[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> United Company Rusal Plc & Ors v 1) HSBC Bank Plc & Ors [2011] EWHC 404 (QB) (01 March 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2011/404.html Cite as: [2011] EWHC 404 (QB) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
1) UNITED COMPANY RUSAL PLC 2) UNITED COMPANY RUSAL INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT LLC 3) MAXIM SOKOV |
Applicants |
|
- and - |
||
1) HSBC BANK PLC 2) CITIGROUP FINANCIAL MARKETS LTD 3) DEBEVOISE & PLIMPTON LLP |
Respondents |
____________________
Mr Richard Handyside QC (instructed by Eversheds LLP) for the First Respondent
Mr Stephen Phillips QC and Mr William Edwards (instructed by Allen & Overy LLP) for the Second Respondent
Mr Timothy Dutton QC and Mr David Head (instructed by Debevoise & Plimpton LLP) for the Third Respondent
Hearing dates: 17 and 18 February 2011
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Tugendhat :
"If through no fault of his own a person gets mixed up in the tortious acts of others so as to facilitate their wrongdoing he may incur no personal liability but he comes under a duty to assist the person who has been wronged by giving him full information and disclosing the identity of the wrongdoers. I do not think that it matters whether he became so mixed up by voluntary action on his part or because it was his duty to do what he did. It may be that if this causes him expense the person seeking the information ought to reimburse him. But justice requires that he should co-operate in righting the wrong if he unwittingly facilitated its perpetration."
i) Was there arguably wrongdoing?
ii) Was Debevoise, however innocently, involved in the arguable wrongdoing?
iii) Is disclosure of the information necessary?
iv) Is the information sought within the scope of the available relief?
v) Should the court exercise its discretion in favour of granting relief?
CHRONOLOGY OF EVENTS
"(5) … On the sale of treasury shares to Trafigura, shareholders should be aware that the Board has never reviewed or approved this transaction and is still not aware of its terms. Under Russian corporate law, offshore subsidiaries are wholly controlled by the management of the company and management appoints directors of those companies. While this practice is completely alien to those of us that operates with a background of English or US corporate governance, Russian corporate practice is completely different with regards to the management of assets held by subsidiaries. In fairness to the management, the board has been pushing for the disposal of non core holdings and these treasury shares are certainly one of those. We would however, have preferred that this disposal had been discussed and the terms outlined to the board. This will be a future topic of discussion between the Norilsk Nickel Board and the management of the company. Needless to say, Gerard and I were unhappy with the way this transaction was conducted and believe it should have been fully reviewed by the Board regardless of the legal niceties."
" - [Rusal] is misinforming the public, saying the deal was of a non-cash character. [Norilsk Nickel] expect to receive profit from the deal, it is a cash deal and was done on market terms.
- Under the laws of Russian Federation this deal should not be put for consideration of [Norilsk Nickel]'s Board of Directors since indirect subsidiaries of the Company are involved. Moreover [Rusal] itself on numerous occasions requested to sell these shares, that is what was implemented.
- [Rusal]'s statement that the deal aims at 'evasion' of Federal law, which regulates foreign investment in the country's strategic enterprises, is an absurd. Since the deal involves a share holding of less than 10% of [Norilsk Nickel]'s statutory capital, Trafigura is not required to obtain the permits under this law. Even more so, Company's subsidiaries selling she shares never held 10% of the shares or more".
"Tuesday management seemed to strengthen its hand, announcing a deal to sell an 8% stake that the company held indirectly to Trafigura… The deal headed off Rusal's challenge to management's right to vote the 8% stake, and gave the company cash to help cover a bid for Rusal's stake.
The deal opens the way for management and Mr Potanin to form a block of shareholders with enough shares to wield effective control, Mr Potanin said. That would 'lock up' Rusal's stake, making it less valuable because it would have less influence, he added. Rusal rejects this argument".
"… [Norilsk Nickel]'s Management is positive that in current conditions it is a logical step facilitating the resolution of the corporate conflict which hampers the growth of shareholder value and diverts the resources of the Company… The deadline for [Rusal]'s response … is … on December 28. We have to state that in case the negotiations on the proposed transaction fail, [Norilsk Nickel] will have to implement other means to neutralize negative effects of the shareholders' conflict on current operation of [Norilsk Nickel] and its strategic development. Striving to increase shareholder value …. [Norilsk Nickel] will be intending to present a general buy back proposal for approval by the Board….
It should be noted… that if [Rusal] rejects the offer, [Norilsk Nickel] will not be able to propose to the aluminium producer such lucrative terms for exiting its investment in [Norilsk Nickel] in the short and medium term".
"[p15] … This Offer provides security holders who wish to sell all or a portion of their interest in [Norilsk Nickel] an opportunity to do so at a premium to market price and provides Corbiere with a block of securities that may be used for financial and business purposes. Although the Offer is open by its terms to all eligible security holders, Interros, a private investment company beneficially owned by Vladimir O. Potanin, notified us that it did not intend to tender any securities in this Offer
[p16] … Corbiere will be considered the owner of the securities, entitled to vote in its own discretion ….
[p36] … If you … tender and transfer your Common Shares … and those securities are accepted by Corbiere, you will not able to vote at the Extraordinary General Meeting of Shareholders on March 11, 2011 … Under Russian law, Corbiere will be entitled to exercise voting rights with respect to such securities at such meeting in its discretion in the procedure established by law. Corbiere has not yet determined how it will vote such securities at such meeting".
"On December 20, 2010, Norilsk Nickel announced that its indirect subsidiaries, including Corbiere, had entered into agreements with [Trafigura] to sell the ADRs held by them and representing approximately 8% of Norilsk Nickel's share capital (the "Sale"). The proceeds from the Sale will be used for general corporate purposes of Norilsk Nickel group. Norilsk Nickel understands that Trafigura has no current plans to increase its stake in the Company to over 10% of Norilsk Nickel's share capital, which would require an application for approval under Russian Federal Law dated April 29, 2008 No. 57-FZ "On Foreign Investments in Commercial Entities Having Strategic Importance for the Defense of the Country and the Security of the State" (the "Russian Strategic Investment Law"). As a result of this Sale it is expected that the number of Common Shares and ADRs held by Norilsk Nickel's direct and indirect subsidiaries will be reduced to less than 1% (without taking into account any Common Shares and ADS that may be required in this Offer). In connection with the Sale, Trafigura entered into a lock-up agreement pursuant to which it undertook not to sell the ADRs acquired in the Sale to a non-affiliated third party until after June 30, 2011. It is currently expected that Trafigura will not participate in this Offer in respect of the securities acquired by it as a result of the Sale.
On December 20, 2010, a court in Krasnoyarsk issued a ruling that it would consider a claim by one of Norilsk Nickel's principal shareholders, UC Rusal, to require Norilsk Nickel to produce certain bookkeeping, accounting and corporate records of Norilsk Nickel. Although Corbiere believes that the Offer is being carried out in full conformity with all applicable laws, UC Rusal in October 2008 challenged in the Russian courts the validity of a prior buyback of shares, and we cannot rule out that there may be litigation challenging the Offer. Any such litigation could, in addition to seeking monetary damages, also seek to enjoin completion of the Offer, which could delay payment made in respect of any tendered securities or prohibit Corbiere from returning any securities tendered by it while such litigation is pending".
"- The Company believes that its shares are significantly undervalued compared to most of its international peers
- The Company has significant value on its balance sheet
- The Company is well placed to generate strong cash flow …
- The Program will contribute to the optimization of its capital structure".
"3) Once it was clear that the offer to acquire the Rusal shares by the company was not likely to proceed, at least in the short term, the board discussed various alternatives for long term shareholder value creation including dividend policy, share buybacks (both on market and via tender), special dividends etc... At this time, the company is essentially debt free and through a combination of the proceeds of asset sales, operational cash flow and moderate borrowing can easily afford to return capital in some form to its shareholders. The Board has been advised by Citibank and UBS that Norilsk shares are undervalued compared to large international competitors and closing this gap is desirable. Given various sensitivities to the absolute level of cash dividends paid in any period of time, it makes sense to consider share buybacks, that all shareholders can participate in equally, as an efficient way of returning capital to shareholders. The majority of the board approved a program that will involve share buybacks at it Dec 28th meeting. Gerard and I believed it would have been preferable to delay this decision somewhat until a complete financial review of the long term strategic production plan and full assessment of the capital requirements of this plan has been complete."
"Our clients have made this application against [the Respondents] since our clients believe that they will hold information and documentation in this jurisdiction that will enable our clients to properly identify, formulate and prosecute their claims in Nevis, Russia and elsewhere… [after referring to Mr Sokov's application] … Our clients believe that Corbiere has instructed [the Respondents] to provide financial and legal services to it in the context of [the Trafigura Deal and the Buy Back Deal]. The purpose of this letter is therefore to provide Corbiere (and its directors) with an opportunity to instruct [the Respondents] to consent to the terms of our clients' application and to provide us with the information and documentation sought by the terms of the draft order…".
"… recommends to shareholders to vote For on the first item of the EGM and to approve the pre-termination of the powers of the Board members and re-elect the Board. This recommendation is given taking into consideration the recent changes in the Company's share capital and appearance of a new shareholder".
RUSSIAN LAW
THE STRENGTH OF THE CASE REQUIRED TO BE SHOWN
THE PURPOSES FOR WHICH DISCLOSURE MAY BE REQUIRED
"I recognise that an ancillary jurisdiction ought to be exercised with caution, and that care should be taken not to make orders which conflict with those of the court seised of the substantive proceedings. But I do not accept that interim relief should be limited to that which would be available in the court trying the substantive dispute; or that by going further we would be seeking to remedy defects in the laws of other countries. The principle which underlies article 24 is that each contracting state should be willing to assist the courts of another contracting state by providing such interim relief as would be available if its own courts were seised of the substantive proceedings: see Alltrans Inc. v. Interdom Holdings Ltd. [1991] 4 All E.R. 458, 468, per Leggatt L.J. By going further than the Swiss courts would be prepared to go in relation to a defendant resident outside Switzerland, we would not be seeking to remedy any perceived deficiency in Swiss law, but rather to supplement the jurisdiction of the Swiss courts in accordance with article 24 and principles which are internationally accepted.
In other areas of law, such as cross-border insolvency, commercial necessity has encouraged national courts to provide assistance to each other without waiting for such co-operation to be sanctioned by international convention. International fraud requires a similar response. It is becoming widely accepted that comity between the courts of different countries requires mutual respect for the territorial integrity of each other's jurisdiction, but that this should not inhibit a court in one jurisdiction from rendering whatever assistance it properly can to a court in another in respect of assets located or persons resident within the territory of the former."
THE POSITION OF LAWYERS AS RESPONDENTS
"I think that the branch of Barclays Bank in Douglas, Isle of Man, should be considered in the same way as a branch of the Bank of Ireland or an American bank, or any other bank in the Isle of Man which is not subject to our jurisdiction. The branch of Barclays Bank in Douglas, Isle of Man, should be considered as a different entity separate from the head office in London. It is subject to the laws and regulations of the Isle of Man. It is licensed by the Isle of Man government. It has its customers there who are subject to the Manx laws. It seems to me that the court here ought not in its discretion to make an order against the head office here in respect of the books of the branch in the Isle of Man in regard to the customers of that branch. It would not be right to compel the branch - or its customers - to open their books or to reveal their confidences in support of legal proceedings in Wales. Any order in respect of the production of the books ought to be made by the courts of the Isle of Man - if they will make such an order. It ought not to be made by these courts. Otherwise there would be danger of a conflict of jurisdictions between the High Court here and the courts of the Isle of Man. That is a conflict which we must always avoid. … It seems to me that, although this court has jurisdiction to order the head office here to produce the books, in our discretion it should not be done."
"A plaintiff in an action before this court has served a subpoena and an order obtained ex parte under the Bankers' Books Evidence Act 1879 upon Citibank at its branch office in London. Citibank is a New York bank with its head office in Manhattan and with branches all over the world. It is not a party to the proceedings. The subpoena and the order require Citibank to produce books and other papers held at its head office in New York, relating to transactions which took place in New York on an account maintained there by a Bahamian company. Citibank has moved to set aside the subpoena and to discharge the ex parte order on the grounds that in principle it exceeds the international jurisdiction of this court and infringes the sovereignty of the United States."
"…in two respects this is an a fortiori case. Barclays was at least an English bank whereas Citibank is foreign. International law generally recognises the right of a state to regulate the conduct of its own nationals even outside its jurisdiction, provided that this does not involve disobedience to the local law. But banks, as I have already said, are in a special position. The nature of banking business is such that if an English court invokes its jurisdiction even over an English bank in respect of an account at a branch abroad, there is a strong likelihood of conflict with the bank's duties to its customer under the local law. It is therefore not surprising that any bank, whether English or foreign, should as a general rule be entitled to the protection of an order of the foreign court before it is required to disclose documents kept at a branch or head office abroad."
"… is, therefore, also an exercise of sovereign authority and not merely a condition of being allowed to take part as plaintiff or defendant in an English trial. In the United States there is a general right to discovery from third parties but the fact that this process is characterised as discovery does not alter its nature for the purposes of international jurisdiction. In addition, the policy grounds for the restraint enjoined in Reg. v. Grossman, 73 Cr.App.R. 302 apply with equal force to discovery under Bankers Trust Co. v. Shapira [1980] 1 W.L.R. 1274."
"seems to me that in a case like this, where alternative legitimate procedures are available, an infringement of sovereignty can seldom be justified except perhaps on the grounds of urgent necessity relied upon by Templeman J. in the London and County Securities Ltd. v. Caplan (unreported)"
WAS THERE WRONGDOING?
"This decision raises serious concerns in the light of [Norilsk Nickel]'s statement of December 20, 2010 (ie 8 days before the current Board of Directors meeting date) regarding the sale of approximately 8% of Company's shares held by its subsidiaries to [Trafigura].
The performance of the agreement to sell ADRs to Trafigura on one hand, and the announcement of the buyback of the Company's shares and/or ADRs in a comparable volume on the other hand, all happening in 8 day period, raise serious concerns due to the lack of rational economic basis for the Company to enter into such transactions.
Moreover, in the absence of clear information on terms of the agreement to dispose ADRs and on Trafigura's financial capabilities there are reasons to believe that: (1) the transactions might be completed with a significant discount in ADRs prices as compared with their market value; or (2) Trafigura might not be the ultimate purchaser of the ADRs and the financing of the transaction is provided by an organization 'friendly' to the Company or one of its shareholders; or (3) the said transaction is not monetary, does not provide for any subsequent income to the Company, but rather it is directed at securing the ability of the Company's management to vote with these shares".
WAS DEBEVOISE INVOLVED IN THE ARGUABLE WRONGDOING?
"35. Although this requirement of involvement or participation on the part of the party from whom discovery is sought is not a stringent requirement, it is still a significant requirement. It distinguishes that party from a mere onlooker or witness. The need for involvement (the reference to participation can be dispensed with because it adds nothing to the requirement of involvement) is a significant requirement because it ensures that the mere onlooker cannot be subjected to the requirement to give disclosure. Such a requirement is an intrusion upon a third party to the wrongdoing and the need for involvement provides justification for this intrusion.
36. It is not the only protection available to the third party. There is the more general protection which derives from the fact that this is a discretionary jurisdiction which enables the court to be astute to avoid a third party who has become involved innocently in wrongdoing by another from being subjected to a requirement to give disclosure unless this is established to be a necessary and proportionate response in all the circumstances: see John v Express Newspapers [2000] 1 WLR 1931. The need for involvement can therefore be described as a threshold requirement. The fact that there is involvement enables a court to consider whether it is appropriate to make the order which is sought. In exercising its discretion the court will take into account the fact that innocent third parties can be indemnified for their costs while at the same time recognising that this does not mean there is no inconvenience to third parties as a result of becoming embroiled in proceedings through no fault on their part."
IS DISCLOSURE OF THE INFORMATION NECESSARY?
"93 … The requirement of necessity was also considered by King J in Campaign Against Arms Trade v BAE paragraphs 15-20; it was argued on behalf of the defendant in that case that this test was not met where the claimant had failed to exhaust other available avenues through which the information might be obtained. King J observed that that was to put the matter "too high" and to put the discretion of the court into too much of a straitjacket. He considered that the court was entitled to have regard to all the circumstances prevailing in the particular case including the size and resources of the applicant, the urgency of its need and to obtain the information it requires and any public interest in its having its needs satisfied.
94 … The intrusion into the business of others which the exercise of the Norwich Pharmacal jurisdiction obviously entails means that a court should not, as Lord Woolf in Ashworth made clear, require such information to be provided unless it is necessary. But in our view, there is nothing in any authority which justifies a more stringent requirement than necessity by elevating the test to the information being a missing piece of the jigsaw or to it being a remedy of last resort. We agree in this respect with the views expressed in Hollander Documentary Evidence, 9th edition at paragraph 5-26. Moreover it would be inconsistent with the flexible nature of this remedy to erect artificial barriers of this kind. In our view the approach of King J in Campaign Against the Arms Trade is to be preferred"
"It is true that in some of the cases the word "necessary" has been used, echoing or employing the language of Order 24, rule 13 of the Rules of the Supreme Court. But, as Templeman LJ observed in British Steel Corporation v Granada Television Limited [1981] AC 1096, 1132, "The remedy of discovery is intended in the final analysis to enable justice to be done". Norwich Pharmacal relief exists to assist those who have been wronged but do not know by whom. If they have straightforward and available means of finding out, it will not be reasonable to achieve that end by overriding a duty of confidentiality such as that owed by banker to customer. If, on the other hand, they have no straightforward or available, or any, means of finding out, Norwich Pharmacal relief is in principle available if the other conditions of obtaining relief are met. Whether it is said that it must be just and convenient in the interests of justice to grant relief, or that relief should only be granted if it is necessary in the interests of justice to grant it, makes little or no difference of substance."
"1. All documents (whether in paper form or electronic format) evidencing the existence or the terms of any Agreement entered into by any of the Companies relating to the Trafigura Deal or the Instruments which were the subject matter of the Trafigura Deal or any Voting Rights attached to those Instruments.
2. All documents obtained by the Respondent in accordance with its customer due diligence and ongoing monitoring obligations arising from The Money Laundering Regulation 2007 SI 2007/2157 in connection with the provision of its services to the Companies in any matter concerning the Transactions".
"…Norwich Pharmacal does not provide a general right of discovery … the action cannot be one used for wide-ranging discovery or the gathering of evidence and is strictly confined to necessary information … "
IS THE INFORMATION SOUGHT WITHIN THE SCOPE OF THE AVAILABLE RELIEF?
"I do not understand Hoffmann J to be stating that a Bankers Trust order must be as specific as a subpoena in all cases, and would respectfully disagree with him if he had. No doubt the degree of specificity required will differ according to the facts of each case and those facts will include the relationship between the person against whom the order is sought and the other persons against whom the claims are made. The court must in this, as in all other exercises of its discretionary powers, seek to achieve a just balance between those who seek such orders and those against whom they are sought. In striking such balance it is necessary to consider the onerousness of compliance with the order sought without being tied down by rules relating to subpoenas."
SHOULD THE COURT EXERCISE ITS DISCRETION IN FAVOUR OF GRANTING RELIEF?
EVENTS SUBSEQUENT TO THE CIRCULATION OF THIS JUDGMENT IN DRAFT
CONCLUSION