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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Griffith & Anor v Gourgey & Anor [2015] EWHC 1080 (Ch) (23 April 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2015/1080.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 1080 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
COMPANIES COURT
In the matter of Bankside Hotels Limited
In the matter of Pedersen (Thameside) Limited, and
In the matter of G&G Properties Limited
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
Nicholas John Clwyd Griffith and another |
Petitioners |
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and |
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Maurice Saleh Gourgey and others |
Respondents |
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Mr John Brisby QC, Mr Andrew Marsden and Mr Tom Gentleman (instructed by The Robert Davies Partnership LLP) for the Respondents
Hearing dates: 23 and 24 March 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Simon:
Introduction
The procedural background
(3) The Respondents do file and serve their response to the Petitioners' [Request] by 4 pm on 22 April 2014.
(4) Unless the Respondents comply with paragraph 3 within the time specified, the Points of Defence [by this stage the Amended Points of Defence] be struck out.
plainly incomplete and insufficient and thus the Respondents were in breach of the unless order [of Rose J].
… that there should be a further Unless Order requiring the Respondents to provide a full response to the request within a specified period of time, which I suggest should be no longer than 21 days, failing which the Particulars of Defence will be struck out. Without wishing to fetter the discretion of the court in the future, it should be noted that, barring something extraordinary, the court would expect complete compliance with such order and would not look kindly upon any further application for relief under either limb.
by 4 pm on 4 December 2014 file with the Court and serve on the Petitioners a full and complete response to (1) the [Request] and (2) any request made under paragraph 1 of this order.
For the avoidance of all doubt, the response to be provided by the Respondents under paragraph 4(b) of this Order shall:
(a) be verified with a statement of truth in accordance with Part 22 of the Civil Procedure Rules 1998, and
(b) give a full and complete response to each and every request made in the [Request] and to any request made under paragraph 1 of this Order to which paragraph 3 applies,
and a response that fails to comply in all respects with the provisions of this paragraph at the time when it is filed and served shall be treated as not having been filed and served for the purposes of paragraph 4 of this Order.
Any application by the Respondents to extend the time for compliance with the conditions set out in paragraph 4 of this Order must be made by application notice duly filed with the Court and served on the Petitioners by 4 pm on 20 November 2014. In the absence of such application notice being filed and served as aforesaid, the Respondents shall not be entitled to apply for any such extension of time.
The Law
I do not … mean that any document with writing on it will do. It must be a document made in good faith and which can fairly be entitled 'particulars.' It must not be illusory … That is the test, in my judgment, and not, as the plaintiff contends, whether each demand for particulars has been substantially met.
If a party against whom an order for particulars is sought wishes to contest the other party's right to them, he must do so when the application is heard. If he consents to the making of the order, he waives his right to object and cannot thereafter decline to comply with the order so far as compliance is possible.
In a pleading containing many different issues, it would be a truly draconian step to strike out the whole of an extensive claim with many different facets because of the failure in respect of one or two of the many allegations to comply with an order to give further and better particulars, unless it was to mark the court's displeasure at the deliberate and contumelious conduct of one of the parties. ... It might have been a far more appropriate course to consider whether the order should have been to strike out those particular paragraphs in toto but to leave the rest of the defence and counterclaim standing.
That said, I would wish to sound two notes of caution. First, an order for further and better particulars (whether or not in Unless form) is not to be regarded as breached merely because one or more of the replies is insufficient. If the answers could reasonably have been thought complete and sufficient, then the correct view is that they require only expansion or elucidation for which a further order for particulars should be sought and made.
Second, although I would regard an Unless order as breached whenever a reply is plainly incomplete or insufficient, I would not expect the court's strike out discretion to be invoked, let alone exercised, unless the further and better particulars considered as a whole can be regarded as falling significantly short of what was required. Whether this would be so would depend in part on the number and proportion of the inadequate replies, in part upon the quality of those replies (including whether their inadequacies were due to deliberate obstructiveness, incompetence or whatever), and in part upon their importance to the overall litigation. Satellite strike out litigation is not to be encouraged and it must be recognised that even to strike out part of a pleading (unless … that would in any event be appropriate because, unparticularised, it is 'vague and embarrassing'), is essentially penal.
[Counsel] submitted that if that were the proper construction of the order or similar orders in the future, that it is going to lead to lengthy analyses before Masters relating to whether a request has been properly answered. That in my view should not be so, because what the court is concerned to examine is whether there has been a genuine attempt to answer the request. That is so, because the court will not contemplate enforcing the sanction of strike out either of the particular allegation unparticularised or of the whole pleading, unless there has been a failure, or failures, to make genuine attempts to answer the request or requests. Of course in a vast case like the present one, that still involves some inquiry and some time, but that is because of the nature of the action.
This was not a case where the failures were such that the defendants should be debarred from defending or counterclaiming completely. It was a case where those matters which remained unparticularised, and where no genuine attempt had been made to particularise should be struck out.
I therefore conclude that the response was, to adopt the words used by the Court of Appeal in the QPS case, plainly incomplete and insufficient and thus the respondents were in breach of the unless order.
I therefore answered the request as best as possible.
The answers to the Request which are in issue on these applications
The movements of monies between the companies were properly accounted and reconciled:
…
24.2 The intercompany balances were reviewed on a periodic (usually annual) basis with the companies' in-house accountant, John Podro, and where appropriate set off against one another.
24.3 These balances were documented and discussed with BKL, as auditors, and in every case, were signed off in due course.
The documents referred to comprise the accounts for the relevant companies. In particular, the transactions referred to are reflected within the accounts for the relevant companies. Copies of those company accounts have been disclosed to Mr Griffith and/or his legal advisers at their request. However, for ease of reference copies of the same are being compiled and will be provided to the Solicitors for Mr Griffith.
(2) The documents referred to in the Reply to request 22 were not provided by 4 December 2013 (and have still not been provided).
State when (by date) such reviews were undertaken and provide full particulars of the balances before the review and the balances after such review, stating what debts were the subject of set-off and the debts that were set off against.
The intercompany reviews would be carried out annually usually in August each year. The intercompany reviews were undertaken when finalising the year end accounts in order to simplify the group lending structure. By way of example if Company A owed Company B £10,000 and Company B owed Company C £10,000, the review may result in Company A owing Company C £10,000 with no intercompany position between Company B and Company C. This simplified the group lending structure.
The intercompany reviews took place in August 2013, August 2012, August 2011. The intercompany review for 2010 took place in May 2010.
For each review the balances before and after the review as between Bankside and the group companies were as follows:
There then followed a schedule showing the balances in the years 2010-2013 before and after the review between Bankside and a number of different companies: Pedersen (Temple Quay) Ltd, Pedersen Leisure Ltd, Pedersen (Chiswick) Ltd, Pedersen (Cardiff) Ltd, Pedersen (York) Ltd, Scorebridge Ltd, Riverbank Hotels Ltd, Pedersen Group Management Ltd, G&G, G&G Land Ltd, Pedersen (UK) Ltd, Pedersen (Liverpool) Ltd, Pedersen (Ealing) Ltd, Pedersen (Bristol) Ltd, Pederson (GB) Ltd, Watchcourt Ltd, Pedersen (Bromsgrove) Ltd and Brentford Hotels Ltd. Most of these were companies in which the Petitioners and Respondents both had a direct or indirect interest. The exceptions were Pedersen Group Management Ltd, Watchcourt Ltd, Brentford Hotels Ltd and Pedersen Leisure Ltd, in which the Respondents alone had a direct or indirect interest.
In answering the request it was necessary to look at the inter company position for all the group companies. To simplify the group lending structure the inter company balances would be transferred to Bankside, and that was what has been done in putting together the table included in the response.
…
As for the response once John Podro and I had looked at all of the intercompany balances, both before and after the review BTG were asked to review our responses and following this they were provided to our legal advisors for their advice.
The reply provides particulars of the intercompany balances before and after the review, and explanation of why the reviews were carried out and when they were carried out. It also provides full particulars for each of the group companies (ie all 20 group companies) as at each review date. It is a full response to the request made.
It is admitted that certain payments (by way of loan or otherwise) were for the benefit of other companies owned or controlled by [the Respondents], though (unless otherwise stated herein) it was intended at all material times that the loans would be repaid. The payments represent sums legitimately paid in lieu of management fees; loaned to other companies as a result of specific funding requirements of different projects at the time; or lent to companies where Mr Griffiths has an interest and therefore suffered no prejudice.
Please identify all sums said to have been paid legitimately in lieu of management fees, identifying the company making the payment, the date and amount, and the recipient, and explain what is meant by saying that the amount was paid 'legitimately'.
The payments were made by Bankside to Pedersen Group Management Ltd. Bankside and its subsidiaries did not have any direct employees and therefore utilized the resources in Pedersen Group Management Ltd. The use of the word 'legitimately' is intended to reflect the fact that it is alleged that both Mr Hodge and [the Petitioner] were aware that the management charges were paid and that they consented to the same and those management charges were paid in respect of services provided by Pedersen Group Management Ltd.
All the sums paid by Bankside to Pedersen Group Management Ltd are outlined as follows showing dates and amounts.
Pedersen Management Ltd has rendered legitimate management charges against G&G Properties for services rendered by Mr Gourgey and his family.
… full particulars of all services rendered by Mr Gourgey and his family.
… represented the additional work carried out over a 13 year period not covered by the monthly management charge. Mr Gourgey did not benefit from any of these management charges and the funds were loaned from Pedersen Group Management Ltd to other group companies.
After standard fees and charges, including legal and other professional fees, the balance remaining for G&G Properties was £2,500,000. In September 2012, this balance was transferred to Bankside.
Please provide full particulars of all such fees, charges, legal and professional fees including the amount and date paid and the services provided for the same.
The fees related to legal fees of Messrs Howard Kennedy, HMLR, Pedersen Group Management, Dragonshare, Solid Foundations property fee and OMS Security fees, as outlined in the attached completion statement.
Conclusion