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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Onur Air Tasimacilik AS v Goldtrail Travel Ltd [2017] EWCA Civ 1830 (16 November 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2017/1830.html Cite as: [2017] EWCA Civ 1830 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION
MRS JUSTICE ROSE
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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ONUR AIR TASIMACILIK AS |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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GOLDTRAIL TRAVEL LIMITED (IN LIQUIDATION) |
Respondent |
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Mr Robert Miles QC and Ms Hilary Stonefrost (instructed by Fieldfisher LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing date : 8 November 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Patten :
"why the payment has not been made, why instructions were given to tell the court that a substantial part payment would be made on 9 July 2015, why that part payment was not made and precisely when and how the order will be complied with if an extension is to be granted."
"4. Onur Air had hoped to pay the judgment sum into court from funds to be received on about 6 July from Saudi Arabian Airline, but receipt of that payment was delayed.
5. Onur Air therefore instructed its solicitors on 7 July to apply to the court for an extension of time for payment of the judgment sum until 17 July and to tell the court that a partial payment would be made on 9 July which it then hoped to do to demonstrate to the court Onur Air's intention to comply with the Order.
6. In the event, Onur Air was not in a position to make the Interim Payment on 9 July 2015 and following further consideration of its cashflow position and its commitments to third parties necessary for the business, Onur now seeks permission from the court to pay the judgment sum into court by monthly payments of £500,000. Onur intends to put its solicitors in funds of £640,000 by 15 August 2015 with instructions to send a cheque for the first instalment to be sent immediately to the Court Funds Office. After that Onur will make further payments of £500,000 on the first banking day of each month until the judgment sum has been paid in full. Onur Air acknowledges that if any of these payments is not made then it will be unable to continue with the appeal."
"Board of Onur Air is of the opinion that this decision is unlawful and against the principles laid down by the European Court of Human Rights. Therefore, the foresaid sum will not be paid."
"20. I have said enough to indicate that the whole history of this appeal is extremely unsatisfactory. I am however very reluctant to strike out an appeal for which permission has been given without giving to the appellants one final chance of explaining their position. If it is now their position that they are so inhibited by the order for payment of the judgment sum that it is stifling their ability to appeal, then they should say so. I appreciate that is not something which they have so far said. They have had ample opportunity, it might be said, to put forward every argument, but stifling of the appeal is one matter which they have thus far declined to put forward. It may be that they are embarrassed by what was apparently said to Rose J about the fact, as [Mr Hasancebi] said in evidence, that the company was of such a size that £5 million was not a large sum of money. Whatever the reasons for their silence, it seems to me that they ought to come forward with their evidence now.
21. What I therefore propose to do is to dismiss the application for an oral renewal of my order and make an appropriate order for costs in relation to that, but to direct that any application for a final order on the appeal should be made on notice to the appellants and that appropriate opportunity should be given to both sides to file evidence in relation to it. It may be that not much further evidence is required from the respondents. I am very anxious that the appeal should not be disposed of without a proper application on notice for the precise order which the respondents now seek."
"Mr Bagana therefore appears to have removed equity from the company and to have used the money to establish himself as a secured creditor. His position as the company's largest single (and secured creditor) has put him into the position where he can effectively decide which of the unsecured debts should be paid and when. This is confirmed by Ms Erguven in her second witness statement where she says that:
"I can confirm that Mr Bagana is fully aware of the position that Onur Air finds itself in in relation to the payment of the Judgment Sum into court as a condition of the continuation of the Appeal. He has made it clear that he would only contemplate considering the possibility of advancing further amounts to Onur Air in the most exceptional circumstances if they were commercial payments strictly and immediately necessary in order to keep Onur Air in business due to the already significant indebtedness of the company to him and the deteriorating financial condition of the company. Mr Bagana has made it clear to the management of Onur Air that he believes that if the court were to strike out the appeal on the grounds that he, as a shareholder, had failed to lend money to Onur Air to enable it to pay the Judgment Sum into court, that would be a breach of his and Onur Air's rights under the European Convention of Human Rights."
"Some of the argument has centred on whether the financial information produced by Onur justifies its alleged belief that it is unable to pay the £3.64m and that, to be made to do so, would lead to the stifling of the appeal. Mr Gibbon cautioned me against attempting to second guess the assessment of the financial state and prospects of the company made by its own directors and officers and I am obviously alive to those difficulties. But even taking Ms Erguven's assessment at face value, it is apparent that a decision has been taken that Onur is able to continue to trade with the support of Mr Bagana and that it could, with that financial support, have made the £3.64m payment even if it would have been in difficulties in generating sufficient cash for that purpose from its trading activities. It seems clear to me that Mr Bagana has decided not to fund the payment by the company and if I can take his financial position into account in assessing Onur's ability to satisfy the condition either prior to 9 July 2015 or thereafter then the CPR 3.1(7) application to vary cannot succeed. There is no evidential basis for concluding that the condition could not have been complied with or that, if complied with, it would stifle the appeal."
"28. I do not propose to use this as an occasion for offering guidance as to what might constitute exceptional circumstances for this purpose. This is best developed on a case-by-case basis with reference to specific facts. But I am satisfied that this is a case which falls within that classification. On the evidence, Mr Bagana is the controlling shareholder and chairman of Onur and has put himself into the position where he is its single largest creditor with security for his loans. It is clear that he has a more than usually close relationship with the company (witness the guarantee arrangements I have mentioned) and effectively controls its financial affairs. I can see no material differences between his situation and that considered by Aikens LJ in Société Générale.
29. In these circumstances, the application fails on its merits. Onur has not established that it could not have satisfied the condition by 9 July or at some later point and the allegation that the appeal would be stifled is not made out. It is not therefore necessary for me to consider Miss Stonefrost's other submission which is that I have no jurisdiction to make an order under CPR 3.1(7) in this case because there was no material change of circumstances between 11 June and 9 July 2015."
"15. There is no doubt - indeed it is agreed - that, if the proposed condition is otherwise appropriate, the objection that it would stifle the continuation of the appeal represents a contention which needs to be established by the appellant and indeed, although it is hypothetical, to be established on the balance of probabilities: for the respondent to the appeal can hardly be expected to establish matters relating to the reality of the appellant's financial situation of which he probably knows little."
"18. It seems that, in particular and as exemplified by the present case, difficult issues have surrounded the ability of a corporate appellant, without apparent assets of its own, to raise money from its controlling shareholder (or some other person closely associated with it); and this is the context of what follows. When, in response to the claim of a corporate appellant that a condition would stifle its appeal, the respondent suggests that the appellant can raise money from its controlling shareholder, the court needs to be cautious. The shareholder's distinct legal personality (which has always to be respected save where he has sought to abuse the distinction: Prest v Prest [2013] UKSC 34, [2013] 2 AC 415, 487, para 34) must remain in the forefront of its analysis. The question should never be: can the shareholder raise the money? The question should always be: can the company raise the money?"
"23. … Possibly ham-strung by the doctrine of precedent, the court in the Société Générale case evidently considered it best to treat the first additional observation in the Hammond Suddard case by consigning it to that over-used store-room in the mansion of the law which is designated as "exceptional circumstances". Such a criterion is on any view dangerous because it is not, on the face of it, linked to its context: see Norris v Government of United States of America (No 2) [2010] UKSC 9, [2010] 2 AC 487, para 56. It sets a "snare … for it may lead to the wrongful downgrading of the significance of circumstances just because they happen not to be exceptional or to their wrongful upgrading just because they happen to be exceptional": H (H) v Deputy Prosecutor of the Italian Republic, Genoa (Official Solicitor intervening) [2012] UKSC 25, [2013] 1 AC 338, para 161. Having, however, an unconstrained ability to reject the phraseology of the additional observations, we in this court have no need to approve the superimposition upon the relevant criterion of a test of exceptional circumstances which neither party before the court seeks to defend. In this context the criterion is:
"Has the appellant company established on the balance of probabilities that no such funds would be made available to it, whether by its owner or by some other closely associated person, as would enable it to satisfy the requested condition?"
24. The criterion is simple. Its application is likely to be far from simple. The considerable forensic disadvantage suffered by an appellant which is required, as a condition of the appeal, to pay the judgment sum (or even just part of it) into court is likely to lead the company to dispute its imposition tooth and nail. The company may even have resolved that, were the condition to be imposed, it would, even if able to satisfy it, prefer to breach it and to suffer the dismissal of the appeal than to satisfy it and to continue the appeal. In cases, therefore, in which the respondent to the appeal suggests that the necessary funds would be made available to the company by, say, its owner, the court can expect to receive an emphatic refutation of the suggestion both by the company and, perhaps in particular, by the owner. The court should therefore not take the refutation at face value. It should judge the probable availability of the funds by reference to the underlying realities of the company's financial position; and by reference to all aspects of its relationship with its owner, including, obviously, the extent to which he is directing (and has directed) its affairs and is supporting (and has supported) it in financial terms."