BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Financial Services Authority (FSA) & Ors v Amro International SA & Ors [2010] EWCA Civ 123 (24 February 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2010/123.html Cite as: [2010] Bus LR 1541, [2010] EWCA Civ 123 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
MR JUSTICE COLLINS
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE STANLEY BURNTON
and
LORD JUSTICE JACKSON
____________________
THE FINANCIAL SERVICES AUTHORITY (1) ELISABETH CONNELL (2) PATRICIA SENRA (3) |
Appellants |
|
- and - |
||
AMRO INTERNATIONAL SA (1) |
||
CREON MANAGEMENT SA (2) |
Respondents |
|
- and - |
||
GOODMAN JONES LLP |
Interested Party |
____________________
WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7404 1424
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Charles Flint QC (instructed by Mishcon de Reya) for the Respondents
The Interested Party did not appear and was not represented.
Hearing date: 2 February 2010
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE STANLEY BURNTON :
Introduction
The facts
I grant this consent motion …. It is extremely unlikely that I will grant any further extensions; this case focuses on events that occurred in 1999 to 2002.
in obtaining the production of documents from Goodman Jones Chartered Accountants ("Goodman Jones"), a London-based accounting firm that we have ascertained through discovery has (or had) records in its possession relating to entities and/or transactions relevant to the SEC's civil court action.
The SEC stated that Badian and others, acting for Rhino, had used short selling to manipulate Sedona's stock price downward to favour the financial interest of Rhino's clients, Amro, Creon and related SPVs identified in Exhibit A to the letter. That list was the list of SPVs that had been provided by Mr Charron. The letter stated:
The documents sought from Goodman Jones will show the identity of the owners of Amro, Creon, and the SPVs and the roles of those entities in the alleged fraud to manipulate Sedona's stock price.
1. All documents that relate to ... Rhino, Amro, Creon … and/or their Special Purpose Vehicles, identified in Exhibit A to this letter, for the earlier of the date of Amro's incorporation or January 1, 2000 through the present, including, but not limited to:
a. All documents that reflect the legal and/or beneficial owners, and the persons who funded and/or directed their activities;
b. All memorandum or correspondence related to Rhino, Amro, Creon and/or their Special Purpose Vehicles; and
c. Bank, brokerage and/or depository accounts records of … Amro and/or Creon and/or their Special Purpose Vehicles (including, but not limited to opening account documents, monthly account statements, cancelled check, deposit slips, and/or wire transfers) in which any of them or persons affiliated with them had signatory or trading authority, and/or in which any of them had a legal or beneficial interest.
The SEC requested the FSA to compel production of these documents in the event that Goodman Jones refused to produce them.
In particular, the FSA wanted to discuss the scope of the request and the relevance of information requested. In particular, the FSA could not understand the relevance of the information requested about Creon and a number of SPVs, as they were not referenced in the SEC's publicly available complaint. The FSA wanted to discuss the following areas of concern with the SEC:
1. How are Goodman Jones related – who are their clients?
2. Who are Creon and what is their involvement as they are not mentioned in the SEC complaint?
3. How are the SPVs related?
4. Why is the timeframe so wide considering conduct in question was prior to 2003?
The SEC explained that the fraudulent action by Andreas Badian as contained in the SEC's request was not an isolated incident and that Andreas Badian and other members of the Badian family had been involved in repeated fraudulent and manipulative practices. The SEC explained that Creon was an organisation that had been identified during discovery which has the same status as Amro and appeared to be involved in the same manipulative transactions. The SEC believe that both Amro and Creon are ultimately owned by members of the Badian family and that Andreas Badian personally profited from the manipulative trading in question.
… do not view the request as unreasonable. Explained that Badian had done the same thing with other transactions and under US law, "pattern and practice" can be used as evidence to show a guilty mind. The interest in Creon and the SPVs is to show a course of behaviour and highlight that Badian had acted in a fraudulent way on a number of occasions and may himself have personally benefited from the manipulative trading in question.
The SEC said that they would send a letter to the FSA setting out the relevance of Creon in the lawsuit, the relationship and relevance of the SPVs and of the documents referred to in requests b and c.
For your information, we hold some records within the items a, b and c of your aforementioned letter and these records could be made available within your timescale.
1. Creon and Amro were both managed by Badian's company and engaged in what appears to be the same fraudulent conduct. They both used the same source of funds for their business.
2. The Special Purpose Vehicles operated to conceal the action of Amro and Creon.
3. The correspondence sought in Item "b" concerning Amro, Creon and the SPVs should show who was directing their activities, the source of their funding, the nature of their operations, and the distribution of profits from illegal conduct. The bank records sought in Item "c" should document the flow of funds into and out of accounts in the names of Rhino, Amro, Creon, and the SPVs. They should also help establish the extent to which Defendant Badian profited from the fraudulent activities of these entities in which he participated. The documents that the Commission seeks from Goodman Jones go to the heart of the allegations in the Complaint. Those documents will help establish the following:
1. Who owns and financed Amro's activities?
2. Who owns and financed Creon's activities?
3. How did Amro and Creon initially fund the transactions that gave rise to the allegations in the complaint?
4. How Amro and Creon initially funded similar transactions?
5. How Amro and Creon earned money from such transactions?
6. To which banks or other depository institutions did Amro and Creon send the earnings or profits from those transactions?
7. Whether any of those earnings are traceable to the funds expended for the benefit of Defendant Badian?
Our goal is to show a "pattern of practice" or a "course of conduct" on the part of Defendant Badian. Such a showing finds support in the law of evidence applicable to this case. Our U.S. Federal Rule of Evidence 404(b) permits a proponent to show "other crimes, wrongs, or acts [to show] proof of motive, opportunity, [or] intent" to engage in the conduct of which a civil Complaint alleges. Correspondence developed in this litigation reveals that Goodman Jones was intimately involved in maintaining the books and records of Rhino, Amro, Creon and the SPVs. Those documents too will help prove the allegations in the Commission's Complaint.
What do you seek to achieve with Enforcement Tools?
- Assist the SEC to further its proceedings against the Defendants, who are suspected of short selling stock in order to manipulate the price downwards, contrary to the provisions of the Securities Act 1933 and the Securities and Exchange Act 1934.
- Fulfil the FSA's obligation to take such steps as it considers appropriate to co-operate with other persons who have functions similar to our own, as required by section 354 of FSMA.
- Fulfil the FSA's commitment to cooperate, provide assistance and exchange information pursuant to the IOSCO Multilateral MoU dated May 2002 and the bilateral MoU between the SEC and the FSA dated 25 September 1991.
It set out the SEC's allegations as follows:
Notwithstanding this prohibition the Commission alleges that Badian, a senior employee at Rhino, engaged in a scheme of extensive short selling of Sedona's shares on behalf of Amro and Creon, in violation of this agreement and US federal securities laws. This conduct operated as a fraud on Sedona and the market for Sedona's shares. The SEC's complaint further alleges that Jacob Spinner, Mottes Drillman and Jeffrey "Danny" Graham assisted Badian in carrying out this scheme. They executed manipulative trades through accounts they controlled at Defendant Pond Equities and other Broker, Refco Securities ("Refco"). They engaged in matching trades with respect to transactions at two brokerage firms, Westminster and Refco, and they double-reported transactions to create the false impression of sales volume. Badian illegally directed Spinner, Drillman and Graham to sell short massive amounts of Sedona stock with "unbridled levels of aggression," to "clobber" Sedona's stock price until it "collapsed." These three individuals concealed the identity of Amro and Creon from the market, which enabled them to create the false appearance that individual investors were selling large amounts of Sedona's stock. During March 2001, Badian directed trading in Sedona that comprised approximately 40% of all trading stock. During that period, Sedona's share price dropped from an average of $1.43 a share before 1 March 2009 to an average of $0.75 per share by 23 March 2001.
The Commission also alleges that the firm Pond Equities and its senior management violated the supervision and recordkeeping requirements of federal securities laws in connection with its trading in Sedona's shares. Moreover, Pond and its directors failed to adopt adequate supervisory and compliance policies and procedures or systems to detect or prevent the manipulative trading in which Spinner and Drillman engaged.
Correspondence obtained during this litigation reveals that Goodman Jones was involved in maintaining the books and records of Rhino, Amro, Creon and the relevant SPVs.
The document set out the relevance of the information sought by repeating the contents of the SEC email of 28 July 2009. Under the heading "Factors in favour of and against Enforcement action", it referred to section 169(1)(b) of FSMA, set out below, and considered the factors mentioned in section 169(4):
Whether corresponding assistance would be given
20. The SEC is a signatory to a bilateral MoU with the FSA dated 25 September 1991 and to the ISOCO MoU of May 2002. Under the terms of these MoUs, the SEC has rendered, and continues to render, corresponding assistance to the FSA.
Whether there is a UK parallel to the law or requirement breached.
21. The SEC's investigations concerns potential violations of the general antifraud provision of the Securities Act of 1933 and the Securities and Exchange Act of 1934. The equivalent offences under UK law are contained in section 397 of FSMA
The seriousness of the case and its importance to persons in the UK
22. The SEC regards the matters giving rise to its investigation as serious. The conduct under question is limited to the US and does not involve UK entities. It is not known whether persons in the UK are affected.
Whether it is in the public interest
23. There is a strong public interest in continuing to foster relationships of mutual assistance with overseas regulators. The exchange of information is of clear advantage to the parties involved and contributes to the maintenance of comity as recognised in international jurisprudence.
Turning to other factors to be consider by FSA:
24. The proposed investigators will consist of Beth Connell and Patricia Senra from the Legal Group.
25. The amount of information being requested is substantial considering the short deadline for production. However, the SEC has explained that the information is necessary to show repeated conduct on behalf of Mr Badian and prove to the court that Mr Badian has shown a repeated course of conduct. In addition, Goodman Jones has indicated that production by the required deadline is feasibile.
"REASONS
Investigators have been appointed in order to assist the SEC with its ongoing civil action in the matter of SEC v Andreas Badian, Jacob Spinner, Mottes Drillman, Jeffrey Graham, Pond Securities Corp, Ezra Birnbaum and Shaye Hirsch, Civ. Action No. 06CV 2621 (Southern District of New York). This action involves fraudulent and manipulative trading in the common stock of Sedona Corporation contrary to the general antifraud provisions contained in section 17(a) of the Securities Act of 1933 and section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act 1934.
(1) The alleged "fraudulent and manipulative trading in the common stock of Sedona Corporation" during March 2001 pleaded in a complaint dated 3 April 2006 ("the US Complaint"); or
(2) The allegation in the US Complaint that the said trading in Sedona stock was "to favour the financial interest of… Amro International SA"; or
(3) The allegation that the alleged "scheme of extensive short selling of Sedona Shares" was engaged in by Andreas Badian.
The legislative framework
The Authority must take such steps as it considers appropriate to co-operate with other persons (whether in the United Kingdom or elsewhere) who have functions—
(a) similar to those of the Authority; or
(b) in relation to the prevention or detection of financial crime.
169. (1) At the request of an overseas regulator, the Authority may—
(a) exercise the power conferred by section 165; or
(b) appoint one or more competent persons to investigate any matter.
(2) An investigator has the same powers as an investigator appointed under section 168(3) (as a result of subsection (1) of that section).
(4) In deciding whether or not to exercise its investigative power, the Authority may take into account in particular –
(a) whether in the country or territory of the overseas regulator concerned, corresponding assistance would be given to a United Kingdom regulatory authority;
(b) whether the case concerns the breach of a law, or other requirement, which has no close parallel in the United Kingdom or involves the assertion of a jurisdiction not recognised by the United Kingdom;
(c) the seriousness of the case and its importance to persons in the United Kingdom;
(d) whether it is otherwise appropriate in the public interest to give the assistance sought.
172 Additional power of persons appointed as a result of section 168(1) or (4)
(1) An investigator has the powers conferred by section 171.
(2) An investigator may also require a person who is neither the subject of the investigation ("the person under investigation") nor a person connected with the person under investigation—
(a) to attend before the investigator at a specified time and place and answer questions; or
(b) otherwise to provide such information as the investigator may require for the purposes of the investigation.
(3) A requirement may only be imposed under subsection (2) if the investigator is satisfied that the requirement is necessary or expedient for the purposes of the investigation.
(4) "Investigator" means a person appointed as a result of subsection (1) or (4) of section 168.
(5) "Specified" means specified in a notice in writing."
By virtue of section 169(1)(b), the Investigators were within the definition in section 172(4), and they therefore had the powers conferred by that section. Section 172(1) confers the powers conferred on other investigators by section 171:
171 Powers of persons appointed under section 167
(1) An investigator may require the person who is the subject of the investigation ("the person under investigation") or any person connected with the person under investigation—
(a) to attend before the investigator at a specified time and place and answer questions; or
(b) otherwise to provide such information as the investigator may require.
(2) An investigator may also require any person to produce at a specified time and place any specified documents or documents of a specified description.
(3) A requirement under subsection (1) or (2) may be imposed only so far as the investigator concerned reasonably considers the question, provision of information or production of the document to be relevant to the purposes of the investigation.
The judgment of Collins J
It is to be noted that subsection (2) of section 171 specifically refers to production of documents which must be specified documents or of a specified description, whereas 172 deals with the provision of information. I suppose it may well be said that production of a document may also be the provision of information, the information being the information contained in the document, but I would have thought that, when one is dealing with production of documents, the natural reading of the provisions of the Act mean one goes to section 171(2) rather than to section 172(2). However, since documents such as are in involved in this case are confidential documents, it seems to me that it is implicit, even if one does not specifically go to section 172(3), that it would not be appropriate to require their production unless indeed that was necessary or expedient for the purposes of the investigation. The word proportionate has been used and it is, as I understand it, accepted that the test that the FSA gives itself is one of proportionality when it is concerned with documents that are otherwise confidential, and it seems to me that that is a proper approach to be adopted when one looks at the provisions of the Act overall. Thus, I do not think that it is right to adopt a technical approach to these provisions of the Act. It seems to me that the approach which I understand to be that adopted by the FSA is indeed a correct one.
42. I come back then to the powers. It seems to me that where, as here, the request for assistance is based, as it was, and indeed the appointment of inspectors makes this clear, on the need to assist in the claim, then the nature of that claim becomes of fundamental importance. It is all very well for the SEC to say that they should be allowed to produce the evidence of other misconduct and to say that they are now alleging that Creon was involved and Amro was involved because Badian was himself, or through his family, effectively the owner of, or heavily involved in, the claimant companies. Those are not allegations which are contained in the claim and, as it seems to me, in those circumstances it is wrong for the FSA to agree to go beyond what is actually covered by the claim. It is particularly the case where, as here, the claim is made for such a wide variety of documentations.
43. Mr Hunter [counsel for Amro] submits that they have not been specified within the meaning of the legislation. Certainly "specified" can include a wide identification of documents but here there is indeed a scope for wondering precisely how far this went and, indeed, Goodman Jones themselves raised queries as to the extent to which they were bound to give discovery. But, more importantly, these, as I say, are sought in order to try to identify unlawful activities by, among others, Amro and Creon, who are thus being dragged in, without any right to defend themselves. It seems to me in those circumstances that the FSA could not have done other than decided that it was not necessary or indeed proportionate for the wide scope of discovery that was sought to be agreed to.
45. So far as questioning the SEC is concerned, it would, I am satisfied, place an intolerable administrative burden on the FSA if they were required to satisfy themselves in all cases as to the correctness of what they were being asked to investigate or the basis upon which the investigation was asked for. They are entitled generally to rely upon the information given to them by the foreign regulator and, in cases other than those such as this which rely on support from an individual court case, normally they will be told, I imagine, why it is that the information is sought, or rather that the investigation is sought, because the allegations are whatever they are and the regulator in question is pursuing the relevant enquiries. As I say, as a general proposition, it seems to me that such an investigation will be an endeavour to find evidence, that is what an investigation is all about, based upon allegations which may in the end turn out to be without foundation but which are taken seriously and properly taken seriously by the foreign regulator.
46. The circumstances here were such as did mean that the FSA thought it right to make some enquiries and that was because the request made did not seem to be consistent with the case which they were being asked to support. Those enquiries made were properly made and it seems to me the FSA adopted entirely the right approach. When, however, they received that information, for the reasons that I have given I do not think that they were justified in giving the assistance that was sought, but I do not think equally that it was necessary for them to make yet further enquiries in order to see precisely upon what the allegations were based. They were faced with what was requested, they knew that it was a request made very much at the last minute (that was obvious from the timing) and they knew the extent of the request and of the documents that they were being asked for. But, as I say, I do not think that there was any specific duty to make further enquiries. It may be that, if they still thought in terms of accepting the request or possibly accepting the request, they should have followed it further, but that was only if they sought to justify agreeing to the request.
47. In those circumstances, I am satisfied that the claim to that extent succeeds, and I say to that extent because I recognise, indeed it is clear, that some discovery will indeed be proper and, provided that that discovery was limited to the Sedona transaction or relevant to the Sedona transaction, then there could be no objection to it.
The issues on this appeal
(1) When considering whether to exercise the powers conferred by section 169(1) of FSMA, is the FSA under a duty to investigate or to verify the information provided by the overseas regulator?(2) On the basis that the SEC's request does not comply with the requirements of the MOUs, was it open to the FSA to accede to it?
(3) When investigators are appointed under section 169, is the FSA subject to the requirement in section 170(2)?
(4) Were the investigators confined by the terms of their appointment to seek documents relevant to the issues pleaded in the New York proceedings? In the circumstances of the present case, was the matter that the FSA was entitled to appoint the Investigators to investigate limited to the facts pleaded in the New York proceedings? And if so, were the documents the production of which the Investigators were entitled to require from Goodman Jones similarly limited to those evidencing those facts?
(5) When deciding whether to make a requirement under section 171(1), is it sufficient for an investigator reasonably to consider that the question, provision of information or production of documents is relevant to the purposes of his investigation, or must he be satisfied that the requirement is necessary or expedient for those purposes?
(6) Was the requirement made by the Investigators for the production of "specified documents or documents of a specified description" within the meaning of section 171(2), or was their requirement too wide or too vague to fall within the statutory power?
The parties' submissions on this appeal
(1) The FSA is under no such obligation.(2) Yes.
(3) No.
(4) No.
(5) The test to be applied is that of relevancy.
(6) The documents sought by the letter of 11 August 2009 are of a specified description and therefore within the statutory power.
Discussion
(1) The lawfulness of the appointment of the Investigators
(2) Was it open to the FSA to accede to the SEC's request if it did not comply with the requirements of the MOUs?
(3) Was the FSA required to comply with the requirement in section 170(2)?
(4) The scope of the Investigators' appointment
(5) The test to be applied by the Investigators when considering whether to exercise the power conferred by section 171
(6) Was the Investigators' requirement for specified documents or documents of a specified description?
27 In order to answer the question raised in this case I think it is necessary to return to first principles with such assistance as may be gained from the earlier authorities. A witness summons, unlike an order for disclosure, requires the person to whom it is addressed to attend court on a specified occasion and to produce to the court the documents to which it refers. It is a requirement reinforced with a penal sanction. Justice demands, therefore, that the person to whom it is addressed should be told clearly when and where he must attend and what he must bring with him. Anything less is unfair to the witness; it also makes supervision and enforcement by the court extremely difficult, as Miss Reffin was forced to admit. For these reasons I consider that the view put forward in Phipson , to which I referred earlier, is to be preferred. Ideally each document should be individually identified, but I do not think it is necessary to go that far in every case. In In re Asbestos Insurance Coverage Cases [1985] 1 WLR 331 the court was concerned with an application under section 2 of the Evidence (Proceedings in Other Jurisdictions) Act 1975 under which the High Court is empowered to make orders for the production of documents for use as evidence in proceedings abroad pursuant to a request from a foreign court. Subsection (4) of section 2 expressly provides that an order made under that section shall not require the person to whom it is addressed to state what documents are or have been in his possession, custody or power or to produce any documents other than particular documents specified in the order and subsection (5) provides for the payment of conduct money, expenses and loss of time. This strongly suggests that the draftsman was seeking to equate an order to produce documents made under section 2 with the writ of subpoena duces tecum and to draw a distinction between such an order and what at that time would have been an order for discovery. However, despite the express requirement that an order under this section must specify particular documents, Lord Fraser of Tullybelton, with whom the other members of their Lordships' House agreed, considered that "a compendious description of several documents" would suffice provided that the exact document in each case was clearly indicated. By way of example he drew a distinction between an order for the production of "monthly bank statements for the year 1984 relating to [your] current account" with a named bank, which he thought would satisfy the requirements of the Act, and "all [your] bank statements for 1984", which he thought would not: see pp 337-338.
28 Rule 34.2 does not contain any provision comparable to section 2(4) of the Evidence (Proceedings in Other Jurisdictions) Act 1975, but Lord Fraser's observations are none the less helpful because they provide an example of the ways in which, without describing them individually, it may be possible to identify the documents to be produced with sufficient certainty to leave no real doubt in the mind of the person to whom the summons is addressed about what he is required to do. In my view that is the test that should be applied when considering whether documents have been sufficiently identified in a witness summons. Whether it has been met is likely to depend, at least in part, on the particular circumstances of the case. It is unlikely to be met if the documents are described simply by reference to a particular transaction or event which is itself described in broad terms, although in cases where the transaction is self-contained and sufficiently well-defined that might be satisfactory. In general, I think that doubts about the adequacy of the description should be resolved in favour of the witness.
29 In the present case the documents are described in the schedule to each of the witness summonses in broad terms of the kind that would be appropriate to an application for disclosure but which fail to identify the documents with sufficient certainty to enable the witness to know what is required of him. I am satisfied, therefore, that the judge was right to set aside the witness summonses on this ground and that it is unnecessary to consider the other matters on which the witnesses relied in support of their applications. …
Conclusion
Lord Justice Jackson:
Lord Justice May: