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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Gulf Azov Shipping Co Ltd & Ors v Idisi & Ors [2004] EWCA Civ 292 (15 March 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2004/292.html Cite as: [2004] EWCA Civ 292 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERICAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE TUCKEY
and
LORD JUSTICE JACOB
____________________
GULF AZOV SHIPPING Co Ltd & ORS |
Respondent |
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- and - |
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CHIEF HUMPHREY IRIKEFE IDISI & ORS |
Appellant |
____________________
S Berry QC & J Collins (instructed by Stephenson Harwood) for the Appellant
Hearing dates : 3 March 2004
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Phillips, MR :
This is a judgment of the Court.
The claim against the Defendants
Contempt of court
The hearing before Langley J
Subsequent contempt proceedings
The claim for costs before Deputy Judge Marriott
The claim against Mr Egbe
The Deputy Judge's findings.
"29. In his evidence at the hearing, Mr Egbe accepted that he had been involved in the conduct of the defence of the Idisi Defendants in three ways. Firstly, he had organised the provision of £56,000 by way of a foreign exchange swap for Chief Idisi and that sum had been transferred to Nabarro Nathanson in London probably in late September 1999 when Nabarro Nathanson were instructed in place of D J Freeman & Co. Mr Egbe said that part of the sum of £56,000 was used to discharge the order for costs against the Idisi Defendants in the sum of approximately £16,000. Secondly, he had organised a loan to Chief Idisi of $350,000 which had been transferred through Mr Egbe's account in Geneva into an account in London on 17th November 1999. This Loan was to enable Chief Idisi to return to the jurisdiction the equivalent sum which he had caused to be abstracted in June 1999. Thirdly, Mr Egbe also said that he considered the conduct of Chief Idisi in Nigeria to be deplorable and he had urged Chief Idisi to have confidence in the English legal system, to participate in the action and not to flout the orders made by the English courts."
"110. I do not believe, that in conveying information to the Learned Judge in response to pointed questions from him, that Mr Bhalla either invented his answers or put forward answers which he knew to be untrue. I believe that Mr Bhalla acted in accordance with instructions he was given not only through Nabarro Nathanson, but directly on one occasion over the telephone from Mr Fred Egbe himself and in the courtroom from Miss Margaret Egbe. I have no doubt having considered all the evidence put to me and having had the advantage of seeing Mr Egbe in the witness box, that the sums of £56,000 and $350,000 were provided by Mr Egbe from his own resources and the Mr Schep was the conduit by which the funds could be transferred from outside Nigeria.
111. I also have no doubt that Mr Egbe and Miss Egbe were closely involved with the conduct of the Idisi Defendants' defence, not only in dealing with Nabarro Nathanson and in conveying messages to the Chief and no doubt his instructions to Nabarro Nathanson, but also in the critical events of the weekend of 6th and 7th of November 1999 on the eve of the hearing before Mr Justice Langley. Whether or not Miss Egbe took £50,000 in cash to London that weekend, it is plain that the intervention of Mr Egbe and his niece combined with the assurances from them that funds would be available, caused Mr Bhalla and Nabarro Nathanson to reserve their decision of Friday afternoon and decide to appear for the hearing on 8th November 1999.
112. As I have said, that hearing lasted six days. The hearing was critical to Chief Idisi's position in the litigation. Miss Egbe made an intervention by making a powerful witness statement on Chief Idisi's behalf as to his medical condition and explaining the attempts being made to purge his contempt. Her statement was designed to persuade the court to allow the case to proceed; and without it and the assurances given to the Learned Judge that funds were coming from Mr Egbe, it is doubtful that the Learned Judge would have allowed the case to proceed.
113. I find it inconceivable that Miss Egbe could have participated in all the ways she did, without her uncle's express permission and encouragement to do so. It is not as though Mr Egbe was a passive observer. He actively participated both in the provision of funds and in assurances to Nabarro Nathanson that funds would be available to enable them to continue and in explaining to Mr Justice Langley via the witness statement of Mr Cohen and the attendance note, precisely what steps he had taken to ensure that the $350,000 reached Nabarro's account in London as soon as possible. Accordingly, given my findings as to Mr Egbe's role, I see no reason to doubt Chief Idisi's sworn statement that Mr Egbe was one of the three men of substance who assisted the Chief financially from June 1999 when he learnt of the sequestration, to February 2000.
114. I believe it to be more likely than not that Mr Egbe, a highly experienced and able lawyer, would also have given advice to Chief Idisi as to how the litigation in England should be conducted. I cannot accept his evidence that he knew little of the proceedings in London. Clearly, he understood the issues before the court on 8th November 1999 and he must have realised, as it was obvious, that Chief Idisi's conduct in Nigeria in detaining the vessel and crew was plainly unlawful that the Chief had no defence to the detention or the demurrage claim and that any application to set aside the default judgment was bound to fail. There is no evidence on which I can judge whether Mr Egbe was paid or received some other benefit, other than the possible goodwill of Chief Idisi for the services he provided. However, I find it unlikely that without substantial benefit to himself he would have taken such trouble and time and exposed himself to the risk, however unlikely, that he might on his view have to repay Mr Schep if Chief Idisi defaulted"
"But I have found on the evidence that Mr Egbe did more. I have found that he arranged for the representation of Chief Idisi by Nabarro Nathanson and Mr Balla; that he financed that representation from his own pocket; that he permitted and encouraged his niece, one of his employees, to be actively involved in the conduct of the litigation to the extent of coming to London over the critical weekend of the 6th and 7th November 1999 and in providing witness evidence in support of the Chief's application to set aside the summary judgment and to be allowed to bring evidence on his counterclaim; that he himself gave evidence by means of Mr Cohen's witness statement and attendance note; and, that he helped to implement the vital strategic and tactical steps necessary to assist Chief Idisi, certainly from the critical period in September 1999 through until Mr Justice Langley's judgment of 26th November 1999."
"133. It may be that like Lord Justice Scrutton and the elephant, we cannot define it, but we know it when we see it; it may also be that, as I believe, guidelines can be formulated to reflect the principle that third party funding is an essential part of our civil justice system as it now stands, but the funder is exposed to a cost order where he has controlled or directed the conduct of the litigation, in a manner which has resulted in undue expense or hardship to the successful party."
"principally his personal participation in the conduct of the litigation at a critical time for Chief Idisi"
The grounds of appeal
Gulf's submissions
The law
"Subject to the provisions of this or any other Act and to rules of court, the costs of and incidental to all proceedings in the civil division of the Court of Appeal and in the High Court, including the administration of estates and trust, shall be in the discretion of the court, and the court shall have full power to determine by whom and to what extent the costs are to be paid."
"In the vast majority of cases, it would no doubt be unjust to make an award of costs against a person who is not a party to the relevant proceedings. But, as the facts of the present case show, that is not always so."
He went on to say that courts of first instance, with appropriate guidance from the Court of Appeal, would be well capable of exercising their discretion under the statute in accordance with reason and justice.
"… the pure funding of litigation (whether of claims or defences) ought generally to be regarded as being in the public interest providing only and always that its essential motivation is to enable the party funded to litigate what the funders perceived to be a genuine case."
"For my part I can see no difference in principle, in the context of facilitating access to justice, between the lawyer who provides his services pro bono or under a conditional fee arrangement, the expert (say an accountant, a valuer or a medical practitioner) who provides his services on a no-win/no-fee basis, and the supporter who - having no skill which he can offer in kind - provides support in the form of funding to meet the fees of those who have. In each case the provision of support – whether in kind or in cash – facilitates access to justice by enabling the impecunious claimant to meet the defendant on an equal footing. "
"85. It might be more practicable to distinguish on the basis of whether the party funded had a reasonable prospect of success in the litigation. But experience with legal aid has shown that this is difficult to predict in advance, particularly where the outcome depends upon credibility or the impression made in the witness box. Lawyers give advice on the basis that what their client tells them is honest and accurate (although they should draw attention to the difficulties which a court may have in accepting the evidence). It is unreasonable to expect funders to be any more sceptical. In practice, there has to be a general approach, whether for or against making such orders, even if there may sometimes be exceptions.
86. On balance, the arguments in favour of a general approach that "pure" funders should not be expected also to fund the opposing party's costs outweigh the arguments in favour of a general approach that they should. There must, however, be exceptional cases where it would be quite unjust not to make an order: principally where the litigation was oppressive or malicious or pursued for some other ulterior motive. The fact that it was quite unmeritorious would be powerful evidence of ulterior motive but neither a necessary nor a sufficient criterion in itself. "
Discussion
i) Arranging for Chief Idisi to be represented by Nabarros;ii) Financing Nabarros' representation from his own pocket;
iii) Permitting and encouraging his niece to come to London over the critical week-end of 6-7 November;
iv) Permitting and encouraging his niece to provide evidence as a witness;
v) Providing evidence himself by means of Mr Cohen's witness statement and attendance note.
We propose to consider each of these actions in turn.
"On any view, the provision of funds to enable payments to be made to the Claimants in the action, cannot conceivably be conduct which would merit the application of a costs sanction. It is the very antithesis of the circumstances contemplated by cost orders against third parties."
We would endorse the judge's comment. The court had subjected Chief Idisi's assets to a world wide freezing order, but at the same time ordered him to bring into the jurisdiction $350,000 and monies to discharge his costs liabilities. It is hard to see how any criticism could be made of third parties who assisted Chief Idisi to comply with the latter part of these requirements.
"20. The effect of the very draconian Orders that have been made in this action has meant that it has been virtually impossible for Chief Idisi to conduct his business; and it is inconceivable that either Chief Idisi or Lonestar Drilling Nigeria Limited could, themselves, have ready access to funds to the tune of US$350,000 which could be remitted to the UK. (It will be remembered that Citizens Bank had declined to advance funds once the Freezing Order was served.)
21. I understand from discussion which I had with Fred Egbe that Chief Idisi's brother had asked him to assist in providing funds to enable Chief Idisi to purge his contempt. Fred Egbe had agreed to make arrangements to provide the funds (which would be lent to Chief Idisi by various third parties). However, there was considerable uncertainty as to whether these funds could be remitted to the UK in time for the hearing on Monday 8 November 1999, and this problem has been greatly exacerbated by the unfortunate severe deterioration in Chief Idisi's health."
"139. I have considered carefully the analysis made by Mr Ghirardani as to the costs and the periods within which they were incurred. Given the evidence of Chief Idisi as to the period of time within which the three men of substance funded his defence, I find no fault with his analysis. It would, I think, be arbitrary and unreal in this case to attempt either to allocate responsibility based on relative financial contributions or, on conduct over different periods of time in the case of each defendant. Therefore I am prepared to make an order against Mr Egbe, that he pay the sum of £421,857.89 and against Chief Ofotokun in the same amount."
"In the instant case there is no doubt that Chief Idisi was funded from June 1999 to February 2000 and, as I have held, by the Fourth and Fifth Defendants."