PROVISION OF SERVICES TO SOPHIE YUHANOV (CHARGES 5, 7, 9, 13, 14)
68 These charges allege contraventions by All Rounder of orders 3(a), 3(b) and 4; and by Ms Lurie and Mr Vladimir Grinberg of orders 3(a) and 3(b).
69 Towards the end of 2010 Mr Vladimir Grinberg decided to establish a new business to provide services similar to those which had previously been offered by All Rounder. He described the steps he took to establish the business in his affidavit. He explained that:
"22. As a result of this, in mid-December 2010, I decided to take a different course of action. I decided to start a new business using the name "Kartina" through which I would offer the same Russian Internet television products that All Rounder had offered to its customers. I thought that by taking this approach it would cause Connect TV to join Kartina (and possibly me) to the proceeding. If this occurred, I thought it would cause Kartina to cooperate with All Rounder, my parents and me by providing the information and documents to support our position or by taking steps to defend the allegations made against Kartina directly.
23. To implement this plan, I did the following things.
(a) I established a new distributorship with Kartina. I used a false name in my dealings with Kartina because I did not want Kartina to decline my application for a new distributorship on the basis of my past association with All Rounder. Further, I did not want my parents to know what I was doing, I decided to use the name Dmitry Shtifelman, the name of the solicitor acting for Connect TV. I thought that if I used that name in the promotion of this new business, my parents would think that the business was associated with Connect TV and would be less inclined to try to find out who was operating it.
(b) I ordered and received from Kartina:
(i) 500 signal codes and passwords; and
(ii) a few dozen 'set top boxes'.
I ordered what I understood to be the minimum quantity that I could order from Kartina as a distributor. These items cost a total of approximately AU$9,900. As I was then living with my mother and I had to keep these things secret from her, I stored the set top boxes mostly in a cupboard in my room with a few kept in the boot of my car where I also stored my paperwork in a satchel.
(c) On or before 20 December 2010, I registered the business name "Kartina World TV Australasia" (Victoria business number B2337393U) and I registered the Australian Business Number 35 307 199 680.
(d) On or about 22 December 2010, I opened a bank account with Westpac in the name of "Kartina World TV Australasia".
(e) I purchased a pre-paid mobile phone with the phone number 0430 543 856. I also subsequently purchased another pre-paid mobile phone with the phone number 0426 965 065. I used these phones exclusively to promote and operate the Kartina World TV Australasia business. I used one phone (0430 543 856) for sales and the other (0426 965 065) as the technical support line.
(f) In or about 10 December 2010, I started promoting the Kartina World TV Australasia business. The main means of promotion that I used was to send a group message to users on the "Odnaklasniki" social networking website. This is a social networking website for the Russian community in Australia which operates in a similar manner to the well-known Facebook web site. I also made some businesses (sic) cards and flyers for my new business and distributed them in cafes and business which are popular with the Russian community in Melbourne."
70 Early in January 2011, Ms Mila Volchek telephoned the number 1800 757 760. This number was advertised as All Rounder's number on its website. The number was registered to All Rounder and, connected to it, was a diversion to the mobile telephone number of Ms Lurie. Ms Volchek's call was answered by a lady who introduced herself as Leonora. Ms Volchek asked her how she could go about arranging for her parents to receive Russian TV. Leonora asked her the speed of the internet at her parents' home. Ms Volchek said that she did not have this information but invited Leonora to call her parents to find out. Ms Volchek gave Leonora her parents' home telephone number.
71 On or about 4 January 2011, Ms Sophie Yuhanov (Ms Mila Volchek's mother) received a telephone call at her home from a lady who enquired as to whether Ms Yuhanov was interested in connecting to Russian television. Ms Yuhanov said that she was. The lady who had initiated the call asked Ms Yuhanov some questions about the internet type and the speed of connection at her home. Ms Yuhanov was unable to answer these questions and the caller directed her to a website (www.kartina.tv) where she was told she could find the exact speed of the internet connection. Ms Yuhanov made these enquiries and then telephoned 1800 757 760. Her call was answered by a lady who gave her name as Yulya. Ms Yuhanov told Yulya that she had ascertained the internet speed on the Kartina website and gave details of the monthly internet download allowance. Ms Yuhanov provided various other details and then said that she would need to discuss the matter with her husband.
72 On 6 January 2011, Yulya telephoned Ms Yuhanov and asked her if she had had the opportunity of discussing the matter with her husband. The call was made from landline telephone number 9534 3570. This number was registered to Mr Yuri Grinberg, Mr Vladimir Grinberg's father. It was connected to a unit at 9/232 Barkly Street, St Kilda. All Rounder's business office was located at this address. At the time the unit was occupied by Mr Yuri Grinberg and Ms Leonora Lurie. Ms Yuhanov said that she had discussed the matter with her husband and that they were willing to proceed with the installation of a Russian TV connection. Yulya then advised her that a man named Dmitry would come and set up the connection. Yulya said that Dmitry would contact Ms Yuhanov and gave her what she said was Dmitry's telephone number. The number was 0430 543 856. This was one of the numbers obtained by Mr Vladimir Grinberg when he established his new business. On 7 January 2011, Ms Yuhanov telephoned the number and spoke to a man who identified himself as Dmitry. She did so for the purpose of arranging installation of the service.
73 "Dmitry" attended Ms Yuhanov's home on 12 January 2011. She described what transpired in her affidavit as follows:
"6. On or about 12 January 2011 a young man attended my home. He identified himself as Dmitry and said he had come to install my Russian television service. He connected a box to my television and performed some technical work.
7. He then filled out a form and signed it, and gave it to me together with some other documents. [The "dealers signature" block on the form was signed "Dmitiry Shtiffelman."]
8. I then signed a cheque drawn on my account for the installation fee of $254.95 and gave it to Tanya Volchek to hand it on to Dmitry. ….
9. While he was still at my place, he demonstrated the television service he had installed. He tuned the television into several Russian language channels, including the channels I know as NTV, Channel One and RTR. These are the three most popular Russian language television channels among Russian speaking people I know in Australia. They are also the Russian language channels I have most interest in viewing.
10. About a month later I received a phone call. The caller said she was from Kartina TV and asked me to make my monthly payment. I was busy and could not talk at that time, I have asked her to call me latter (sic). In a few days I have received a phone call from Dmitry who have asked me to make another monthly payment. I said that I need to get an invoice for the money I have already paid. I have advised him that when I will get an invoice, I will make another payment in order to continue watching Russian channels.
11. On 14 February 2011 I received an email which appeared to have been sent from the email address Kartina_worldtv@y7mail.com. Attached to that email was an invoice from Kartina worldtv Australasia." [The invoice was signed with a printed signature "Dmitriy Shtifelman"].
74 Ms Yuhanov's account of events was confirmed by Ms Tatyana Volchek who was present at Ms Yuhanov's home on 12 January 2011. In her affidavit Ms Volchek deposed that:
"5. On 12 January 2011, around 6:30 pm, I was at the home of Mrs Yuhanov. While I was there I saw from the living room window a red car with number plates URN537 pulled up and parked across from Mrs Yuhanov's house, and I saw a man come out of the car. The man who came out of the car, walked towards Sophie's house. I heard knocking at the door, when the door was opened, the man standing there was the same man I saw coming out of the red car. He identified himself as Dmitry, and said he had come in order to install Russian language television for Mrs Yuhanov.
6. When the person entered the house, I immediately identified him as the same man who had attended the Federal Court last year for a hearing in this matter. At that time, he had been sitting at the bar table next to an older woman. I recall that he had identified himself to the court as Vladimir Grinberg and had told the court that he was the son of Leonora Lurie. I was very surprised to see him attending Mrs Yuhanov's home in order to install Russian language television, particularly as I knew his name was not Dmitry.
7. While the person was at the premises, I photographed the car he had emerged from that was parked across the road. …
8. I engaged in a long conversation in Russian with the man, which I recorded on my mobile phone. …
9. The man installed what I know to be a device called a set top box, which enables television broadcasts communicated via the internet to be viewed on a television. He demonstrated reception of Russian language television channels on Mrs Yuhanov's television. Among other channels, he demonstrated reception of the channels I know as NTV, Channel One and RTR. These are the three most popular Russian language television channels among Russian speaking people I know in Australia.
10. I saw the man fill out a form and sign it. He gave it to me for Mrs Yuhanov together with some other documents. I was watching him as he filled in the form and was extremely surprised to see that he signed the form with the name Dmitriy Shtiffelman.
11. I was surprised because Dimtry Shtifelman is the name of the solicitor who has sole carriage of this matter for the applicants through the firm Lloyd and Barclays solicitors. I am aware that Mr. Shtifelman's name appears on many affidavits which have been filed with the court in this matter."
75 In his affidavit Mr Vladimir Grinberg confirmed that what was said by Ms Yuhanov and Ms Volchek in the passages quoted from their respective affidavits "described the steps I took to connect an Internet television service at Ms Yuhanov's home in January 2011." He also deposed that, in so far as the paragraphs described things that he had said or done, he agreed that they were accurate.
76 "Yulya" was identified as Mr Vladimir Grinberg's girlfriend, Ms Yulya Beliavskaya. She did not give evidence. He attributed this failure to her suffering from a bipolar disorder and her being seven months pregnant. No supporting medical evidence was provided.
77 Mr Vladimir Grinberg accepted that the vehicle he drove to Ms Yuhanov's premises was registered in the name of All Rounder but said that he used it for both business and private purposes. He denied that he was acting as the agent of All Rounder at the time at which he installed the equipment at Ms Yuhanov's premises: he did so in the course of his newly established business.
78 Ms Lurie denied having any conversation with Ms Mila Volchek or Ms Sophie Yuhanov in January 2011.
79 Mr Grinberg admitted to re-broadcasting or communicating the copyright channels to Ms Yuhanov, but asserted that he engaged in this activity as a means of inciting Connect TV to join Kartina to the proceedings, not to re-establish All Rounder after it was stopped from carrying on its business by the 14 September 2010 Orders.
80 Connect TV alleged that this assertion made by Mr Grinberg was false. It pointed to a discussion between Mr Grinberg and Ms Volchek at the time at which Mr Grinberg came to Ms Yuhanov's home to install the set-top box. Mr Grinberg told Ms Volchek that his intention was to take advantage of what he saw as being a loop hole in the orders. That loop hole was that the orders did not bind Kartina. He had transferred, so he said, all of All Rounder's clients to his new business so that they could continue receiving Russian television broadcasts notwithstanding the operation of the orders. He made no mention during this conversation of any desire to have Kartina to be joined to the principal proceeding.
81 It is to be borne in mind that the orders made on 14 September 2010 bound All Rounder and its servants and agents. They did not bind Mr Vladimir Grinberg save to the extent that he was acting as the servant or agent of All Rounder.
82 The links between All Rounder and the events relevant to these charges are tenuous. Ms Mila Volchek chose to initiate the request for the installation of the Russian television services by telephoning All Rounder's advertised 1800 number. Her mother subsequently used the same telephone number to respond to certain enquiries. On this occasion she appears to have spoken to Mr Vladimir Grinberg's girlfriend. She subsequently had a further discussion with Mr Grinberg's girlfriend on a landline connected to the same premises as All Rounder's business office. Thereafter, however, contact was made using one of the mobile telephone numbers which Mr Vladimir Grinberg had registered to conduct his Kartina business. When he visited Ms Yuhanov's home to install the equipment he drove a vehicle registered to All Rounder but which he also used for private purposes.
83 Mr Vladimir Grinberg did not explain how he was alerted to Ms Yuhanov's expression of interest. Even if it be assumed that the referral had come directly or indirectly from Ms Lurie it does not necessarily follow that his subsequent activities were undertaken as the servant or agent of All Rounder. Furthermore, even if, contrary to her denial of having any dealings with either Ms Volchek or Ms Yuhanov, Ms Lurie had told Mr Vladimir Grinberg of having received such a request, that alone would not have constituted a breach of my orders by Ms Lurie or, through her, by All Rounder.
84 The fact that Mr Vladimir Grinberg used a car which was registered to All Rounder when he came to Ms Yuhanov's home to install the equipment does not compel the conclusion that he was then acting as the agent of All Rounder. The inference is open that, although the car was registered to All Rounder, Mr Grinberg continued to use it after 17 September 2010 to attend to his private business and that he continued his personal use of it after he had established his new business. There was no urgent need to change the registration details for the vehicle.
85 I am, therefore, not satisfied beyond reasonable doubt that All Rounder, Ms Lurie or Mr Vladimir Grinberg have contravened any of the orders which I made on 14 September 2010 by taking steps to respond to Ms Yuhanov's request for the installation of Russian language services at her home. These charges are not proven.