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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Hammonds (A Firm) v Jones [2009] EWCA Civ 1400 (21 December 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2009/1400.html Cite as: [2009] EWCA Civ 1400, [2010] Bus LR D85 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION
MR JUSTICE WARREN
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LLOYD
and
LORD JUSTICE SULLIVAN
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HAMMONDS (a firm) |
Claimant Respondent |
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- and - |
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DAVID JONES |
Defendant Appellant |
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WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7404 1424
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
for the Appellant
Alan Steinfeld Q.C. and Richard Ritchie (instructed by Hammonds LLP)
for the Respondent
Hearing date: 2 December 2009
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Lloyd:
The Partnership Deed
"29. Thirdly, the Continuing Partners are to pay various amounts to the Outgoing Partner. It is clear that these amounts are intended to be in full and final settlement of the Outgoing Partners' claims in respect of his entitlement in respect of the partnership of which he was a partner, that is to say the Partnership as it existed on the day before the Succession Date. The amounts described are these:
a. Under paragraph 3.1.1, a capital sum (payable within 30 days) equal to the aggregate of (i) Fixed Capital (ii) the balance on the Outgoing Partner's Deferred Drawings Account (excluding a tax reserve).
b. Under paragraph 3.1.2, any undrawn balance on the Current Account of the Outgoing Partner for the Partnership Year in which the Succession Date occurs and from any previous Partnership Year. This undrawn balance (it seems in respect of both the year of departure and earlier years) is payable on the earlier of (i) 30 days after the date on which the same has been determined and (ii) 180 days from the end of the Partnership Year in which the Succession Date occurs."
"16.1 The Partnership Accounts of the Partnership in respect of each Partnership Year shall be made up annually and audited as at the close of business on the last day of such Partnership Year.
16.2 A copy of the Partnership Accounts shall be delivered to each of the Partners after the same have been audited. All objections (if any) to such Partnership Accounts shall be stated in writing by the Partner concerned to the Senior Partner within 10 days of his receiving such copy and (subject to any objections so stated) such Partnership Accounts shall at the expiration of such period (or earlier if agreed by all the Partners) be binding on all the Partners. Any objections to such Partnership Accounts by a Partner shall be duly considered by the Partnership Board and its decision thereon shall be binding on such Partner unless within 5 days of receiving such decision he shall notify in writing to the Senior Partner his desire to refer the matters in dispute to a Partners' Meeting in which event the determination of the Partners by Ordinary Resolution shall be binding on all Partners."
The parties' contentions
The judge's judgment
"45. I do not consider that it is commercially nonsensical to reach either of the results for which the parties contend. It would make perfectly good sense for a partnership deed to provide unambiguously that partnership accounts prepared for a partnership year should be binding on all the persons who were partners at any time during that year, albeit that in such a case one might expect to find some mechanism within the deed for an outgoing partner to challenge the account. But it would also make perfectly good sense for accounts to be prepared by, and be binding only on, the continuing partners, with an outgoing partner being left to a remedy through the courts if the continuing partners were unable to satisfy any objection which the outgoing partner might have to the account prepared by them."
"It is impossible to think that the draftsman of the provision had the situation which now arises in mind at all for, if he had done, he would surely have addressed it directly. Instead, he has drafted the whole of clause 16 without considering the consequences of a change of the membership of the Partnership either during the Partnership Year in question or thereafter. Quite clearly, however, the provision has to be applied more widely than the limited situation where there is no change in the membership of the Partnership from the beginning of a Partnership Year until the accounts for that year have become binding, under clause 16, on all the Partners. The issue, in reality, is the meaning to be given to the words which the draftsman has used in circumstances which he has not expressly dealt with and where it is not, therefore, surprising that whatever approach is adopted, difficulties of construction arise."
"It must be remembered that the accounts may cover a period during which an outgoing partner was a member of the firm. If such a partner is to be bound by accounts approved by the continuing partners, this should be expressly stated in the agreement."
"73. In any event, neither Mr Steinfeld's approach nor that of Mr Flint and Mr Croxford is without its difficulties of construction as I hope my analysis of the different consequences indicates. But each of the overarching results for which each side contends makes perfectly good commercial sense. If the UK Partnership Deed had made clear that an Outgoing Partner was not bound by the accounts prepared by the members of the Partnership of which he was not a member, that could not be met with an astonished reaction by the reasonable commercially-minded solicitor. As Mr Croxford points out, there may be perfectly good reasons why the partners concerned would decide to combine together on that basis. On the other hand, if the UK Partnership Deed had made it clear beyond doubt that an Outgoing Partner would be bound by such accounts – even though he may have no right to attend a meeting at which any objection fell to be considered or, though he had a right to attend, he had no vote – then, again, that would also be seen as a perfectly unexceptional way of proceeding. In those circumstances, there is no scope pursuant to the law as I understand it for implying a term."
Discussion
Lord Justice Sullivan
Lord Justice Sedley