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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Durnont Enterprises Ltd v Fazita Investment Ltd & Ors [2023] EWHC 1294 (Ch) (26 May 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2023/1294.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 1294 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS
OF ENGLAND AND WALES
INSOLVENCY AND COMPANIES LIST (Ch D)
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
(sitting as a Deputy Judge of the High Court)
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DURNONT ENTERPRISES LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and – |
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(1) FAZITA INVESTMENT LIMITED (2) WLADYSLAW JAROSZEWICZ (3) MICHAEL CARL JAROSZEWICZ (4) M-JWK-MANAGEMENT SPÓLKA Z OGRANICZONA ODPOWIEDZIALNOSCIA (formerly M-JWK-MANAGEMENT SPÓLKA Z OGRANICZONA ODPOWIEDZIALNOSCIA SP.J and M-JWK Sp. z. o.o. SKA) (5) ANNA BANDURSKA (6) JAN CZEREMCHA (7) MACIEJ DE MAKAY (8) BNP PARIBAS BANK POLSKA S.A. (formerly BGZ BNP PARIBAS S.A., formerly RAIFFEISEN BANK POLSKA S.A.) (9) POLISH REAL ESTATE INVESTMENT LIMITED |
Defendants |
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The Defendants did not appear and were not represented
Hearing dates: 11-12 May 2023
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Crown Copyright ©
Tom Smith KC :
Introduction
(1) First, for 'second stage' permission pursuant to CPR r. 19.15 to continue a derivative action against the First to Eighth Defendants (the "Permission Application");
(2) Secondly, for permission, insofar as necessary, to serve the Amended Claim Form out of the jurisdiction pursuant to CPR rr. 6.36 and 6.37 and other documents pursuant to CPR r. 6.38 (the "Service Out Application").
Background
The Company
The SSA
The Claim
The 2014 SPA
The Subrogation Claim
The April 2016 PoA and the Collateral Agreement
The 28 April 2016 Board meeting
The Cyprus Injunction
Exit discussions
The Default Judgment
The sale of the Bialystok shopping centre
The Return Transfer Agreement
Issuance of Series H Certificates
The First and Second Bailiff Sales
The Series I-K Issuances
The Third Bailiff Sale
Overall
The Alleged Loss
(1) The alleged loss of value of the Certificates and loss of profit on such Certificates following the Bailiff Sales which took place between December 2018 and 2020.
(2) The loss of the value of the Series H and Series I-K Certificates and loss of profit on such certificates, and the loss of value in the Certificates caused by the issues of the Series H and Series I-K Certificates.
The Derivative Claims
(1) against Fazita and the Bank for breach of the SSA (the "SSA Claims");
(2) against all of the First to Eighth Defendants under Article 415 of the Polish Civil Code ("PCC") (the "Article 415 Claims");
(3) against Wladyslaw Jaroszewicz, Michael Jaroszewicz, Mr Czeremcha and Mr de Makay for breach of the fiduciary duties they owed to the Company under Cypriot law (the "Fiduciary Duty Claims").
The M-JWK Action
Procedural History
The Permission Application
The Legal Framework
"… the plaintiff ought at least to be required before proceeding with his action to establish a prima facie case (i) that the company is entitled to the relief claimed, and (ii) that the action falls within the proper boundaries of the exception to the rule in Foss v Harbottle."
"where what has been done amounts to fraud and the wrongdoers are themselves in control of the company. In this case the rule is relaxed in favour of the aggrieved minority, who are allowed to bring a minority shareholder's action on behalf of themselves and all others. The reason for this is that, if they were denied that right, their grievance could never reach the court because the wrongdoers themselves, being in control, would not allow the company to sue."
"A prima facie case is a higher test than a seriously arguable case and I take it to mean a case that, in the absence of an answer by the defendant, would entitle the claimant to judgment. In considering, whether the claimant has shown a prima facie case, the court will have regard to the totality of the evidence placed before it on the application."
Whether the English Court should determine the question
"Prior to the coming into effect of the Companies Act 2006, the English courts had jurisdiction over foreign company derivative claims to the extent that such claims were permitted by the law of the country of incorporation of the company concerned – see Konamaneni v. Rolls Royce Industrial Power (India) Limited and others [2002] 1 WLR 1269 ("Konamaneni") per Lawrence Collins J as he then was at [44] – [50] but subject to the qualification that the Courts of the place of incorporation of the company concerned would generally be the most appropriate forum for determining such a dispute and thus generally England would not be clearly the appropriate forum for determining such a dispute – see Konamaneni at [65] to [67]."
"In my judgment the courts of the place of incorporation will almost invariably be the most appropriate forum for the resolution of the issues which relate to the existence of the right of shareholders to sue on behalf of the company."
"I also consider that the effect of Pergamon Press Ltd v Maxwell [1970] 1 WLR 1167 is, at the least, that if issues arise relating to the exercise of what Pennycuick J described as discretionary powers of management, then I should accord considerable weight to the potential role of the courts of the place of incorporation. I doubt whether they have exclusive jurisdiction to deal with such issues. For example it may be wholly unjust to require recourse to an offshore haven to pursue fraudulent directors in a case which has no connection with the jurisdiction other than that it is the place of incorporation."
"In my judgment this is not an exceptional case of the kind to which Lawrence Collins J. referred. No doubt in the sort of case that he was contemplating the foreign corporation would have had some assets within the jurisdiction; or the acts of the fraudulent directors might have been committed within the jurisdiction. None of that applies to the present case. The only connection that PTM has with this jurisdiction is the fact that Mr Reeves lives here and has chosen to instruct an English legal team."
Prima facie case of entitlement to the relief claimed
Article 415 Claims
Article 415 Claims – Fazita, Wladyslaw and Michael Jaroszewicz and M-JWK
(1) breach of community principles of life (this appears to be synonymous with the community principles of coexistence referred to above);
(2) breach of the general prohibition against appropriation of someone else's movable property or property rights (derived from article 284 of the Polish Criminal Code); and
(3) breach of the general prohibition of causing another person to disadvantageously dispose of property by misleading him, or by taking advantage of a mistake or inability to adequately understand the actions undertaken (derived from article 286 of the Polish Criminal Code).
Article 415 Claims – Ms Bandurska, Mr Czeremcha, Mr de Makay and the Bank
(1) breach of community principles of life;
(2) breach of the general prohibition against appropriation of someone else's movable property or property rights (derived from article 284 of the Criminal Code);
(3) breach of general prohibition of causing another person to disadvantageously dispose of property by misleading him, or by taking advantage of a mistake or inability to adequately understand the actions undertaken (derived out from article 286 of the Criminal Code); and
(4) breach of general prohibition of causing damage to an entity by person managing its business by way of exceeding powers granted to such person or by failing to perform his duties (article 296 of the Criminal Code).
Knowledge of the Claimant
Fiduciary Duty Claims
SSA Claims
"Each of the parties (other than [the Company]) undertakes to the others that he will exercise all powers and rights available to him as a director, officer, employee or shareholder in [the Company] (or in any other Group Company) in order to give effect to the provisions of this Agreement and to ensure that [the Company] complies with its obligations under this Agreement."
(1) would act in good faith in the best interests of the joint venture and of the members of the Company as a whole; and
(2) would comply with their fiduciary duties and other duties arising by virtue of their position as director, officer or shareholder of any entity within the Fund.
"Such 'relational' contracts, as they are sometimes called, may require a high degree of communication, co-operation and predictable performance based on mutual trust and confidence and involve expectations of loyalty which are not legislated for in the express terms of the contract but are implicit in the parties' understanding and necessary to give business efficacy to the arrangements. Examples of such relational contracts might include some joint venture agreements, franchise agreements and long-term distributorship agreements"
"These cases, both appellate and first instance, all demonstrate in my judgment that there is no general duty of good faith in all commercial contracts, but that such a duty could be implied into some contracts, where it was in accordance with the presumed intention of the parties. Whether any contract is relational is heavily dependent upon context, as well as the terms. The circumstances of the relationship, defined by the terms of the agreement, set in its commercial context, is what decides whether a contract is relational or not."
The Default Judgment Claim
(1) first, there has to be a "conscious and deliberate dishonesty" in relation to the relevant evidence given, or action taken, statement made or matter concealed, which is relevant to the judgment sought to be impugned;
(2) secondly, the relevant evidence, action, statement or concealment (performed with conscious and deliberate dishonesty) must be "material". This means that the fresh evidence that is adduced after the first judgment has been given is such that it demonstrates that the previous relevant evidence, action, statement or concealment was an operative cause of the court's decision to give judgment in the way it did. As the Court of Appeal stated, "put another way, it must be shown that the fresh evidence would have entirely changed the way in which the first court approached and came to its decision".
(3) thirdly, the question of materiality of the fresh evidence is to be assessed by reference to its impact on the evidence supporting the original decision, not by reference to its impact on what decision might be made if the claim were to be retried on honest evidence.
(1) First, the contention that the procuring of the Default Judgment was part of (and, the Claimant infers, intended to facilitate) a continuing course of fraudulent conduct on the part of Wladyslaw Jaroszewicz and/or Michael Jaroszewicz (as set out above and below), which had the intention of expropriating the Company's assets, in the form of its Certificates in the Fund, to (the Claimant infers) entities ultimately owned or controlled by them at the expense of the Company's members as a whole.
(2) Secondly, it is said that at the time that M-JWK requested the court to enter the Default Judgment, M-JWK was aware that the allegation in paragraph 34(h)(v) of its Particulars of Claim dated 25 January 2016 (namely that "PREI's assets against which any judgment would be enforced are mainly investment certificates in a Polish closed-end investment fund") was untrue. In particular, it is said that by this time, as M-JWK knew, the Company's assets in the form of the Certificates had been transferred to M-JWK. Accordingly, it is said that M-JWK invited the court to enter default judgment on a basis it knew to be untrue.
Limitation
Prima facie case of entitlement to bring a derivative claim
Other Matters
"They include: the size of the claim; the strength of the claim; the cost of the proceedings; the company's ability to fund the proceedings; the ability of the potential defendants to satisfy a judgment; the impact on the company if it lost the claim and had to pay not only its own costs but the defendant's as well; any disruption to the company's activities while the claim is pursued; whether the prosecution of the claim would damage the company in other ways (e.g. by losing the services of a valuable employee or alienating a key supplier or customer) and so on. The weighing of all these considerations is essentially a commercial decision, which the court is ill-equipped to take, except in a clear case."
Conclusion
(1) I grant permission to bring the Article 415 Claims against Fazita, Wladyslaw and Michael Jaroszewicz, M-JWK and Ms Bandurska but not against Mr Czeremcha, Mr de Makay or the Bank. I note, however, that the Claimant maintains its own direct claims under Article 415 against Mr Czeremcha, Mr de Makay or the Bank on the footing that (contrary to its primary position) Polish rather than Cypriot law governs the reflective loss issue (APOC, paragraphs 71 and 72).
(2) I grant permission to bring the Fiduciary Claims against Wladyslaw and Michael Jaroszewicz but not against Mr Czeremcha or Mr de Makay.
(3) I grant permission to bring the SSA Claims against Fazita but not against the Bank. I note also that the Claimant brings its own direct claims for declaratory relief in connection with the SSA (APOC, paragraph 84).
(4) I grant permission to bring the Default Judgment Claim against M-JWK and Wladyslaw and Michael Jaroszewicz (including the restitution claim), but not against Fazita or Ms Bandurska.
The Service Out Application
Serious issue to be tried
Jurisdictional gateways
The SSA Claims
The Article 415 Claims
The Fiduciary Duty Claims
The Default Judgment Claim
(a) the defendant's alleged liability arises out of acts committed within the jurisdiction; or
(b) the enrichment is obtained within the jurisdiction; or
(c) the claim is governed by the law of England and Wales."
Forum
(1) The fact that the Company and Fazita chose English law to govern the SSA and England as the exclusive forum in which to determine disputes under the SSA in relation to the Company.
(2) The fact that it is said that the main operative documents relating to the Company have always been governed by English law because English law and the English courts were considered a neutral choice of law (the majority of the Company's shareholders being either Polish or Norwegian) and a reputable forum to settle any disputes should they arise (Rothe 1 [37(e)]). However, I note in this regard that other relevant agreements such as the 2014 SPA and the Framework Agreement are governed by Polish law.
(3) The fact that the Subrogation Claim was brought by M-JWK against the Company in England, and the Default Judgment was obtained in England.
(4) The fact that English law governs the SSA Claims and the Default Judgment Claim. Further, the SSA Claims will need to proceed in this jurisdiction in any event given the exclusive jurisdiction clause in the SSA. So far as the Default Judgment Claim is concerned, since this concerns a claim to set aside a judgment of the English Court, it is difficult to see how it could be litigated in any other jurisdiction.
(5) The fact that the Fiduciary Claims are said to be closely connected with the SSA Claims.
(6) The fact that the M-JWK Action will also be proceeding in England in any event, unless stayed by agreement or court order. The M-JWK Action was brought by M-JWK. It is the Claimant's case that M-JWK is controlled by Wladyslaw and Michael Jaroszewicz and there appears therefore to be a basis for saying that Wladyslaw and Michael Jaroszewicz caused it to bring these proceedings in England, which overlap with the present proceedings. As noted above, defences have been filed in those proceedings.
(7) The fact that a further related claim brought on 22 July 2019 against the Company concerning alleged breaches of the SSA (the "PSPT Claim") has been pursued in England.
Other Matters
"Pending (i) confirmation that the parties to whom the previous versions of Røthe- 1, OR1, Røthe-2 and OR2 were disclosed do not challenge the Claimant's assertion of privilege and further order of the Court consequent or (ii) final determination of any challenge to the Claimant's assertion of privilege and further order of the Court consequent upon such final determination:
(i) use of the previous versions of Røthe-1, OR1, Røthe-2 and OR2 by any person to whom any of those documents were disclosed be prohibited; and
(ii) non-parties be prohibited from accessing the previous versions of Røthe-1, OR1, Røthe-2 and OR2."
Conclusion