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 >> Zumax Nigeria Ltd v First City Monument Bank Plc [2020] EWHC 1852 (Ch) (14 July 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2020/1852.html Cite as: [2020] EWHC 1852 (Ch) |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS
CHANCERY DIVISION
7 The Rolls Building Fetter Lane London EC4A 1NL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
ZUMAX NIGERIA LIMITED |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
||
FIRST CITY MONUMENT BANK PLC |
Defendant |
____________________
Poonam Melwani QC and Paul Henton (instructed by Preston Turnbull LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 1-2 July 2020
Written submissions on 8-9 July 2020
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Miles:
Introduction
The parties and the transfers
2. Zumax is a Nigerian company which formerly provided engineering and other services to oil companies. It is based in Warri, Nigeria.
3. The defendant, First City Monument Bank plc ("FCMB"), is a Nigerian bank. As a result of a merger with Finbank plc, which had itself come into being as a result of a merger involving, among others, IMB International Bank plc ("IMB"), FCMB has inherited the rights and obligations of IMB.
4. The proceedings relate to some bank transfers dating from 2000 to 2002. At that time, Zumax's main banker was IMB, with which it held a Naira-denominated account in Lagos. Zumax also had Naira-denominated accounts with Warri branches of Citibank Nigeria, Standard Trust Bank and Equitorial Trust Bank.
5. IMB, too, had a Naira-denominated account in Nigeria with Standard Trust Bank, as well as ones with Guaranteed Trust Bank and Citizens Bank. It also held two US dollar-denominated accounts, numbered 160122964015 and 160122964010, at the London branch of Commerzbank. A third US dollar-denominated account with Commerzbank ("the IMB Morgan Account") was held by an entity associated with IMB, IMB Morgan plc ("IMB Morgan", formerly known as "IMB Securities plc"), and for the purposes of this appeal FCMB accepts that no distinction is to be drawn between IMB and IMB Morgan. All three Commerzbank accounts were "correspondent" accounts.
6. At least in part, the oil companies for which Zumax undertook work would be invoiced in US dollars and asked to pay the money into an account that Redsear Limited ("Redsear"), a company incorporated in the Isle of Man, held with Chase Manhattan International ("Chase") in London. Barling J described Redsear as a nominee of Zumax, and it was common ground before us that Redsear held the funds that it received from Zumax's customers on trust for Zumax. Money in the account ("the Redsear Account") would be used to meet Zumax's US dollar business needs, with any surplus funds being transferred to Nigeria.
7. The accounts that IMB and IMB Morgan held with Commerzbank had a central role in these arrangements. Where money was to go to Nigeria, either to Zumax itself or (say) to one of the company's suppliers, it would in the first instance be transferred from the Redsear Account to one or other of the Commerzbank accounts. In the case of money destined for Zumax, the plan, according to Zumax, was that it should be credited with Naira to a corresponding value on its account with IMB in Lagos. FCMB, in contrast, maintains that Zumax would often prefer to use an informal "parallel" market which offered a more attractive exchange rate than the official rate. Mr Toyin Owolabi, who was IMB's treasurer and head of treasury/business development between 2000 and 2004, has said in a witness statement that in such circumstances:
"IMB would pay through its local NGN [i.e. Naira] account with Citizens Bank, by issuing a cheque to the customer or paying into one of the customer's local current accounts with another bank in Nigeria or direct to a third party (such as a supplier) as the customer wishes".
8. The present proceedings concern ten transfers from the Redsear Account to the Commerzbank accounts that were made between May 2000 and April 2002. The transfers were as follows:
Number Date of receipt Amount 1 10 May 2000 $205,000 (less $15 charge) 2 11 May 2000 $105,000 (less $15 charge) 3 12 May 2000 $205,000 (less $15 charge) 4 24 July 2000 $505,000 (less $15 charge) 5 8 January 2001 $355,000 & $250,000 (less $15 charge on each transfer) 6 10 August 2001 $901,000 (less $15 charge) 7 23 October 2001 $410,000 8 24 December 2001 $155,000 (less $15 charge) 9 27 February 2002 $251,000 (less $15 charge) 10 23 April 2002 $410,000 (less $15 charge)
9. Five of the transfers were into the IMB Morgan Account and the remainder into one or other of IMB's own accounts. In each instance, save in respect of the third transfer, Chase received manuscript instructions from Mr Edwin Chinye, who was a director of Redsear and the signatory on its account with Chase. Mr Chinye was also the managing director of IMB (and a director of Zumax), but it is common ground that he was not acting on behalf of IMB in signing the Redsear instructions (see paragraph 66(vii) of the judgment). To a substantial extent, Mr Chinye's instructions were then reflected in the relevant entries in the statements that Commerzbank produced for the three accounts.
The decision of the Court of Appeal
Release of the funds from the Court account to Zumax
Post-judgment submissions to the Court of Appeal
"There is undoubtedly force in the points that [counsel for Zumax] made. Should statements for Zumax's Warri accounts for the relevant period become available and prove to lend no support to FCMB's case, it may need to re-evaluate its position. As matters stand, however, I have concluded, on balance, that FCMB does have a real prospect of defeating the claim as regards the first, second, fourth, fifth, seventh, eighth and ninth transfers on the strength of the payment defence."
Events after the Court of Appeal's order
What happened to the monies released to Zumax from the sums in Court
Legal principles
"[29] In my judgment, the following principles are applicable when dealing with an application that a party to on-going litigation should be debarred from continuing to participate in the litigation by reason of having failed to pay an order for costs made in the course of the proceedings:
(1) The imposition of a sanction for non-payment of a costs order involves the exercise of a discretion pursuant to the Court's inherent jurisdiction.
(2) The Court should keep carefully in mind the policy behind the imposition of costs orders made payable within a specified period of time before the end of the litigation, namely, that they serve to discourage irresponsible interlocutory applications or resistance to successful interlocutory applications.
(3) Consideration must be given to all the relevant circumstances including: (a) the potential applicability of Article 6 ECHR; (b) the availability of alternative means of enforcing the costs order through the different mechanisms of execution; (c) whether the court making the costs order did so notwithstanding a submission that it was inappropriate to make a costs order payable before the conclusion of the proceedings in question; and where no such submission was made whether it ought to have been made or there is no good reason for it not having been made.
(4) A submission by the party in default that he lacks the means to pay and that therefore a debarring order would be a denial of justice and/or in breach of Article 6 of ECHR should be supported by detailed, cogent and proper evidence which gives full and frank disclosure of the witness's financial position including his or her prospects of raising the necessary funds where his or her cash resources are insufficient to meet the liability.
(5) Where the defaulting party appears to have no or markedly insufficient assets in the jurisdiction and has not adduced proper and sufficient evidence of impecuniosity, the court ought generally to require payment of the costs order as the price for being allowed to continue to contest the proceedings unless there are strong reasons for not so ordering.
(6) If the court decides that a debarring order should be made, the order ought to be an unless order except where there are strong reasons for imposing an immediate order."
(a) It is wrong to impose a condition which would have the effect of preventing a party (R) bringing, continuing, or defending a claim.
(b) Where R argues that it will not be able to comply with a sanction and will therefore be deprived of access to justice the burden is on it to establish this on the balance of probabilities.
(c) Even where R appears to have no realisable assets of its own with which to satisfy the proposed condition, that condition will not stifle the claim if R can raise the required sum.
(d) Where R is a company, the Court must keep at the forefront of the analysis that it is a distinct legal personality from its shareholders. The question is whether R can establish on the balance of probabilities that no such funds would be made available to it, whether by its owner or by some other closely associated person, as would enable it to satisfy the requested condition.
"The criterion is simple. Its application is likely to be far from simple. The considerable forensic disadvantage suffered by an appellant which is required, as a condition of the appeal, to pay the judgment sum (or even just part of it) into court is likely to lead the company to dispute its imposition tooth and nail. The company may even have resolved that, were the condition to be imposed, it would, even if able to satisfy it, prefer to breach it and to suffer the dismissal of the appeal than to satisfy it and to continue the appeal. In cases, therefore, in which the respondent to the appeal suggests that the necessary funds would be made available to the company by, say, its owner, the court can expect to receive an emphatic refutation of the suggestion both by the company and, perhaps in particular, by the owner. The court should therefore not take the refutation at face value. It should judge the probable availability of the funds by reference to the underlying realities of the company's financial position; and by reference to all aspects of its relationship with its owner, including, obviously, the extent to which he is directing (and has directed) its affairs and is supporting (and has supported) it in financial terms."
Zumax's opposition to the imposition of sanctions
The merits of the claims
The Bank's conduct
The stifling argument
The sums owed to Zumax under the judgment of Obadina J
Other factors
Conclusions