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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Open Joint Stock Company Alfa-Bank v Georgy Trefilov [2014] EWHC 1806 (Comm) (04 June 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2014/1806.html Cite as: [2014] EWHC 1806 (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 :
(Sitting as a Deputy Judge of the High Court)
____________________
OPEN JOINT STOCK COMPANY ALFA-BANK |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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GEORGY TREFILOV |
Defendant |
____________________
Sonia Toianey QC and Christopher Bond (instructed by Rosenblatt Solicitors) for the
Defendant
Hearing date: 2nd May 2014
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr C Edelman QC:
Introduction
(i) There was a violation of natural justice in that the Claimant's conduct meant that the Defendant did not engage with the Russian proceedings with the result that judgment was entered against him in his absence, without his having had the opportunity either fully to understand the nature of the claim against him or to present his case to the Court;
(ii) The Russian Court did not have before it the facts and documents to make a proper determination of the Defendant's liability and it is to be inferred that the information before the Court was seriously misleading;
(iii) The judgment was based on a form of guarantee which the Defendant denies was the form of guarantee that he executed, which it is alleged contained two important conditions to his liability which affected the Claimant's entitlement to judgment;
(iv) There are very serious questions about what the Russian Court was told and why it was given the information that it was and in circumstances where it is alleged that it would not have entered judgment against the Defendant had it been properly informed of all the facts there is a compelling reason for this case to proceed in order for there to be disclosure and the service of evidence.
Evidence
(a) Claimant's evidence:
(i) The first and second witness statements of Alexander Korogodov, who is the Chief International Counsel of the Claimant;
(ii) The first witness statement of Andrey Ganin, an employee of the Claimant who currently holds the position of Director of Department for Work with Major Corporate Clients and who in April 2008 held the position of Deputy Head of Department for Support for Department for Work with Network Clients;
(iii) The first and second witness statements of Craig Barrett, a solicitor in the London office of the Claimant's solicitors, Chadboume & Parke (London) LLP.
(b) The Defendant's evidence:
(i) The first and second witness statements of the Defendant;
(ii) A statement by Nadezhda Ivanovna Vardzhiyska, who worked at the material time as Head of Department of Corporate Finance and Development of Project Financing for "Holding Marta" which appears to have been the holding company through which the Defendant conducted his business activities. This statement did not include a Statement of Truth.
The Facts
(i) A three year Facility Agreement No, 100767 dated 1 November 2006 ("the 2006 Facility Agreement") with a credit limit of US $15m pursuant to which advances were to be made under individual loan agreements secured by guarantees by two companies in the Marta Group ("the 2006 Loan Guarantors");
(ii) Three supplemental Loan Agreements numbered 5, 6 and 7 dated 27 July, 2 August and 14 November 2007 for loans pursuant to the 2006 Facility Agreement for a term of twelve months;
(iii) A two year Facility Agreement No. 106198 dated 31 January 2008 under which the Claimant agreed to make available an increased credit facility ("the January 2008 Facility Agreement");
(iv) A supplemental Loan Agreement dated 31 January 2008 under which the Claimant agreed to advance funds pursuant to the January 2008 Facility Agreement for a term of three months secured by performance guarantees executed by other Marta companies ("the January 2008 Loan Guarantors") - those guarantees also secured monies due pursuant to the loans made in 2007 and any other monies owed by LLC Elekskor to the Claimant,
(i) That the Claimant could only recover from the Defendant under the guarantee sums which it had not recovered after first having proceeded against the January 2008 Loan Guarantors;
(ii) If the deal then being negotiated with X5 for the sale of long leases of a number of the properties operated by LLC Elekskor went ahead, the Claimant would accept payments made by X5 through third parties to reduce LLC Elekskor's debt to the Claimant.
"Numbered, stitched and sealed 5 (Five) sheets
Director for Crediting Corporate Clients of Alfa - Bank OJSC"
which was signed and stamped by "N. Yu. Gryaznova", to which Mr Ganin then added in manuscript "Executed in my presence; passport data verified by A.V. Ganin" and then signed the document.
(i) The Defendant's business was at the time on the verge of bankruptcy and the Defendant badly required fresh financing;
(ii) He was in such a weak negotiating position that he would not have been able to persuade the Claimant to accept a guarantee in the terms he now asserts;
(iii) In order to include a provision as to the ranking of security, there would have to be a special decision of the Claimant's Internal Credit Committee authorising such ranking, which did not happen;
(iv) The inclusion in a guarantee of a reference to a proposed or potential arrangement would never be acceptable because such a vague contractual term would cause the contract to be deemed "non-concluded" under Russian law.
"... During the recent period of time during multiple meetings and negotiations, conducted in presence of management of the bank (Mr Tatarchuk V.) and Holding Marta (Mr Trefilov G.) we finally came to the agreement, as the result of which we accepted to perform certain obligations. I would not hide that the obligations accepted by Mr Trefilov in the conditions of the absence of liquidity on the market were very difficult to perform and Mr Trefilov had no choice but to subject all his personal assets to security in order to find required financing. Despite all difficulties, Holding Marta performed its part, specifically
- On 21 April 2008 Mr Trefilov gave personal guarantees in relation to repayment of loans of "Elekskor" LLC pursuant all loans granted by Alfa- Bank ...
Your side still did not perform the obligations towards us, specifically the loan agreements between "Elekskor" LLC and OJSC "Alfa-Bank" are still not prolonged.
Moreover, on 06 May 2008, the bank formally demanded from "Elekskor" LLC and on 16 May 2008 from Mr Trefilov the repayment of loans under all agrees with "Elekskor" LLC and Mr Trefilov. We consider such actions to be in breach of our April's agreements. They contradict all agreements reached between the parties as well as the accepted obligations, and already performed by our side. ...
... we urge the management of OJSC "Alfa-Bank" to perform the agreed obligations:
- To recall the demands of repayment of loans to "Elekskor" LLC and Mr Trefilov.
- To effect the prolongation of current credit lines of "Elekskor" LLC. .."
"Max [Pershin], I am not prepared to discuss any 30 per cent! Once again, we do have 75 to 25? Will I get anything at all? You have to understand that this will leave my family with nothing. I am giving you everything. I have agreement with Germans for 30 million Euros. Well, why don't you take it? Why not everything? Take the 30 million Euros as well what about me? You have got me cornered and now you want me to sign something? I will not sign anything. Even if I had to do time - I will not sign. Max, what do you want? You want me to leave the country and not be involved in any decision making anymore? Well, be careful what you wish for. Dealing with these issues will cost you. I daresay you will end up with ... No one will be on the run on the account of one and a half million dollars. Just to reiterate: I am meeting you halfway I have committed myself, do you understand? Now you are saying to me: another 30% on top! What 30%? We agreed to do 90/10! ...
And then what? Your loan is not repaid. I came here to propose how it can be repaid. And all you do is squeeze me and say: "No, you will do it this way because we have leverage". In relation to the guarantee I came willingly, because he (nodding towards Pershin) and Tatarchuk asked me to sign the guarantee to avoid problems. I basically could just leave and say "Well, guys, I have an unsecured loan of 25 million, but I don't give a shit, bye!" You see, I started an honest dialogue with you and now you are trying to screw me over. "3 months, no more than 30% ..."."
There is no reference in the transcript to the Claimant having obtained judgment against the Defendant.
(a) did not seek to make any challenge to the propriety of the judgment against him, notwithstanding that he admits that he became aware of the existence of the judgment as a result of the claim against him in these proceedings;
(b) repeatedly referred to the form of guarantee on which the Claimant relied without suggesting that the form of guarantee on which the Claimant was relying was not the form of guarantee which he had signed;
(c) asserted that he did not have a permanent place of residence in Austria and that his residence was as specified in the guarantee relied upon by the Claimant;
(d) asserted that the mere fact that he was registered with the police at an address in Vienna did not permit it to be inferred that he had consciously made that address his economic, professional and social centre and that accordingly the address specified in the guarantee relied upon by the Claimant was the address to which any and all notifications regarding the agreement should be sent;
(e) asserted that the address given for the Defendant in the guarantee accorded with the address given for him in the company registers of the companies whose shares were the subject of the injunction;
(f) asserted that the Vienna Court did not have jurisdiction over him as he did not have his permanent residence in Austria but in Moscow;
(g) relied on clause 6.1 of the form of guarantee produced by the Claimant which provided for all issues relating to the guarantee to be submitted to the Meschanskiy District Court;
(h) relied on clause 6.2 to assert that all prior agreements, arrangements, negotiations and correspondence between the parties prior to the execution of the agreement should become null and void as of the execution date of the agreement;
(i) relied on a provision in the guarantee requiring modifications to be in writing;
(j) asserted that jurisdiction did not lie with the Vienna Court or any other Austrian Court but was exclusively with the Meschanskiy District Court "which has already been entrusted with the legal matter in question";
(k) made allegations about the Alfa Group being "one of the most notorious raiders" which had "for many years been known for its activities in the field of hostile take-overs and unfair business practices" without suggesting any impropriety in relation to the Claimant's reliance on the form of guarantee which it had produced for the purposes of the Austrian proceedings.
"The court's conclusions are based on the reviewed materials, are substantiated and correspond to the evidence gathered and to applicable legislation ...
No violation of the norms of substantive or procedural law that would require changes to the judgment have been found in the case."
The Law
(a) Summary Judgment
(i) The Court must consider whether the Defendant has a "realistic" as opposed to a "fanciful" prospect of success, with a claim being "fanciful" if it is entirely without substance;
(ii) A "realistic" prospect of success is one that carries some degree of conviction and not one that is merely arguable;
(iii) The Court is not obliged to take everything that a party says in his witness statement at face value and without analysis. In some cases it may be clear that there is no real substance in factual assertions which are made, particularly if they are contradicted by contemporaneous documents. Contemporary activity or lack of activity may similarly cast doubt on the substance of factual assertions.
(See sub-paragraphs (1), (2) and (4) of [15].)
(i) The Court must avoid conducting a "mini-trial" without disclosure and oral evidence;
(ii) The Court should avoid being drawn into an attempt to resolve those conflicts of fact which are normally resolved by a trial process;
(iii) The Court must take into account not only the evidence actually placed before it on the application for summary judgment, but the evidence that can reasonably be expected to be available at trial;
(iv) Allegations of fraud may pose particular problems in summary disposal;
(v) So far as Part 24.2(b) is concerned, there will be a compelling reason for trial where "there are circumstances that ought to be investigated".
(Sub-paragraphs (3), (5), (6), (7) and (10) of [15].)
"The criterion which the Judge has to apply under CPR Pt 24 is not one of probability; it is the absence of reality."
(b) Natural Justice
14-163: "... English Courts never investigate the propriety of the proceedings in the foreign Court, unless they offend against English views of substantial justice. ..." (a quotation from Pemberton v. Hughes [1899] 1 Ch 781, 790, per Lord Lindley)
"In Jacobson v. Frachon (1927) 138 LT 386, Atkin L.J., after referring to the use of the expression "principles of natural justice," said:
"Those principles seem to me to involve this, first of all that the Court being a Court of competent jurisdiction, has given notice to the litigant that they are about to proceed to determine the rights between him and the other litigants, the other is that having given him that notice, it does afford him an opportunity of substantially presenting his case before the Court." (at p.392)
14-166: "... If the Defendant has agreed, or is deemed to agree, a particular method of service (such as service at an address in the foreign country notified to a company of which he is a member) then it is immaterial that he did not receive actual notice. If the Defendant has agreed to submit to the jurisdiction of the foreign Court, and service has been effected in accordance with the foreign law, but actual notice has not been given, then the question will be whether substantial injustice has been caused by the lack of notice, including consideration of whether the Defendant had a remedy in the foreign court ... if the Defendant is resident in the foreign country at the time when the proceedings were commenced, or if he voluntarily appears in the proceedings, it is difficult for him to take the objection that he did not receive sufficient notice, for in such circumstances any notice is sufficient which is in accordance with the law of the foreign country, provided that the foreign procedure does not offend against English views of substantial justice. If the Defendant agrees in advance to submit to the jurisdiction of the foreign court and service is effected in accordance with the method of service to which he has agreed ... he cannot complain if he did not receive actual notice. "It is not contrary to natural justice that a man who has agreed to receive a particular mode of notification of legal proceedings should be bound by a judgment in which that particular mode of notification has been followed, even though he may not have had actual notice of them.""
"Even on a Part 24 application, an explanation as to why particular defences which are said to have been available were not taken in the foreign proceedings should be both consistent and coherent."
"Since the ultimate question is whether there has been proof of substantial injustice caused by the proceedings, it would, in our opinion, be unrealistic in fact and incorrect in principle to ignore entirely the possibility of the correction of error within the procedure of a foreign Court which itself provides fair procedural rules and a fair opportunity for remedy. The Court must, in our judgment, have regard to the availability of a remedy in deciding whether in the circumstances of any particular case substantial injustice has been proved. However, the relevance of the existence of the remedy and the weight to be attached to it must depend upon factors which include the nature of the procedural defect itself, the point in the proceedings at which it occurred and the knowledge and means of knowledge of the Defendants of the defect and the reasonableness in the circumstances of requiring or expecting that they made use of the remedy in all the particular circumstances,"
(c) Fraud
"Closely parallel to the rule that a foreign judgment is conclusive is the rule that the Defendant must take all available defences in the foreign Court, and that, if he does not do so, he cannot be allowed to plead them afterwards inEngland. But neither of these rules applies if the judgment was obtained by fraud."
(d) Russian Civil Procedure Code
(i) Article 67 - Evaluation of Proof:
This provides that a Court cannot deem as proven circumstances evidenced only by a copy of a document or any other written evidence if the original document has been lost or has not been submitted to the Court or if copies of such a document adduced by each party in dispute are not identical to each other and it is impossible to establish the authentic contents of the original document through other evidence;
(ii) Article 118 - Change of Address During the Proceedings:
Persons involved in a case must notify the Court of any changes in their address during the proceedings and in the absence of such advice, a Court subpoena or any other Court notification will be sent to the last place of residence or place of stay of the addressee known to the Court and will be deemed as served, even if the addressee does not any longer reside or stay at this address;
(iii) Article 338 - Term of Filing a Cassation Appeal
A cassation appeal may be filed within 10 days of the date when the Court issued its judgment in final form;
(iv) Article 367 - Right of Recourse to "Supervisory Instance" Court
Court rulings may be appealed to a Supervisory Instance Court within 6 months of their effective date. (Article 377 makes it clear that this encompasses appeals against Cassation Resolutions.)
(v) Article 392 - Grounds for Reconsideration of Court Decisions
This permits Court decisions to be reconsidered on the grounds of newly- established circumstances which are expressed to include knowingly false testimony of a witness and falsification of evidence.
Submissions
(i) The conduct of the Russian proceedings was a violation of natural justice rending it contrary to public policy to enforce the judgment;
(ii) Alternatively there is a compelling reason for the case to proceed so that there can be an investigation into whether the judgment was obtained by fraud.
(i) In circumstances where the Defendant agreed to the jurisdiction of the Moscow Court and to an address for service, it is immaterial that he did not receive actual notice of the proceedings if documents were served either in accordance with the agreed method of service or in accordance with the Russian Civil Procedure Rules.
(ii) The Defendant's assertion that he did not receive any documents delivered to his address and that the Claimant knew this is not credible, in support of which reliance was placed on:
(a) the Defendant having specified his Registration Address as being also his actual address in the guarantee executed in favour of Uniastrum Bank on 14 December 2007;
(b) his use of the same address in the Powers of Attorney which he executed in June 2008;
(c) his reliance in the Austrian proceedings on his Registration Address and on the provisions of the form of guarantee relied upon by the Claimant specifying his Registration Address;
(d) his having received the demand dated 16 May 2008 sent to his Registration Address because a reply to it was sent on his behalf;
(e) the certificate of service on him of notice of the hearing on 13 October 2008.
(iii) The Defendant admits that he was aware of the commencement of the proceedings prior to the hearing on 13 October 2008 and even if he was told that any demand by the Claimant against him would fall away after the X5 deal had completed and payments from X5 were received in satisfaction of LLC Elekskor's obligations to the Claimant, he does not contend that he was told or that he understood that the proceedings would be withdrawn or stayed and so if he decided to take no action he did so at his own risk.
(iv) The Defendant was personally served with notice of the hearing on 13 October 2008 and his bare denial that he was so served is not credible.
(v) The Defendant granted a Power of Attorney in favour of Mr Demchenko who was therefore authorised to act on behalf of the Defendant in relation to the proceedings and Mr Demchenko signed a receipt acknowledging that he had been notified of the hearing on 13 October 2008 - whether or not Mr Demchenko notified the Defendant of the hearing date is irrelevant but he must have done.
(vi) An appeal against the judgment was issued together with an application to extend time for submitting an appeal and there is no credible explanation for this step having been taken other than it having been done by or on behalf of the Defendant:
(a) it is incredible for the Defendant to suggest that the Claimant issued these applications in order to avoid a genuine appeal at a later date because firstly it would not have prevented the Defendant from pursuing a further appeal against the Cassation Resolution or applying to the Court to reconsider its decision by reference to "newly established circumstances" or pursuing a wholly separate criminal complaint about the Claimant presenting false evidence to the Court and secondly because it was the existence of the Cassation Appeal which enabled an application to be made for a stay of execution of the judgment (that application was made at the same time as the Defendant was challenging the injunction against him in the Austrian Court);
(b) whoever instigated the application for a stay of execution must have been aware of the existence of the Cassation Appeal and only the Defendant could have had an interest in postponing execution against him;
(c) the application for a stay of enforcement which relied upon the existence of the Cassation Appeal was issued on the Defendant's behalf by a lawyer to whom the Defendant had given a Power of Attorney;
(d) the Defendant gave false evidence about Powers of Attorney in his first witness statement, such evidence being confounded by the documents produced by Mr Korogodov in his second witness statement (the Defendant's evidence as to the Powers of Attorney contained in his first witness statement was shown by the contents of Mr Korogodov's second witness statement to be false but I have put that to one side for the purposes of reaching my conclusions).
(vii) The issue of the application to stay enforcement and of the application to release a car from enforcement demonstrate that the Defendant must have been fully aware of what was going on in the Russian proceedings and the Defendant admits that he learned about the judgment against him in early 2009 as a result of the Austrian proceedings, at which time it remained open to him to take various steps to challenge the judgment, including on his case, issuing a Cassation Appeal and applying for an extension of time for doing so together with disavowing the existing Cassation Appeal once it came to his attention.
(viii) Although the Defendant asserts at paragraph 104 of his first witness statement that he would have brought the issues which he raises in that witness statement "to the attention of the Moscow Court" had he been aware of "the need to engage in the Russian Legal Proceedings, or of the hearing of 13 October 2008, or of the judgment against which I could appealed (sic)", the fact is that he did become aware of the judgment as a result of the steps taken against him by the Claimant in Austria in early 2009 but, on his evidence, he took no such steps - in fact he had already issued a Cassation Appeal and he then also issued an application to stay enforcement;
(ix) There is no consistent and coherent explanation for the Defendant's failure to have raised in the Moscow Courts, whether before or after judgment was obtained, any of the defences which he now asserts.
(i) the terms proposed are vague and unworkable;
(ii) the term as to enforcement of the guarantee after enforcement of alternative security would be exceptional and require authorisation from the Claimant's Internal Credit Committee;
(iii) as regards the alleged term relating to the X5 deal, that deal was not concluded until July 2008 - months after the guarantee was signed;
(iv) the letter dated 26 May 2008 did not assert the existence of or reliance on these specific terms but rather complained that the Claimant had not extended the term of the LLC Elekskor loan agreements;
(v) the Defendant has never produced a version of the guarantee containing the terms for which he contends;
(vi) The Defendant did not raise any issue as to the form of the guarantee until he served his evidence on 15 April 2014-6 years after signing the guarantee;
(vii) The Defendant did not raise these issues in the Cassation Appeal;
(viii) Not only did the Defendant not raise these issues in the Austrian proceedings, he actually placed reliance on the form of guarantee that the Claimant had produced;
She further submitted that in any event there is nothing further that needs to be investigated in order for the Defendant to he able to allege fraud in that the basis on which judgment was given is plain from the reasons given by the Court and from the Court file.
(i) The telegrams that the Russian Postal Service has recorded as not being served on the Defendant bear out the Defendant's evidence that he was not living at his Registration Address;
(ii) There is no evidence from the Claimant to challenge the Defendant's assertion that he was assured that the demand under the guarantee would fall away once the X5 deal was completed and payments were received, as in fact happened;
(iii) The fact that neither the Defendant nor anyone acting on his behalf appeared at the hearing on 13 October 2008 corroborates the fact that he was unaware of the proceedings and that the Powers of Attorney that he granted were not relevant to his defence of the proceedings;
(iv) The Austrian proceedings do not assist in consideration of this aspect because the principal issue in the Austrian proceedings was that of jurisdiction, in the documents he submitted the Defendant did not engage to any or any material extent with the merits of the claim against him and the inference I should draw is that the Defendant was focussing on the jurisdiction issue;
(v) There is a triable issue as to who signed the application to appeal and for an extension of time for an appeal.
She accepted however that it would be implausible for the Claimant to have applied for a stay of execution of its own judgment.
Analysis
(i) His having used that address as his actual as well as his Registration Address in the guarantee in favour of Uniastrum dated 14 December 2007;
(ii) The stipulation of that address and no other address in clause 7 of the guarantee (on the final page of the document, the authenticity of which is not challenged by the Defendant) which would mean that any notices to be sent under the guarantee would be sent to that address;
(iii) His having received the letter of demand dated 16 May 2008 sent to that address;
(iv) The Defendant's execution of Powers of Attorney using his Registration Address and no other address;
(v) The ability of the Russian Postal Service to serve the telegram giving notice of the hearing of 13 October 2008 in circumstances where the only address available was the Defendant's Registration Address and the person serving the telegram would have had to verify the identity of the person on whom the telegram was being served;
(vi) The Defendant having asserted and relied on his Registration Address in support of his challenge to the jurisdiction of the Court in the Austrian proceedings;
(vii) The Defendant having stated at a hearing on 27 July 2010 that he resided permanently in Moscow and that the address (which was different from his Registration Address) at which he was then living had been his address only since 29 December 2009.
(i) The terms would have been extraordinary terms for the Claimant to have agreed to include in the guarantee for the reasons given in Mr Korogodov's evidence;
(ii) If such terms had been agreed, I would have expected there to be explicit reliance on them in the letter dated 26 May 2008 responding to the demand under the guarantee dated 16 May 2008;
(iii) I would have expected the Defendant to defend the proceedings instituted against him by the Claimant, relying on the terms of the guarantee that he signed;
(iv) The Defendant's failure to challenge the form of guarantee relied upon by the Claimant for the purposes of the Austrian proceedings and his reliance on that version of the guarantee in support of his challenge to the jurisdiction of the Austrian Courts is inexplicable if he had signed some other form of the guarantee;
(v) Although Ms Tolaney speculated in her submissions as to why the Defendant had adopted the stance he did adopt in the Austrian proceedings and seeks to suggest that the Defendant did not really address the merits of the Claimant's claim against him, the Defendant does not himself in his evidence proffer any explanation and I am not surprised that he does not do so because it is impossible to think of any rational explanation for his not having raised the point if, indeed, he had signed a different form of guarantee;
(vi) If it is true that he did not realise that the Claimant had obtained a judgment against him until early 2009 in the context of the Austrian proceedings, it is inexplicable if he did sign a different form of guarantee that he did not take steps in Russia to raise his case that the judgment against him had been obtained on a false basis;
(vii) It is inexplicable that at no stage has the Defendant ever produced a version of the guarantee, whether signed or otherwise, containing the terms which he says were included in the guarantee.
Quantum
Conclusion