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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Zambia v Meer Care & Desai (a firm) & Ors Rev 1 [2006] EWCA Civ 390 (07 March 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2006/390.html Cite as: [2006] EWCA Civ 390 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE CHANCERY DIVISION
THE HON MR JUSTICE PETER SMITH
Strand London, WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE MAY
LORD JUSTICE JACOB
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THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF ZAMBIA FOR AND ON BEHALF OF THE REPUBLIC OF ZAMBIA |
Claimant/Respondent |
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- and - |
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(1) MEER CARE & DESAI (a firm) (2) CAVE MALIK & CO (a firm) (3) DR FREDERICK JACOB TITUS CHILUBA* (4) XAVIER F CHUNGO (5) ATAN SHANSONGA (6) STELLA MUMBA CHIBANDA* (7) AARON CHUNGU* (8) BIMAL THAKER (9) FAUSTIN M KABWE* (10) IRENE KABWE (11) FRANCIS KAUNDA* (12) BOUTIQUE BASILE (13) NEBRASKA SERVICES LTD (14) M.I.S.S.L. ASSOCIATIONS LIMITED (15) HEARNVILLE ESTATES LTD (16) JARBAN SA (17) RAPHAEL SORIANO (a/k/a/ KATBE KATOTO a/k/a/ EMMANUEL KATTO) (18) BELSQUARE RESIDENCE N.V. (19) ROLAND CRACCO (20) ROBERT STANDAERT |
Defendants/Appellants (Appellants are marked with*) |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Mr William Blair QC, Mr Michael Sullivan and Ms Hannah Brown (instructed by Messrs DLA Piper Rudnick Gray Cary) appeared on behalf of the Respondent
Mr David Head (instructed by Reynolds Porter Chamberlain) appeared on behalf of the First Defendant
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Crown Copyright ©
SIR ANTHONY CLARKE MR:
Introduction
The Action
(1) The Zamtrop conspiracy, to which each appellant was a party.
An account was opened at the Zambian National Commercial Bank in London by the Zambian Security Intelligence Services. US$25 million was paid to this from the account of the Zambian Ministry of Finance at the Bank of Zambia, on the false premise that it was required to satisfy government liabilities under contracts with two United States companies. It was then disbursed to certain of the defendants.
(2) The Mofed conspiracy.
A £100,000 consultancy fee was paid by the Ministry of Finance to MISSL Associates Limited, the fourteenth defendant ("MISSL"). This was purportedly for services provided by MISSL under a management agreement in relation to a London property. The property was owned by Mofed Limited, an English company which was in turn owned by the Zambian Ministry of Finance. No consultancy services were provided. This claim concerns two of the appellants, the sixth and ninth defendants, Ms Chibanda and Mr Kabwe.
(3) The BK facility conspiracy.
This claim concerns approximately US$34 million paid by the Ministry of Finance under a purported arms contract between Zambia and Bulgaria. The money was paid to bank accounts in Belgium and Switzerland. At least part of this money was then remitted through client accounts of the London solicitors.
The Criminal Proceedings in Zambia
Freezing Injunctions
Application
Submissions before the Judge
Forum non conveniens
"1) The characteristic of the alleged fraudulent conspiracy involves payment of government monies into English bank accounts and their disbursement for the personal use of the defendants concerned.
2) The bank accounts in question were English bank accounts.
3) Each of the defendants was involved in giving instructions in respect of the remittance of monies to or from the English bank accounts and/or receiving substantial amounts of monies allegedly from the English bank accounts.
4) Therefore, although the monies originated from Zambia and although part of the money was ultimately returned to Zambia, nevertheless, the conspiracy centred allegedly in London.
5) A substantial part of the money allegedly stolen was not returned to Zambia, but was remitted to other accounts in England, Europe and the United States distributed as cash or used to discharge liabilities in England."
The Issues in the Appeal
"1) Whether the order made by the judge is sufficient to remove the prejudice to the appellants' ability to defend the criminal proceedings in Zambia that has been occasioned by the continuance of the English civil proceedings; and
2) Whether the orders made by the judge are sufficient to prevent a breach of the appellants' right to a fair trial of the English civil proceedings under article 6 of the Convention."
I take these issues in turn.
Criminal Proceedings: Prejudice
"There is a short way to deal with this as I indicated in argument. It is to ring fence the English proceedings. Thus the proceedings take place in private and an order is made that none of the evidence adduced by the defendants can be used against them in criminal proceedings nor any of the documents disclosed by them in these proceedings be used in the criminal proceedings unless they agree or the court otherwise orders. The result would therefore be that there could be no possible abuse of the criminal proceedings and the defendants' right to silence and the way in which they conducted their criminal defences."
"1) The claimant is a nominal claimant who brings the action on behalf of a sovereign state, the republic of Zambia.
2) The incentive for complying with the order ring fencing the evidence in the English civil proceedings is the continuance of the English proceedings. A breach of the order would lead to the claim being struck out or stayed.
3) When the English proceedings come to an end, there will be no incentive for the Zambian Attorney General, either the present one or a future one, to continue to abide by the order of 10 October 2005, the ring fencing order.
4) If there is a change of government in Zambia, the next Attorney General might not feel inclined to abide by the ring fencing order. If he breached the order, it might be impossible to punish him for contempt. He would be likely to plead that the order was made against his office and not his person. He might also claim sovereign immunity.
5) The judge ought to have stayed the English proceedings until the conclusion of the criminal proceedings in Zambia. The ring fencing order will not be sufficient to protect the appellants in any criminal proceedings that are continued against them after the conclusion of the English proceedings.
6) It is therefore submitted that the judge erred in law by concluding that ring fencing the evidence in the English proceedings will prevent prejudice to the appellants' ability to defend the criminal proceedings in Zambia."
"18. Without prejudice to CPR 31.22 without the permission of the court as to which the parties are to be at liberty to apply, no documents disclosed by any of the defendants including but not limited to any documents read to or by the court or referred to in any hearing held in public, may be used for any purposes including but not limited to the conduct of investigations and/or civil and/or criminal proceedings in Zambia or any other country other than these proceedings.
21. Without prejudice to CPR 32.12 without the permission of the court as to which the parties are to be at liberty to apply, no witness statements served by any of the defendants may be used for any purposes including but not limited to the conduct of investigations and/or civil and/or criminal proceedings in Zambia or any other country other than these proceedings."
"The Attorney General (as the appellants recognise) sues in a representative capacity for an on behalf of the Republic of Zambia. Under the State Immunity Act 1978 a state is immune from the jurisdiction of the courts of the United Kingdom (section 1(1)). A state is not immune as respect of proceedings in respect of which it has submitted under jurisdiction of the courts of the United Kingdom, (section 2(1)). A state is deemed to have submitted if it has instituted the proceedings, (section 2(3)(a)). As claimant therefore, Zambia has submitted to the jurisdiction of the English court in respect of these proceedings. The ring fencing order itself remains binding following the English proceedings and Zambia remains amenable to contempt proceedings for any breach of the order."
Civil Proceedings, a Fair Trial
A Evidence:
1) The judge had suggested in May that the problems about evidence could be addressed by part of the evidence either being given in Zambia and transmitted to London by videolink or being given in Zambia before an examiner, preferably the trial judge, who could travel to Zambia for the purpose, as Lindsay J had done in Peer International Corporation v Thermidor Music Publishers Limited [2005] EWHC 1048. 2) By the time of the hearing in August 2005, the task force on corruption had sought and obtained the consent of the government of Zambia for the English court to sit in private in Zambia in order to hear the evidence of the appellants and any other Zambian witnesses whom the parties wished to call. 3) In this way, the credibility of all the witnesses, whether heard in England or Zambia, could be assessed by one judge. 4) In these circumstances, there could be no prejudice to the appellants, who would receive a fair trial. 5) The judge recognised that this posed potential problems for other defendants, but concluded that they could take part in a number of potential ways. They could listen to and observe the evidence by videolink and play a part in that way, or they or their representatives could go to Zambia and play a part there.
B Participation in the trial:
The judge recognised that the appellants would be in a less good position to give oral instructions to their solicitors and counsel from Zambia than if they were present in England. However, he concluded that they would nevertheless be able to present their case. He said in paragraph 27 of his judgment:
"As regards the proceedings in England, there is in reality no difficulty in the Zambian defendants seeing daily transcripts or even seeing a videolink of the evidence. Matters that arise can be dealt with on the giving of instructions overnight. That is not the best way, but it does seem to me to provide a way whereby the defendants can have a fair opportunity of defending the case in England and presenting a fair case as is their right by giving live evidence before a tribunal. It is not the best solution in the sense that in an ideal world, it would be best if the parties were in the court during the trial. However, that cannot be achieved without causing great prejudice to all the other parties as outlined above. With the right approach, I envisage the defendants will have little difficulty of a practical nature in presenting their case."
"The European Court of Human Rights has held that the right to adversarial proceedings means, in principle, the opportunity to have knowledge of, and comment, on all evidence adduced or observations filed, even by an independent member of the national legal service with a view to influencing the court's decision. In civil cases, however, the right of a party to be present at the hearing has been held to extend only to certain kinds of cases such as cases which involve an assessment of a party's personal conduct."
"However the procedure followed before the audit court was clearly not adversarial although this is one of the principal guarantees of a judicial procedure. Before convicting the applicant the audit court did not hear her or summon her to appear, nor would it seem she had been invited to present supplementary observations. Since the applicant's personal conduct directly contributed to the formation of the audit court's opinion, the Commission considers that the right to a fair hearing in the particular circumstances of the case necessitated direct consideration by the court of the applicant's grounds of defence."
"1. In the determination of his civil rights and obligations or of any criminal charge against him everyone is entitled to a fair and public hearing within a reasonable time by an independent and impartial tribunal established by law. Judgment should be pronounced publicly but the press and public may be excluded from all or part of the trial in the interests of morals, public order or national security in a demographic society, and where the interests of juveniles or the protection of the private life of a party so require or to the extent strictly necessary in the opinion of the court and in special circumstances where publicity would prejudice the interests of justice.
2. Everyone charged with a criminal offence shall be presumed innocent until proved guilty according to law.
3. Everyone charged with a criminal offence has the following minimum rights (c) to defend himself in person or through legal assistance of his own choosing or if he has not sufficient means to pay for legal assistance, to be given it free where the interests of justice so require "
"The improvements in technology are such that in my recent experience as a trial judge, the giving of evidence by video conference link (VCF) has become by 2003 a readily acceptable alternative to giving evidence in person, provided there is a sufficient reason for a party from the normal rule that witnesses give evidence in person before the court. In the ordinary run of cases, a sufficient reason may easily be shown. If there is sufficient reason, then even in cases where the allegations are grave and the consequences to the parties serious, the giving of evidence by VCF is now an entirely satisfactory means of giving evidence in such cases. Examples can be seen in the statutory regime permitting young and vulnerable witnesses to give evidence in this way in criminal cases and in civil cases as trials such as de Molestina v Noba [2002] EWHC 2413 (Comm) (see the observations of Langley J at paragraph 24.)"
LORD JUSTICE MAY:
LORD JUSTICE JACOB:
Order: Application withdrawn, appeals dismissed.