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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Godley, R v [2014] EWHC 2343 (QB) (14 November 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2014/2343.html Cite as: [2014] EWHC 2343 (QB) |
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BLACKFRIARS CROWN COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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REGINA |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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WILLIAM GODLEY |
Defendant |
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Mr Simon Csoka QC (instructed by Rahman Ravelli Solicitors) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: Monday 14 April 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
Gloster LJ :
Background
i) From 1997 to June 2002 Imperial promoted numerous offshore investment funds through a worldwide group of companies from its headquarters at Binbrook in Lincolnshire. The products promoted were offshore investments based in Caribbean jurisdictions. Sales offices, introducers and financial advisors promoted these schemes worldwide and investors often invested life savings on the promise of guaranteed high returns with no risk to the capital invested.ii) Investors in Imperial were assured that their investment was deployed into secure and highly profitable lending businesses run by Imperial mainly in the UK. Monthly statements were sent to investors purporting to show that their investment had grown as promised. In reality less than half of the investor funds received by Imperial were loaned out by the UK businesses and those businesses were not generating profits. Investors' funds were dissipated on the costs of running the Imperial network of companies, large commissions paid to introducers, continued subsidising of unsuccessful businesses and high salaries and benefits paid to management.
iii) The prosecution alleged that the Imperial scheme could therefore only continue if investors retained their confidence in it and continued to invest. Once this confidence was lost large numbers of investors sought to redeem their investment and the scheme collapsed in June 2002. The administrators of Imperial estimate that only a tiny percentage of investors' funds will be recovered.
iv) The prosecution alleged that Mr Brook and Mr Fraser were the controlling minds of the fraud. Mr Godley was at the next rank of seniority. He was a director of the principal fund raising companies in the Bahamas and was Head of International Sales. With a large network of contacts in the financial services industry worldwide, he facilitated the successful sale of Imperial investments to hundreds of wealthy clients, particularly in the USA and Commonwealth countries.
v) In April 2001 Mr Godley moved to Imperial's new office in Mayfair and became chief executive officer. Imperial continued to solicit investment with promises of high yields. The UK companies continued to run at a loss. Meanwhile, the Grenadian authorities had found Imperium Bank, a related Imperial company, to be insolvent.
vi) The Caribbean fund raising companies were placed into liquidation in July 2002. The UK companies went into voluntary administration on 10 June 2002. Over £150 million was owing to investors.
"... aware at the time when he pleaded guilty that there would be no certainty as to the stance to be taken in the confiscation proceedings by the SFO. I reject his evidence that he genuinely believed, at the time he pleaded guilty, that he had secured the exclusion of the Portuguese property from these proceedings for the benefit and security of his wife."
"1. The applicant contends that he pleaded guilty to the charge of conspiracy to defraud on the basis that those previously advising him told him they had been given a firm (oral) assurance that, if he did so, the SFO would not seek a confiscation order in respect of his family home in Portugal.
2. Leading counsel on the applicant's behalf now argues that no such assurance could sensibly have been given, since the law does not invest the prosecution with any discretion in relation to these applications for confiscation: if the statutory presumptions apply, they cannot be disapplied simply because the prosecution does not rely on them. Therefore, he suggests, the guilty plea was entered on the basis of improper -- and erroneous -- advice and the conviction based upon the plea should be quashed.
3. However this precise point was taken before the trial judge, Gloster J, on his behalf in an application to stay the proceedings against him. After a three day hearing at which the applicant, his wife, those who had previously represented him (including Mr Sturman QC, his leading counsel) and representatives of the prosecution -- amongst others -- gave evidence, the judge ruled as a fact that no such assurance had been given. It is true that in an application for a stay the burden of proof rested on the applicant but the judge did not decide the matter on the burden of proof she made clear findings of fact. I cannot see any prospect whatsoever of the CACD deciding that she was wrong.
4. Moreover, privilege having been waived, I find the response of Mr Sturman to be entirely convincing. Following a consultation with the applicant, the pros and cons of pleading guilty were fully set out in the very detailed letter of 12 April 2007, which made abundantly clear that no further assurance could be given in respect of the family home in Portugal than that the SFO would 'keep an open mind' on the subject. In my judgment the applicant pleaded guilty knowing that there was no such assurance as he now alleges.
5. In any event, applicants are required to appeal within the time allowed by the Rules. If the applicant wished to take this point, he could -- and should -- have done so at the time by applying to change his plea; he could easily have done so since he was then represented by a fresh legal team. However, he did not do this. The application now looks very much like an eleventh hour delaying tactic intended to postpone the ongoing confiscation proceedings. In my judgment this application is wholly without merit and I refuse to extend the time for making it." [My emphasis.]
"11. ….With those observations we wholeheartedly agree. In our judgment, Mr Csoka's approach, with respect, ignores a clear ruling of a High Court Judge based upon evidence from not only the applicant but his wife and a number of his legal representatives. The judge ruled the applicant's evidence was unreliable. She rejected what he claimed were his reasons for entering his plea of guilty. It is not open to the applicant or Mr Csoka on his behalf now to proceed upon the basis that those findings have never been made.
If Mr Csoka wished to do try to undermine those findings, it was incumbent upon him to put before this court some material which might have justified a re-visiting of them. Absolutely nothing has been put forward other than the applicant's own discredited account and what in our view was the unjustified criticism of the applicant's former advisers.
12. This renewed application has been, we fear, a waste of our time, the time of the Court of Appeal Office Staff and Lawyers and a waste of precious resources generally. For all those reasons, the renewed application must be refused."
The issues
i) the fact and extent of Mr Godley's "benefit" pursuant to section 71 of the 1988 Act;ii) whether Mr Godley has satisfied the court on the balance of probabilities that "the realisable amount" is less than the value of his benefit;
iii) the amount to be recovered pursuant to section 71, 74 and 102 of the 1988 Act;
iv) the amount to be paid by way of compensation from any confiscation order pursuant to section 130 of the Powers of Criminal Courts (Sentencing) Acts 2000 and section 72 (7) of the 1988 Act and the persons to whom any such amount should be paid.
The principal issues in dispute between the parties
Benefit
Value of benefit
Cash payments from ICS & Imperium Bank relating to the defendant's employment in the Bahamas |
£749,869 |
Cash payments from Central Consolidated Management Ltd relating to the defendant's employment in the Bahamas |
£83,932 |
Cash payments from ICF (UK) and Imperium Bank relating to the defendant's employment in the UK |
£439,688 |
Housing costs in the Bahamas paid by Imperial |
£56,667 |
Total benefit without RPIJ | £1,330,156 |
Total benefit including RPIJ addition | £1,567,974 |
i) `the benefit date range: Mr Godley proposed a benefit date range of 1 January 2001-27 November 2001, as compared with the prosecution's proposed benefit date range of 1 November 1999-30 June 2002;ii) certain specific items of benefit as follows:
a) the inclusion of certain payments made to Mr Godley during the period April 2001-June 2002;b) Bahamas' housing costs;c) indexation calculation.Accordingly the position according to Mr Godley's latest written statements was that the correct quantum of benefit received by Mr Godley was £460,462.
Realisable amount
i) section 71(6) (in its relevant formulation) which provides that:"(6) Subject to subsection (1C) above the sum which an order made by a court under this section requires an offender to pay shall be equal to -(a) the benefit in respect of which it is made; or(b) the amount appearing to the court to be the amount that might be realised at the time the order is made,whichever is the less. "; andii) section 74 (3) which defines the "amount that might be realised at the time a confiscation order is made" ("the realisable amount") as:
"(a) the total of the values at that time of all the realisable property held by the defendant, less(b) where there are obligations having priority at that time, the total amounts payable in pursuance of such obligations,together with the total of the values at that time of all gifts caught by this Part of this Act."
i) gifts totalling £38,489 were made to their son Kevin Godley in the period from 9 November 1999 to 31 January 2005;ii) gifts totalling £20,803.85 were made to their son Chris Godley in the period from 23 October 2001 to 22 November 2007;
iii) gifts totalling £73,451.69 were made to their daughter Kim Godley in the period from 16 February 2001 to 21 April 2008; and that
iv) gifts totalling £1,691,179 were made by Mr Godley to Mrs Godley, principally via a company called Tundra Capital Management Ltd ("TCM").
Discussion and determination
Benefit - appropriate date range
Quantum of benefit
i) First, I see no reason not to include in the benefit figure certain payments made to Mr Godley during the period April 2001-June 2002. The fact that such payments were not listed within the ICF salary records is irrelevant; Ms Thomas' evidence clearly demonstrates that the disputed payments were paid during the period to Mr Godley from Imperial companies such as ICF or Imperium Bank. They were clearly related to Mr Godley involvement as a director of Imperial companies and as such are properly included as part of any benefit figure related to his criminal conduct.ii) Likewise, I am satisfied that the prosecution has proved that Mr Godley received a benefit of £56,667 in respect of his housing costs in the Bahamas which were paid for by Imperial. This figure reflects the sum of US $5000 paid per month by Imperial in respect of his housing allowance in respect of the relevant period from1 November 1999 – 30 June 2002. The fact that, as Mr Godley's forensic accountant, Mr Philip de Nahlik asserts, Mr Godley had to maintain a house in the UK for his family and that "the house in the Bahamas was wholly exclusively necessarily incurred so that he could carry out contractual obligations", even if that be the case is irrelevant. Mr Godley was in the Bahamas for the sole purpose of perpetrating the fraud on investors and monies were paid to him from ICG, the corporate vehicle for the fraud, during the currency of, and in connection with, the commission of the offence. Accordingly, such monies are properly included as a benefit from criminal conduct I should mention that Mr Godley did not produce any evidence to support his assertion that US $3000 as opposed to $5000 was being paid per month.
iii) Although Mr Csoka questioned whether there should be any indexation calculation at all in relation to the amount of the benefit, it is clear that section 74(5) expressly enables any increase in the value of money to be taken into account in the determination of the quantum of the benefit received. In the light of the prosecution's latest adjustment to the indexation calculation, using the new RPIJ measure of Consumer Price Inflation, there is nothing in the other points taken by Mr Godley's forensic accountant in relation to the issue of indexation.
Realisable amount
Relevant definitions
"shall be equal to -
(a) the benefit in respect of which it is made; or
(b) the amount appearing to the court to be the amount that might be realised at the time the order is made,
whichever is the less. ".
Likewise I have already referred to section 74(3) which defines the "amount that might be realised at the time a confiscation order is made" ("the realisable amount") as:
"(a) the total of the values at that time of all the realisable property held by the defendant, less
(b) where there are obligations having priority at that time, the total amounts payable in pursuance of such obligations,
together with the total of the values at that time of all gifts caught by this Part of this Act."
"(a) any property held by the defendant; and
(b) any property held by a person to whom the defendant has directly or indirectly made a gift caught by this Part of this Act."
"(7) Subject to subsection (12) below, references in this Part of this Act to the value at any time (referred to in subsection (8) below as "the material time") of a gift caught by this part of the Act are references to -
(a) the value of the gift to the recipient when he received it adjusted to take account of subsequent changes in value of money; or
(b) where subsection (8) below applies, the value there mentioned; whichever is greater.
(8) Subject to subsection (12) below, if at the material time he holds -
(a) the property which he received (not being cash); or
(b) property which, in whole or in part, directly or indirectly represents in his hands the property which he received;
The value referred to in subsection (7) above is the value to him at the material time of the property mentioned in paragraph (a) above or, as the case may be, of the property mentioned in paragraph (b) above so far as it so represents the property which he received, but disregarding any charging order."
"(10) A gift (including a gift made before the commencement of this Part of this Act) is caught by this Part of this Act if -
(a) it was made by the defendant at any time after the commission of the offence or, if more than one, the earliest of the offences to which the proceedings for the time being relate: and
(b) the court considers it appropriate in all the circumstances to take gift into account."
The realisable amount
i) whether or not the court was entitled on the evidence before it to include in the calculation of the realisable amounts:a) gifts totalling £1,691,179 made by Mr Godley to Mrs Godley; andb) gifts totalling £132,744.54 made by Mr Godley to his children; andii) whether the court the court considered it appropriate in all the circumstances to take the various gifts into account.
"87. The onus which is placed upon the defendant is not an evidential one but a persuasive one, so that the defendant will be required to discharge the burden of proof. (See Lord Hope's third category of provisions in Kebilene (at p.992)). This is therefore a situation where it is necessary to carefully consider whether the public interest in being able to confiscate the ill-gotten gains of criminals justifies the interference with the normal presumption of innocence. While the extent of the interference is substantial, Parliament has clearly made efforts to balance the interest of the defendant against that of the public in the following respects:
a) It is only after the necessary convictions that any question of confiscation arises. This is of significance, because the trial which results in the conviction or convictions will be one where the usual burden and standard of proof rests upon the prosecution. In addition, a defendant who is convicted of the necessary offence or offences can be taken to be aware that if he committed the offences of which he has been convicted, he would not only be liable to imprisonment or another sentence, but he would also be liable to confiscation proceedings. "
b) The prosecution has the responsibility for initiating the confiscation proceedings unless the court regards them as inappropriate. In both cases there is a discretion to be exercised and the manner in which the discretion is exercised is capable of being reviewed by this court.
c) There is also the responsibility placed upon the court not to make a confiscation order when there is a serious risk of injustice. As already indicated, this will involve the court, before it makes a confiscation order standing back and deciding whether there is a risk of injustice. If the court decides there is, then the confiscation order will not be made.
d) There is the role of this court on appeal to ensure there is no unfairness." [ My emphasis.]
Gifts made by Mr Godley to his children
" in the main the payments were made innocently and purely to pay for them to attend university and support them with associated living expenses ….. the innocuous and regular nature of the payments … is consistent with them being for university and living expenses and not as a means of dishonest disposal/concealment but more importantly due to the fact that they clearly cannot be recovered. "
Alleged gifts made by Mr Godley to Mrs Godley
i) that the only reason for any assets being held in, or transferred into, Mrs Godley's name was for tax purposes; Mr and Mrs Godley acted on the basis of professional tax advice;ii) that Mr Godley had not taken any steps to transfer his assets into the name of his wife in an attempt to put them beyond the reach of any interested parties;
iii) that the liquidators of Imperial were unable to establish any traceable or proprietary links between the funds which Mr Godley had received from Imperial and those which were paid by TCM; and
iv) that the monies paid to Mrs Godley by TCM and Atlantic were not gifts made to her directly or indirectly by Mr Godley, but rather were the proceeds of dividend payments received by her in her own right as a shareholder in TCM and Atlantic.
TCM
i) Mr Godley as holding 12,750 shares or 25.5%;ii) a Mr Donato Carucci as holding 12,750 shares or 25.5%;
iii) Mr Gary Lyons as holding 12,250 or 24.5%; and
iv) Mr John Hall as holding 12,250 or 24.5%.
"Please accept this letter as confirmation that the directors as listed, are the beneficial shareholders of Tundra Capital Management Ltd."….
"As a result of legal advice obtained from Charles Russell solicitors the group will be divesting itself of all management and control in the UK as part of restricting the group. This naturally has personal tax ramifications for the directors/beneficial owners and as a result they seek the opening of personal accounts with your branch."
"The Defendant was a Director of Tundra along with Donato Carruci, Gary Lyons and John Hall. Due to tax advice received it was agreed that the shares would be held by Anne Godley due to the fact she was non-UK domiciled and therefore it would be more tax efficient."
Atlantic Management Holdings
Alpha Toronto No 2
Conclusion on the gifts to Mrs Godley and to Mr and Mrs Godley's children
Conclusion in relation to the realisable amount
The amount to be paid
The amount to be paid by way of compensation from any confiscation order and the persons to whom any such amount should be paid