which your clients could seek their costs.... However, our clients do of course intend to serve their claims. One of the reasons they have not yet served is because, entirely without prejudice to the points made above, our clients are in the process of obtaining after the event legal costs insurance to cover their possible liability to pay your clients' costs of the claims...".
66. The Plaintiffs point out there is no Jersey authority in support of the proposition that an applicant for injunction must disclose their litigation funding arrangements and the extent of an applicant's duty to disclose, under Jersey and English law, is limited to its financial position with regard to its ability to honour any cost undertaking and damages in respect of which, of course, the court was informed at the ex parte hearing in chambers by the Plaintiffs' legal adviser.
67. It is further argued by the Plaintiffs that the question of the Plaintiffs need for ATE insurance did not arise until the Interveners threatened to bring a security for costs application which would have been prevented by ATE insurance.
68. We accept, for the purposes of this judgment, that there is no express requirement to notify a court considering the grant of an interim injunction about the arrangements made by Plaintiffs for their litigation funding. However, clearly if there is a funding question which may impinge upon the timing of a step, in this case the issue of English proceedings, which the injunction is sought to underpin, then that would be a material consideration that should be brought to the attention of the court.
69. We think, therefore, that an intention on the part of a plaintiff to delay the issuing of the English proceedings until litigation funding is secured is something that should have been told to the court and a failure to do so is a material non-disclosure.
70. However, as we have said above, in our judgement this would not have prevented the court from granting the relief sought other than the Court may well have put a time limit in for the commencement and progress of the English proceedings.
71. In our judgement, this failure on the part of the Plaintiffs is not sufficiently serious to merit the immediate discharge of the injunction but even were it to be so, we would on balance have re-imposed it as amended by the subsequent amendment of Commissioner Birt.
72. It is convenient to deal with the allegation that the Plaintiffs failed to return to Court to inform the Court of evidence provided to them by the Interveners about payments made by the Interveners to or on behalf BT in consideration for Burwood, and relating to tax advice given to BT about the transfer of the Burwood which pre-dated the commencement of the Bahrain proceedings because both of these matters relate to information that came to the attention of the Plaintiffs after the Interveners were involved in the proceedings and accordingly the proceedings were no longer ex parte.
73. Gearon Affidavit 1 asserts that Beale Affidavit 1 fails to refer the Court to correspondence with Mr Gearon's firm but was material to the potential success or otherwise of the Plaintiffs' English claims and should have been disclosed to the Court at the time of the variation. On 12th October, 2017, Charles Russell Speechly wrote a letter to Trowers and Hamlins which contained an annex providing information which related to the provision by the Interveners of financial support to BT between 2006 and his death in 2017 which amounted to over £7.1 million. That letter also attached tax advice provided by KPMG dated from the 1990s that recommended that BT set up an offshore structure for inheritance tax reasons. These, it is suggested were relevant matters for the Plaintiffs to have disclosed to the Court that should have been disclosed pursuant to the Plaintiffs' duties of full and frank disclosure. They undermined, so it is argued, the assertions in Beale Affidavit 1 of a good arguable case by reason of the fact that they would have pointed to consideration being paid by the Interveners for Burwood and indeed that BT was motivated by considerations other than avoiding creditors for the transfer.
74. The way that the Interveners put the matter before the Court is that the duty of the Plaintiffs of full and frank disclosure of the evidence provided to them by the Interveners extends beyond that time when the ex parte orders have been made and after the matter has become, in effect, inter partes.
75. It is correct that no reference is made to these matters in Beale Affidavit 1 but they are dealt with in Beale Affidavit 3.
76. In this he characterises the points made by the Plaintiffs as an assertion that although Burwood was transferred by BT to Red Rose by way of a deed of gift and registered such in the Land Registry, it was not in fact a gift but part of a contractual agreement whereby the Interveners received a beneficial ownership of that property in exchange for supporting BT financially. This matter was touched on by Janet Gabrielson of Ocorian Limited in her affidavit of 28th September 2017 ("the Gabrielson Affidavit") in support of the application by Red Rose to vary the injunctions contained in the Order of Justice.
77. Other than pointing out that in his judgment it is improbable that the English court would accept a claim made by the Interveners as characterised above given the way that the transaction was set up, he makes the observation that it is a matter for determination by the court within the English proceedings.
78. In Beale Affidavit 4, with regard to the payment by the Interveners of rent to Red Rose, it is pointed out that Red Rose was owned by the Interveners beneficially and, in effect, it is asserted that there is a circulatory of payment although this appears to have been denied by Charles Russell Speechlys in correspondence on the basis that the monies received by Red Rose were used to defray other costs incurred by BT.
79. With regard to the motivation of the transfer of Burwood House to Red Rose being based in fact on a recommendation by KPMG for tax planning purposes, Beale Affidavit 3 points to the fact that this has been raised as an issue for the first time in paragraph 9 of the Gabrielson Affidavit.
80. Beale Affidavit 3 sets out a number of reasons why in his view this information would not affect the assessment of a good arguable case. In brief, they are as follows:-
(i) The KPMG recommendation was made in 1992 but it was only some 14 years later after the 2005 Judgment had been obtained that it was acted upon;
(ii) At around the same time, so the Plaintiffs will say, BT wound up the business of ART and ceased travelling to Bahrain in order to evade enforcement of the 2005 Judgment;
(iii) Even if saving tax was one purpose of the transaction, if another substantial purpose was evading creditors then that would also impugn the transfer;
(iv) In fact the transfer resulted in additional tax liabilities;
(v) Even if the intention was to save tax and given the assertion by the Interveners that the transfer whilst characterised as a gift was in fact part of an agreement between themselves and BT, this would be an attempt to evade liabilities to HMRC potentially;
(vi) The transfer of Burwood was arranged on behalf of BT by a close personal adviser who appears, according to the allegations made in Beale Affidavit 3 to have sought to avoid letters from Mr Beale's law firm;
(vii) The explanation by the Interveners is not consistent with the Le Mauviel Affidavit.
81. The Plaintiffs argue that at the time of the application for the injunction they were not aware of any possible side arrangement between BT and the Interveners, nor were they aware of the tax advice that BT may have received.
82. Moreover it is pointed out that to the extent that these are challenges to the English proceedings, they are a matter for the English court to resolve.
83. One of the issues to consider is the extent to which the duty of full and frank disclosure carries with it an obligation to continue to make disclosure once the matter is inter partes and the information that might be disclosed is within the knowledge of the other parties.
84. In fact the allegation that the transfer of Burwood was not in fact a gift but was rather part of an agreement between BT and the Interveners is contained in paragraph 14 et seq of Badriya's First Affidavit which was filed in support of the current application. It is pointed out, however, by the Plaintiffs that this is the Interveners' own information and could have been raised before the Court during the application to vary the injunction had the Interveners sought to intervene at that point. It is accepted that such explanations relating to payments made by the Interveners or tax advice might be relevant but not that there is an obligation upon the Plaintiffs in the circumstances to have referred them back to the court.
85. The Interveners point to the case of Wilkins and Others -v- Headrick and Others 2000/186A in which the court considered amongst other things the effect of the failure to proceed with interrogatories which had been granted on an ex parte basis. The court at paragraphs 18 to 20 said:-
86. The Interveners accordingly argue that it is clear that under Jersey law there is a continuing obligation of full and frank disclosure even after an injunction has been obtained and that the information relating to the Interveners' payments and the KPMG tax advice clearly should have been referred to the issuing judge.
87. The Plaintiffs for their part distinguish Wilkins on the basis that the instant position is very different. Wilkins was concerned with interrogatories in addition to freezing orders, and there is no suggestion that the Plaintiffs in this case had abandoned any of the relief that they had obtained on an ex parte basis.
88. The Plaintiffs rely on Commercial Injunctions (6th Edition) by Stephen Gee QC ("Gee") where at paragraph 9-026, the learned author states:-
89. We were also referred to the recent case of JSC BTA Bank -v- Mukhtar Ablyazov, Ilyas Khrapunov [2018] EWHC 259 (Comm), in which, under the heading "The Continuing Duty of Disclosure" the court said this at paragraphs 9 et seq said:-
90. It seems to us that the obligation of full and frank disclosure continues to apply to a plaintiff who has obtained interim relief unless and until the matter becomes inter partes.
91. Thereafter, the matter being inter partes, in our judgment where information is in the possession of the defendants in general (or the Interveners in this case), particularly in the circumstances where they have the information and the Plaintiffs initially do not, then they, that is the defendants/Interveners, can bring matters to the attention of the court as they wish. In fact the information relating to the alleged agreement between the Interveners and BT was contained in the Gabrielson Affidavit in any event as was reference to the KPMG tax advice.
92. To the extent that Wilkins, above, suggests that the obligation of full and frank disclosure remains on a plaintiff even after the matter has become inter partes such that a Plaintiff has a continuing obligation to bring to the attention of the court information brought to his attention by a defendant it does not, in our view, represent the correct position.
93. It is common ground that the approach of this Court to full and frank disclosure is to be found in the case of Goldtron Limited -v- Most Investment Limited [2002] JLR 424 in when at paragraphs 15 and 16 the Court said:-
94. In Gee at paragraph 9-008 the learned author states with regard to the duty of full and frank disclosure:-
95. Even if there has been a failure in full and frank disclosure it is not always the case that the court would raise an interim injunction or, if it does, it may consider re-imposing it. In Goldtron at paragraphs 22 and 23 the Court said this:-
96. In Gee, at paragraph 21-057, the learned author says:-
97. Although we refer to the extract for the sake of completeness, we note in the Gabrielson Affidavit at paragraph 5 that the defendant reserved its position to apply to discharge the injunctions. In any event it does not to us appear that the principle referred to in Gee will be applicable in the instant case given that there has been no previous hearing in connection with the Interveners.
98. As an alternative to the application to lift the undertaking, the Interveners apply for a variation of the undertaking to permit a substantial sum, specifically £1,121,926.37 to be removed from the retained sum and paid to the Interveners English solicitors for the purpose of funding legal costs.
99. In the case of Armco Inc., and Others -v- Donoghue and Others [1998] JLR Notes 12A. The Court of Appeal set out a number of principles which are to be applied in deciding whether to allow payment of the defendant's legal costs out of injuncted funds. The principles are set out in the following extract from the notes of the case:-
100. In a short judgment delivered in the case of A and Another-v- C and Another (No. 2) [1981] QV 961 Robert Goff J considered an application on the part of the defendants to release monies frozen by a Mareva injunction in order to pay their legal costs. In considering what information the court needed in order to consider such an application, the learned judge, at page 963 paragraph B says this:-
101. Gee at paragraph 21-053 in connection with a claim for the release of funds to pay legal costs where there is a proprietary claims says this:-
102. And, lastly, in Vulnerable Transactions in Corporate Insolvency (2003) Harmer and Bennett Ed in considering an application under Section 423 of the Insolvency Act 1986 the learned authors say:-
103. We take from these cases the following principles:-
(i) A claim under Section 423 of the Insolvency Act 1986 is proprietary in nature;
(ii) Where a proprietary claim is concerned, the principles set out in Armco above apply;
(iii) It is for the applicants, in this case the Interveners, to establish that they have no other assets from which they can fund the litigation before generally they should have recourse to the retained funds.
104. The application for the release of funds is supported by Badriya's First Affidavit and Badriya's Second Affidavit.
105. In Badriya's First Affidavit she confirms that the Interveners have not been able to obtain third party funding although it does not go into detail and that the proceeds of sale from Burwood represent the only unencumbered monies of any significance which the Interveners could call upon to defend the claims made against them.
106. She repeats the assertion that the transfer of Burwood was not a gift but that the Interveners funded the ongoing expenses for maintenance and upkeep of the estate and BT's personal living expenses and medical costs in effect in return for the transfer of Burwood to Red Rose.
107. She maintains that the expenditure over the years has totalled "many millions of pounds". She refers to Gearon Affidavit 1 which refers to "hundreds of pages of evidence" to support the assertion that the Interveners financially supported BT.
108. Badriya confirms that she and the other Interveners have been required to take out loans and exhibits her bank statements and other documents dealing with aspects of her financial affairs. The only documentation exhibited which did not relate to Badriya appears to be a certificate of insured mortgage relating to Rabab in favour of a bank and a letter from another bank to Rabab confirming an overdraft facility.
109. In Badriya's Second Affidavit she confirms that she is a full-time surgeon working in Bahrain and also conducts a private clinic. Her sister Rabab owns retail stores in Bahrain and is also involved in the real estate business. Others of the Interveners work with Rabab and are supported financially by their partners.
110. Badriya states that none of them have substantial liquid assets and that most of their liquid resources have been spent on legal proceedings in Bahrain and in meeting the running costs of Burwood. She asserts that all of the properties owned by the Interveners are encumbered by loans which have, to an extent at least, been incurred in maintaining Burwood.
111. She refers further to a report of property values relied upon by the Plaintiffs which she seeks to dispute and also to undermine on the basis that the deeds which allegedly form part of the report and relate to real estate owned by Rabab were unlawfully obtained under Bahraini law because only those with an interest in properties can obtain copies of deeds from the Bahrain Survey and Land Registration Bureau.
112. Badriya confirms that she does not believe that all of the properties listed in the report are in fact owned by Rabib and says:-
"I (and my family) do not wish, or believe that it is fair, that we are asked to provide corrections to a report obtained illegally within Bahrain and in connection with which an arrest warrant has been granted."
113. She confirms that the properties owned by Rabab jointly or otherwise have significant debts secured against them but "there has not been sufficient time since the service of Mr Beale's third affidavit to collate the documentation in relation to such mortgages."
114. We note in Beale Affidavit 4 that any suggestion of illegality is expressly disputed and that the copy deeds were not attached to the impugned report but rather exhibited separately. Mr Beale disputes that there was any validity to any criminal complaint which he says, in effect, has been improperly made.
115. We do not need to resolve this dispute over evidence. The assertions in the report have been made in connection with assets owned by the Interveners and the Interveners have not, because they maintain that information was obtained unlawfully, condescended to answer it or comment upon it. This, in terms of the exercise that the court is asked to undertake, is unhelpful.
116. Beale Affidavit 3 deals with the Interveners' assets and makes reference to the property valuation on which the Interveners have declined to comment. The report makes reference to some 10 properties including several four storey buildings, investment buildings and residential buildings and compound villas and the valuation report values those property assets at BD9,129,394 which is the equivalent of approximately £18 million.
117. In addition, evidence is put before us that Rabab owns a property in central London together with her husband and her son and some evidence is provided that property might have a value of in excess of £1 million. The Land Registry does not show any mortgage outstanding. The Beale Affidavit 3 concludes that Rabab, accordingly, has real estate assets valued at approximately £20 million.
118. The information provided by Badriya is disputed. By way of example, in a letter dated 9th April, 2018 from Standard Chartered Bank to Badriya, there appears to be an outstanding overdraft of BD108,837 but a fixed deposit of BD300,000 which would, so Mr Beale states, be a net asset position of approximately £400,000.
119. In our judgement, the criticism of the Interveners' evidence is justified.
120. This is in essence a proprietary claim in the sense that it is claimed that the assets transferred to Red Rose belong to BT's estate and should be set aside under section 423 of the Insolvency Act 1986.
121. Having been placed on notice that the Plaintiffs are asserting a proprietary claim it was in our view incumbent upon the Interveners to place sufficient evidence before the Court in support of their application so that the Court could be satisfied that they did not have a ready recourse to alternate assets. That is certainly the assertion made in Badriya's affidavits but the documentary support is, it must be said, thin. The Court is not clear that the documentation exhibited relating to Badriya's own affairs represents the totality of her banking arrangements and we are not provided with any detail relating to the real property or personal property owned by the Interveners other than to some extent Badriya. There is prima facie evidence that Rabab owns very substantial amounts of real property in Bahrain and, indeed, in London and we cannot be satisfied that the Interveners do not have recourse to significant assets sufficient to fund their litigation costs.
122. Furthermore, in our judgement, any alleged illegality in obtaining information from the public registry in Bahrain does not absolve the Interveners from meeting the financial case that they need to do in order to obtain money from the retained funds.
123. We note that the legal costs incurred and in prospect are substantial and that we are informed that the most recent account rendered by the Interveners' legal advisers have not been met. That does not say it could not be met and we simply do not have enough information to be satisfied that we should make the orders sought by the Interveners. It may be that with further information the Interveners can make another application to the Court but at this point the evidentiary picture is insufficient.
124. In our judgement, as we have indicated, a number of the matters raised by the Interveners do not amount to a material lack of disclosure on the part of the Plaintiffs. The delay in financing leading to a delay in the commencement of the English proceedings should however have been disclosed. As we have said, it is likely to be the case that the judge considering the interim injunctions would have fixed a deadline for the commencement of proceedings. However we do not consider on balance that the want of disclosure should lead us to raise the injunction.
125. In our judgement, therefore, we are not persuaded either that there has been a sufficient want of disclosure to justify raising the injunctions granted by the Court nor releasing the monies from the undertaking which replaced them. Nor do we believe that we have sufficient information to make the orders requested by the Interveners for money to fund the English proceedings