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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 >> Tomic & Anor v Residences By Damoor Ltd & Anor [2024] EWHC 1348 (Comm) (05 June 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2024/1348.html Cite as: [2024] EWHC 1348 (Comm) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
LONDON CIRCUIT COMMERCIAL COURT (KBD)
B e f o r e :
(sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge)
____________________
(1) ANA TOMIC (2) JENS-PETER STEIN |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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(1) THE RESIDENCES BY DAMOOR LIMITED (2) ANTHONY JAMES CAMILLE COTRAN |
Defendants |
____________________
Helen Galley (instructed by Penman Sedgwick) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 12 April 2024
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
John Kimbell KC sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge:
Introduction
"The Second Respondent (personally and in his capacity as a director of the First and Third Respondents) undertakes that 50% of the net proceeds of sale of 50 Dewhurst Road, London (for the avoidance of doubt, "net" includes net of all and any fiscal liabilities of the Third Respondent such as corporation tax liability resulting from the sale) shall be deposited into an account in his name at QIB (UK) plc and shall not be removed from England and Wales, or in any way disposed of, dealt with, or have their value diminished save that this undertaking shall not:
1) Prohibit the Second Respondent from spending up to £7000 a week towards his ordinary living expenses, including, but not limited to (to the extent that such expenses fall within the scope of the Second Respondent's ordinary living expenses): (1) rent and/or a contribution towards rent of Flat A, 42 Claydon House, Chelsea Waterfront, Waterfront Drive, London SW10 0DD; (2) his children's school fees or a contribution to them, plus any reasonable sums invoiced to the Second Respondent in respect of legal advice and representation.
2) Prohibit the Respondents from dealing with or disposing of any of the above proceeds of sale or sums standing to the credit of the above Q.I.B (UK) plc account attributable to such proceeds of sale in the ordinary and proper course of their business (including, but not limited to, to the extent that the transaction otherwise falls within the ordinary and proper course of their business, the purchase of a replacement residential property in the United Kingdom for the Second Respondent and his family).
The Respondents may agree with the Applicants' legal representatives that the above spending limits should be increased for one-off payments or generally (consent in relation to any request to increase not to be unreasonably withheld) or that this undertaking should be varied in any other respect, but any agreement as aforesaid must be in writing (which includes for the avoidance of doubt an exchange of emails). There shall be liberty to apply to the court in the event of any dispute arising in connection with this undertaking."
"The Second Defendant (personally and in his capacity as a director of Damoor Limited) undertakes to the Claimants and the Court as follows:
1)All monies currently deposited in Damoor Limited's bank account at QIB (UK) plc (sort code 40-64-24, account number 10037849) ("the Monies") shall be forthwith transferred to the Second Defendant's solicitors, Penman Sedgwick LLP.
2)The Second Defendant will not withdraw any of the Monies from his solicitors' account other than for the purposes of funding the Second Defendant's costs and disbursements of these proceedings….
7) The Second Defendant will instruct Penman Sedgwick LLP and any solicitors who may be subsequently instructed by the Second Defendant in these proceedings:
7.1) by 4pm on 19 April 2024, to notify the Claimants' Solicitors whether or not the transfer provided for by paragraph 1 above has taken place; and
7.2) not to release any of the Monies other than for the purposes of funding the Second Defendant's costs and disbursements of these proceedings;
and
7.3) not to release any of the Monies to enable the Second Defendant to meet his living expenses;"
The other parts of the Undertaking which I have omitted were various fortifications to protect the Claimants in the event that Penman Sedgwick ceased to act for Mr Cotran.
The Three Schedules
Schedule No. | Hearing | Amount |
1 | 17 October 2023 | £9,420 |
2 | 13 December 2023 | £7,621 |
3 | 12 April 2024 | £41,488 |
a. A 486 page CMC Bundle;
b. A 493 page Application Bundle, which had been prepared for the hearing listed 1 March 2024;
c. A 212 page Supplemental Bundle for 12 April hearing
d. A 27 page bundle of supplemental correspondence.
e. A 145 page authorities bundle.
Factual Background
The Application Notice
a. Part (a) sought an affidavit from Mr Cotran confirming that he had complied and would continue to comply with the Undertaking. Mr Cotran eventually provided a response as part of a witness statement dated 23 November 2023 sent to Court the day before a CCMC took place ('Cotran 1').
b. Part (b) sought disclosure of bank statements for the QIB Account. This part of the application was due to be heard at a hearing on 13 December 2023 but the day before the hearing Mr Cotran agreed to provide the statements on terms that the costs of the hearing were reserved. A consent order dated 12 December 2023 was agreed.
c. Part (c) of the application notice, sought an order that the balance of the sale proceeds held at the QIB Bank be paid into an escrow account. It was this part of the original application which remained in issue until 11 April when the Modified Undertaking was agreed.
a. A first witness statement of Mr Moruzzi dated 17 October 2023 ('Moruzzi 1').
b. A second witness statement of Mr Moruzzi dated 7 December 2023 ('Moruzzi 2').
a. Cotran 1.
b. An affidavit dated 21 December 2023 ('Cotran 2').
c. A witness statement dated 29 February 2024 ('Cotran 3').
The legal basis for the Application
"(1) The High Court may by order (whether interlocutory or final) grant an injunction or appoint a receiver in all cases in which it appears to the court to be just and convenient to do so.
(2) Any such order may be made either unconditionally or on such terms and conditions as the court thinks just.
(3) The power of the High Court under subsection (1) to grant an interlocutory injunction restraining a party to any proceedings from removing from the jurisdiction of the High Court, or otherwise dealing with, assets located within that jurisdiction shall be exercisable in cases where that party is, as well as in cases where he is not, domiciled, resident or present within that jurisdiction."
a. The Court takes the undertaking as its starting point; it does not revisit whether the undertaking was properly given: see Koza [69] –[73].
b. The Court does not have to try the issue as to whether or not the undertaking has been breached. It proceeds upon a criterion of sufficient arguability and does what is necessary to "police" the undertaking: see Koza [79] and [80].
His submission was not challenged by Ms Galley and I accept it.
The Submissions
a. By 11 April when the Modified Undertaking was agreed, the Claimants had been wholly successful in all three parts of their original application (described above).
b. Mr Cotran had behaved unreasonably in that he deliberately ignored questions put to him in correspondence and refused to provide the QIB Account statements until the eve of the December hearing.
c. Mr Cotran admitted breaching the Undertaking in a number of respects. He accepted that he had to repay money which he ought not to have taken from the QIB Account.
d. There was a good arguable case of dishonesty in respect of the diversion of money claim and that he had misled the Court about his intention to remain resident in the UK.
a. Whilst Mr Cotran had admitted breaching the Undertaking, he had explained how it had come about and apologized. He had offered to take steps (and had in fact taken steps) to restore the balance on the QIB Account as if there had been no breach.
b. There had been some unattractive blanking in correspondence by Mr Cotran but he had been acting for a considerable period as a litigant in person and after taking legal advice he had provided the Claimants with the bank statements they had had asked for.
c. The conditions which the Claimants had sought to impose in relation to the escrow account were unreasonable and Mr Cotran had been justified in refusing them. The Modified Undertaking which was ultimately agreed had in substance been offered as early as 28 February 2023.
d. The Claimants had taken a very aggressive and oppressive approach throughout.
e. The Claimants had pursued and then abandoned a bad point in suggesting that Mr Cotran's legal expenses were included in the cap in the Undertaking rather than being in addition.
f. Costs had been wasted by the vacation of the 1 March hearing which was entirely due to the Claimants.
The relevant discretion
44.3(1) The court has discretion as to—
(a)whether costs are payable by one party to another;
(b)the amount of those costs; and
(c)when they are to be paid.
(2) If the court decides to make an order about costs—
(a)the general rule is that the unsuccessful party will be ordered to pay the costs of the successful party; but
(b)the court may make a different order.
….
(4) In deciding what order (if any) to make about costs, the court must have regard to all the circumstances, including—
(a)the conduct of all the parties;
(b)whether a party has succeeded on part of his case, even if he has not been wholly successful;
…
(5) The conduct of the parties includes—
(a)conduct before, as well as during, the proceedings and in particular the extent to which the parties followed any relevant pre-action protocol;
(b)whether it was reasonable for a party to raise, pursue or contest a particular allegation or issue;
(c)the manner in which a party has pursued or defended his case or a particular allegation or issue; and
(d)whether a claimant who has succeeded in his claim, in whole or in part, exaggerated his claim.
44.4—(1) Where the court is to assess the amount of costs (whether by summary or detailed assessment) it will assess those costs—
(a)on the standard basis; or
(b)on the indemnity basis,
but the court will not in either case allow costs which have been unreasonably incurred or are unreasonable in amount.
(Rule 48.3 sets out how the court decides the amount of costs payable under a contract)
(2) Where the amount of costs is to be assessed on the standard basis, the court will—
(a)only allow costs which are proportionate to the matters in issue; and
(b)resolve any doubt which it may have as to whether costs were reasonably incurred or reasonable and proportionate in amount in favour of the paying party.
(Factors which the court may take into account are set out in rule 44.5)
(3) Where the amount of costs is to be assessed on the indemnity basis, the court will resolve any doubt which it may have as to whether costs were reasonably incurred or were reasonable in amount in favour of the receiving party.
(4) Where—
(a)the court makes an order about costs without indicating the basis on which the costs are to be assessed; or
(b)the court makes an order for costs to be assessed on a basis other than the standard basis or the indemnity basis,
the costs will be assessed on the standard basis.
"In Excelsior Commercial and Industrial Holdings Ltd [2002] EWCA Civ 879 … the Court declined to give detailed guidance as to the principles to be applied by judges intending to make orders for costs on the indemnity basis, taking the view that they should not strive to replace the language of the rules with other phrases and that the matter should be left so far as possible to the discretion of judges at first instance (at [38] per Waller LJ). The Court held that the making of a costs order on the indemnity basis would be appropriate in circumstances where: (1) the conduct of the parties or (2) other particular circumstances of the case (or both) was such as to take the situation "out of the norm" in a way which justifies an order for indemnity costs (at [31] per Lord Woolf LCJ and [39] per Waller LJ)."
Analysis
Schedules 1 and 2
"We refer to the undertaking provided by Mr Cotran in January 2023, set out in
the Schedule to Deputy Judge John Kimbell KC's Order sealed on 1 February
2023 (the "January Order"). Our clients are concerned to ensure that the
undertaking is being properly complied with. Those concerns were heightened
in the light of your clients' willingness to breach the Disclosure Order by not
paying the costs ordered against them by the deadline in the Disclosure Order
or in a timely manner.
Accordingly, please confirm by way of bank statement
evidence:
27.1 That Mr Cotran is still complying with his undertaking to the Court set
out in Schedule A of the January Order;
27.2 The current balance remaining of 50% net sale proceeds deposited at
Mr Cotran's account at QIB (UK) plc (the "Deposited Amount");
and
27.3 The current total removed from the Deposited Amount to cover
permitted diminishments as set out in sub paragraph (1) and (2) of
Schedule A of the January Order (the "Permitted
Diminishments")."
"confirmation that you have seen the relevant evidence and that Mr. Cotran is complying with the undertaking"
"[T]he Undertaking does not allow you the privilege of my Bank Statements. These are all tactics to prolong this litigation for your firm's own financial gain, hence why you find it necessary for three of your colleagues to be copied in all emails"
The CCMC
1.1 Following the completion of the sale of 50 Dewhurst Road, £1,893,700.59 was deposited into a nominated account at Qatar Islamic Bank (QIB). My 50% share of the proceeds from the sale of our property, net of tax, were left in the nominated QIB Account.
1.2 Part of the terms of the Undertaking Order allowed £7,000 a week to cover my living expenses.
1.3 Part of terms of the Undertaking Order allowed funds in the nominated account to be used to cover legal fees.
1.4 I was advised that the value of tax owed, taking into consideration the sale of the Company's only asset, was £230,000.
1.5 At the time of writing this Witness Statement an estimated £294,000 has covered my living expenses of which £7,000 a week was made available to cover such expenses.
1.6 At the time of writing this Witness Statement it is estimated that £156,000 has been spent on legal fees.
1.7 The balance in the QIB Account is £267,000.
1.8 The balance will continue to deplete by up to £7,000 per week on living expenses and legal fees
where needed and I anticipate no funds in the QIB Account by March/April 2024.
"in order to give full and frank information to the Court in relation to compliance with an undertaking which I gave to the Court voluntarily on 20 January 2023"
The Affidavit exhibited a four page statement of account for Damoor showing a credit of £1,894,918 being the net proceeds of sale and then a series of transactions leaving a balance of £214,172 as at 18 December 2023.
a. The QIB Account is not an account in his name.
b. Mr Cotran did not have an account at the QIB.
c. That Mr Cotran had transferred £500,000 from the account to his own bank. This was said to cover 78 weeks of living expenses at £7000 per week. This period was Mr Cotran's estimate of how long the proceedings would last.
d. A transfer out of "roughly" £230,000 to another account to cover corporation tax and a transfer of 50% of the net amount to his wife had been made.
e. The account had been used to pay legal expenses.
Decision on Schedules 1 and 2
a. It was unacceptable and unreasonable for Mr Cotran and his then solicitors to completely ignore reasonable requests for information about the proceeds held pursuant to the Undertaking and for reassurance that it had been complied with.
b. No explanation was ever offered as to why no response was provided to any of the nine letters sent.
c. Mr Cotran did not admit (until Cotran 3) that he had acted in breach of the Undertaking in a number of respects including making deductions in excess of the generous weekly cap of £7000.
d. He has never explained why he failed to provide the information about the QIB Account when it was first requested. When he did respond in Cotran 1 and 2, the information was not full or frank. It took three attempts to reveal the extent of the breaches.
e. The purported explanations for the breaches were in my judgment wholly unconvincing. The fact that it had been overlooked by Mr Cotran when the Undertaking was provided that he did not have an account at QIB, the fact that QIB charged high fees for individual withdrawals and the fact that certain expenses such as school fees fell due on a termly rather than weekly basis were not good explanations for his conduct let alone excuses. The Undertaking contained within it a flexible mechanism not only for allowing one-off payments by agreement (such as for school fees) also for other variations to deal with practical issues as they arose. All that was required was an exchange of emails.
f. Well before the Claimants' first enquiry in June 2023, Mr Cotran's solicitors ought to have contacted the Claimants and explained that he did not have an account with QIB so the Undertaking could not be complied with according to its terms and proposing a practical solution to that problem. Further it should have been obvious that a unilateral £500,000 lump sum withdrawal by Mr Cotran based on a prediction of how long the litigation was going to take was not an acceptable step to take without either the consent of the Claimants or the permission of the Court.
g. The refusal to provide a copy of the QIB Account bank statement until the eve of the hearing in December was also unreasonable. A copy of the statement ought to have been provided as a matter of course given the terms of the Undertaking and in the interests of transparency. It was all the more obvious that it needed to be provided by October / November in the light of the failure to respond to the initial correspondence.
Schedule 3
a. I accept Ms Galley's submission that the terms of the escrow agreement proposed by Withers were unreasonable and oppressive. For Withers as solicitors on the record for other party to be able to pay itself for policing the remaining sums and for Mr Cotran to have to apply to them for permission to make withdrawals would be a highly unusual situation which the Court would be highly unlikely to have sanctioned. Although at the time Withers made the proposal that they act as escrow holder, Mr Cotran was not represented by solicitors, in my view, any escrow proposal should have involved the account being in the hands of a neutral third party.
b. The Claimants ought to have accepted Ms Galley's proposal made by email on 28 February 2024. The details and necessary fortifications ought to have been agreed in correspondence without the need for any further hearing.
c. The point taken by the Claimants and not dropped until 15 March 2024 that sums expended in respect of legal services were covered by the cap was a very bad one. This would be a very unusual type of order and in fact the cap in the Undertaking was agreed by reference to Mr Cotran's then current levels of expenditure (albeit before Withers were instructed for the Claimants).
d. Crucially in terms of proportionality, at the latest by the time Cotran 3 was received, it ought to have been clear to the Claimants that the entirety of remaining sum in the QIB Account were realistically going to be consumed by legal expenses. However the remaining proceeds were secured (whether by escrow or otherwise), the stark reality was that whatever the form of the escrow account agreed, it served no useful practical purpose for the Claimants. The trial had been fully cost budgeted at the CCMC and it ought to have been clear that the remaining sums (even when the admitted overspend was repaid) were going to be used up in legal expenses. It was never going to provide a pool to enforce against in the event of success at trial. A full blown pursuit of the Application after the end of February was accordingly in my judgment disproportionate.
e. The Claimants' skeleton filed for the hearing strayed far beyond the bounds of what was necessary to deal with the remains of the Application. It made detailed allegations (including a detailed four page schedule) about the underlying merits of the claim and made allegations about Mr Cotran which the Court was never going to be able to decide as part of the Application. Although, the skeleton was prepared before the terms of the modified Undertaking were agreed, it ought to have been confined to describing the extent of the breaches of the Undertaking and what was reasonably necessary and proportionate to remedy the situation.
f. There was no need to instruct a silk to deal with what remained of the Application. When the 1 March hearing was stood out due to the Claimants' failure to file a bundle in time, the reasonable thing in light of Cotran 3 to minimise any further time and costs in respect of the Application and instead to concentrate on the real issues in the case and preparation for trial. Instead bundles with a total content in excess of 1000 pages were submitted to Court.
g. Nevertheless, the Claimants reasonably incurred costs in January and February prior to the service of Cotran 3 trying to work out what had happened to the sums subject to the Undertaking based on Cotran 1 and 2 and how serious the breaches had been. Even after that they were entitled to take time to consider Cotran 3 and to incur some costs in negotiating a modified undertaking in correspondence which was not ultimately achieved until 11 April 2024.
Conclusion