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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Kazakhstan Kagazy Plc & Ors v Zhunus & Ors [2020] EWHC 128 (Comm) (30 January 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2020/128.html Cite as: [2020] EWHC 128 (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 :
____________________
KAZAKHSTAN KAGAZY PLC and others |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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BAGLAN ABDULLAYEVICH ZHUNUS and others |
Defendants |
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HARBOUR FUND III LP |
Additional Party |
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COOPERTON MANAGEMENT LIMITED and other |
Charging Order Respondents |
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Dominic Chambers QC and Joe-Han Ho (instructed directly) for the Charging Order Respondents
The Defendants and Additional Party did not appear and were not represented
Hearing date: 17 January 2020
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Andrew Baker :
Introduction
i) Four apartments (with associated parking spaces) in Burlington Place, Mayfair, one each owned by Fablink Ltd, Waychem Ltd, Standcorp Ltd and Permafast Ltd, Cypriot companies owned 100% by Cooperton Management Ltd ('Cooperton'), also a Cypriot company.
ii) 19 Wycombe Square, Kensington, owned by Dencora Ltd ('Dencora'), a BVI company. The Wycombe Square property was the Arip family home in London between 2009 and 2018.
iii) Flat 9, 10 Montrose Place, Belgravia, owned by Unistarel Corp ('Unistarel'), a BVI company.
i) Cooperton owns the owners of the Burlington Place properties in its capacity as trustee of the Jailau Trust, founded by Mrs Asilbekova in April 2014 for the benefit of Mr and Mrs Arip's children, Rabiga, Talal and Khadisha.
ii) Dencora, the owner of the Wycombe Square property, is the only asset of Carabello Holdings Inc ('Carabello'), another BVI company, which is owned in turn by the Wycombe Settlement, founded by Mr Arip in April 2009 for the benefit of Mr and Mrs Arip, their parents and issue. The current trustee of the Wycombe Settlement is Pilatus Trustees Ltd ('Pilatus') in Cyprus.
iii) The owner of the Montrose Place property, Unistarel, is owned by Drez Investments Corp ('Drez'), another BVI company, and Drez is owned in turn by the RaTalKha Settlement, founded by Mrs Asilbekova in January 2013 for the benefit of herself and Mr and Mrs Arip's children (hence, presumably, RaTalKha). Pilatus is also the current trustee of the RaTalKha Settlement.
I shall refer compendiously to the Jailau Trust, the Wycombe Settlement, the RaTalKha Settlement and the WS Settlement (said to be another family trust of indirect relevance to these charging order claims) as 'the Settlements'.
i) first, declarations that the properties belong in equity to the claimants, being (the claimants allege) the traceable proceeds of Mr Arip's frauds;
ii) second, in the alternative, charging orders and/or orders for sale of the properties if they belong in equity to Mr Arip;
iii) third, in the further alternative, relief under sections 423 to 425 of the Insolvency Act 1986 to reverse the transactions pursuant to which the respective respondents own the properties, those transactions having been (the claimants allege) transactions to defraud Mr Arip's creditors.
The first claim is inconsistent with the second (which is therefore indeed strictly in the alternative); the second claim appears entirely to replicate (as against the charging order respondents) the charging order proceedings in this Claim that give rise to the applications now before me; and the third claim appears to be a different way of possibly breaking through the structure under which the properties appear to be held so as to make their value available for the part-discharge of Mr Arip's judgment debts in this Claim, although I shall not claim to have understood fully what asset(s) the Insolvency Act relief, if granted, would cause to become available, or how, in that regard.
The Present Applications
i) an application by the claimants issued on 1 November 2019 for a declaration that the Points of Defence stand struck out and for the entry of judgment with the interim charging orders being made final; and
ii) an application by the respondents issued on 6 November 2019 for relief from sanctions under CPR 3.8/3.9, applying the principles set down by the Court of Appeal in Denton et al v T H White Ltd [2014] EWCA Civ 906, [2014] 1 WLR 3926.
The Defaults
i) Is the breach serious or significant? If not, relief should ordinarily be granted.
ii) Is there a good reason for the default? If so, there will ordinarily be a powerful case for granting relief. Even where there is no good reason, an applicant for relief should be clear and frank in explaining to the court, by evidence, how and why the default occurred. The reason(s) why an applicant defaulted will ordinarily be relevant to the third stage, and may be relevant to the first stage, even when it or they do not amount to any good reason for defaulting, something it has proved very difficult for applicants to demonstrate.
iii) What does justice require, in the particular case? Weight is always to be given to the need for litigation to be conducted efficiently and at proportionate cost (CPR 3.9(1)(a)) and the need to enforce compliance with rules, practice directions and orders (CPR 3.9(1)(b)). But there is no closed list of relevant factors; all the circumstances of the case must be considered and, specifically, it is wrong in principle to approach an application for relief on the basis that unless a default is insignificant or there is a good reason for it, relief must be refused.
i) Paragraph 1(a)/(b) required certain steps to be taken to provide fuller disclosure as to the reasons why Quinn Emanuel had ceased to act for the Burlington Place respondents. There was a degree of detail set out, but almost all of what had to be done was for those respondents' then solicitors, Candey Ltd, to do. There was full and timely compliance with paragraph 1(a)/(b).
ii) Paragraph 1(c) required the Burlington Place respondents either to provide "substantive responses" to certain particular Requests for Further Information or to "withdraw the relevant parts of the pleading to which [the given Request] refers". As I describe below, and in the manner I there identify, the Burlington Place respondents did not comply.
iii) Paragraph 1(d) required the Burlington Place respondents to provide copies of certain documents received by Signature Litigation LLP from Mills & Reeves LLP on 17 October 2018 (Signature having been those respondents' solicitors after Quinn Emanuel and before Candey Ltd) and to do work to clarify any claim to privilege in relation to those documents. As with paragraph 1(a)/(b), that was detailed work that in practice would fall to the respondents' solicitors to undertake, and there was full and timely compliance.
iv) Paragraph 2 required Dencora, the Wycombe Square respondent, to particularise or withdraw a specific pleading point, by reference to certain particular Requests for Further Information, as under paragraph 1(c) for the Burlington Place respondents. Dencora likewise did not comply, as and in the way I identify below.
v) Paragraph 3(a) required Unistarel and Dencora, as Montrose Place and Wycombe Square respondents respectively, to provide a witness statement from Mr Georghiou addressing a number of matters relevant to their Extended Disclosure, in particular as to the identification of electronic documents (or devices on which such documents might be found) that possibly should have been or should be searched. A statement from Mr Georghiou was timely provided the content of which complied with much of paragraph 3(a), but there was not full compliance, as I describe below.
vi) Paragraphs 3(b), 3(c) and 3(d) required Unistarel and Dencora to complete specified particular tasks in respect of their disclosure, namely (paragraph 3(b)) a disclosure review of c.15,000 documents from the computer of Mr Georghiou's PA at A A Georghiou LLC, Ms Lola Champidi, (paragraph 3(c)) a 'hit report' in respect of the search terms applied, and (paragraph 3(d)) disclosure of additional responsive material, if any, obtained after resolution of a data corruption issue identified in a Disclosure Certificate. There was full and timely compliance with all of these requirements.
Paragraph 3(a) Disclosure Defaults
Paragraphs 1(c) & 2 Pleading Defaults
i) (by reference to an original Request 80) the natural person or persons alleged to have had that intention for and on behalf of each of these respondents; and
ii) (by reference to an original Request 81) all facts and matters relied upon in support of each such allegation of intention.
"80(a) The natural person on behalf of Cooperton was Cooperton's director, Mr Georgios Vlachou.
80(b) The natural persons on behalf of each of the subsidiaries were the directors of those subsidiaries who were Menikos Yiannakou, Michalakis Hadjimichael and Dora Kaskani.
81 The facts and matters relied on in respect of each of the individuals identified in the responses to request 80 above are those pleaded in paragraphs 33(a) and (b) of the Points of Defence."
Conclusion
Denton Stage 1
Denton Stage 2
i) I do not accept that the pleading defaults were not intentional. The July responses speak for themselves. They were, in terms, a deliberate refusal to withdraw the allegations in question whilst openly not responding substantively to the respective Requests. As I described above, a stand was taken on it being inappropriate to withdraw. That stand was wrong-headed (and no attempt has been made to justify it or even explain where it came from), but it was equally, and plainly, quite intentional.
ii) By contrast, as regards the disclosure defaults, I am prepared to accept that Mr Georghiou (a) was making an honest attempt to comply with all of the detailed parts of paragraphs 1 (leaving aside 1(c)) and 3 of the Unless Order, (b) timely complied, in fact, with almost all of them (itself powerful evidence that he was not trying to defy or dodge the disclosure-related Unless Order requirements), and (c) honestly (albeit mistakenly) thought when giving his July statement (i) that he was identifying all relevant electronic devices falling within paragraph 3(a)(iii) and (ii) that he was addressing properly the matter required of him by paragraph 3(a)(iv)(B).
iii) I do not accept that Mr Georghiou only realised that there had been defaults when Mr Chambers QC came on the scene. He authorised the service of the July responses to the Requests for Further Information with their deliberate stance of non-compliance. He acknowledges that he knew within the course of the Extended Disclosure exercise completed in September, over a month before Mr Chambers QC was first instructed, that he (Georghiou) had been wrong not to identify at least Ms Schukina's office computer under paragraph 3(a)(iii) of the Unless Order. It is not clear to me how anything different can be said (or, to be fair to him, whether Mr Georghiou actually says anything different) for the other devices found in September to hold disclosable documents that were not identified under paragraph 3(a)(iii) in July. The penny though, I accept, does seem to have dropped in respect of paragraph 3(a)(iv)(B) only after Mr Chambers QC's arrival.
iv) I readily accept and this is principally to Mr Chambers QC's credit that the present application for relief from sanctions was prepared and issued promptly following his being instructed, with the revised Further Information responses and the further and better witness evidence from Mr Georghiou designed to address the failures of compliance in July that I have already discussed at some length.
Denton Stage 3
i) The defaults were serious or significant, and they came after repeated failures to comply with procedural obligations including prior court orders. No good reason has been shown why the defaults occurred. The need to ensure that litigation is efficient and proportionately costly, and that practice directions, rules and orders are enforced, which are always to carry particular weight, are powerful factors in this case.
ii) The defaults have caused and continue to cause substantial disruption to the proper progress of the proceedings, with significant unnecessary cost, multiple unnecessary hearings and the wastage of court resources.
iii) Mr Georghiou gave evidence as to why Quinn Emanuel came off the record back in October 2018 that he now accepts was wrong and cannot honestly have believed when he gave it. As it is now clear that concerns over the respondents' approach to disclosure, driven by Mr Georghiou, were in fact the reason why Quinn Emanuel ceased to act, the court can have no confidence in the integrity of the respondents' disclosure and no confidence that there can ever be a fair trial, bearing in mind that in practice any disclosure of documents evidencing how and to what extent the Arips were involved in the acquisition of the properties and their subsequent management will have to come from the respondents.
iv) There has been no material change of circumstance since the Unless Order was made and the court "must proceed on the basis that the sanction of strike out contained in the unless order was properly imposed as a proportionate sanction for failure to comply. It will, therefore, be a comparatively rare case in which the applicant can persuade the court, absent a material change of circumstances, that it would now be appropriate to grant relief from the sanction as being disproportionate.": Sinclair et al v Dorsey & Whitney (Europe) LLP et al [2015] EWHC 3888 (Comm), [2016] 1 Costs LR 19, per Popplewell J (as he was then) at [25]. Therefore, the effective forfeiture of the properties against which the interim charging orders will be made final if relief from sanctions is refused should not be regarded as unjust or disproportionate. (That forfeiture is of course no hardship at all if the claimants' claims in relation to the properties are well-founded, so their forfeiture by reason that the respondents do not defend the claims is logical and fair; and the loss of any right to defend claims will often be the natural, appropriate and proportionate consequence of serious procedural default.)
v) The respondents failed to apply for relief promptly. If the respondents needed it to be spelt out, Allen & Overy for the claimants did spell out for them by letter dated 23 August 2019 that they were in default. True it is that the necessary application for relief from sanctions was prepared and issued impressively promptly at the instigation of Mr Chambers QC once he received the necessary files from Candey Ltd on 30 October 2019 after being instructed on 21 October. However, that urgent action should have been instigated immediately in response to Allen & Overy's letter, if not in July without the need to be prompted.
i) The Unless Order defaults would not render the conduct of this litigation overall inefficient or disproportionately expensive, if relief were now granted. The importance of enforcing compliance with rules, practice directions and court orders is accepted and recognised by the respondents, and by Mr Georghiou personally in particular. The extent of compliance with the Unless Order requirements, at significant cost, and the completion in September of Unistarel and Dencora's Extended Disclosure (subject to any particular points that may yet need to be addressed), also at substantial cost, and the sincere apologies the court has received for the failures to comply, should steer the court away from concluding that sticking to the default sanction originally ordered is necessary to promote the public interest in compliance with court orders. These breaches, indeed, were "at the very low end of the seriousness/significance scale which were quickly remedied when discovered".
ii) The forfeiture of the respondents' only assets, being very valuable real property, can be seen now to be disproportionate by way of consequence flowing from the actual defaults that occurred.
iii) The commencement of the 2019 Claim, and the mutual investment of time and cost on both sides therein, all after the respondents' defaults, weighs heavily in favour of relief from sanctions being granted. (Mr Chambers QC raised this, if he needed it, to a submission that by commencing the 2019 Claim and/or by one or more of the steps taken in it before 1 November 2019, the claimants had lost, by an election between inconsistent rights or remedies, any right to apply for judgment now to be entered.)
iv) Xyan is unaffected by the Unless Order and defends charging order applications in respect of the Ilford properties raising materially similar defences to those hitherto advanced by the respondents, most particularly those advanced in relation to the Montrose Place property by its sister company, Unistarel. If relief from sanctions is not granted, at all events in the case of Unistarel (although Mr Chambers QC did not limit the submission to Unistarel), there is the prospect of Xyan showing by succeeding in its defence that, on the true substance of the matter, the respondents (again, Unistarel especially) should not have had to give up their properties to answer Mr Arip's judgment debts. The editors of the White Book suggest at Note 3.9.21 that "Circumstances which favour the grant of relief from sanctions arise where the defaulting party is a defendant wishing to raise defences or counterclaims which his co-defendants will raise whether or not he is allowed relief from sanctions", citing Blakemores LDP v Scott [2015] EWCA Civ 999, and Kishenin v Von Kalkstein-Bleach [2015] EWCA Civ 1184.
i) Firstly, the failure to particularise the specific allegations at issue was not the only or main item on the agenda for any unless order.
ii) Secondly, the logic behind any unless order in relation to the lack of particularisation of those allegations was not considered fully because of the stance adopted before Jacobs J by the respondents. They having by Mr Haque QC given clear reassurance that if they did not provide substantive particulars they would withdraw the allegations, the subsequent combination of a failure to particularise and an ill-founded attempt to justify not withdrawing would not have been within the contemplation of the court.
Denton Summary
Pleading Defaults
Disclosure Defaults
Conclusion
The Waiver of Privilege Application, the RFI Application and the M&R Application
(a) In respect of the Waiver of Privilege Application, the Respondents' solicitors, Candey Limited ("Candey"), are to obtain from Quinn Emanuel and provide to the Claimants' solicitors:
(i) copies of all the Quinn Documents are defined within the May Order (including those referred to by Mr Khatoun in his email dated 24 September 2018), such documents to be unredacted (save that matters which are entirely extraneous and unrelated to matters concerning Quinn Emanuel's termination of the retainer, and only such matters, may be redacted); and
(ii) an unredacted copy of Mr Khatoun's email dated 24 September 2018;
(b) Also in respect of the Waiver of Privilege Application:
(i) the Burlington Respondents shall instruct Candey to request Quinn Emanuel to provide copies of all of the Quinn Documents to Candey directly; and
(ii) the Burlington Respondents must serve a witness statement from the partner of the Respondents' current solicitors, Candey, (A) explaining the steps taken by the Burlington respondents and by Candey in compliance with paragraphs 1(a) and 1(b)(i) of this Order and (B) confirming that he has satisfied himself that any redactions applied have been applied in compliance with this Order.
(c) In respect of the RFI Application, either provide substantive responses to the Burlington Further RFI; alternatively to withdraw the relevant parts of the pleading to which it refers;
(d) In respect of the M&R Application, provide to the Claimants' solicitors:
(i) (unless paragraph 1(d)(ii) below applies) copies of the documents with Signature, the Respondents' former solicitors, received from Mills & Reeve on 17 October 2018 (the M&R Documents) relating to the proposed acquisition by the Jailau Trust of the properties known as the Holland Park Villas and/or any other property acquisitions (or proposed acquisitions) involving the Jailau Trust which are similar to the acquisition of the Burlington Properties;
(ii) if the Respondents object to the Claimants' inspection of the M&R Documents which have not been produced to the Claimants in the Respondents' supplemental disclosure provided on 18 April 2019 on grounds of privilege, the basis for that assertion is to be set out in an itemised privilege log.
2. Unless Dencora, by no later than 4.30pm on 19 July 2019, provides substantive responses to the Wycombe Further RFI or alternatively withdraws the relevant parts of the pleading to which it refers, its Points of Defence dated 8 March 2019 shall be immediately struck out and judgment shall be entered for the Claimants in the Charging Orders Applications concerning the Wycombe Property and the Charging Order in the Claimants' favour over the Wycombe Property shall be made final.
Extended Disclosure
3. Unless Unistarel and Dencora do, by no later than 4.30pm on 19 July 2019, carry out the following steps, their Points of Defence dated 8 March 2019 shall be immediately stuck [sic] out and judgment shall be entered for the Claimants in the Charging Orders Applications concerning the Montrose Property and the Wycombe Property and the Charging Orders over those Properties in the Claimants' favour shall be made final;
(a) Provide to the Claimants' solicitors a witness statement from Mr Andreas Georghiou ("Mr Georghiou") addressing the following matters;
(i) In relation to the statement in Dencora and Unistarel's disclosure certificate (the "Disclosure Certificate") that Mr Georghiou does not use a personal computer, that his office does not contain a computer, and that all email correspondence to and from his email account is contained only on the computer of his personal assistant and office administrator, Ms Lola Champidi ("Ms Champidi"), an explaination of the following:
A. how emails sent from his email address ([email protected]) are generated and how he monitors emails sent to that email address;
B. how he carries out his day to day business if he does so without using any computers or electronic devices that might be capable of being searched for the purposed of Extended Disclosure;
(ii) Confirmation as to which electronic devices and/or computers he owns, holds or uses (either in a personal or business capacity), and why these devices were not searched for the purposes of Extended Disclosure;
(iii) Confirmation of what other electronic devices, computers and servers or data storage devices are used by his firm, A.A. Georghiou LLC, and/or any employees of his firm that are (or have been) involved with the administration of the WS Settlement, the Wycombe Settlement, the Jailau Trust and the RaTalKha Trust (the "Employees"), and why those devices and/or servers or data storage devices were not searched for the purposes of Extended Disclosure;
(iv) In relation to the statement in the Disclosure Certificate that certain electronic documents may have been lost or deleted in the ordinary course of life or business, an explanation of:
A. What is meant by the phrase "in the ordinary course of life or business";
B. what (if any) steps were taken to preserve data that may be relevant to any issue in the proceedings following his firm's involvement in the proceedings;
C. what (if any) steps were taken to suspend any relevant document deletion or destruction processes for the duration of the proceedings; and
D. what (if any) steps were taken to search for electronic data and information that is stored on servers and back-up systems and/or electronic data and information that has been 'deleted'.
(v) An explanation of the searches for hard copy documents carried out by the Respondents, including clarification of (a) which repositories of hard copy documents have been searched, (b) where they are located and (c) who searched each such repository.
(b) In so far as disclosure of the c.15,000 documents obtained from Ms Champidi's computer after the application of search terms has not yet been completed, that exercise be completed and disclosure of any responsive material be provided to the Claimants' solicitors in accordance with the Disclosure Order.
(c) Provide to the Claimants a hit report in respect of the search terms applied.
(d) In so far as any additional responsive material was identified as a result of the corruption issue referred to in the Disclosure Certificate, that material be provided to the Claimants' solicitors in accordance with the Disclosure Order.