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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Habib Bank Ltd. v Ahmed & Ors [2004] EWCA Civ 805 (24 June 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2004/805.html Cite as: [2004] EWCA Civ 805 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEENS BENCH DIVISION
(MR JUSTICE SIMON)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE SEDLEY
and
LORD JUSTICE KEENE
____________________
HABIB BANK LIMITED |
Claimant Respondent |
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- and - |
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AHMED & OTHERS |
Defendants Appellants |
____________________
Alastair McGregor QC and Matthew Collings (instructed by Lane & Partners) for the Respondent
Hearing date: Wednesday 21 April 2004
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Sedley :
This is the judgment of the court
" The intended appeal is against findings of fact made by the trial judge who had disbelieved witnesses on crucial issues. The correct approach to such an appeal was restated in Assicurazioni Generali [2003] 1 WLR 577, and it is plain that the judge, who observed the witnesses give evidence, had a considerable advantage over this court. No transcript of evidence has been provided. On the material which the appellants have chosen to put before this court, it is not possible to accept that oral evidence has been misunderstood or that which is contained in a witness statement must be accepted as determining a factual issue. I do not accept that the judge made any error on burden of proof nor that the reasoning of the judge was inadequate. It has not been shown that the judge was not entitled to reach his conclusions and there is no real prospect of success on any of the grounds of appeal."
"2). …. In relation to the family matter in which Mr Ahmed is contending that his wife had a beneficial interest in these properties, although they were in his name, the judge did not believe any of the evidence that Mr Ahmed gave and did not find all Mrs Ahmed's evidence reliable but was less scathing about their son, although he thought that some of the evidence given by the son did not go to crucial issues.
3). It was only last night, when we received a skeleton argument by Mr Briggs, which cross referred to the transcript, that it appeared that he had a clear point that the judge may have overlooked evidence given by the son in relation to a conversation that he had about the origins of the money provided to buy the hotel some months before legal proceedings were started against his father for a large sum of money in Pakistan. A point has also been made that the judge got wrong the evidence given by a Mr Chui about the reason why certain documents were not available. It appears to me that it is inappropriate for this matter to be dealt with one way or the other on the basis of a skeleton argument of which the respondents have had no notice at all, and that the appropriate course is to adjourn this hearing to be heard on notice on the basis that if permission to appeal is granted the appeal will follow immediately. The hearing should last half a day."
"32. I found that I was unable to rely on the evidence of Mr Ahmed. It was clear that, if he was telling me the truth about the ownership of the Hotel, he must have told lies to a large number of other people to whom he had said he was the owner. The Immigration Authorities, the Bank of Scotland, Bass International and his solicitors were all told that he was the owner and acted on that basis. Having seen him give evidence I found much of his evidence on the source of the funds which were used to buy the hotel to be incapable of belief. Where I would have expected him to be clear and straightforward, I found him vague and evasive. Simply by way of example, I found his evidence that the dividends from Pioneer had been paid over to Mr Chui was not credible. This was said for the first time in the witness box and was inconsistent with Mr Chui's witness statement. Mr Ahmed was a director of Pioneer and said that he kept an eye on the company for his wife.
33. Although I regarded Mrs Ahmed as a more straightforward witness than her husband, I did not consider all her evidence to be reliable. Again, by way of example, she denied that the Supplemental Declaration of Trust was made in response to the Bank's registration of its Judgment in September 1999. Although dated June 1999, I am quite satisfied that the document was prepared in September and was in response to the commencement of the Registration Proceedings which, as she said, caused her such concern. Again, on the crucial issue of the source of the funds, I found Mrs Ahmed's evidence unsatisfactory.
34. Qamar Ahmed struck me as a much more straightforward witness, but he was also a witness who had little relevant evidence to give on the main issue."
"5. From about 1962 until about 1989, Mr Ahmed ran a business manufacturing textiles, in conjunction with other members of his family, in Pakistan. His business took him to Hong Kong and it was here that he came into contact with Mr Jimmy Chui. In 1987 Mr Chui told Mr Ahmed and his wife that he wished to set up in business on his own and invited Mr and Mrs Ahmed to invest in a new company that he set up: Pioneer Century Ltd ("Pioneer"). About £100,000 was invested in this company and 2 million shares in the company were allotted as follows: ? in the name of Mr Chiu, ? in the name of Mrs Ahmed and ? in the name of Qamar Ahmed, who was then aged 14.
…..
8. On 22 February 1994 the sum of $300,000 was credited to Mr Ahmed's account at Lloyd's Bank, Hanover Square on the instructions of Pioneer. On 14 March 1994 Davis & Co (the solicitors instructed by Mr Ahmed) made an internal note:
" Attending Mr Ahmed at these offices concerning his purchase of the Watermead Hotel, Aylesbury for £675,000… The Property is to be bought in the Client's sole name…"
…..
35. It is convenient to start with evidence about Pioneer. On the Ahmed's case the money originally invested in Pioneer in 1988 (US$175,000) came from Mrs Ahmed, whom they both described as a wealthy woman who took an interest in her own investments. It is their case that the investment in Pioneer was so successful that Mr Chui was able to remit a total of US$620,150 representing Mrs Ahmed's investment as follows:
21.3.94 US$300,000
28.6.94 US$ 50.000
28.3.95 US$170,000
13.12.95 US$ 30,000
8.3.95 US$ 70,150
36. Mr Ahmed's statement in relation to the first payment (§34)
reads as follows:
" My wife said to me that she would be arranging for these monies to be paid on her behalf through Pioneer by whom she was owed money through unpaid dividends in respect of shares she had acquired for herself and in Qamar's name in that company and interest income."
Mrs Ahmed described what happened in 1994 at §20 of her statement:
"I telephoned Jimmy Chui to ascertain the amount of dividends which I was due from Pioneer. He told me that sums due to me
were in excess of US$300.000. This was made up of both dividends from profits and interest which had accrued on monies belonging to Pioneer."
The statement of Mr Chui (who did not give evidence) is slightly more specific. At §5 he set out the profits made by Pioneer and (at§6) continued:
"Although dividends became payable to the Company's shareholders at the end of each year neither (Mrs Ahmed) nor Qamar took their dividends. (Mrs Ahmed) told me to leave those monies in Pioneer to enable it to continue to trade as profitably as possible. Leaving the payable dividends in Pioneer gave Pioneer additional cash flow to use."
37. The Ahmed family's case was therefore that the dividends and interest earned by Pioneer had accumulated to such an extent that a ? share was $620,150.
38. The accounts of Pioneer show a total dividend distribution to shareholders in the period 1990 to 1995 to have been HK$1,458,240.74 (the equivalent of US$187,831). According to the Ahmed's evidence, the ? shareholding in Pioneer in the name of Mrs Ahmed and Qamar, was in fact Mrs Ahmed's shareholding. If that is correct the total dividend distribution to Mrs Ahmed in this period would have been US$125,221 very much less than the $620,150 which Mr Chui says he remitted to England. However, it is important to note that in the accounts of Pioneer these monies are described as dividends paid. In other words, distributed to shareholders. It is difficult to see how they could have been both distributed to shareholders and left in the company or in the hands of Mr Chui. Mr Ahmed's explanation was that the dividends had been paid out, but held by Mr Chui; but the evidence of Mr Chui and Mrs Ahmed was that they were left in Pioneer to assist the cash-flow. I am satisfied that the dividends from Pioneer were not used to fund payments sent to London as described by the Ahmeds. Even if they were, the dividend distribution would account for only a small proportion of the money remitted to London by Mr Chui. The question would then arise as to where the balance came from.
39. The Ahmed family's explanation is that the balance was interest income earned from monies deposited in banks. Pioneer would be paid by its customers immediately on sale of goods but did not need to pay its suppliers for 120 days. The customers' money was held on deposit for the 120 days in accounts in Mr Chui's own name. As Mr Chui says (§7 of his statement):
" These monies were deposited in accounts in my personal name at various banks therefore such interest income was not shown on the Company's accounts. In Hong Kong, any interest earned by a company would be subject to taxation as it would be taken as the Company's profits and having interest accruing in an account in my name avoided such tax having to be paid, as in Hong Kong personal interest income was not taxable (emphasis added)."
40. The first point to note is that, if this was indeed how Mr Chui made money, the scheme appears to have been designed to evade the payment of tax. Furthermore, it would have needed to have been highly rewarding if the total sums remitted to London amounted US$620,150 (or even US$494,929). Although some documents have been produced showing the interest payments, these documents only account for US$183,199 of which a ? share would amount to US$122,133. It is suggested that the balance came from other accounts which Mr Chui is no longer prepared to disclose in view of the potential consequences. I am not prepared to accept that suggestions, which requires the court to accept that at least US$372,000 came from profits made in accounts hidden from Pioneer and not disclosed in this action.
41. In my view the Ahmed's explanation as to the source of the funds: that it came from Pioneer, as the proceeds of an underhand interest operation, is not credible. It is unclear where the money to fund the Hotel came from; but I am satisfied that it did not come from Mrs Ahmed's interest, such as it was, in Pioneer.
42. I make this qualification because I also formed the view that some of the financial operations carried out in Mrs Ahmed's name were in truth the operations of Mr Ahmed. I have little doubt that Mrs Ahmed had money of her own and used such money for the benefit of her husband and her children; but in my view there were assets lodged in Mrs Ahmed's name which were, in truth, the assets of Mr Ahmed. In such cases he retained a signing authority and dealt with assts as if they were his own. I suspect that the shareholding in Pioneer was such an asset, although such a finding is not necessary for the purposes of this judgment and I have not made such assumption.
43. In the light of these findings, I am satisfied that the Declarations of Trust dated the 29 April 1996 and 2 June 1999 did not formalise a pre-existing position, but were responses by the Ahmed family to the Bank's proceedings and made in the hope of salvaging some of Mr Ahmed's assets. The first Declaration of Trust was the consequence of the family conference about Mr Ahmed's assets in December 1995.
Costs
"Consideration of the notice of appeal, appeal bundle, the appellant's skeleton argument and addendum thereto; liaising with counsel by telephone, e-mail and fax in relation to preparation of the respondent's notice, the skeleton argument (including review of notes of hearing before court below and providing these to counsel) the respondent's bundle, the authorities bundle and this costs summary."
The resultant total is almost £12,000. To it are added a further £1,107 for over 4 hours' telephone and written attendances on the bank and its Karachi lawyers; £1,027:50 for almost 5 hours of solicitors' time spent telephoning and writing to counsel's clerks, the court and the transcribers; £1,035 for conferring with junior counsel and the bank's Karachi lawyers; and a relatively modest sum of £277:50 for something over an hour spent communicating with the other side.
Documents
Attendances
Solicitors' attendances at court
Counsel
Result
Attendances on the appellant's solicitors 277:50
All other attendances 900:00
Documents 1400:00
Attendance at court 752:50
Disbursements: junior counsel 12,750:00
Transcription 115:00
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16,195:00