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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Interactive Technology Corporation Ltd v Ferster & Ors [2016] EWCA Civ 614 (28 June 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2016/614.html Cite as: [2016] EWCA Civ 614 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION
MRS JUSTICE ASPLIN
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(Vice President of the Court of Appeal, Civil Division)
LORD JUSTICE TOMLINSON
and
MR JUSTICE KEEHAN
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INTERACTIVE TECHNOLOGY CORPORATION LTD |
Claimant/ Respondent |
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- and - |
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(1) JONATHAN FERSTER (2) WORLD ONLINE SOFTWARE NV (a company incorporated in Curacao) (3) CARMEL MEDIA GROUP NV (a company incorporated in Curacao) (4) DATA TRAFFIC SOLUTIONS LIMITED (5) FOUR SEASONS ADVERTISING LIMITED (6) FOUR SEASONS MEDIA LIMITED (7) FOUR SEASONS TECHNOLOGY LIMITED (8) INTERACTIVE TECHNOLOGY CORPORATION (EUROPE) LIMITED (9) LANESBOROUGH INVESTMENTS LIMITED (10) LANESBOROUGH MEDIA LIMITED (11) LANESBOROUGH TECHNOLOGY LIMITED (12) WOODVILLE LIMITED (13) WORLD ONLINE SOFTWARE LIMITED |
Defendants/ Appellants |
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Andrew Thompson QC and Ben Shaw (instructed by Herbert Smith Freehills LLP) for the Defendants/Appellants
Hearing date : 24 May 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Tomlinson :
i) Jonathan had established a web of companies, both in England and overseas, namely the Second to Fourteenth Defendants, which he claims to own to the exclusion of ITC or his brothers;ii) One such company is the Second Defendant, World Online Software NV, hereinafter "WOS", incorporated in Curacao. This company held the gaming licence on trust for the benefit of the business conducted by ITC;
iii) By an Asset Purchase Agreement signed in May 2013 but backdated to January 2012, Jonathan secretly purported to cause ITC to transfer substantially all of its principal assets to WOS, and purported to cause ITC to enter into a Supply of Services Agreement to facilitate the future operation by WOS of the business previously owned by ITC.
Ground 1
"35. As a result of the above, I consider that if the Respondents were put on notice of this application the First Respondent would realise the potentially severe impact the ultimate claim may have against him (and the other Respondents he controls) and would take steps to dissipate assets of the Company and, indeed, his own assets. I believe that unless the Search Order is given some effective sanction, there is a serious risk that the First Respondent would take immediate steps to ensure that anything that was incriminating or unfavourable to him or the other Respondents would be concealed or destroyed."
ITC also relied upon an affirmation made by Warren Ferster which recorded that he had read Sydney Fulda's affirmation in draft. It is alleged by the Defendants that ITC failed to reveal to the court that Jonathan's brothers did not believe that there was any risk of destruction of documents, as Warren would in due course inform Jonathan on 13 January 2015.
"WF You told lies. There's no money in the company. We lost 3 million dollars last year you told us. The company lost, got knocked for.
JF I've never!!
WF Yes, yes, yes.
JF Payment processers do occasionally knock us.
WF 3 million dollars?
JF I'm not sure which year that's . . .
WF You said it was last October. Straight after you put those crooks into prison.
SF Warren, I am sure he can provide evidence for these payment processers going.
JF Hold on, what documents did you think I was destroying?
WF We didn't think you were destroying anything. We never thought you would destroy any documents.
JF So why did you go for a freezing order.
SF Because you were drip feeding the information. You weren't providing the information required.
WF All you were getting is bank statements, one statement every week. You never supplied any information Jonathan."
"62. . . . even if there has been material non-disclosure, the Court has a discretion whether or not to discharge an order obtained ex parte and whether or not to grant fresh injunctive relief. Discharge of the order is not automatic on any non-disclosure being established of any fact known to the applicant which is found by the Court to have been material, although it would only be in exceptional circumstances that a Court would not discharge an order where there had been deliberate non-disclosure or misrepresentation."
At the very least, say the Defendants, Asplin J should have considered whether, in the exercise of her discretion, considered anew in the light of this revelation, it was appropriate either to discharge the order or to grant fresh relief, bearing in mind that by the time the matter came before her execution of the order was incomplete, with numerous outstanding disputes about the categories of material which had been seized.
Ground 2
"33. Before turning to the other requirements for granting a freezing order and the basis for a search and preservation order, I should add that had it been necessary I would have concluded that on the evidence before me, which was also before Birss J, that there is and was a good arguable case in relation to breach of fiduciary duty by Jonathan by the dishonest and unauthorised transfer of the company's business and assets to WOS, the second defendant, and the appropriation of business opportunities and as to unauthorised remuneration and expenses. My reasoning will be apparent from the matters to which I will refer below."
The Defendants suggest that it is relevant to that conclusion that ITC's auditor had himself stated that the income of the business had all been paid to it and, even if the accuracy of the statement was contentious, it needed to be drawn to the attention of Birss J that this was what ITC's auditor had said.
Ground 3
"ITC submitted that there had not been cooperation as regards disclosure of documents by the corporate defendants, when there had been such full cooperation in other respects and Jonathan's brothers accepted that they had no right to the books and accounts of the corporate defendants as stated in the letter of 28 October 2014."
The reference to the letter of 28 October 2014 is to a letter from DAC Beachcroft to Jonathan which included the following paragraph:
"As directors of the Company, our clients have no direct interest in the books and records that strictly belong to World Online Software NV. However, our clients are entitled to access to all information and documentation belonging to the Company which might relate to World Online Software NV (such as, for example, that which is relevant to Issues 2 to 4 above). In any event, this should involve a significant amount of material in its own right."
Issues 2 to 4 were:
"2. The unauthorised transfer by you [Jonathan] of the Company's assets to a company known as World Online Software NV, a company which we understand is controlled by you;
3. The terms of the Company's trading with World Online Software NV;
4. The granting of the gaming licence by the Company to World Online Software NV."
"115. I now back turn to the search and preservation orders. In this regard I take into account the very serious nature of such an order. Nevertheless, in my judgment there is a very strong prima facie case against the defendants arising from the facts and matters to which I have already referred. Further, despite the dialogue which occurred from September to November 2014, I reject Mr Freedman's submission that the order was wholly disproportionate and unnecessary and that in fact an order for delivery up should have been made on notice. I have come to this conclusion as a result of the refusal to supply any documentation in relation to the corporate defendants despite Jonathan's case that the business was being run by WOS, the second defendant, and that all monies were channelled through a variety of other corporate defendants, which is clear from the letter of 27 October 2014 to which I have referred. I also consider that there was and is a real risk of destruction of evidence which can be inferred from the same matters to which I have referred under the heading of the freezing order."
Mr Justice Keehan :
Lord Justice Moore-Bick :