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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Trade Credit Finance No (1) Ltd. & Anor v Bilgin & Ors [2004] EWHC 2732 (Comm) (03 November 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2004/2732.html Cite as: [2004] EWHC 2732 (Comm) |
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QUEENS BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Trade Credit Finance No (1) Limited National Westminster Bank Plc |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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Dinc Bilgin Lime Company Limited Coutts & Co |
Defendant |
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Mr. Khawar Qureshi (instructed by St. Davids) for the First Defendant
Mr. Stuart Adair (instructed by Arnold Fooks Chadwick) for the Second Defendant
Hearing dates : 28th& 29th June, 1st & 7th & 15th July, 13th & 30th September, 5th October
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Crown Copyright ©
Gavin Kealey Q.C. :
INTRODUCTION
THE FACTS
THE INJUNCTION AND THE PROPERTY
THE CLAIMANTS' APPLICATION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT AGAINST THE FIRST DEFENDANT
"In consideration of the Company [TCF] entering into the Conditional Sale Agreement .. the Guarantor as primary obligor unconditionally and irrevocably:
(a) guarantees to the Company by way of continuing guarantee as principal obligor and not merely as surety the payment by the Borrower [Sabah] of each Instalment up to the Guaranteed Amount for that Instalment; and
(b) agrees that if and each time that the Borrower shall fail to pay any Instalment as and when the same becomes due, the Guarantor will on demand .. pay to the Company (as if the Guarantor instead of the Borrower were expressed to be the primary obligor) up to the Guaranteed Amount in the case of that Instalment free from all deductions whatsoever, together with interest thereon at a rate of 10.05 per cent per annum .."
"The obligations of the Guarantor hereunder shall not be affected by any matter or thing which but for this provision might operate to affect such obligations including without limitation
(a) any time or indulgence granted to or composition with the Borrower or any other person;
(b) the taking, variation, renewal or release of, or neglect to perfect or enforce, any rights, remedies or securities against the Borrower or any other person; or
(c) any unenforceability or invalidity of any obligations of the Borrower, so that this Deed shall be construed as if there were no such unenforceability or invalidity."
(a) on the basis of the evidence of Mr. Caglar referred to above and the suggested unlikelihood of Mr. Caglar having given such an assurance in circumstances where the Second Protocol was a negotiated document in which Mr. Bilgin had secured more generous wording than that originally proposed;
(b) on the basis that the oral assurance was contrary to the terms of the Second protocol;
(c) on the basis that Mr. Bilgin's evidence is internally contradictory; and
(d) on the basis that, after the Second Protocol was signed, demands were made on Mr. Bilgin in respect of the 8th and 9th instalments without eliciting any protest from Mr. Bilgin.
(a) In relation to the evidence of Mr. Caglar, there is a serious dispute that will turn on what was said or not said between two persons at meetings when, so far as I can infer from the material, no-one else was present. I cannot resolve that dispute at this juncture in advance of disclosure and without the benefit of oral evidence. As for the fact that the wording of the Second Protocol was more generous to Mr. Bilgin than that originally proposed, that does not in and of itself negative the real possibility that the oral assurance was give.
(b) I do not consider that the assurance is necessarily inconsistent with the terms of the Second Protocol. The former, if given, would be suspensory and, whilst clause 4 of the Second Protocol emphasised that that the guarantee continued in full force and effect, that does not mean that the beneficiary of the guarantee might not at the same time have agreed not to enforce its terms pending an anticipated sale contract being concluded. On the contrary, if there were an expectation that such a sale contract would be concluded and might realise an amount sufficient to discharge Sabah's debts under the Conditional Sale Agreement, it might have made sense to the parties to suspend any action to enforce the guarantee in the period between the entering into the Protocol and the conclusion of the sale contract.
(c) I do not consider that any inconsistencies in Mr. Bilgin's evidence are of such substance as to warrant the rejection of those parts that are critical to this factual issue. It seems to me clear what Mr. Bilgin is saying. The accuracy of his account, and the question of such internal inconsistencies as may exist, are matters that I cannot resolve on a application for summary relief.
(d) It is correct that demands were made on Mr. Bilgin after the signing of the Second Protocol and that, it would appear, Mr. Bilgin did not raise any protest about them notwithstanding the terms of the oral assurance on which he relies. However, I do not consider that, taken singly or in conjunction with the other matters addressed above, this is sufficient to justify the rejection at this juncture of Mr. Bilgin's evidence. After all, it might equally be said against the Claimants that they took no steps against Mr. Bilgin to enforce the guarantee after the signing of the Second Protocol until they learned of the existence of a valuable asset in this jurisdiction, and that such forbearance is consistent with the alleged oral assurance having been given. (Mr. Downes submitted that I could not take into account such post facto conduct on the basis that it was inadmissible in aid of construction. I reject that submission. The conduct is not relevant to construction; it is relevant and admissible to the issue whether an assurance was given as and in the terms alleged.) In the final analysis, these are matters of evidence and ultimately of submission to a court that has had the benefit of oral testimony. They cannot sensibly be resolved at this stage.
(a) the Second Protcocol was inconsistent with the oral assurance and, therefore, Mr. Bilgin could not rely on any principle of estoppel;
(b) since the Second Protocol was inconsistent with the oral assurance, the only relief for which Mr. Bilgin could contend was rectification of the former so that it accorded with the latter, and Mr. Bilgin was not seeking such relief; and
(c) Mr. Bilgin has not explained how Mr. Caglar could have had actual or ostensible authority from the Second Claimant to whom the guarantee had been assigned. (This last submission featured briefly in Mr. Downes' Skeleton but was not developed in oral submission.)
(a) the evidence of Mr. Wood of Clyde & Co. at paragraph 12 of his second affidavit sworn on 17th May 2004 that it was "quite likely Merkez is not keen to enter into an agreement to buy the [printing press] because it presently has the use of it without any payment to the Claimants";
(b) the fact, deposed to by Mr. Wood in his second affidavit, that significant efforts have been made by representatives of TCF and the ECGD to negotiate with Merkez an agreement to purchase the printing press but these have not met with a positive response from Merkez;
(c) the failure by Merkez to give an indication of the purchase price that it would be prepared to contemplate in relation to the printing press despite having told Mr. Crick of the ECGD in the first week of March 2004 that it would give such an indication within the following two weeks;
(d) the failure by Mr. Bilgin to produce any evidence to support his statement that Merkez had agreed with Sabah to purchase the printing press from the Claimants;
(e) the statement by Mr. Bilgin in his affidavit of 7th May 2004 that, unless and until the charges by which the printing press has become encumbered in Turkey are released, Merkez cannot purchase it; and
(f) Mr. Wood's belief, as expressed in his second affidavit, that "the intentions of Merkez to purchase the [printing press] are at best equivocal, based on the experience of Mr Bob Crick [ECGD] and Mr Simon Jones [TCF]".
(a) One method of trying to oppose the auction would be to obtain an injunction from a court in Turkey other than the Execution and Inspection Court. However, this has already been attempted by the Claimants and they failed: they submitted an objection to the originally scheduled auction on the basis of the English judgment declaring TCF to be the owner of the press but this was rejected.
(b) Other creditors might also initiate a sale by auction of the printing press at any time. Whilst the Claimants could apply to oppose any such auction on the basis of the English judgment, if they fail, there would be a real risk that they would have to pay a penalty to Halkbank of up to 40% of the value of the press. That is a risk that the Claimants have decided that they are not prepared to take.
(c) Finally, upon a sale by auction, under Turkish law, Halkbank's commercial pledge would take priority over any rights to ownership that the Claimants might have. The Claimants would only have a right to a share in the proceeds of sale of the press once Halkbank's claim had been satisfied. That claim amounts to over U.S.$ 27 million and far exceeds the value of the printing press.
"The Court may give summary judgment against a claimant or defendant on the whole of a claim or on a particular issue if
1. it considers that
(i) that claimant has no real prospect of succeeding on the claim or issue; or
(ii) that defendant has no real prospect of successfully defending the claim or issue; and
(b) there is no other compelling reason why the case or issue should be disposed of at a trial."
ii. Part 24 confers on the court an exceptional power since the ordinary principle, which is established to meet the ends of justice, is that disputes are to be resolved at trial on the evidence and after completion of disclosure.
iii. Part 24 is to be applied in the interests of all concerned to dispose of cases or issues that are not fit for trial at all.
iv. The test whether a case or issue is fit for determination on an application for summary judgment is whether there is a real prospect of the claim or defence, as the case may be, succeeding in circumstances where "real" is to be equated with "realistic" and contrasted with "fanciful".
v. A Part 24 application is not to be used for the conduct of a mini-trial on the documents chosen to be deployed by the parties without disclosure or oral evidence. Where the case or issue is complex or its determination is time-consuming, the court must be astute not to allow an application for summary judgment to turn into a mini-trial and should consider with care whether or not the application should be permitted to proceed. However, where there is a realistic prospect of benefit to the parties, the court may permit the application to proceed but it will be necessary for it to keep in mind the nature of the exercise that is permissible under Part 24.
THE SECOND DEFENDANT'S APPLICATION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT
"A declaration that the proceeds of sale of the Property and/or all sums held in the Second Defendant's Coutts bank account at 440 Strand are beneficially owned by the First Defendant.
Alternatively, a declaration that 50% of the proceeds of sale of the Property and/or all sums held in the Second Defendant's Coutts bank account at 440 Strand are beneficially owned by the First Defendant."
(a) the purchase of the property in 1996 was made with the assistance of a mortgage from Coutts in the joint names of Mr. and Mrs. Bilgin, Mrs. Bilgin thereby subjecting herself to significant personal obligations to Coutts;
(b) the mortgage dated 1st February 1996, which defined the Borrower as Mr. and Mrs. Bilgin, further provided by clause 2 that "the Borrower [Mr. and Mrs. Bilgin] as beneficial owner hereby charges by way of legal mortgage the Mortgaged Property as a continuing security to the Lender";
(c) Arnold Fookes Chadwick, solicitors, acted in connection with the purchase of the property expressly on behalf of both Mr. and also Mrs. Bilgin;
(d) the transfer was with full title guarantee, and it is plain from the restriction on the office copy of the entry at H.M. Land Registry that Mr. and Mrs. Bilgin were tenants in common in equity.
(a) the property was not the "matrimonial home";
(b) it is to be inferred that Mr. Bilgin provided the cash that was used to fund the purchase of the property;
(c) Mr. Bilgin has placed other assets beneficially owned by him into the names of family members to act as his nominee;
(d) there is no record of any meeting between Mrs. Bilgin and either Coutts or Arnold Fookes Chadwick;
(e) there are a number of documents that refer to the purchase of the property by Mr. Bilgin without mention being made of Mrs. Bilgin, and a number of documents that indicate that decisions relating to the property were made by Mr. Bilgin alone;
(f) it was the privacy of Mr. Bilgin, and not that of Mrs. Bilgin, that was the predominant motive for the transfer of the property to Lime;
(g) there is no record of any advice from Arnold Fookes Chadwick regarding Mrs. Bilgin's residential status and tax liability; and
(h) decisions relating to the property whilst it was held by Lime, and decisions relating to the proceeds of sale of the property to Cadogan Estates, were made by Mr. Bilgin alone.
(a) the fact that the property was not the "matrimonial home" does not seem to me to advance the matter further one way or another. Mr. Bilgin has deposed that, throughout his marriage to Mrs. Bilgin, he and Mrs. Bilgin have owned their separate assets but some of their valuable assets are and have been owned by them in equal shares. He says that, since his family was growing up and he and his wife were fond of visiting London regularly, they decided in the late 1980s to purchase a flat in Chalfont House. They then decided to sell the flat and purchase a house. There is no evidence to gainsay what Mr. Bilgin has deposed to. On the uncontroverted evidence, the property, like the flat before it, was intended to be enjoyed by both Mr. and Mrs. Bilgin as a matrimonial asset. The fact that it was not their principal matrimonial residence does not alter that fact. All the evidence is to the effect that it was a family property which Mr. and Mrs. Bilgin and their family enjoyed and which Mrs. Bilgin and her daughter, in particular, used to visit frequently. It was, in effect, Mr. and Mrs. Bilgin's London home.
(b) It is said that Mr. Bilgin supplied the cash with which the property was purchased. In fact, if the cash was provided by Mr. Bilgin, it was first paid into the joint account in the joint names of Mr. and Mrs. Bilgin before being used to pay for the purchase. But, putting that matter to one side, it is not suggested that the provision of funds by a husband for the purchase of a matrimonial asset is anything out of the ordinary. If the suggestion is to be made that the provision of funds by a husband for the purchase of a matrimonial asset is something that, in and of itself, should attract the suspicion that the asset which is then purchased in joint names is not in fact beneficially jointly owned, I would reject it. At best, the provision of funds by a husband for such a purchase is neutral. It is entirely consistent with what happens in many families where one spouse is the sole earner and the other provides for the family in as valuable but different a way. The source of the money does not dictate, or assist in determining, where the beneficial interest lies.
(c) As to the allegation that Mr. Bilgin has placed other assets beneficially owned by him into the names of family members to act as his nominee, the only example that the Claimants are able to give does not provide the support that the Claimants need. The Claimants point to a letter signed by Mr. Bilgin on 23rd March 2004 (over six years after the property was purchased) in which he instructed Coutts to transfer $6.4 million out of the joint account in his and Mrs. Bilgin's name at Coutts into the bank account of his son-in-law and daughter (Mr. and Mrs. Polley) in Boston, U.S.A.. The Claimants rely in this context upon the statement by Mr. Polley in his second affidavit sworn on 24th June 2004 that he was to hold the funds in equal shares for and on behalf of Mr. and Mrs. Bilgin. Whilst Mr. Polley thus confirms that he was to hold the funds effectively as nominee, sight should not be lost of the identity of those for whose benefit the funds were to be held: the funds were not to be held for the benefit of Mr. Bilgin alone; they were to be held as to 50% for Mrs. Bilgin. Properly analysed, therefore, this factor does not advance the Claimants' case. On the contrary, it supports the proposition that family assets were held jointly by Mr. and Mrs. Bilgin.
(d) The absence of any record of any meeting between Mrs. Bilgin and Arnold Fookes Chadwick suggests that there was no meeting between them. However, any suggestion that this is anything out of the ordinary is not supported by any evidence. It has not been suggested that this situation was any different from that of other ordinary married couples whose assets are held in joint names. It cannot realistically be suggested that the purchase of a beneficial interest in the property by Mrs. Bilgin required any such meetings or that she was ill-served by the absence of any. Moreover, it is clear from the documents why no meeting occurred: Mrs. Bilgin's solicitor wrote to Coutts on 7th December 1995 and stated that he did not think that it would be necessary for Coutts to interview Mrs. Bilgin. He also made reference to her very busy schedule. The inference that the Claimants are presumably seeking to draw is that it was Mr. Bilgin who had control over the arrangements for the purchase of the property and who exclusively dealt with it. That may be correct. But that fact does not negative the acquisition by Mrs. Bilgin of a beneficial interest in the property. After all, she applied for the mortgage, signed the mortgage documents and assumed onerous personal obligations as lessee and onerous personal obligations to Coutts. The fact that this was all arranged, even controlled, by Mr. Bilgin goes no further than to show that Mr. Bilgin was in charge – but not unusually, or suspiciously, so.
(e) The Claimants also seek to infer an intention shared by Mr. and Mrs. Bilgin that the latter would hold her share of the property as the former's nominee from a number of documents.
i. The first is a note of a meeting between Mr. Bilgin and Arnold Fookes Chadwick on 4th December 1995 in which it is recorded as having been said that the purchase of the property would be by Mr. Bilgin personally and that the property would be registered in his sole name. However, this meeting took place two months before the purchase and, moreover, only three days before Arnold Fookes Chadwick wrote a letter to Coutts (the same letter as that referred to in (d) above) in which they referred to the purchase of the property by both Mr. and Mrs. Bilgin and dealt in some detail with Mrs. Bilgin's affairs. On the same day, the same solicitors wrote to the vendors' solicitors to say that they were instructed by Mr. and Mrs. Bilgin who had (both) agreed to purchase the property. The overwhelming weight of the documentary evidence demonstrates beyond any realistic doubt that the intention of Mr. and Mrs. Bilgin was to purchase the property in both their names and to register the property accordingly. The one note of an early meeting upon which the Claimants rely does not detract from that conclusion.
ii. The second is an undated net asset statement signed by Mr. Bilgin's cousin which appears to have been attached to the mortgage application and which notes that Mr. Bilgin owned the flat at Chalfont House and had an outstanding balance on it. However, the mortgage application, itself, which was apparently signed by Mr. and Mrs. Bilgin describes both Mr. and also Mrs. Bilgin as the owners of the flat and as having been the owners of the flat for the previous four years (as in fact they had been). It is not sensible to give the asset statement any weight in the light of the signed mortgage application form and the correct facts.
iii. Thirdly, the Claimants rely on several documents which, it is said, demonstrate that all decisions regarding the property and Lime were ultimately taken by Mr. Bilgin alone. Assuming that to be correct, again it is not said that it is at all out of the ordinary so far as many married couples are concerned. Control of affairs by Mr. Bilgin shows no more than that Mr. Bilgin did indeed apparently have or take control of such affairs. However, it does not mean that the beneficial proprietary interest in the matrimonial property was not shared between himself and his wife. There is no inconsistency between the two.
(f) The sixth point relied on, namely that Mr. Bilgin's privacy was the dominant motivating force behind the transfer of the property to Lime, is to my mind nothing to the point. If it was Mrs. Bilgin's privacy that had been in jeopardy and had induced the transfer, that would not have indicated that Mr. Bilgin held his apparent interest in the property as his wife's nominee. The point relied on by the Claimants shows only that Mr. and Mrs. Bilgin decided that they should transfer the property out of their names in order to dissociate the property from Mr. Bilgin.
(g) The seventh point seized on by the Claimants is the apparent absence of advice from Coutts concerning Mrs. Bilgin's residential status and tax liability. It is suggested, as a result, that Mrs. Bilgin has not treated her perceived beneficial interest in the property as a taxable asset in the United Kingdom. However, it is quite clear that Coutts did consider Mrs. Bilgin's residential status and tax liability: the notes of the meeting with Mr. Polley on 20th May 2002 make that explicitly clear. Interestingly, Coutts appear to have considered those matters so far as they concerned Mrs. Bilgin and her daughter but not so far as they concerned Mr. Bilgin. Coutts in fact suggested that these matters (concerning Mrs. Bilgin and her daughter) should be addressed by a suitably experienced UK solicitor.
(h) The last point on which the Claimants rely is that the decisions relating to the property whilst it was held by Lime, and the decisions relating to the proceeds of sale of the property to Cadogan Estates, were made by Mr. Bilgin alone. However, for the reasons that I have already expressed in other related contexts above, this is not a point that substantively advances the Claimants' case on the issue of Mrs. Bilgin's proprietary interest. The Claimants cannot apparently point – in fact they do not even attempt to point - to anything that distinguishes the situation and conduct of Mr. and Mrs. Bilgin in relation to their purchase of the property in 1996 from those of other ordinary married couples whose assets are held in joint names. The Claimants have done nothing to show that, whilst those other husbands and wives will each hold for his or her own benefit an equal beneficial interest in the asset that they have purchased (even in circumstances where the funds originally come out of the earnings of only one of them, and where one of them alone takes charge of the arrangements for the purchase and makes decisions alone), Mr. and Mrs. Bilgin did not.
(a) The notes of a meeting with Coutts on 20th May 2002 in which it was recorded that Mr. Polley expressed the belief that the best way forward was to transfer the property into an offshore company for the purposes of confidentiality and tax mitigation. However, whilst it might be that a desire for confidentiality did not require the beneficial interest in the property to be transferred, the proposed tax advantage could not have been gained unless the beneficial interest was transferred. As Blackburne J. said in a not dissimilar context in Nightingale Mayfair Limited v Mehta & others (21st December 1999):
"These tax objectives would simply not have been achieved if Mr Mehta had been and remained the beneficial owner; they could only have been achieved, under the structures established, if Omdeep owned the property beneficially."
The same logic applies in this case.
(b) The (alleged) facts that the purchase by Lime was apparently paid for by a loan from Mr. and Mrs. Bilgin in circumstances where no money changed hands, there are no loan notes and no contemporaneous documents supporting the existence of a loan. However, the evidence before the court paints a significantly different picture. The transfer of the property was made by Mr. and Mrs. Bilgin to Lime with full title guarantee in circumstances where (i) Coutts advanced a loan to Lime to facilitate the purchase and the property was mortgaged by Lime to Coutts, (ii) a valuation of the property was obtained from a valuer appointed by Coutts, (iii) Lime paid the stamp duty of £136,000 on the transaction, and cash to Mr. and Mrs. Bilgin sufficient to discharge their personal mortgage, (iv) documents immediately preceding the transfer (as to which see paragraph 76 below) referred unequivocally to the making and existence of the loan, and (v) in the balance sheet of Lime prepared independently by Coutts (Isle of Man) Ltd., a loan of £3,201,604 is shown as payable which not only accords with the contemporaneous evidence of the making and existence of the loan but also, according to Mr. Polley, is due as to one half to Mr. Bilgin and the other half as to Mrs. Bilgin.
(c) The transaction, it is said, was not arm's length but was dressed up to be arm's length. Reliance is placed on a letter from Mr. and Mrs. Bilgin's solicitors which stated "The above structure is the best that can be reasonably devised for protecting your privacy. The great advantage is that the initial transfer, which is essentially a public document, bears all the hallmarks of an arm's length transaction and it will be for full value." I agree that the transaction was probably not at arm's length. That was almost inevitable, given that the transfer was to a company that would be controlled by Mr. and Mrs. Bilgin. However, the stated objective of the transaction in the letter was the protection of Mr. Bilgin's privacy. That could not be achieved unless there was the appearance of an arm's length transaction. There is nothing intrinsically wrong with, or legally exceptionable about, that. It is, to my mind, of no weight when the evidence of Mr. and Mrs. Bilgin's solicitors is considered: Mr. Millman of Arnold Fooks Chadwick states, in a passage in his evidence which the Claimants have not been able to challenge:
"..Mr Cairney at Coutts confirms his understanding of the then proposed transaction and the reasons for it. It is perhaps worth noting in my letter of the 14th June to Mr Cairney, copied to Mr Polley, that I say that the funds required to be injected by Mr and Mrs Bilgin should in the first instance be treated as beneficial loans. I then speak of zero dividend shares. If [Lime] were a bare trustee there would be no beneficial loans, neither could redeemable preference shares be issued. I have no doubt that my firm's instructions were that the beneficial interest in the Property were to be transferred to the then Newco and that Coutts, effectively the mind of the Newco, believed and understood that they were through Newco to purchase the entire beneficial ownership in the Property. None of the documentation makes any sense unless that were the case."
The question that I have to determine is whether the Claimants have any realistic prospect of showing an underlying intention that Lime should not be the beneficial owner of the property. The question whether the transaction was at arm's length is of no assistance in that determination: see Hitch & Others v Stone Inspector of Taxes) [1999] STC 431, 463. Evidence of the reasons and objectives of the transfer is far more enlightening and relevant.
(d) It is said by the Claimants that the price of the purchase was artificially depressed so as to minimise stamp duty. Even assuming that to be correct (and it is disputed by Lime), it does not advance the enquiry very much. Stamp duty in a significant amount was still paid.
(e) The board of Lime, it is said, treated Lime's assets as if they were Mr. Bilgin's. There are, it seems to me, two answers to this. In the first place, one of the two emails relied on by the Claimants in this context in their Skeleton in fact suggests that Lime's assets were subject to the ultimate control of Mr. and Mrs. Bilgin, and not Mr. Bilgin alone. That email was dated 23rd July 2003 and stated "The balance of £88,672.50 will remain in the company account for the time being unless there is a need for the funds by Mr and Mrs Bilgin". In the second place, if Lime were so subject to the control of Mr. Bilgin that he could treat Lime's assets as though they were his own, there would be no purpose whatever in Mr. Bilgin having retained any beneficial interest in the property. This was explained by Chadwick J. in The Arab Monetary Fund v Dr. Hashim & others (15 June 1994):
"The imposition on a nominal purchaser of a resulting trust in favour of the person who has provided the purchase money is founded upon the unexpressed but presumed intention of the true purchaser that he should be beneficially entitled to the property for which he has paid. But to presume such intention where land is purchased in the name of an overseas corporation which has been formed or acquired for that purpose and which is under the sole control of the true purchaser would be perverse. The likely intention of the true purchaser in those circumstances is that the whole interest in the property (both legal and beneficial) should be in the overseas entity (either in fact or in law) to control the corporation in such a way that he can deal with the property as if it were his own. To impose a resulting trust in such circumstances would be to defeat, rather than to promote, the intention of the true purchaser."
It seems to me that this passage is as apt to be applied to a case where a corporation has been formed for the purpose of purchasing a property from the person who is to be in sole control of that corporation, as it is to be applied to the case where the purchase is of property from a third party.
(f) The Claimants rely on the fact that the original scheme involving the transfer of the property to an off-shore company envisaged some form of discretionary trust. This is correct but it provides no assistance to the Claimants. The scheme was dealt with in a number of places in the correspondence but in most detail in Coutts & Co.'s letter dated 29 May 2002. It is clear from that letter that what was envisaged was that the property should be purchased from Mr. and Mrs. Bilgin by an off-shore company of which Mr. and Mrs. Bilgin would be the joint beneficial owners; and that, thereafter, Mr. and Mrs. Bilgin should gift their shares in the company to a discretionary trust. It was clearly implicit in this proposed arrangement that the entire interest of Mr. and Mrs. Bilgin in the property, legal and beneficial, would be transferred by them to the new company. Therefore, rather than supporting the suggestion that the new company should be a convenient repository of merely the legal title in the property, the proposed arrangement supports the proposition that neither Mr. nor Mrs. Bilgin intended to retain any part of the beneficial interest in the property after it had been purchased by the new off-shore company.
(g) In the event, the trust scheme was not implemented. The Claimants have suggested that this provides further support to their contention that Mr. Bilgin's beneficial interest never passed to Lime. But it does not. Their primary case was that Mr. Bilgin's predominant motivation behind the transfer was to hide the property; and that their secondary case was that Mr. Bilgin's "further or alternative" predominant motivation was to evade existing liabilities to creditors and to deprive creditors of existing rights (in particular to attempt to place the property beyond the reach of enforcement by the Claimants). It was not made clear to me by the Claimants why Mr. Bilgin would have wished to hide the property unless it was for the purpose of avoiding liabilities; and, in fact, Mr. Downes in the course of his oral submissions produced a powerful argument (for which, see paragraph 87 below) that the hiding of the property had everything to do with the evasion of enforcement of liabilities. Nevertheless, whether it was Mr. Bilgin's wish to transfer his title in the property to Lime in order to preserve or safeguard his privacy and also for estate planning reasons (as Mr. Polley suggests), or whether the transfer was in fact motivated by Mr. Bilgin's desire to hide the property and/or to avoid his contractual obligations under the guarantee and other liabilities (as the Claimants suggest), neither of these objectives could have been achieved with any sufficient degree of success without an effective and complete transfer of title. On that basis, it would simply not be logical to conclude that Lime was merely a convenient repository of the property.
"Mr Morison submitted that the court will pierce the corporate veil where a defendant by the device of a corporate structure attempts to evade (i) limitations imposed on his conduct by law; (ii) such rights of relief against him as third parties already possess; and (iii) such rights of relief as third parties may in the future acquire. Assuming that the first and second of these three conditions will suffice in law to justify such a course, neither of them apply in the present case. It is not suggested that the arrangements involved any actual or potential illegality or were intended to deprive anyone of their existing rights."
(a) First, it seems to me that the Court of Appeal had well in mind the fundamental principle that it is only appropriate to pierce the corporate veil where special circumstances exist indicating that the company in question is a mere façade concealing the true facts: Woolfson v Strathclyde Regional Council [1978] SLT 159, 161. The two conditions cannot be taken in any way to derogate from that limiting principle.
(b) Secondly, the first condition was, it seems to me, intended to go no further than the decision of the Court of Appeal in Gilford Motor Co. Ltd. v Horne [1933] Ch. 935. That decision concerned an individual defendant who had entered into covenants restricting his trading activities and, in order to avoid those covenants, had caused a company to be formed for the purpose of enabling him through it to do things which, if he had done them personally, would have amounted to a breach of covenant. The Court of Appeal concluded that the company was a mere device for enabling the personal defendant to commit breaches of covenant and so granted an injunction both against the personal defendant and also against the company. However, it was not necessary for the Court of Appeal to treat, and the Court of Appeal did not treat, the assets of the company as though they were the assets of the individual defendant.
(c) Thirdly, the third condition was, it seems to me, intended to go no further than the decision of Russell J. in Jones v Lipman [1962] 1 W.L.R. 1962. In that case, the personal defendant was seeking to avoid an order for specific performance of a contract to sell land to the plaintiffs by conveying the same parcel of land to a company that he had specially acquired after the date of the contract. Russell J. held that the company was a device or mask that the personal defendant held before his face in order to avoid recognition by the eye of equity. Again, the court did not have to, and did not, treat the defendant company's assets as though they belonged to the personal defendant. Rather it granted the equitable relief of specific performance against both defendants.
(d) Therefore, I venture to doubt that the two conditions were intended to trespass beyond the proposition that, if a person acquires a company, which is subject to his complete control, and transfers property to that company for the purpose of defeating a person's right to equitable relief against him or evading an existing equitable obligation as in Gifford Motor Company v Horne [1933] Ch. 935 and Jones v Litman [1962] 1 W.L.R. 832 – injunction or specific performance – the court may grant a remedy directly against the company: see the discussion in the judgment of Chadwick J. in The Arab Monetary Fund v Dr Hashim (loc. cit.).
(e) Specifically, I do not consider that the two conditions were intended to support the proposition that a court may treat a company's assets as though they were the personal defendant's own merely because he has acquired that company and transferred assets of his own to it for the purpose of avoiding the risk of enforcement against him of a liability in common law damages or debt. Assuming that this was the motivation behind the transfer (and it seems to me, on the evidence, that this is by no means implausible), it is nevertheless not unlawful conduct; and I return to the compelling logic that, where such is the intention and motivation of the personal defendant, it would be perverse (in the language of Chadwick J.) to treat the company as a façade: the logical intention is that the entire interest in the assets, legal and beneficial, should pass to the company so that they remain within the control of the personal defendant while not being available to satisfy creditors.
(a) Whichever alleged motivation is attributed to Mr. Bilgin, there would have been no purpose in his retention of a beneficial interest. On the contrary, Mr. Bilgin's alleged objectives could not have been achieved with any sufficient degree of success, unless the transfer was effective to pass the beneficial interest to Lime.
(b) On the Claimants' case, Mr. Bilgin assumed and exercised complete control over Lime, which was merely his puppet, and thus over the property which he treated as his own (and Mrs. Bilgin's). In those circumstances, as Chadwick J. said in a similar context, it would be perverse to presume an intention of Mr. Bilgin that he should retain a beneficial interest in the property. The overwhelming likelihood in those circumstances, especially when those are combined with the others mentioned in this paragraph, is that Mr. Bilgin intended upon transfer of the property to Lime that the beneficial interest as well as the legal title should pass to Lime.
(c) That conclusion is not only reinforced by the recognition of the fact that Lime was a company independently owned by Mr. and Mrs. Bilgin in which they owned the entire issued share capital; it was moreover manifested by the manner in which Mr. and Mrs. Bilgin sought and obtained, and implemented, professional advice in relation to the transfer of the property to an off-shore company (in the event, Lime).
(d) The Claimants have adduced no evidence that Mr. Bilgin's solicitors and Coutts & Co. did not understand, and did not intend, the entire interest in the property to be transferred by Mr. and Mrs. Bilgin to Lime. On the contrary, the evidence from Mr. Bilgin's solicitors is that they intended and acted so as to transfer the entire interest, legal and beneficial, in the property. As for Coutts & Co., which advanced a loan by way of a mortgage to Lime and took a charge over the property as security for repayment of that loan, it would be extraordinary to suppose that it did not believe and intend the entire beneficial interest in the property to pass to Lime. As for Coutts (Isle of Man) Ltd., which supplied the management services for, and directors of, Lime, the unchallenged evidence is that it also believed and understood that Lime was acquiring and had acquired the entire beneficial ownership in the property.
(e) No special circumstances exist indicating that Lime was a mere façade concealing the true facts. There is no satisfactory or sufficient evidence to enable the Claimants to suggest with the necessary degree of plausibility, even at the stage of an application for summary judgment, that the clear distinction drawn between a company and its members, between their respective legal personalities and between their assets should, in this case, not be maintained.
THE FIRST DEFENDANT'S APPLICATION TO DISCHARGE THE FREEZING ORDER
"When an ex parte application is made for a Mareva injunction, it is of the first importance that the plaintiff should make full and frank disclosure of all material facts. He ought to state the nature of the case and his cause of action. Equally, in fairness to the defendant, the plaintiff ought to disclose, so far as he is able, any defence which the defendant has indicated in correspondence or elsewhere."
It seems to me that the claimant should likewise disclose any defence which the defendant is likely to take (because it is or ought to be sufficiently obvious to the claimant), whether or not the defendant has mentioned it previously.
THE FIRST DEFENDANT'S APPLICATION FOR SPECIFIC DISCLOSURE
"(1) A person must not knowingly or recklessly, without the consent of the data controller
(a) obtain or disclose personal data or the information contained in personal data, or
(b) procure the disclosure to another person of the information contained in personal data.
(2) Subsection (1) does not apply to a person who shows
(a) that the obtaining, disclosing or procuring
(i) was necessary for the purpose of preventing or detecting crime, or
(ii) was required or authorised by or under any enactment, by any rule of law or by the order of a court,
(b) that he acted in the reasonable belief that he had in law the right to obtain or disclose the data or the information or, as the case may be, to procure the disclosure of the information to the other person."
CONCLUSIONS
(a) the Claimants' application for summary judgment against the First Defendant, Mr. Bilgin, in respect of his guarantee liability succeeds;
(b) the Second Defendant's, Lime's, application for summary judgment against the Claimants succeeds;
(c) the Claimants' application for a continuation of the freezing order succeeds, subject to modification to take into account Mrs. Bilgin's interests;
(d) the First Defendant's application for the discharge of the freezing order fails;
(e) the First Defendant's application for specific disclosure fails;
(f) Mrs. Bilgin's application is adjourned.