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England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions >> Akhmedova v Akhmedov & Ors [2020] EWHC 2235 (Fam) (14 August 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2020/2235.html Cite as: [2020] EWHC 2235 (Fam) |
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FAMILY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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TATIANA AKHMEDOVA |
Applicant |
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- and – |
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FARKHAD TEIMUR OGLY AKHMEDOV WOODBLADE LIMITED COTOR INVESTMENTS SA QUBO 1 ESTABLISHMENT QUBO 2 ESTABLISHMENT STRAIGHT ESTABLISHMENT AVENGER ASSETS CORPORATION COUNSELOR TRUST REG SOBALDO ESTABLISHMENT TEMUR AKHMEDOV |
Respondents |
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- and – QUBO I ESTABLISHMENT STRAIGHT ESTABLISHMENT COUNSELOR TRUST REG WALPART TRUST REG SOBALDO ESTABLISHMENT DR ANDREAS IGNAZ SCHURTI URS DANIEL HANSELMANN DR ERNST JOSEPH WALCH DR BARBARA JOHANNA MARTINA WALCH DR MORITZ ROLF BLASY Committal Respondents |
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Graham Brodie QC and Richard Eschwege (instructed by BCL Solicitors) for the Eighth and Ninth Respondents and First to Fifth Committal Respondents
Charles Howard QC (instructed by Hughes Fowler Carruthers) for the Tenth Respondent
Hearing dates: 15-18 June, 29-30 June, and 4 August 2020
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Crown Copyright ©
This judgment was delivered following a remote hearing conducted on a video conferencing platform and attended by the press. The judge has given leave for this version of the judgment to be published.
Covid-19 Protocol: This judgment was handed down remotely by circulation to the parties' representatives by email and release to BAILII. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be at 10.30am on Friday 14th August 2020.
Mrs Justice Knowles:
a) the Applicant Wife's ["the Wife"] application dated 15 November 2019 for disclosure from the Eighth and Ninth Respondents, Counselor and Sobaldo, in support of her claims under s.423 of the Insolvency Act 1986 ["the IA"] and s.37 of the Matrimonial Causes Act 1973 ["the MCA"];b) an application dated 28 November 2019 by the first five Committal Respondents (Qubo 1, Straight, Counselor, WalPart and Sobaldo) to be released from their obligations under the orders made by this court in December 2016, March 2018, and August 2019. In effect, they ask the court to set aside or vary those orders in their favour; and
c) an application dated 26 February 2020 by the Eighth and Ninth Respondents, Counselor and Sobaldo, for a case management stay of the proceedings pending the outcome of proceedings in Liechtenstein.
Background
The Parties
The Variations Sought
a) Qubo 1 sought to vary the financial remedies order granted by Haddon-Cave J on 20 December 2016 by removing Qubo 1's obligation, pursuant to paragraph 16, to transfer title to, and to deliver up, the Artwork to the Wife;b) Straight sought to vary the order granted by Haddon-Cave J on 21 March 2018 by removing Straight's obligation to effect transfer of title to the Yacht to the Wife pursuant to paragraph 9 and, importantly, also to remove the concurrent judgment debt pursuant to paragraph 10; and
c) Counselor and Sobaldo sought to vary the freezing order which I granted on 15 August 2019 as continued in October 2019, by removing their obligations to give disclosure ancillary to the freezing order pursuant to paragraphs 20-22 of the August order.
Liechtenstein Proceedings
The Wife's Contentions
The Hearing: Expert Evidence
The Liechtenstein Court's Spruch or Advice
Breach of Professional Secrecy
1) Anyone who reveals or exploits a secret that has been entrusted to or made accessible to him… as a lawyer, legal agent, trustee, auditor, or patent attorney…
and the disclosure or exploitation of which is likely to prejudice a legitimate interest of the person who has engaged in his activity or for whom it has been engaged, shall be punishable by imprisonment for up to six months or a fine of up to 360 daily rates.
…
5) The offender shall not be punished if the disclosure or exploitation is justified in terms of content and form by a public or legitimate private interest.
6) The perpetrator is only to be prosecuted upon the request of the person violated in his or her interest in confidentiality (paras. 1 and 3).
The Offence of Embezzlement
1) Anyone who knowingly abuses his authority to dispose of another's property or to oblige another to do so, thereby damaging the other person's property, shall be punished by imprisonment for up to 6 months or a fine of up to 360 daily rates.2) Anyone who unjustifiably violates rules which serve to protect the assets of the beneficial owner is abusing his or her authority.
3) Anyone who causes a loss exceeding CHF 7,500 through the act shall be punished with a custodial sentence of up to 3 years, and anyone who causes a loss exceeding CHF 300,000 with a custodial sentence of between one and 10 years.
Civil Liability to the Wife: Intentional Harm from Immoral Acts
1) Anyone is entitled to demand compensation for damages caused by the damaging party which he or she has incurred as a result of culpability of the latter; the damage may have been caused by transfer of a contractual obligation or without relationship to a contract.2) Even those who intentionally inflict damage against good morals may be responsible for this, but if this happened when exercising a right, only if exercising right obviously had purpose of damaging the other.
3) If a contractual obligation of the debtor directed at forbearance is violated and the debtor continues the contractually unlawful behaviour despite the agreement, then the creditor can claim for elimination of the unlawful behaviour (ceasing) and forbearance of future illegal behaviour and in the event of culpability for damages.
Civil Liability of Directors of an Establishment
Breach of Execution
The Approach to Foreign Law and Considerations of Comity
"In my judgment, the Court should, in relation to [committal] applications in the case such as the present, adopt a flexible approach in determining, as a matter of discretion, what action, if any, to take - just as it does in relation to the question whether to make an order in the first place. That will involve taking into account all the circumstances, including the nature of the order made by the English and the foreign court, the circumstances in which the relevant orders were obtained, the consequences of breach of the foreign order and any other relevant considerations."
Thus, one relevant consideration is the risk of prosecution and sanction in the foreign state. Another is the nature of this court's orders and the circumstances in which they were made.
"112. Just as it is inconsistent with comity for an English court to purport to interfere with assets subject to the local jurisdiction of another court, so it is inconsistent with comity for another court to purport to interfere with assets situated here which are subject to the jurisdiction of the English court."
"70. It is important to note that these principles do not depend upon the nature of the claim or the nature of the loss suffered upon which the court in State A adjudicates. They are concerned with the location of the assets against which enforcement of that judgment is sought. It is, therefore, nothing to the point that the conduct of which the claimant complains occurred, or the losses which it suffered were incurred, in State A where the trial on liability takes place. Those matters may justify the exercise of personal jurisdiction over the defendant by the courts of State A if the defendant is resident elsewhere, but do not confer enforcement (or subject matter) jurisdiction on the courts of State A over assets located in other jurisdictions."
The Application for a Stay
Introduction
The Parties' Submissions
Legal Principles
"(3) Nothing in this Act shall affect the power of the Court of Appeal or the High Court to stay any proceedings before it, where it thinks fit to do so, either of its own motion or on the application of any person, whether or not a party to the proceedings."Rule 4.1(3)(g) of the Family Procedure Rules 2010 contains a similar case management power to stay the whole or part of any proceedings either generally or until a specified date or event. In applying that rule, the court must have regard to the overriding objective to deal with cases justly (r. 1.1(1)) and to the factors listed in r. 1.1(2).
"choosing whom to sue is one thing; choosing in what order to pursue proceedings against different defendants may be another, especially when two related sets of proceedings are being, or could be, pursued concurrently. In such a case the court itself has a greater interest, not only because the existence of concurrent proceedings may give rise to undesirable consequences in the form of inconsistent decisions, but also because the outcome of one set of proceedings may have an important effect on the conduct of the other".
"… Mr Pollock did not suggest that this would be the only such application of its kind if the judge's order were upheld, and he would have had difficulty making such a submission since another application has already been successfully made. He did, however, suggest that the court was well able to control its own business, and he accepted the grant of stays such as this would be a rarity, account always being taken of the legitimate interests of plaintiffs and the requirement that there should be no prejudice to plaintiffs beyond that which the interests of justice were thought to justify. It is plain that in exercising this jurisdiction the court would have to be mindful of the effect of article 6.I for my part recognise fully the risks to which Mr Carr draws attention, but I have no doubt that judges (not least commercial judges) will be alive to these risks. It will very soon become clear that stays are only granted in cases of this kind in rare and compelling circumstances. Should the upholding of the judge's order lead to the making of unmeritorious applications, then I am confident that judges will know how to react."
a) First, the judge noted, at [112] the obvious risk of inconsistent, indeed conflicting, judgments where, broadly, the same issues would fall to be considered by the court here and the court there at the same time and between the same parties. The court further observed that if the two sets of proceedings went forward to adjudication at first instance, then whatever the sequences, practical conundrums would develop.b) Secondly, the court said at [115-116] that the legal issues were plainly matters of German law and referred to the preference in VTB Capital v Nurtritek [2013] AC 337 at [46] per Lord Mance for a case to be heard by the courts of the country whose law applies. Hildyard J held at [117] that the jurisdiction likely to be most affected by the result was Germany.
c) Finally, there was the question of prejudice and the fact that the claims in Germany were to be determined in any event such that the Administration could not finally be brought to an end until those matters had been concluded.
Discussion
Delay
Risk of inconsistent and/or conflicting findings and decisions
a) Both claims plead and rely on the initial transfers of the Artwork, the Yacht and the Monetary Assets before the December 2016 Haddon-Cave order.b) Both plead and rely on the further transfers of the Yacht to Straight and the Monetary Assets to the five Liechtenstein trusts after the December 2016 Haddon-Cave order.
c) Both claims ultimately seek the transfer of monies to the Wife in satisfaction of the Haddon-Cave order. The s.423 claim is premised on the basis that the Husband entered into, or caused, transactions to put assets beyond the Wife's reach when she made her claim against him and the sums were awarded to her by the Haddon-Cave order. That is also the basis of the Liechtenstein proceedings. The same alleged schemes of evasion are advanced in both sets of parallel proceedings.
Appropriate Forum
Practical Sense
Conclusion
The Variation Application
The Nature of the Orders
The Present Application
The Parties' Submissions
Relevant Legal Principles: Variation
1) In this rule –a) 'financial remedy order' means an order or judgment that is a financial remedy, and includes –
i) part of such an order or judgment; or
ii) a consent order; and
b) 'set aside' means –
i) in the High Court, to set aside a financial remedy order pursuant to section 17(2) of the Senior Courts Act 1981 and this rule;
ii) in the family court, to rescind or vary a financial remedy order pursuant to section 31F(6) of the 194 Act.
2) A party may apply under this rule to set aside a financial remedy order where no error of the court is alleged.
3) An application under this rule must be made within the proceedings in which the financial remedy order was made.
4) An application under this rule must be made in accordance with the Part 18 procedure, subject to the modifications contained in this rule.
5) Where the court decides to set aside a financial remedy order, it shall give directions for the re-hearing of the financial remedy proceedings or make such other orders as may be appropriate to dispose of the application.
…
13.5 An application to set aside a financial remedy order should only be made where no error of the court is alleged. If an error of the court is alleged, an application for permission to appeal under Part 30 should be considered. The grounds on which a financial remedy order may be set aside are and will remain a matter for decisions by judges. The grounds include (i) fraud; (ii) material non-disclosure; (iii) certain limited types of mistake; (iv) a subsequent event, unforeseen and unforeseeable at the time the order was made, which invalidates the basis on which the order was made.…
13.8 In applications under rule 9.9A, the starting point is that the order which one party is seeking to have set aside was properly made. A mere allegation that it was obtained by, e.g., non-disclosure, is not sufficient for the court to set aside the order. Only once the ground for setting aside the order has been established (or admitted) can the court set aside the order and rehear the original application for a financial remedy. The court has a full range of case management powers and considerable discretion as to how to determine an application to set aside a financial remedy order, including where appropriate the power to strike out or summarily disposed of an application to set aside. If and when a ground for setting aside has been established, the court may decide to set aside the whole or part of the order there and then, or may delay doing so, especially if there are third-party claims to the parties' assets. Ordinarily, once the court has decided to set aside a financial remedy order, the court would give directions for a full hearing to redetermine the original application. However, if the court is satisfied that it has sufficient information to do so, it may proceed to re-determine the original application at the same time as setting aside the financial remedy order.
a) New events have occurred since the making of the order invalidating the basis, or fundamental assumption, upon which the order was made.b) The new events should have occurred within a relatively short time of the order having been made. It is extremely unlikely that could be as much as a year, and in most cases, it will be no more than a few months.
c) The application to set aside should be made reasonably promptly in the circumstances of the case.
d) The application if granted should not prejudice third parties who have, in good faith and for valuable consideration, acquired interests in property which is the subject matter of the relevant order.
"…. His Lordship was careful to contain the principle by reference to the absence of "any general or unfettered power to adjust the final order … merely because it thinks it just to do so". He confirmed that the essence of the jurisdiction is that "it would be inequitable not to [vary its terms] because of or in the light of some significant change in the circumstances since the order was made".[paragraph 52]
"… an application to set aside a consent order by way of an application under FPR r 4.1(6) will be considered against the Tibbles criteria against the backdrop of the desirability of finality in litigation, the undesirability of permitting litigants to have "two bites at the cherry" and the need to avoid undermining the concept of appeal. Having borne those matters in mind, the court can thereafter set aside an order following a "promptly made" application, but only in the following circumstances:"(i) where there had been a material change of circumstances since the order was made; (ii) where the facts on which the original decision was made had been misstated; or (iii) where there had been a manifest mistake on the part of the judge in formulating the order."
Discussion
"As the new FPR r 9.9A provides specifically for the power of the court to set aside a financial remedy order (as opposed to any other type of order) then it rather than FPR r 4.1(6) should, as of 3 October 2016, be invoked where such relief is sought. FPR r 4.1(6) will continue to govern any other applications to set aside which are governed by the Family Procedure Rules."
The Wife's Application for Disclosure
The Parties' Positions
Discussion
Conclusion