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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Chellapermal v The Financial Conduct Authority & Ors [2019] EWHC 2260 (Ch) (23 August 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2019/2260.html Cite as: [2019] EWHC 2260 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF
ENGLAND AND WALES
BUSINESS LIST (ChD)
The Rolls Building, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
Mrs SHAMILLA CHELLAPERMAL |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) THE FINANCIAL CONDUCT AUTHORITY (2) Mr DHARAM PRAKASH GOPEE (3) Miss CAMILLA CHELLAPERMAL |
Defendants |
____________________
Mr Evans QC instructed by and for the First Defendant
The Second and Third Defendant did not appear and were not represented.
Hearing dates: 29 July 2019
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Master Kaye :
i) An order that the court direct that the First Defendant, the Financial Conduct Authority ("FCA") remove a Restraint Order over a bank account held in the name of the Third Defendant at NatWest. (I note that this claim would not fall within the jurisdiction of the Chancery Division).
ii) A declaration that the funds in the restrained bank account amounting to £130,343.83 ("the Fund") in fact belong to the Claimant as being the proceeds of sale of a property known as 14 Stanbury Avenue Watford WD17 3HW ("the Property"), and,
iii) A declaration that the funds were paid to the Claimant by the Second Defendant as surplus funds belonging to the Claimant pursuant to a letter or statement of account dated 7 January 2016.
i) Transcripts of hearings before HHJ Gledhill QC in Southwark Crown Court (SCC) in February 2016;
ii) HHJ Gledhill QC's ruling of 17 February 2016 in respect of Claimant's proprietary claim to the Fund;
iii) HHJ Gledhill QC's ruling in relation to the Second Defendant in April 2016;
iv) The Claimant's application for permission to appeal HHJ Gledhill QC's ruling in respect of her claim to the Fund to the Court of Appeal Criminal Division (CACD);
v) The Claimant's application for permission to seek Judicial Review in relation to HHJ Gledhill QC's ruling in respect of the Fund and its refusal.
3.4
(1) In this rule and rule 3.5, reference to a statement of case includes reference to part of a statement of case.
(2) The court may strike out a statement of case if it appears to the court –
(a) that the statement of case discloses no reasonable grounds for bringing or defending the claim;
(b) that the statement of case is an abuse of the court's process or is otherwise likely to obstruct the just disposal of the proceedings; or
(c) that there has been a failure to comply with a rule, practice direction or court order.
(3) When the court strikes out a statement of case it may make any consequential order it considers appropriate.
…
(5) Paragraph (2) does not limit any other power of the court to strike out a statement of case.
i) It represents an attempt by the Claimant to re-litigate an issue already decided against her,
ii) It represents an attempt by the Claimant to bypass the statutory scheme which has been enacted to deal with the issues she raises (Part 2 Proceeds of Crime Act 2002 ("POCA")),
iii) The Claimant has a collateral objective in bringing the claim, and,
iv) Although ostensibly in the name of the Claimant, the Second Defendant is driving the application.
a) That the Chancery Division has jurisdiction to determine her claim to the Fund.
b) That she is entitled to bring her claim in a court of equity and have it determined by a court of equity.
c) That new evidence uncovered the night before the hearing (but not before the court) will demonstrate that she has been treated differently to other victims of the Second Defendant.
d) That she wants an adjournment to enable her family to raise money to enable her to obtain legal advice in relation to the new evidence.
Background
"the important factual dispute between the [Claimant] and [the Second Defendant] is apparent on the face of the papers, which is ironic because of course she has called [the Second Defendant] as a witness in support of her application. As Mr Evans has pointed out, the burden of proof on the civil scale is on her to show that the Restraint Order should be varied, which she can only do of course by demonstrating that she had a proprietary claim in the monies that have been paid into her daughter's account after the imposition of this Restraint Order."
I am satisfied that [the Claimant] did not have such proprietary claim on the evidence I have heard for the reasons set out in the note of Mr Evans. I have come to the conclusion that this application is not made out to the civil standard that I refuse to vary the Restraint Order.
I am well aware that that will be very disappointing for [the Claimant], but I am afraid that I have to apply the law as it is, and the evidential burden being on her, even to the lower civil standard, has simply not been made out."
i) The decision to grant the Restraint Order in June 2015,
ii) The decision to vary the Restraint Order in December 2015 (which included an extension to cover both the Fund in, and, the Third Defendant's account), and
iii) The decision of HHJ Gledhill QC of 17 February 2016 including in respect of the Claimant's proprietary claim to the Fund.
Application to Strike Out pursuant to CPR 3.4(2)
The Claimant's submissions
i) she could not afford to pay for legal representation;
ii) that she was battling to pay the mortgage on her husband's property (this is not the Property);
iii) she did not know that the Second Defendant was under investigation when she asked him to lend her money;
iv) she believes that she has been treated unequally and unfairly as against other victims of the Second Defendant. She said that she had uncovered evidence, the day before the hearing, that other victims of the Second Defendant who had, she said, the same agreements as she had had with the Second Defendant or his companies, had got their homes back. She did not understand why she was being punished;
v) she maintains that the Fund is her money derived from the net proceeds of sale of the Property which was held on trust for her by the Second Defendant;
vi) she is entitled to bring her claim in a court of equity and have it determined there. This submission had two parts: a) that Mr Evans had told her that she should and b) that the postscript to SFO v Lexi Holdings (referred to at paragraph 57 below) entitles her to.
FCA Submissions
"Sometimes issues may arise in Restraint Order proceedings about equitable interests which are not unduly complicated and can readily be dealt with in the Crown Court. In other cases, the sums involved may not warrant any unusual steps. But there may be times when the complexities are such that it may not be wise for a Crown Court Judge to embark on seeking to decide those issues. In such a case where a relaxation of the Restraint Order is sought, consideration should be given to adjourning those variation proceedings to enable the issues to be determined in proceedings before a Specialist Chancery Circuit Judge or High Court Judge of the Chancery Division. Alternatively, those arranging the listing of such cases in the Crown Court should seek to ensure they are heard by a judge with the relevant experience or expertise."
Discussion
Application to Adjourn
i) The application to strike out for abuse of process had been issued on 24 June 2019. The Claimant filed evidence in opposition on 19 July 2019. There is no explanation as to why the new evidence she had identified the night before the hearing was not obtained earlier and was not already before the court;
ii) The matters about which the Claimant wished to adduce new/further evidence and seek legal advice upon were not matters which would go to the substance of the abuse of process application, which this court was to determine on this application. The grounds for saying that the claim was an abuse of process were not based on the merits of the claim but on it being an abuse because it was seeking to re-litigate the same claim that the SCC had determined in February 2016.
iii) The evidence did not in any event even appear to go to the merits of whether the Claimant had a proprietary claim in the Fund. The evidence appeared to go to a broader question of whether the Claimant had been treated fairly or equally with other victims of the Second Defendant.
iv) The Claimant would not be precluded from deploying that evidence, if so advised, during the Confiscation proceedings listed to take place in December 2019.
v) There was no evidence to support the submission that the Claimant's family would now seek to raise funds to enable her to seek advice in relation to the new evidence nor that they were in a position to do so. The matters to which these proceedings relate date back to 2015 the Claimant has represented herself throughout. The suggestion that funding would now be become available in relatively short order, possibly as soon as 3 weeks, seemed improbable in the absence of any supporting evidence.
vi) Although these proceedings were only issued in May 2019, given the basis of the application for an adjournment, which did not go to the grounds of the application to strike out there was no merit in prolonging the proceedings and causing both parties to incur further costs.
vii) I have taken into account the need for the court to further the overriding objective to deal with cases justly and at proportionate cost, including consideration of the allocation of court time and resources and balancing the question of prejudice between the Claimant and FCA and taking into account that the Claimant is unrepresented.