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England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Battlebridge Group Ltd v Amala Equity Ltd & Anor [2006] EWHC 2982 (Comm) (23 November 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2006/2982.html Cite as: [2006] EWHC 2982 (Comm) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Battlebridge Group Ltd |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Amala Equity Ltd Joseph Kelly |
Defendants |
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Alexander Cranbrook (instructed by DMH Stallard) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 8 November 2006
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice David Steel :
a) that there were two companies under the name of Amala: one incorporated in Ireland and the other in Gibraltar;
b) neither of them has ever traded;
c) they are both the creatures of Mr Kelly: he is the sole shareholder and the sole executive director: the companies are both controlled by him;
d) both companies have bank accounts but no assets;
e) Mr Kelly appreciated the fact that Battlebridge's pleaded case as to the identity of the parties to the contract was inaccurate, despite which he allowed the filing of a defence on his behalf admitting the identity of the contracting party;
f) the Gibraltar company was struck off the register on the 28 June 2006.
a) The history printout showed the shares that had been lodged with the Bank of New York in London.
b) The bank statements produced by the Defendants showed the shares to be deposited with Credito Artigiana.
i) Amala would advance £2million out of the loan amount upon execution of the promissory note, the balance to be advanced within two months so as to permit Mr Kelly to carry out 'checks' on TDM:ii) the collateral would be reduced to 5million shares, the balance of 493,708 shares to be returned forthwith.
i) the sum of £2million would be advanced immediately;ii) the balance was conditional on checks to be carried out by Mr Kelly proving satisfactory;
iii) (at a subsequent meeting) that all the shares not held by Phillips were to be returned, being only 433,708 in total.
"… what is the problem Joseph, please advise when a) the 493708 shares are to be delivered to Battlebridge account… b) the remainder of the funds under the agreement are to be delivered."
"You have failed to respond to all of my e-mails, phone calls and faxes, so I am formally writing to you with a number of requests.
Upon the signing of the Collateral Limited Recourse Loan Agreement, dated 28th January 2004 I expected that a number of things would happen. Sadly Amala Equities Limited have still not fully complied with the terms of the agreement hence I write to you to request that you remedy them.
The following actions still need to be done: -
1. To forward the full value of the loan as per Clause 2.1.
2. Amala to return 493,708 shares in 3DM as you only pledged 5,000,000 and not the total of 5,493,708 to pledge the full 5,493.708 shares in 3DM as set out in appendix A of the agreement.
3. An explanation as to why you kept in an account at Phllips Securities (UK) Ltd the 493,708 shares.
4. An explanation as to why you have traded at least 60,000 of these shares for your own personal gain.
5. Why the 5 million shares have been moved from the designated account to an account at the Bank of New York nominees, which is contrary to the terms of the agreement. ... "
....
Battlebridge Group Ltd expects you to remedy these breaches otherwise it shall consider terminating the agreement and seek damages for losses suffered."
"I have been travelling in the past week and therefore unable to reply before now. I am willing to have an amicable discussion to resolves issues; however, while you are using language that incorporates legal threats I cannot envisage an amicable dialogue taking place…"
"…
2. He was happy to talk about the position where we were as regards to the loan. He agreed that the initial £2million advance of the loan should have been followed with the remainder. His reasoning was that he was unsure whether 3DM Worldwide was a pump and dump company and was protecting his client i.e. the one he borrowed the funds from to do the non-recourse loan with us.
3. I said I understood his position but it didn't reflect upon the agreement we had and that he had breached the terms of it.
4. I mentioned that we were willing to pursue this through the Civil Courts and if necessary make a formal complaint to the appropriate authority if advised by our lawyers….
6. When asked he said the remainder of the money was in an Esco account and had not been touched.
7. When asked he denied that he had not traded a single share out of the Phillip's securities account that held the remainder of the Battlebridge stock...
8. His excuse for not contacting me was that he had been contacted by the FSA who were enquiring into this loan agreement and they had told him not to contact us.
9. He said another reason for not forwarding the second part of the loan amount was because we had suspended our stock of 2 weeks and not informed him…"
The Witnesses
"It is frequently very difficult to tell whether a witness is telling the truth or not; and where there is a conflict of evidence such as there was in the present case, reference to the objective facts and documents, to the witness's motives and to the overall probabilities, can be a very great assistance to a judge in ascertaining the truth."
a) Mr Livingstone-Raper struck me as a straight-forward and responsive witness in whose evidence I could place confidence particularly where consistent with the documents.
b) Mr Kelly, on the other hand, struck me as a particularly unsatisfactory and evasive witness, all the more and unconvincing as his evidence was seldom supported by the contemporary material.
£1.69 million
a) Despite numerous demands by Mr Livingtone-Raper in the correspondence for payment of the balance of the loan, at no stage did Mr Kelly ever respond to the effect that the balance was not due because the checks were either incomplete or unsatisfactory. Indeed in his final letter, responding to Mr Livingstone-Raper's detailed reasoning for payment of the balance, there is no suggestion by Mr Kelly that the money was not due, simply that the original agreement was based on an excessive share price.
b) Although it is pleaded that payment of the balance was conditional on these checks, there is not a word of support for that proposition in Mr Kelly's witness statement.
c) The whole concept of a variation to limit the drawdown makes little commercial sense: although the loan sum was to be reduced by 40%, the share capital was to be reduced by only 10% or so and, even more strikingly, the sum secured by the promissory note was to remain at £3.69million.
d) For the sake of completeness, I accept Mr Livingston-Raper's evidence that he was only minded to forebear pressing for the full loan in April because Mr Kelly "held all the cards".
60,000 shares
a) The pleaded case was both that the 60,000 shares formed part of the collateral and "that the 60,000 shares were retained" because the Claimants had failed to pay any interest on the loan.
b) In the further information furnished under CPR Part 18, the Defendants asserted that the shares were used "as security for the hedge position".
c) In his statement Mr Kelly stated "I decided to hold back 60,000 shares pending payment of the interest which Mr Livingstone-Raper had promised at our meeting in May".
Collateral shares
Counterclaim