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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Steenbok Newco 10 SARL & Anor v Formal Holdings Ltd & Ors [2024] EWHC 1160 (Comm) (10 May 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2024/1160.html Cite as: [2024] EWHC 1160 (Comm) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
COMMERCIAL COURT (KBD)
7 Rolls Building Fetter Lane London EC4 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
(1) STEENBOK NEWCO 10 SARL | ||
(2) IBEX RETAIL INVESTMENTS LIMITED | Claimants | |
- and - | ||
(1) FORMAL HOLDINGS LIMITED | ||
(2) MR MALCOLM KING | ||
(3) MR NICHOLAS KING | Defendants |
____________________
(instructed by Reynolds Porter Chamberlain LLP) for the Claimants
Alan Gourgey KC, Bobby Friedman and Tara Taylor
(instructed by DLA Piper UK LLP) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 9 and 10 May 2024
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE BRYAN :
A. INTRODUCTION AND BACKGROUND
B. APPLICABLE LEGAL PRINCIPLES
B.1 THE DISCRETION UNDER CPR 17.3
"It is relevant to have regard to the degree to which the case sought to be advanced by the amendment is one that the parties have in fact already been addressing. In Hawksworth v Chief Constable of Staffordshire [2012] EWCA Civ 293 (CA), the Court of Appeal stated, obiter, that it might appropriate to permit an amendment at trial in respect of a matter which, although not raised in the pleadings, had nevertheless been raised in some of the witness statements and experts' reports served before trial. In Ahmed v Ahmed [2016] EWCA Civ 686, the claimants applied to have letters of administration revoked on the basis that the will annexed to them had not been duly executed or witnessed. At the start of the trial the claimants obtained permission to amend their particulars of claim so as to allege that the will had been forged. The Court of Appeal dismissed an appeal against that grant of permission: the amendment was no more than a formality bringing the claimants' case into line with what had been argued for at least six months; the appellants had not been taken by surprise by the amendment and, indeed, had themselves sought at the pre-trial review permission to call a handwriting expert."
(emphasis added)
"Particularly in complex litigation, it is not unusual for amendments to be made to the statements of case to reflect changes in the parties' understanding of the issues and the other party's case, the emergence of new evidence, or developments in the law. The parties may also wish to amend the statements of case to reflect the evidence that they have served for adduction [sic] at trial or to narrow or perhaps to reformulate the issues in the action. This is a consideration which the Court should take into account in deciding how to dispose of the application having regard to principles of active case management and the furtherance of the overriding objective..."
"(a)… An amendment is late if it could have been advanced earlier, or involves the duplication of cost and effort, or if it requires the resisting party to revisit any of the significant steps in the litigation (such as disclosure or the provision of witness statements and expert's reports) ...
(b) An amendment can be regarded as 'very late' if permission to amend threatens the trial date, even if the application is made some months before the trial is due to start. Parties have a legitimate expectation that trial dates will be met and not adjourned without good reason.
(c) The history of the amendment, together with an explanation for its lateness, is a matter for the amending party and is an important factor in the necessary balancing exercise. In essence, there must be a good reason for the delay…
(e) The prejudice to the resisting parties if the amendments are allowed will incorporate, at one end of the spectrum, the simple fact of being 'mucked around', to the disruption of and additional pressure on their lawyers in the run-up to trial and the duplication of cost and effort at the other. If allowing the amendments would necessitate the adjournment of the trial, that may be an overwhelming reason to refuse the amendments.
(f) Prejudice to the amending party if the amendments are not allowed will, obviously, include its inability to advance its amended case, but that is just one factor to be considered. Moreover, if that prejudice has come about by the amending party's own conduct, then it is a much less important element of the balancing exercise."
(emphasis added)
B.2 AMENDMENTS UNDER CPR 17.4 AFTER THE END OF THE RELEVANT LIMITATION PERIOD
"25. The relevant principles in respect of amendments which are outside a statutory limitation period are governed by section 35 of the Limitation Act 1980 and CPR 17.4. There is a four stage test, as explained in Ballinger v Mercer Ltd [2014] EWCA Civ 996, [2014] 1 WLR 3597 at [15] and Mulalley & Co Ltd v Martlet Homes Ltd [2022] EWCA Civ 32 at [38]:
(1) Is it reasonably arguable that the opposed amendments are outside the applicable limitation period?
(2) Did the proposed amendments seek to add or substitute a new cause of action?
(3) Does the new cause of action arise out of the same or substantially the same facts as are already an issue in the existing claim?
(4) Should the Court exercise its discretion to allow the amendment?"
"48. As regards Stage 2 (new cause of action) from the recent analysis of the authorities by Longmore LJ in Berezovsky v Abramovich §§59 to 69, the following principles arise:
(1) The "cause of action" is that combination of facts which gives rise to a legal right; (it is the "factual situation" rather than a form of action used as a convenient description of a particular category of factual situation…
(2) Where a claim is based on a breach of duty, whether arising in contract or tort, the question whether an amendment pleads a new cause of action requires comparison of the unamended and amended pleading to determine (a) whether a different duty is pleaded (b) whether the breaches pleaded differ substantially and (c) where appropriate the nature and extent of the damage of which complaint is made… (Where it is the same duty and same breach, new or different loss will not be new cause of action. But where it is a different duty or a different breach, then it is likely to be a new cause of action).
(3) The cause of action is every fact which is material to be proved to entitle the claimant to succeed. Only those facts which are material to be proved are to be taken into account; the pleading of unnecessary allegations or the addition of further instances does not amount to a distinct cause of action. At this stage, the selection of the material facts to define the cause of action must be made at the highest level of abstraction…
(4) In identifying a new cause of action the bare minimum of essential facts abstracted from the original pleading is to be compared with the minimum as it would be constituted under the amended pleading…
(5) The addition or substitution of a new loss is by no means necessarily the addition of a new cause of action: Berezovsky §64 and Aldi §26. Nor is the addition of a new remedy, particularly where the amendment does not add to the "factual situation" already pleaded."
49. As regards Stage 3, ("arising out of the same or substantially the same facts") a number of points emerge, particularly from Ballinger at [34] to [38]:
(1) "Same or substantially the same" is not synonymous with "similar".
(2) Whilst in borderline cases, the answer to this question is or may be substantially a "matter of impression", in others, it must be a question of analysis.
(3) The purpose of the requirement at Stage 3 is to avoid placing the defendant in a position where he will be obliged, after the expiration of the limitation period, to investigate facts and obtain evidence of matters completely outside the ambit of and unrelated to the facts which he could reasonably be assumed to have investigated for the purpose of defending the unamended claim.
(4) It is thus necessary to consider the extent to which the defendants would be required to embark upon an investigation of facts which they would not previously have been concerned to investigate: Ballinger §38. At Stage 3 the court is concerned at a much less abstract level than at Stage 2; it is a matter of considering the whole range of facts which are likely to be adduced at trial…
(5) Finally, in considering what the relevant facts are in the original pleading a material consideration are the factual matters raised in the defence…"
C. THE CLAIM AS CURRENTLY PLEADED
"The Alleged Steinhoff Loan Agreements and the Alleged Formal Loan Agreement were only concluded for the sake of appearance. They were intended, and/or used, to cover the Defendants' and Mr Jooste's fraudulent scheme to extract funds from the Steinhoff Entities to the Defendants through at least the use of circular or layered payments, via Fihag as nominee and/or agent and/or messenger, under which it was at all relevant times intended that the Steinhoff Entities would be repaid less than they advanced and so would suffer loss (the "Fraudulent Scheme"). Based on the Fraudulent Scheme and the loss suffered by the Steinhoff Entities, the Defendants and Mr Jooste intended to enrich themselves and to secure to each other this enrichment at the expense of the Steinhoff Entities."
"As a result of the above, there was no valid, legal or proper basis for any of the Factual and Claimed Payments, because the Alleged Steinhoff Loan Agreements and the Alleged Formal Loan Agreement were void ab initio on the basis of their being sham documents, alternatively because they were induced by fraudulent misrepresentation or mistake on the basis of the false Performance Representations or immorality or abuse of power."
D. THE PROPOSED AMENDMENTS
(1) First as to the alleged misrepresentations relied on which underpin the Claimants' case.
(2) Secondly there is reliance on a newly pleaded and newly defined, "Unlawful Scheme" (replacing the previous Fraudulent Scheme) which relies on extensive new assertions of unlawfulness (both fraud and otherwise);
(3) Thirdly there are fundamental changes to the identity of the parties to the alleged fraud (to include individuals previously said to be induced by the previous representations) ;
(4) Fourthly, Formal is alleged to be liable regardless of the role of Malcolm King and Nicholas King – as a result of the alleged fraud of Paula King (who was never previously said to be a wrongdoer); and
(5) Fifthly entirely new claims relating to the Talgarth Settlement pleaded at paragraphs 34HA-34HD which go directly to the Claimants' title to sue (and which the Defendants say the Claimants could have pleaded long ago, the burden always having been on them to prove title to sue).
F. THE HISTORY OF THE AMENDMENTS
THE PROPOSED AMENDMENTS : DISCUSSION AND DECISION