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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Alexander v Century Financial Brokers LLC & Ors [2025] EWHC 219 (Ch) (07 February 2025) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2025/219.html Cite as: [2025] EWHC 219 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
BUSINESS LIST (ChD)
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
ZUFI ALEXANDER |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) CENTURY FINANCIAL BROKERS LLC (2) CENTURY FINANCIAL CONSULTANCY LLC (3) CMC MARKETS UK PLC |
Defendants |
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Yash Kulkarni KC (instructed by Sham Uddin direct access barrister) for the Second Defendant
The First and Third Defendants did not appear
Hearing dates: 4 November 2024
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Crown Copyright ©
Master Kaye :
Background
i) The claimant successfully resisted the challenge to the jurisdiction.
ii) The claimant had invested US$6,252,700, withdrawn US$1,324,788 and her losses amounted to US$1,606,012.11.
iii) CFB was not licenced under the laws of the UAE to undertake the functions it purported to undertake for the claimant under the CFB IBA and it had not complied with all the relevant UAE regulations relating to the services it purported to provide to the claimant.
iv) CFB had executed some of the trades on the claimant's account without her knowledge or approval.
v) The claimant's trading activities were a commercial business undertaken with an intention to make a profit but that involved the risk of losses as well.
vi) CFB had received undisclosed commissions on the claimant's trades of US$2,496,600.73.
vii) CMC received commission of US$12.
viii) CFB was found liable to pay the claimant a total of US$4,102,539.11 made up of the commissions of US$2,496,600.73 and losses of US$1,606,012.11.
ix) However, the final order determined the sums payable to the claimant as US$2,496,600.73 plus interest at 9% from the date on which the case was filed for the undisclosed commissions and US$2m as the compensatory element, on which interest was to accrue at 9% from the date of the judgment becoming final after exhaustion of all rights of appeal which was in fact 12 September 2021.
x) The claim against CFC and CMC failed and no findings were made in respect of either of them.
"First: dissolving and liquidating the company ((Al-Asr Financial Brokerage (LLC)) and appointing the competent accounting expert who holds the role in the table as a liquidator for it, by making an inventory of all the company's assets and its capital of rights and obligations. The company's director has to write a detailed list of the company's funds, its budget, its rights with others, and its obligations and debts, assign the liquidator to sell the company's assets through a public auction and deposit the proceeds of the sale in a bank for the account of the company under liquidation, notifying the company's creditors, settling all debts owed by the company, and distributing the remaining funds among the partners, each according to his share. Upon the end of the liquidation, the liquidator shall announce this judgment, and an amount of twenty thousand dirhams shall be specified as the liquidator's fee to be added to the liquidation costs."
i) That the individuals involved in the management and operation of CFC and CFB were the same;
ii) CFB and CFC knew that the claimant was angry about the loss of her investment and had threatened litigation against CFB;
iii) The communications between CFB/CFC and CMC about the CFC IBA began in about December 2018 when CFB/CFC already knew that the claimant considered she had a substantial claim against CFB;
iv) The proposal to transfer the CFB clients to CFC which resulted in the Migration Agreement involving all three defendants was proposed after the claimant had issued the Dubai CFI claim on 21 April 2019;
v) The proposed CFC IBA and the Migration Agreement were discussed between the defendants whilst the Dubai CFI claim was continuing.
vi) All the defendants knew that the Dubai judgment directed that CFB pay circa US $ 4.5m to the claimant;
vii) The Migration Agreement was entered into less than two weeks after the Dubai judgment and subsequently completed on 20 March 2021 less than a month after CFB's unsuccessful appeal at the same time as the CFB IBA was terminated and was replaced by the CFC IBA;
viii) The Offending Transactions would have the clear and obvious effect of prejudicing the claimant's ability to enforce the Dubai judgment against CFB by the transfer of valuable business assets to CFC from CFB with CMC's agreement and the defendants must have appreciated this;
ix) The defendants have provided no justification for the Offending Transactions.
Permission to serve out:
"First, the applicant must satisfy the court that, in relation to that defendant, there is a serious issue to be tried on the merits of the claim. "A serious issue" means a substantial question of law or fact or both. The test is the same as that applied to resist an application for summary judgment, viz. whether there is a real, as opposed to a fanciful, prospect of success." [serious issue to be tried in relation to each cause of action]
"Second, the applicant must satisfy the court that there is a "good arguable case" that the claim for which permission to serve proceedings out of the jurisdiction is sought falls within one or more of the cases mentioned in this Rule." [The jurisdictional gateways set out in PD 6B 3.1]
"Third, the applicant must satisfy the court that in all the circumstances, England is clearly or 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 of the proceedings out of the jurisdiction." [Forum]
"I am not aware of any other facts that are not already addressed above that ought to be highlighted in this witness statement by way of full and frank disclosure."[sic]
The Application
"1. Set aside permission to serve the claim form upon it out of the jurisdiction; 2. Set aside service of the claim form; and/or 3 declare that thye court does not have jurisdiction to try this claim; or 4 declare that the court does not exercise such jurisdiction as it has4. Costs"
"CF Consultancy challenges the jurisdiction of the English Court to hear this matter or to decline such jurisdiction as it has. It also applies to set aside permission for service of the claim form out of the jurisdiction. I shall leave any detailed legal argument to my counsel at the hearing itself but, in the meantime, set out the bases on which I take issue with the claim being served on CF Consultancy and the English Court seeking to exercise jurisdiction over it."
"One of the bases on which the Claimant sought permission to serve CF Consultancy out of the jurisdiction was under paragraph 3.1(3) of Practice Direction 6B, on the basis that CF Consultancy was a necessary or proper party to a claim against the CMC Markets, which is incorporated in this jurisdiction.
As far as I can tell from the Particulars of Claim, there is no claim against CMC Markets in the English Court. Whilst it may be a party to the claim, no substantive relief is sought against it as a defendant. In the UAE proceedings to which Mr Glaysher refers, the claim against CMC Markets was dismissed.
I would contend, therefore, that there is no claim against CMC Markets to which CF Consultancy is a necessary or proper party."
Serious issue to be tried on the merits:
Gateways:
Connections/Forum:
CMC and Jurisdiction clauses:
The parties:
The Transactions:
The prior disputes:
Fragmentation:
UAE law:
Conclusion on sufficient connection and forum
Conclusion