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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 >> Energy Venture Partners Ltd v Malabu Oil and Gas Ltd [2014] EWCA Civ 1295 (09 October 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2014/1295.html Cite as: [2015] 1 All ER (Comm) 97, [2014] EWCA Civ 1295, [2015] WLR 2309, [2014] WLR(D) 417, [2015] 1 WLR 2309, [2015] CP Rep 3, [2014] 2 CLC 569 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION, COMMERCIAL COURT
Mr Justice Hamblen
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE McFARLANE
and
SIR DAVID KEENE
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Energy Venture Partners Limited | Appellant | |
- and - | ||
Malabu Oil and Gas Limited | Respondent |
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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)
Charles Graham QC and Andrew Lodder (instructed by Edwards Wildman Palmer UK LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing date : 17 July 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Tomlinson :
i) The Freezing Order was continued subject to various modifications;
ii) An arrangement was sanctioned whereby the Federal Government of Nigeria could give a payment instruction to JP Morgan for US$215 million to be paid into court with the balance of US$801,450,000 being paid to Malabu;
iii) EVP was required to fortify its cross-undertaking in damages by means of a written guarantee in favour of Malabu in the sum of US$150,000, a level which reflected the fact that the sum of US$215 million had not yet been paid into court; and
iv) Malabu had liberty to apply for an increase in the amount by which EVP should fortify its cross-undertaking in the event that JP Morgan paid US$215 million into court on the instructions of the Federal Government of Nigeria.
i) the cost of borrowing in Nigeria would have been higher than 3.25%; and
ii) the deposit interest rates which would have been available to Malabu had it deposited US$215 million in a Nigerian bank in Nigeria would have been considerably higher than 3.25%.
"24. I have already identified the evidence in this case which indicates that the cross-undertaking is of very uncertain value, but that does not automatically mean that fortification is required. In the light of the authorities just cited, it is both appropriate and necessary for me to consider the extent to which a risk of loss has been shown. In many cases the fact that there is a risk of loss will be obvious merely from the general situation, and while it may not be possible to put anything like a precise figure on the loss, the court, will if necessary, do what it can on the evidence before it to reach an appropriate figure. The courts are well accustomed to assessing the appropriate value to be given to things whose valuation is difficult. In some cases it will be possible to make a more precise or confident assessment than in others. The mere absence of particularised evidence does not mean that there is no evidence of a risk of loss. [Counsel] submitted that what he had to show was a risk of loss; any more refined questions of causation and likelihood would be appropriate for the enquiry (if any) should the cross-undertaking be called upon. I agree with that as a general approach. By and large it will be unnecessary and inappropriate for a court to go into a detailed and prolonged assessment of difficult questions on causation on applications for interim relief, not least because it might become entirely academic.
25. However, that leaves open the question of a threshold which has to be crossed by a Respondent in establishing that there is a sufficient risk of loss. If it is not sufficiently apparent that there is a sufficient risk of loss, then while that is no reason for not extracting a cross-undertaking, it would be a reason for not requiring fortification. It seems to me impossible to specify any formula for or definition of that level of risk. All that can be said is that the court must be satisfied that there is a sufficient level of risk to require fortification in all the circumstances. That will be a question of judgment in every case where it arises (though there will be large numbers in which it will not have to be the subject of any particularly anxious enquiry.)"
"20. I was referred to two authorities on this causation issue. In Air Express v Ansit [sic, in fact Ansett Transport Industries] [1981] 146 CLR 249, the High Court of Australia decided that a claimant for damages for loss under a cross-undertaking had to show that the making of the order was a cause without which the damage would not have been suffered. That was a case in which the rival competitor for having caused the relevant loss was, as here, the very existence of the proceedings in which the injunction was obtained. That test is, in effect, if I may be excused the Latin, a causa sine qua non test.
21. The same court also imposed a foreseeability test. In Tharros Shipping Co Ltd v Bias Shipping Limited [1994] 1 Lloyds LR 577, Waller J affirmed both those requirements as part of English law, and at page 581 continued as follows:
"[The court] retains a discretion not to enforce the undertaking if it considers that the conduct of the defendant in relation to the obtaining or continuing of the injunction or the enforcement of the undertaking makes it inequitable to do so, but if the undertaking is enforced the measure of the damages payable under it is not discretionary. It is assessed on an enquiry into damages at which principles to be applied are fixed and clear. The assessment is made upon the same basis as that upon which damages for breach of contract would be assessed if the undertaking had been a contract between the plaintiff and the defendant that the plaintiff would not prevent the defendant from doing that which he was restrained from doing by the terms of the injunction: see Smith v Day (1882) 21 ChD 421, per Brett LJ at p.427."
22. That analysis strongly suggests to me that it is loss caused by the preventative or, as the case may be, coercive effect of the injunction that is recoverable under the cross-undertaking."
i) the US$215 million in court was money which belonged to it and it suffered a loss by being prevented by the injunction from exercising the rights of an owner over the money; and
ii) the loss should be assessed on a basis which reflected an interest rate which would be payable to borrow the money over the time it was the subject of the injunction.
i) that it might be that the payment to Malabu was required to be paid on to a third party, then identified as a shadowy entity called Petrol Service Co Ltd, a company, as David Steel J observed, whose "name, existence and purpose remain[ed] as obscure at the end of th[e] hearing as it [had] at the beginning". EVP's point was that if, as seemed possible, Malabu was under an existing liability to pay the US$215 million to a third party upon receipt, then there would be no basis for its claim founded on the cost of borrowing, or indeed on deposit interest forgone.
ii) that since Malabu had the use, so it would appear, of US$800 million, there was no need for it to borrow a further US$215 million; and
iii) that there was no evidence that Malabu actually needed to or would borrow US$215 million to cover the position whilst the money had been paid into court.
"20. Having regard to those three principles, I consider first the question of whether it is possible to make an intelligent estimate of the likely amount of the loss. In this case there is no particular difficulty about that. This is not a complex damages claim involving intricate issues of causation and remoteness. It is a straightforward claim by the defendant for the time value of money as a consequence of being kept from the use of the sum of US$215 million which has been paid into court. There may be issues as to what the appropriate rate of interest may be, but the court is well used to dealing with estimates and quantifications reflecting the loss of the use of money, which is the nature of the claim here."
"As matters stand the full sum of US$1,000,092,000 was due to be paid to the defendant. As a result of the order of the court US$215 million was paid into court and only the balance paid to the defendant. On the face of it, had it not been for the court order, that further sum would have been paid to the defendant and it has prima facie therefore lost the use of that money and would be entitled to make a claim for compensation for the loss of the use of the money."
i) Even if it be the case that Malabu were under a liability to pass on the money to a third party, the prima facie effect of the Freezing Order would be that Malabu would be required to borrow that money elsewhere to satisfy the liability. "In my judgment the defendant has at least a good arguable case that even if there be some arrangement or obligation in relation to the onward transfer of the payment, the mere fact that the payment is one which was required to be made to it is sufficient to ground a prima facie claim for loss of use of the money". (Judgment paragraph 27).
ii) It was not correct to suggest that a rich claimant could not recover interest for loss of the use of his money;
iii) The normal measure of compensation for the loss of the use of money is simply an interest claim based on the usual cost of borrowing an equivalent sum, and there is no necessity to require or to provide specific evidence in relation to actual arrangements or to show that Malabu actually needed to or would borrow US$215 million to cover the position whilst these monies had been paid into court.
"The position is that the claimant has security for its claim on the basis of having shown the court that it has a good arguable case. If, as I find to be the position, the defendant can show that it too has a good arguable case that it will suffer an interest loss if it succeeds in this action and enforces the cross-undertaking, then it should equally be protected." (Judgment paragraph 31)
"A power of the court under these Rules to make an order includes a power to vary or revoke the order."
Accordingly, Rix LJ adjourned the application for permission to appeal pending that application.
"14. EVP sought permission to appeal Hamblen J's decision on fortification to the Court of Appeal. Its permission application was refused by the Court of Appeal on the papers but was renewed orally before Rix LJ. In the course of the renewed application, EVP referred to newly-acquired evidence said to support the contention that Malabu was simply a channel for unlawful and corrupt payments. The Court of Appeal was also told that EVP wished to argue that Hamblen J had been misled as to the status of Malabu. Putting it shortly for the moment, the contention was that Malabu had been presented as an international trading company, when in fact it was but a domestic Nigerian company which had only carried on business in respect of the two Resolution Agreements and had done no further business and was not intending to do any further business.
15. The new evidence consisted of press articles published on the world wide web in respect of an interim report from the Nigerian Economic and Financial Crimes Commission ("EFCC") to the effect that, immediately following the transfer of the US$800 odd million to Malabu, the funds were dispersed as follows: (i) US$336 million, to the account of Rocky Top Resources Limited ("RTR") with the Abuja CBD branch of the Keystone Bank, out of which US$165 million was transferred to various individuals; (ii) US$64 million to an account allegedly belonging to Chief Dan Etete, "the blacklisted principal of Malabu, who is a convicted criminal"; (iii) US$157 million to A Group Construction Co Ltd, said to be co-owned by Mr Abubakar Aliyu; (iv) US$180 million to Mega Tech Engr Co Ltd; (v) US$34 million to Imperial Union Limited and (vi) US$30 million to Novel Property and Development Limited (also said to be co-owned by Abubakar Aliyu). RTR was said to be owned by Mr Abubakar Aliyu who is described by EFCC sources as "Mr Corruption" and a front for Government Officials."
"29. Fourthly, it is said that there is no evidence that the defendant actually needs to or will borrow US$215 million to cover the position whilst these moneys have been paid into court. However, in my judgment that is not a necessary requirement of a claim for interest. There may be cases in which it is necessary to go into the particular arrangements made by the particular claimant, but that is usually where the claimant is seeking to claim an enhanced level of compensation. The normal measure of compensation for the loss of the use of money is simply an interest claim based on the usual cost of borrowing an equivalent sum, and there is no necessity to require or provide specific evidence in relation to actual arrangements. In those circumstances I am satisfied that the defendant can show that there is a sufficient risk of loss to required fortification."
1) Whether Hamblen J applied the correct legal test for deciding whether fortification should be ordered in respect of a cross-undertaking in damages;
2) If he did apply the correct legal test, whether EVP should have been ordered to provide fortification; and
3) If fortification should have been ordered, whether Hamblen J assessed the amount of fortification correctly, in doing so by reference to a borrowing rate of interest.
Initially, on the ex parte application, Rix LJ directed that the hearing of the appeal be expedited so as to be heard before the trial listed for 26 November 2012, however after receiving submissions from Malabu on 22 October he set aside the order for expedition. In so doing Rix LJ observed:-
"I have considered the submissions forwarded to me. It seems to me better that the parties should concentrate their efforts on the forthcoming trial. That is a fixture, and its outcome, subject of course to any appeal, will determine the course of these proceedings. In the meantime the fortification has been provided. If Energy succeeds at trial, the appeal question drops away, and, even if Malabu appeals, any application for further fortification will have to be addressed in those new circumstances, which are not the circumstances of today. Similarly, if Energy fails, the question will become the different question of whether it is liable on its cross-undertaking in damages for which the fortification is but security. In any event, a great deal more will have been learned about the transactions at the root of this dispute and about the parties and their part in them. If, as Energy submits, a partial success or failure or an appeal from the trial judgment raises anew the question of further fortification, this appeal can be advanced, with expedition if necessary, but also with greater insight."
"The bank statements show that sums totalling circa US$800 million were received into Malabu's bank accounts on 24 August 2011 and rapidly dissipated in a number of transactions between 26 August 2011 and 6 September 2011. The bank statements and paragraphs 4 to 7 of Mr Munamuna's evidence reveal that:
21.1 Of the US$400 million deposited in Malabu's account with Keystone Bank:
21.1.1 Circa US$336 million was transferred to Rocky Top Resources Ltd, a company owned by Chief Etete; and
21.1.2 US$60 million was transferred to "a bureau de change for foreign trading undertaken by Chief Etete".
21.2 Of the circa US$401 million paid into Malabu's First Bank account:
21.2.1 US$157 million was transferred to A Group Construction Co. Ltd;
21.2.2 US$180 million was transferred to Mega Tech Engr. Co. Ltd;
21.2.3 Circa US$34 million was transferred to Imperial Union Ltd; and
21.2.4 US$30 million was transferred to Novel Property and Development Ltd."
i) The agreement that the hearing of the appeal should await the outcome of the parties' respective applications for permission to appeal the substantive judgment; and
ii) Funding difficulties. Mr Boddy explained that his firm holds part of the judgment sum awarded to EVP in a designated client account with EVP's instruction to hold those funds on account of future work. In May 2014 a payment instruction from McGuireWoods to its bank, the Royal Bank of Scotland, in respect of this account was not followed. RBS had not been able to tell either McGuire Woods or EVP why it felt unable to comply with the instruction. The issue was unresolved.
"The court would be unlikely to be prepared to assist an applicant once much time had gone by. With the passing of time is likely to come prejudice for a respondent who is entitled to go forward in reliance on the order that the court has made. Promptness in application is inherent in many of the rules of court: for instance in applying for an appeal or in seeking relief against sanctions . . ."
I respectfully agree. There was simply no basis upon which it was appropriate to adjourn still further this almost wholly academic appeal. Equally, there was no basis upon which it was appropriate to permit the belated introduction of fresh evidence, which of itself would have necessitated an adjournment in order to permit Malabu the opportunity to seek to rebut it. It was for these reasons that, at the conclusion of Mr Pilbrow's application, I joined in dismissing both the application to adjourn the appeal and the application to adduce fresh evidence.
"In the case of a freezing order it may be necessary to distinguish between the harm caused by the existence of the litigation and the harm caused by the fact that the freezing order has been made. This consideration is important in the present case, because Mr Holyoake relies on a number of instances where his standing has been called into question by bankers and business associates since the grant of the order, and the question may arise as to whether this is damage which he would have suffered in any event. But it is very difficult on the limited evidence which is available to be sure whether or not it is the litigation or the order which is giving rise to the prospect of harm."
"It is not easy at this stage definitively to relate many of these instances to the preventive or coercive effects of the order. Nevertheless I think it is realistic to suppose that the existence of the freezing order could cause significant damage to Mr Holyoake. Firstly, it is clear from the evidence that Mr Holyoake has an extensive asset portfolio. It is almost inevitable that the existence of the freezing order will cause him loss. The assets discussed in the evidence are worth millions of pounds. It is entirely reasonable to suppose that damage will be incurred on a commensurate scale by Mr Holyoake if he is unable to deal freely and properly with his assets. Secondly, the freezing order is a very extensive one, and does not relate solely to one or two assets. As Mann J observed in Sinclair v Cushnie, it will be easier to foresee a risk of loss in such cases. Thirdly, it is no answer to say that Mr Holyoake will always be able to apply for permission to dispose of assets: the delay in obtaining that consent may well be damaging, or make it not worth selling the assets at all. Fourthly, I think that this is a case where, at least at this stage, it is not unrealistic to suppose that the order may have a significant, incrementally damaging effect on Mr Holyoake's standing. The examples given in his evidence may turn out to be cases where the order has had an impact on his ability to benefit from his ownership of assets and do business with others."
Floyd J concluded, at paragraph 30:-
"I should take the course in the present case which is least likely to lead to an injustice. I have no hesitation in saying that the cross undertaking should be fortified. To refuse to do so would potentially leave the defendants uncompensated for a very substantial claim, in circumstances where such an injustice would appear to be readily preventable. Equally I am satisfied that the undertaking should not be open ended. In my judgment the undertaking should be fortified in the sum of £4 million. This represents a realistic assessment of the order of damages that the defendants might suffer, although it is of course necessarily an unscientific one at this stage of the proceedings."
"Broadly speaking, they require an intelligent estimate to be made of the likely amount of any loss which may be suffered by the applicant for fortification (here the defendants) by reason of the making of an interim order. They require the court to ascertain whether there is a sufficient level of risk of loss to require fortification. They require that the loss has been or is likely to be caused by the granting of the injunction."
The three requirements are of course inextricably linked. The principles could equally be summarised, as Hamblen J did at paragraph 31 of his judgment, as a requirement that the applicant for fortification show a good arguable case for it. In this interlocutory context, showing a sufficient level of risk of loss to require fortification is synonymous with showing a good arguable case to that effect. In some cases the assessment of loss may at the interlocutory stage be difficult. It is in such cases that an intelligent estimate is required. An intelligent estimate will be informed and realistic although it may not be entirely scientific.
Lord Justice McFarlane :
Sir David Keene :