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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Magdeev v Tsvetkov [2019] EWHC 1557 (Comm) (20 June 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2019/1557.html Cite as: [2019] EWHC 1557 (Comm) |
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BUSINESS & PROPERTY COURTS
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
MR RUSTEM MAGDEEV |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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MR DIMITRY TSVETKOV |
Defendant |
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- and - |
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(1) MR EMIL GAYNULIN (2) EQUIX DIAMONDS DMCC (previously EK DIAMONDS DMCC) (3) EQUIX GROUP LIMITED (previously EK LUXURY GOODS LIMITED) |
Additional Parties |
____________________
Charles Béar QC and Anna Dilnot (instructed by PCB Litigation) for the Defendant.
Hearing date: 7 May 2019
Draft judgment supplied to the parties: 10 June 2019
Judgment Approved
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
THE HON. MR. JUSTICE PICKEN:
Background
"Within 3 (Three) working days from the date the Present Agreement is signed by all Parties the Investor [Mr Magdeev] shall initiate a bank transfer from his personal bank account in the amount of 10,000,000.00 (Ten million) US Dollars … to the following bank account of the Trading Company [EK Diamonds] … ."
"The Guarantor [Mr Tsvetkov] shall be fully liable in the (sic) favor of the Investor [Mr Magdeev] for the responsibilities of the Trading Company [EK Diamonds] as per the terms and conditions of the present Agreement".
"In accordance with the terms and conditions of the present Agreement the Lender [Mr Magdeev] shall provide the borrower [Mr Tsvetkov] with the loan … in the total amount of €5,000,000.00 (Five Million Euro ONLY) by transferring the said funds to the following bank account of the Borrower [Mr Tsvetkov] … ."
(1) Mr Magdeev received several payments that cumulatively discharged the loan under the First Agreement;
(2) an oral agreement concluded between Mr Magdeev, Mr Tsvetkov and Mr Gaynulin in Moscow on 7-8 December 2015 ('the December 2015 Oral Agreement') had the effect of terminating the First Agreement;
(3) Mr Magdeev represented to Mr Tsvetkov in December 2015 that he would not enforce the payment obligations under the First Agreement and, consequently, he is estopped from doing so; and
(4) Mr Magdeev's resignation from the board of EK Diamonds in early 2016 and the termination of his employment contract with EK Diamonds had the effect of discharging Mr Tsvetkov's guarantee under the First Agreement.
(1) it was an implied term of the Second Agreement, in the form of a condition precedent to Mr Tsvetkov's liability, that Mr Magdeev would not do anything to prevent or obstruct the sale of a certain diamond by EKLG;
(2) even if it did not amount to a condition precedent, there was an implied term to this effect and the non-repayment of the loan under the Second Agreement was caused by Mr Magdeev's breach of that implied term;
(3) the December 2015 Oral Agreement had the effect of terminating the Second Agreement; and
(4) Mr Magdeev represented to Mr Tsvetkov that he would not enforce the payment obligations under the Second Agreement and he is, consequently, estopped from doing so.
"In all the circumstances it is to be inferred that the purpose of imposing the fixed charges and/or dividing up the stock between the shareholders and/or running down the Graff Business and/or depriving EK Diamonds' bank account of funds was to deprive the Graff Business of assets otherwise available to use to earn revenue and/or to satisfy any judgment which Mr Tsvetkov as a contingent creditor might thereafter obtain against the companies. In turn, the purpose of so depriving the companies was to harm Mr Tsvetkov and to increase the pressure on Mr Tsvetkov to yield to Mr Magdeev's demands."
"(1) EK Diamonds has not been able to repay the loan under the First Agreement.
…
(3) Mr Tsvetkov has therefore suffered loss and damage in a sum equivalent to any liability that he is found to have to Mr Magdeev in these proceedings.
(4) Alternatively, Mr Magdeev has lost the chance that EK Diamonds would have repaid the loan under the First Agreement … ."
It can be seen, therefore, that it is the damage sustained by EK Diamonds which is said to give rise to Mr Tsvetkov's liability under the First Agreement (and the guarantee which he thereby gave Mr Magdeev).
"(2) Further or alternatively, EKLG has not been able to sell the Diamond and the contemplated mechanism of repayment of the loan under the Second Agreement has not occurred.
…
(4) Alternatively, Mr Magdeev has lost the chance … that the Diamond would have been sold and the loan under the Second Agreement repaid from the proceeds of sale."
It can again be seen, therefore, that it is damage suffered by EKLG which is said to give rise to Mr Tsvetkov's liability under the Second Agreement.
(1) Loss and damage consisting in Mr Tsvetkov being unable to earn salary or other income from his employment or role within the Graff Business and EKLG which has, among other things, hindered him from repaying the sums due under the First Agreement and the Second Agreement (the 'Employment Loss').
(2) In or around February 2016, Mr Tsvetkov assumed EKLG's obligation to repay a sum of €4 million to an investor, Mr Mikhail Turetskiy. This gave rise to a liability of €4 million owed by EKLG to Mr Tsvetkov. Mr Tsvetkov alleges that he suffered loss and damage consisting in not being paid this amount by EKLG. Alternatively, it is alleged that Mr Tsvetkov lost the ability to obtain reimbursement from EKLG of the sum of €2 million paid out by Mr Tsvetkov in order to satisfy a debt due by EKLG to Mr Turetskiy (the 'Turetskiy Loss').
(3) Loss and damage consisting of the costs and expenses incurred by Mr Tsvetkov in investigating the alleged conspiracy (the 'Investigation Loss').
Mr Gaynulin's application for strike out/summary judgment
(1) Ground 1: on the basis that the Conspiracy Claim is self-defeating since, if the allegations against Mr Magdeev underlying the Conspiracy Claim are established, then, the Primary Claim will fail. As a result, Mr Tsvetkov has not suffered any loss that he could recover from Mr Gaynulin pursuant to the Conspiracy Claim.
(2) Ground 2: on the basis that the Conspiracy Claim is barred by the principle of reflective loss.
(3) Ground 3: insofar as the Conspiracy Claim relies on Mr Tsvetkov's liability under the Second Agreement, it is factually incoherent.
Self-evidently, Ground 1 only applies to Mr Tsvetkov's claim for loss consisting of his liability to Mr Magdeev under the Primary Claim. In other words, it applies to the entirety of Mr Tsvetkov's unamended Additional Claim but not to the new heads of loss that Mr Tsvetkov seeks to add by way of amendment.
Principles applicable to strike out/summary judgment
"(a) that the statement of case discloses no reasonable grounds for bringing or defending the claim;
(b) that the statement of case is an abuse of the court's process or is otherwise likely to obstruct the just disposal of the proceedings; or
(c) that there has been a failure to comply with a rule, practice direction or court order."
"(1) those which set out no facts indicating what the claim is about, for example 'Money owed £5000',
(2) those which are incoherent and make no sense,
(3) those which contain a coherent set of facts but those facts, even if true, do not disclose any legally recognisable claim against the defendant."
"(a) it considers that –
(i) that claimant has no real prospect of succeeding on the claim or issue; or
(ii) that defendant has no real prospect of successfully defending the claim or issue; and
(b) there is no other compelling reason why the case or issue should be disposed of at a trial."
"i) The court must consider whether the claimant has a 'realistic' as opposed to a 'fanciful' prospect of success: Swain v Hillman [2001] 2 All ER 91.
ii) A 'realistic' claim is one that carries some degree of conviction. This means a claim that is more than merely arguable: ED & F Man Liquid Products v Patel [2003] EWCA Civ 472 at [8].
iii) In reaching its conclusion the court must not conduct a 'mini-trial': Swain v Hillman.
iv) This does not mean that the court must take at face value and without analysis everything that a claimant says in his statements before the court. In some cases it may be clear that there is no real substance in factual assertions made, particularly if contradicted by contemporaneous documents: ED & F Man Liquid Products v Patel at [10].
v) However, in reaching its conclusion the court must take into account not only the evidence actually placed before it on the application for summary judgment, but also the evidence that can reasonably be expected to be available at trial: Royal Brompton Hospital NHS Trust v Hammond (No 5) [2001] EWCA Civ 550.
vi) Although a case may turn out at trial not to be really complicated, it does not follow that it should be decided without the fuller investigation into the facts at trial than is possible or permissible on summary judgment. Thus the court should hesitate about making a final decision without a trial, even where there is no obvious conflict of fact at the time of the application, where reasonable grounds exist for believing that a fuller investigation into the facts of the case would add to or alter the evidence available to a trial judge and so affect the outcome of the case: Doncaster Pharmaceuticals Group Ltd v Bolton Pharmaceutical Co 100 Ltd [2007] FSR 63.
vii) On the other hand it is not uncommon for an application under Part 24 to give rise to a short point of law or construction and, if the court is satisfied that it has before it all the evidence necessary for the proper determination of the question and that the parties have had an adequate opportunity to address it in argument, it should grasp the nettle and decide it… ."
Ground 1: the Conspiracy Claim insofar as it concerns the Primary Claim is self-defeating
(1) First, Mr Anderson QC submitted that, if Mr Tsvetkov's Conspiracy Claim against Mr Magdeev is successful, Mr Tsvetkov would have an absolute defence of set-off/circuity of action in response to the Primary Claim. As a result, Mr Tsvetkov will not have suffered any loss that he could seek to recover from Mr Gaynulin.
(2) Secondly, Mr Anderson QC submitted that, insofar as the loss alleged as part of the Conspiracy Claim consists of Mr Magdeev's claim against Mr Tsvetkov under the Second Agreement, then, if Mr Tsvetkov were able to establish the facts underlying the Conspiracy Claim, Mr Magdeev's claim based on the Second Agreement will fail by virtue of one or more of the other defences (besides the defence of set-off/circuity of action) relied upon by Mr Tsvetkov.
Mr Tsvetkov has not suffered loss as the Primary Claim is barred by circuity/set-off
"The Defendant denies having any liability to the Claimant for the reasons set out in his Defence dated 28 February 2018. However, if and to the extent that the Defendant is found to have any liability to the Claimant, he will seek to recover the amount of such liability from the Additional Parties pursuant to the claims set out herein.
As against the First Additional Party, the Defendant claims damages for conspiracy, on the basis that the First Additional Party has conspired with the Claimant to use unlawful means to injure the Defendant and/or with the predominant motive of injuring the Defendant, thereby causing his loss and damage in the form of his (alleged) liability to the Claimant."
"Mr. Floyd, for Akzo, does not argue that if it can be shown that there is a good arguable case against his client, that it was party to the alleged infringement of the patent, the fact that the principal reason for joining Akzo is to obtain discovery is of itself a reason to set aside service on that company. However, a person or body not shown to be arguably liable in any action may not be made a party to proceedings simply in order to obtain discovery."
It follows that, having concluded that the Conspiracy Claim against Mr Gaynulin does not have a real prospect of success for the reasons stated above, it would be inappropriate for the claim to be permitted to continue merely so that Mr Tsvetkov can seek to obtain disclosure from Mr Gaynulin. I am clear, for the same reason, that it would be equally inappropriate to allow the claim to continue in order to afford Mr Tsvetkov an opportunity to cross-examine Mr Gaynulin since joining a party simply in order to enable there to be cross-examination is, in substance, no different from joining a party for the purposes of obtaining disclosure. Both purposes are ancillary consequences of joinder; they cannot, in and of themselves, serve as justification for the naming of parties as defendants who would not otherwise be joined to the proceedings.
"In a commercial case such as this a judgment for only nominal damages is a defeat."
Leggatt J cited in this context Hyde Park Residence Ltd v Yelland [1999] RPC 655, in which Jacob J (as he then was) said this at page 670:
"It seems to me that the whole question of nominal damages is at the end of this century far too legalistic. A plaintiff who recovers only nominal damages has in reality lost and in reality the defendant has established a complete defence."
"The presumption of falsity does not however leave the judge in a position to make a declaration to all the world that the allegation was false. In the present case, where the matter will not even be explored at the trial, the judge could not possibly be expected to declare, with confidence, that the claimant never provided funding to Osama bin Laden. There may well in due course be a finding in relation to this in the Burnett action, where the question will be directly in issue.
…
If the claimant succeeds in this action and is awarded a small amount of damages, it can perhaps be said that he will have achieved vindication for the damage done to his reputation in this country, but both the damage and vindication will be minimal. The cost of the exercise will have been out of all proportion to what has been achieved. The game will not merely not have been worth the candle, it will not have been worth the wick."
Mr Tsvetkov's claim under the Second Agreement will fail due to other defences
"It was an implied term of the Second Agreement, which by its nature was a condition precedent to Mr Tsvetkov's liability to repay the loan, that Mr Magdeev would not do anything to impede the performance of the Second Agreement, and in particular to prevent or obstruct the sale of the Diamond by EKLG … ."
Paragraph 44 alleges breach as follows:
"In breach of the above implied term, Mr Magdeev has taken steps to prevent EKLG from selling the Diamond and/or returning the proceeds of sale to Mr Magdeev and Mr Tsvetkov. In particular:
(1) On or around 8 July 2017, Mr Magdeev procured the creation of a charge over the Diamond by way of security for debts allegedly owed to him by EKLG.
(2) On or around 27 July 2017, Mr Magdeev physically removed the Diamond from the Graff boutique, together with a number of other items, and sent them to Geneva Freeport. To the best of Mr Tsvetkov's knowledge, the Diamond and the other items which Mr Magdeev removed are still being stored at Geneva Freeport."
Paragraph 45, then, states:
"In the circumstances, a condition precedent to Mr Tsvetkov's liability under the Second Agreement has not been fulfilled, and Mr Magdeev is therefore not entitled to repayment of the loan."
"(6) Immediately after the meeting referred to in paragraphs 56(5)(b) above, fixed charges were executed and registered in Cyprus over the jewellery stock of EKLG. The stock was divided into two lists, one for each of Mr Magdeev and Mr Gaynulin. Accordingly, taking the charges at face value, the effect of the fixed charges was at least to ensure that the company would not be able to obtain the benefit of any sale of the charged assets.
(7) On 27 July 2017, Mr Magdeev purported to offset stock against the amount which EKLG owed him as an investor. Mr Magdeev physically took possession of US$21 million of stock representing the share of the company's assets which he had agreed with Mr Gaynulin, removed that stock from Limassol and flew it to the Geneva Freeport."
"Paragraph 43 is denied. The Second Agreement was a loan by Mr Magdeev to Mr Tsvetkov, to enable Mr Tsvetkov to invest in EKLG. It was not connected with the purchase of any particular diamond. Accordingly, it is not affected by the re-sale of any particular diamond. The alleged implied term was not a term of the Second Agreement".
Mr Béar QC referred also to paragraph 45 of the agreed Case Memorandum which reads as follows:
"Mr Magdeev denies that his loan under the August 2015 Agreement was in any way connected with the purchase of any particular diamond, and thus denies any term or condition precedent of the sort alleged…"
It should be noted, however, that in neither of these passages is there a denial of the existence of the implied term as a matter of law. Properly understood, all that they contain is a contention that the implied term does not arise since the Second Agreement was not connected with the purchase of the Diamond. Whether that was the case is a question of fact, not law. Indeed, as highlighted above, the factual allegation that the Second Agreement was part of a wider transaction pursuant to which EKLG would acquire the Diamond is part of Mr Tsvetkov's Conspiracy Claim. It follows that, for present purposes, I must assume that fact in Mr Tsvetkov's favour.
Ground 2: Reflective loss
The law on reflective loss
(1) whether the rule against recovery of reflective loss applies to claims by creditors of a company who are not its shareholders; and
(2) as to the scope of the exception to the reflective loss principle recognised by the Court of Appeal in Giles v Rhind [2003] Ch 618.
"Once it is recognised that the justification for the rule is wider, it is difficult to draw a principled distinction between a claim by a shareholder qua creditor (in relation to which, as Mr Choo Choy accepted, Johnson v Gore Wood & Co [2002] 2 AC 1 and Gardner v Parker [2004] 2 BCLC 554 are binding authority that the claim is barred by the rule) and a claim by any other creditor who is not a shareholder. As a matter of logic and principle, it is difficult to see why a claim by a creditor who has one share in a company should be barred by the rule against reflective loss whereas a claim by a creditor who is not a shareholder is not. That point is well illustrated by the example of a creditor who owns shares in the company, whose claim is initially barred by the rule, but, on this hypothesis, if he sells the shares, the rule no longer bars his claim. That makes no logical or legal sense at all."
"Reflective loss extends beyond the diminution of the value of the shares; it extends to the loss of dividends (specifically mentioned in Prudential Assurance Co Ltd v Newman Industries Ltd (No 2) [1982] Ch 204) and all other payments which the shareholder might have obtained from the company if it had not been deprived of its funds … .
The same applies to other payments which the company would have made if it had had the necessary funds even if the plaintiff would have received them qua employee and not qua shareholder and even if he would have had a legal claim to be paid. His loss is still an indirect and reflective loss which is included in the company's claim. The plaintiff's primary claim lies against the company, and the existence of the liability does not increase the total recoverable by the company, for this already includes the amount necessary to enable the company to meet it."
"Where a company suffers loss caused by a breach of duty owed to it, only the company may sue in respect of that loss. No action lies at the suit of a shareholder suing in that capacity and no other to make good a diminution in the value of the shareholder's shareholding where that merely reflects the loss suffered by the company. A claim will not lie by a shareholder to make good a loss which would be made good if the company's assets were replenished through action against the party responsible for the loss, even if the company, acting through its constitutional organs, has declined or failed to make good that loss."
"There are observations, which I have quoted, in the speech of Lord Millett in Johnson which appear to me strongly to reinforce the conclusion that the rule against reflective loss does indeed bar BDC's claim against Mr Parker insofar as it is based on the loan. Thus, in the passage from his speech I have quoted at para. 30 above, Lord Millett does not merely refer to 'shareholders' but also to 'creditors'. Secondly, in the passage cited in para.31 above, Lord Millett emphasised that reflective loss does not only extend to 'diminution of the value of the shares' and 'loss of dividends', but also to 'all other payments which the shareholder might have obtained from the company if it had not been deprived of its funds'. Similarly, at p.862H; 67B, he said in terms that the fact that Mr Johnson was claiming, as it were, qua employee, rather than qua shareholder, made no difference. I can see no basis whatever in logic or principle as to why, if a claim qua employee is barred by the rule, a claim made qua creditor is not similarly so barred. In most cases where an employee's claim is barred by the rule against reflective loss, the employee will be a creditor of the company. It is hard to see why a creditor who is an employee should be treated differently from any other creditor of the company when it comes to applying the rule against reflective loss."
"The fundamental difficulty with that submission is that, at least in this Court, it would perpetuate the illogical and unprincipled distinction to which I have drawn attention between the shareholder with one share who is a creditor, whose claim is barred by the rule against reflective loss on the current state of the authorities and the creditor with no shares or who has sold his shares, whose claim is not barred. Furthermore, I agree with Mr Lewis QC that the answer to Mr Choo Choy QC's example of the creditor of an individual is that the non-shareholder creditor of a company is closer to the shareholder creditor of the company than to the creditor of an individual, the common thread being the company and the fact that the various considerations justifying the rule against reflective loss then come into play, as identified above, double recovery, causation, conflict of interests and avoiding prejudice to other creditors."
He, then, had this to say at [37]:
"In my judgment, the last consideration applies with particular force to any creditor of a company, whether a shareholder or not. If the creditor were able to pursue a claim in relation to the asset stripping of the company such as in the present case, that would bypass and subvert the pari passu principle, applicable to the unsecured creditors of the company in the event of liquidation, that the assets of the company be distributed rateably. On this hypothesis, if a creditor were able to pursue a claim for reflective loss, it could make a full recovery of its debt against the wrongdoer to the prejudice of the other creditors, whereas if the liquidator were to pursue the company's claim against the wrongdoer and thereby replenish its assets, they would be available for distribution to the general body of creditors."
"Although Giles v Rhind [2002] EWCA Civ 1428, [2003] Ch 618 has not been followed in Hong Kong (see Waddington v Chan Chun Hoo [2008] HKCFAR 370), it is binding on courts in this jurisdiction short of the Supreme Court, as the Court of Appeal held in Webster v Sandersons Solicitors [2009] EWCA Civ 830, [2009] 2 BCLC 542 at [36]. Lord Clarke MR affirmed the summary by Neuberger LJ in Gardner v Parker at [37] and noted at [38] that 'the critical point in Giles v Rhind was … that the company was disabled from bringing the claim by the very wrongdoing which the defendant had by contract promised him, as a shareholder, and the company that he would not carry out'. In contrast, there was nothing equivalent on the facts of Webster. Other cases have emphasised the limited scope of the exception and the demanding nature of the test of impossibility caused by the wrongdoing which a shareholder claimant must meet (Towler v Mills [2010] EWHC 1209 (Comm) at [25], Norcross v Georgallides [2015] EWHC 1290 (Comm) at [65], and Kazakhstan Kagazy Plc v Arip [2014] EWCA Civ 381, [2014] 1 CLC 451 at [33])."
"The exception is a narrow one, only applicable where as a consequence of the actions of the wrongdoer, the company no longer has a cause of action and it is impossible for it to bring a claim or for a claim to be brought in its name by a third party such as Marex in the present case. Contrary to Mr Choo Choy's submissions, I consider the impossibility or disability must be a legal one and what might be described as factual impossibility is insufficient. Although, in the passage at para 79 of his judgment in Giles v Rhind which I have quoted at para 47 above, Chadwick LJ referred to '[the company] being forced to abandon by reason of impecuniosity attributable to the wrong which has been done to it', he cannot have intended that every case where the impecuniosity of a company is attributable to the wrongdoing would fall within the exception. If that were what Chadwick LJ was saying, given that, in many cases where the rule against reflective loss is in play, the company's assets have been abstracted by the wrongdoer, so that without an injection of funds, for example from a shareholder or creditor, it is not possible for the company to bring a claim, the exception would risk becoming the rule."
The Employment Loss and the Turetskiy Loss
"… Mr Tsvetkov has been unable to earn salary or other income (such as a share of profit from sales of jewellery) from his employment or role within the Graff Business and EKLG which has, among other things, hindered him from effecting repayment under the First and Second Agreements."
"… Mr Tsvetkov has not been paid and has lost the chance to be paid the sum of €4 million owed to him by EKLG pursuant to (i) Mr Tsvetkov's assumption, in or around February 2016, of EKLG's obligation to repay Mr Mikhail Turetstkiy, then an investor in EKLG, the sum of €4 million and (ii) a letter addressed to the then director of EKLG, Mr Anastasiou, dated 15 February 2016 and signed by Mr Magdeev and Mr Gaynulin which acknowledged the debt due to Mr Tsvetkov arising from the matters in (i) above and instructed Mr Anastasiou to pay €4 million from EKLG to Mr Tsvetkov ('the Repayment Letter'). Accordingly, the Repayment Letter constituted or evidenced a liability of €4 million to Mr Tsvetkov from EKLG. Alternatively, Mr Tsvetkov has procured payment to Mr Turetskiy of €2 million and is liable to (sic) reimbursed by EKLG in that amount … ."
(1) Mr Magdeev and Mr Gaynulin have stripped EKLG of all its assets such that it is not in a financial position to pursue these claims.
(2) EKLG is currently under the control of Mr Magdeev. Mr Magdeev and his son are EKLG's sole shareholders and its sole director works for Mr Magdeev.
(3) Mr Tsvetkov cannot bring a derivative claim because he is no longer a shareholder of EKLG.
(4) Mr Tsvetkov cannot petition to wind up EKLG under Cypriot law because, as under English law, a winding up order will not be made when a debt is disputed.
"At trial a first instance judge is bound by the doctrine of precedent to apply the law as laid down in a decision of the Court of Appeal, even if there is a possibility that that decision may be reversed. But the same is not necessarily the case where a judge is dealing with an application to strike out a claim or to give summary judgment before a trial. Then the judge can take into account the possibility that the Court of Appeal's decision may be reversed on appeal and may dispose of the application by refusing to strike it out or to give summary judgment accordingly, especially where it is known that in other proceedings the Court of Appeal's decision is to be tested in a pending appeal to the House of Lords (Derby v Weldon (No 5) [1989] 1 WLR 1244). But in such circumstances it may be a more proportionate use of the parties' and the court's resources to stay the application pending the determination of the appeal instead of dismissing it (Green v Skandia Life Assurance Co Ltd, op. cit.)."
"However, there is another situation where a judge is, as it seems to me, entitled and indeed bound to take into account the possibility that a decision of the Court of Appeal may be reversed by the House of Lords. That is where, as in this case, the court is asked to strike out a claim on the ground that the Court of Appeal has held that the facts alleged give rise to no cause of action, or to strike out a defence on the ground that the Court of Appeal has held that the facts alleged afford no defence".
He went on at page 1252 to say this:
"I do not think, therefore, that the decision of the Court of Appeal, in Lonrho Plc. v. Fayed is a decision that in circumstances such as these the court has no alternative but to strike out the statement of claim … I am, therefore, free to decide whether in these circumstances the court is bound to strike out the claims in conspiracy and to disallow amendments raising claims in conspiracy … In my judgment, in the instant case there are overwhelming reasons for refusing to strike out the allegations of conspiracy and for allowing the amendments so far as they raise allegations of conspiracy".
As Vinelott J made clear, however, this was a case in which there was a clear need "for an authoritative exposition of the law by the House of Lords", specifically because there was an apparent inconsistency between two House of Lords decisions (Lonrho Ltd v Shell Petroleum Co Ltd (No. 2) [1982] AC 173 and Buttes Gas and Oil Co v Hammer [1982] AC 888), as well as a question as to whether in the Lonrho case the House of Lords impliedly overruled the decision of the Court of Appeal in Belmont Finance Corporation Ltd v Williams Furniture Ltd (No. 2) [1980] 1 All ER 393: see pages 1252H-1253F.
"It seems to me to be wrong and not in accordance with the overriding objective to require Skandia Life to defend a complex claim at no doubt considerable expense and trouble when on the law as it stands I have held that the claim fails, simply on the basis that it is possible that the House of Lords might change the law. But on the other hand if I give judgment now against Mr Green, it would in effect force Mr Green to appeal in the hope that the House of Lords might have changed the law in his favour before any such appeal could be heard. Neither course seems a very proportionate use of the Court's, or the parties', resources. Nor do I think that I ought to try and predict what the House of Lords might do; the very fact that leave to appeal has been granted shows that the point is arguable and it would be invidious for me to express my own views on what the law is likely to turn out to be."
"The duration of the employment and, therefore, the validity of the present agreement shall be for one(one) (sic) year, commencing as from September 1st 2016. Based on the Employer's [i.e. EKLG's] discretion the agreement will renew automatically for another year without any special warning. The employment may be terminated be (sic) either party with a written notice of at least one (1) month or the period which was set in the Law (whichever is minimum)."
Mr Tsvetkov's witness statement does not suggest that EKLG failed to pay him salary until the termination of his employment. Indeed, insofar as he touches on the issue in his witness statement, Mr Tsvetkov's evidence is that he did receive his salary (see paragraph 42.3.1). It follows that the Employment Loss, as re-formulated or explained by Mr Béar QC, can only relate to the salary that Mr Tsvetkov would have earned after 1 September 2017. Notably, however, clause 4 does not entitle Mr Tsvetkov to have his employment agreement renewed after that date. That is a matter that is expressly left to EKLG's discretion. In those circumstances, it is far from clear why Mr Tsvetkov should be entitled to claim as damages the salary that he would have earned if ELKG had not terminated his contract. This is especially so since, at the relevant time, EKLG was controlled by the alleged conspirators, Mr Magdeev and Mr Gaynulin. As such, they would hardly have been likely to have exercised their discretion in Mr Tsvetkov's favour. It follows that Mr Tsvetkov is in no position to demonstrate that he would have earned salary beyond the termination date and, as such, ought to receive an award of damages in an equivalent sum – even assuming that that is how the case has been put (which it was not until Mr Béar QC's somewhat rearguard recharacterization efforts at the hearing).
The Investigation Loss
"Further, Mr Tsvetkov has incurred costs and expenses in investigating the alleged conspiracy. In particular, he has paid the following amounts to law firms in England:
a. PCB Litigation – approximately £45,000; and
b. Fladgate LLP – approximately £34,000."
"I consider first the argument that the expenditure is recoverable as costs because, if it is so recoverable, the Owners have no claim for more than nominal damages. This is because, as is explained by Louise Merrett in her article 'Costs as Damages', (2009) 125 LQR 468, 'The basic rule of English law is that, unless the claimant can rely upon a separate cause of action, litigation costs can only be recoverable as costs, and not as damages'. This is so notwithstanding 'the costs of litigation would, if ordinary principles governing the recoverability of damages were applicable, represent recoverable damages': Seavision Investment SA v Evennett (The 'Tiburon'), [1992] 2 Lloyd's LR 26 at p.34 per Scott LJ. This principle can work in favour of the paying party: for example, if costs are to be assessed on a standard basis, the amount recoverable is limited by considerations of proportionality as well as reasonableness. Nevertheless, in this case the Owners argued that the expense incurred in providing and maintaining the RBS guarantee is recoverable as costs, and accept that, if this is so, it is not recoverable as damages even if some of it is disallowed upon an assessment. The Charterers dispute that the expense is recoverable as costs."
"To resist such a counter-attack and also counter-attacks from various other directions, the plaintiffs maintain, and must maintain, a large investigation department, and the money actually expended in unravelling and detecting the unlawful machinations of the defendants which have been proved in this case before any proceedings could be taken must have been considerable. I can see no reason for not treating the expenses so incurred which could not be recovered as part of the costs of the action as directly attributable to their tort or torts. That these expenses cannot be precisely quantified is true, but it is also immaterial. Accordingly, the plaintiffs have proved the damage which is essential to the tort of conspiracy, and they are entitled to an inquiry accordingly."
"Subhead (d) claims the cost of managerial and staff time spent in investigating, or mitigating the consequences of, the conspiracy. There is also a claim for out of pocket expenses in respect of extra security guards, small in amount, but obviously related to aspects of the conspiracy. I would allow the subhead to be pleaded.
… It is established that a party to a civil action cannot, in a separate action, recover against the other party to the first action costs of the first action which he was not awarded at the trial of that action: Quartz Hill Consolidated Gold Mining Co v Eyre (1883) 11 QBD 674, which, in Berry v British Transport Commission [1962] 1 QB 306 was held to be authority binding on this court, so far as civil proceedings are concerned."
"…whether, as R+V contends, and Risk disputes, R+V is entitled to recover, as damages, internal management and staff time and internal overheads, except to the extent that R+V can prove that it has suffered a loss of profits due to the diversion of resources as a result of an actionable wrong."
"The problem, it seems to me, resolves itself into two constituents: (a) Is there any warrant for suggesting that managerial time, which otherwise might have been engaged on the trading activities of the company, had to be deployed on the initiation and supervision of remedial work (excluding anything which might properly be regarded as preparation for litigation)? And (b) if so, could this reasonably have been the subject of evidence, or is it so diffcult to quantify that the application of some suitable rule of thumb is justified?
I have no doubt that the expenditure of managerial time in remedying an actionable wrong done to a trading concern can properly form the subject matter of a head of special damage. In a case such as this it would be wholly unrealistic to assume that no such additional managerial time was in fact expended. I would also accept that it must be extremely difficult to quantify."
"In my judgment, as a matter of principle, such head of loss (i.e. the cost of wasted staff time spent on the investigation and/or mitigation of the tort) is recoverable, notwithstanding that no additional expenditure "loss", or loss of revenue or profit can be shown. However, this is subject to the proviso that it has to be demonstrated with sufficient certainty that the wasted time was indeed spent on investigating and/or mitigating the relevant tort; i.e. that the expenditure was directly attributable to the tort — see per Roxburgh LJ in British Motor Trades Association at 569. This is perhaps simply another way of putting what Potter LJ said in Standard Chartered, namely that to be able to recover one has to show some significant disruption to the business; in other words that staff have been significantly diverted from their usual activities. Otherwise the alleged wasted expenditure on wages cannot be said to be 'directly attributable' to the tort. The quantification of such expenditure will, of course, have to be proved with sufficient particularity at the March 2006 hearing."
"Excess costs. Newey J's decision to award costs to Mr Willers on a standard basis is readily understandable. The action had been discontinued and the judge would not have been able to determine whether Mr Willers should recover indemnity costs without conducting what would have amounted to a trial of the present action. On the other hand, the notion that the costs order made has necessarily made good the injury caused by Mr Gubay's prosecution of the claim is almost certainly a fiction, and the court should try if possible to avoid fictions, especially where they result in substantial injustice. A trial of Mr Willers's claim will of course take up further court time, but that is not a good reason for him to have to accept a loss which he puts at over £2m in legal expenses. Expenditure of court time is sometimes the public price of justice. If Langstone's action against Mr Willers had gone to a full trial, and if at the end the judge had refused an application for indemnity costs because he judged that the claim had not been conducted improperly, then to attempt to secure a more favourable costs outcome by bringing an action for malicious prosecution would itself have been objectionable as an abuse of the process of the court, because it would have amounted to a collateral attack on the judge's decision. But those are not the circumstances and I do not regard Mr Willers's claim to recover his excess costs as an abuse of process."
"In order to understand the nature and extent of the conspiracy, I have had to incur significant investigative costs, which costs I understand are recoverable in a claim for conspiracy.
a. I initially instructed Fladgate LLP ('Fladgate') to represent me in the English proceedings. Fladgate undertook significant and detailed review of the documents and correspondence in my possession, to investigate and identify the actions between Mr Gaynulin and Mr Magdeev that formed the alleged conspiracy against me. This occurred both prior to and throughout the preparation of statements of case on my behalf. I provided my consent for Flagdate to provide a copy of their invoices to PCB Litigation LLP ('PCB'), who have reviewed them and advised me that Fladgate's fees in investigating the alleged conspiracy are approximately £45-50,000 (excluding Counsel's fees).
b. My current solicitors, PCB have also undertaken work investigating the alleged conspiracy. PCB have similarly had to review significant documentation in order to advise me on issues in relation to the conspiracy, particularly in light of the Defences filed by Mr Gaynulin and EK Diamonds. PCB have also provided assistance to my Cypriot lawyers, Scordis, in investigating the alleged conspiracy against me. I am advised by PCB that its fees in this respect amount to a total of approximately £34,000 (including Counsel's fees)."
Ground 3: Incoherence
"It is important to keep in mind the principles to be applied in deciding whether a case is suitable for disposal on a summary basis. The most authoritative up-to-date statement is that of Lord Hope in Three Rivers DC v Bank of England (No 3) [2001] 2 All ER 513:
'In other cases it may be possible to say with confidence before trial that the factual basis for the claim is fanciful because it is entirely without substance. It may be clear beyond question that the statement of facts is contradicted by all the documents or other material on which it is based. The simpler the case the easier it is likely to be to take that view and resort to what is properly called summary judgment. But more complex cases are unlikely to be capable of being resolved in that way without conducting a mini-trial on the documents, without discovery and without oral evidence. As Lord Woolf said in Swain v Hillman, [2001] 1 All ER 91, at p. 95 that is not the object of the rule. It is designed to deal with cases that are not fit for trial at all.'"
He went on at [21] as follows:
"Another frequently cited passage on the same theme is the judgment of Colman J in De Molestina v Ponton [2002] 1 Lloyd's Rep 271, 280 para 3.5, speaking of the difficulty of basing summary judgment on inferences of fact in a complex case:
'…, as Three Rivers District Council shows, where the application in such complex cases relies on inferences of fact, the overriding objective may well require the claim to go to trial in the interest of a fair trial. That is because the relevant inference could not be safely drawn without further discovery and oral evidence at the trial. It is thus necessary, where such inferences are relevant, to guard against the temptation of drawing them as a matter of probability, because the achievement of the over-riding object requires a much higher degree of certitude. Where in a complex case, as may often be the situation, the frontier between what is merely improbable and what is clearly fanciful is blurred, the case or issue should be left to trial.'"
He continued at [22]:
"To these familiar citations, Mr Reza adds the words of Potter LJ in ED&F Man Liquid Products v Patel [2003] EWCA Civ 472 para 10:
'However, that does not mean that the court has to accept without analysis everything said by a party in his statements before the court. In some cases it may be clear that there is no real substance in factual assertions made, particularly if contradicted by contemporary documents. If so, issues which are dependent upon those factual assertions may be susceptible of disposal at an early stage so as to save the cost and delay of trying an issue the outcome of which is inevitable … .'"
He concluded at [23]:
"If Mr Reza was hoping to find in those words some qualification of Lord Hope's approach, he will be disappointed. The Three Rivers case was specifically cited by Potter LJ. He was in my view intending no more than a summary of the same principles. Lord Hope had spoken of a statement contradicted by 'all the documents or other material on which it is based'. It was only in such a clear case that he was envisaging the possibility of rejecting factual assertions in the witness statements. It is in my view important not to equate what may be very powerful cross-examination ammunition, with the kind of 'knock-out blow' which Lord Hope seems to have had in mind."
"… In order to more easily to satisfy BCV's requirements and maintain confidentiality as against Mr Gaynulin it was agreed that that (sic) Mr Magdeev would make his investment in the following way. Half of the loan monies would be paid by Magdeev and his son, Ernest Magdeev, directly to EKLG as a subscription for new preference shares, redeemable from April 2018. The other half would be loaned to Mr Tsvetkov and then paid by him and Ms Khayrova to EKLG, also as a subscription for preference shares which Mr Tsvetkov agreed to hold for the benefit of Mr Magdeev…" (emphasis added)
In his witness statement, similarly, Mr Tsvetkov states at paragraph 31 that:
"The structure of the agreement between myself and Mr Magdeev can be summarised as follows:
31.1 Mr Magdeev would provide €10 million to EKLG to enable it to purchase the pear-shaped diamond….;
31.2 €5 million would be paid directly to EKLG (€2.5 million by Mr Magdeev himself, and €2.5 million by Ernest Magdeev on his behalf). The remaining €5m would be paid indirectly to EKLG through me (€2.5 directly from me, and €2.5 by Elsina on my behalf), with Mr Magdeev providing these funds to me as a loan." (emphasis added)
Conclusion
(1) It is appropriate that Mr Tsvetkov's Conspiracy Claim against Mr Gaynulin insofar as it concerns the Primary Claim, and so as currently pleaded, should be struck out and that summary judgment should be given dismissing that claim.
(2) I am not persuaded that the three proposed heads of loss (the Employment Loss, the Turetskiy Loss and the Investigation Loss) have a realistic prospect of success. Accordingly, were these already part of the pleaded case as against Mr Gaynulin, they would similarly have been struck out with summary judgment being given dismissing those claims.