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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 >> Varma v Atkinson & Anor [2020] EWCA Civ 1602 (27 November 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2020/1602.html Cite as: [2020] EWCA Civ 1602, [2021] 2 WLR 536, [2021] Ch 180 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
HHJ JOHNS QC (Sitting as a Judge of the High Court)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE ROSE
and
LORD JUSTICE STUART-SMITH
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SANJIV VARMA |
Appellant |
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- and – |
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PAUL ATKINSON & GLYN MUMMERY (as Joint Liquidators of Grosvenor Property Developers Limited (in liquidation)) |
Respondents |
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Rory Brown and Andrew Shipley (instructed by Gunnercooke LLP) for the Respondents
Hearing date: 10 November 2020
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Crown Copyright ©
Lady Justice Rose:
The background to the claim and the proceedings so far
"if the Dubai Diamonds exist, without declaring a personal interest in the transaction offered them for sale to [Grosvenor] for an unknown price and caused the purchase of the same by [Grosvenor] for an unknown sum (assumed from the analysis of the said bank accounts to be at least £3,122,841) …"
"… there is no real evidence of the existence of the jewellery and diamonds. These items have certainly not been produced to the liquidators to help repay creditors. There are not even photographs of them. I was told that photographs have been taken of them by or for Mr Maneet Singh and Mr Arjun Khadka. But no such photographs have been produced and Mr Varma did not even give clear evidence that he has sought them from Mr Singh or Mr Khadka; even with his liberty at stake. There is no record of insurance for the valuables, despite them apparently being worth £4.95m. There are only, by way of documents, the invoice of 27 June 2017 and the Settlement Agreement. But I found myself unable to place any reliance on those for reasons I will explain."
i) Finding 1: Mr Varma was in breach of the Falk order by including a false statement in his affidavit of 16 May 2019, namely the statement that the £3,122,841 was paid out by Grosvenor to GCFZE "against the sale of jewellery and diamonds to the company".
ii) Finding 3: Mr Varma was in breach of paragraph 10 of the Birss order in that he had failed to swear an affidavit on behalf of GCFZE setting out GCFZE's assets.
iii) Finding 4: Mr Varma was in breach of paragraph 4 of the Johnson order because he failed to send a letter to GCFZE's Emirates bank instructing it to disclose bank statements to the Respondents by the deadline specified in the order.
iv) Finding 5: Mr Varma was in breach of paragraph 3 of the Hochhauser order which required him to sign and return "forthwith" letters prepared by the Respondents' solicitors and addressed to three businesses. Mr Varma had not provided the signed authority letters until 15 August 2019.
v) Finding 7: Mr Varma was in breach of the Falk order by making a false statement in his affidavit of 16 May 2019 by stating that GCFZE had used the £3,122,841 transferred to it by Grosvenor to meet its financial obligations and debts when it was clear that £2 million of that sum was transferred first to Mr Varma's personal account and then to Siddhant Varma.
The application to admit new evidence
i) a witness statement dated 7 November 2020 from Mr Khadka signed by him and witnessed by an advocate in Mumbai. He refers to the Settlement Agreement which he says he executed on behalf of Grosvenor. He says that as instructed by Mr Singh in June 2018, he inspected the Jewellery which was shown to him by Mr Varma's mother and brother at Mrs Varma's house in Mumbai. He says further that he commissioned an additional valuation of the Jewellery which he recalls was 'circa £5m'. Unfortunately, he has been unable to locate the valuation report or any correspondence with the valuer. He says he took delivery of the Jewellery from Mr Varma in Mumbai on 11 June 2018 in return for Mr Varma handing over the Settlement Agreement.ii) A witness statement from Ian Williams, a non-practising solicitor who has known Mr Varma for many years. He produces a photocopy of a certified copy of the passport of Maneet Singh that was sent to him in the context of some unrelated possession proceedings in which Mr Varma was involved in late 2016 and early 2017. He says further that he recalls speaking to Mr Singh on the telephone with Mr Varma possibly twice in the context of a different receivership.
iii) A witness statement of Peter Neidle, the solicitor who had certified the copy of Mr Singh's passport. His evidence is that he would not have certified the copy without seeing Mr Singh in person with the original of his passport.
iv) The fourth witness statement of Siddhant Varma made in May 2020 for the purpose of the hearing before Judge Prentis. In this he gave detailed evidence about amongst other things his understanding that the £2 million he received was an advance inheritance from his grandmother. As I have said, Judge Prentis largely accepted that evidence as providing an explanation that negated the assertion that Siddhant's receipt of the money was unconscionable.
v) A witness statement dated 10 June 2020 by Manju Dumra, Siddhant's maternal grandmother, about her gift to Siddhant's fiancée of a diamond ring that had belonged in her family for many years. This was evidence that Judge Prentis regarded as supporting Siddhant's contention that the giving of gifts of valuable jewellery was customary within wealthy Punjabi families.
vi) A witness statement of Taru Dumra, Siddhant's mother and Mr Varma's ex-wife, dated 10 June 2020 confirming that Mr Varma's family were very wealthy and that Mr Varma had shown her a letter from his mother regarding her intention to give jewellery to Mr Varma worth about £4.5 million from which approximately £2 million was to be given to Siddhant.
vii) A witness statement from Virginia Furst, Siddhant's partner, dated 10 June 2020 describing the diamond ring she had been given by her mother in law when she became engaged to Siddhant.
viii) A witness statement from Alyson Reilly, a partner at the Respondents' solicitors, about the valuation and likely provenance of Ms Furst's diamond ring.
ix) A copy of a hand written letter dated 17 February 2017 from Mr Varma's mother to Mr Varma saying that she is going to give him nine items of jewellery which she then lists, telling him that he should sell them and give Rupees 20 crores (one crore being 10 million rupees so that 20 crores is about £2 million) to Siddhant. This is accompanied by an advocate's letter dated 6 June 2020 certifying that Mrs Varma had signed the letter in his presence on 17 February 2017.
x) A letter from a UAE company MBC Auditing and Accounting saying that the jewellery and diamonds mentioned in Mrs Varma's letter had been given by Mr Varma to GCFZE and then sold for £4.95 million from which £2 million was paid to Siddhant in accordance with Mrs Varma's wishes.
The Grounds of Appeal
"Question 5: When the Company paid circa £3.1m into the account of Grosvenor Consultants FZE, what happened to these funds after that?"
Mr Varma had answered in his affidavit:
"Answer 5: The funds were paid against sale of jewellery and diamonds to the company. Grosvenor Consultants FZE used some [of] the money to meet its financial obligations and debts, some of the monies was used towards expenses and some of the money was used towards failed and abortive transactions in Dubai/UAE. Details of the above are in Dubai and I can only access them when I can go to the UAE and can provide you with the same."
Ground 3: the mental element required for a finding of contempt
"9.1 Unless paragraph (9.2) applies, the Respondent must within 48 hours of service of this order and to the best of his ability inform the Applicant's solicitors of all his assets worldwide exceeding £2,000 in value whether in his own name or not and whether solely or jointly owned, giving the value, location and details of all such assets.
9.2 [privilege against self-incrimination]
10. Within 7 working days after being served with this order, the Respondent must swear and serve on the Applicant's solicitors an affidavit setting out the above information."
"130. I should make clear that given the request for permission to appeal and for a stay and Mr Varma not having the benefit of being legally represented at this stage, I was not satisfied on hearing his evidence that he had an intention to breach the order. But that is relevant, it seems to me, only to sentence."
"If a person or a corporation is restrained by injunction from doing a particular act, that person or corporation commits a breach of the injunction and is liable for process of contempt if he or it in fact does the act and it is no answer to say that the act was not contumacious in the sense that in doing it there was no direct intention to disobey the order."
"The view of Warrington J [in Stancomb] has thus acquired high authority. It is also the reasonable view, because the party in whose favour an order has been made is entitled to have it enforced, and also the effective administration of justice normally requires some penalty for disobedience to an order of a court if the disobedience is more than casual or accidental and unintentional."
Conclusion
Lord Justice Stuart-Smith:
Lord Justice Lewison: