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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 >> Joint Stock Company 'Aeroflot-Russian Airlines' & Ors v Gudavadze & Ors [2014] EWCA Civ 431 (04 March 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2014/431.html Cite as: [2014] EWCA Civ 431 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT
HIGH COURT CHANCERY DIVISION
(MR JUSTICE MORGAN)
Strand London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE KITCHIN
SIR STANLEY BURNTON
____________________
(1) JOINT STOCK COMPANY 'AEROFLOT-RUSSIAN AIRLINES' (2) THE GOVERNMENT OF THE SAMARA REGION OF THE RUSSIAN FEDERATION |
Claimants/ Respondents |
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and |
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EKATERINA BEREZOVSKAYA HELENA GORBUNOVA |
Defendants |
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-v- |
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(1) INNA GUDAVADZE (2) IYA PATARKATSISHVILI (3) LIANA ZHMOTOVA (4) NATELA PATARKATSISHVILI |
Respondents/ Appellants |
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AND IN THE ESTATE OF PLATON ELENIN (FORMERLY BORIS ABRAMOVICH BEREZOSKY) DECEASED, CAVEAT NOS: 62126 AND 62127 |
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MR WILLIAM HENDERSON (instructed by Signature Litigation LLP) appeared on behalf of the Respondents
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Crown Copyright ©
THE CHANCELLOR OF THE HIGH COURT:
"53. Having directed myself as to the relevant legal principles, I will now consider the result of applying those principles. I will begin by considering the application of the principles identified in Science Research Council v Nasse. I find that the AP Confidential Information is likely to be highly material to the outcome of the substantive applications. I consider that the availability of that information at the substantive hearing is necessary for the purpose of disposing fairly of those applications. I find that there is no alternative way of producing the result that such information is before the court, other than by relaxing the confidentiality restrictions in the AP Settlement Agreement. I consider that I do have power to impose suitable restrictions on the use of the information so as to preserve to the AP Family some of the remaining confidentiality of that information and/or to ensure compliance with [CPR] rr. 31.22 and 32.12 and/or to prevent an abuse of the process of the court. The imposition of suitable restrictions will not prevent all parties relying upon the information for the purpose of disposing fairly of the substantive applications. The imposition of such restrictions will not conflict with the fundamental requirement of natural justice. Even with such restrictions, Aeroflot will be able to put its case through its lawyers and fully instruct and take advice from those lawyers. Aeroflot will be able to do everything which it needs to do in order to present its case in the substantive proceedings. The court should not be unduly reluctant to impose restrictions which do no harm to anybody but preserve as far as possible the confidentiality of a third party caught up in litigation in which it has no direct involvement. The imposition of such restrictions will help to prevent the possibility of use, i.e. the misuse, of the information for collateral purposes.
54. The above reasoning supports the imposition of suitable restrictions. In addition, although the evidence is not as detailed as I would have liked, I consider that the evidence in Marson 2 does support a finding that there is some risk of some damage to the AP Family if that information were freely available to all parties, without the restrictions to which I will refer. Even if the substantive applications were dealt with at a hearing in private, there is some risk of leakage from Aeroflot to the Russian Federation which might lead to the kind of consequences feared by the AP Family, as described in Marson 2. I add that I am not in a position to consider whether the apprehended action by the Russian Federation against the AP Family would be legitimate or illegitimate."
"(1) Restricting the disclosure of the AP Confidential Information to certain named persons within Aeroflot (probably a small number of persons) – being the persons who are reasonably needed to give instructions in relation to these proceedings.
(2) In addition to disclosure to Aeroflot's lawyers in accordance with the order of 30 October 2013, such disclosure to be by way of provision of a single hard copy of the AP Confidential Information to each named person so that each hard copy is not to leave a specified office for each named person; may be inspected only by the named persons and may not itself be copied, scanned or otherwise converted into electronic form.
(3) On terms that each named person shall give an express written undertaking (i) to maintain the confidentiality of the information and (ii) that use shall not be made of it otherwise than for the purpose of these proceedings.
(4) The parties, and the AP Family, are to have permission to apply as to how the AP Confidential Information shall be dealt with at the hearing of the substantive applications and as to whether such hearing, or any part of it, should be in private.
(5) The parties, and the AP Family, are to have permission to apply as to the terms which should be imposed as to the destruction or return of the AP Confidential Information at the conclusion of the substantive applications."
"1. The 30 October 2013 order be varied so as to provide that [Ms Berezovskaya] be not permitted to adduce the AP Confidential Information in [Aeroflot's proceedings] or in her application for a grant of administration in respect of the estate of [Mr Berezovsky] or in Aeroflot's claim that she should be passed over under section 116 Senior Courts Act 1981.
Alternatively.
2. The 29 January 2014 order be varied so as to provide that disclosure of the AP confidential Information to the officers or employees of the Claimants specified in the Schedules to the order may only be made orally or by inspection of them in Pinsent Mason LLP's London office of a single hardcopy of the specified documents which shall be retained in that Office AND that those documents and any other documents (including the evidence [Ms Berezovskaya]) containing the AP Confidential Information served on [Aeroflot/Samara] shall be retained in Pinsent Mason LLP's London office and should not be sent to Russia."
1. The Judge correctly formulated the relevant test for overriding the the AP Family's contractual and equitable entitlement to retain confidentiality of the APCI as being whether that is 'necessary' for the fair determination of the substantive issue of who should administer the estate; but he wrongly held that that issue cannot fairly be determined without the APCI.
2. The Judge wrongly held that the outcome of the substantive issue "might well turn on the solvency of the estate". The APCI is relevant to the issue of the solvency of the estate, but the solvency of the estate is or should be at most a marginal issue in the determination of the substantive issue.
3. The estate should be administered properly with priority being given to creditors whether the estate is solvent or insolvent. Accordingly it is not "necessary" to determine the issue of solvency in order to determine the substantive issue, and the Judge wrongly held that the AP Family's rights of confidentiality should be overriden for that purpose.
4. If, contrary to the above, the Judge was correct in holding that the outcome of the substantive issue "might well turn on the solvency of the estate", he was wrong in holding that that made it so "necessary" to determine the issue of solvency as to justify overriding the AP Family's rights of confidentiality in the APCI and their associated rights under Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights ("the ECHR").
5. If, contrary to the above, the Judge was correct in overriding the AP Family's rights of confidentiality in the APCI and their associated rights under Article 8 of the ECHR subject to restrictions on how the APCI could be dealt with, he was wrong in permitting hard copies of documents containing the confidential information to be sent to Russia, by reason of the real risks to which that gives rise so far as the AP Family are concerned, in comparison with the alternative of requiring the hard copies to remain in Aeroflot's/ Samara's solicitors' office in London, and the lack of prejudice to Aeroflot and Samara which would result from that alternative.
"Our clients will take a neutral stance on [section] 8.1 ... Our clients will not change this stance going forward".
"Our clients have never sought to challenge the Receivers' valuation of the [AP Settlement] nor sought disclosure of the same from them."
"... as to the value of the AP Settlement, in the event that the Receivers and the Court accept that the AP Settlement is an asset of the Estate, the value should be determined not solely 'by reference to the views of the Receivers' but by taking into account the views of the Receivers. For the avoidance of doubt all interested parties will be able to comment on the Receivers' valuation (and we reserve our clients' rights in this regard)".
LORD JUSTICE KITCHIN:
SIR STANLEY BURNTON: