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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 >> The Serious Organised Crime Agency v Azam [2013] EWCA Civ 970 (31 July 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2013/970.html Cite as: [2013] EWCA Civ 970, [2013] 1 WLR 3800, [2014] 1 All ER 206, [2013] WLR 3800, [2013] Lloyd's Rep FC 513, [2013] CP Rep 47, [2013] WLR(D) 327 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
THE HON MR JUSTICE GLOBE
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE MOORE-BICK
and
LORD JUSTICE MCFARLANE
____________________
THE SERIOUS ORGANISED CRIME AGENCY |
Claimant Respondent |
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- and - |
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AMIR AZAM |
Defendant Appellant |
____________________
WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Andrew Sutcliffe QC and Jonathan Hall (instructed by CRT Legal) for the Respondent
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Lloyd:
Introduction and summary
The facts
"He has another bank account in Luxembourg, but can't remember the name of the bank, will think about it."
The relevant legal provisions
"The court –
(1) will not make an exclusion for the purpose of enabling a person to meet his reasonable legal costs (including an initial exclusion under paragraph 5B.1); and
(2) may set aside any exclusion which it has made for that purpose or reduce any amount specified in such an exclusion,
if it is satisfied that the person has property to which the property freezing order or interim receiving order does not apply from which he may meet those costs."
Decided cases about available assets and freezing orders
"If a defendant against whom a restraint order has been made wishes to vary the order in order to enable him to use the funds or assets which are the subject of the order, which I will call "the restrained assets", in order to pay for his defence, it is for him to persuade the court that it would be just for the court to make the variation sought. I would call that the burden of persuasion. For example, if it were clear that the defendant had assets which were not restrained assets, the court would not vary the order because it would not be just to do so consistently with the underlying purpose of the restraint order."
"I would not accept that submission. In my opinion the principles identified above apply to this class of case. The question for the judge was whether X discharged the burden of proof or, as I would prefer to put it, the burden of persuasion. That depends upon an analysis of the facts. As I see it, on an application to vary a restraint order in a case of this kind, where the order relates to all the defendant's assets, the position in principle is that it is for the defendant to satisfy the court that it would be just to permit him to use funds which are identified as being caught by the order. If the court concludes that there is every prospect of the defendant being able to call on assets which are not specifically identified in the order, or assets which others will provide for him, I do not think that the court is bound to vary the order in the terms sought."
"The obligation on the defendant to satisfy the court that it would be just to permit the use of funds for the payment of legal expenses is not the same as that there is an obligation on the defendant to prove the negative, that he does not have money outside those covered by the order. To hold otherwise would be to require him to undertake a task that would be extraordinarily difficult to discharge, the proof of the negative, and to do so in circumstances where his own first protocol article 1 rights were engaged because it is money which belongs beneficially to him and assets which belong beneficially to him which are the subject of the proceedings. It seems to me that to require him to prove the negative in those circumstances would, at the very least, risk infringing his article 6 rights; a difficulty which will not arise if the persuasive burden rests on the Director."
"Nevertheless his basic point in my judgment still holds good, and even in the absence of the practice direction it would be appropriate for the court to approach applications for an exclusion for legal expenses, or an application to vary or set aside such an exclusion, having regard to the familiar principles applicable to proprietary claims."
"… on the evidence before me, the applicant is a wholly unreliable witness and I could not hold that I am satisfied that she has no other sources of funds, even though none have been identified. … But, again, it seems to me that the important feature is that I have to judge whether or not the exclusion of money for legal expenses is being done in circumstances where there is a proper basis for satisfaction that there are other funds. There is nothing in her current lifestyle to suggest that that is so: she lives on benefits, the private schooling has ended and her husband is in prison, as he has been for many years."
The correct legal test: discussion
i) It is for the applicant to show that, in all the circumstances, it is just to permit him to use funds which are subject to the PFO in order to pay his legal expenses.
ii) If on the evidence the court is satisfied that there are other available assets which may be used for this purpose, to whomsoever they may belong, it will not allow the affected assets to be used.
iii) If the court is not satisfied of that, the court has to come to a conclusion as to the likelihood that there are other available assets on the basis of the evidence put before it. If the evidence leaves the court in doubt, but with specific grounds for suspicion that the applicant has not disclosed all that he could and should about his assets, then it may resolve that doubt against the applicant, as it did in SFO v X. But if the evidence does not provide any such specific indications or grounds for suspicion, then even if the court rejects the applicant's evidence as unreliable, it may not have any adequate basis for concluding that there are other available assets. In that case (Mrs Azam's application being an example) the court should not resolve the impasse against the applicant on the basis that it was for him to prove positively the absence of available assets. There may be objective factors which cast light on the probabilities one way or the other, as there were in the case of Mrs Azam. But if there is nothing of that kind, and nothing which indicates the existence of unexplained or undisclosed available assets, then the fact that the applicant has previously concealed relevant assets is not sufficient by itself to show that he is still concealing such assets, and thereby to deprive him of the ability to use his own assets, despite the constraints of the PFO, to defray the cost of legal representation to defend himself in the proceedings. I would therefore reject the proposition that there is a specific burden of proof on the applicant which requires him to prove that there are no other available assets which could be used for the relevant purpose, such that if he does not discharge that burden, his application must fail.
iv) In coming to that conclusion I am aware that I differ from the way the point was put by Henderson J in Szepietowski at paragraph 41, as to the applicability to cases under the 2002 Act (in its present form) of the principles applying in the case of freezing orders to protect proprietary claims in ordinary civil proceedings, and as to the burden of proof lying on the defendant, in which he followed what Stanley Burnton J had said in Creaven, before the 2006 amendments to the 2002 Act. I hesitate before disagreeing with Henderson J on any point, but it seems to me that this point was not necessary for his decision and he did not have occasion to examine the issue so closely as we have had to. In my judgment the observations of Mitting J and Ouseley J are better indications as to the correct approach in this respect. For each of those judges the point was central to the case before him.
Grounds of appeal
The judgment below
"63. The key point is the first point. The circumstances of travelling from England to Luxembourg to open two completely different bank accounts into which hundreds of thousands of pounds of cash were deposited is not something that one would forget. They were deliberate actions. They required guile, effort and planning. If the truth is that he only opened two Luxembourg accounts, I reject the proposition made by him that he would have needed the assistance of his wife to inform him about them. I am satisfied that Azam knew the difference between the two accounts and he knew roughly how much was in each. He even partly identified the second account to Mr Saunders in February 2011. I am further satisfied that he knew that he had to provide a full and complete statement of his assets and not just respond to what SOCA knew existed. He was in prison and I do not underestimate the difficulties inherent in that fact. However, he had plenty of time within which to think and to give his instructions. During April and May 2012, he was in the company of Mr Rose-Smith, a senior solicitor, for almost 25 hours discussing his assets. The detailed and professional way that Mr Rose-Smith went about the production of the statement and the defence, including reading his notes back to Azam, underline the care he was taking to ensure that both documents were an accurate reflection of what Azam had told him. The contradictory explanations later given by Azam as to why the existence of the BDL account was omitted are illuminating. I am satisfied that Azam appreciated that SOCA only knew about the KBL account and deliberately chose not to disclose the BDL account.
64. The consequence of this finding is that I am satisfied that Azam's statements of truth cannot be relied upon. I am also satisfied that I cannot rely upon Azam's statement that he has no unfrozen assets. To the contrary, I am satisfied that he has not provided full and frank information about his finances and has other assets which have not yet been discovered. Given the sums that have been deposited in the accounts that have been discovered, I am satisfied that whatever is deposited elsewhere will be a sizeable sum out of which he can pay the reasonable legal expenses of both his past and present solicitors."
Conclusion
Lord Justice Moore-Bick
Lord Justice McFarlane