BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Sharp & Ors v Blank & Ors [2015] EWHC 3219 (Ch) (12 November 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2015/3219.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 3219 (Ch) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
HC-2014-001010 HC-2014-001387 HC-2014-001388 HC-2014-001389 HC-2015-000103 HC-2015-000105 |
CHANCERY DIVISION
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
Sharp & Others |
Claimants |
|
- and - |
||
Blank & others |
Defendants |
____________________
Helen Davies QC & Tony Singla (instructed by Herbert Smith Freehills) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 21st, 22nd and 23rd October 2015
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Nugee:
Introduction
The pleaded allegations
(1) Paragraph 107(8)Paragraph 107 pleads that by virtue, among other things, of the due diligence carried out by Lloyds, it is to be inferred that at all material times the Defendants had full knowledge of certain facts; and sub-paragraph (8) of the Particulars of Knowledge is as follows:"HBOS, through its Bank of Scotland subsidiary, was manipulating its GBP and USD LIBOR submissions to bring them into line with other LIBOR panel banks and give the impression that the financial circumstances of HBOS were better than was actually the case and, in particular, that it was able to borrow funds on the London inter-bank market."(2) Paragraph 108(6)
Paragraph 108 pleads that in breach of duty the Defendants took positive steps to conceal certain matters from the Lloyds shareholders, and sub-paragraph (6) of the Particulars of Concealment is as follows:"The Defendants failed to disclose to the Lloyds shareholders and/or to the market generally that HBOS, through its Bank of Scotland subsidiary, was manipulating its GBP and USD LIBOR submissions to bring them into line with other LIBOR panel banks and give the impression that the financial circumstances of HBOS were better than was actually the case and, in particular, that it was able to borrow funds on the London inter-bank market."(3) Paragraph 115(2)(h)
Paragraph 115 pleads that certain express and implied representations said to have been made by the Defendants were false and/or misleading. Sub-paragraph 2(h) of the Particulars of Falsity is as follows:"As stated above, at the time of the announcement of Lloyds' intention to acquire HBOS and at all material times thereafter, the supply of wholesale funding to HBOS had dried up and customers were moving deposits out of HBOS at an alarming rate. Bank of Scotland was manipulating its GBP and USD LIBOR submissions to give the false impression that HBOS was able to borrow funds on the London inter-bank market at interest rates that were similar to other banks. The reference to the position during the latter part of 2007 without reference to the situation at the time of the publication of the Shareholder Circular was misleading and disingenuous."(4) Paragraph 115(6)(h)
Sub-paragraph 6(h) of the Particulars of Falsity to paragraph 115 is as follows:"The Defendants did not believe and/or did not have reasonable grounds to believe that there had been no change to the financial or trading position of the HBOS Group. They knew that HBOS had ceased to be able to fund itself and was wholly reliant on covert central bank support to enable it to pay its debts as they fell due and continue to trade. They also knew that the Bank of Scotland was manipulating its GBP and USD LIBOR submissions to conceal the fact that it could not borrow funds on the London Inter-Bank market. The sums borrowed from the Federal Reserve, the Bank of England and Lloyds amounted to many times the total market capitalisation of HBOS. Furthermore they knew that the huge losses being suffered by HBOS were quickly eroding its capital and that if HBOS were not acquired by Lloyds it would have to be nationalised."
(1) It was said that on or shortly after 18 September 2008 the Director Defendants would have been aware that HBOS was incapable of borrowing from or lending to other banks, and that they therefore would have appreciated that its GBP and USD LIBOR rates were:"a fiction designed to disguise its financial circumstances and the fact that it was neither able to borrow nor lend."(2) Reference was made to the outcome of an investigation by the Financial Conduct Authority ("FCA") into both Lloyds and BoS as set out in a Final Notice addressed to them dated 28 July 2014 ("the Final Notice"). This found that directions were given by certain Lloyds managers to manipulate the LIBOR rates. It was said that:
"It therefore follows that the Director Defendants would have been aware of the possibility that HBOS would have been doing the same thing as Lloyds was doing at the time."
The principles
The Final Notice
"the rate at which an individual contributor panel bank could borrow funds, were it to do so by asking for and then accepting interbank offers in reasonable market size just prior to 11.00 London time."
"Certain managers at both Firms were directly involved in or knew about and permitted the practice of manipulating submissions for the Repo rate and GBP, USD and JPY Libor. As a consequence, these Managers condoned the Requests and promoted a culture on the Money Market Desks where such misconduct was accepted."
Fictitious rates
"The combination of deteriorating market conditions and structural issues in the LIBOR fixing process therefore would have caused dislocation completely independent of any lowballing or trader manipulation."
In fact one of the report's conclusions was that the FSA should have considered the possibility and likelihood of lowballing (particularly in the period from April 2008) rather than assuming the only problems with LIBOR were those caused by structural issues in the LIBOR fixing process. But the significant thing is that this conclusion was not based on the difficulties that banks had in accessing wholesale markets but on a number of communications made to the FSA in the relevant period, of which (in the judgment of the report's authors) 26 included a direct reference to lowballing, and a further 48 included a reference that could have been interpreted as such.
Application of CPR 24.2
"In other cases it may be possible to say with confidence before trial that the factual basis for the claim is fanciful because it is entirely without substance. It may be clear beyond question that the statement of facts is contradicted by all the documents or other material on which it is based. The simpler the case the easier it is likely to be to take that view and resort to what is properly called summary judgment. But more complex cases are unlikely to be resolved in that way without conducting a mini-trial on the documents without discovery and without oral evidence. As Lord Woolf MR said in Swain's case [2001] 1 AER 91 at 95, that is not the object of the rule. It is designed to deal with cases that are not fit for trial at all."
Lord Hobhouse said at [158] that:
"the criterion which the judge has to apply under CPR Pt 24 is not one of probability; it is absence of reality. The majority of the Court of Appeal used the phrases 'no realistic possibility' and distinguished between a practical possibility and 'what is fanciful or inconceivable'… Although used in a slightly different context these phrases appropriately express the same idea."
(Lord Hobhouse dissented in the result but I do not read his speech as differing in this respect from that of the majority).