[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Ghadami v Bloomfield & Ors [2017] EWHC 2020 (Ch) (02 August 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2017/2020.html Cite as: [2017] EWHC 2020 (Ch) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
Mr Mohammad Reza Ghadami |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
||
(1) Paul Bloomfield (2) Philip James Saunders (3) Paresh Kantilal Chohan (4) Jan Bonde Nielsen (5) Peter Bonde Nielson (6) Saif Durbar (7) Mark Rhodes (8) Mahendra Narottam Bakhda (9) David John Risbey (10) Kennth John Fincken (11) Larios Properties Ltd (12) Festio Investments Ltd (13) Belgrave Capital Ltd (14) Brazxa Investments International Corporation (15) Beacon Industries Corporation (16) Lynn Properties Limited (17) Vitala Investment Holding Limited (18) Merix International Ventures Limited (19) 41 USG INC |
Defendants |
____________________
Mr Ben Hubble QC for the Third Defendant
Ms Helen Galley for the Second and Sixth Defendants
Mr Gabriel Buttimore for the Fourth, Fifth, Seventh and Eighth |Defendants
Adam Rosenthal for the Sixteenth to Eighteenth Defendants
The other Defendants did not appear and were not represented
Hearing date: 7 and 8 June 2017
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Norris:
"In oral discussions Mr Bloomfield agreed that… he would transfer ownership of [42 Upper Grosvenor Street] and [42 Reeves Mews] and [41 Upper Grosvenor Street] and [41 Reeves Mews] to [Mr Ghadami]. "
In argument it has been Mr Ghadami's case (though not exactly his pleaded case) (a) that Mr Bloomfield (not Larios Properties Ltd) was the "real" owner and so capable of being bound by the promise; or (b) that Mr Bloomfield was the agent of the "real" owners (alleged to be Mr Jan Bonde Nielsen and Mr Saif Durbar) who were bound by their agent's promise; (c) that the oral promise created a legally binding obligation (capable of specific performance) to transfer the properties from Larios Properties Ltd to Mr Ghadami; (d) that the remaining Defendants (who are successors in title to Larios Properties Limited or who were directors of (or of the holding companies of) those successors or solicitors retained by those successors) are liable to Mr Ghadami for the economic torts of conspiracy, interference with a contract, procuring a breach of contract and causing loss by unlawful means (essentially because they participated in "sham sales" concerning the properties where only bits of paper circulated and no real money changed hands, but where the bits of paper defeated Mr Ghadami's claims).
"Notwithstanding the enormous use of Court resources in providing Mr Ghadami with material and the equally significant use of court time in allowing him to deploy it and to assess its significance I am satisfied that the conspiracy claims and those claims based on an intention to cause Mr Ghadami loss simply have no foundation"
(a) The point is not new: the actual SDLT return was before the Master showing the same figure paid as is referred to in HMRC's letter;
(b) The discrepancy is not suspicious, the Statement of Account having (wrongly) calculated anticipated SDLT as payable on the purchase price net of VAT whereas the return calculates SDLT on the VAT-inclusive price;
(c) The fact that Mr Chohan may have made an error in calculation when accounting to his client in no way supports the proposition that the complex transaction in which he was involved was a sham.
(d) There is no proper ground upon which to revisit my judgment.
"From Mr Ghadami's witness statement… it appears that he thinks that my clients and I were involved in the sale of the properties by 41 UGS Inc to Merix to which part of his claim relates….. He is wrong, we were not… "
(a) this is not "new material" and I decline to admit further evidence after judgment when that evidence was available at the original hearing;
(b) in so far as relevant, the new material undermines Mr Ghadami's case that all transactions were "shams". The starting point must be that there was a genuine purchase of the shares in (and so assets of) 41 UGS Inc in which real money changed hands.
(a) the error in the actual completion date for the sale of the shares in 41 UGS Inc is irrelevant to the analysis and its correction therefore makes no difference;
(b) a Barrell application cannot be used to present further argument after judgment on material that was before the Court and could have been deployed at the original hearing.
(c) The fact that Mr Saunders was prepared to sign (on behalf of Z) a contract for the sale of the shares in 41 UGS Inc before legal title to those shares had been obtained (and at a time when Z itself had only the benefit of a contract to acquire them) shows either that Mr Saunders and those behind Z were prepared to take commercial risks or that Goldsky's participation was a form of interim funding arrangement under which Goldsky made available a deposit payment. That does not help Mr Ghadami (who himself relies upon property developers having taken commercial risks by promising him rewards even if his development projects did not succeed).
"…all title and corporate due diligence already covered via Saunders Bearman (which firm will likely be acting for the Buyer [different Partner]…."
Mr Ghadami says this is not a reference to different partners in the same solicitor's firm acting on different sides of a conveyancing transaction. Mr Ghadami submits that this indicates that there is in the background a different joint venture partner. He has picked up a reference in another hand written note (of James Hill?) which refers to an entity called "Glenco Corporation" as being a "junior JV partner": so he says any reference to "partner" is a reference to a joint venture partner. When I enquired what was the relevance of this point, Mr Ghadami said that it demonstrated a "sham" because there was a concealed joint venture partner who was the real "Buyer", the concealment being required to show something to the Royal Bank of Scotland that was not true. He suggested that the "real" partner was a Kazakh politician acting as a "front" for Mr Durbar.
(a) the material upon which this argument was grounded was included in volume 26 of the material before me at the time of the original hearing but was not then relied upon, and a Barrell application not the occasion to deploy previously unused material in an attempt to re-argue the case;
(b) a consideration of the material shows that the ineffective transaction (involving Hamlins LLP negotiating on behalf of a complete stranger to any of the transactions that eventuated) cannot realistically labelled a "sham";
(c) fact that its existence and prospective completion may have used to persuade a bank to continue extending facilities might demonstrate a willingness to deceive a bank, but cannot demonstrate that the transactions which did eventuate were shams designed to defeat Mr Ghadami's interests.
"A Directional Order that the Claimant in Person now amend his Particulars of Claim within a reasonable time with further reasonable time for the Defendants to reply if they so wish."
No draft Amended Particulars were then produced. What the amendment application itself argued was that the case had been prematurely struck out before standard disclosure "so C must rely on his fresh evidence and as such must amend his POC accordingly". I explained in paragraph [108] of my main judgment that this application would be addressed on the date fixed for the disposal of the consequential matters. This was 7 June 2017. Mr Ghadami spent his time advancing the second Barrell application. No draft amended Particulars of Claim were produced.
(a) Mr Ghadami's case against the 2nd to 19th Defendants is and remains struck out so that there is nothing to amend;
(b) If the purpose of the amendment was to enable Mr Ghadami to plead in relation to his existing causes of action material facts evidenced by the "new evidence" he seeks to adduce then I have held in my main judgment and in my first Barrell application judgment (and have held at the conclusion of the second Barrell application) that none of this "new evidence" makes good the deficiencies in Mr Ghadami's presently pleaded case;
(c) There are still no draft Amended Particulars of Claim and I could not in any event grant a general and unspecific permission to amend;
(d) The only hint that Mr Ghadami has given as to what is proposed is that on the basis of advice (said to have been received from one or more QCs) he wants to plead proprietary estoppel or unjust enrichment. But the original decision to plead an oral contract and not to rely on some form of estoppel was a quite conscious one made in a pleading signed by Counsel: and I cannot see how (in relation to events occurring between 2005 and 2007) a claim in unjust enrichment could overcome the hurdle presented by CPR 17.4(2).
"shall (if so advised) file and serve Amended Particulars of Claim in respect of his claim against the Fourth and Eleventh Defendants within 28 days of the determination of the Claimant's application to set aside this order failing which the remainder of the claim against the Fourth and Eleventh Defendants do stand dismissed".
At the original hearing of the Application Mr Buttimore (Counsel for Jan Bonde Nielsen) submitted that if Mr Ghadami was seeking a rehearing of the application before the Master then it was open to me to revisit (and to vary) this particular order. In paragraph [96] of my judgment I held that since Mr Buttimore's application had only been included by way of a footnote in a skeleton argument that would not be fair to Mr Ghadami, and that I would leave the Master's order undisturbed.
"I have lost battles but the war is there to be won. I will put in every effort of my blood to get justice….. I am going to get judgment at the end of the day. It is not revenge. It is a matter of property..."
As I have noted, there is already a third Barrell application issued. Provided that Mr Ghadami's evident determination results in applications that do not completely lack merit and which stand a real prospect of success, and which are in each case pursued in a way that accords with the overriding objective, he may pursue that course. The Court process is there to enable him to achieve justice, but not to enable him to heap injustice upon others.
(a) Mr Chohan's involvement in the events recounted in Mr Ghadami's narrative was that he was a conveyancing solicitor acting for a purchaser, but Mr Ghadami chose to accuse him of participation in "sham" sales as part of a conspiracy to deprive Mr Ghadami of certain benefits that Mr Bloomfield had promised him, and as acting as a conduit for "dirty" Kazakh money: these were serious charges for any professional to face, yet they were speculative and there was no real ground for them.
(b) Mr Ghadami's pursuit of Mr Chohan has been exceptionally intrusive and in that regard significantly unreasonable (including an examination of the dissolution of his partnership and enquiries into litigation in which Mr Chohan's wife is involved).
(c) Mr Chohan has been involved not only in the pursuit of the Application and the Appeal but also in responding to applications which themselves totally lacked merit so that the pursuit of the case against him marks this case as one apart from the norm.
(d) On 10 October 2013 Mr Chohan made an offer of a "drop hands" settlement: this was rejected.
"I can see no difficulty in principle which would prevent the court from making an order, before a person applies to register a unilateral notice without reasonable cause, to restrain such a person from committing such a tort….. If an application were made for such [an order] on an interim basis, the usual approach in American Cyanamid v Ethicon [1975] AC 396 and/or Nottingham Building Society v Eurodynamics Systems plc [1993] FSR 468…. would be applied… "
(a) Dismiss the Application (dated 14 March 2014);
(b) Dismiss the Appeal (dated 22 April 2014);
(c) Dismiss the recusal application (dated 4 February 2016);
(d) Dismiss the first Barrell application (dated 14 October 2016);
(e) Dismiss the second Barrell application (dated 1 June 2017);
(f) Stay Mr Ghadami's current (and third) Barrell application generally;
(g) Refuse Mr Ghadami's oral application for permission to bring contempt proceedings against Mr Johnson;
(h) Refuse Mr Ghadami's application (dated 14 October 2016) for permission to bring contempt proceedings against the Ninth Defendant;
(i) Refuse Mr Ghadami's application (dated 14 March 2014) for permission to bring contempt proceedings the Second and each of the Fourth to Eighth Defendants inclusive;
(j) Refuse Mr Ghadami's application (dated 20 December 2015) for permission to amend his Particulars of Claim;
(k) Make an ECRO against Mr Ghadami in the terms indicated in paragraph [62] above.
(l) Order Mr Ghadami to pay the costs of the Second Defendant to be assessed on the indemnity basis down to and including 28 March 2014 and from and after that date on the standard basis and to pay £45,000 on account of those costs by 4.00pm 15 September 2017;
(m) Order Mr Ghadami to pay the costs of the Third Defendant of the action to be the subject of a detailed assessment on the indemnity basis and to pay £150,000 on account of those costs by 4.00pm 15 September 2017;
(n) Order Mr Ghadami to pay the costs of the Fourth, Fifth, Seventh and Eighth Defendants of the action to be the subject of a detailed assessment on the indemnity basis and to pay £109,000 on account of those costs by 4.00p.m. on 15 September 2017;
(o) Order Mr Ghadami to pay the costs of the Sixth Defendant of the action to be the subject of a detailed assessment on the indemnity basis and to pay £62,000 on account of those costs by 4.00p.m. on 15 September 2017;
(p) Order Mr Ghadami to pay the costs of the Sixteenth, Seventeenth and Eighteenth Defendants of the action to be assessed on the indemnity basis and to pay £133,000 on account of those costs by 4.00pm 15 September 2017;
(q) Direct that where an order has been made for detailed assessment then the paying and receiving party may instead agree the amount of such costs;
(r) Grant an injunction until further order restraining Mr Ghadami from seeking to register any unilateral notice against the respective registered titles of Vitala, Lynn or Merix to 42 Upper Grosvenor Street, 42 Reeves Mews and 41 Upper Grosvenor Street and 41 Reeves Mews but ordering them to give 14 days' written notice to Mr Ghadami of any intended disposal (meaning a transfer or the grant of any derivative interest) to the intent that Mr Ghadami may be enabled to consider what (if any) application he wishes to seek to issue;
(s) Reserve the costs of the injunction application dated 30 May 2017 to the next hearing concerning the injunction or any application arising out of it.