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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 >> Rio Properties Inc & Anor v Gibson Dunn & Crutcher & Anor [2005] EWCA Civ 534 (22 April 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2005/534.html Cite as: [2005] EWCA Civ 534 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT
CHANCERY DIVISION
(HHJ MADDOCKS)
Strand London, WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE ARDEN
____________________
(1) RIO PROPERTIES INC | ||
(2) DAVID JULIAN BUCHLER | Appellants | |
-v- | ||
(1) GIBSON DUNN & CRUTCHER | ||
(2) ANTHONY BONANNO | Respondents |
____________________
Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR DAVID UFF (instructed by Messrs Pannone & Partners) appeared on behalf of the Respondent
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
"Pursuant to the undertaking set out in paragraph 4 of Schedule 2 to the Order of 23 July 2002, Rio Properties Inc do pay to Gibson Dunn & Crutcher and Anthony Bonanno any costs that they might have incurred in complying with their obligations under the Orders of 26 June 2002, 29 July 2002, 2 August 2002 and 9 August 2002, such costs to be assessed in accordance with the terms of the undertaking."
2. By his order dated 23 July 2002 ("the July 2002 order") HHJ Maddocks appointed David Buchler, a licensed insolvency practitioner, as interim receiver and manager of the estate of Amer Mouaffac Almidani ("the bankrupt"). At the date of the July 2002 order a bankruptcy petition was pending against the bankrupt. The petition, which had been presented on 27 December 2001 by Rio Properties Inc (a company incorporated in the State of Nevada, USA) ("Rio"), was based on gambling debts amounting to some $1.8million. On 2 August 2002 Judge Maddocks made a bankruptcy order on the petition. On 7 August 2002 Mr Buchler was appointed the bankrupt's trustee in bankruptcy.
3. In the period between the making of the July 2002 order and the making of the bankruptcy order Mr Buchler applied (without notice) for, and was granted, orders for disclosure of information relating to the bankrupt's affairs. The orders were made against Messrs Gibson Dunn & Crutcher ("Gibsons"), solicitors acting in the administration of the estate of the bankrupt's late father, in which the bankrupt was entitled to a share. The partner in Gibsons with responsibility for that matter was Mr Anthony Bonanno.
4. On 7 August 2002, immediately prior to making the bankruptcy order, the judge made two further orders. First, he made an order purporting to extend Mr Buchler's appointment as interim receiver and manager pending the appointment of a trustee in bankruptcy. Secondly, he made a further disclosure order against Gibsons. This last-mentioned order was varied by a further order made on Mr Buchler's application on 9 August 2002 (that is to say, two days after he had been appointed trustee).
5. On 29 August 2002 Gibsons and Mr Bonanno applied for (among other things) a declaration that the July 2002 order was a nullity, and that in consequence all subsequent orders (including the disclosure orders) made on the application of Mr Buchler purportedly acting as interim receiver and manager under the July 2002 order were also nullities. The application was heard by HHJ Maddocks."
"17. The disclosure order dated 2 August 2002 ordered Gibsons to deliver to Mr Buchler by 12 noon on Tuesday 6 August 2002 all files and documents in their possession custody or power relating to matters in which they had acted for the bankrupt and all files and documents relating to the bankrupt's share in his late father's estate.
18. The orders made on Friday 2 August 2002 were served on Monday 5 August 2002. On Tuesday 6 August 2002 the appellants applied for, and were granted, a stay of the disclosure order made on the previous Friday until after Friday 9 August 2002. Accordingly nothing had been done by the appellants pursuant to the disclosure order dated 2 August 2002 by the time of Mr Buchler's appointment as trustee on Wednesday 7 August 2002."
"The Petitioning Creditor [which was Rio] will pay the reasonable costs of anyone other than the Debtor which have been incurred as a result of this Order or compliance with it."
"53. I turn next to the orders made on 2 August 2002, and to the order dated 9 August 2002 which purported to continue the earlier disclosure order, subject to variations. Mr Uff challenges these orders not on the basis that they were nullities but on the basis that they were irregular and liable to be set aside as of right. He submits that in consequence the order dated 9 August 2002 was similarly irregular. Assuming for the moment that the orders dated 2 August 2002 were indeed irregular, nevertheless in my judgment Mr Uff's challenge must fail. By its order dated 9 August 2002 the court, in substance, imposed a new regime for disclosure and for the service of a witness statement; and it did so in circumstances where, by reason of the stay which had been granted, nothing had been done under the regime imposed by the earlier disclosure order. In the circumstances I cannot accept Mr Uff's submission that the 9 August 2002 order was somehow infected by the (assumed) irregularity of the earlier orders."
7. Considering all of the above, the practical issue between the parties is now costs. In view of the overriding objective, it is incumbent upon all the parties to consider ways of resolving the matter without recourse to the Court. In the interests of resolving all of the above outstanding Applications and the Appeal, the Trustee is prepared to settle all of the outstanding Applications and your Appeal on payment to him of £8,000 as a contribution towards his costs. This would mean that
7.1. Your Part 18 Application would be dismissed.
7.2. Your Appeal will be withdrawn.
7.3. The Trustee will not proceed with his Application for costs in relation to the hearings on 7 November 2002 and 5 June 2003.
7.4. The Cost Orders obtained thus far in favour of the Trustee against your clients would not be enforced by the Trustee.
7.5. Your clients will not enforce any Costs Order in their favour against the Trustee.
7.6. The Slip Application would proceed in as much as the Court Orders need to be corrected but otherwise there would be no order as to costs on this Application."
"It remains to consider the effect of the offer of settlement by the letter of 7 August 2003. The letter is certainly to be applauded as a genuine attempt to resolve all the miscellaneous heads of costs by a composite settlement. It deserved a more positive response. Nevertheless, I find it difficult to treat the letter as a Part 36 offer. The very number of different issues, including the appeal which was pending and one issue which I think was not covered, being the costs under the undertaking, make it difficult to apply. If it were to be applied it would, first, require the costs claims to be resolved and the costs quantified. Only then could it be seen whether the offer fell short of or exceeded the final outcome.
20. I do not therefore feel able to mark the failure to accept the offer as a ground for making an order as to the payment of interest or the payment of any costs on an indemnity basis, nor do I see it as appropriate to make some other form of order to mark that failure."
Order: appeal allowed in Part. Paragraph 1 of the order of 16 December 2004 is set aside. No order as to costs.