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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 >> Slade (t/a Richard Slade And Co) v Abbhi [2018] EWHC 2039 (Comm) (24 September 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2018/2039.html Cite as: [2018] EWHC 2039 (Comm) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
LONDON CIRCUIT COMMERCIAL COURT
Royal Courts of Justice Rolls Building Fetter Lane London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
(Sitting as a Judge of the High Court)
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RICHARD JOHN SLADE (t/a Richard Slade and Company) |
Claimant |
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- and – |
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DEEPAK ABBHI |
Defendant |
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Stephen Robins (instructed by Birketts) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 24, 25 and 27 July 2018
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Crown Copyright ©
HH JUDGE RUSSEN QC:
Introduction
"On or around 11 July 2013 the Defendant:
(a) Informed the Claimant that Mr Singh himself would be unable to pay the Claimant's fees and disbursements to be incurred in connection with the Action";
(b) Agreed with the Claimant, in consideration of the Claimant agreeing to act for Mr Singh in the Action, that he would pay such fees and disbursements on Mr Singh's behalf, alternatively, lend Mr Singh sufficient funds to pay such fees and disbursements and ensure that those funds would be applied for that purpose, pursuant to the 2012 Loan Agreement (a copy of which was provided by the Defendant to the Claimant by email on 16 July 2013)"
Background
"Mr Singh was suing his two sons, Jasminder and Herinder, for a declaration that the family's property was held on a common intention constructive trust to give effect to the Hindu custom of mitashakvara by which the patriarch was entitled to partition the property, which would then be divided among defined male members of the family, here Mr Singh and his two sons, Jasminder and Herinder. The case was financially significant because the family's property included substantially the entire share capital of Edwardian Group Limited, a hotel-owning and operating group with, on its 2012 accounts, a net asset value in excess of £800 million. In addition, the eldest son, Jasminder, owned a very substantial property, Tetworth Hall, and its estate in Ascot, Berkshire."
"Rachel has just pointed out (which I should have thought of myself) that it would be preferable in terms of risk to Jasminder trying to bankrupt Dad if we lose for Mum to keep her Shares for the time being and for Dad to use the £500,000 which he is supposed to have in an off-shore account. That was constantly referred to during the Trial, but I am not clear whether it actually exists: Rachel believes that it does."
The Alleged Oral Agreement
"8. They were certainly well-informed about the status of the case, which we discussed briefly. Mr Abbhi was keen to ascertain how much work would be required and to stress that I should provide him with an estimate as soon as I was able. They professed themselves perfectly satisfied with my credentials, Mr McDonnell's recommendation being the only important matter. Mr Abbhi explained that while my contract of retainer would be with Mr Singh, his father-in-law had no liquid assets and so he, Mr Abbhi, would be responsible for paying my bills. To protect him from an application for costs in the event of an unsuccessful outcome, the money would be routed through Mr Singh's bank account, cheques drawn on which and signed by Mr Singh would be delivered to me by hand.
"9. I told Mr Abbhi that I would be prepared to act for Mr Singh in the proceedings only on this basis. I would never have done so otherwise, given that Mr Abbhi had made it clear to me that Mr Singh did not himself have the funds to pay my firm's fees."
"41. There is no truth in these allegations – save only that I did provide Mr Slade with a copy of the Loan Agreement by email, albeit on 15 July rather than 16 July 2013 (although the difference in dates may be accounted for by an international time difference).
42. I am quite sure that had Mr Slade suggested I should pay Mr Singh's legal fees I would remember it since I would have rejected any such proposal out of hand. I had gone to some lengths to document a formal loan agreement and had been advised that provided I was simply a lender of money to Mr Singh I would not be at risk of becoming liable in costs to Jasminder should Mr Singh lose his case. Accordingly, I had every reason to remain at arm's length from the litigation.
43. Furthermore, there is no truth in the allegation that I made some commitment to Mr Slade to lend money to Mr Singh. I cannot remember exactly what was said about my loan agreement, but we certainly discussed it, and I clearly mentioned that there was a written agreement because shortly after the meeting Mr Slade asked me to provide him with a copy of it. I am quite sure that I did not make any commitment to Mr Slade of the kind he alleges. I had no reason to do so. I think I would have remembered had he asked me to do so but I do not recall any discussion."
"My evidence is the total of what you see here" [by which he meant the Particulars of Claim and his witness statement]. "Perhaps I can help by putting it this way: I do not believe that I had actually seen the loan agreement at the time of my meeting with Mr Abbhi and his wife, Seema, but I had been told of its existence, both by Mr McDonnell and by Mr Abbhi himself."
The Parties' Testimony
"the best approach for a judge to adopt in a trial of a commercial case is …. to place little if any reliance at all on witnesses' recollections of what was said in meetings or conversations, and to base factual findings on inferences drawn from the documentary evidence and known or probable facts."
i) he was obviously anxious to distance himself from the Action and what the contemporaneous documents show to have been his involvement in it and his awareness of developments within it as it progressed;
ii) no doubt related to that first point, it seemed clear to me that even some four years on from the conclusion of the Action he was still mindful of the potential exposure to a third party costs application by Jasminder; and
iii) there was a disturbing shift in his account of the meeting on 11 July 2013.
"And then further, my Lord, if Mr Slade went with a different impression, that I was going to pay his legal – legal costs of Mr Singh and that I was personally liable, he never put that in writing. He could have sent me an email after the meeting of July 11 stating his understanding. And if it was so important to him, the payment of his legal bills were so important to Mr Slade, then he should have put that in an email. He didn't because there was no agreement."
"The arrangements I had in mind here was for Mr Slade to arrange to have the retainer agreement signed with Mr Singh. That was the main arrangement. The second arrangement was how he was going to receive his money from Mr Singh."
"A. I made Mr Slade aware of the mortgage on the shares and he was – because that was part of the loan agreement as well. There was a mortgage over the shares. He was aware of that and I told him as well that this is the maximum amount that I would be lending, if I would even go to that extent, because I do have a clause of further loans at my discretion.
Judge: So when you say, "I told him this was the maximum amount", what was "this"?
A. That was the value of the shares, which was at that point around roughly, I would say, £800,000 to £1 million, according to the books – the public records of Edwardian Hotels."
"Further to my previous email" – that was the one dated 21 January which I have mentioned in paragraph 35 above – "it is, of course, a feature of these arrangements that Mr Singh (the client and only person legally liable to pay) disposes of his shares (his only asset) to repay Deepak with the result that if Jasminder does not buy them from Seema and the case is lost, the legal team is then entirely dependant for payment on Deepak, Seema and Mr Singh's goodwill (none of them having any legal liability to pay). So if we structure the share transfer as Deepak has asked, we would need to include in the papers for signature (possibly before anything else was signed) a guarantee by Mrs Singh and a charge over her shares – unless there's something else you can think of. Let's discuss this aspect of the matter tomorrow."
Analysis of the Agreement
"The agreement that was made was this: Mr Singh, Mr Abbhi and Seema wanted me to act as Mr Singh's solicitor for the purposes of the forthcoming trial. I am reducing this to a series of propositions if you like. That is proposition number one. Number two: Mr Singh couldn't pay. Number three: Mr Abbhi said he would pay. Number four: Mr Abbhi said that there was a slight complication in that he did not want to pay me directly because he considered, on the basis of previous advice, that that might expose him more than necessarily [sic] to an application under section 51 by Jasminder, and so the precise way in which he would pay me would be by providing his funds so that Mr Singh could write a cheque and deliver it to me."
"[N]o action shall be brought ….. whereby to charge the defendant upon any special promise to answer for the debt, default or miscarriages or another person ….. unless the agreement upon which such action shall be brought or some memorandum or note thereof shall be in writing and signed by the party to be charged therewith or some other person thereunto by him lawfully authorised."
Disposal