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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Therium (UK) Holdings Ltd v Brooke & Ors [2016] EWHC 2477 (Comm) (07 October 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2016/2477.html Cite as: [2016] EWHC 2477 (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 :
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THERIUM (UK) HOLDINGS LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and – |
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(1) MR. GUY BROOKE (2) MS. EMMY ETTEMA (3) CABLE PLUS BV |
Defendants |
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1st Floor, Quality House, 6-9 Quality Court,
Chancery Lane, London WC2A 1HP.
Telephone No: 020 7067 2900. Fax No: 020 7831 6864
e-mail: [email protected])
MR. SIMON WILLIAMS (instructed by Direct Access) for the First Defendant
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Crown Copyright ©
MR. JUSTICE POPPLEWELL :
"He once again apologises for his personal absence, but instructs me that his medical condition is once again such that he is unable to travel. He has asked me to pass on to Mr. Justice Popplewell the attached medical report in German, but with an English translation, which relates to his condition in early August, the time of the last hearing. He has not been able to obtain a report in relation to his current condition. He would ask that a copy of the report is not passed to the claimant or its representatives, but borne in mind by the judge when he considers sentence at the hearing tomorrow."
The e-mail was not copied to Therium or its legal advisers.
"For a man on the run, Guy Brooke is not particularly mobile. Aged 78, confined to a wheelchair, with a spluttering cough that comes from chronic lung disease, he looks unlikely to outpace even the most portly policeman.
Yet sitting in the courtyard of a five-star hotel somewhere in Europe last week, the retired businessman explained how he has spent the past five months dodging a litigation funder.
...
The London-based litigation funder has secured a worldwide freeze on his assets and is pushing for a two-year prison sentence as a 'coercive' measure to make Brooke hand over the money. He has already been found in contempt of several High Court orders.
Brooke slipped out of Britain in April and went into exile with his long-term girlfriend, Emmy Ettema. They have moved from country to country, from rented flat to rented flat, living 'day to day' on money provided by old friends. Brooke, a former trader with close-cropped white hair and sharp blue eyes, said the couple felt 'as though we're being harassed'. He is determined not to give up, however. He claimed the law firm that introduced him to Therium had failed to advise him properly on the funding agreement, which he believes was flawed.
'It's our money', Brooke said. 'For €4m I can take a few problems, you know. It's not a bad reward. They'll just have to put up with it. They've tried everything they could, intimidation-wise. They've been quite vicious.'
He said the proceeds of the case were now beyond even his reach because the director of his Caribbean company had moved them elsewhere. Therium 'will need a good bloodhound' to find the millions, he added, with a smile. 'Or Sherlock Holmes.'
...
Rolling his wheelchair back and forth in the hotel courtyard and dragging on an ecigarette, he was unapologetic. In clipped public school tones, he said that Neil Purslow, Therium's chief investment officer, 'still believes to this day that €4m is their money, and of course it's not. That money belongs to the [offshore] company.'
...
It is unclear how straightforward it would be for the High Court to locate Brooke and haul him back as the case is civil, not criminal. He is happy to stay on the move: 'We rent an apartment for a month or so, then go and see something'.
With his blue eyes rebellious and unflinching, Brooke swatted away the threat of imprisonment. 'They're just like angry bees', he said."
"I was referred to a number of relevant authorities, including Crystal Mews Limited v Metterick & Others [2006] EWHC 3087 (Ch) at paras.8 and 13, Trafigura Pte Ltd v Emirates General Petroleum Corporation [2010] EWHC 3007 (Comm), JSC BTA Bank v Solodchenko [2011] EWHC 2908 (Ch), JSC BTA Bank v Solodchenko (No 2) [2012] 1 WLR 350 at paras.52 to 57 and 66 to 67, Templeton Insurance Limited v Thomas & Panesar [2013] EWCA (Civ) 35 at para.42, JSC VTB Bank v Skurikhin [2014] EWHC 4613 (Comm) and ADM Rice Inc v Corporacion Comercializadora de Granos Basicos SA [2015] EWHC 2448 (QB). From those authorities I derive the following principles which are applicable to the present case:
"(1) In contempt cases the object of the penalty is to punish conduct in defiance of the court's order as well as serving a coercive function by holding out the threat of future punishment as a means of securing the protection which the injunction is primarily there to achieve.
(2) In all cases it is necessary to consider (a) whether committal to prison is necessary; (b) what is the shortest time necessary for such imprisonment; (c) whether a sentence of imprisonment can be suspended; and (d) that the maximum sentence which can be imposed on any one occasion is two years.
(3) A breach of a freezing order, and of the disclosure provisions which attach to a freezing order is an attack on the administration of justice which usually merits an immediate sentence of imprisonment of a not insubstantial amount.
(4) Where there is a continuing breach the court should consider imposing a long sentence, possibly even a maximum of two years, in order to encourage future cooperation by the contemnors.
(5) In the case of a continuing breach, the court may see fit to indicate (a) what portion of the sentence should be served in any event as punishment for past breaches; and (b) what portion of a sentence the court might consider remitting in the event of prompt and full compliance thereafter. Any such indication would be persuasive but not binding upon a future court. If it does so, the court will keep in mind that the shorter the punitive element of the sentence, the greater the incentive for the contemnor to comply by disclosing the information required. On the other hand, there is also a public interest in requiring contemnors to serve a proper sentence for past non-compliance with court orders, even if those contemnors are in continuing breach. The punitive element of the sentence both punishes the contemnors and deters others from disregarding court orders.
(6) The factors which may make the contempt more or less serious include those identified by Lawrence Collins J as he then was, at para.13 of the Crystal Mews case, namely:
(a) whether the claimant has been prejudiced by virtue of the contempt and whether the prejudice is capable of remedy;
(b) the extent to which the contemnor has acted under pressure;
(c) whether the breach of the order was deliberate or unintentional;
(d) the degree of culpability;
(e) whether the contemnor has been placed in breach of the order by reason of the conduct of others;
(f) whether the contemnor appreciates the seriousness of the deliberate breach;
(g) whether the contemnor has co-operated;
to which I would add:
(h) whether there has been any acceptance of responsibility, any apology, any remorse or any reasonable excuse put forward."