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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Kahangi & Ors v Nourizadeh [2009] EWHC 2451 (QB) (09 October 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2009/2451.html Cite as: [2009] EWHC 2451 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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(1) SAIYED REZA QUREISHI KAHANGI (2) MOHAMMED TAHERI (3) SWIFT COLLEGE LTD (4) SWIFT INVESTMENT & DEVELOPMENT COMPANY LTD |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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DR ALI REZA NOURIZADEH |
Defendant |
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Richard Parkes QC and David Hirst (instructed by J Tehrani) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 2 October 2009
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Eady :
a) that the First and Second Claimants, on their own behalf and on behalf of the Third Claimant company, have fraudulently obtained large sums of money from a substantial number of Iranian students by promising them places on educational courses at a college in England which does not exist;
b) that there are reasonable grounds to suspect that the First and Second Claimants have bribed or improperly persuaded corrupt officials handling educational matters at the Iranian Ministry of Science, and officials at the Iranian Ministry of Defence, to grant exemptions from military service where student applications to the non-existent Swift College were concerned, thereby assisting the First and Second Claimants in perpetrating the fraud;
c) that the Third Claimant exists only as a vehicle for the First and Second Claimants' fraudulent enterprise;
d) that the First and Second Claimants, on their own behalf and/or on behalf of the Third Claimant and/or the Third Claimant through its director Ahmad Mokhtari, caused or permitted their employee or agent Ahmad Mokhtari to threaten their victims that they would be reported to the Iranian military authorities and to the UK authorities, with consequent loss of their right to remain in the UK and deportation to Iran, if they complained about their treatment at the hands of the First, Second and/or Third Claimants;
e) that the First and Second Claimants, on their own behalf and/or on behalf of the Third and/or Fourth Claimants, have made sinister threats and have offered corrupt inducements to the Defendant to persuade him not to publish any more articles about them;
f) that there are reasonable grounds to suspect that the Fourth Claimant is a bogus company and that the First, Second and Fourth Claimants are engaged in money laundering.
There is also a plea of Reynolds privilege.
"The judiciary in Iran remained heavily under the influence of executive and religious government authorities. The functioning Islamic Revolutionary Courts severely undermined judicial authority in the country. Lawyers were not adequately protected in exercising their functions by an effective professional association."
It also included the following passage:
"The Supreme Leader maintains direct control over all internal security and police forces, the judiciary and the state broadcasters.… According to Article 57 of the Constitution, the legislature, the judiciary and the executive, all must function under the 'absolute rule of the Supreme Leader'."
"The judiciary in Iran is not free from government influence. Religious minorities, women and men are not treated equally before the courts. Although the Constitution endorses certain rights of fair trial, these are not respected in practice."
It is perhaps unnecessary to cite any further passages from this document. It clearly presents a troubling picture and, what is more, there is no evidence before me to suggest that the report was either inaccurate at the time it was published or that there have been improvements in the position since.
"Choice of forum clauses whereby the parties submit to the jurisdiction of a foreign (i.e. non-Iranian) court are permitted provided that there are certain disputes, such as disputes involving real property located in Iran, that fall within exclusive jurisdiction of Iranian courts. Foreign court judgments are enforceable in Iran subject to obtaining the judicial recognition of that judgment from the Iranian court. The granting of judicial recognition is subject to certain conditions, with one of the most important of which being the reciprocal treatment of Iranian court judgments by the courts of the jurisdiction where the foreign court judgment has been issued. Iran is not a party to a multinational treaty for the reciprocal enforcement of judgments and has entered into bilateral treaties for such purpose only with a very few countries (for example, no such bilateral treaty exists between the UK and Iran)."
Again, no evidence has been produced on behalf of the Claimants for the purpose of refuting this assessment of the situation.
"1– According to Iranian law enforcement of foreign court judgments is subject to judicial recognition of the relevant foreign court judgment by the Iranian court of competent jurisdiction and the granting of such judicial recognition is subject to satisfaction of the following conditions:
(1) reciprocal treatment of Iranian court judgments by courts of the jurisdiction in which the judgment is issued (i.e. English courts, in this case);
…
2– To the best of our knowledge, there is no treaty between Iran and UK for reciprocal enforcement of judgments. As a result, the requirement of reciprocity will, in practice, be the more difficult one to satisfy. Although affidavits of English lawyers and scholars quoting cases where an English court has enforced an Iranian court judgment should be sufficient evidence to satisfy this condition, due to relatively limited cases of enforcement of foreign judgments in Iran, to the best of our knowledge (noting that Iranian court judgments are not published) there is no established practice as to standard of proof required for satisfaction of this condition.
In conclusion, absent a treaty for reciprocal enforcement of judgments between Iran and UK, enforcing an English court judgment in Iran could prove to be very difficult and, at best, a lengthy process with no reasonable guarantees as to the outcome."