![]() |
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | |
England and Wales High Court (King's Bench Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (King's Bench Division) Decisions >> Wagner v Bright Station Ventures Management Ltd [2024] EWHC 1612 (KB) (25 June 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/KB/2024/1612.html Cite as: [2024] EWHC 1612 (KB) |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]
KING'S BENCH DIVISION
KINGS BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
DANIEL WAGNER |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
||
BRIGHT STATION VENTURES MANAGEMENT LIMITED |
Defendant |
____________________
THOMAS PLEWMAN KC & WILLIAM HOOPER (instructed by SQUIRE PATTON BOGGS LLP) for the DEFENDANT
Hearing dates: 2nd - 12th May 2023
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE SWEETING
Introduction
The Disputes in Summary
a. the sums claimed were advanced or paid;
b. Mr Wagner was under no personal obligation to make the payments or advances; and
c. they were not made as a gift.
a. work to put the records in order,
b. work to ensure tax compliance, and
c. forensic investigation into the payments made by Mr Wagner.
The Principal Individuals
BSVL & Powa – The Powa Services Agreement
The Bothy Power of Attorney
"Attend and vote on behalf of the Company at any general meeting and at any separate meeting or any adjournment thereof relating to the Company's shareholding in Bright Station Ventures Limited (the "Investment").
BSVM and the nature of its role
"Bright Station Ventures (and its subsidiary, Bright Station Ventures Management Limited) (together "BSV") operated as a holding company with its primary asset being Powa Technologies[...] BSV operated as a service provider to Powa and other BSV investee companies (BuyaPowa, Attraqt, Aigua Media etc) whereby it contracted with utility providers (property, power, telecoms etc) and re-charged these services to the investee companies [...] . BSVM was set up as the trading entity and BSV was the holding company."
"As and when those costs were incurred by BSVM, they would be later appropriately apportioned by me in the ledgers for the other group companies where they were also benefiting from those services. I recall that, on occasion, I would raise invoices between the group companies as part of that apportionment and ensure that the relevant VAT payments were also apportioned."
Q…I think you agree with Mr Derbyshire -- and your statement, I think, is perhaps even less equivocal than his on this -- that BSVM was the group service company?
A. Agreed.
Q. You say rightly in your statement that there was no formal documentation recording the role of BSVM as the group service company?
A. Yes.
Q. You didn't ever at the time consider there had to be such documentation, did you?
A. No.
Q. And nobody else, as far as you are aware, at the time, ever suggested that there ought to be some sort of formal documentation?
A. Not at the time, no.
Q. And you were content, as was Mr Derbyshire, for Mr Wagner to be responsible for the running of that service company in terms of its expenditure on rent?
A. I was, yes.
Q. On telephones?
A. Yes.
Q. On employee expenses claims?
A. Yes.
"I do not remember anything formal or any specific documents between any of the companies reflecting their relationship and my view is that at the outset there was probably not a fixed idea as to how the relationship would work it was something that developed over time."
VC247, BSL & Rezolve
"…the Assignor hereby assigns and transfers all of his right, title and interest in and to all the debts owed to the Assignor by Bright Station Ventures Management Limited, a company registered in England under Company number 07710419. As at today's date, the amount owing to the Assignor amounts to GBP Sterling £733,222.24 and US Dollars $166,896".
Powa PLC
a. On 29 October 2015, Mr Wagner lent Powa PLC $1m;
b. On the same day Mr Wagner gave a personal guarantee for a loan of £600,000 from a Mr Nic de Boinville to Powa PLC. There is a back-to-back indemnity, also dated 29 October, from BSVL agreeing to underwrite that guarantee addressed to Mr Wagner and signed by him as Chairman of BSVL;
c. On 2 December 2015 BSVL lent Powa PLC $1m;
d. On 11 December 2015, Mr Wagner gave a personal guarantee for a loan of $2m from Mr Ben White to Powa PLC. Having advanced the sum agreed, Mr White joined the board of Powa PLC, his appointment being approved at a Board Meeting on 13 January 2016, and;
e. On 17 December 2015, Mr Wagner gave a personal guarantee for a loan of $2m from Mr Stuart Roden to Powa PLC.
The Powa Administration and its aftermath
"… having to close down 18 worldwide subsidiary offices of Powa as I was still a serving director, and the company directors all faced threats of potential criminal liability in some countries."
"After the sale of IP, Deloitte informed me that I was the director of these subsidiaries and it was my responsibility to close them down. In order to do so, I had to engage with lawyers all over the world to close down the entities in an orderly manner. This was expensive in places like Asia and some countries in Europe as liabilities needed to be settled as well as lawyers' fees.
Whilst BSV had no liquidity, I advanced the money on BSVs behalf to make sure these entities were closed and liabilities - both criminal and commercial - were lifted from me (as director)".
"So, Deloitte, when they took control of Powa, they basically -- there was subsidiaries, and they deliberately left all of those subsidiaries as, like, "zombie" companies, and the decision they took, it was kind of cynical, but the decision they took was because all -- they had obviously carefully evaluated those 18 companies before determining not to touch them. They realised that I was a director on all of them, in Taiwan, Singapore, Germany, everywhere, all over the world. None of them had any money. Most of them had liabilities to the topco. And so, by not putting them into -- there was no value of them taking the administration of them because it would have been a cost to them. By leaving them to me as a director, I had all the responsibility to close them down, finance any liabilities in countries where I would have had a criminal -- in some countries you have a criminal liability if you do not solvently close down a company, like Italy, from the top of my head Singapore, I think Germany there is an element of it, and other countries. So in the aftermath of Powa going down, amongst all this other stuff that was going on, my Lord, there was a huge amount of intense activity all over the world, which I didn't have really the money for, to close these companies down, where I had to take on counsel. A lot of those things were never charged to BSV and still aren't part of this -- I'm not even sure if any of them made it into our claim here. But I had to pay lawyers all over the world to close them down."
"Legal fees:
a. £3,500 and €17,000 to Taylor Wessing for Powa Office closures
b. Payment of USD$7,247.00 to Lee & Li Attorney-at-Law - Taiwan for old debt owed to this company for services provided for Powa Taiwan so that they will release documents to enable preparation of dissolution of Powa Taiwan
c. Payment of USD$7,000.00 to Baker & Mckenzie - Taiwan against dissolution of Powa Taiwan
d. Payment of USD$15,000.00 to Lex Compass Singapore against closure of Powa Singapore
e. Payment of SGD$2,000.00 to Lex Compass Singapore against closure of Powa Singapore f. £55,000 to Mishcon de Reya for work carried out in 2015"
"This is the first I have heard of all these contracts between BSV and the Powa subsidiaries and the investment in BuyaPowa.
During the last four years I have done my best to make sure that all the procedural requirements of running a company with Isle of Man domicile have been complied with. This has not always been easy as I have often not been advised of planned developments until very late in the process.
Recently this "late in the process" has become "after the event has happened". In this scenario it is not possible for me to go on as the Chief Financial Officer of BSV. Therefore I am resigning with immediate effect from all my involvements with BSV companies."
"Please find a sample of the contract I was referring to attached. It was signed by Polina Atherton in the IOM in September 2015 and is one of 18 similar agreements. Were you around at that time? I am surprised you were not involved in some way.
Regarding the urgent investment last week into BuyaPowa. I apologise for not reaching out. Ivor Dunbar had advanced the monies and we repaid him. I had our previous £150k loan wrapped up into an 'at call' loan agreement for the £150k and the new £120k (also attached). This is much better for BSV as it happens.
Both Henry and I have been dealing with a lot of challenging and time sensitive issues and although not an excuse for breaching protocol, I would ask you to reconsider your resignation with the commitment from me to ensure this doesn't happen again. Will you do that?"
"All my access to emails (including BSV) was taken away by Deloitte, and all the company bank accounts were frozen. This meant that I had to be extremely focused and prioritise all my available time such that many day-to-day tasks had to be deferred or could not be completed until matters had calmed down at some time in the future. In retrospect, I accept that these circumstances meant that I did not always fully and formally record matters in writing or hold formal meetings. This was simply not possible. … I was at all times fully transparent with the other directors of BSV and with its shareholders. I considered that all my actions were not only objectively in the best interests of the BSV group but also that they were understood and approved by those other directors and shareholders."
"In the meantime, I have incorporated Rezolve Limited within which I have granted BSV shares representing just over 10%. This new business is quickly building momentum around an improved 'PowaTag' proposition. I have been very careful not to breach any IP or other rights owned by 964 Bidco."
"We have discussed this issue with Mr Wagner, Mr Dunbar and other representatives of the Powa Lead Shareholders, who are confident that any such arguments can be strongly and effectively refuted."
"Having thought about matters overnight and considered the content of our call of yesterday it is with regret that I confirm my decision to resign from the board of BSV with immediate effect. I also had a conversation with Michael yesterday and he is of the same view in respect to his position. The reasons are as outlined in my emails of Tuesday the 4th April and Monday the 10th April in addition to the realisation that despite best endeavours I am not able to secure that a dialogue takes place between the various parties with a view to resolving the issues, I am simply not able to continue in the role on a Company where there is not majority shareholder support for the board as currently constituted. Whilst that support may actually be achievable currently there is no clear visibility on the matter absent a formal vote on the various issues As indicated our resignation means that the Company is not capable absent new appointments to undertake any activity other than to secure alternate appointments, the responsibility for new appointments is vested in the remaining Director and / or the shareholders. The resignation does create the opportunity for the board to be reconstituted with nominations from potentially both disparate shareholder groups in line with a resolution you make to appoint additional board members and in line with the EGM request for shareholder representation inbound yesterday."
"It was noted that Dan Wagner had been funding a claim ("DW's Claim") on his own account for the last year which is similar to BSV's Claim and, in consequence, his interest could potentially be seen as conflicting with that of the Company in respect of the need to ensure that DW's Claim was supported by the Company's....
It was noted that the Company would benefit from any claim brought against Wellington, Ben White et al in any event due to its ownership of Powa (c. 70%) and its debt with Powa (c. $10m) but:
...Funding the Claim would be highly speculative;
…The Claim could go on for many years and would therefore need considerable management time and input; and
...The costs of pursuing the Claim in the courts could be materially in excess of £10 million.
It was also noted that Dan Wagner has been funding DW's Claim for the last year and is willing to continue to pursue it. It was further noted that if DW's Claim is successful, the Company would benefit as a creditor insofar as any settlement or compensation received by Powa would, in the majority, be paid out to the Company due to its large debt and equity position. If DW's Claim is unsuccessful however, the Company would not have diverted valuable cash and management resources that currently it doesn't have.
It was noted that the timing of any action either on BSV's Claim or on DW's Claim was pressing and that, absent any available funds, it could be in the Company's best interests not to pursue BSV's Claim at this point...
The directors then considered the Company's financial position, its ability to pay its debts as they fell due and the current state of its balance sheet. It was noted that there was no cash available to pursue BSV's Claim. It was also noted that whilst DW is going ahead with DW's Claim this does not prevent the Company from going ahead with BSV's Claim if it wanted to or had the means to do so at some point in the future.
Consequently, IT WAS RESOLVED THAT the Company not pursue BSV's or any Claim at this point but would seek to benefit from the success of DW's Claim."
Q. You will accept this is a formal decision by BSV not to pursue a claim itself and, instead, to leave you to continue a claim that you were funding on your own account?
A. Correct.
[...] Q. And I will simply put to you that in that context, for you to suggest that now the costs of you doing so should be borne by BSV, or indeed in this case by BSVM, is plainly at variance with what was factually agreed at the time.
A. I think that that is a fair point, yes.
"There is a dispute in the Courts of the voting rights of a block of shares known as Bothy. In view of this, to be determined in the Courts and to give the parties a chance to determine the outcome, the poll will be conducted on Tuesday 15 August at noon by the Company Secretary. The business of this meeting being formally concluded, I declare the meeting closed."
Litigation
"a. bear his own costs of the Wagner Application and of the Aquila Application and shall not be entitled to claim them as either an expense or as a creditor in the Administration; and
b. contribute to the costs of Aquila of and occasioned by the Wagner Application and his opposition to the Aquila Application in the total sum of £187,000,"
"4.2 DW irrevocably agrees that he has no rights whatsoever, whether in law, in equity or otherwise over Bothy's shares in BSVL whether (without prejudice to the generality of the foregoing) under the Bothy Undertaking, by a power of attorney, or otherwise.
4.3 DW irrevocably agrees that he has no right in law or in equity to require Bothy to execute any power of attorney pursuant to the Bothy Undertaking or otherwise.
4.4 DW and Bothy irrevocably agree and acknowledge that, in so far as they may exist, any and all powers or rights granted to DW by Bothy pursuant to the Bothy Undertaking, any power of attorney or otherwise are hereby terminated with immediate effect."
Legal Expenses and Costs
The Administration Proceedings
The IOM Proceedings and the Bothy Proceedings - Settlement
"subject to clause 10 above, each party shall bear their own costs in relation to the Proceedings and this Deed".
The IOM Proceedings - Invoices
The Bothy Proceedings -Invoices
Personal Cash Advances
"If money is proved, or admitted, to have been paid by A to B, then in the absence of any circumstances suggesting a presumption of advancement, there is prima facie an obligation to repay the money; accordingly if B claims that the money was intended as a gift, the onus is on him to prove this fact."
"…advanced money to BSVM to meet some obligations after the Powa bankruptcy and because all the other accounts were frozen. Many payments had to be made to close down Powa offices around the world, pay legal fees and other costs that were left after Powa went out of business."
The Corporate Advances by BSL and Rezolve
The VC247 Advances
"One of those companies was VC247. It was the only company -- it had about £100 in the bank, or maybe less. I don't know exactly. It was one company that I had a credit card and access online to the bank account. At that point, Deloitte had taken all the bank account management, all our cards to access Barclays for Bright Station, Bright Station Limited, Bright Station Ventures. All of them were taken -- were closed down. So the only bank account I had -- I didn't have online banking, sorry. I had a chequebook and a credit card, or a debit card."
"… funnelled consultancy revenue and other elements of my activity to generate cash into that vehicle and then I passed that money into Bright Station Ventures to settle debts."
"I am aware that there was an assignment of the loans of VC247 to Mr Wagner on 10 of December 2018. I was told by Mr Wagner that he wished to close this company but, before doing so, I knew that it was necessary to deal with the fact that VC247 had made substantial transfers of money into BSVM, and that the money was still owed by BSVM to VC247. I discussed this with Mr Wagner, and it was decided that the best way to solve this problem was for there to be a legal assignment of that debt to Mr Wagner personally. I drafted an assignment document and sent it to Mr Wagner for his approval. I recall that I later witnessed Mr Wagner's signature on this document, at the offices at 80 New Bond Street. Following the assignment, VC247 was closed."
"Because in dissolving the business, that would have gone forever, if I hadn't have done that. So it was suggested that I do it formally and I said that's a great idea, and we drafted a letter, held a virtual board meeting and that was it."
The Counterclaim
Credit cards
"8.1 The Company shall reimburse (or precure the reimbursement of) all reasonable expenses wholly, properly and necessarily incurred by the Employee in the course of the Appointment, subject to production of VAT receipts or other appropriate evidence of payment.
8.2 The Employee shall abide by the Company's policies on expenses as set out in the Staff Handbook from time to time.
8.3 Any credit card supplied to the Employee by the Company shall be used only for expenses incurred by him in the course of the Appointment."
Jeff Max
Anthony Caplin
Accountancy fees
Joanne Slater/Eventess
The de Boinville Indemnity and Powa Loan
"Mr de Boinville lent £586,500 in October 2015 to Powa Technologies with Dan Wagner (DW) giving Personal Guaranty (PG). Repayment of £330,000 has been made so far between March and June as creditor is holding him personally liable and pursuing accordingly. Balance due by 30th June is £274,801 including interest of £18,301"
"As we came to the end of November 2015, BSV had no cash to prop up Powa for payroll so the only way the company could continue to trade was through third party convertible loans. $8.5m was provided during this time and some required me to provide a personal guarantee. Had I not done so, we would have had to close the business down. $5m in PGs were given of which $4m to Ben White and his conspirators. The remaining $1m needed to be settled when the business went under and BSV has now settled in full".
Q…Well, they were extraordinary times in 2015 and 2016 for Powa, were they not?
A. Yes.
Q. And you would very likely have been aware at the time that the way it worked -- and I quite accept this is not standard procedure, but the way it worked was Mr de Boinville lent a large amount to Powa, that was guaranteed by Mr Wagner and he then had a what he calls a back-to-back indemnity with BSVL. Is that right?
A. I don't recall that at the time. I don't recall that we were aware of the back-to-back indemnity.
Q. Is it fair to say you might have been aware but six years later you simply can't say?
A. That's probably fair .
Q. But in any event, whether or not you were aware of a back-to-back indemnity, it looks to me as if you took the view that it was appropriate for BSV to be repaying Mr de Boinville's loan on behalf of Powa?
A. At that point, yes.
Q. Yes. And that's because, as we discussed with Mr Derbyshire, Powa was -- I can't remember whether it was you or Mr Derbyshire used this language -- was the jewel in the crown of the BSVL group, prior to its demise?
A. Yes, yes.
Foreign Legal fees
Mobile Phone Charges
"Well, many of those numbers are data numbers. They are numbers used by dongles in my computer for internet access when I'm on the road, as well as my phones, I have two mobile phones and one of them has two SIMs in it , so I have three SIMs so -- but bear in mind, it does sound maybe excessive, my Lord, that I have six numbers or six contracts, but I'm a mobile commerce executive. I mean that's my business. So I have different types of phones to test out software and stuff . That was the case at Powa. And these contracts which you're referring to and the Vodafone contract was transferred from Venda, where I was running an ecommerce business, to Bright Station Ventures in 2011, I think, or 2010 and just remained there ever since. Because transferring mobile phone numbers to a new corporate payee is a challenge so it wasn't appropriate to -- it was just easier to recharge them back to the various companies, which is what we did most of the time to Powa and others."
Henry Agoh
"Q. Did you know he was the bookkeeper for BSVM?
A. Yes, upon reflection, yes, I did.
Q. As well as for some of the other companies such as Powa?
A. Not necessarily aware but I would expect him to be, yes.
Q. And to the extent that Mr Agoh was providing those services , it would not have been of concern to you that he was being paid for those services by BSVM?
A. No.
Q. Indeed, you would have expected that to be the case?
A. Yes"
Private Healthcare
Salary & The BSVL Services Agreement
a. The statutory directors were entirely unaware of any agreement by the company to pay a salary to Mr Wagner; there was no reference to the service agreement in the board minutes, it was not formally discussed with the board, and it was not mentioned in correspondence until it came to be relied on.
b. No salary was accounted for in BSVL's accounts as an accrual.
c. There was no suggestion that the other shareholders were aware of the agreement.
d. There had been no disclosure of an entitlement to salary under s.148 of the Isle of Man Companies Act 1931.
e. No payroll or tax records were produced which referenced the agreement or any payments made under it. An agreement to work as the CEO of a Manx company was not consistent with BSVL's offshore status given that Mr Wagner was permanently resident in the UK.
f. The metadata on the first version provided by Mr Wagner indicated that it was produced in 2017 giving rise to the suggestion that it was created later than its ostensible date of the 1st of January 2012. A subsequent document with 2012 metadata was incorrectly dated.
g. The first express reference to a document dated the 1st of January 2012 was made in the Reply and Defence to Counterclaim.
Worksmart
Books and Records
Consequential Matters