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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Khouj v Acropolis Capital Partners Ltd & Anor [2016] EWHC 2120 (Comm) (19 August 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2016/2120.html Cite as: [2016] EWHC 2120 (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 :
____________________
Azzam Faisal Khouj |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1)Acropolis Capital Partners Limited (2)Acropolis Capital Management Limited |
Defendants |
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GILEAD COOPER QC and JAMES WALMSLEY (instructed by Cooley (UK) LLP) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 19, 23, 24, 25 and 27 May and (on paper) 3, 14 and 16 June 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Knowles :
Introduction
The Defendants' position
Mr Nabil Chartouni
Private Equity Investments
"Mr Sutcliffe QC: So, looking back at your witness statement, paragraph 29, where you say in the second sentence, "Neither I nor anyone else at ACP or ACM was ever involved in making these arrangements," that requires correct[ion], does it not, because one of ACM's directors, namely your father, was involved in advising Mr Mansouri about these investments.
Mr Cameron Chartouni: Technically, yes, you're right, although I really considered him to be not giving him that advice as a director of ACM but rather in his own capacity.
Mr Sutcliffe QC: How was Mr Mansouri's interest, whether it was 50 per cent for most of them or, as you say, a lesser interest for two of them, how was it held?
Mr Cameron Chartouni: I'm not sure how his so the investments into those private equity funds were held in Chartouni trust company names.
Mr Sutcliffe QC: Within the Chartouni trust company how was Mr Mansouri's interest held?
Mr Cameron Chartouni: I am not exactly certain how it was held, I can't say."
"Mr Cameron Chartouni: Yes, I believe they do.
Mr Sutcliffe QC: Who do they hold those investments for?
Mr Cameron Chartouni: Those are held for the Chartouni family trust companies.
Mr Sutcliffe QC: Anyone else?
Mr Cameron Chartouni: Well, as per that schedule then I assume there's some portion thereof that is held for Mr Mansouri."
Investments in the Multi-Strategy Fund or the Plus Fund (ASFL)
Investment in the Park Lane Flat, and Tellico
Mrs Kurdi and April 2010
"As discussed with you, I wish to transfer the ownership of [the Park Lane Flat] to my niece [Mrs Kurdi]. As you are aware, the apartment is owned through [Tellico].
Please arrange for the transfer of the shares of [Tellico] currently registered in the name of Kleinwort Benson's nominee company to [Pensaloca], to be held to the account of [Mrs Kurdi].
Please assist her in every way possible to manage [the Park Lane Flat] and to dispose of it if she so wishes."
"Please arrange for the shares in [Tellico] beneficially held on my behalf through Borrowdale Nominees Limited to be transferred to and registered in the name of [Pensaloca]. Please forward the details of transfer to [ACM].
Please note that I have transferred the ownership of [Tellico] to my niece [Mrs Kurdi]."
"Being familiar with the requirements to transfer shares in ASFL, I mentioned that a share transfer form would have to be completed. Mr Mansouri asked me to fill in the form for him to sign. I filled in the relevant details for both Mr Mansouri and Mrs Kurdi and handed the form to Mr Mansouri, which he signed. The form was then given to Mrs Kurdi to sign and return directly to the Administrators of [the Multi-Strategy Fund], together with her identification documents. Mrs Kurdi said she would do so when she got back to Saudi Arabia."
"At a later date Nabil Chartouni explained to me that Mr Mansouri had gifted these assets to Mrs Kurdi because she and Mr Mansouri were very close and she and her husband had been helping him, both personally and in his businesses, particularly in his later years. I also understand, from Nabil Chartouni, that Mr Mansouri believed he had to gift assets to Mrs Kurdi before he died because he believed she would not inherit anything from him due to Saudi forced heirship rules."
Agency and fiduciary relationship: generally
"For the purposes of determining whether Value Partners was the agent of UBS and therefore of both parties, it does not matter whether the relationship between Value Partners and UBS was one which the parties regarded as an agency relationship. What matters is whether they had agreed to a relationship which, regardless of how they regarded it, amounted in law to an agency relationship. As Lord Pearson explained in Garmac Grain Co In v H.M.F. Faure & Fairclough Ltd [1968] AC 1130 at [594]-[595]:
"The relationship between principal and agent can only be established by the consent of the principal and the agent. They will be held to have consented if they have agreed to what amounts in law to such a relationship, even if they do not recognise it themselves and even if they have professed to disclaim it, But the consent must have been given by each of them, either expressly or by implication from their words or conduct. Primarily one looks at what they said and did at the time of the alleged creation of the agency. Earlier words and conduct may afford evidence of a course of dealing in existence at that time and may be taken into account more generally as historical background. "
In Branwhite v Worcester Works Finance Ltd [1969] 1 AC 552 Lord Wilberforce cited this passage and continued at 587:
"The significant words, for the present purpose, are 'if they have agreed to what amounts in law to such a relationship ' These I understand as pointing to the fact that, while agency must ultimately derive from consent, the consent need not necessarily be to the relationship of principal and agent itself (indeed the existence of it may be denied) but may be to a state of fact upon which the law imposes the consequences which result from agency. It is consensual, not contractual. So interpreted, this formulation allows the establishment of an agency relationship in such cases as the present."
(In the latter case, Lord Wilberforce dissented (with Lord Reid) in the result, but that does not affect the contribution made to authority by the passage quoted).
Agency and fiduciary relationship: the investments
"Mr Sutcliffe QC: And what you are saying as I understand it is that ACM manages certain investments for the Chartouni family trust companies and Mr Mansouri, ACM has liquidated some of those investments and ACM is now transferring to Mr Mansouri his portion.
Ms Lapwood: ACM were doing, were providing the administration for Mr Mansouri's portion, to distribute his portion of this to Mr Mansouri.
Mr Sutcliffe QC: What I suggest is that the activities you describe, investment management, liquidation of payments, transferring to Mr Mansouri his portion, were all activities undertaken by ACM for Mr Mansouri, were they not?
Ms Lapwood: It was undertaken by me as an employee of ACM for the Chartouni family trust company, yes.
Mr Sutcliffe QC: For Mr Mansouri.
Ms Lapwood: What do you mean, for Mr Mansouri? I did this as Carol, an employee of [ACM] that was providing the administration for the Chartouni family trust company, [Caygill] to send these proceeds to Mr Mansouri.
Mr Sutcliffe QC: You had a joint role, did you not? You were acting for ACM on behalf of Chartouni family trust companies and Mr Mansouri.
Ms Lapwood: No, not and Mr Mansouri. This is me working for [ACM] looking after [Caygill's] side of the business."
"The transfer IN is a distribution received on an investment we have with Mr Mansouri as a co-investor, the transfer OUT is to pass on most of the proceeds to Mr Mansouri."
"I have just sent through payment for [Pensaloca] for value today, the payment is to be invested through [Caygill: this was blanked out in the disclosed copy] for Mr Mansouri who sent in the funds in the beginning of March.
To make up the $200,000 SG Hambros should have credited your account with $16,202.06 for [Pensaloca] value yesterday."
"Mr Sutcliffe QC: I just want to consider this email a moment. It is dated 18 March. You say Mr Mansouri sent in the funds in the beginning of March. Where would those funds have been sent? Not Pensaloca because you are saying that you sent them through a payment for Pensaloca today.
Ms Lapwood: I don't really understand this email, what I was talking about here, no, I'm sorry.
Mr Sutcliffe QC: Do not worry, it is 12 years ago but it looks like Mr Mansouri sent the funds somewhere else and you are now transferring them to Pensaloca.
Ms Lapwood: No, I couldn't tell you, I'm afraid, I don't remember.
Mr Sutcliffe QC: Would you have remembered that the company was Caygill if I had not told you, SG Hambros?
Ms Lapwood: I would not necessarily have known that, sir, no.
Mr Sutcliffe QC: You say the payment is to be invested for Mr Mansouri, do you see that?
Ms Lapwood: Yes, I see that.
Mr Sutcliffe QC: Would it be right that what you are saying in this email is that you acting on behalf of ACM are sending funds to Pensaloca which are to be invested for and on behalf of Mr Mansouri?
Ms Lapwood: I don't really understand this email at all, sir. I can't explain it, I'm sorry.
Mr Sutcliffe QC: It looks like you are providing a payment processing service for Mr Mansouri.
Ms Lapwood: I don't understand what I was talking about so I can't comment on that.
Mr Sutcliffe QC: In respect of an investment that was to be made for him in a Chartouni family trust company.
Ms Lapwood: Nothing in this email makes any sense to me so I can't explain what I was doing at that point to explain this email. I don't know."
"Mr Cooper QC: What I want to suggest to you is that your puzzlement about [the email] disappears if what has happened is simply that the word "request" has been missed out by mistake.
Ms Lapwood: I can't say that. I don't know what this is [ ]
Mr Cooper QC: No, but do you see the point that if you read in the word "request", "I've just sent through the payment request for Pensaloca," so the same form of
Ms Lapwood: Right. I see what you mean. Okay. I'm with you now. Sorry. Yes. Yes, I guess that would make sense.
Mr Cooper QC: Does it now make sense to you?
Ms Lapwood: Yes. Okay. Because it probably It would have been a payment request as opposed to Yeah it may do. I'm not sure, sir. I don't know what I was talking about here."
"Tellico Investments S.A.
I write to inform you that I have decided to transfer the management of [Tellico] and my apartment in London [ie the Park Lane Flat] from yourselves to [ACM] whose details are as follows:
[ACM]
73 Brook Street
London
W1K 4HX
[Telephone]
Attention: Ms Carol Lapwood
Carol Lapwood will be in contact with you shortly in order to organise the orderly transfer of the company's records.
Please contact me if you have any queries."
a. that ACP and ACM undertook and managed private equity investments and an investment in the Multi-Strategy Fund or the Plus Fund and an investment in the Park Lane Flat or Tellico on behalf of Mr Mansouri;b. that ACP and ACM used a bank account or accounts held by Pensaloca to make payments for and on behalf of Mr Mansouri, principally concerning the payment of capital calls and the receipt of proceeds or distributions in relation to the private equity investments;
c. that the circumstances gave rise to the requisite relationship of trust and confidence on which a fiduciary relationship is founded;
d. that ACP and ACM were the agents of Mr Mansouri in relation to the management of the assets forming the investments I have described in this judgment.
Other activity
The fiduciary duty or duties arising
"In some contexts, for instance in the paradigm cases described by Lord Browne-Wilkinson, the content of the fiduciary obligations which arise will be reasonably standard and well known, having been worked out in the cases over decades if not centuries.
However, there has always been scope for fiduciary duties to be found to arise in a range of other contexts which have important similarities to the paradigm cases, but also significant differences. In those contexts, it is necessary to examine with some care what is the precise content of the particular fiduciary obligations arising in the specific circumstances of the individual case.
Fiduciary obligations may arise in a wide range of business relationships, where a substantial degree of control over the property or affairs or one person is given to another person. Very often, of course, a contract may lie at the heart of such a business relationship, and then a question arises about the way in which fiduciary obligations may be imposed alongside the obligations spelled out in the contract. In making their contract, the parties will have bargained for a distribution of risk and for the main standards of conduct to be applied between them. In commercial contexts, care has to be taken in identifying any fiduciary obligations which may arise that the court does not distort the bargain made by the parties The touchstone is to ask what obligations of a fiduciary character may reasonably be expected to apply in the particular context, where the contract between the parties will usually provide the major part of the contextual framework in which the question arises."
The context will of course extend to the nature of the commercial transaction and not simply its terms: Neste Oy v Lloyds Bank plc (The "Tiiskeri") [1983] 2 Lloyd's 658 at 663 2nd col. and 665 1st col. per Bingham J (as he then was).
The duration of the relationship or the duties
"I have now discussed this matter with Mr Nabil Chartouni. He has advised that the investments made jointly with him by the late [Mr Mansouri] were gifted to [Mrs Kurdi] during his lifetime. As I have already mentioned to you, the ownership of the apartment in London that is managed by our company was also gifted to Mrs Kurdi during Mr Mansouri's lifetime.
As a result of the above mentioned, both Mr Chartouni and ourselves have a fiduciary responsibility only to Mrs Kurdi. Therefore we cannot discuss her financial affairs with you or Mr Mansouri's heirs as these assets are not part of Mr Mansouri's estate."
Concluding observations