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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> BB & Ors v Khayyat & Ors [2022] EWHC 904 (QB) (13 April 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2022/904.html Cite as: [2022] EWHC 904 (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) BB (2) CC (3) DD (4) EE (5) FF (6) GG (7) HH (8) II |
Claimants |
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- and – |
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(1) MOUTAZ AL KHAYYAT (2) RAMEZ AL KHAYYAT (3) DOHA BANK LIMITED |
Defendants |
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HANNAH BROWN QC & SANDY PHIPPS (instructed by Eversheds Sutherland) for the Third Defendant
Hearing dates: 1, 2 and 29 March 2022
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE SWIFT:
A. Introduction
"72. …
(f) However, evidence which relates not to the underlying allegations but to the alleged interference in these proceedings by the Defendants or agents of the State of Qatar should be before the judge, because this evidence is directly relevant to the suitability of the State of Qatar as a forum. I will not limit that evidence to matters occurring since 9 October 2020, because HHJ Coe QC's Order did not contain any such express limitation. I will permit all of the Claimants' evidence which relates to alleged attempts by the Defendants or others on behalf of the State of Qatar to interfere with the course of justice in these proceedings. At present the Claimants have not identified any parts of their evidence going to these issues beyond those referred to in paragraph 30 of Doha Bank's skeleton argument, but I will give a further opportunity to the Claimants to do so, and for Doha Bank to respond, in the light of the approach I have outlined in this judgment."
Chamberlain J gave directions to allow this conclusion to be realised (see his Order of 22 June 2021). He also granted the Claimants permission to apply to amend their Particulars of Claim "… to include any part of the matters contained in the [statements filed by the First to Third and Eighth Claimants] that can properly be included in a statement of case". Final directions on the evidence were set out in Chamberlain J's further Order of 9 August 2021.
"… the State of Qatar embroiled itself in a conspiracy to pervert the course of justice to prevent its involvement in terrorist financing from coming to light".
"15. It can accordingly be seen that the claimants wish to go further than they had pleaded originally and to advance a case that the alleged terrorist financing which forms the subject of the claim was carried out as part of a broader conspiracy in which members of the Qatari ruling elite participated and, it appears, allegedly carried out on behalf of the state of Qatar, and that the Bank facilitated that conspiracy (which arguably raised issues of agency).
…
28. … I consider that the claim advanced in the draft amended Particulars of Claim is indeed a broader one than the one advanced in the Particulars of claim – specifically alleging that there was a conspiracy involving and at the behest of the Qatari ruling elite – and that the Claimants themselves recognised that at the time by considering it necessary to serve these draft amendments.
29. The allegation is not that the Al Khayyat brothers acted as terrorist financiers in an individual capacity, albeit motivated by their connections to the State of Qatar and enabled by their connections to the State of Qatar (whatever that may mean). Rather, the plea in the draft amended Particulars of Claim is of a broader kind. It is that there was a conspiracy to fund the Al Nusra Front driven by the state of Qatar in which the defendants were participants, and (it appears) that the Qatari state's terrorist financing was organised through the agency, in particular, of the Bank.
…
34. In my judgment this leaves the defendants in a state of uncertainty. This is not a case, as Mr Emmerson submits in paragraph 34 of his skeleton argument, of the Bank "seeking to take advantage of an opportunity to assert state immunity in circumstances in which it would otherwise be out of time to do so". Whether it is out of time or not is a separate issue. But the Bank is entitled to advance its state immunity case on the clear understanding of the basis of the case the claimants are actually intending to advance at trial.
35. The Bank is concerned that while the claimants have now reverted to their original Particulars of Claim and Mr Emmerson asserts that they do not, therefore, allege the broader conspiracy plea … the matters relied upon by the Claimants in correspondence, their witness statements and Mr Emmerson's submissions to the Court at earlier hearings and indeed, his skeleton argument for this hearing all suggest that in reality that is indeed the true nature of the claimants' case. I have some considerable sympathy with that concern.
36. In the light of these contradictory positions, in my judgment it is critical that the defendants are properly informed of the case which they will have to meet at trial. Indeed, this was the very point that Mr Justice Chamberlain made clear in his judgment at the directions hearing to which I have already referred.
…
37. The Claimants' case, in my judgment, cries out for clarification, particularly in the light of the advancement of a serious plea of conspiracy or something akin to conspiracy, and because it is now being said that this claim does not raise the same issues as the Hashwah claim when the Claimants had originally said that the witness evidence in that case would be relied upon in this case (because the allegations were the same).
…
40. Accordingly, I consider in the light of Claimants' change of case and in the light of the unusual circumstances of this case, which I have outlined in this judgment, that the Third Defendant should be given the opportunity to ask for further information of the original Particulars of Claim in order that the precise ambit of the case to be advanced at trial by the claimants is clearly defined and understood."
Calver J made an order reflecting the conclusions at paragraph 40 of his judgment, and also vacated the hearing date for the forum non conveniens application. The Bank's request for Further Information was served on 6 October 2021. The Claimants responded on 29 October 2021.
B. Decision
(1) The application to strike out
"(2) For the purposes of this Response, and the answers that follow:
…
(b) The Claimants have elected to confine their case strictly to the allegations advanced in the (original unamended) Particulars of Claim … The Claimants in this claim will not advance any broader claim such as that advanced by the (different claimants) in Claim No. CL- 2021- 332 (the Hashwah Proceedings). The draft Amended Particulars of Claim in the present proceedings … have been withdrawn in their entirety and will play no part in the case to be advanced.
(c) … for the avoidance of doubt, the Claimants disavow any assertion made in correspondence or written/oral submissions that seeks to go beyond the scope of the case as originally pleaded. The Claimants accept and aver that they will be bound at trial by the case set out in the original Particulars …
(3) For the purposes of the present case, the Claimants have elected to confine their allegations against the Defendants to an allegation that they participated in terrorist funding arrangements in their individual (whether that be personal or corporate) capacities, on the factual premise that these were arrangements unauthorised by the Emir of the State of Qatar, which involved dishonest and corrupt misappropriation of funds (including state funds) by individuals acting without the authority (or purported authority) of the State.
(4) The claimants further confirm, without prejudice to (2) above, that for the sole purpose of answering the Defendants' forum non conveniens challenge, they intend to adduce evidence (for which permission has been given) relating to attempts to pervert the course of justice in these proceedings. That evidence (or parts of it) indicates or involves allegations that attempts were made by individuals or entities claiming to be associated with the State of Qatar or on its behalf, to coerce and/or bribe witnesses and intermediaries in these proceedings and to discover the identities of the Claimants. These allegations are strictly relevant and admissible only as regards Defendant's jurisdictional challenge. They do not form part of the substantive claim to be pursued at trial, which will proceed in accordance with the original particulars."
"9. The Claimants in these proceedings allege that the Defendants participated in terrorist funding arrangements in their individual (whether that be personal or corporate) capacities. In that regard:
(1) The Claimants' claims do not implead the State of Qatar nor any servant, official or agent of the State of Qatar. The Claimants advance no positive case with respect to authorisation of the terrorist funding arrangements by the State of Qatar, which is in any event is immaterial to the cause of action as against the Defendants under Syrian law.
(2) In the absence of (i) any positive case of state authorisation by the Claimants; and (ii) any responsive assertion or evidence of state authorisation by the Defendants, it is a necessary inference that any funds which flowed from the State of Qatar to the Defendants (and were subsequently transferred to terrorist organisations in Syria) were misappropriated."
Put very shortly, this paragraph makes it clear that the Claimants' case is the misappropriation case.
"14 – States entitled to immunities and privileges
(1) The immunities and privileges conferred by this Part of this Act apply to any foreign or commonwealth State other than the United Kingdom; and references to a state include references to –
(a) the sovereign or head of that State in his public capacity;
(b) the government of that State; and
(c) any department of that government,
but not to any entity (hereafter referred to as a "separate entity") which is distinct from the executive organs of the government of the State and capable of suing or being sued."
(2) Whether the Bank's state immunity application is unarguable
C. Disposal