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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Rajabieslami v Tariverdi & Ors [2023] EWHC 455 (Comm) (06 March 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2023/455.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 455 (Comm) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
KING'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
Sitting as a Deputy Judge of the High Court
____________________
DR MORTEZA RAJABIESLAMI |
Claimant |
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- and – |
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(1) MR SAM TARIVERDI (2) MELOUSA INC (3) PASSA NAVIGATION INC |
Defendants |
____________________
Ms Colleen Hanley (instructed by Waterson Hicks) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 24, 27 February 2023
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MR SALTER KC:
(A) Introduction
(B) The action
(C) The procedural history
.. There is simply no time to digest and respond to this evidence even if it were admissible in this application, which it plainly is not .. The eleventh hour conduct of the Claimant attempting to shoehorn in voluminous further evidence not relating to the stated grounds of the application and then raising the suggestion that 2.5 hours will not be sufficient to dispose of the application is nothing more than a thinly veiled attempt to have the Defendants' application hearing adjourned and derailed ..
.. Investigation of the merits of the case on an application for security is strongly discouraged. It is usually only in those cases where it can be shown without detailed investigation of evidence or law that the claim is certain or almost certain to succeed or fail that the merits will be taken into consideration ..
(D) Gateways (e) and (g)
The pre-conditions or gateways in rule 25.13(2) are not questions for the court's discretion: they are matters of fact on which the court needs to be satisfied
the claimant failed to give his address in the claim form or gave an incorrect address in that form
The address given by Dr Rajabieslami in the Claim Form was "Energy Venture Holding Company, Al Dafna Area, West Bay, Zone 63, Street 920, Building 27". Condition (e) will therefore be satisfied only if the defendants can show that that was "an incorrect address".
The claim form must include an address (including the postcode) at which the claimant lives or carries on business, even if the claimant's address for service is the business address of their solicitor.
It is therefore sufficient if the address given is an address at which the claimant at the relevant time carries on business.
.. the correct address and the address where I carry on business on a day-to-day basis. This is the address which is provided for the building by the Doha Municipality .. As with many Middle Eastern countries, addresses in Qatar do not have postcodes ..
the claimant has taken steps in relation to his assets that would make it difficult to enforce an order for costs against him
(E) Gateway (a)
the claimant is
(i) resident out of the jurisdiction, but
(ii) not resident in a State bound by the 2005 Hague Convention, as defined in section 1 (3) of the Civil Jurisdiction and Judgements Act 1982
.. It is sufficient for an applicant for security for costs simply to adduce evidence to show that "on objectively justified grounds relating to obstacles to or the burden of enforcement" there is a real risk that it will not be in a position to enforce an order for costs against the claimant/appellant and that, in all the circumstances, it is just to make an order for security.
Obviously there must be a proper basis for considering that such obstacles may exist or that enforcement may be encumbered by some extra burden: whether the evidence is sufficient in any particular case to satisfy the judge that there is a real risk of serious obstacles to enforcement, will depend on the circumstances of the case.
I consider that the judge was wrong to uphold the Master's approach that the appropriate test was one of "likelihood", which involved demonstrating that it was "more likely than not" (i.e. an over 50% likelihood), or "likely on the balance of probabilities", that there would be substantial obstacles to enforcement, rather than some lower standard based on risk or possibility. A test of real risk of enforceability provides rational and objective justification for discrimination against non-Convention state residents ..
A "real risk" in this sense must, however, be "a risk supported by solid evidence". A risk that is merely "speculative or fanciful" is not sufficient: see JSC Karat-1 v Tugushev [2021] 4 WLR 66 at [148], per Cockerill J.
.. The recognition and enforcement of foreign judgments in Qatar is governed by Articles 379 and 380 of the Civil and Commercial Procedural Code. Article 379 states that foreign judgments may be recognised and enforced in Qatar "on the same conditions that exist under the laws of that country". Therefore, applicants must prove that a judgment issued by a Qatar court is enforceable in the jurisdiction that rendered the foreign judgment.
Securing the recognition and enforcement of a foreign judgment in Qatar is generally easier if a level of reciprocity can be established between Qatar and the country that issued the foreign judgment (ie, that judgments issued by the Qatar courts enjoy the same enforceability treatment in the country that issued the foreign judgment). If this reciprocity cannot be established by any bilateral or multilateral treaty, the Court of Execution will call for evidence on the laws of the country that rendered the foreign judgment in relation to the conditions applicable to the execution of a Qatari judgment in the jurisdiction that issued the foreign judgment.
In the absence of any reciprocal arrangement between Qatar and the country that rendered the foreign judgment, it may be challenging to secure the recognition and enforcement of that foreign judgment in Qatar, and the Qatar courts will likely refuse to recognise and enforce the judgment or rehear the dispute.
There have been cases where the Court of Appeal has declined to enforce a foreign judgment on the basis that neither party submitted evidence establishing the existence of any bilateral or multilateral treaty concerning the recognition and enforcement of judgments and/or judgments issued by the Qatar courts being enforced in the jurisdiction of the foreign judgment in accordance with the principle of judicial comity ..
.. Qatari courts can call for textual evidence on English laws concerning the rules regulating enforcement of a Qatari judgment in England and Wales. If the textual evidence were such that the English courts can re-examine the merits of a case upon which Qatari courts had already passed judgment, then Qatari courts would similarly be entitled to re-examine the merits of an English court judgment or order ..
.. We note that following the English courts enforcing a Dubai court of cassation judgment in Lenkor Energy Trading DMCC v Puri, the UAE Ministry of Justice issued a directive confirming that English court judgments can be enforced in the UAE. We would expect the Qatari courts to also follow this approach if an English court recognises and enforces a Qatari court judgment ..
.. The Qatari court will require concrete evidence in order to be satisfied as to reciprocity. In the absence of a treaty, that evidence would need to be in the form of examples of Qatari judgments actually having been enforced by English courts without re-examination of the merits, or a declaration by the government of the foreign country i.e. the United Kingdom government, that Qatari judgments will be recognised in the English courts without re-examination.
If it is the case that there are no such concrete examples, and there is no government declaration, the Qatari courts will be certain to reject any request for an enforcement order ...
.. It is correct that in the absence of a treaty evidence of reciprocity could be by way of a declaration by the UK Government or providing the Qatari courts with examples of where English courts have enforced Qatari judgments in England, but these two modes of evidencing reciprocity are not exclusive and Qatari courts can call for textual evidence concerning the rules regulating enforcement of a Qatari judgment, for example, by way of expert evidence on the English law position to the Qatari court ..
Subject to the Exceptions hereinafter mentioned and to Rule 63 (international conventions), a foreign judgment in personam given by the court of a foreign country with jurisdiction to give that judgment in accordance with the principles set out in Rules 47 and 48, and which is not impeachable under any of Rules 52 to 55, may be enforced by a claim or counterclaim for the amount due under it if the judgment is:
(i) for a debt or definite sum of money (not being a sum payable in respect of taxes or other charges of a like nature or in respect of a fine or other penalty); and
(ii) final and conclusive
but not otherwise.
.. Enforcement of foreign judgments in the UAE is governed by Articles 222 to 225 of the Federal Law No 42 of 2022 (the Civil Procedure Law) .. and there is no requirement that a judgment could be only enforced against a resident – enforcement could be sought regardless of the residency of the person as long as there are assets within the jurisdiction against which enforcement could be sought ..
(F) Is it just, in all the circumstances, to make an order?
.. a matter which not only opens the jurisdiction [to order security], but also provides a substantial factor in the decision whether to exercise it ..
[21] Whilst I am not a forensic expert, viewing the various signatures side by side, it is apparent to the naked eye that these appear identical or different sized versions of the same signature.
[22] As these documents have supposedly been signed over the course of several years, the identical appearance could only be explained if this was an electronic signature that the Claimant regularly used between 2016 and 2019.
[23] That is not however the case. I have reviewed the documents my firm holds on this file, and it appears that this signature has been lifted from a hard copy document, which the Claimant signed on 18 April 2019 - page 2 of the Declaration of Trust itself.
If the case turned on the Declaration of Trust and the ancillary documents, I might not have been persuaded but it seems to me that that is not all there is in this case.
I will mention some points which seem to me to be important which lend some credence to the Declaration of Trust and so to the case that this ship was in fact owned indirectly by Ms Sanchouli:
First, contemporaneous evidence of invoices from Ms Sanchouli's company of expenses which would ordinarily have been borne by the owner and not the time charterer. Substantial expenses for the Dry docking, USD3 million paid to the company. If Ms Sanchouli was simply a time charterer the dry docking expenses would not have been payable by her or her company.
Second, I have been referred to an important exchange which took place in November 2020 between Stephenson Harwood acting on behalf of Desero and one other, the company known as Saint James an operating company owned and run by Mr Tariverdi, there was at this point a dispute on unrelated issues in relation to the sale of a vessel – problems arising in relation to crew, a letter was sent by Stephenson Harwood who said they were acting on behalf of Desero and this was sent to Saint James, the response did not come from Mr Tariverdi himself but from a senior person from the company, no issue was taken with the fact that Stephenson Harwood was instructed by the company and the email indicated as a whole that Saint James considered that Stephenson Harwood were acting for the owners.
That email goes somewhat further as it is dealing with the issue of crew under a time charter ordinarily and the one produced by Mr Tariverdi in original proceedings, crew would be paid by owners not time charterers but email from Saint James asks for remittances to be paid to make payments for crew supporting proposition that the true ownership was not with SJ or its principal Mr Tariverdi but rather with SH's clients from whom the letter of November 2020 had been sent.
Fourth, the witness evidence and affidavit refers to various expenses of, ordinarily, owners having been paid and in contrast the absence of any evidence of hire being paid by Ms Sanchouli or the company to Mr Tariverdi's company. I have been shown evidence of payments in relation to dry docking as well as other expenses which would ordinarily be expenses of the owner rather than the charterer.
Next, it is fair to say that back in November 2021, when Mr Tariverdi did assert ownership, that was instantly and emphatically denied by Ms Sanchouli with detailed reasons being given why that was not the case, though true at the time the Declaration of Trust was not produced but I don't consider that a point of great significance, more important was that Ms Sanchouli did not accept that Mr Tariverdi was the owner of the ship.
Next I agree with Mr Davidson that there is some force in the point that there is an absence of any documentation which indicates how it was that Mr Tariverdi or his company made payment for the owning company to have acquired the ship. One expects a substantial payment and there is no evidence of payment having passed to the Claimant or Ms Sanchouli, this may look very different when it returns on the return date but that is the present position.
Next, a significant WhatsApp exchange in January of this year, at the time Ms Sanchouli raised the question that a rumour had been heard that the vessel was being sold. The WhatsApp although perhaps somewhat cryptic shows that Ms Sanchouli believed that the vessel was hers. Mr Tariverdi in response did not put forward any suggestion he was the owner, and that Ms Sanchouli was asking about something that was not any business of hers and he denies any sale had taken place. It in fact transpires a MOA was entered into by Mr Tariverdi on behalf of Saint James effecting a sale of the ship to a company called Last voyage and it is that company which is the Defendant along with Mr Tariverdi to the Bangladesh proceedings. But the point is that first Mr Tariverdi did not deny Ms Sanchouli's ownership interest. Appears to have falsely indicated there was a sale.
Finally, most recently, on 9 June 2022, following the unsuccessful application to Mr [Justice] Baker, they wrote to Mr Tariverdi relying on and enclosing the Declaration of Trust. There was not as far as I can see from the correspondence any assertion that the correspondence was not genuine and there was never in fact any detailed or brief response to the letter which had been sent. There was simply the response which indicated that he was travelling and would provide a response in due course. As far as I'm aware there's never been an open response to what was said, I was referred as part of the full and frank disclosure, what was discussed in WP discussions but Mr Davidson has said as far as he is aware there was no denial of ownership of Ms Sanchouli even though Mr Tariverdi had asserted ownership in September 2021.
So when I look at those matters all taken together I do consider there is a sufficient case for present purposes. That Ms Sanchouli has been a victim of a serious fraud on the basis of having heard Mr Davidson and the case may look very different on the return date.
.. The law reports are replete with cases which were thought to be hopeless before investigation but were decided the other way after the Court had allowed the matter to be tried ..
As Sir Igor Judge PQBD noted in Wrexham Association Football Club v Crucialmove Ltd [2006] EWCA Civ 237 at [58], "This collective judicial experience does not always, or inevitably, provide a compelling reason for allowing the case to proceed to trial". However, an application for security for costs is not the right occasion for the kind of "detailed investigation of evidence or law" that would be required to reach that sort of conclusion in a case such as the present.
(F) Quantum