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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Masri v Consolidated Contractors International Company Sal [2010] EWHC 2640 (Comm) (21 October 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2010/2640.html Cite as: [2010] EWHC 2640 (Comm) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
MUNIB MASRI | Applicant/Judgment Creditor | |
and | ||
CONSOLIDATED CONTRACTORS INTERNATIONAL COMPANY SAL | ||
CONSOLIDATED CONTRACTORS (OIL AND GAS) COMPANY SAL | First and Second Respondents/Judgment Debtors | |
WAEL S. KHOURY | Third Respondent |
____________________
MR JAMES LEWIS QC & MR BEN BRANDON (instructed by S. C. Andrew) for the First and Second Respondents/Judgment Debtors
MR IAN MILL QC & MR ANDREW HUNTER (instructed by Messrs. Jones Day) for the Third Respondent
Hearing dates: 5, 6 and 10 October 2010
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE DAVID STEEL :
"It is one thing to recover a favourable judgment: it may prove quite another to enforce it against an unscrupulous defendant."
"I am afraid that the case is a grotesque example of a tendency to burden the court with documents of grossly disproportionate quantity and length. It is a practice which must stop. Far from assisting the court, it makes the work of the court infinitely harder."
a) The defendants had opposed an application by the claimants to dispense with personal service. In a judgment dated 2 August 2010, I acceded to the application primarily on the ground that full notice had been given to the defendants' solicitors and, it was fairly to be assumed, thereby to the judicial administrator in the Lebanon. But I also had regard to the difficulty of effecting service and to the draconian penalties to be imposed by the Lebanese Court on the claimant in the event he sought in any manner to enforce this court's orders.
b) The third respondent sought to strike out or stay the contempt application against him on various grounds, including the absence of any arguable grounds and abuse of process. Mr. Justice Blair dismissed the application and furnished a reasoned judgment on 6 October during the course of this CMC. In the result, the final determination of the abuse of process issues (the basis of which is in many respects the same as now raised by the defendants) will need to be determined at the main hearing.
(i) receiving revenues under certain identified contractual entitlements over which a receiver had been appointed, to the exclusion of the receiver;
(ii) failing to co-operate with the receiver as required by the relevant orders (or positively interfering with the receivership); and
(iii) failing to provide information or documents as required under orders of the Court.
a) Sch.1 to the CPR incorporates various rules from the former RSC. These include RSC Ord. 52 "Committal".
b) Under the rule such an application has to be made by application notice in the relevant proceedings supported by an affidavit.
c) By virtue of the relevant practice direction, CPR Part 23 (applications for court orders) applies to the application, subject to certain exceptions and amendments.
d) It follows that while the application may give rise to a hearing within the meaning of CPR Part 39 it would not be trial.
a) The filing of written evidence in support of or in opposition to a committal application.
b) The liberty of the respondent to give or call oral evidence even in the absence of any written evidence.
c) The giving of case management directions.
d) The notifying of assistance that might be available from the Community Legal Service.
e) The facility for striking out the application in accord with CPR Part 3.
f) The non-availability of the power to order joint experts under CPR Part 35.
g) The removal of the power to seek information under CPR Part 18 against a respondent.
In short, the application is a civil proceeding and is not to be equated with a private prosecution: Guilford Borough Council v. Smith CA 4 October 1993.
"5. Disclosure must not be an open ended trawl of unused material. A critical element to fair and proper disclosure is that the defence play their role to ensure that the prosecution are directed to material which might reasonably be considered capable of undermining the prosecution case or assisting the case for the accused. This process is key to ensuring prosecutors make informed determinations about disclosure of unused material."
"25. It is of course open to the court to order disclosure at any stage of the proceedings, including for the purpose of interlocutory proceedings. But it is well established under the previous procedural rules that such a power should be exercised sparingly and only for such documents as can be shown to be necessary for the fair disposal of the application; see Rome v. Punjab National Park [1989] 2 All England Reports 136. There are no reasons for concluding that any different approach is appropriate under the provisions of CPR: see Disclosure, Matthews and Malek 2nd Edition Para2.68.": Fiona Trust Holding Corp. v. Privalov 2007] EWHC 39 (Comm)
"Your client's contempt application is the continuation of a plot hatched by your client, with the assistance of others including his son Mr Mazen Masri, to force the companies to pay the judgment debt under the threat of disclosure to the courts and the media of confidential documents secretly and unlawfully obtained by private investigators and/or stolen from the companies by one or more people in breach of fiduciary duty."
"10. My affidavits are supported by extensive documentary evidence. A number of the documents exhibited to my affidavits are in the public domain, but a significant number have been obtained (through lawful means) via the use of inquiry agents.
11. Enquiry agents were instructed on behalf of Mr. Masri. The enquiry agents were instructed to search for documents which might assist Mr. Masri in enforcing the judgment debt, using only legitimate means. As part of this search, the enquiry agents searched for documents which had been discarded by CCC and which might assist Mr. Masri in enforcing the judgment debt. In particular, they searched for documents discarded as rubbish on the pavement outside the London offices of CCC. I understand where they identified documents which might be relevant, they made copies of those documents and returned the originals to the refuse sacks outside CCC's offices. The enquiry agents have confirmed to me that they have used these methods of obtaining documents for use in court proceedings on several other occasions before and that their conduct has not been criticised by the court when the means of obtaining the documents have been disclosed. I say this on the basis of information provided to me by the relevant enquiry agents which I believe to be true.
12. The documents held by my firm have not been used for any purpose other than the ongoing enforcement proceedings between the Judgment Creditor and the Judgment Debtors."
a) all or the bulk of the documents probably remain available to the defendants;
b) given the history of this matter the defendants will inevitably not produce the documents voluntarily;
c) the claimant's conduct is difficult to categorize as "outrageous";
d) the evidence thus obtained is entirely independent of the conduct of the inquiry agents.
a) A significant quantity of documents is involved which would be expensive and time consuming to produce into a proceeding already weighed down with paper.
b) The bulk of the material disclosed was regarded as relevant to the claimant's case on the third respondent's role within the defendant organisation.
c) Documents which demonstrated that the third respondent was not involved in individual matters would not assist the court.
d) Thus it is likely that the vast bulk of the further material would be entirely irrelevant and thus not proportionate to produce.
e) The documents could not by definition help on the question whether the inquiry agents acted lawfully or not.
f) All the evidence (documentary or otherwise) as to actions of the defendants and the third respondent's status within the organisation are within the control of the defendants.
a) hearsay inadequately sourced.
b) belief inadequately sourced.
c) submissions by way argument.
I have already dealt sufficiently with categories (a) and (b). As regards (c) I accept that, in common with almost every affidavit or witness statement of a solicitor filed in interlocutory proceedings in the Commercial Court, matters which should really form part of written or oral submission have been included.