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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> ED&F Man Capital Markets LLP v Obex Securities LLC & Anor [2017] EWHC 2965 (Ch) (22 November 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2017/2965.html Cite as: [2018] WLR 1708, [2018] 1 WLR 1708, [2017] WLR(D) 777, [2017] EWHC 2965 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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ED&F MAN CAPITAL MARKETS LLP |
Applicant |
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- and – |
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(1) OBEX SECURITIES LLC (2) RANDALL KATZENSTEIN |
Respondents |
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Sarah Harman (instructed by Rosenblatt) for the Respondents
Hearing dates: 9-11 May 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
Miss Catherine Newman QC :
i) A serious issue to be tried on the merits of the claim against a foreign defendant;
ii) A good arguable case that the claim falls within one or more of the gateways provided under paragraph 3.1 of PD6B and
iii) England and Wales is clearly and distinctly the appropriate forum for the trial of the dispute and that in all the circumstances the court ought to exercise its discretion to permit service out of the jurisdiction.
Jurisdiction
"(2) On the application, in accordance with rules of court, of a person who appears to the High Court to be likely to be a party to subsequent proceedings in that court [...] the High Court shall, in such circumstances as may be specified in the rules, have power to order a person who appears to the court to be likely to be a party to the proceedings and to be likely to have or to have had in his possession, custody or power any documents which are relevant to an issue arising or likely to arise out of that claim—
(a) to disclose whether those documents are in his possession, custody or power; and
(b) to produce such of those documents as are in his possession, custody or power to the applicant or, on such conditions as may be specified in the order—
(i) to the applicant's legal advisers'"
Non-Disclosure
i) What are described as "materially similar" documents were being sought from Platinum in proceedings brought in the court of the Southern District of New York;
ii) It is said that Man did not explain to the Master why it had brought such proceedings against Platinum but not against Obex/RK;
iii) It is said that the Master was not told that the documents being sought in England were confidential to Platinum and that confidentiality issues would increase the cost of conducting the review;
iv) It is said that the Master was not told that Man had not asked Obex/RK who owned Flat Rock, nor that it was a matter of public record in the Cayman Islands that Flat Rock owned shares in Prime.
i) that it was at all times clear that the purpose of seeking documents from Obex/RK would be to demonstrate the knowledge of Obex/RK of the financial problems of Platinum at the time when they introduced Platinum to Man and when they represented that Platinum was not in financial difficulties. Such documents are, he deposes, and in my judgment rightly, more likely to be in Obex/RK's possession than in the possession of Platinum. The possibility of Platinum having some documents going to the knowledge of Obex/RK cannot be ruled out, but it would not be the primary source. In contrast Obex/RK would be the most obvious source. In oral argument it was accepted on behalf of Man that it would have been better to disclose this application in the USA courts to the Master, but it was also argued, and I accept, that the documents being sought there and the documents to be sought here would not be a matching set and even success in the US application was never going to dispose fully of the application here. I was also told that the application in the USA against Platinum was being opposed by the SEC on the ground that it would interfere with their investigations;
ii) Man argued that Platinum could not be sued in the courts of England and Wales but it was common ground that Obex/RK would properly be sued here if at all. Equally, Obex/RK would not be amenable to suit in the Southern District of New York as the agreed proper forum for disputes between Man and Obex/RK was England and Wales. I accept that is correct, indeed, it was not contested;
iii) There might be an allegation of confidentiality obligations owed to Platinum respect of documents in the possession of Obex/RK, but that is not obvious. Again I agree. Quite apart from communications between Obex, RK and/or Platinum which might turn up in response to the disclosure application being made in the US courts, it is obvious that communications between Obex and RK might or might not contain material which Platinum might consider confidential, but not obvious that all the material would be confidential, or that such a claim of confidence would be a bar to its disclosure;
iv) Mr Courtney points out that in his first witness statement dated 22 December 2016, which was before the Master, he had disclosed that Man had asked RK for KYC documents on Prime by email dated 9 March 2016 for the express purpose of establishing ultimate beneficial ownership. His evidence was that Obex had set up Prime, which was incorporated in June 2015, with one beneficial owner called Obex Commercial LLC ('Obex Commercial'). Man believes that Platinum, or one of its affiliates, possibly Mr Nordlicht, is one of Prime's ultimate owners. Man had asked Obex, in early 2016, for information identifying the ultimate beneficial owner ('UBO') of Prime. In late February 2016 RK sent certain information identifying those who had interests in Prime as Obex Commercial, a 'Bermuda Purpose Trust', (without more) and Flat Rock (again, without saying who was behind Flat Rock). This revealed the connection with Flat Rock but not, Man argues, the ultimate beneficial ownership of Prime. What Man had asked for and what it had not asked for is plain from Mr Courtney's first witness statement. It is likewise plain from Mr Courtney's first witness statement that Man is now asking for all the documents which provide evidence of all the legal and beneficial owners of Prime and Flat Rock. In his first witness statement dated 15 March 2017, Mr Huntley pointed out that a search in the Cayman Islands would have disclosed that Platinum owned Prime. In his second witness statement dated 28 March 2017, Mr Courtney explains that whilst RK did disclose that Platinum had an interest in Prime, he did not disclose, despite enquiry about Prime's ('UBO'), full information about the ownership of Prime.
i) Further information given by Mr Huntley in his second witness statement about the ownership of Prime and about the Bermuda Trust will doubtless be considered by Man before it actually decides to make its pre-action disclosure application. However the information is being drip fed and no explanation has been given of why a full and clear answer was not given to Man's inquiries in 2016;
ii) The suggestion that Man's 2016 requests had a special meaning derived from the rubric of their account opening forms is one for argument on the application itself;
iii) Other complaints made by Mr Huntley in his evidence are disputed points of fact such as whether or not misrepresentations were made.
iv) In my judgment there were not such failures of disclosure as to cast doubt on the safety of the Master's Order and the evidence of Mr Courtney in his first witness statement was adequate for the exercise which the Master had to perform.
No reasonable prospect of success
Conclusion