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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Public Joint Stock Company Vseukrainskyi Aktsionernyi Bank v Maksimov & Ors [2014] EWHC 4370 (Comm) (19 December 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2014/4370.html Cite as: [2014] EWHC 4370 (Comm) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Rolls Building,Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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PUBLIC JOINT STOCK COMPANY VSEUKRAINSKYI AKTSIONERNYI BANK |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) SERGEY MAKSIMOV & others |
Defendant |
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Mr Davies (instructed by McGuireWoods London LLP) for the First Defendant
Hearing date: 19 December 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Hamblen :
(1) Ground (1) - Mr Maksimov's admitted failed to provide disclosure of his assets and an affidavit verifying that disclosure in accordance with paragraphs 10(1) and 11 of the Cooke Order.
(2) Grounds (2) and (3) – Mr Maksimov caused or procured the 22nd Defendant, United Overseas Sales Corporation ("United"), to deal with its assets by transferring its shareholding in the 6th Defendant, Bauman Trade LLC ("Bauman") in breach of paragraph 6(3) of the Cooke Order and/or thereby knowingly assisted in or permitted a breach of the order by those companies in breach of paragraph 17 of the Field Order.
(3) Ground (4) - Mr Maksimov caused the shares owned by United and the 26th Defendant, Davidson Distribution Ltd ("Davidson") in the 9th Defendant, Kyivrichport PJSC ("KRP") to be disposed of or dealt with and thereby knowingly assisted in or permitted a breach of the order by those companies in breach of paragraph 17 of the Field Order.
(4) Ground (5) – Bauman, United, Davidson, the 15th Defendant, Dyrect Investment LLC ("Dyrect"), the 20th Defendant, Citilink Distribution Ltd ("Citilink"), and the 23rd Defendant, Inmodal Company Ltd ("Inmodal") failed to provide disclosure of their assets and Mr Maksimov, thereby knowingly assisted in or permitted a breach of the order by those companies in breach of paragraph 17 of the Field Order.
(5) Ground (7) – Mr Maksimov failed to disclose his shares in the 25th Defendant, Cascade Ventures Ltd ("Cascade") in breach of paragraphs 10(1) and/or 11 of the Cooke Order.
"Although I have found Mr Maksimov to be in contempt, the contempt may be said to be of a technical nature in that the Bank has had disclosure of these companies' assets through Mr Maksimov's own asset disclosure, as confirmed in Mr Maksimov's 7th witness statement. What is lacking is a separate asset disclosure statement by the companies."
(1) The Bank's two major disputed allegations of dealings in breach of the freezing order (in relation to Bauman and the Kiev River Port shares) which were both rejected in the judgment;
(2) The Bank's unsuccessful efforts to persuade the court that Mr Maksimov's admitted breach of the Cooke Order in failing to provide asset disclosure on time was dishonest (and therefore meriting a severe and immediate custodial sentence).
(3) The question of adjournment and whether the hearing could properly go ahead without Mr Maksimov's attendance and cross examination by video link.
"… it is legitimate to infer from Mr Maksimov's misconceived reliance on the privilege against self-incrimination that he was attempting to rely on the same in order deliberately to seek to avoid giving disclosure and to seek also to conceal assets in breach of the Court's orders…
(paragraph 105(3))
That was also the thrust of the case put to Mr Maksimov in his cross-examination.
(1) It could have raised any queries in relation to that asset disclosure in the inter-solicitor correspondence;
(2) It could have made a more formal request for further information about assets and sought an order that such further information be provided if it was not forthcoming;
(3) It could have applied for permission to cross-examine Mr Maksimov on his assets.
"44. It is now well established, in the light of the new culture introduced by the CPR, and in particular with the requirements of proportionality referred to in CPR 1.1(2) as part of the overriding objective, that it is an abuse of process to pursue litigation where the value to the litigant of a successful outcome is so small as to make the exercise pointless, viewed against the expenditure of court time and the parties' time and money engaged by the undertaking: see Jameel v. Dow Jones & Co [2005] QB 946 per Lord Phillips at paragraphs 54, 69 and 70 (conveniently extracted in note 3.4.3.4 on page 73 of the 2009 White Book).
45. The concept that the disproportionate pursuit of pointless litigation is an abuse takes on added force in connection with committal applications. Such proceedings are a typical form of satellite litigation, and not infrequently give rise to a risk of the application of the parties' and the court's time and resources otherwise than for the purpose of the fair, expeditious and economic determination of the underlying dispute, and therefore contrary to the overriding objective as set out in CPR 1.1. The court's case management powers are to be exercised so as to give effect to the overriding objective and, by CPR 1.4(2)(h) the court is required to consider whether the likely benefit of taking a particular step justifies the cost of taking it. Furthermore, paragraph 5 of the Contempt Practice Direction makes express reference to the court's case management powers in the context of applications to strike out committal proceedings.
46 It has long been recognised that the pursuit of committal proceedings which leads merely to the establishment of a purely technical contempt, rather than something of sufficient gravity to justify the imposition of a serious penalty, may lead to the applicant having to pay the respondent's costs: see Adam Phones v. Goldschmidt (supra) per Jacob J at 495 to 6, applying Bhimji v. Chatwani [1991] 1 All ER 705. Jacob J concluded, by reference to that case:
"Since that judgment the Civil Procedure Rules have come into force. Their emphasis on proportionality and on looking at the overall conduct of the parties emphasises the point that applications for committal should not be seen as a way of causing costs when the defendant has honestly tried to obey the court's order."
47. Committal proceedings are an appropriate way, albeit as a last resort, of seeking to obtain the compliance by a party with the court's order (including undertakings contained in orders), and they are also an appropriate means of bringing to the court's attention serious rather than technical, still less involuntary, breaches of them. In my judgment the court should, in the exercise of its case management powers be astute to detect cases in which contempt proceedings are not being pursued for those legitimate ends. Indications that contempt proceedings are not so being pursued include applications relating to purely technical contempt, applications not directed at the obtaining of compliance with the order in question, and applications which, on the face of the documentary evidence, have no real prospect of success. Committal proceedings of that type are properly to be regarded as an abuse of process, and the court should lose no time in putting an end to them, so that the parties may concentrate their time and resources on the resolution of the underlying dispute between them."
1) the relevant information and documents in relation to the dealing allegation and certain aspects of Mr Maksimov's asset disclosure came in stages rather than all being provided in Mr Maksimov's initial witness evidence; and(2) the Bank was successful on Ground 5, albeit that this was not a matter which took up any significant time and was ultimately of a somewhat technical nature since the Bank already has disclosure of the assets of the relevant companies through Mr Maksimov's personal asset disclosure.