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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Huntington v Imagine Group Holdings Ltd & Anor [2008] EWCA Civ 159 (04 February 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2008/159.html Cite as: [2008] EWCA Civ 159 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION, COMMERCIAL COURT
(MR JUSTICE CHRISTOPHER CLARKE)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE THOMAS
and
LORD JUSTICE HOOPER
____________________
HUNTINGTON |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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IMAGINE GROUP HOLDINGS LIMITED & ANOTHER |
Respondent |
____________________
WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
LLP) appeared on behalf of the Appellant.
Mr A Boyle QC and Mr D Wolfson (instructed by Fulbright & Jaworski
LLP) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Dyson:
"The Board of Directors of Imagine will have the right to construe, interpret, administer, amend or cancel the LTIP, at any time, provided that any amendment or cancellation of the LTIP will not affect the right of any participants to any payments under the LTIP that have been allocated or accrued to that date…."
"Whether D1 and D2 were in repudiatory breach of contract by:
a. Failing to make any determination or allocation of Mr Huntingdon's LTIP entitlement for 2004. In that regard, was any such failure consequent upon a failure by Mr Huntington promptly to prepare board papers necessary for the finalisation of the LTIP allocation and/or
b) Maintaining its entitlement (and settled intention) to leave the Danish Re and LION transactions out of the accounting exercise to establish Mr Huntington's 2004 LTIP entitlement and/or
c) Maintaining its entitlement (and settled intention) unilaterally to remove Mr Huntington's contract of employment and LTIP rights."
The facts
"We are preparing a management compensation plan to be presented at our first full board meeting (probably in August/September). This plan will be consistent with what we have previously stated and will be specific an amount so that individuals can develop some expectation of what it means for them. Moreover, the plan will be prepared after we have had an opportunity to canvass the market to make certain that it is competitive.
Please note that this plan will cover the senior management team including yourself, Mike Daly, Bob Forness and others. We are quite open to considering an alternative plan for our underwriters (or revenue producers) if you believe that this is warranted. This may be a straight cash bonus plan or a plan that resembles our existing LTIP. This is something that you and the senior management team need to consider.
Finally, if there are some managers who feel that these determinations violate the terms of their employment contracts then we should sit with each of them to discuss our compensation approach and philosophy. If at the end of that meeting they remain uncomfortable then we should negotiate a fair and amicable basis for their departure."
"Equally, if you are in agreement I would ask that you e-mail me by return so that I can proceed to let the various interests know that a solution has been found and they should stop panicking."
"We will make it clear to employees that you are eliminating the LTIP plan with effect as of January 1st, 2005. However, you are not yet in a position to tell individuals the specifics of the replacement plan, or the specifics of individual allocations to them for 2005 and for future periods. You have stated that you hope to have such details for the meeting of the board of directors in London in August or September. It is not possible to ask employees to give up contractual rights in exchange for something that is not yet defined. Thus, I suggest that we inform them of the elimination of plan and ask them to withhold judgement/action regarding the new plan until such time as it is clearly defined to them. Brascan and Imagine would agree that such action by employees will not prejudice or constitute a waiver of the rights of the employees under their employment contracts."
On 9 May Mr Myhal replied, saying:
"In principle, I believe your memo reflects my understanding subject to my comments below."
The judgment, insofar as it related to issue 4(c)
"The reference to payments 'accrued to that date', in addition to payments that have been allocated, indicates that, if the Board cancels the LTIP mid-year, the employees will have the right to participate in the LTIP in respect of their service up until the date of cancellation -- what had been called 'the stub period'. The contrary was not suggested. Were it otherwise the Board would have been at liberty to cancel the LTIP on December 30th and, by that means, to disentitle the employees to a major part of their remuneration in respect of the calendar year. This cannot have been what the parties intended."
"321. That paragraph reflects an understanding that Imagine intends to eliminate the LTIP plan with effect from 1st January 2005 and will announce that intention. Imagine will indicate the specifics of a replacement plan and of individual allocations for 2005 at a later date; and meanwhile will be inviting the employees to suspend judgment on the footing that to do so would not waive their employment rights. Those rights would include the right to have their accrued rights under the May LTIP recognised. Until they knew what they were being asked to accept the employees' failure to do anything would not prejudice them.
322. The paragraph is not an indication that Imagine will renege on the employees accrued rights in respect of the period up to the date when the existing plan is cancelled and the new plan is clearly defined to them. Given that the new plan had not yet been crafted, it was too early to tell what its details will be (as Mr Huntington recognised) and that will be the allocation for 2005 -- hence the need to suspend judgment. It was perfectly possible that the employees would receive the same or more than there May LTIP entitlement in respect of the stub period, even if differently calculated; or that, if they declined to remain as an employee under a scheme that was not the same the May LTIP, that they would be allowed whatever their entitlement was for the stub period. Since under the May LTIP Imagine had a right of cancellation they would have no legitimate complaint that Imagine had exercised it.
323. It was Mr Huntington's case that the passage about the 2005 underwriting years set out in paragraph 172 above had not been discussed in a telephone conversation on 5th May but was something he put into the memorandum. If that is so (and Mr Myhal was not clear whether the subject had been discussed in that telephone conversation) it seems to me more difficult for Mr Huntington to claim that Imagine was repudiating its obligations in respect of the stub period. Mr Myhal's broad agreement with Mr Huntington formulation is not an unequivocal indication that Imagine would not honour its obligations in respect of the stub period.
324. This is particular so given that in such discussions as there had been prior to the 9th May e-mail, as Mr Myhal put it:
'….I do not think we ever took any issue that, you know, we would unilaterally extinguish an employee's contractual rights, and I think his expectation that employees need the specifics of the replacement plan, I think we always accepted, absolutely....whenever this transition occurred we would have had to make sure we had an appropriate transition plan. We were not at any time suggesting that someone should somehow be out of pocket as a result of this change of one plan to the other'"
The law
"195. A party to a contract will be held to have repudiated it if 'the acts or conduct of the party evince an intention no longer to be bound by the contract': per Lord Coleridge CJ in Freeth v Burr (1874) LR 9 CP 208 at 213. For that purpose the court must examine the totality of the party's conduct prior to the acceptance of the alleged repudiation. It is no bar to the acceptance of a repudiatory breach that the breach is anticipatory in that it consists of a threat not to perform obligations that are due to be performed in the future. But a statement that a party will not honour his obligations in the future, which, unaltered, would have been repudiatory, may cease to be so in the light of any withdrawal of that threat before the alleged repudiation is accepted: Norwest Holst Group Administration Ltd v Harrison [1985] IRLR 240.
196. The obligation to pay the agreed remuneration is one of the terms of a contrast of employment. An attempt to alter that obligation in a substantial way is a breach that is necessarily repudiatory. As Judge, LJ, with whom the rest of the Court agreed, put it in Cantor Fitzgerald International v Callaghan [1999] IRLR 234, para 42:
'Where, however, an employee unilaterally reduces his employee's pay, or diminishes the value of the salary, the entire foundation of the contract of employment is undermined. Therefore an emphatic denial by the governor of his obligation to pay the agreed salary or wage, or a determined resolution not to comply with his contractual obligations in relation to pay and remuneration, will normally be regarded as repudiatory. To the extent that Gillies [1979] IRLR 457 suggest otherwise, it does not accurately reflect the relevant legal principles.'
197. The court cited with approval the position adopted as common ground by the parties in Rigby v Ferodo Ltd [1987] IRLR 516:
'The unilateral imposition by an employer of a reduction in the agreed remuneration of an employee constitutes a fundamental and repudiatory breach of the contract of employment which, if accepted by the employee, would terminate the contract of employment.'"
Submissions
"With regard to 2005, I propose that Brascan would announce to employees that the existing LTIP would cease with effect from 1 January 2005 and that employees should have an opportunity to consider the alternative proposal without prejudicing or waiving their rights under their contracts of employment."
"Q: What you agreed with Mr Myhal in your telephone conversation on 5th May is recorded by you in your memorandum of 6th May and so far as 2005 is concerned, what you record as having been agreed in that conversation appears at 1783: 'You are not yet in a position to tell individuals the specifics of the replacement plan.' It is obviously a fair question for you to ask, what have you got in mind for me, and Mr Myhal is saying, surely, 'We are not in a position to tell individuals the specifics of the replacement plan', and you may not like that, Mr Huntington, but he is not saying 'You are not going to get it', he is saying he cannot give you the specifics, but the plan has not been designed, it is not yet ready. So in the meantime what you are recording here is that all the employees will get what they are already entitled to under the existing LTIP arrangements for 2005; is that not right?
A: If this is agreed to and I am stating that it is only acceptable that you cannot give someone detail if you give them a reservation of rights, and that is not done."
"Q: Do you agree that what Mr Myhal is saying here is that he accepts your memorandum as reflecting the understanding that you had reached, subject only to the two specific comments which he mentions?
A: No. And why I do not accept that is that there is a great number of points that he has not addressed. He has not --
Q: But he is accepting your memo --
A: No, he has not accepted the reservation of rights issues at all. It was never explicitly discussed and agreed in the first telephone conversation about that issue and he ignores it completely in this response."
Discussion
Lord Justice Thomas:
Lord Justice Hooper:
Order: Appeal dismissed