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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 >> Apparel Fzco v Iqbal [2024] EWHC 1931 (Comm) (26 July 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2024/1931.html Cite as: [2024] EWHC 1931 (Comm) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
LONDON CIRCUIT COMMERCIAL COURT (KBD)
B e f o r e :
(sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge)
____________________
APPAREL FZCO |
Claimant/Applicant |
|
- and – |
||
SHEERAZ IQBAL |
Defendant/Respondent |
____________________
RICHARD POWER (instructed by Ronald Fletcher Baker LLP) for the Defendant/Respondent
Hearing date: 2 July 2024
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
John Kimbell KC:
Introduction
The evidence
Item No. |
Evidence (in chronological order) |
Date |
Abbreviation |
1 |
First Affidavit of Owen John Vanstone-Hallam |
07.02.24 |
Hallam1 |
2 |
First Affidavit of Sheeraz Iqbal (enclosing a schedule of assets) |
26.02.24 |
Iqbal1 |
3 |
First Witness Statement of Sheeraz Iqbal |
29.02.24 |
Iqbal2 |
4 |
First Witness Statement of Owen John Vanstone-Hallam |
08.03.24 |
Hallam2 |
5 |
Second Witness Statement of Sheeraz Iqbal |
09.04.24 |
Iqbal3 |
6 |
Witness Statement of Claire Rose Brown of JMW Solicitors |
24.06.24 |
Brown1 |
7 |
Witness statement of Lee Bottomley |
25.06.24 |
Bottomley1 |
8 |
Third Witness statement of Sheeraz Iqbal |
01.07.24 |
Iqbal4 |
Factual Background
"Hi Michael,
I am a senior buyer at TK Maxx UK and we are interested in exploring the opportunity to acquire past season/leftover stock of clothing, shoes and accessories from Apparel Group. Please let me know if there is an opportunity."
a. LGD was founded in 2013 and trades in unsold / residual stock of well-known brands;
b. LGD had been informed by Mr Iqbal ("call sign[1] Sam") of the UK company Red Global Ventures Ltd that a batch of Tommy Hilfiger branded clothing/shoes i.e. the Goods might be available.
c. Red Global and LGD have been doing business "to everyone's satisfaction" since 2016.
d. Mr Iqbal is also associated with Oryx Retail Group ('Oryx').
e. The Goods were to be acquired by LGD from TK Maxx.
f. LGD had agreed to buy the Goods from TK Maxx for EUR353,475 and this sum was paid to a bank account apparently in the name of TJX Ltd (said to be a parent company of TK Maxx).
g. LGD had been fooled by "fictitious employees" of TK Maxx but had purchased the Goods in good faith and sold them on to their clients.
"My firm has explained to the Claimant the requirement for an applicant for a freezing order to give full and frank disclosure in any application that is made without notice to the opposing party. The Claimant had confirmed in writing that it considers it has given full and frank disclosure. My firm believes that through this Affidavit and the Exhibit hereto, the Claimant has given full and frank disclosure"
Full and frank disclosure: the law
"A party who seeks relief ex parte is under a duty to the court to make the fullest disclosure of all material facts. He must disclose any defence he has reason to anticipate may be advanced. If he does not comply, he will be deprived of the fruits of his order without consideration of the merits and irrespective of whether, had he made such disclosure, he would or would not have obtained the order. It matters not whether the non-disclosure is deliberate or innocent. The court may allow a limited latitude for a slip, but only where the party seeking relief has corrected the error quickly."
"…even if an injunction is discharged, the court should be ready to consider a further application for an injunction based upon facts as they appear at the time of the application to discharge the first injunction"
"As I said in a judgment given in this court only last week, I would endorse as emphatically as I can the views expressed by Lord Denning MR and Donaldson LJ in Bank Mellat v Nikpour [1985] FSR 87 that the making of an application for a Mareva injunction requires the fullest and frankest disclosure to the court on the part of the applicant."
"This principle that no injunction obtained ex part shall stand if it has been obtained in circumstances in which there was a breach of the duty to make the fullest and frankest disclosure is of great antiquity. Indeed, it is so well established in the law that it is difficult to find authority for the proposition: we all know it; it is trite law"
(1) The duty of the applicant is to make "a full and fair disclosure of all the material facts:" see Rex v. Kensington Income Tax Commissioners, Ex parte Princess Edmond de Polignac [1917] 1 K.B. 486 , 514, per Scrutton L.J.
(2) The material facts are those which it is material for the judge to know in dealing with the application as made: materiality is to be decided by the court and not by the assessment of the applicant or his legal advisers: see Rex v. Kensington Income Tax Commissioners , per Lord Cozens-Hardy M.R., at p. 504, citing Dalglish v. Jarvie (1850) 2 Mac. & G. 231 , 238, and Browne-Wilkinson J. in Thermax Ltd. v. Schott Industrial Glass Ltd. [1981] F.S.R. 289 , 295.
(3) The applicant must make proper inquiries before making the application: see Bank Mellat v. Nikpour [1985] F.S.R. 87 . The duty of disclosure therefore applies not only to material facts known to the applicant but also to any additional facts which he would have known if he had made such inquiries.
(4) The extent of the inquiries which will be held to be proper, and therefore necessary, must depend on all the circumstances of the case including (a) the nature of the case which the applicant is making when he makes the application; and (b) the order for which application is made and the probable effect of the order on the defendant: see, for example, the examination by Scott J. of the possible effect of an Anton Piller order in Columbia Picture Industries Inc. v. Robinson [1987] Ch 38 ; and (c) the degree of legitimate urgency and the time available for the making of inquiries: see per Slade L.J. in Bank Mellat v. Nikpour [1985] F.S.R. 87 , 92–93.
(5) If material non-disclosure is established the court will be "astute to ensure that a plaintiff who obtains [an ex parte injunction] without full disclosure … is deprived of any advantage he may have derived by that breach of duty:" see per Donaldson L.J. in Bank Mellat v. Nikpour , at p. 91, citing Warrington L.J. in the Kensington Income Tax Commissioners'; case [1917] 1 K.B. 486 , 509.
(6) Whether the fact not disclosed is of sufficient materiality to justify or require immediate discharge of the order without examination of the merits depends on the importance of the fact to the issues which were to be decided by the judge on the application. The answer to the question whether the non-disclosure was innocent, in the sense that the fact was not known to the applicant or that its relevance was not perceived, is an important consideration but not decisive by reason of the duty on the applicant to make all proper inquiries and to give careful consideration to the case being presented.
(7) Finally, it "is not for every omission that the injunction will be automatically discharged. A locus poenitentiae may sometimes be afforded:" per Lord Denning M.R. in Bank Mellat v. Nikpour [1985] F.S.R. 87 , 90. The court has a discretion, notwithstanding proof of material non-disclosure which justifies or requires the immediate discharge of the ex parte order, nevertheless to continue the order, or to make a new order on terms.
On an application without notice the duty of the applicant is to make a full and fair disclosure of all the material facts, i.e. those which it is material (in the objective sense) for the judge to know in dealing with the application as made: materiality is to be decided by the Court and not by the assessment of the applicant or his legal advisers; the duty is a strict one and includes not merely material facts known to the applicant but also additional facts which he would have known if he had made proper enquiries: Brinks Mat Ltd v. Elcombe [1988] 1 WLR 1350 at 1356–7. But an applicant does not have a duty to disclose points against him which have not been raised by the other side and in respect of which there is no reason to anticipate that the other side would raise such points if it were present.
"It is well established that on all applications without notice it is the duty of the applicant (including an applicant in person) and those representing the applicant to make full and frank disclosure of all matters relevant to the application; this includes all matters of fact or law which are or may be adverse to the applicant. An applicant must disclose to the judge "any fact known to him which might affect the judge's decision whether to grant relief or what relief to grant"
"Although often expressed in terms of a duty of disclosure, the "ultimate touchstone" is whether the presentation of the application is fair in all material respects: per Popplewell LJ in Fundo Soberano De Angola v Jose Filomeno dos Santos [2018] EWHC 2199 (Comm). See also Hunt v Ubhi [2023] EWCA Civ 417; [2023] 4 All ER 530; [2023] Bus LR 1827 at [41] (Newey LJ)."
(1) The duty of an applicant for a without notice injunction is to make full and accurate disclosure of all material facts and to draw the court's attention to significant factual, legal and procedural aspects of the case;
(2) It is a high duty and of the first importance to ensure the integrity of the court's process. It is the necessary corollary of the court being prepared to depart from the principle that it will hear both sides before reaching a decision, a basic principle of fairness. Derogation from that principle is an exceptional course adopted in cases of extreme urgency or the need for secrecy. The court must be able to rely on the party who appears alone to present the argument in a way which is not merely designed to promote its own interests but in a fair and even-handed manner, drawing attention to evidence and arguments which it can reasonably anticipate the absent party would wish to make;
(3) Full disclosure must be linked with fair presentation. The judge must be able to have complete confidence in the thoroughness and objectivity of those presenting the case for the applicant. Thus, for example, it is not sufficient merely to exhibit numerous documents;
(4) An applicant must make proper enquiries before making the application. He must investigate the cause of action asserted and the facts relied on before identifying and addressing any likely defences. The duty to disclose extends to matters of which the applicant would have been aware had reasonable enquiries been made. The urgency of a particular case may make it necessary for evidence to be in a less tidy or complete form than is desirable. But no amount of urgency or practical difficulty can justify a failure to identify the relevant cause of action and principal facts to be relied on;
(5) Material facts are those which it is material for the judge to know in dealing with the application as made. The duty requires an applicant to make the court aware of the issues likely to arise and the possible difficulties in the claim, but need not extend to a detailed analysis of every possible point which may arise. It extends to matters of intention and for example to disclosure of related proceedings in another jurisdiction;
(6) Where facts are material in the broad sense, there will be degrees of relevance and a due sense of proportion must be kept. Sensible limits have to be drawn, particularly in more complex and heavy commercial cases where the opportunity to raise arguments about non-disclosure will be all the greater. The question is not whether the evidence in support could have been improved (or one to be approached with the benefit of hindsight). The primary question is whether in all the circumstances its effect was such as to mislead the court in any material respect;
(7) A defendant must identify clearly the alleged failures, rather than adopt a scatter gun approach. A dispute about full and frank disclosure should not be allowed to turn into a mini-trial of the merits;
(8) In general terms it is inappropriate to seek to set aside a freezing order for non-disclosure where proof of non-disclosure depends on proof of facts which are themselves in issue in the action, unless the facts are truly so plain that they can be readily and summarily established, otherwise the application to set aside the freezing order is liable to become a form of preliminary trial in which the judge is asked to make findings (albeit provisionally) on issues which should be more properly reserved for the trial itself;
(9) If material non-disclosure is established, the court will be astute to ensure that a claimant who obtains injunctive relief without full disclosure is deprived of any advantage he may thereby have derived;
(10) Whether or not the non-disclosure was innocent is an important consideration, but not necessarily decisive. Immediate discharge (without renewal) is likely to be the court's starting point, at least when the failure is substantial or deliberate. It has been said on more than one occasion that it will only be in exceptional circumstances in cases of deliberate non-disclosure or misrepresentation that an order would not be discharged;
(11) The court will discharge the order even if the order would still have been made had the relevant matter(s) been brought to its attention at the without notice hearing. This is a penal approach and intentionally so, by way of deterrent to ensure that applicants in future abide by their duties;
(12) The court nevertheless has a discretion to continue the injunction (or impose a fresh injunction) despite a failure to disclose. Although the discretion should be exercised sparingly, the overriding consideration will always be the interests of justice. Such consideration will include examination of i) the importance of the facts not disclosed to the issues before the judge ii) the need to encourage proper compliance with the duty of full and frank disclosure and to deter non-compliance iii) whether or not and to what extent the failure was culpable iv) the injustice to a claimant which may occur if an order is discharged leaving a defendant free to dissipate assets, although a strong case on the merits will never be a good excuse for a failure to disclose material facts;
(13) The interests of justice may sometimes require that a freezing order be continued and that a failure of disclosure can be marked in some other way, for example by a suitable costs order. The court thus has at its disposal a range of options in the event of non-disclosure.
a. There is case law warning of a tendency "to allege material non-disclosure on rather slender grounds" (Brink's-MAT Ltd v Elcombe [1988] 1 W.L.R. 1350 at 1359, above per Slade LJ) and to seek discharge "on the grounds of the most trifling errors" (Worldcom International v Home Communications Ltd, 16 September 1998, unrep., per Timothy Walker J).
b. Generally, it is inappropriate to seek to set aside a freezing order for nondisclosure where proof of non-disclosure depends on proof of facts which are themselves in issue in the action, unless the facts are truly so plain that they can be readily and summarily established, otherwise the application to set aside the freezing order is liable to become a form of preliminary trial in which the judge is asked to make findings (albeit provisionally) on issues which should be more properly reserved for the trial itself (Crown Resources AG v Vinogradsky, 15 June 2001, unrep. (Toulson J)).
The Submissions
"JUDGE: "You do need, if you do not mind, just to headline to me if there is any other matter of full and fair disclosure, any other matter which if the defendant was here they would be saying "Hey, look at this".
COUNSEL: "Yes, well, I do not think there is my Lord. We cannot find anything that we ought to draw to your attention to say there is a gaping hole in the story, or even a bit of a tear in the cloth …that means it could unravel"
a. The e-mail correspondence between Mr Iqbal on the one hand and "Natalie Brown" and "Rohan Rai" on the other which starts with an approach by Ms Brown on 18 April 2023, evidence an apparent agency agreement between Mr Iqbal and TK Maxx and ends on 5 October 2023 with a complaint about faulty stock ("the Agency Emails").
b. The fact of LGD's longstanding business relationship with Mr Iqbal
c. The potential defence available to Mr Iqbal that he believed that the transaction being presented by the TK Maxx Impersonators was a genuine one (i.e. that he had himself been duped into acting as an agent).
Item No. |
Passage (with emphasis added) |
Problem |
1 |
"It has emerged that the Claimant was subject to a straightforward but highly organised fraud at the hands of Defendant" (para 11) |
This is a submission. It should have been qualified in some ways such as: "It is the Claimant's case that it was ..." or "the Claimant believes" and the source of that belief identified. |
2 |
"It transpires that the fraudsters were the Defendant and those acting at his direction" (para 17)
|
This passage is misleading because it suggests that the Claimant has firm evidence which demonstrates that the Defendant had masqueraded as the TK Impersonators. At best this was a belief, submission or inference which the Claimant contended ought to be drawn based on other bits of evidence. |
3. |
"The Defendant has already disposed of the Stock which he fraudulently acquired from the Claimant by selling it on to LGD for cash consideration of EUR353,475" |
Same problem as No. 1 above. |
4 |
"Various documents were provided to the Claimant by the Defendant posing as Mr Rai and Ms Brown". (para. 38). |
Same problem as in No.2 above |
5 |
"On 6 June 2023, the Defendant posing as the fictitious Mr Rai issued a purchase order" (para. 43).
|
Same problem as in No.2 above |
6 |
"as he [the Defendant] was the person behind the fictional aliases of Ms Brown and Mr Rai" (para 44). |
Same problem as in No.2 above |
7 |
"Mr Yani is also understood to be an alias of the Defendant. In early August, the Defendant and/or his associates, posing as Mr Yani and Ms Brown continue to say there was no change in the status of the shipment." (para. 49).
|
Pursuant to para. 4.2 of the PD to CPR Part 32, the person who believed this to be the case should be identified and the source of that knowledge stated. In reality this is a submission or a suggested inference based on other evidence |
8 |
"in the interests of full and frank disclosure, the facts are straightforward: the Defendant posing as TK Maxx and intermediaries sold the stock to LGD..." (para 54).
|
The introductory words suggest that the concept of full and frank disclosure was not understood by the deponent. Rather than being an attempt to give full and frank disclosure, the passage simply summarises the Claimant's own case but mispresents it as being a matter of "straightforward fact". In fact, the Claimant had no direct evidence that the Defendant posed as the TK Maxx Impersonators. This assertion needed to be appropriately qualified or rephrased as a submission |
9 |
In an effort to cover his tracks, on 16 October 2023, the Defendant emails the Claimant claiming to be Sam Lee. |
This factually incorrect and highly prejudicial. The email is signed simply as "Sam" (which LGD had informed Apparel was the name used by Mr Iqbal) not "Sam Lee". The use of "in an effort to cover his tracks" needed to be qualified and identified as being a belief or submission. |
10 |
"When the Claimant first made enquiries in October, the supposed intermediary was referred to as "Sam Lee" from "Stock Offers HK"".
|
There is no document or other source for the assertion that the Defendant referred to himself as "Sam Lee". This matters because the Claimant goes onto say that that it "understands that Sam Lee was an alias used by the Defendant" and in para. 61 to the "supposed Mr Lee". The intention seems to have been to suggest that because the Claimant had concrete evidence the Defendant had posed as one other person, namely "Sam Lee" this supported the Claimant's case that he had also posed as the TK Maxx Impersonators. |
a. "The Respondent made contact with the Applicant in March 2023, representing himself as staff from the retailer TK Maxx (para. 32-33 1st Affidavit OVH) – these were fictional identities".
b. "In August 2023, still posing as staff from TK Maxx, the Respondent attempted to misdirect the Applicant into believing that the Stock had ultimately made its way to South Africa (para. 47-53 1st Affidavit OVH"
c. "To aid the deception, in October 2023, the Respondent added a further character to his deception to as the middleman. The Respondent claimed to be Sam Lee of HK Stocklot Trading Company Limited (para 59-63 1st Affidavit OVH)".
Should the Order be continued or re-instated?
The relevant principles
a. A good arguable case means a case which is "more than barely capable of serious argument, and yet not necessarily one which the judge believes to have a better than 50% chance of success": Kazakhstan Kagazy plc & Ors v Arip [2014] 1 CLC 451 at [66]. In endorsing that test, the Court of Appeal also rejected the suggestion that the applicant is required to show that it has "much the better of the argument": see [66]-[68] per Elias LJ and see also Longmore LJ at [25].
b. When applying the good arguable case test, the court should not attempt to try the issues but should only consider the apparent strength or weakness of the respective cases to decide whether the claimant's case, on the merits, is sufficiently strong to reach that threshold. That may include assessing the apparent plausibility of statements in the affidavits: see Alternative Investment Solutions (General) Ltd v Valle de Uco Resort & Spa SA [2013] EWHC 333 (QB) at [7] and Kazakhstan Kagazy plc & Ors v Arip [2014] 1 CLC 451 at [23] per Longmore LJ
c. The test for 'good arguable case' in the context of freezing injunctions is not a particularly onerous one"; In Lakatamia Shipping Company Ltd v Moritomo [2019] EWCA Civ 2203; [2020] 1 C.L.C. 562 at [35], Haddon-Cave LJ said that and at [38], that "[t]he central concept at the heart of the test [is] 'a plausible evidential basis'" (Emphasis added).
(1) The claimant must show a real risk, judged objectively, that a future judgment would not be met because of an unjustified dissipation of assets. In this context dissipation means putting the assets out of reach of a judgment whether by concealment or transfer.
(2) The risk of dissipation must be established by solid evidence; mere inference or generalised assertion is not sufficient.
(3) The risk of dissipation must be established separately against each respondent.
(4) It is not enough to establish a sufficient risk of dissipation merely to establish a good arguable case that the defendant has been guilty of dishonesty; it is necessary to scrutinise the evidence to see whether the dishonesty in question points to the conclusion that assets may be dissipated. It is also necessary to take account of whether there appear at the interlocutory stage to be properly arguable answers to the allegations of dishonesty.
(5) […]
(6) What must be threatened is unjustified dissipation. The purpose of a WFO is not to provide the claimant with security, it is to restrain a defendant from evading justice by disposing of, or concealing, assets otherwise than in the normal course of business in a way which will have the effect of making it judgment proof..."
(7) Each case is fact specific and relevant factors must be looked at cumulatively."
"The fifth evidential factor, (namely the "stable door" point) was in my view (and contrary to the judge's view) a powerful factor militating against any conclusion of a real risk of dissipation. If there had been a real risk of the appellants unjustifiably dissipating their assets, it would have materialised by the time of the application. The first intimation of what became the present proceedings occurred in May 2014. There was then a detailed letter of claim, with draft particulars of claim, in December 2014. A revised claim was ultimately issued in August 2015. The respondents repeatedly threatened to seek a freezing order (or similar relief) from September 2015. The application for an initial notification was made in February 2016, resulting in the 7-8 April hearing. In my view it was inherently unlikely that the appellants would unjustifiably dissipate their assets in the future, having not done so by this point."
a. Although none of the failures in presentation of the Claimant's case were intentional, there was, as I have held, nevertheless a pervasive overselling of the Claimant's evidence in material respects at all stages of the application (affidavit, skeleton and oral argument) and a failure to draw the court's attention to material evidence which pointed away from the Defendant being the instigator of the fraud.
b. The Claimant's case does not reach the threshold of good arguable case. The Claimant has a case which is capable of serious argument but not more. The Defendant has now put before the Court a significant body of WhatsApp messages and emails which strongly support the Defendant's case that he was himself duped by the TK Impersonators. For the Claimant's case that Mr Iqbal is behind the scam and impersonated Ms Brown, Mr Rai and Mr Yani, to be correct all of theses emails and all of the WhatsApp messages which Mr Iqbal has produced in evidence (including those retrieved by an independent expert from his broken phone) have to be fabricated. It is of course possible that they are and that will be a matter for trial. Mr Cullen submitted that there was some evidence to support the case that all the emails and WhatsApp messages are fabricated. He pointed to some discrepancies between the native versions of the emails (in particular in respect of whether "Sam" appeared in them or not) and the versions produced in pdf. Some of these discrepancies Mr Iqbal could explain and others he could not. However, most of the discrepancies were it seemed to entirely inconsequential, for example, "20222" instead of "2022" and a difference in unit price. More significantly, as Mr Power submitted, despite the fact that the Claimant now has the native emails, Mr Cullen has not able to point to anything in the meta data of the emails themselves which would suggesting that they were all fabricated. The emails and WhatsApp messages also have a level of everyday detail that lend them an apparent plausibility. They are consistent with each other in showing how Mr Iqbal was slowly drawn in and then became more and more uncomfortable as the money goes out of his company's account and his commission is not paid. It is not appropriate for me to descend into the minutiae of this evidence or to make even provisional findings. That is a matter for the trial judge. Mr Cullen could also point to one admitted lie and one fabricated purchase order by Mr Iqbal. However, as the evidence stands, the highest I consider it can be put is that it arguable and properly pleadable inference that Mr Iqbal is somehow involved in the fraud but no direct evidence that he was or that he has fabricated all the emails and WhatsApp messages he has exhibited in evidence. The fact that admitted that he gave a false account of the transaction to Apparel and falsified one document is capable of supporting such an inference but I am not fully persuaded that on the material currently available the Claimant's case meets the threshold of a good arguable case.
c. Even if I am wrong about that and the case crosses the threshold on the evidence presently available, there is in my judgment no evidence of a real risk of dissipation of assets. The Applicant must demonstrate a current risk of dissipation of assets now held: see point (4) of the summary on p. 2924 of the White Book 2024 drawn from Gulf Air BSC v One Flight Ltd [2018] EWHC 1019 (Comm at [17] – [20]). I accept Mr Power's stable door submission for the following reasons:
i. On the evidence now available, the proceeds of the sale were originally paid into the accounts of a company owned by Mr Iqbal. On his evidence and on the basis of the WhatsApp messages he has produced, he was taken by surprise by this and did not want the money in those accounts.
ii. The money was then transferred out to 11 companies said by the TK Maxx Impersonators to be companies who were suppliers to TK Maxx and who were owed money by TK Maxx.
iii. There is no evidence that the companies which received the money have any link to Mr Iqbal such that the money should today be considered as being an asset of his.
d. It follows that on the basis of the evidence now available both the Goods themselves have gone (first into the hands of LGD and then sub-purchasers) and the proceeds of the sale to LGD have gone. Any freezing injunction today would therefore be nothing more than an attempt to shut the stable door after the horse has bolted. The position is very different to that before Knowles J. because at that stage the evidence was that the proceeds of the sale to LGD remained in the hands of a company controlled by Mr Iqbal.
e. As to the other factors, relevant to the threat of dissipation, Mr Cullen submitted that there are doubts about the veracity of Mr Iqbal's statements about his assets, in particular his assertions about his wife's interest in a cryptocurrency account and their family home and the lack of any obvious source of income to support his lifestyle (including two expensive cars). However, none of these points in my judgment rose above the level of general suspicion or assertion and did not really bear directly on the issue of whether there was solid evidence of risk of a dissipation of assets.
f. As to dishonesty, Mr Cullen understandably emphasised that Mr Iqbal has now admitted that he lied to Apparel when he said that HKS had purchased the Goods and sold them to LGD and that he had falsified one document (the HKS purchase order). He says he lied under pressure from LGD to put some distance between them and TK Maxx. I am in no position to assess the credibility of that explanation. However, the false statement in the email to Apparel does not strike me as the work of a calculating fraudster who has carefully laid a trail of emails and WhatsApp messages. The message obviously made things worse for Mr Iqbal because it contradicted the email correspondence he had sent to Apparel which on its face suggested that he was just a broker or agent. In any event the admitted dishonesty in question, is not sufficiently closely linked to any risk of dissipation of current assets to weigh heavily in the balance in favour continuing / re-instating the Order.
g. As to Mr Iqbal's reaction to the claim, he has put in a full defence and very detailed witness statements explaining how he came to be involved and exhibiting comprehensive chains of emails and WhatsApp messages and other documents, such as his LinkedIn profile, which are consistent with his being duped. His initial response to the queries from Apparel was I accept slightly odd and defensive. It is possible that what he most feared (at that time) was losing the trust of LGD and that was more important to him than being open with Apparel. However, in my judgment, there is nothing overall in his reaction to the claim such as to weigh significantly in favour of continuing or re-instating the Order.
h. Mr Iqbal has in open correspondence offered an undertaking in respect of his largest declared asset namely the equity in his house.
i. There is nothing in the evidence relevant to good arguable case on the merits which is of sufficient strength as support the inference that there is a real risk of dissipation. I was referred in this context to the comments of Henshaw J in ArccelorMital v Ruia and Others at [2020] EWHC 740 (Comm) [213] and those of Gloster LJ in Holyoake v Candy [2018] Ch 297 at [61]
j. In summary, approaching the matter holistically, for the reasons given above, I do not consider that the Claimant has established there is a real risk of a future unjustified dissipation of assets which is supported by solid evidence, even if the Claimant has contrary to my conclusion above a good arguable case on the merits.
Conclusion
Note 1 “call sign” is what the machine translation has produced but this seems to be a doubtful translation in this context. The original Dutch letter uses “roepnaam” which possibly just mean “usual name” or “everyday name”. [Back]