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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 >> Suez Fortune Investments Ltd & Anor v Talbot Underwriting Ltd [2016] EWHC 1085 (Comm) (10 May 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2016/1085.html Cite as: [2016] EWHC 1085 (Comm) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
7 Rolls Building Fetter Lane London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
(1) SUEZ FORTUNE INVESTMENTS LTD |
Claimants |
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(2) PIRAEUS BANK AE |
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- and - |
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(1) TALBOT UNDERWRITING LTD |
Defendants |
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Mr Jonathan Gaisman QC, Mr Stephen Kenny QC and Ms Nichola Warrender (instructed by Norton Rose Fulbright) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: Monday 11th April, Tuesday 12th April and Friday 15th April 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
The Hon. Mr Justice Flaux :
Introduction
Background
"The claimants are to disclose all further documents within the custody or possession of Suez Fortune and/or Worldwide Green Tankers and/or Mr Marios Iliopoulos which fall within standard disclosure, as ordered in paragraph 7 of the Directions Order and/or are responsive to the First and/or Second Disclosure Orders and/or paragraphs 2 and/or 3 above…"
"We have discussed with our clients the release to Hill Dickinson of a hard disk on which the entire WWGT archive is stored, covering the period of 1st January 2008 until 31st December 2014 being the date on which WWGT ceased to operate. It will not be possible for owners to release to this firm such a disk. There is on the WWGT archive documentation in respect of another matter where this firm acts for certain interests which are opposed to the interests of owners and managers of another vessel on the WWGT disk. There would be an obvious conflict of interest in this firm having access to such documentation.
Our clients have, however, agreed to effect key word searches against the WWGT email archive to include the terms BV, B.V, Brillante, Brilante, Suez Fortune, Iliopoulos, Solal, Bravo Tankers, Hydrasec, Alpha Marine, Yemen, Aden, Anyland, Sirah, Status, Poseidon, LISCR, US Navy, Clydes, Gonzaga, Tabares, Artezuela and Marquez. Indeed our clients have agreed to effect such key word searches against the names of all crewmembers on board at the date of the casualty." [Since there were 26 crewmembers, these 19 additional key word terms meant that there were 45 in all agreed in that letter, as referred to in later correspondence from Hill Dickinson.]
"14.07 The solicitor has an overall responsibility of careful investigation and supervision in the disclosure process and he cannot simply leave this task to his client [Myers v Elman [1940] A.C. 282, at 322, 325, 338]. The best way for the solicitor to fulfil his own duty and to ensure that his client's duty is fulfilled too is to take possession of all the original documents as early as possible. The client should not be allowed to decide relevance – or even potential relevance – for himself, so either the client must send all the files to the solicitor or the solicitor must visit the client to review the files or take the relevant documents into his possession. It is then for the solicitor to decide which documents are relevant and discloseable…"
"… There are various reasons why Owners are unwilling to relinquish the flash-drive or even a facsimile to Hill Dickinson or even to Clyde & Co. Foremost amongst these is the fact the flash-drive contains information concerning a matter in which my firm acts against another of Mr Iliopoulos' businesses in wholly unrelated proceedings in Greece. Other reasons include the fact that the flash-drive contains information in respect of which (without waiving privilege) Greek lawyers have advised the First Claimant that they owe a duty of confidentiality to third parties (for instance, telephone records, bank account numbers etc); that it contains information concerning personal issues of Mr Iliopoulos including his health; and that it contains information relating to ongoing unrelated claims, including proceedings in the European Court of Human Rights against the State of Ukraine in relation to the sequestration of a ship and an action against the State of Cuba in respect of another ship. Therefore, although you have suggested that conflicts of interest in my firm could be overcome by the erection of an 'ethical wall' or else by the Bank's solicitors carrying out the review of documentation, neither suggestion satisfies the concerns of the First Claimant or Mr Iliopoulos personally."
"The flash drive was initially kept at the First Claimant's offices at 2, Gounari Street, Athens. However, once allegations of wilful misconduct were made, Mr Sayed Agha, a former representative of WWGT, asked for the flash-drive to be delivered to a Greek attorney, Mr Grigorakis, for safekeeping. On 11 May 2015, following the making of the first disclosure order on 1 May, Mr Bezas agreed with Mr Said Agha for the return of the flash-drive from the custody of Mr Grigorakis.
The flash-drive has since been interrogated through the use of search terms. The flash-drive is in the form of a USB-2 1TB. It has been interrogated by an IT technician, Mr Georgiou."
"…this was effectively an admission that the disclosure exercise was being conducted by the claimants themselves and not by Hill Dickinson, and that therefore this was not only an unsatisfactory situation, but one which meant that Hill Dickinson were not in a position to comply with their own obligations to the court in relation to disclosure of satisfying themselves through their own examination of the relevant documents that their clients were disclosing all relevant documents. The importance of that obligation on the solicitors cannot be overemphasised in this case where there are serious allegations of wilful misconduct, and effectively scuttling of the vessel."
(1) It was said by Mr Iliopoulos that WWGT, which had ceased operating on 31 December 2014, was a company in which he was previously a shareholder and over which he had control. It was said that Mr Sayed Agha (the chartering manager of WWGT since 2007) was now the holder of all the shares, which were bearer shares, as well as having been the sole director of WWGT since August 2012 and its legal representative under Greek Law 89/67.(2) Mr Iliopoulos revealed for the first time that Mr Grigorakis was Mr Agha's Greek lawyer. He gave a detailed explanation as to why, on 9 March 2015, the WWGT archive had been put into the custody of Mr Grigorakis, allegedly for safekeeping. His explanation in his witness statement was:
"Mr Clift also explained [in paragraph 33 of his twelfth witness statement dated 17 December 2015] that the WWGT archive was initially kept at the First Claimant's offices at 2, Gounari Street, Piraeus. However, once the allegations of wilful misconduct were made, Mr Agha asked for the archive to be delivered to his Greek attorney, Mr Grigorakis, for safe-keeping. Given the situation, Mr Agha's view was that this archive ought to be retained by a lawyer.I considered this an appropriate and responsible course of action. Given the new baseless allegations, I was concerned about any other unfounded accusations being made in connection with it being in my possession. It was also a crucially important repository of evidence which deserved to be kept properly."(3) Mr Iliopoulos referred to the alleged toing and froing of the WWGT archive to which I have already referred at [17] above, culminating in the alleged return of the archive to Mr Grigorakis on 17 December 2015, the day before the hearing of the insurers' application for unless orders in relation to the owners' breaches of their disclosure obligations. None of this had been previously disclosed by the owners, even to their own solicitors. Mr Iliopoulos exhibited a whole series of "receipts" signed by Mr Grigorakis and/or Mr Bezas of the owners ostensibly recording the handing over and handing back of the archive on each such occasion.
(4) Mr Iliopoulos stated that Mr Clift had informed him of the Final Order on the evening of 18 December 2015 and that, whilst he had been reluctant to disclose the documentation previously, he understood that the Court Order needed to be followed. He said that, on 24 December 2015, he requested a meeting with Mr Clift, his Greek lawyer, Mr Tsafos and Mr Agha, to be held on Monday, 4 January 2016. The new situation had to be explained to Mr Agha and according to Mr Iliopoulos' witness statement it was better for this to be done in person, as it was the best way of ensuring that the archive could be obtained straightaway without further discussion. Mr Iliopoulos said he was eager for Mr Clift to be there so that Mr Agha could hear from him personally, including as to the seriousness of the situation, but Mr Clift could not attend because he was ill.
(5) The meeting proceeded without him and according to Mr Iliopoulos it was only at that meeting on 4 January 2016 that Mr Agha stated for the first time that he would not allow Mr Grigorakis to provide the WWGT archive to the owners. Mr Iliopoulos set out the reasons which Mr Agha gave for this refusal at paragraph 27 of his witness statement: (i) that he could not provide anything until he had advice from his Greek lawyer as to his position, including under Law 89/67; (ii) that there was a criminal case against Mr Agha in Greece as the legal representative of the company in respect of the death of a crewmember on board another vessel in Nigeria in 2013 which was due to be heard in Greece in a few weeks' time on 26 January 2016; (iii) the fact that there were now allegations of dishonesty being made by insurers against him personally in relation to the switching of the bills of lading. Mr Iliopoulos said that Mr Bezas had told Mr Agha the gist of those allegations before the hearing on 18 December 2015, but they showed him the actual pleaded amendments at the meeting. Mr Agha asked why such allegations needed to be made against him and refused to release the archive in case he faced other accusations for which there was no justification.
(6) Mr Iliopoulos said that he had suggested that Mr Agha should sleep on the matter and they should resume their discussions the following day, 5 January 2016. However, at the meeting the following day his attitude had hardened. It was clear that he had held discussions with his lawyer, Mr Grigorakis, and he said his final position was that he would not give back the WWGT archive.
"38……The reasons that were apparently given by Mr Agha for refusing to do so [hand over a copy of the WWGT Archive] are set out by Mr Iliopoulos in paragraph 27 of his witness statement: first of all, that he had to have advice from a Greek lawyer as to what his position was, including under the Greek law 89/67, which apparently imposes responsibilities on the legal representatives of a company, but that explanation is completely nonsensical since the obligations under 89/67 do not include any obligations in relation of disclosure of documentation to a third party; and in any event, Mr Agha had apparently handed over, or his lawyer had handed over, the archive on a number of previous occasions without apparently needing to take specific advice about that.
39. The second reason, or the second ground for the alleged reluctance was apparently there is a criminal case against Mr Agha, as the legal representative of the company, in relation to the death of a crew member in Nigeria in 2013, and that criminal case is due to be heard in Piraeus on 26 January 2016, so in two weeks' time. Again, that case must have been already ongoing at the time, at least, of the requests for the disclosure of the archive in October, at the end of October last year when it was handed over without any apparent concern about ongoing criminal proceedings.
40. The third reason apparently given by Mr Agha is that he is in some way incensed by the allegations about false bills of lading, which is a further amendment to the pleadings which was made by the owners on the last occasion, but it seems to me that that cannot be a good reason at all for not being prepared to disclose the documentation.
41. Following that meeting, on 7 January 2015 Mr Bezas and Mr Tsafos came to London and met Mr Clift, and an e-mail was then sent to Mr Grigorakis, but he was apparently away, and did not respond to that until 8 January when he said that he was in a position to set up a meeting that afternoon. There was then a meeting that afternoon at which Mr Grigorakis, according to Mr Iliopoulos, continued to refuse to hand over the archive and complained about the orders made in respect of disclosure by the court not being specific and not in line with Greek legislation, and also complained that there had been multiple violations of Greek law, which he did not identify. All of that seems to me to ignore the fact that the effect of the orders made by the court is that these documents are documents within the control of the owners. So it is not a question of third party disclosure at all, which seems to me to be what Mr Grigorakis is addressing."
"50. I have already indicated during the course of this judgment that I regard this to-ing and fro-ing, with obtaining the archive and then handing it back without taking a copy of it which, even if one takes Mr Iliopoulos' statement at face value is, to say the least, a curious action, as the owners certainly unnecessarily putting the archive out of their legal control.
51. As to whether it was deliberate and knowingly done, it seems to me that, as Mr Gaisman QC submits, the owners must have known that this would be the effect of the steps which, on Mr Iliopoulos' evidence, are the steps which have apparently been taken. It is not suggested anywhere in his evidence by Mr Iliopoulos that he was ignorant of the legal effects of what he was doing. On his own case, what he appears to have done is firstly voluntarily hand over his own shares to Mr Agha; secondly, to make Mr Agha the sole director of the company, and; thirdly, against that background and in those circumstances, to hand over the only copy of the archive to Mr Agha. In those circumstances, even if one took that material at face value, it seems to me Mr Iliopoulos must have known that at least one possible consequence of what he did was that it would not be possible to obtain the archive back from Mr Agha if Mr Agha declined to hand it back.
52. It follows from that, in my judgment, that Mr Gaisman QC's first submission is made out; that the owners have unnecessarily and deliberately put the archive out of their legal control, most recently on 17 December 2015, in the face of a hearing the following day at which the owners must have appreciated it was highly likely the court would order them to disclose the archive. No legitimate reason is advanced by the owners for handing back the archive the day before the hearing and I can only interpret this as having been done deliberately, with a view to seeking to contend exactly as the owners have sought to contend at this hearing; that in some way this material is now out of their control.
53. In my judgment it is not necessary for the purposes of determining this application to decide whether or not Mr Iliopoulos' version of events is true or not. It is sufficient for present purposes to say that it is a wholly inadequate explanation, or a wholly inadequate attempt to demonstrate that the documents are now outside the control of the owners, in circumstances where (i) there is simply no evidence as to why Mr Iliopoulos has handed over the shares to Mr Agha; (ii) the document alleged to demonstrate that he is the sole director does nothing of the sort but simply says that the sole director, whoever that was, appointed him the legal representative; and (iii) the explanation provided by Mr Iliopoulos for thinking that it was appropriate for Mr Agha to give the documents to his lawyer for safekeeping is, frankly, an unbelievable explanation for what has occurred.
54. I am quite satisfied that these owners have taken steps to try and make it as difficult as possible for this particular aspect of their own disclosure obligations to be complied with. This is not something that has happened accidentally but has happened quite deliberately and, in those circumstances, as Mr Gaisman QC submits quite correctly, the owners are in continuing and contumelious breach of court orders and default of their disclosure obligations."
Developments since the 12 January hearing
Mr Iliopoulos' health
The criminal complaint
The legal framework for the applications
"(1) On an application for relief from any sanction imposed for a failure to comply with any rule, practice direction or court order, the court will consider all the circumstances of the case, so as to enable it to deal justly with the application, including the need—
(a) for litigation to be conducted efficiently and at proportionate cost; and
(b) to enforce compliance with rules, practice directions and orders."
"On an application for relief from a sanction, … the starting point should be that the sanction has been properly imposed and complies with the overriding objective… it is not open to [the applicant] to complain that the order should not have been made, whether on the grounds that it did not comply with the overriding objective or for any other reason…"
"The first stage is to identify and assess the seriousness and significance of the "failure to comply with any rule, practice direction or court order" which engages rule 3.9(1). If the breach is neither serious nor significant, the court is unlikely to need to spend much time on the second and third stages. The second stage is to consider why the default occurred. The third stage is to evaluate "all the circumstances of the case, so as to enable [the court] to deal justly with the application including [factors (a) and (b)]"
"38. An 'unless order', however, does not stand on its own. The court usually only makes an unless order against a party which is already in breach. The unless order gives that party additional time for compliance with the original obligation and specifies an automatic sanction in default of compliance. It is not possible to look at an unless order in isolation. A party who fails to comply with an unless order is normally in breach of an original order or rule as well as the unless order.
39. In order to assess the seriousness and significance of the breach of an unless order, it is necessary also to look at the underlying breach. The court must look at what X failed to do in the first place, when assessing X's failure to take advantage of the second chance which he was given.
…
41. The very fact that X has failed to comply with an unless order (as opposed to an 'ordinary' order) is undoubtedly a pointer towards seriousness and significance. This is for two reasons. First, X is in breach of two successive obligations to do the same thing. Secondly, the court has underlined the importance of doing that thing by specifying an automatic sanction in default (in this case the Draconian sanction of strike out)." (emphasis added)
"In my judgment, this jurisprudence permits the following conclusions to be drawn:
(i) Despite occasional references to a possible distinction between jurisdiction and discretion in the operation of CPR 3.1(7), there is in all probability no line to be drawn between the two. The rule is apparently broad and unfettered, but considerations of finality, the undesirability of allowing litigants to have two bites at the cherry, and the need to avoid undermining the concept of appeal, all push towards a principled curtailment of an otherwise apparently open discretion. Whether that curtailment goes even further in the case of a final order does not arise in this appeal.
(ii) The cases all warn against an attempt at an exhaustive definition of the circumstances in which a principled exercise of the discretion may arise. Subject to that, however, the jurisprudence has laid down firm guidance as to the primary circumstances in which the discretion may, as a matter of principle, be appropriately exercised, namely normally only (a) where there has been a material change of circumstances since the order was made, or (b) where the facts on which the original decision was made were (innocently or otherwise) misstated.
(iii) It would be dangerous to treat the statement of these primary circumstances, originating with Patten J and approved in this court, as though it were a statute. That is not how jurisprudence operates, especially where there is a warning against the attempt at exhaustive definition.
(iv) Thus there is room for debate in any particular case as to whether and to what extent, in the context of principle (b) in (ii) above, misstatement may include omission as well as positive misstatement, or concern argument as distinct from facts. In my judgment, this debate is likely ultimately to be a matter for the exercise of discretion in the circumstances of each case.
(v) Similarly, questions may arise as to whether the misstatement (or omission) is conscious or unconscious; and whether the facts (or arguments) were known or unknown, knowable or unknowable. These, as it seems to me, are also factors going to discretion: but where the facts or arguments are known or ought to have been known as at the time of the original order, it is unlikely that the order can be revisited, and that must be still more strongly the case where the decision not to mention them is conscious or deliberate.
(vi) Edwards v. Golding [2007] EWCA Civ 416 is an example of the operation of the rule in a rather different circumstance, namely that of a manifest mistake on the part of the judge in the formulation of his order. It was plain in that case from the master's judgment itself that he was seeking a disposition which would preserve the limitation point for future debate, but he did not realise that the form which his order took would not permit the realisation of his adjudicated and manifest intention.
(vii) The cases considered above suggest that the successful invocation of the rule is rare. Exceptional is a dangerous and sometimes misleading word: however, such is the interest of justice in the finality of a court's orders that it ought normally to take something out of the ordinary to lead to variation or revocation of an order, especially in the absence of a change of circumstances in an interlocutory situation."
Mr Iliopoulos as a witness
"…even someone who is apparently fluent in a foreign language may misinterpret the nuances of questions in that language and, if they wish to do so, should be entitled to give their evidence in their mother tongue."
"Q. could you answer this question, please, and just listen to it: how could handing the archive to owners for onward transmission to Hill Dickinson have any impact whatever on the criminal complaint against Mr Agha in relation to the crew member's death?
…………………..
MR JUSTICE FLAUX: What you are being asked is how could handing the archive by the owners to their own solicitors in London have any impact on the criminal claim against Mr Agha made in relation to the death of the crew member? Nothing to do with Grigorakis or the Grigorakis complaint. What is the answer?
A. I still don't understand the question, if you can just simplify it for me.
MR GAISMAN: I think you do understand it. I will go on."
Detailed findings of fact
The history of disclosure by the Owners
"Q…The point I'm trying to make is that what Mr Clift is explaining that he advised is that his firm would need to review all the documents in the flash drive; do you see?
A. And what is the question?
Q. What I am suggesting is that that shows that you and owners knew very well that Hill Dickinson required to have access to your electronic documents so that they could work out what needed to be disclosed. That's right, isn't it?
A. And -- I do not understand your question.
Q. You and owners knew from an early stage in the litigation that Hill Dickinson required to have access to all the documents on an electronic flash drive so that they could work out what needed to be disclosed for themselves; that's right, isn't it?
A. Whatever they requested, they had it. I do not have anything to do with the computers -- Mr Clift knows that I do not use computers, but whatever they asked for, they got it.
Q. That's not true, because they asked for, as the evidence shows quite clearly, the Worldwide flash drive, and you refused to them have it; that's right, isn't it?
A. Can you please show me where you see this, because I don't have any knowledge of IT, or any flash drives or hard drives or anything."
The owners' attitude to compliance with their disclosure obligations
"Q. If they tell you that you have to do something in order to comply with your duty in English litigation, you would do it, wouldn't you?
A. Yes. Reasonably, yes, yeah.
Q. Unless somebody else had given you different advice. If Hill Dickinson said 'You must take this step, it is your duty as an English Court litigant to do so', you would do it I presume?
A. No, because initially from Hill Dickinson, they said that the VDR should be given – the VDR should be given.
…
And we said no, because we said that we would not give it unless there is a court order. The same thing happened with my passport. Without a court order, we wouldn't give it. And the same thing happened with the archive. If there was no court order, we wouldn't give it. And this was the argument within our comments for not giving those things. But it's a separate thing being asked by a firm like Norton Rose for certain things, and it's a separate thing having a court order requesting those things. If there is a court order, we always comply with it, and there's absolutely no dispute about this. Therefore it's a different thing having a request and a different thing having a court order.
Q. I'm not talking about a request, I am talking about advice from your solicitor that this is something that you must do, and that advice might well say "You have to do this irrespective of whether it is a court order". If you received that advice, you would say "No, I will not do it until there is a court order"? Have I correctly understood your evidence?
A. Our solicitor's advice is respected, but in some cases might not be correct. We follow the court orders."
The sole directorship and handing over the bearer shares
"53. In my judgment it is not necessary for the purposes of determining this application to decide whether or not Mr Iliopoulos' version of events is true or not. It is sufficient for present purposes to say that it is a wholly inadequate explanation, or a wholly inadequate attempt to demonstrate that the documents are now outside the control of the owners, in circumstances where (i) there is simply no evidence as to why Mr Iliopoulos has handed over the shares to Mr Agha; (ii) the document alleged to demonstrate that he is the sole director does nothing of the sort but simply says that the sole director, whoever that was, appointed him the legal representative; and (iii) the explanation provided by Mr Iliopoulos for thinking that it was appropriate for Mr Agha to give the documents to his lawyer for safekeeping is, frankly, an unbelievable explanation for what has occurred."
"11. I would add that, in my experience, the share certificates are always kept separately from the other corporate documents and records of the company (e.g. the articles of association and the resolutions of the company). These records may well be held by a director, or a lawyer representing the company. But the share certificates would not, in my experience, be part of those records.
12. I therefore totally disagree with Mr Karamitsios [the owners' Greek law expert] that it is common or normal for the bearer shares in a company to be held by a director of the company who is not the beneficial owner (as he suggests at the first paragraph on p.4 of his letter of 2 February).
13. In particular I find it very hard to believe that Mr Iliopoulos would, in 2012, have handed the bearer share certificates in WWGT for safe keeping to an employee who he had only known for five years, without obtaining a receipt or other signed acknowledgement that the transfer was simply custodial."
"A. I have the control of Worldwide because I'm mentioned as the beneficial owner in many bank documents and I have the ---- I controlled the accounts, and I'm mentioned in many company documents.
Q. Well, I haven't seen a number of these documents. I don't think I've seen any of them. But the point I'm making is that you do understand, the person who is in control of a company, unless and until he's removed, is the director, yes?
A…….the beneficiary of the company, and that was myself.
Q. Assuming you could prove it?
A. Since my name was mentioned in so many documents, it's common sense that I was that person, and I never handed over those shares, because I was the legal owner of these shares."
"A. I believe that the word "executive" here means, you know, who he is the highest in power, and this is myself, because it's myself who is mentioned in all the documents. It was me who could make any decision I wanted at the time and I have the – and this is certain, this is absolute.
Q…I'm suggesting to you it is obvious that Mr Agha was in legal control of Worldwide.
A. Yes, but I had the power to do whatever I liked, even to replace him.
Q. Well, we might debate that, but I'm not going to take up time with you now……"
"The above mentioned two companies [WWGT and Aegean Jet Co, owner of the Aetos] belong to the same group of companies, where Mr Marios Iliopoulos had a commercial interest. In relation, however, to the above mentioned first company [WWGT], which was represented by my principal [Mr Agha] Mr Iliopoulos maintained an interest until the time where all of its shares were transferred to my principal's ownership following an agreement between them."
The alleged option agreement
"In addition, however, Mr Agha requested that if ever WWGT ceased operating in Greece, he would be entitled to take it over. The reasons why he proposed this were as follows. He could see that I was veering towards the cessation of WWGT's operations and did not want his hard work to be in vain, in case I subsequently decided to close it down anyway. Also, if he was to spend time and effort building up WWGT as a manager of third party vessels, he wanted to have the advantage of its brand recognition, in case I no longer needed it as a tool. I agreed to Mr Agha's request. Our agreement was made orally, but it was witnessed by Mr Bezas and Ms Katarina Tsafou, who were in attendance."
"Mr Agha reiterated that he was not willing to hand over the archive; indeed, he considered himself incapable of handing it over, given that it would be put into the hands of solicitors, yet contained information confidential to third parties. But anyway, he said, he did not have to hand over the archive as the company now belonged to him because of our previous agreement in the summer of 2012. This left me speechless. I remembered the agreement, but had not understood it to apply."
"A. There are no written records. This is the general spirit in shipping. Often things are done on this basis and there are important things that happen on based on verbal agreements and verbal arrangements. This is perfectly normal.
Q. Why would Mr Agha be happy with an oral agreement? This was an important development as far as he was concerned. He was getting an option, he was getting the promise of performance bonuses, the opportunity to take over.
A. Because Mr Agha knew from all these years like most --- you know, the whole of Piraeus and most shipowners know that my word is my contract."
"….And the things that were included in our agreement in 2012, like to bring more ships, these had not materialised, he hadn't actually done these things. I was entirely certain this would never be the case.
Q. But the option you had conferred on him was a simple agreement, as you describe it. If and when Worldwide Greece closes down, you may take it over, and it had closed down.
A … How could you get the company's goodwill without actually having fulfilled these? He didn't deserve this in any case.
Q. ... there was a further condition to the exercise of the option, namely that Mr Agha fulfilled certain criteria or targets. The first time I have ever heard that suggestion, Mr Iliopoulos, is now.
A…..just, we didn't talk about that option as an isolated thing, there was just an overall discussion about certain things that needed to take place, and this was just a cherry on the cake, if you like, that he would actually take over the company, but he didn't deserve this."
"A. I didn't talk about a condition, all I said is that it was an overall discussion and at the end of the discussion, he made a comment that 'if we continue as we have talked about, my plan is to do this, would you have a problem with it?' It was an overall discussion and I said no."
That simply succeeded in demonstrating how inconsistent and incoherent the evidence is about the alleged oral option agreement.
"Q. So anybody taking on Worldwide would have that liability to cope with, wouldn't they?
A. That's not the case because the bank would be after me. Worldwide was just one of the corporate guarantors, they had nothing to fear……
Q. But if Worldwide made profits, then those profits were exposed to the guarantee being called on, weren't they?
A. … the profits go to the managing company. The profits go to the owner companies and not to the management company.
Q. Mr Agha was supposed to want to take over this management company precisely to make money out of it wasn't he? That was the whole idea."
The alleged handover of the archive in March 2015
"Q. What you should have said to yourself, do you agree, as soon as you read these allegations was: owners need to be sure that the archive remains fully under its control so that owners can comply with their duties of disclosure as advised by Hill Dickinson; do you agree?
A. Yes.
Q. If you were going to put the Worldwide archive somewhere different from owners' own office, you had to put it somewhere you could get it back immediately and if necessary by law?
A. Yes, I agree."
"Moreover, in the context of my co-operation with Mr SAYED AGHA, the latter entrusted me, after the revocation of the licence of establishment in Greece of his company WORLDWIDE GREEN TANKERS LTD and the shutting down of its offices and the termination of its activities, with the safe keeping of its electronic archive, (which was in a condensed form "hard drive"), since he would, from then on, reside permanently in Dubai of UAE…"
However, that cannot be a truthful explanation for the handing over of the archive in March 2015, because Mr Agha had moved to Dubai in December 2014. Asked why Mr Grigorakis had got this wrong, Mr Iliopoulos just said: "I am not the right person to respond to this question."
"Clearly he must have thought that this was information -- these archives should be with the person that was representing him while he was in Dubai, because he was the sole director and the legal representative of the company. It was also the right place for this archive to be, according to what he was saying and what I was saying. If Mr Agha had other things in his mind too, then I'm not -- any further things in his mind, then I'm not in a position to know that."
"I believe that I explained that I wanted this to be away from me and I didn't want this to be with one of my lawyers. Mr Grigorakis was known to my family, he was a family friend, he's well-respected in Greece, and I had no reason to do anything different to what Mr Agha had requested."
"Q. The point I'm making is this, Mr Iliopoulos: even if you controlled Worldwide, you didn't control Mr Agha, did you?
A. That's not the case, because often when Mr Agha had different opinions, if I respected them and if they were valid, I would take them into account. If not, then I would just impose my own decisions.
Q. I don't think that's an answer to my question either. You didn't control Mr Agha, did you?
A. I told you I had the highest power in the company and I was in control of everything.
Q. Mr Grigorakis may have been a family friend, but he was acting for Mr Agha in this transaction, wasn't he?
A. Yes, and he was the right person to have this archive, according to what I've explained to you.
Q. Why? It had been sitting, you would say, quite safely in owners' offices. Why was there any need to give it to…Mr Agha's lawyer Mr Grigorakis?
A. I explained that this was a request made by Mr Agha, which he made for his own reasons, and for my own reasons, my own personal reasons, I agreed, and this is why I made the decision."
"MR GAISMAN: So if Mr Agha it was who asked for the archive to be handed over, there is no reason why he would not have explained to you, or to owners, the terms upon which he would hand it back, is there?
A. But you explained that, up to August, all the searches were about Brillante.
Q. That's not an answer to the question."
"… I knew that Mr Agha was, like I, reluctant for the archive to be passed to third parties, including the First Claimant's solicitors: we had discussed the matter and he was of the same opinion as I that only documentation relating to the Brillante Virtuoso, and none other should be downloaded from the archive" (emphasis added)
In cross-examination Mr Iliopoulos accepted that he knew that Mr Agha was only willing for the archive to be used on certain conditions and said that up until the making of the Final Order on 18 December 2015, they were agreed that the archive contained material that "went against Greek law" and should not be disclosed "because there were third party obligations".
"Speaking for myself, it seems folly in the extreme not to have made another copy, so that if there were a fire or a theft at Mr Grigorakis' office, you could at least say "Never mind, we've got a copy ourselves". You don't need to be computer literate or a computer specialist to take that fundamental sensible step."
"A. Yes, but in the context of Stage 2, my obligation was to keep any information on Brilliante and BMP.
MR JUSTICE FLAUX: You can't possibly be telling me -- perhaps you are, Mr Iliopoulos -- that you didn't regard yourself as under an obligation to ensure that archive or that computer record, whatever it was, was preserved for the purposes of Stage 2.
A. Yes, I agree with this. That's exactly what I'm saying; that I could have kept only the information that related to Stage 2.
MR JUSTICE FLAUX: No, with respect, that's not what I'm suggesting to you at all."
The second alleged handover in August 2015
"Q. So by the time the archive was handed back to Mr Grigorakis by owners in, I think, August 2015, you knew perfectly well that you were handing it back to somebody who was only willing to give it you back on conditions.
A. I explained that there were no restrictions or limitations, it was something that we agreed together, and there would be absolutely no limitations if there was a court order".
The further alleged handing back of the archive on 17 December 2015
"Q. You didn't tell Mr Clift about the repeated handing back and handing over of the archive after the original giving of it to Mr Grigorakis, did you?
A. This is not correct. We informed Hill Dickinson.
Q. You didn't tell Mr Clift that Mr Grigorakis was Mr Agha's lawyer when he signed his witness statement on 17 December 2015, a very important 30-page witness statement.
A. Unfortunately for Mr Clift, we had informed weeks before Ms Maria Moisidou from Hill Dickinson. If Mr Clift wasn't made aware of that then that's his problem."
"Q. So it's not the fact that you failed to tell him the true position, it's that Ms Moisidou failed to pass on what she was told by owners in Greece to Mr Clift in London; is that right?
A. Possibly."
"14 … There are various reasons why Owners are unwilling to relinquish the flash-drive or even a facsimile to Hill Dickinson or even to Clyde & Co. Foremost amongst these is the fact the flash-drive contains information concerning a matter in which my firm acts against another of Mr Iliopoulos' businesses in wholly unrelated proceedings in Greece. Other reasons include the fact that the flash-drive contains information in respect of which (without waiving privilege) Greek lawyers have advised the First Claimant that they owe a duty of confidentiality to third parties (for instance, telephone records, bank account numbers etc); that it contains information concerning personal issues of Mr Iliopoulos including his health; and that it contains information relating to ongoing unrelated claims, including proceedings in the European Court of Human Rights against the State of Ukraine in relation to the sequestration of a ship and an action against the State of Cuba in respect of another ship. Therefore, although you have suggested that conflicts of interest in my firm could be overcome by the erection of an 'ethical wall' or else by the Bank's solicitors carrying out the review of documentation, neither suggestion satisfies the concerns of the First Claimant or Mr Iliopoulos personally."
"We were not worried about having -- we didn't have any concerns about having a court order, it would actually protect us, so we would moved forward in the way that we did if there hadn't been a court order, and we would have taken all necessary actions had there been a court order."
I reject that evidence as completely untrue. The owners clearly objected to the making of an Order and the suggestion that they would have welcomed an Order is preposterous. As I pointed out when Mr Iliopoulos gave this evidence and as I noted at [139] above, the owners had never come to Court to seek such a protective Order.
"Because on 17 December we are talking about searches in relation to the vessel. So all previous 45 searches did not include this. Therefore, you are talking about different things. So the 45 searches in October and November are different to the 45 searches we are talking about here."
However, that was obviously nonsensical, since as Mr Gaisman QC pointed out, a narrower search using one of the search terms "in relation to the vessel" would have produced a sub-set of the documents produced by the wider search. In any event, Mr Clift's witness statement was clearly talking about the ongoing process of searching in relation to the 45 terms agreed in the letter of 30 October 2015, not to some new process of searching by reference to new search terms.
Events between the hearing on 18 December 2015 and 12 January 2016
"A. As I explained, I believed that we owed some respect to Mr Agha with a face-to-face conversation, because we believed with a face-to-face conversation we would actually get the disk back, there would be some respect through a face-to-face -- it would show a respect to him by having a face-to-face conversation, and the disk had never been a problem before."
The reasons for the refusal to hand over the archive
"Mr Agha had various issues that concerned him in relation to Greek law. It is not fixed on Law 89, because there are other complications related to other laws. So Mr Agha's concerns on any legal matters were not strictly related only to Law 89 in relation to things that happened previously."
"A. I'm sorry, Mr Gaisman, but we are playing with words again. I didn't say I have anything to do with initiating this complaint.
Q. I understand that.
A. All I said, and I said that yesterday, that I'm not going to comment on the complaint which is not mine. This is not my role to comment on that complaint.
…
A. This is exactly what I was referring to as a 'technical offsiding' you've been doing until today, about health and my passport because you don't have a case.
MR JUSTICE FLAUX: Mr Iliopoulos, I said to you earlier on that I'm not the slightest bit interested in hearing you repeating insults to Mr Gaisman or insults to the underwriters. You have come to give evidence. You are being asked about one of the reasons that was given by Mr Agha for not handing over this archive and Mr Gaisman has asked you a very specific question which is whether you have an explanation as to why it is that that reason is not given by Mr Grigorakis in the complaint which he filed; are you prepared to answer that question or not?
...
MR JUSTICE FLAUX: No….Focus on the question you are being asked.
A. As I said I have no involvement."
"Q. could you answer this question, please, and just listen to it: how could handing the archive to owners for onward transmission to Hill Dickinson have any impact whatever on the criminal complaint against Mr Agha in relation to the crew member's death?
A. This complaint destroyed Mr Agha's willingness …in order to start talking again about the archive. In other words, he just went back to the beginning, to the starting point. If you go back and refer to the email that you showed me yesterday which I composed on -- it was in March, it was my email that was sent in March, I don't remember the exact date, which I'm calling him to come and --
MR JUSTICE FLAUX: You are not answering the question, Mr Iliopoulos. You are answering a different question, which is one you keep on wanting to refer to. But you are not answering the question you are being asked.
A. (In English). Sorry.
MR JUSTICE FLAUX: What you are being asked is how could handing the archive by the owners to their own solicitors in London have any impact on the criminal claim against Mr Agha made in relation to the death of the crew member? Nothing to do with Grigorakis or the Grigorakis complaint. What is the answer?
A. I still don't understand the question, if you can just simplify it for me.
MR GAISMAN: I think you do understand it. I will go on."
"Q…why would Mr Agha have thought that you were to blame for the fact that he was being held responsible as manager for the death of the crew member?
A. You will see that very often in Greece they don't look to see who the legal representative is, they just want to see who the actual owner is of the beneficiary. Therefore, the prosecutor would -- could either prosecute myself, the captain, Mr Agha, or all of us. So therefore I am not in a position to know why the prosecutor went for Mr Agha.
Q. That is not the question I asked you. The question I asked you is this: Mr Agha is the only director of the managers at the relevant time and he has full executive authority for managing the vessel, right?
A. (In English). Yes.
Q. Why would he take it out on you? Why would he want to damage you for the fact that he was being held responsible as the manager that he was?
A. I do not understand your question.
Q. Well, I have asked it twice. I'm going to go on.
A. It is confusing.
Q. Sorry?
A. It is confusing.
MR JUSTICE FLAUX: It is a fairly straightforward question, with respect, Mr Iliopoulos. Do you want it translated again?
THE INTERPRETER: Can you repeat the question?
MR GAISMAN: If Mr Agha was the manager with full executive authority for managing the vessel…why was he going to damage you, by withholding the archive, given he was the responsible person as the manager of the vessel?
A. As I explained before, please do not put myself in Mr Agha's mind. I said myself earlier that what Mr Agha said on 5 January is unconvincing and ridiculous.
Q. You said yesterday that Mr Agha was sensible and business like; do you remember? Page 23 of the transcript, do you remember that or not?
A. Yes, this is why I trusted him.
Q. Yes. So it would be entirely irrational for Mr Agha to risk legal action by you for the loss of the present claim, and it wouldn't help him at all with the death of the crew member?
A. I'm not in a position to know what else is going through Mr Agha's mind, because I'm not Mr Agha. This is what I'm saying is what Mr Agha has presented, which is unconvincing. And therefore we agree that he is unconvincing in what he says."
"Q. So you agree that as a matter --- looking at the bills of lading point on its own, there was no reason whatever why he should be enraged or panic stricken or terrified?
A. I cannot comment"
"MR JUSTICE FLAUX: Right. So going back to the question, are you able to help me as to why on earth Mr Agha would want to punish the owners and reward the underwriters who had made this, you tell me, infuriating allegation against him. It makes absolutely no sense whatsoever. Why would he do it?
A. I entirely agree that he had absolutely no reason to punish us."
The alleged change of attitude and the Grigorakis complaint
"Elia, I had considered commencing a constructive discussion further to your proposal to find a solution on the matter of the hard-drive today however this possibility has been slaughtered by the events of the past week. For there to be such hatred for the insurers to undertake such offences which are criminal, your opponents are looking to destroy you with whatever means, even illegally and ruthlessly without any hesitation, so you can understand I don't want to be a party to this I have other priorities in my life. There is no respect and limits, and also of course no ethical walls, as your lawyer has guaranteed otherwise how is it possible for there to be ethical walls when at the same time there are serious criminal offences as I was advised from my lawyer. Your assumption are yours and your problems with your opponent are also yours. Definitely I will look to obtain further legal advice regarding whatever legal actions against the responsible parties and I wish you good luck. Regards. Sayed"
"I do remember that, because Mr Clift -- when this message was received by Mr Bezas, I was in the same office with Mr Bezas and Mr Clift, in the same office, that minute, when that message arrived. We had already been in a meeting with Mr Clift for a few hours…and that is when this message arrived.
Q. That was just a coincidence, was it, that Mr Clift was there, when the message arrived?
A. How would I know whether this is a coincidence or not? I told you why I remember it well."
"I convinced Mr Agha that a dialogue in respect of the [WWGT] archive should be re-opened. It seemed to me that Mr Agha had had a change of attitude since we last spoke, possibly simply due to the passage of time. I reiterated [the owners'] offer to provide security in the sum of Euros 1 million. I managed to persuade Mr Agha to agree to a meeting in Dubai the following week on the understanding that any cooperation would be subject to the provision of security by [the owners] and to the good faith of all parties concerned."
"A month later on 17 February, Mr Bezas managed to open the dialogue again with Mr Agha. What Mr Agha is saying here is not that he is going to give the disk. This is a dialogue starting here in good faith in order to find a solution. He didn't say that he was going to give the disk immediately, therefore the dialogue that had been – that stopped for a month, it was re-opened."
"And therefore the dialogue that we re-opened with Mr Agha was just to test, to see whether Mr Agha would be convinced in selling the disk for a large amount of money. There was absolutely nothing certain, we wanted to test other things, we just wanted to test what other possibilities we had.
Q. Yes. Change of attitude is the word in Mr Bezas' witness statement that was in the question I asked you a long time ago, but you haven't answered it.
A. I agree."
As I have already said, I found the evidence of Mr Bezas about the change of attitude incredible and it was not made any more credible by its adoption by Mr Iliopoulos.
"Q. You see, if you look at the complaint, page 133.
A. I will not.
Q. You absolutely refuse to look at it?
A. I have absolutely nothing to comment on that complaint. If the judge wants me to have a look at it and comment then I will do it.
Q. Mr Iliopoulos, this complaint has been introduced into these proceedings. Let's assume it is an entirely independent complaint by Mr Grigorakis. It has been deployed in these proceedings as an exhibit to Mr Clift's 17th witness statement, and you knew that was happening before it happened, didn't you?
A. And I said that I will not comment on it unless the judge wants me to."
"A. Before we begin, I just said that for – on legal matters I will not respond. Any other question, you can put to me but…
MR GAISMAN: I wasn't asking you any legal questions. I was asking you about how it was that these emails had been translated with such extraordinary speed and you refused to answer; did you understand that to be a legal question?
A. This is not – this exact thing is not a legal matter, but it is part of the Greek legal proceedings, but I did respond on how one can actually have these emails translated so quickly and how much that would cost. On anything else I do not know. So do not ask me things on things I might not know.
…
"Q… Now, I have never seen – nobody on our side has ever seen the attachments to this complaint. But there is no sign that there is an officially certified translation that I have ever seen?
A. I still do not understand why you are asking me.
Q. It is highly suspicious, do you agree, that Mr Grigorakis claims to have found this package late on, I think, a Friday evening and yet managed with very imperfect English, and no assistance that I can see, to have turned all this material into what the claimants say is accurate English-sorry accurate Greek.
A. You are asking me whether this is suspicious?
Q. Yes.
A. Is this my role to answer whether this is suspicious or not? You should be asking Mr Grigorakis.
Q. Now, let me ask you a question which does concern you. The material which Mr Grigorakis has come into possession of was obviously intended to be private, wasn't it?
A. Do not ask me. Ask Mr Grigorakis."
"A. Believe it or not, and I would like to emphasise that I understand that I'm under oath and I would like to (in English). And please don't smile Mr Gaisman (Interpreted). I have not read those emails until today, because I was very upset. I only know the summaries of those emails. Believe it or not, this is a fact and not just because I'm sworn…
....
A. I told you, I have not read them.
…
A. As I said previously there are certain points that have been summarised to me and nothing more than that.
…
A. I have not. – I have not had ----I have never seen these emails. I have just given an oral explanation and description of those emails."
"Q. That is just a coincidence, is it, that the thief, or whoever it was who acquired these emails, sent one copy to Mr Grigorakis and one copy to Mr Shepherd, who happened to be your solicitor in a controversial claim involving the London market, called the Elli; is that right?
A. I understand what you are trying to achieve. But you are hiding from the court that within the text there is also reference to Alexandros…
Q. Alexandros T.
A. Alexandros T. And this is information you are hiding from the court, because it is just not to your benefit…Why, why – I was told that there are also references to Alexandros T, so why are you not mentioning this, which is also very famous in Greece."
"Q. Let me be quite clear, Mr Iliopoulos: the entity that had the most pressing interest into hacking into and exposing the activities of underwriters' agents were owners and you; do you agree?
A. I will not play Mr Gaisman's game, because every point that he loses triggers a new point. I will not play this game.
Q. Well I'm putting to you that it was owners and you who sponsored the illegal acquisition of these emails, Mr Iliopoulos; would you like to comment or not? Because that is my case.
A. The only thing I would like to comment on is what you say, which is in record, then –
Q. What I say which is……?
A. Which is being recorded, if there is any responsibility for any of the assumptions in the allegations against me, you will be – you will be held responsible for those.
Q. Yes, I am well aware that you are threatening Mr Iliopoulos. We are well aware that you have threatened – so far you have threatened Mr Zavos.
MR JUSTICE FLAUX: You will not use this court to threaten counsel or English lawyers. You will behave yourself.
A. I'm talking about --- I'm referring to English law, not Greek law.
MR JUSTICE FLAUX: You have just, Mr Iliopoulos, exposed your motive very clearly. Could you translate that please.
A. All I'm saying is that if what you are saying is allowed by English law then that is perfectly okay. If it is not, then you will be held responsible for this.
MR JUSTICE FLAUX: That is a threat of proceedings elsewhere, which is fully understood, as is your reference to the Alexandros T. That is why I said your motive has been exposed very clearly."
Conclusion on the findings of fact
Application of legal principles on these findings of fact
Conclusion