Can concealing a breach of lease conditions constitute fraud?
Introduction
Breach of lease or other kinds of contracts is commonly understood to be
a civil wrong. Under certain circumstances, however, concealing a breach may
attract criminal liabilities. In the recent case of 香港特別行政區 訴 黎智英及另一人 [2022] HKDC 456, the Hong Kong District Court found the defendants
guilty for fraud in concealing a contravention of lease conditions by the
company they controlled or managed.
Facts
Hong Kong Science and Technology Parks
Corporation (formerly known as Hong Kong Industrial Estates Corporation) (the “Lessor”) is a statutory corporation and
it provides long leases of premises at science and industrial parks/estates at discounted
rent to tenants with a view to advancing industrial and technological
development.
In August
1995, Apple Daily Printing Limited (formerly known as Maxhope Limited and Next
Media Printing Limited) (the “Lessee”)
applied for a lease of the premises (the “Premises”)
in Tseung Kwan O Industrial Estate from the Lessor for the purpose of publishing
and printing newspapers and magazines. An agreement for lease was signed in
October 1995 and a formal lease (the “Lease”)
was signed in 1999.
The Lease contains
a “no alienation clause” whereby the Lessee was not allowed to underlet or part
with the possession of the Premises or any part thereof, nor to permit any
other party to occupy any part of the Premises by way of a licence. Subject to
prior written approval of the Lessor, a subsidiary or associate company of the Lessee may be permitted to occupy or share
the use of part of the Premises by way of licence on such terms as may be
approved by the Lessor.
Dico Consultants Limited (“Dico”) is a private company controlled
by D1 and held 49% shares in the
Lessee from 1997 to 2001. From 1995 to May 2020, it occupied certain area of
the Premises without applying for a licence. However, the Lessee has never
applied for a license for Dico, despite having applied to the Lessor for
licenses for various subsidiaries and associate companies of the Lessee from
time to time since 1997.
D1 was at all material times the chairman
and shareholder of Apple Daily Printing Limited and controlled various
corporate entities under Next Digital Limited (the “Group”).
D3 was the Director
of Administration of Next Media Management Services Limited. On 9 April 2020,
D3 made a written reply to the Lessor’s enquiry, stating that “Dico does not
occupy and is not operating on any part of the Lot”.
Charges
D1 and D3 were charged of fraud. The Prosecution case is that D1 and D3 were
under a duty to make disclosure to the Lessor at the material
time. Yet they permitted Dico to occupy the Premises without informing the
Lessor, knowing that this contravened the conditions of the Lease. Dico or the
Group benefited from such omission whilst the Lessor was subject to prejudice
or substantial risk of prejudice. Such omissions can therefore constitute
fraud.
Defences
The defences were as follows:
1.
There is no breach of lease. The occupation by Dico was incidental to the
Lessee’s operation or business at the Premises and should therefore be regarded
as the Lessee’s ancillary office which is permissible under the Lease.
2.
Further, Dico only occupied 0.16% of the Premises. Its occupation did
not vary the overall land use of the Premises. There was substantial compliance
with the Lease conditions.
3.
D1 and D3 do not have any obligation to disclose the contravention of
lease and hence their concealment (if any) cannot constitute fraud.
4.
The Lessee is a separate legal entity. D1 should not automatically be
responsible merely by being its director and shareholder. D3 was not the
Group’s senior management and was unaware of the restrictive conditions of the
Lease. He was merely a contact person acting in accordance with instructions.
5.
D1 and D3 did not have any intent to defraud.
6.
There was no prejudice or substantial risk of prejudice to the Lessor.
Verdict and reasoning
The Court found D1 and D3 guilty. It is
undisputed that Dico never got any licence to occupy the Premises and its
business was not related to publishing or printing of newspaper and magazines. The
Court took into account the context that the Lessee enjoyed discounted rent
under the Lease. In return, the Lessee
has to fulfil the conditions set by the Lessor
which matches Lessor’s objectives and policies. The Court therefore considered
the Lease to be a special one. Under such context, an omission can constitute
deliberate concealment and thereby a fraud.
Instead of
pointing out to the Lessor that the occupation of Dico was incidental and did
not require a license as argued in the
defence case, the Lessee chose to conceal Dico’s occupation.
Further, the Court
found that D1 was all along the controller of both Dico and the Lessee and
cannot excuse himself merely by suggesting that he was busy overseeing the Group’s
business and had very limited participation in the present case. The Court did
not accept that D3 was merely a contact person with no knowledge about the
affairs of the Premises.
The Court drew the
only reasonable and irresistible inference that D1 and D3 knew all along the
land use restrictions and the licencing
system under the Lease, but still concealed Dico’s occupation of the Premises
without any licence.
Takeaway
This case serves as a reminder that parties
to a contract should not take it for granted that their conduct in relation to
a breach of the contract will only lead to civil consequences. The special
context of a contract, for instance where the party can only enjoy special
benefit upon fulfilment of certain conditions,
may give rise to a duty of disclosure. Deliberate concealment of its own
breaches or other material facts may constitute fraud and attract criminal liabilities.
Non alienation clauses are common in leases, tenancy agreements and mortgages.
It is advisable to seek immediate legal advice if there are any questions
regarding a breach or possible breach of such clauses.
For enquiries,
please feel free to contact us at: |
E: criminal@onc.hk T:
(852) 2810 1212 19th Floor, Three Exchange Square, 8 Connaught Place, Central, Hong
Kong |
Important: The law and procedure on
this subject are very specialised and
complicated. This article is just a very general outline for reference and
cannot be relied upon as legal advice in any individual case. If any advice
or assistance is needed, please contact our solicitors. |
Published by ONC Lawyers © 2022 |