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England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Sabbagh v Khoury & Ors [2018] EWHC 1330 (Comm) (31 May 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2018/1330.html Cite as: [2018] EWHC 1330 (Comm) |
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THE BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND & WALES
COMMERCIAL COURT (QBD)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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SANA HASSIB SABBAGH | Claimant | |
and | ||
(1) WAEL SAID KHOURY (2) SAID TOUFIC KHOURY (deceased) (3) SAMER SAID KHOURY (4) TOUFIC SAID KHOURY (5) SAMIR HASSIB SABBAGH (6) SUHEIL HASSIB SABBAGH (7) WAHBE ABDULLAH TAMARI (8) CONSOLIDATED CONTRACTORS GROUP SAL (HOLDING COMPANY) (9) CONSOLIDATED CONTRACTORS INTERNATIONAL COMPANY SAL (OFFSHORE) (10) HASSIB HOLDING SAL |
Defendants |
Jessica Hughes (instructed by CMS Cameron McKenna Nabarro Olswang LLP) for the Fifth, Sixth and Tenth Defendants
Hearing dates: 27-28 February 2018
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Robin Knowles:
Introduction
The two material claims
"7. On 29 June 2002 Hassib [Sana's father] suffered a severe stroke which incapacitated him for the rest of his life and, it is alleged, rendered him unable to make any business decisions or to manage his own affairs. In proceedings issued in the High Court on 9 July 2013 [Sana] alleged that the principal defendants conspired from a date shortly after Hassib's stroke to misappropriate assets belonging to Hassib and that since his death in 2010 they have also conspired to deprive her of her entitlement to the shares in CCG which she claims belonged to Hassib at the date of his death. These two claims have been labelled the asset misappropriation claim and the share deprivation claim and, for convenience, we shall adopt the same terminology.
8. The asset misappropriation claim relates for the most part to dividends from Hassib's shares in CCG which were used either to make investments in other companies and property or to meet expenses such as the running costs of an aircraft. It is not in dispute that before his stroke Hassib used and authorised CCIC [Consolidated Contractors International Company, a company in the CCC group and the Ninth Defendant] to pay family expenses and charitable donations out of his income from dividends and other investments. But the allegation is that, following Hassib's stroke, accumulated dividends and other income were used knowingly by the defendants (other than [the Seventh Defendant] and HH) to make improper or unauthorised investments in their own names and that, when sold, the proceeds of sale from these investments were not accounted for or applied for the benefit of Hassib. To the extent that they would otherwise have formed part of Hassib's estate on death, [Sana] seeks damages for conspiracy based on the value of the misappropriated assets.
9. The share deprivation claim depends on Hassib having retained ownership of shares in CCG at the date of his death. [Sana] relies on a confirmation by the Commercial Registry in Beirut ("the Commercial Registry") dated 16 January 2010 that its register contained an entry which records that, as at 10 May 2009, Hassib continued to hold 399,915 shares in CCG. She alleges that following her father's death, the defendants conspired to deprive her of her entitlement under Lebanese law to a third of this shareholding by unlawfully procuring the transfer of the shares to HH."
Article 45 of the Articles of Association of CCG
"Disputes
Every dispute arising during the course of the existence of the company or during its liquidation, whether between shareholders themselves or between shareholders and the company itself, shall be solved through mediation or else through arbitration according to the regulation put in place by the First Board of Directors …, provided that the general shareholders assembly has approved it.
Disputes are divided into two kinds:
A) Individual disputes in which the aggrieved party has the right to file a claim according to the directives of Article 166 of the Trade Act against the company, and which the shareholders are not permitted to halt through the balloting process via the general shareholders assembly for the purpose of releasing from responsibility the members of the Board of Directors
B) Disputes involving the general interests of the company; these cannot be directed against the Board of Directors or against one of its members except in the name of and on behalf of a group of shareholders, and in accordance with a decision from the regular general shareholders assembly."
The decision of the Court of Appeal of England & Wales
"Article 45: asset misappropriation claim
122. It was common ground that the only way by which the claimant could be bound by Article 45, in relation to the asset misappropriation claim, was in her capacity as Hassib's heir. Sana was not, and nor did she claim an entitlement to have been, a shareholder in CCG at any time relevant to this claim.
123. Moreover, as the judge recorded at [246]-[248], the parties' experts on Lebanese law were in effect agreed that Sana would only be bound insofar as the asset misappropriation claim was based on the contract containing the arbitration clause; that is the articles of association. Therefore, regardless of the scope of Article 45, the claimant would only be bound by it if the asset misappropriation claim was based on CCG's articles of association.
124. In our view the asset misappropriation claim is not based on CCG's articles of association, either when made by Sana in her own right or when brought in her capacity as Hassib's heir. Accordingly, Sana is not bound by Article 45 and questions of the scope of the clause fall away. As the judge found, the proper characterisation of the asset misappropriation claim, evaluated as a matter of substance and not form, is a claim based on the general Lebanese law concerning an alleged conspiracy to deprive Sana of what is said to have been Hassib's property. The claim is not concerned with breaches of the articles of association, and is essentially no different from a (hypothetical) claim that the defendants conspired to take other property from Hassib which Sana would otherwise have inherited. This is not merely due to the fact that the claim is framed in non-contractual terms, nor is it a matter of clever pleading. The claim is in substance different from a claim based on the articles of association.
125. For these reasons, we also agree with the judge that the claim is not an accounting claim in relation to Hassib's "shareholder account", and that it is not appropriate to siphon off a part of this claim for a mandatory stay. To the extent that there is an accounting exercise, it relates to a quantification of the claim based on the general law. Nor, similarly, is the claimant asserting a right to receive dividends qua shareholder: rather, the claim is that dividends which were declared were improperly diverted away from Hassib (and thus Sana).
126. Finally, in relation to why Sana is not bound by Article 45, it is no answer for the defendants to suggest that the judge overlooked or failed to apply the evidence of Professor Slim to the effect that the asset misappropriation claim could only have been brought as a claim in contract in Lebanon. The obvious and dispositive reason is that the defendants did not challenge on appeal the judge's conclusion that the asset misappropriation claim, as framed as a non-contractual claim, was arguable. This contention therefore simply goes to the merits of the asset misappropriation claim as a matter of Lebanese law. Secondarily, it follows from our conclusion above concerning characterisation that, in fact, the asset misappropriation claim could not have been brought as a contract claim based on rights derived from the articles of association.
127. It follows that it is not necessary to consider whether the asset misappropriation claim falls within the scope of Article 45. However, our view is that, even if the claimant had been bound by the arbitration clause, the asset misappropriation claim would not have been within its scope. This is because the scope of Article 45 is limited by Article 762 of the Lebanese Code of Commerce, which prescribes that arbitration clauses are only valid insofar as they relate the interpretation, enforcement or performance of the contract in question. Moreover, Article 45 is expressly confined to the two kinds of disputes identified as 'A' and 'B', and the asset misappropriation claim does not fall into either category.
Article 45: share deprivation claim
128. The claimant could only be bound by Article 45 if the share deprivation claim was brought as Hassib's heir or if Sana was claiming to be entitled to be recognised as a shareholder.
129. In our view, Sana is again not bound by Article 45. It is clear that she is not claiming as heir: the claim was in no sense inherited from Hassib, and indeed Hassib could not have brought the claim which the claimant does bring. The claim is not based on the articles of association, but on the general law. Similarly, we are inclined to accept that Sana is not claiming an entitlement to be recognised as a shareholder, but rather is claiming that the defendants have deprived her of this entitlement. The relationship is tripartite: whilst Hassib would have been bound to arbitrate an assertion that he was entitled to be recognised as shareholder, as against the defendants, this cannot bind Sana to arbitrate her claim even if her claim depends in part on the question of Hassib's ownership, since she does not claim on Hassib's behalf.
130. In any event we would also accept that the share deprivation claim is, like the asset misappropriation claim, outside the scope of Article 45 since the arbitration clause is confined to the two specified kinds of disputes."
The interim injunction sought
The present case
No agreement to arbitrate the two claims
"Issue estoppel may arise where a particular issue forming a necessary ingredient in a cause of action has been litigated and decided and in subsequent proceedings between the same parties involving a different cause of action to which the same issue is relevant one of the parties seeks to reopen that issue."
Lord Sumption JSC went on, at [22], to conclude that one of the propositions for which Arnold was authority was:
"… Except in special circumstances where this would cause injustice, issue estoppel bars the raising in subsequent proceedings of points which (i) were not raised in the earlier proceedings or (ii) were raised but unsuccessfully. …"
The Lebanese Court
Delay
Other impact on the Arbitration Claimants
Other cases
Conclusion
Other matters