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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 >> Property Alliance Group Ltd v The Royal Bank of Scotland Plc [2015] EWHC 3272 (Ch) (13 November 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2015/3272.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 3272 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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PROPERTY ALLIANCE GROUP LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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THE ROYAL BANK OF SCOTLAND PLC |
Defendant |
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David Railton QC and Adam Sher (instructed by Dentons) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 5th and 6th November 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Birss:
The GRG issue
The LIBOR issue
"19. I am not prepared to make the order sought requiring RBS at this stage to answer the Request for Further Information, which is the matter I am dealing with now. My reasons are, first of all, because in fact I have already decided that I would not do that in para.128 of my judgment. Moreover, considering the matter afresh, I remain of the view that the appropriate time to consider requests of this nature is after disclosure. I note that Mr. Justice Roth, in the judgment relied on by PAG, National Grid Electricity v ABB Ltd. [2014] EWHC 1555 Ch was dealing with a Request for Further Information which does, I accept, have parallels to the request Mr Lord is making in this case but it was being considered in a completely different context, after disclosure and witness statements.
20. An important aspect which to some extent applies to both parties is that, just as I have not held now that RBS is correct that the next person to plead in detail is PAG, so I am not holding now that the next person in this litigation to plead in detail is RBS. Thus both sides will need to approach the matter [of their next pleading] without that matter [of the RFI] having been resolved. It seems to me that it is important that PAG take a realistic and sensible approach to the disclosure they have been given. It may be that when they do that Mr. Lord's fears will be realised and it will be such that the disclosure does not help PAG articulate the case which it wishes to bring properly before the court. In those circumstances, PAG will be able to explain this to the court and a Request for Further Information of the kind they have sought, if they wish to maintain it, will have to be considered carefully in those circumstances. Equally it may be the disclosure produced by RBS allows PAG, in fact, to articulate its case with some precision, in which case it will not have been necessary to order this RFI.
21. I would make the same point, completely conversely, to RBS. I was not convinced at all by Mr. Railton's submission that somehow RBS do not know what exculpatory material they need to start thinking about preparing. As Mr. Lord has said to me more times than I care to remember, RBS knows what has been going on; there have been significant investigations; the disclosure will be focused on the Regulatory Review Documents which are to be provided; those documents are characterised by the fact that they have arisen in the context of careful investigations of one sort of another conducted by or on the Bank's behalf. In my judgment, it is highly probable that the Bank knows exactly what it needs to consider when thinking about what evidence it may need to call to deal with the matters which are dealt with in those documents. Accordingly, the court will not be sympathetic to the suggestion that somehow if PAG adjusts its case based on the documents which have been disclosed, that RBS can imagine that they can then approach their preparation as if they have had to start to prepare a response to that from a standing start."
"6. [...] By taking out any reference to the Review, one is left not knowing what the Bank's reasons for a denial are. The modern approach to Statements of Case in litigation means that if a party wants to deny something, it needs to give reasons for its denial (CPR r16.5(2)). Equally, if it wants to make a non-admission, there are certain limitations which relate to that as well (CPR r16.5(1)(b)). Although the non-admission is not explained in any detail in the plea in its original form, that was not a significant difficulty because it was clear what the Bank's real case was: it relied on the Clifford Chance Review. However, the amendment simply takes that out and leaves the plea in an unsatisfactory state. There is a denial, without any reasons, and then a blanket non-admission, without any explanation what the state of knowledge of the defendant is or why otherwise it is unable to admit or deny the allegations. "
The fraud amendments
i) RBS's actual misconduct in relation to LIBOR extends materially beyond that revealed by the regulatory findings;
ii) RBS's actual LIBOR misconduct includes but is not limited to the wrongdoing and guilty knowledge set out in the schedule;
iii) RBS has not yet pleaded properly or at all to RBS's actual LIBOR misconduct;
iv) RBS is able so to plead since such matters are within its knowledge, information and belief and RBS should be required to do so in accordance with the CPR;
v) PAG should be entitled to rely on such additional instances of actual LIBOR misconduct as may be disclosed by RBS properly pleading to the same or providing proper information and disclosure.
i) show an approach and attitude within RBS to the manipulation of LIBOR that goes well beyond isolated instances of wrongdoing and amounts to an ongoing regime or environment within RBS in which misconduct relating to LIBOR benchmarks was practised and condoned from at least August 2007 until well into 2011;ii) justify the inference that the true extent of actual misconduct goes materially beyond the instances chronicled in the schedule; and
iii) support PAG's complaints about LIBOR misconduct and manipulation by RBS.
i) There are a number of documents starting from one dated 9th August 2007 which provide arguable support for the allegations of misconduct in relation to USD LIBOR. An example is a document dated 16th August 2007, whereby the submitter at RBS (Paul Walker) seems to have been asked to make a submission that took into account the pricing of a floating rate transaction that would impact the relevant book on the following day. The schedule also refers to documents from June and October 2008 which provide arguable support for an inference that derivatives traders sought to influence the bank's USD submitter on those occasions. These two are notable given the admissions of attempted manipulation on those dates which are now sought to be made by RBS in its Amended Defence, served after this schedule.ii) There are a number of documents (fewer than for USD) which arguably support the allegations of misconduct relating to GBP LIBOR. For example there is a calendar reminder set on 11 September 2009 whose purpose, PAG submits, should be inferred as having been to remind Mark Thomasson to submit a low 6 month GBP LIBOR rate on 16th September 2009 at the request of RBS derivatives traders who had transactions set by reference to 6 month LIBOR that were due to fix on that date. On that date Mr Thomasson made a submission that was 5 basis points lower than the submission made on the previous day.
iii) There is an email dated 16th August 2007 from John Ewan (the managing director of the BBA) to Graham Niblock and Mark Thomasson, both of RBS and other members of the BBA FX and Money Markets committee. The email relates to "ongoing problems with the inter-bank market". Mr Ewan requests a meeting to discuss issues. One issue is the BBA definition of LIBOR as being a rate at which a bank could borrow funds by accepting inter bank offers. He points out that "currently there is no London interbank market". Another issue to be discussed is "how best to defend ourselves against potential accusations that the current rates are not a genuine reflection of the market".
iv) There is a record of a teleconference on 20th August 2007 involving Paul Walker of RBS with a representative of a hedge fund in which Paul Walker states that liquidity has completely dried up "so no one has really got a cash market anymore to base LIBORs on". He also says "so people are just setting their LIBORs, you know, to suit what they've got on their book."
v) There is an email dated 29th August 2007 from Ian Bedford of RBS Global Banking and Markets divisions to recipients including Graham Niblock, Scott Nygaard and Kevin Liddy which refers to illiquidity of the interbank cash markets and appears to state that, as regards GBP and USD LIBOR "the 'mechanism' is definitely broken".
vi) There is an email on 15th November 2007 from Graham Niblock to a group including John Cummins, which refers to LIBORs in GBP and USD still fixing higher than where cash is actually trading in the interbank market. It states "we have stopped lending cash internally at LIBOR as it does not reflect our cost of funds any longer".
vii) There are references in documents in November 2007 to "a meaningless benchmark", "almost an irrelevant indicator", and "LIBOR is kind of false at the moment".
viii) On 29th November Paul Walker responded to an email from Mark Thomasson relating to a communication from John Ewan at the BBA in which Mr Walker wrote "Citibank, UBS and Deutsche put in regular Libors way below the market … UBS don't really trade cash anyway, they set their Libors as many banks do to suit the Derivative Fixes. With no underlying cash market what do the BBA expect??????"
ix) On 30th April 2008 Johnny Cameron circulated a note of a meeting he had attended described as the BBA's CEO's meeting. It took place at the Bank of England on 25th April. The note was sent to a number of people including Mary McCallum (executive assistant to Fred Goodwin, then CEO of the RBS Group), Guy Whittaker, John Cummins, Peter Nielsen and Graham Niblock. It includes the following: "They wanted Banks to play $ libor very 'straight'. I said FED needed to understand and be involved." The word "they" seems to refer to the Bank of England. PAG submits this was a reference to the Bank of England directing banks to make accurate or honest submissions for USD LIBOR as opposed to inaccurate or dishonest submissions. PAG submits that it can be inferred that representatives of the Bank of England and each of the individuals to whom Mr Cameron sent the note were aware that, prior to it, LIBOR panel banks had not been submitting accurate or honest LIBOR rates at least for USD LIBOR. This material on its own does not support a plea of dishonest manipulation as opposed to knowledge that the rates were inaccurate, but it provides a properly arguable foundation for PAG's allegation that those at the highest level in the bank were aware of serious problems with LIBOR.
x) There is an email dated 28th May 2008 from Johnny Cameron to John Cummins and Graham Niblock in which he states that he has received a call from Paul Tucker, the then Deputy Governor of the Bank of England. The email refers to concerns that the BBA may appear too complacent about the problem of LIBOR fixing. Mr Cummins replies referring to a primary area of concern as being USD LIBOR setting in London and the view that these rates do not reflect reality.
xi) There is a transcript of a conversation between John Cummins and Paul Walker on 2nd October 2008 which refers to the bank being in "gold medal spot" in the context of LIBOR submissions. Mr Cummins appears not to want RBS to be in that position. "Gold medal spot" seems to refer to having the highest submitted rate amongst the panel banks. PAG submits one can infer that following this call Mr Cummins passed on that instruction to Peter Nielsen and/or Scott Nygaard.
xii) It appears that on 25th November 2008 John Cummins sent a briefing note to Stephen Hester (then CEO of RBS) for a forthcoming meeting at the Bank of England in which it was noted that, amongst other things, "the inter-bank market is not functioning properly".
Amendments to the Defence
20. In my judgment one can extract the following propositions from Somatra Ltd v Sinclair Roche & Temperley from the above cited passages:
i) The Court of Appeal has decided that in this area the principles relating to the circumstances in which the privilege relating to without prejudice materials has been waived are the same as, or at least very similar to, those in which the privilege relating to legal professional privilege materials is waived.
ii) Once a party (on an interlocutory application) has opened up issues on the merits of the case, which will form part of the very questions to be determined by the trial judge, no party which has chosen to refer to privileged material or discussions for the purposes of that application, should be entitled use them to his advantage on the merits of the case in the interlocutory context, but then assert a right to prevent its opponent from doing so on the merits at the trial.
iii) The Court of Appeal in Somatra Ltd v Sinclair Roche & Temperley clearly took the view that one of the ratios of Vinelott J's decision in Derby v Weldon was that the privileged material had been deployed in a significant way at the interlocutory Mareva application stage on the merits of the case. In other words the Court of Appeal rejected the argument that the ratio was solely that leading counsel had deployed, or was about to deploy, the privileged material at trial.
iv) As a matter of principle and policy, it is not just, on the one hand, to permit one party to deploy legally professionally privileged, or without prejudice, material for the purposes of an interlocutory application, in order to advance that party's case on the merits, and thereby to gain a litigation advantage, and, on the other hand, to deny the other party the opportunity to refer to, or deploy, such materials at trial, where, likewise, the merits of the case are in issue.
The RFIs
Disclosure
(1) Johnny Cameron / Linda Lord-Hogan (Mr Cameron's personal assistant);
(2) Fred Goodwin / Mary McCallum;
(3) John Cummins;
(4) Guy Whittaker;
(5) Brian Crowe;
(6) Peter Nielsen;
(7) Graham Niblock;
(8) Scott Nygaard;
(9) Paul Walker
Conclusion