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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Metropolitan Housing Trust Ltd vTaylor & Ors [2015] EWCA Civ 1595 (19 November 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2015/1595.html Cite as: [2015] EWCA Civ 1595 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION
(MR JUSTICE WARREN)
Strand London, WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
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METROPOLITAN HOUSING TRUST LTD | Applicants | |
-v- | ||
TAYLOR AND OTHERS | Defendants |
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trading as DTI
8th Floor, 190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr Thomas Grant QC (instructed by Messrs Clyde & Co.) appeared on behalf of the Defendants
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Crown Copyright ©
"Mr Ladhur's own family and business circumstances make it inconceivable to my mind that there is the slightest risk that he personally would leave the jurisdiction to avoid a judgment. Further, as he explains and must be accepted for present purposes the only assets of any value are his shares in his family home and his shares in the company through which he makes his living."
"Moreover, I cannot see any reason in principle why the considerations which are applicable when the court is considering the grant of a Mareva injunction should not be applied in favour of a plaintiff even if he has lost in the court below, though the question will not be 'Does he have a good arguable case?' but 'Does he have a good arguable appeal?'"
He found that the judge in refusing interim relief pending appeal had applied the wrong test, in effect had set the bar too high on the question of whether there was disclosed a real risk of dissipation, but nonetheless considering the matter afresh the Court of Appeal nonetheless declined to grant interim relief pending appeal. At page 13 Stuart Smith LJ said:
"It is sufficient if there is a real risk that the judgment in favour of the plaintiff will remain unsatisfied if injunctive relief is refused ... "
Thereby broadly equating the test before the Court of Appeal with the real risk of dissipation test which would ordinarily be applied at first instance in considering whether to grant or refuse freezing relief. That was not a case in which the issue for the full court when the appeal came to be heard was the same as that question, namely whether there was indeed a real risk of dissipation. The other case is Novartis AG v Hospira UK Ltd, another decision of this court, [2014] 1 WLR 1264. That was a question whether an ordinary restraining injunction should be granted to the unsuccessful party at first instance pending that party's appeal to the Court of Appeal. Floyd LJ summarised the relevant principles at paragraph 41 as follows:
"I would summarise the principles which apply to the grant of an interim injunction pending appeal where the claimant has lost at first instance as follows:
I) The court must be satisfied that the appeal has a real prospect of success.
Ii) If the court is satisfied that there is a real prospect of success on appeal, it will not usually be useful to attempt to form a view as to how much stronger the prospects of appeal are, or to attempt to give weight to that view in assessing the balance of convenience.
Iii) It does not follow automatically from the fact that an interim injunction has or would have been granted pre-trial that an injunction pending appeal should be granted. The court must assess all the relevant circumstances following judgment, including the period of time before any appeal is likely to be heard and the balance of hardship to each party if an injunction is refused or granted.
Iv) The grant of an injunction is not limited to the case where its refusal would render an appeal nugatory. Such a case merely represents the extreme end of a spectrum of possible factual situations in which the injustice to one side is balanced against the injustice to the other.
V) As in the case of the stay of a permanent injunction which would otherwise be granted to a successful claimant, the court should endeavour to arrange matters so that the Court of Appeal is best able to do justice between the parties once the appeal has been heard."
"I will not order the discharge of the freezing order with immediate effect. My order will take effect only after 21 days from its date, giving the claimant the opportunity to protect his position by making such application to the Court of Appeal on notice to Mr Ladhur if he thinks fit. I do not think it appropriate over this period to restrict the freezing order to Mr Ladhur's interest in the family home and his shares in the company which Mr Grant as a secondary submission invites me to do. I would hope however that if it considers it right to make any sort of freezing order as an interim measure the Court of Appeal will consider adopting that approach in the light of what I said in paragraphs 382 and 383 of my judgment. In those paragraphs I said in effect that even if a risk of dissipation had been established, the appropriate order would have been to restrict the freezing order to dealings with Mr Ladhur's interest in the family home and his shares in the company given the quantum of the claims in relation to which a good arguable case has been shown."
I said earlier that the good arguable case identified by the judge was in the region of £460,000 and I have explained how the aggregate value of Mr Ladhur's share in his family home and in his companies appears to be approximately £500,000. It seems to me that there is real force in those observations of Warren J. A limited restraint in those terms would on the face of it not appear to prevent Mr Ladhur from doing anything with his assets which he currently wishes to do with them, in the sense that he has not sought up to now permission from the court in relation to any dealing with his share in the house or indeed with his shares in the third defendant company. On the contrary, his evidence has been very much the opposite, namely that there is no prospect that he would wish to deal with either of those assets because the house is his and his family's home and the company is his only source of income. Accordingly, on the face of it a restraint of that kind would not appear, even if wrongly granted now in the sense that in the future the full court of appeal upholds Warren J's judgment, would cause a substantial irremediable prejudice in so far as it would restrain Mr Ladhur from doing something which he would otherwise wish to do. Furthermore, a limited freezing order in those terms would, as it seems to me, relieve Mr Ladhur from the daily inconvenience, which I do not in any way underestimate, of having to deal with every payment which he wishes to make having regard to the question whether or not that particular payment does or does not infringe a general freezing order made against him.