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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> SPL Private Finance (PF1) IC Ltd & Ors v Arch Financial Products LLP [2015] EWHC 1124 (Comm) (16 January 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2015/1124.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 1124 (Comm) |
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ROLLS BUILDING FETTER LANE London EC4 |
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B e f o r e :
BETWEEN:
____________________
SPL PRIVATE FINANCE (PF1) IC LIMITED AND 17 OTHERS |
Claimant |
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-v- |
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ARCH FINANCIAL PRODUCTS LLP |
Defendant |
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AND BETWEEN: |
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SPL PRIVATE FINANCE (PF2) IC LIMITED AND 5 OTHERS |
Claimant |
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-v- |
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ROBIN FARRELL |
Defendant |
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MR R FARRELL appeared on behalf of the Defendants.
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE HAMBLEN:
Introduction
(3) permission to use documents disclosed by Mr Farrell pursuant to the terms of the freezing injunction in connection with possible proceedings under section 423 of the Insolvency Act 1986. A cross application is made by Mr Farrell for the setting aside of the worldwide freezing order.
Factual background
(1) The true reason why Lonscale was created as a vehicle for the acquisition of Club Easy was to assist Mr Farrell and his associate, Mr Barkman, in a plan to extract "what [they] can take out of it" from a total payment which was to be made by the investors [Judgment, 125]. From the outset, Mr Farrell envisaged that the investors in the acquisition of Club Easy would include the Claimants [Judgment, 123].
(2) A total of £21m was invested in Lonscale in connection with the acquisition of Club Easy in October 2007. £20.2m was invested by the Claimants and £800,000 by Foundations Program Plc ("FPP"), an Isle of Man company which was under the control of Mr Barkman [Judgment, 136].
(3) Of the £21m invested in Lonscale, £3m was paid directly to Arch FP, and £3m was held for various corporate vehicles under the control of Mr Barkman of which a further £556,152 was paid to Arch FP at his direction [Judgment, 137].
(4) Walker J found that the Claimants "funded either the whole or a very substantial part of the £3m which Arch FP received. I am sure that it was the [Claimants'] investment which resulted in Arch FP taking what it regarded as a £3m profit" [Judgment, 138] and that "The only reason for the payments of £3m was so that, in Mr Barkman's words, Arch FP and Mr Barkman could 'turn a profit' of such a size that it would 'turn heads'" [Judgment, 139].
(5) The Claimants had not consented to the use of their funds to make the payment of £3m of fees to Arch FP (or any fees beyond those provided for by the IMAs). There may have been some informal disclosure to the then directors of the Cells that Arch FP would be receiving a fee from the transaction but they were not told that the Claimants would be funding the fee in large part [Judgment, 148-149]. Any disclosure that may have occurred did not amount to full disclosure of all material facts [Judgment, 185].
(6) In profiting from the investment which it arranged for the Claimants to make in Lonscale without fairly managing the conflict of interest between Arch FP and the Claimants to which the investment gave rise, Arch FP acted in breach of its fiduciary duties to the Claimants [Judgment, 244-245].
(7) Mr Farrell assisted Arch FP's breach of fiduciary duty: "he was in charge of the extraction venture on behalf of Arch FP throughout August 2007, and he ensured that it was carried through during the months which followed" [Judgment, 283]. In assisting that breach of fiduciary duty, Mr Farrell acted dishonestly [Judgment, 284-285].
The Issues
Issue 1 - whether the freezing order should be continued or set aside.
"There is accordingly, in my judgment, power to grant an interlocutory injunction between final judgment and execution.
If there is such a power, there seems to be no logical reason why a Mareva injunction should not be used in aid of execution. Indeed, in one sense it could be said that there is greater justification for restraining a defendant from disposing of his assets after judgment than before any claim has been established against him. It is true that there is a variety of methods for enforcing execution as set out in RSC Ord 45 r. 1 and once the plaintiff has obtained judgment it may be said that he should pursue the remedies provided by the rules rather than extend the application of Mareva injunctions still further. The answer to that objection is that, as has been frequently pointed out, the Mareva injunction acts in-personam on the defendant and does not give the plaintiff any rights over the goods of the defendant nor involve any attachment of them. In this context it would have the effect of preserving the defendant's goods until execution could be levied upon them; and the remedies of injunction execution can take effect side by side. Such was the views of Robert Goff J in Stewart Chartering Ltd v C & O Managements SA [1980] 1 WLR 460 where he continued a Mareva injunction granted before judgment in aid of execution. Plainly an injunction will only be granted where the plaintiff can adduce evidence of a kind which normally supports an application for a Mareva injunction, namely, that there are grounds for believing that the judgment debtor may dispose of his assets to avoid execution. Perhaps such grounds may be more readily established after judgment than before it."
"(i) there is a real risk that a judgment or award will go unsatisfied, in the sense of a real risk that, unless restrained by injunction, the defendant will dissipate or dispose of his assets other than in the ordinary course of business: Ninemia Maritime Corporation v Trave Schiffahrtgesellschaft mBH und co KG (the Niedersachsen [1983] 2 Lloyd's Rep 600 per Mustill J as interpreted by Mr Justice Christopher Clarke in TTMI Ltd of England v ASM Shipping Ltd of India [2006] 1 Lloyd's Rep 401 at page 406 (paras 24 to 27); or
(ii) that unless the defendant is restrained by injunction, assets are likely to be dealt with in such a way as to make enforcement of any award or judgment more difficult, unless those dealings can be justified for normal and proper business purposes: Stronghold Insurance Co Ltd v Overseas Union Insurance Ltd [1996] LRLR at pages 18 and 19 per Potter J and Motorola Credit Corporation v Uzan (No 2) [2004] 1 WLR 113 at page 153 (paras 142 to 146) where the Court of Appeal was applying the same principle in the context of disclosure of assets by the defendant."
"233. For the reasons given above I conclude that Arch FP was negligent in relying upon the Storeys property valuations, in committing the Lonscale claimant cells to the October 2007 investments when they knew that a substantial capital injection was needed and that nothing was in place to ensure that the necessary capital injection would be made and in failing to conduct any risk/reward analysis on behalf of the cells. The analysis under each of these three heads identified earlier leads to the same conclusion: no reasonable investment manager could possibly have considered that the October 2007 investments would be in the best interests of the cells. Mr Farrell knew that they were unjustifiable. He nevertheless ensured that Arch FP committed the Lonscale claimant cells to those investments so as to enable Arch FP and Foundations to extract the substantial sums planned as the second stage of their extraction venture.
283. I have held in section G above that Arch FP was in breach of fiduciary duty in committing the Lonscale claimant cells to the October investments in circumstances where this gave rise to a conflict of interest and in taking the payment of £3 million on 6 November which came about because Arch FP was in a position to ensure and did ensure that the Lonscale claimant cells entered into the October 2007 investments. For the reasons given section G above, I have no doubt that Mr Farrell assisted Arch FP to breach its duty in both these respects. He was in charge of the extraction venture on behalf of Arch FP throughout August 2007 and he ensured that it was carried through during the months which followed.
285. Moreover, even if and on I were wrong to conclude that Mr Farrell was well aware that what he was doing was wrong, in my view it is plain that at the very least he suspected that relevant elements of the transaction were such as would make it wrong and nevertheless took a conscious decision not to make inquiries which would have resulted in him learning things which would have made it wrong to proceed with the transaction."
(1) Walker J was "driven to the conclusion that Mr Farrell knowingly misled the court in what he said in relation to Arch FP's role in 2007, in relation to the suggestion that Mr Barkman paid Arch's £3m fee out of a £6m 'capital gain' made by Mr Barkman, and in saying that Arch FP had complied with advice it had received on the fair management of conflicts" [Judgment, paragraph 86].
(2) The evidence given by Mr Farrell relating to the alleged last minute change to the structure of the "fee" paid to Arch FP and to Mr Barkman's alleged preference to make a capital gain was described by Walker J as "simply incredible" [Judgment, paragraph 161]. The Defendants' written closing submissions on the point are described as making a "disingenuous" observation on the inconsistencies in the documents [Judgment, paragraph 161(10)].
(3) Walker J concluded his consideration of the Defendants' evidence on the arrangements for the payment of the "fee" by saying that "…Mr Farrell and Mr Addison consider it vital to keep up a pretence which could barely qualify as a charade. I say that it barely qualifies as a charade because the Lonscale claimant cells are right to say that this account has been 'mired in inconsistency' and beggars belief. I am sure that Mr Farrell and Mr Addison are both well aware that their contention that the sum of £3m was paid by Mr Barkman is utterly untrue" [Judgment, paragraph 163].
(4) As regards Mr Farrell's evidence that the "fees" were financed by AT1, Walker J was "sure that when giving this answer Mr Farrell knew it to be untrue" [Judgment, paragraph 198].
(5) On the question whether Arch FP had carried out a risk/reward analysis before committing the cells to the investment in Lonscale, Walker J rejected Mr Farrell's oral evidence that an analysis had been carried out by the portfolio managers, stating that "I am sure that in giving this evidence Mr Farrell was telling the court that such an analysis had been produced, when in fact he well knew that no such analysis had been produced" [Judgment, paragraph 226].
(6) As regards whether Arch FP managed conflicts of interest fairly and whether it acted in the manner which satisfied the requirements for fair conduct which were recorded in the note of a meeting with an external advisor which was referred to as "the Symington meeting", Walker J found that "Mr Farrell in cross examination was making points which were obviously false, and I am sure that they were known by him to be false. The notion that this transaction could be brought within paragraph [7] of the Symington note was preposterous" [Judgment, paragraph 257].
(7) Similarly, on the question of whether there was a documented rationale of the transaction, Walker J found that "there was no merit whatever in Mr Farrell's assertion that there was a documented rationale for the transaction" [Judgment, paragraph 260].
(8) Walker J concluded on the question of the management of conflicts of interest that "In each of the above respects I am sure that Mr Farrell gave evidence at the very least without regard to its truth and in most respects knowing it to be untrue" [Judgment, paragraph 262].
"The court can infer the risk of dissipation from the findings made against Mr Farrell in the judgment. I refer in particular to the finding at paragraph 282 that the court had "no doubt that Mr Farrell assisted Arch FP to breach its duty in both these respects: he was in charge of the extraction venture on behalf of Arch FP throughout August 2007 and he ensured that it was carried through during the months which followed". The court then found, at paragraph 282, that it was "driven to the conclusion that he knew that what he was doing was wrong". Those findings amount to findings that Mr Farrell engaged in the improper extraction of funds from the cells for the benefit of Arch FP and that he was involved in that extraction knowing very well that what he was doing was wrong. Such conduct justifies an inference that Mr Farrell would be willing to manipulate and transfer his own assets for the purpose of avoiding the enforcement of the judgment which has been obtained against him."
"20. On 21 December 2006 the IC C was incorporated.
Between December 2006 and May 2008 more than 20 cells were incorporated and authorised by the Guernsey financial services commission ("GFSC"). They included the Lonscale claimant cells. Most were listed on the CISX. Most of the shares in the Lonscale claimant cells were held by one or more of the UK sub-funds.
21. The cells also included Arch Treasury IC Ltd ("AT1", now known as SPL Treasury (AT1) IC Ltd). It differed from other cells. Mr Farrell explained that it was established in June 2007 'mainly as a syndications and warehousing vehicle'."
Issue 2 –further disclosure
Issue 3 – permission to apply for Guernsey freezing order
Issue 4 – use of disclosed documents
Conclusion