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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Nosnehpetsj Ltd v Watersheds Capital Partners Ltd & Anor [2020] EWHC 739 (Ch) (27 March 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2020/739.html Cite as: [2020] EWHC 739 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
CHANCERY APPEALS
Fetter Lane London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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NOSNEHPETSJ LIMITED (In Liquidation) |
Claimant/ Respondent |
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- and - |
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WATERSHEDS CAPITAL PARTNERS LIMITED RICHARD BUZZONI |
Defendants/ Appellants |
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Stephen Fennell (instructed by Oury Clark) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 5 December 2019
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Crown Copyright ©
Sir Alastair Norris:
"I notice the accounts of [WCP] show in note 9 that it is a subsidiary of [Watersheds1]. That is not right. Could you change it before they go to the revenue."
It is not at present clear to what "accounts" of WCP Mr Buzzoni was referring (save that they were ones which were due to be but had not at that point been sent to HMRC). But the Annual Return dated 19 April 2013 shows Mr Buzzoni as the registered holder of the Ordinary Shares in WCP and states that Watersheds1 had transferred those shares to Mr Buzzoni on 26 September 2012 (i.e. apparently before Mr Buzzoni's e-mail of 1 February 2013). It is common ground that no consideration was given for any transfer of the Ordinary Shares in WCP by Watersheds1 to Mr Buzzoni.
a) The Annual Returns and the Abbreviated Accounts must have been approved by Mr Buzzoni (a chartered accountant) and they undoubtedly show the Ordinary Shares in WCP as belonging legally and beneficially to Watershed1. It was not clear that the position recorded in the approved documents was incorrect.
b) There are very few documents relating to the circumstances (i) in which the Annual Returns and Abbreviated Accounts came to be prepared and (ii) in which the Ordinary Shares came to be transferred from Watersheds1 to Mr Buzzoni and "much might emerge later".
c) One should not exclude the possibility that cross-examination may well reveal something not apparent from the documentation. (I think that here the judge must have had in mind (i) the oddity of the Ordinary Shares being transferred by Watershed1 to Mr Buzzoni (which entails Watershed1 having some transferable interest); (ii) the transfer appearing to take place in the September before Mr Buzzoni notified his accountant of what he perceived to be an error; and (iii) a submission of Counsel for the liquidator. That submission was "If Mr Buzzoni's evidence is that: "this was all a "cock-up" and I keep making these "cock-ups in ways that seem to have helped myself"…..and if Mr Stephenson says "Well, I cocked up as well", if the judge believes them, then we are in difficulties and probably will not succeed").
a) There will be a substantial trial of issues concerning the Prefs, so that only a modest saving is achieved by summarily disposing of the arguments about the Ordinary Shares;
b) The key issue is whether Mr Buzzoni gave a truthful documentary account of the ownership of the Ordinary Shares or made repeated (but unexplained) mistakes;
c) Only limited and evidently partial disclosure has been given (of those documents which support Mr Buzzoni's case) and the circumstances in which and basis upon which he came to approve a succession of documents confirming the beneficial ownership of the Ordinary Shares and then to reverse the position ought (even under the current disclosure regime) to be explored before a final conclusion is reached;
d) The documents that have been disclosed in support of Mr Buzzoni's case are not themselves internally consistent (the e-mail of 1 February 2013 complaining of an error is written long after the error was apparently "corrected");
e) If the constructive trust is founded on the perfection of an imperfect gift it is not necessarily the case that the donor must have done all in his or her power to effect the transfer (including executing a share transfer form) there being a broader principle that the circumstances may establish that it would be unconscionable for the donor to recall the "gift", and those circumstances should be examined;
f) Given the factual background I have briefly recounted I do not accept that the only type of constructive trust that might arise is one founded upon an imperfect gift;
g) Nor do I accept that it "beggars belief" that Mr Buzzoni would want to acknowledge that the Ordinary Shares in WCP belonged beneficially to Watersheds1 (the acknowledgement dates from 2010, some years after WCP had taken over the business of Watersheds1, and years before Mr Buzzoni incorporated Watersheds2 or tried to have Watersheds 1 struck off);
h) Where the sole director of an insolvent company has transferred to himself for no consideration assets shown in its accounts as belonging to the company the Court should in general hesitate before deciding that the transaction does not need to be scrutinised at a trial.