CL-2018-000297, CL-2018-000404, CL-2018-000590, - [2025] EWHC 2364 (Comm)
Commercial Court

CL-2018-000297, CL-2018-000404, CL-2018-000590, - [2025] EWHC 2364 (Comm)

Fecha: 02-Oct-2025

I do not think it obvious that there is any principled reason to distinguish between breach of a contract to which the conspiracy claimant is not party and breach of trust or fiduciary duty where the

38.

I do not think it obvious that there is any principled reason to distinguish between breach of a contract to which the conspiracy claimant is not party and breach of trust or fiduciary duty where the conspiracy claimant is not a beneficiary, when considering what can amount to unlawful means in a tortious conspiracy claim. But these are all, I respectfully suggest, points deserving consideration at the highest level on which it serves no purpose for more to be said, obiter, in this judgment. (For example, personal compensatory liabilities for dishonest assistance or knowing receipt may be seen as species of ancillary liability (as Lord Briggs JSC noted in Byers v Saudi National Bank [2023] UKSC 51, [2024] AC 1191, at [42]); and it has been suggested that recognising breach of trust or fiduciary duty as unlawful means for a common law conspiracy claim would be inconsistent with the careful delineation, through those equitable causes of action, of when there should be liability for secondary participation in equitable wrongdoing (see Clerk & Lindsell, 24th Edition, para 23-120 at n.570; and Lewison LJ’s comment in his dissenting judgment in Racing Partnership Ltd, supra, at [248]).)