BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Greene King Plc v Quisine Restaurants Ltd & Anor [2012] EWCA Civ 698 (24 May 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2012/698.html Cite as: [2012] EWCA Civ 698 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION
CARDIFF DISTRICT REGISTRY
HHJ MILWYN JARMAN QC
0CF30145
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE RIMER
and
LORD JUSTICE PATTEN
____________________
GREENE KING PLC |
Claimant/ Respondent |
|
- and - |
||
QUISINE RESTAURANTS LIMITED NAZAR NAFIE SHASHA |
Defendants/Appellants |
|
- and - |
||
STEPHEN KEITH DITE |
Defendant |
____________________
John McGhee QC and Paul Clarke (instructed by Birketts LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing date : 24th April 2012
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Patten :
"1.1 the Assignee shall punctually pay the rents and perform and observe the covenants and other terms of the Underlease;
1.2 if the Assignee shall make any default in payment of the rents or in performing or observing any of the covenants or other terms of the Underlease, the Undertenant will pay the rents and perform and observe the covenants or terms in respect of which the Assignee shall be in default and make good to the Landlord and/or Tenant on demand and indemnify the Landlord and/or Tenant against all losses, damages, costs and expenses arising or incurred by the Landlord and/or Tenant as a result of such non-payment, non-performance or non-observance notwithstanding:
(a) any time or indulgence granted by the Landlord and/or Tenant to the Assignee or any neglect or forbearance of the Landlord and/or Tenant in enforcing the payment of the rents or the observance or performance of the covenants or other terms of the Underlease;
(b) that the terms of the Underlease may have been varied by agreement between the parties (but subject always to section 18 Landlord and Tenant (Covenants) Act 1995);
(c) that the Assignee shall have surrendered part of the Premises in which event the liability of the Undertenant under this guarantee shall continue in respect of the part of the Premises not so surrendered after making any necessary apportionments under section 140 Law of Property Act 1925;
(d) any other act or thing by which but for this provision the Undertenant would have been released."
"The Tenant hereby undertakes with the Undertenant's Guarantor to use all reasonable endeavours to give written notice to the Undertenant's Guarantor each and every time the rents reserved by the Underlease are more than two months in arrear."
"27. I am not satisfied in the end that this is a clause which gives rise to a condition which is precedent to the liability of Quisine or Mr Shasha. It does seem to me that the wording, had it been so fundamentally important, could have been put on the basis of a mandatory obligation rather than simply to use reasonable efforts. It is not couched in the language of the classic condition precedent, in my judgment.
28. Despite this, Mr Spackman submits that, even if it is not a condition precedent, it is a term which goes to the root of the contract for the reasons already submitted. On the other hand, Mr Clarke submits that the clause does not say whether the rent referred to is a sum of two months rent or any sum which is owed for more than two months. He pointed out that Mr Dite had already given a substantial rent deposit, so that arrears were not as high as the rent deposit when notice was first given. He submits, therefore, that there was no prejudice to Mr Shasha or Quisine. A lease could have been taken, but that was not done, under s.17 when the notice was eventually served in December.
29. In my judgment, I am not satisfied that this matter does go to the root of the contract, for reasons I have already referred to. It was intended to give Mr Shasha some comfort and some information as to what was going on but, in my judgment, it falls short of the sort of term which would be necessary in order to say that this went to the root of the contract."
"31. Mr Spackman submits, nevertheless, that if there was a breach which was not repudiatory, it is a breach which, nevertheless, entitles Mr Shasha to damages. Mr Spackman's primary submission under this head is that those damages would equate to the amounts which Greene King now claim. I am sure that now, looking back, Mr Shasha is convinced that, had he received a notice earlier on in 2008, he would have taken steps to remedy the situation, but I am not persuaded that in reality, at the time, that he is likely to have done so. The situation was that there were arrears of some £55,000 by mid March, but there was a payment made at the end of March and a further payment made by the end of June. Mr Shasha told me in evidence that he was very keen to sell the business at the premises and to have no further part in it. In my judgment, it is unlikely at that time, had he been told in March or June 2008 that there were sums, albeit less than appeared at December 2008, that he would have taken any further steps other than to persuade Mr Dite to pay the monies. The reason he did not take any steps at December 2008, in my judgment, was more likely to be because there were payments being made, albeit not in the full amounts, he, Mr Shasha, did not want any further involvement in the premises and it is unlikely he would have taken any further steps had he known of the true position earlier on."
"In consideration of the contractor and of the Bank at the request of the guarantor severally entering into this agreement, the guarantor hereby agrees with the contractor and by way of separate agreement hereby agrees with the Bank and undertakes as follows, that is to say: (a) That the company shall subject to the said works being duly executed in accordance with this agreement, duly and punctually make to the contractor the payments prescribed by clause 2 hereof, and that upon any default for three days or more on the part of the company (written notice of which shall be given by the contractor to the guarantor within six days of such default) in making any payment on the prescribed date he the guarantor will himself immediately make the payment so in default to the contractor."
"Thus the event on which Taglioni has agreed to make the payment is not the default by itself on the part of the company but upon default six days' notice of which shall have been given to Taglioni by the appellant; and no such notice was ever given. The notice is just as much a condition on which Taglioni becomes liable as the default itself is. Inasmuch as the notice was never given there was no default on the part of Taglioni, and therefore the liability of the respondents never came into existence."
"8. Lombard agrees with the Depositor that it will use its best endeavours to ensure that the machinery referred to in the Schedule to the Lease Agreement shall remain in the possession of the Lessee and will notify the Depositor should the Lessee propose to sell or assign its interest in any of the said machinery.
9. Upon the Lessee being in default under the Lease Agreement Lombard shall agree to notify the Depositor whereupon Lombard and the Depositor shall consult with a view to determine what course of action will be taken by Lombard following such default and without limiting the generality of that action Lombard may at its option assign the Lease Agreement and any security held therefor to the Depositor."
"10. In the context of suretyship contracts there has been a natural tendency to refer to the creditor's promise as a condition precedent rather than as a condition. This is because many guarantees are unilateral instruments, containing no promises on the part of the creditor except in so far as the recital of the consideration may refer to such a promise. See, for example, United Dominions Trust (Commercial) Ltd. v. Eagle Aircraft Services Ltd. (1968) 1 WLR 74; (1968) 1 All ER 104 which, though not involving a guarantee, concerned a unilateral undertaking. This tendency in no way affects the discussion in the preceding paragraph.
11. In deciding whether a promise has the status and effect of a condition, courts are not too ready to construe a term as a condition and, at least where other considerations are finely balanced, will hold that a term is of such a kind that breach of it does not give rise to an automatic right to rescind. This approach is explained by a preference for a construction that will encourage performance rather than avoidance of contractual obligations: Cehave N.V. v. Bremer m.b.H. (1976) QB 44, at pp 70-71; Bunge Corporation, at pp 715-716; pp 541-542 of All ER
12. Three factors favouring an interpretation of cll.8 and 9 that gives them the status of conditions may be mentioned. First, in the event of breach, neither clause is readily enforceable by way of an action for damages. Damages for breach would be difficult to prove. Secondly, the two clauses impose an obligation to give the surety notice and the purpose of imposing an obligation to give that notice is to enable the surety to take such action as it can to safeguard its position and its interests. Notice of default would alert the appellant to the immediacy of its risk, enable it to persuade the debtor to remedy the default and put possible alternative proposals to Lombard for its consideration. Notice of a proposed assignment would possibly enable the appellant to make suggestions for the disposition of the debtor's interest in the machinery to the best advantage. Thirdly, as Deane J. explains in his judgment, it was clearly disadvantageous to the surety to be faced with a situation in which it would be liable as surety for a lessee of equipment who no longer enjoyed possession of that equipment, notwithstanding that it remained liable to pay the rent.
13. On the other hand the provisions are not expressed to be conditions. No time is fixed within which notice is to be given (cf. Midland Counties Motor Finance Co. Ltd. v. Slade (1951) 1 KB 346, at p 351; United Dominions Trust (Commercial) Ltd.). And the language in which the clauses are expressed does not provide a clear indication that they were intended to be fundamental obligations or to operate as conditions.
14. If the contract in the present case were to be viewed as an ordinary contract without regard to its special character as a suretyship contract, we incline to think that the factors already mentioned would establish cll.8 and 9 to be conditions. It is necessary to take into account as well the special character of a suretyship contract and of the relationship that it creates between the parties. As appears later, when this is done, the relevant obligations in cll.8 and 9 are seen clearly to have the status of conditions. As a preliminary to a consideration of this matter it is necessary to examine the special principle, said to apply to a suretyship contract, that the surety is discharged from its obligations by the creditor's breach of that contract, so long at any rate as the breach materially prejudices the interests of the surety."
"15. The provisions of cll.8 and 9 of the Security Deposit Agreement make clear Ankar's concern to avoid a situation in which its liability as surety for Manufacturing as "lessee" in possession of the equipment had been transformed into a liability as surety for the performance by Manufacturing of its obligations under the lease in circumstances where Manufacturing had ceased to be entitled to possession of the leased machinery. The reason for that is not hard to discern. Obviously, in the latter situation, any rights of subrogation against Manufacturing would be of dubious value. Thus it was that cl.8 of the Security Deposit Agreement expressly required Lombard to use its best endeavours to ensure that the equipment remained in the possession of Manufacturing while cl.9 contemplated that, in the event of default by Manufacturing in performance of its obligations under the lease, Ankar might negotiate with Lombard for an assignment to it of Lombard's interest as lessor of the leased equipment. In that context, it simply could not be said that, viewed objectively, Lombard's departure from its obligations under cll.8 and 9 was not sufficiently serious to preclude the existence of the circumstances under which Ankar had agreed to be liable as surety. To the contrary, the failure to notify Ankar of Manufacturing's default (cl.9) and intended assignment (cl.8) precluded the circumstances existing in which Ankar could enjoy the agreed opportunity of attempting to avoid the very situation which it was obviously most concerned to avoid, namely, the situation in which it would be liable as surety for a lessee of equipment who remained liable to pay the rent for the equipment but no longer enjoyed the quid pro quo of possession of it. It follows that Lombard was not entitled to claim from Ankar, as surety, payment of the moneys owing to it by Manufacturing under the lease or to apply the amount deposited with it by Ankar in payment of those moneys. It may well be that this result in the instant case is open to the justified criticism that it is brought about by the application to a commercial transaction of a special rule which reflects a common law approach to sureties which is a survival "of the days when commercial dealings were simpler, when surety companies were unknown, when sureties were commonly generous friends whose confidence had been abused" (see Cardozo, The Nature of the Judicial Process, (1921), p 154 and cf. Midland Counties Motor Finance Co. Ltd. v. Slade (1951) 1 KB 346, at p 352). That special rule can however be excluded by contrary agreement of the parties to a commercial transaction if they so desire. The wider question whether the traditional special rules applicable to sureties should be made generally inapplicable to a guarantee given in a purely commercial context raises considerations of general policy which, in the context of settled law, are best left to the legislature to resolve."
Lord Justice Rimer :
Lord Justice Laws :