Ireland is an appropriate forum for case linked to Russian oligarch Dmitry Mazepin, court rules

Dmitry Mazepin. Photo: Mikhail Svetlov/Getty Images

Tim Healy

One of the defendants in an alleged €2bn conspiracy-to-defraud action involving sanctioned Russian oligarch Dmitry Mazepin, who allegedly controls a Dublin-registered company, has failed in its challenge to a decision that the Irish courts have jurisdiction to hear the case.

Mr Justice Denis McDonald, who heads the Commercial Court, ruled JSC Khimaktninvest (Kai), which says it is a separate and independent legal person to the other defendants, dismissed Kai’s application to set aside an earlier order allowing the firm to be joined as a defendant.

Kai was joined early last year in the case which was brought in 2016 by four Caribbean-registered firms alleging conspiracy to defraud them of their shares in Russian ammonia producing company Togliattiazot (ToAZ).

The claim relates to what are known as “raider attacks” in which a so-called corporate raider acquires a minority shareholding in a target company before taking allegedly illegal steps to ultimately wrest control of it.

The four plaintiff companies – Trafalgar Developments, Instantania Holdings, Kamara and Bairiki Inc – have sued EU-sanctioned Russian billionaire, Dmitry Mazepin, another Russian ammonia producer called United Chemical Company Uralchem (UCCU), which Mr Mazepin controls, as well as UCCU itself and a number of other companies and individuals.

These other companies/individuals are either controlled by Mr Mazepin or acted in concert with him to damage the plaintiffs’ interests, it is alleged.

Among those other companies is Eurotoaz, a Dublin-registered firm, also allegedly controlled by Mr Mazepin. Eurotoaz was allegedly engaged in a campaign of vexatious and false litigation in Russia to deprive the plaintiff companies of their shareholding in ToAZ.

It is claimed they were all part of a conspiracy to defraud the plaintiffs through illegal and corrupt actions. The claims are denied.

The High Court previously rejected a challenge by the Mazepin/UCCU defendants to the jurisdiction of the Irish courts to deal with the case. An appeal is pending on that decision.

In arguments seeking to have Kai taken out of the case, the firm said, among other things, the plaintiffs were engaged in “forum shopping” and trying to relitigate underlying matters that the plaintiffs had already unsuccessfully litigated in Russia.

The plaintiffs argued the court had already dealt with the jurisdictional issue in relation to the other defendants and there was no merit in allowing this new jurisdictional challenge.

The claim is before the Irish court and it does not involve the relitigation of any of the issues heard in Russia, it was also argued.

In a decision dismissing the Kai challenge, Mr Justice McDonald said he applied the principles previously applied by the High Court in establishing the jurisdictional issue.

Given those previous findings that the plaintiffs had demonstrated a good arguable case for the alleged conspiracy, it followed that the plaintiffs had established a good arguable case that the acquisition of the shares by Kai represented the culmination of the alleged scheme of conspiracy, the purpose of which is to expropriate the plaintiffs’ shares in ToAZ, he said.

Any determination of the truth or falsity of the claims could only be made at a full trial, he said.