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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 Commercial Bank Privatbank v Kolomoisky & Ors [2022] EWHC 775 (Ch) (01 April 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2022/775.html Cite as: [2022] EWHC 775 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
BUSINESS LIST (ChD)
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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JSC COMMERCIAL BANK PRIVATBANK |
Claimant |
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- and – |
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(1) IGOR VALERYEVICH KOLOMOISKY (2) GENNADIY BORISOVICH BOGOLYUBOV (3) TEAMTREND LIMITED (4) TRADE POINT AGRO LIMITED (5) COLLYER LIMITED (6) ROSSYN INVESTING CORP (7) MILBERT VENTURES INC (8) ZAO UKRTRANSITSERVICE LTD |
Defendants |
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Mark Howard QC, Michael Bools QC, Alec Haydon QC, Geoffrey Kuehne and Ben Woolgar (instructed by Fieldfisher LLP) for the First Defendant
Clare Montgomery QC, Matthew Parker QC, Nathaniel Bird and Alyssa Stansbury (instructed by Enyo Law LLP) for the Second Defendant
Thomas Plewman QC and Marc Delehanty (instructed by Pinsent Masons LLP) for the Third to Eighth Defendants
Hearing date 28 March 2022
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Trower:
Introduction
"These proceedings are of the utmost importance to the Bank and to the State, as the Bank's owner. In many ways, given the value of the Bank's claim in these proceedings, securing a prompt and effective recovery of the billions of dollars misappropriated from it by the defendants has become even more important for the Bank and the State since the war began. Any recoveries made by the Bank in these proceedings are likely to be critical to supporting Ukraine's financial system and rebuilding the country when the war is over."
The claims in these proceedings
i) that the cash repayments were themselves funded by further intermediary loans to companies it says were owned or controlled by the first and second defendants;
ii) that while it received ownership and control of certain assets, the transfer of those assets to it did not result in a valid reduction of the relevant loans.
21. The defendants, including Mr Kolomoisky and Mr Bogolyubov, accept, for the purposes of this appeal, that there is a good arguable case that the bank lost approximately US$515m through these transactions and that they were orchestrated by Mr Kolomoisky and Mr Bogolyubov, using the borrowers and suppliers in the manner generally alleged by the bank. Mr Kolomoisky and Mr Bogolyubov have not themselves to date proffered any explanation for the transactions in question or sought to explain their commercial rationale, if any.
22. The judge observed in his judgment at para 25 that there was no difficulty with the bank proving a good arguable case of a fraudulent scheme. The evidence was "strongly indicative of an elaborate fraud perpetrated by someone, allied to an attempt to conceal from any auditor or regulator the existence of bad debts on the bank's books, and money-laundering on a vast scale. The borrowers had no commercial track record or any substantial assets. The documentary evidence clearly demonstrated that the supply agreements were shams, and "were used as a deceptive basis on which to justify very large sums of money owing out of the bank". The artificial complexity of the recycling of funds was itself indicative of a fraudulent scheme. At para 104, the judge noted that Mr Kolomoisky and Mr Bogolyubov had admitted "a good arguable case of fraud on an epic scale".
Power to Adjourn: the law
"I consider the authorities below, but it may be helpful if I indicate my conclusions on the relevant principles at the outset. These are that Mr Scorey is right that the guiding principle in an application to adjourn of this type is whether if the trial goes ahead it will be fair in all the circumstances; that the assessment of what is fair is a fact-sensitive one, and not one to be judged by the mechanistic application of any particular checklist; that although the inability of a party himself to attend trial through illness will almost always be a highly material consideration, it is artificial to seek to draw a sharp distinction between that case and the unavailability of a witness; and that the significance to be attached to the inability of an important witness to attend through illness will vary from case to case, but that it will usually be material, and may be decisive. And if the refusal of an adjournment would make the resulting trial unfair, an adjournment should ordinarily be granted, regardless of inconvenience to the other party or other court users, unless this were outweighed by injustice to the other party that could not be compensated for."
"CPR 1.1(2)(d) demands that the Court deals with cases 'expeditiously and fairly'. Fairness requires the position of both sides to be considered and this is in accordance with Article 6 ECHR."
Conditions in Ukraine
i) the inability of the defendants to give proper instructions to their English lawyers on the conduct of the litigation during a critical period in the run-up to the trial, exacerbated by an interruption to the services the defendants are accustomed to receiving from their assistants and lawyers based in Ukraine;
ii) the inability of the lawyers to provide detailed or adequate advice to their clients during that period on the conduct of the litigation;
iii) the inability of the defendants and their witnesses properly to prepare for giving evidence in relation to matters that occurred some time ago;
iv) the prospect of there being real and substantial difficulties in giving evidence whether in person in England or by video link from Ukraine;
v) a significant delay in the finalisation of the expert evidence in circumstances in which some, although not all, of the experts are in Ukraine.
The position of the First Defendant
"He explained that air raid sirens go off frequently, several times a day and rockets are falling on the outskirts of Dnipro. In the circumstances, it is difficult for lawyers at his firm to work and they fall into various categories: (i) some are still trying to get their families out of the country; (ii) four or five people have joined the territorial defence and are undergoing active training; (iii) some have been called up through conscription; (iv) some are helping as volunteers which takes up most of their time; and (v) some are outside the main cities and he has no way of contacting them."
The position of the second defendant
"I would ask the judge to take into consideration whether in such a time it is better for me to be spending my time and energy with lawyers preparing for a hearing that may not happen; or to assist my people prepared to defend their country?"
The position of the third to eighth defendants
The claimant's position
Conclusion
i) The first (to which I have already alluded) is that, having reached the conclusion that the damage has already been done and is continuing day by day, it would be wrong not to recognise the reality of the position, and plan accordingly.
ii) The second flows from the first. Disruption to the courts system and the needs of other court users will be exacerbated if a wait and see approach is taken in a case such as the present.
iii) The third is that material further additional cost and expense will be incurred, some or indeed much of which may well be wasted. The claimant is I am sure correct that some of the expense will relate to work which will have to be done in any event. But much will not.
iv) The fourth is that, if an adjournment is granted now, there is a respectable prospect of the court being able to refix the trial for June next year. From the court's perspective, that is currently achievable. If the re-listing has to wait until the beginning of May, there is a material risk that the trial will not be able to start until the end of next year or even the beginning of 2024.
v) The fifth is that there is no real answer to Ms Montgomery's rhetorical question: "the real problem with postponing until May is … What are the defendants supposed to be doing in that period?" She said that there would, effectively, be a phony trial preparation, devoid of an opportunity to either save costs or change direction, where the lawyers would have to do their best to guess what their instructions might be or to get instructions that are partly truncated and garbled and get on with it. That would, she said, be to contemplate a continuing injustice in the preparation of this case. I agree.