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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 >> Mir Steel UK Ltd v Morris & Ors [2012] EWCA Civ 1397 (01 November 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2012/1397.html Cite as: [2012] EWCA Civ 1397 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION
Mr Justice David Richards
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE RIMER
and
LORD JUSTICE SULLIVAN
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MIR STEEL UK LIMITED |
Appellant/ First Defendant |
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- and - |
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(1) CHRISTOPHER MORRIS (2) MARK FRY (3) DAVID HUDSON (4) ALPHASTEEL LIMITED (in liquidation) |
Respondents/Proposed Part 20 Defendants |
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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)
Mr Lloyd Tamlyn (instructed by Lipman Karas LLP) for the Respondents
Hearing date: 24 July 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Rimer :
Introduction
The facts
'Subject to the release of Security Interests referred to above, we will acquire only such right and title to assets as Alphasteel actually has. We acknowledge the existence of:
(a) a title dispute relating to claim by Lictor Anstalt to ownership of Alphasteel's hot strip mill and that the Definitive Agreements between us will provide that we shall be responsible for settling any claims made against us, the SPV or the Assets following Completion in relation thereto;…' [Emphasis supplied]
'Subject to the provisions of this Agreement, the Vendor shall sell and the Purchaser shall purchase, with effect from the Transfer Date, the Business by way of the purchase by the Purchaser of such right, title and interest as the Vendor may have in the following assets free of any claims by the Charge Holder under the Charge Holder's security.'
There followed a list of assets that included 'the Fixed Assets'.
'Such right, title and interest as the Vendor may have, and the risk, in all the Assets shall pass and the Vendor shall be deemed to have delivered the assets into the possession of the Purchaser on the Transfer Date.'
'9.1 If any of the Assets are or shall be found to be subject to a lien, hire purchase, hire, loan, leasing or rental agreement or other encumbrance, the Purchaser shall take subject to it. …
9.3 The Purchaser acknowledges that it has had the opportunity to inspect the records of the Vendor to satisfy itself as to the position regarding the matters referred to in clause 9.1.
9.4 The Vendor and the Administrators warrant that they have not wilfully withheld any materials in their possession nor wilfully failed to supply any details held by them in relation to the interests of Lictor Anstalt in the hot strip mill situated at the Property.
9.5 The purchaser agrees that it shall be responsible for settling any claim made against it by Lictor Anstalt in respect of the hot strip mill situated at the Property.' [Emphasis supplied]
'16.1 Except as expressly agreed including without limitation as agreed in clauses 9.2, 9.4, 11.2, 15, 22.1 and paragraph 11 of schedule 3, the Administrators shall incur no personal liability in any form. In particular, the Administrators shall incur no personal liability whatsoever under this Agreement or under any deed, instrument or document entered into under or in connection with it.
16.2 This exclusion of the Administrators' personal liability shall be in addition to and not in substitution for any right of indemnity or relief or remedy otherwise available to the Administrators and shall continue notwithstanding completion of this Agreement (in whole or in part).
16.3 The Administrators are parties to this Agreement in their personal capacities only for the purpose of receiving the benefit of the exclusions, limitations, undertakings, covenants and indemnities in their favour contained in this Agreement and for the limited purposes of providing specified undertakings and warranties.'
'17.4 It is agreed by the Purchaser that the terms and conditions of this Agreement and the exclusions contained in it are fair and reasonable, bearing in mind that:
(a) …
(b) …
(c) the Purchaser has, and has informed the Vendor and the Administrators that it has, available to it skilled professional advice concerning the terms of this Agreement, the Assets and the matters referred to in paragraph (b) above and that it is in the light of this advice that the Purchaser has agreed to buy the Assets on an "as is" basis for a consideration calculated to take into account (inter alia) the risk to the Purchaser represented by the fact that the parties believe that the said exclusions would be recognised as fully effective by the Courts; ….'
Lictor's claims in the proceedings
The applications before the judge
The judge's judgment
'67. … I will start with the claim for contribution under the Civil Liability (Contribution) Act 1978. This requires Mir Steel to show that the proposed Part 20 defendants are liable to the claimant in respect of the same loss which is claimed against Mir Steel. The claim for contribution is made against both Alphasteel and the administrators.
68. As regards the claim for contribution against the administrators this in my judgment has no prospect of success. As earlier discussed, the rule in Said v. Butt prevents a claim against the administrators in tort for inducing a breach of contract by Alphasteel. Equally, in my judgment, the same rule will defeat a claim on the same facts but repackaged, as Mr Tamlyn aptly described it, as a claim for unlawful means conspiracy. The essence of the rule is that agents are not to be liable for procuring their principal to act in breach of contract, provided they acted in good faith in the course of their agency, and it should make no difference whether the claim is made for inducing a breach of contract or for an unlawful means conspiracy. The High Court of Australia so held in O'Brien v. Dawson (1942) 66 CLR 18 and, in my judgment, the position is the same in English law.
69. As regards the claim against Alphasteel, Mr Tamlyn relies on clause 9.5 of the hive down agreement. The risk of claims by the claimant was of course known at the time of the hive down and the subsequent sale of the shares in Mir Steel to Libala. It is clear from the hive down agreement that the parties agreed that the risk of such claims should be borne by Mir Steel and indirectly by Libala. Thus, clause 9.5 provides that Mir Steel "shall be responsible for settling any claim made against it by Lictor Anstalt in respect of the hot strip mill situated at the property". The claims for inducing breach of contract and in conspiracy made by the claimant are, as it seems to me, clearly claims made by the claimant in respect of the hot strip mill. Mr Downes submitted that clause 9.5 was restricted in its effect to claims to title to the hot strip mill and to claims, such as the claim in conversion, which are dependent on such title. However, clause 9.5 is not drafted in a restrictive manner, but applies to "any claim". I see no reason for not giving it its obvious meaning.'
The appeal
'I hold that if a servant acting bona fide within the scope of his authority procures or causes the breach of a contract between his employer and a third person, he does not thereby become liable to an action in tort at the suit of the person whose contract has thereby been broken.'
The clause 9.5 issue
'(1) If the clause contains language which expressly exempts the person in whose favour it is made (hereafter called "the proferens") from the consequences of the negligence of his own servants, effect must be given to that provision. …
(2) If there is no express reference to negligence, the court must consider whether the words used are wide enough, in their ordinary meaning, to cover negligence on the part of the servants of the proferens. If a doubt arises at this point, it must be resolved against the proferens ….
(3) If the words used are wide enough for the above purpose, the court must then consider whether "the head of damage may be based on some ground other than that of negligence," to quote again Lord Greene in [Alderslade v. Hendon Laundry, Limited [1945] 1 KB 189, 192]. The "other ground" must not be so fanciful or remote that the proferens cannot be supposed to have desired protection against it; but subject to this qualification, which is no doubt to be implied from Lord Greene's words, the existence of a possible head of damage other than negligence is fatal to the proferens even if the words used are prima facie wide enough to cover negligence on the part of his servants.'
'… There can be no doubting the general authority of these principles, which have been applied in many cases, and the approach indicated is sound. The Courts should not ordinarily infer that a contracting party has given up rights which the law confers upon him to an extent greater than the contract terms indicate he has chosen to do; and if the contract terms can take legal and practical effect without denying him the rights he would ordinarily enjoy if the other party is negligent, they will be read as not denying him those rights unless they are so expressed as to make clear that they do. But, as the insurers in argument fully recognized, Lord Morton was giving helpful guidance on the proper approach to interpretation and not laying down a code. The passage does not provide a litmus test which, applied to the terms of the contract, yields a certain and predictable result. The Courts' task of ascertaining what the particular parties intended, in their particular commercial context, remains.'
'61. Lord Morton's tests were applied by the House of Lords in Smith v. South Wales Switchgear Co. Ltd. [1978] 1 WLR 165, but accompanied by words of caution about avoiding mechanistic construction. Lord Keith of Kinkel described the tests, at p. 177, as "guidelines" but emphasized that:
… the matter is essentially one of the ascertaining the intention of the contracting parties from the language they have used, considered in the light of surrounding circumstances which must be taken to have been within their knowledge.
62. Viscount Dilhorne, at p. 168, likewise quoted with approval a remark of Lord Justice Salmon (in Hollier v. Rambler Motors (AMC) Ltd. [1972] 2 QB 71 at p. 80) that –
… in the end you are driven back to construing the clause in question to see what it means …
and a passage in the judgment of Lord Justice Buckley in Gillespie Brothers & Co Ltd. v. Roy Bowles Transport Ltd. [1973] QB 400 at p. 419 in which he explained the basis of the guidelines as being an assumption that it was –
… inherently improbable that one party to the contract should intend to absolve the other party from the consequence of the latter's own negligence. The intention to do so must therefore be made perfectly clear …
63. Likewise in Ailsa Craig Fishing Co. Ltd. v. Malvern Fishing Co. Ltd. [1983] 1 WLR 964 at p. 970 Lord Fraser of Tullybelton said that the Canada Steamship guidelines were based on the "inherent improbability that the other party to a contract including such a clause intended to release the proferens from a liability that would otherwise fall upon him." For this reason, Lord Fraser said that the guidelines were not "applicable in their full rigour" to clauses which limited rather than excluded liability. I doubt, however, whether Lord Fraser intended to introduce one mechanistic rule (a distinction between limiting and excluding liability) to mitigate the rigour of another. The question, as it seems to me, is whether the language used by the parties, construed in the context of the whole instrument and against the admissible background, leads to the conclusion that they must have thought it went without saying that the words, although literally wide enough to cover negligence, did not do so. This in turn depends upon the precise language they have used and how inherently improbable it is in all the circumstances that they would have intended to exclude liability. In applying the Canada Steamship guidelines, it must also be borne in mind that, as Lord Denning MR pointed out in George Mitchell (Chesterhall) Ltd. v. Finney Lock Seeds Ltd. [1983] QB 284 at pp 297-298 (a perception which was adopted on appeal by the House of Lords: [1983] 2 AC 803 at pp. 812-813), they date from a time before the Unfair Contract Terms Act, 1977, when the Courts had no remedy but construction to relieve consumers from the burden of unreasonable exclusion clauses.'
'… Lord Morton was expressing broad guidelines not prescribing rigid rules. It cannot be right mechanically to apply the guideline incorporated in his third paragraph so as to produce a result inconsistent with the commercial purpose of the contract in question.'
Lord Justice Sullivan :
Lord Justice Mummery :