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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 >> JSC Mezhdunarodniy Promyshlenniy Bank v Pugachev [2016] EWHC 258 (Ch) (12 February 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2016/258.html Cite as: [2016] EWHC 258 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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(1) JSC MEZHDUNARODNIY PROMYSHLENNIY BANK (2) STATE CORPORATION "DEPOSIT INSURANCE AGENCY" |
Applicants |
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- and – |
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SERGEI PUGACHEV |
Respondent |
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The Respondent appeared in person by video link assisted by Mr Michael McNutt
Hearing dates: 11 and 12 February 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
MRS JUSTICE ROSE:
"In contempt cases the object of the penalty is both to punish conduct in defiance of the court's order as well as serving a coercive function by holding out the threat of future punishment as a means of securing the protection which the injunction is primarily there to do."
Failure to deliver up travel documents and leaving the jurisdiction
Disposal of assets in breach of the freezing orders
"Whilst there may be cases in which such a sentence would be disproportionately severe, any wilful defiance of the court and its orders is necessarily a very serious offence and if the contemnor is aggrieved, he has a remedy in his own hands – he can seek his immediate release by ceasing his defiance, complying with the order and thereby purging his contempt."
Failure to comply with the search and seizure orders
Failures in disclosure relating to the EPK/Basterre monies
False evidence as to lack of funds
"63. In our judgment, there are many factors to be considered when determining the appropriate level of sentence for perjury and related offences. We have already indicated that there is not, in our judgment, any distinction as to the level of sentence to be drawn according to whether the proceedings contaminated were of a civil or criminal nature. Perjury may be comparatively trivial in relation to criminal proceedings or very serious in relation to civil proceedings. No doubt whether the proceedings were civil or criminal is one of the factors proper to be considered. There are many others. We do not purport to give an exhaustive list. They include the number of offences committed; the timescale over which they are committed; whether they are planned or spontaneous; whether they are persisted in; whether the lies which are told or the fabrications which are embarked upon have any actual impact on the proceedings in question; whether the activities of the defendant draw in others; what the relationship is between others who are drawn in and the defendant. …"
Conclusion
"This label denotes a rule of common sense, that sentencing is not an exercise to be performed mechanically. True it is that the sentencer who is called on to deal with a series of offences should first seek to hit upon the appropriate sentence for each offence, and should then ask himself whether in principle the individual sentences should be so expressed as to involve in each instance a real addition to the time spent in custody, rather than being compressed into a set of concurrent sentences, with only the longest having any practical effect on the outcome for the offender. But this is not the end of the exercise. There then comes the time when the sentencer must stand back from the proceedings, and put them in perspective, in order to see whether logic should yield to a broader concept of proportionality between the time which the offender has to spend in prison and the wrongfulness of his conduct. In many cases, of course, the sentencer will rightly conclude that the sentences should indeed be made to operate consecutively. But in others it may be seen that to multiply an appropriate single sentence by the number of offences yields a total time to be served which is simply too long, having regard to the true wickedness of what the offender has done. In such an event, the sentencer must do his best to arrive at a suitable global figure, and then arrive at it either by reducing the individual sentences whilst keeping them consecutive, or making some or all of them take effect concurrently."
Allegation A1: he failed to deliver up his French passport in breach of paragraph 1(2) of the Ex Parte Passport Order Sentence of 21 days imprisonment
Allegation A2: he left the jurisdiction in breach of the court-imposed travel restriction in breach of paragraph 4(a) of the Hildyard Order Sentence of 8 months imprisonment to run concurrently with Allegation A3
Allegation A3: he failed to identify and deliver up further travel documents in breach of paragraph 1(2) of the Ex Parte Passport Order, paragraph 1(2) of the Return Date Passport Order and paragraph 3(d) of the Rose Order Sentence of 8 months imprisonment to run concurrently with Allegation A2
Allegation B1: he procured and/or permitted the transfer of shares in LLC Petrovka- Rent held by Limebury Investments Ltd to another company in breach of paragraphs 2(1), 2(2), 2(3) and/or 2(4) of the Return Date Freezing Order Sentence of 12 months imprisonment
Allegation B3: he dealt with the proceeds of sale of Financiere Hediard in breach of paragraphs 2(1), 2(2), 2(3) and/or 2(4) of the Return Date Freezing Order Sentence of 24 months imprisonment
Allegation B4: he sold two motor cars in breach of paragraphs 2(1), 2(2) and/or 2(3) of the Return Date Freezing Order Sentence of 24 months imprisonment
Allegation B5: he disposed of part of the proceeds of any recoveries from his Bilateral Investment Treaty arbitration claim in breach of paragraphs 2(1), 2(2) and/or 2(3) of the Return Date Freezing Order Sentence of 3 months imprisonment
Allegation C1: he failed to deliver up mobile devices, namely an iPad and a mobile phone in breach of paragraph 19 of the Ex Parte Search Order and/or paragraph 4 of the Search Protocol Order Sentence of 4 months imprisonment to run concurrently with Allegation C2
Allegation C2: he failed to provide passwords to email accounts in breach of paragraph 20(1) of the Ex Parte Search Order and/or paragraph 1 of the Return Date Search Order. Sentence of 3 weeks imprisonment to run concurrently with Allegation C1
Allegation D3: he failed to set out to the best of his ability and having made all reasonable enquiries what happened to $146.7 million transferred from Devecom Ltd to Basterre Business Corporation in breach of paragraph 1(d) of the Rose Order Sentence of 20 months imprisonment to run concurrently with Allegation E1
Allegation E1: he gave false evidence in respect of EPK and Basterre having no honest belief that it was true. Sentence of 20 months imprisonment to run concurrently with Allegation D3
Allegation E4: he gave false evidence in respect of his impecuniosity during his submissions to Hildyard J during his cross-examination and as confirmed in his fifth affidavit when he had no honest belief that it was true. Sentence of 10 months imprisonment
COSTS