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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Filatona Trading Ltd & Anor v Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan UK LLP (Re Costs) [2024] EWHC 2751 (Comm) (30 October 2024) URL: https://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2024/2751.html Cite as: [2024] EWHC 2751 (Comm) |
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KING'S BENCH DIVISION
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
COMMERCIAL COURT
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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(1) FILATONA TRADING LIMITED (2) OLEG VLADIMIROVICH DERIPASKA |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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QUINN EMANUEL URQUHART & SULLIVAN UK LLP |
Defendant |
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Antony White KC (instructed by Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan UK LLP) for the Defendants
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Calver:
The costs dispute before the court
a. The name and address of the "business intelligence consultancy" which provided the Russian language copy of the Glavstroy Report to the Defendant on or around 27 September 2019.
b. The name(s) and address(es) of the natural persons at the "business intelligence consultancy" who were involved in the procurement of the Glavstroy Report and its provision to the Defendant.
Legal Principles
"29.... Norwich Pharmacal applications are not ordinary adversarial proceedings, where the general rule is that the unsuccessful party pays the costs of the successful party. They are akin to proceedings for pre-action disclosure where costs are governed by CPR r 48.3. That rule, we believe, reflects the just outcome and is consistent with the views of Lord Reid and Lord Cross in the Norwich Pharmacal case. In general, the costs incurred should be recovered from the wrongdoer rather than from an innocent party. That should be the result, even if such a party writes a letter to the applicant asking him to draw to the court's attention to matters which might influence a court to refuse the application. Of course such a letter would need to be drawn to the attention of the court. Each case will depend on its facts and in some cases it may be appropriate for the party from whom disclosure is sought to appear in court to assist. In such a case he should not be prejudiced by being ordered to pay costs.
30. The court when considering its order as to costs after a successful Norwich Pharmacal application should consider all the circumstances. In a normal case the applicant should be ordered to pay the costs of the party making the disclosure including the costs of making the disclosure. There may be cases where the circumstances require a different order, but we do not believe they include cases where: (a) the party required to make the disclosure had a genuine doubt that the person seeking the disclosure was entitled to it; (b) the party was under an appropriate legal obligation not to reveal the information, or where the legal position was not clear, or the party had a reasonable doubt as to the obligations; or (c) the party could be subject to proceedings if disclosure was voluntary; or (d) the party would or might suffer damage by voluntarily giving the disclosure; or (e) the disclosure would or might infringe a legitimate interest of another."
"The Court of Appeal also made the point (at para 29 of the judgment) that Norwich Pharmacal applications are not ordinary adversarial proceedings, where the general rule is that the unsuccessful party pays the costs of the successful party, and that in general it is just that the applicant should recover its costs of obtaining the information that it needs from the wrongdoer rather than from an innocent party. It is relevant in that regard that, if the party from whom disclosure is sought is ordered to bear its own costs, or even to pay costs incurred by the applicant, it has no means (unlike the applicant) of recovering those costs from the wrongdoer".
"I think that the Rules implicitly recognise that it will not usually be unreasonable for [that person] to require the applicant to satisfy the court that he ought to be granted the relief which he seeks. The reason for that lies, I think, in a recognition that a private person who is not a party to existing litigation which brings with it an obligation of disclosure is entitled to maintain the privacy of his papers unless sufficient grounds can be shown for overriding it and that it is for the person seeking to invade that privacy to justify doing so."
"These authorities suggest that the same costs principles should apply to applications for disclosure under CPR r 46.1 as to Norwich Pharmacal applications and other applications against innocent third parties. The principles are that:
(1) it is reasonable for an innocent third party to seek to protect private information by resisting a court order;
(2) as between an innocent claimant and an innocent third party it is more unjust for the third party to bear the costs than the claimant, because it is the claimant who is invoking the legal process to obtain a benefit, and the fact that the benefit is one to which he is legally entitled is not enough to justify an innocent third party having to be out of pocket;
(3) in general the costs should be recovered from the wrongdoer, not the innocent third party, which the third party has no means to achieve;
(4) the principle does not treat a third party as entitled to do no more than adopt a neutral position before it is at risk of having to bear or pay the costs of resisting the application; active opposition, albeit unsuccessful, is not of itself unreasonable behaviour or sufficient to deprive the third party of the benefit of the general principle that the applicant should pay its costs;
(5) if it is reasonable for the third party to resist disclosure, it is entitled to decide on what basis to do so, and with what evidence, without losing its costs protection, provided that it does take an unreasonable course which unnecessarily increases the costs;
(6) there may be cases which require a different order but that will not usually be the case (a) where the third party had a genuine doubt whether the applicant was entitled to disclosure; or (b) where the third party was under a legal obligation not to disclose; or (c) where the legal position was not clear; or (d) where the third party could be subject to legal proceedings or might suffer damage if it gave voluntary disclosure; or (e) where disclosure would or might infringe a legitimate interest of another."
"it is reasonable to expect a person who receives a request to provide information, supported by evidence that the person has been mixed up, albeit innocently, in wrongdoing and that the information is needed for the purpose of proceedings against the wrongdoer, at least to indicate his position and to say whether he is prepared to provide the information voluntarily and, if not, whether and on what grounds he will oppose an application for a Norwich Pharmacal order."
Analysis
"On balance and taking all of the circumstances into account, I am not willing to make the serious finding that QE ought to have known that they were facilitating arguable wrongdoing at the time when the section 68 proceedings were issued in reliance upon the Glavstroy Report. However, I do find that (i) after they submitted the report and RPC raised serious questions about its authenticity just 7 days later, and (ii) after Mr. McGregor set out in his 12th witness statement served on 30 May 2020 the indicia of the alleged forgery in detail, QE failed to make the urgent enquiries which they ought to have made at that stage to satisfy themselves as to the authenticity of the report. (That was particularly so in circumstances where they accept that they did not know the ultimate source of the Glavstroy Report, and therefore how it came into being)."
(1) the general rule that the costs incurred by the claimant on a Norwich Pharmacal application should be recovered from the wrongdoer rather than from an innocent party;
(2) that QE is a highly reputable law firm which was motivated by a concern to maintain the privacy of its client's affairs;
(3) Mr. Greeno's genuine belief referred to above; and
(4) that if QE is ordered to bear its own costs it has no means (unlike the Claimants) of recovering those costs from the wrongdoer.
Note 1 which are recited in the judgment. [Back]
Note 2 QE served two witness statements of Mr. Greeno (consisting of 26 and 9 pages respectively). [Back]