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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 >> Investec Bank (UK) Ltd v Zulman & Anor [2010] EWCA Civ 536 (18 May 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2010/536.html Cite as: [2010] EWCA Civ 536 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE DAVID STEEL
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
THE RIGHT HONOURABLE LORD JUSTICE LONGMORE
and
THE RIGHT HONOURABLE LORD JUSTICE MOORE-BICK
____________________
INVESTEC BANK (UK) LTD |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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(1) ARNOLD ZULMAN (2) DAVID ZULMAN |
Respondents |
____________________
Mr Stuart Adair (instructed by Radcliffes Le Brasseur) for the Respondents
Hearing dates : 5th May 2010
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
The Facts
"3. LIMITATION
The Guarantor's liability shall be limited as follows:
3.1 the Guarantor shall only be liable under this Guarantee to the extent that the Debtor's liability to the Bank at the time of the making of demand by the Bank under this Guarantee exceeds £2,000,000, all of which is secured by a debenture in favour of the Bank and of which £1,000,000 is further secured by a deposit; and
3.2 the maximum amount of the Guarantor's liability shall not exceed a principal amount of £500,000 plus interest,
and any costs and expenses relating to enforcement of the Bank's rights under this Guarantee."
The Zulmans' liability as guarantors only therefore arose if the company's debt exceeded £2 million.
The Judgment
"(1) Whether, on its true construction, the effect of clause 3.1 is to preclude any liability on the part of the defendants if the indebtedness of Ashbury is less than £2,000,000;
(2) Whether the claimant is entitled to rectification of clause 3.1 of the Guarantee;
(3) Whether, in or around January 2007, the parties concluded an oral agreement that the Guarantee would be varied to disapply clause 3.1;
(4) Whether David Zulman's initialling of the 31st January Letter was effective to vary the Guarantee;
(5) Whether David Zulman had authority to vary the Guarantee on behalf of David Zulman; and
(6) Whether Arnold and/or David Zulman are estopped from relying on the limitation of their liability contained in clause 3.1 of the Guarantee."
He answered these questions by saying (1) Yes (2) No (3) No (4) No (5) Not applicable and (6) No.
"4.6 The judge erred in law and/or in procedural fairness in failing to make any finding as to the Bank's case to the effect that there was an oral agreement between the Bank and the defendants reached on 1st February 2007 that clause 3.1 of the Guarantee would no longer apply."
Preliminary Matters
"Subject to contract"
"One possibility is that the agreement is regarded by the parties as incomplete, or as not intended to be legally binding, until the terms of the formal document are agreed and the document is duly executed in accordance with the terms of the preliminary agreement (e.g. by signature). This is generally the position where "solicitors are involved on both sides, formal written agreements are to be produced and arrangements are made for their execution". The normal inference will then be that "the parties are not bound unless and until both of them sign the agreement". A second possibility is that such a document is intended only as a solemn record of an already complete and binding agreement."
"This offer will lapse if this letter is not accepted within 14 days of its date.
…
Please confirm your acceptance of the variations set out above to the terms and conditions of the Facility Letter by signing and returning to the Bank the enclosed copy of this letter."
To our mind these clauses indicate that Ashbury was not to be bound until the variation letter was signed, as it in fact was on 22nd February. But only from that date was Ashbury bound and since it was expressly signed on behalf of Ashbury, only Ashbury was bound by its contents.
"3. (New) LIMITATION
3.1 The total amount recoverable by the Bank from the Guarantor under clause 2 shall not exceed the sum of £500,000 plus interest, costs and expenses".
At the end (same as before)
"YOU SHOULD SEEK INDEPENDENT LEGAL ADVICE BEFORE ENTERING INTO THIS GUARANTEE
SOLICITOR'S CERTIFICATE
I confirm that I have explained this document to the signatory(ies)
………………………… (Signature of Solicitor)
………………………… (Name of Solicitor and Firm)
………………………… (Date)"
Just as it is clear that the variation letter had to be signed before the company was bound so it is, in our judgment, clear that the guarantors had to sign the new guarantee before they would be bound. The most telling indication is that it was always contemplated that the Zulmans would obtain legal advice before they signed the guarantee. This would be a pointless provision if the parties intended to be bound by the terms of an earlier oral agreement for the obvious reason that, if the Zulmans' solicitor advised them against signing, the Zulmans had to be in the position of being able to take that advice.
Conclusion
Mini Judgment
This is a mini judgment of the court written by Lord Justice Longmore following the main hand down.
Order is uncontroversial save as to costs. The issue on costs relates to what has been called the pleading point which we decided against the respondents in the sense that we did not dismiss the appeal on the basis that the appellants' arguments were not open to them on the pleadings. Since this was hotly contested before the hearing considerable sums of money were expended and there is no doubt that the respondent raised the temperature unnecessarily by wrongly suggesting that Mr Downes misrepresented the pleading position on the course of seeking permission to appeal from Aikens LJ. Having won on this issue, the claimant Bank seeks the costs of this issue and has asked for an oral hearing on the matter.
We are satisfied that there is no need for an oral hearing which would only add yet further to the expense.
We have, however, anxiously considered the written submissions which are persuasively presented but we have in the end decided that the matter is not as clear cut as the appellants would have us believe and that we should not depart from the usual order that the costs of a successful respondent should be paid by the appellants.
The reasoning for this is that the question whether an agreement was made on 1st February 2007 was not a pleaded issue. The pleadings alleged that the relevant agreement was made in January 2007; no application to amend was made or at any rate carried though to a request for a decision. The question had surfaced, however, in the cross-examination of Mr David Zulman and was covered in final speeches. We have decided that although an agreement in principle was reached on 1st February, nothing was intended to be binding until reduced to writing and signed which it never was. It seems to us, therefore, that there was initial fault on the part of the appellants in failing to make their case clear enough for the respondents and the judge to understand it. The merits of the pleading point are thus by no means one way even though the appellants ultimately won upon it. We consider that it was so bound up with the main issue (namely whether the parties intended to be bound on 1st February) that no separate order for costs of that issue should be made. The appellants must pay the respondents costs as assessed in full and make a payment on account of those costs in the sum of £18,000.