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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Ivanhoe Mines Ltd v Gardner [2020] EWHC 144 (Comm) (29 January 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2020/144.html Cite as: [2020] EWHC 144 (Comm) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS
OF ENGLAND AND WALES
COMMERCIAL COURT (QBD)
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
IVANHOE MINES LIMITED (previously IVANHOE NICKEL AND PLATINUM LIMITED) |
Claimant |
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- and – |
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TONY RICKY GARDNER |
Defendant |
____________________
Jamie Riley QC (instructed by SA Law LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 17th January 2020
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Crown Copyright ©
The Honourable Mr Justice Foxton:
The background
"31. On behalf of Ivanhoe counsel submitted that Mr. Gardner made a deliberate attempt to avoid his obligations and to avoid receiving communications so as to frustrate the litigation process. In support of this serious allegation reference was made in particular to a number of matters. First, after losing in the Supreme Court and knowing that SARS would then recalculate the tax due and serve a fresh assessment Mr. Gardner left South Africa for Spain in May 2015 without informing Ivanhoe, to whom he owed his obligation to pay the tax assessed on GBSA, of his address in Spain. Second, in July 2017 just 6 days after lawyers instructed to act for him in South Africa in other (related) proceedings had received a demand for payment from Ivanhoe they came off the record and were instructed not to receive any further correspondence for him. Third, the only forwarding address he gave at that time was a hotel in England where he would be, it seems, for a limited period. He did not give his address in Spain.
32. On behalf of Mr. Gardner counsel referred me to Mr. Gardner's witness statement in which he said that he truly believed that if Ivanhoe "had wanted to locate me it could have done so. There was nothing to stop them contacting Mr. van Zanten or Ms. Fleming [former officers of GBSA]. Also, when they had to affect personal service on me, they were able to locate my father's address. Had they done this in October 2018 when he was alive, my father would have contacted me and informed me that the court papers had been sent to his address." He said that he "was not hiding".
33. What is striking about Mr. Gardner's conduct is that having expended considerable effort to challenge the assessment of tax (which he had promised to pay) by appealing to the Supreme Court he then, having lost his appeal, expended no effort in contacting Ivanhoe with a view to paying the tax he had agreed to pay. On the contrary, his letter of 25 November 2015 suggested that there was a way in which the tax need not be paid. Then, when his South African lawyers had received a demand for payment of the tax from Ivanhoe, he disinstructed them. It is reasonable to infer from these events that Mr. Gardner was unwilling to pay that which he had promised to pay. It is also reasonable to infer that he wished to make it difficult for Ivanhoe to communicate with him. That is consistent with the fact that the forwarding address that he gave to his South African lawyers was not his permanent address in Spain but a hotel in England at which he would stay for a limited period. He did not suggest at that time that either former officers of GBSA (Mr. Van Zanten or Ms. Flemming) could receive communications on his behalf or that his father could. In those circumstances his evidence that Ivanhoe should have contacted him through those persons rings hollow, notwithstanding that Ivanhoe were aware of Mr. Van Zanten (when they copied an email to him in July 2015) and of the address at which his father resided (when they sent the 23 November 2018 Order to that address on 26 November 2018, albeit that they were not then aware that this was the address at which his father resided).
34. On the material available to the court on this application I am not persuaded that there was a good reason for Mr. Gardner not attending the hearing in November 2018. On the contrary there is good reason to believe that, having lost the Supreme Court appeal, he did not wish to be contacted about the tax he had promised to pay and hoped that Ivanhoe would be unable to contact him about it. He certainly did not leave in place a mechanism by which, if Ivanhoe wished to enforce the Consent Award or the Tomlin Order, they could notify him of their wish and of any relevant court proceedings (save of course for the fact that Ewart Price remained on the record in England)."
"51. The circumstances in which Mr. Gardner asks the court to re-list (and so to re-hear) Ivanhoe's application of November 2018 are therefore these. Mr. Gardner has failed to show that there was a good reason for his not attending the hearing, though he did proceed promptly to set aside the court's order on learning of it. He has identified one ground of defence which, although it cannot be said to lack any real prospect of success, is rather weak. In circumstances where there is good reason to believe that Mr. Gardner did not wish to pay the tax he had agreed to pay and hoped (as proved to be the case) that Ivanhoe would have great difficulty in informing him of any steps they proposed to take to enforce his obligation to pay the tax in question his request that the court should re-list and re-hear the Tomlin Application is certainly unattractive and unappealing. Having regard to the court's limited resources a party who hopes to avoid a court order against him by making it difficult for his creditor to track him down cannot reasonably expect the court, after the court has allocated one hearing to the matter, to allocate another hearing to the matter at the behest of the party who finds that his attempt at avoiding a court order against him has failed. For these reasons I have decided that it is not fair and just or in accordance with the overriding objective to relist (and to re-hear) this matter."
The test for post-judgment freezing order relief
i) whether a real risk of dissipation had been made out; and
ii) whether it is just and convenient to continue the Injunction.
"Based on these authorities, the defendants advance seven propositions which the bank does not dispute and which I accept. They were as follows:
a. The claimant must demonstrate a real risk that a judgment against the defendant may not be satisfied as a result of unjustified dealing with the defendant's assets.
b. That risk can only be demonstrated with solid evidence; mere inference or generalised assertion is not sufficient.
c. It is not enough to rely solely on allegations that a defendant has been dishonest; rather it is necessary to scrutinise the evidence to see whether the dishonesty in question does justify a conclusion that assets are likely to be dissipated.
d. The relevant inquiry is whether there is a current risk of dissipation; past events may be evidentially relevant, but only if they serve to demonstrate a current risk of dissipation of the assets now held.
e. The nature, location and liquidity of the defendant's assets are important considerations.
f. Whether or to what extent the assets are already secured or incapable of being dealt with is also relevant.
g. So too is the defendant's behaviour in response to the claim or anticipated claim."
Has a real risk of dissipation been established?
Is it just and convenient to make the order?
A notification order?
The further orders sought by Ivanhoe
The calculation of the maximum value of the assets
The provision of information by Mr Gardner
The cross-undertaking in damages and the issue of fortification
The variation sought by Mr Gardner
Costs
i) To my mind, Mr Riley QC's best point is that the rates charged by White & Case are high, and comfortably in excess of the guideline rates in the White Book. While that is relatively common, the differential is particularly stark here when considering the low value of the claim.
ii) Mr Riley QC points to the involvement of five White & Case fee earners. Given the low value of the claim, there was every reason for Ivanhoe to use a "lean team". However, I believe Mr Riley QC has overstated the criticism, which merits only a small discount.
iii) Mr Riley QC points to the figure for internal attendance, of which a substantial amount would appear to relate to internal White & Case discussions. I accept Mr Kramer's explanation for the level of time taken which, in the circumstances, is not unreasonable.
iv) Mr Riley QC submits that the figures for work on documents are high, pointing in particular to the 27 hours claimed in preparing the first affidavit of Amanda Cowell. While I do not agree with Mr Riley QC's submission of this as "eye-watering", I accept that it is on the high side.
v) Similarly, the figure for work on documents for the return date is high, given the short period which elapsed between the without notice application and the return date, and the limited number of developments which Ms Cowell needed to address. There were, however, other matters after the service of Ms Cowell's witness statement which would have required further work, which I have allowed for.
vi) I reject Mr Riley QC's criticism of the fact that Ivanhoe instructed separate counsel for the without notice application and the return date hearings.
i) £40,000 for the "without notice" application.
ii) £43,000 for the return date.