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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 >> Kawasaki Kisen Kaisha Ltd v James Kemball Ltd [2021] EWCA Civ 33 (18 January 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2021/33.html Cite as: [2021] 2 All ER (Comm) 1102, [2021] 3 All ER 978, [2021] EWCA Civ 33 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND & WALES
COMMERCIAL COURT (QBD)
MR JUSTICE TEARE
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE HENDERSON
and
LORD JUSTICE POPPLEWELL
____________________
KAWASAKI KISEN KAISHA LTD |
Appellant/Second Defendant |
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- and – |
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JAMES KEMBALL LIMITED |
Respondent/Claimant |
____________________
Nigel Jacobs QC and Ruth Hosking (instructed by HFW LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing date : 16 December 2020
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Popplewell :
Introduction
Outline of facts
The pleading
"26. In the premises [KKK] knowingly and intentionally procured and/or induced [K-Euro] to breach the Service Agreement (for Period 3) with [JKL] directly and/or indirectly in order to enable O.N.E. to take over the haulage operations which would otherwise have been performed by [JKL] for Period 3 under the Service Agreement:
(i) By reason of (inter alia) its relationship with [K-Euro] and its involvement in the conclusion of the SPA and Service Agreements, [KKK] must have been aware of the existence of the Service Agreement concluded between [JKL] and [K-Euro] and/or that [K-Euro] had agreed that [JKL] would provide haulage services for an extended period thereunder.
(ii) [KKK] was or must have been aware, or was at least sufficiently reckless in regard to, the probable consequences for the ability of [K-Euro] to continue to perform the Service Agreement with [JKL] following the establishment of O.N.E. as part of the joint venture. Under the joint venture O.N.E. would take over the haulage operations of the joint venture companies in the United Kingdom, thereby disabling [K-Euro] from performing its obligations under the Service Agreement with [JKL].
(iii) The establishment of O.N.E. and its take-over of [JKL's] and [K-Euro's] services in the United Kingdom thus meant that [K-Euro] was unable to perform the Service Agreement (as [K-Euro] repeatedly acknowledged in 2017 - 2018). The establishment of O.N.E. was inconsistent with the ability of [K-Euro] to perform the Service Agreement as [KKK] must have known.
27. In these circumstances [KKK] directly or indirectly induced and/or procured [K-Euro] to breach the Service Agreement in order to enable O.N.E. to take over the import and export haulage operations conducted under the Service Agreement by [JKL]. By establishing the O.N.E subsidiary or group of subsidiaries in order to take over the haulage operations for Period 3 which were to be undertaken by [JKL] under the Service Agreement with [K-Euro], [KKK] knowingly and intentionally procured and/or induced [K-Euro] (whether directly or indirectly) to breach the Service Agreement with [JKL]."
(1) In paragraph 26 the allegation that KKK knowingly "procured and/or induced" K-Euro to breach the Service Agreement is expanded to one that KKK "procured and/or induced and/or encouraged and/or persuaded" K-Euro to breach the Service Agreement.
(2) There are added two subparagraphs to paragraph 26 after subparagraph (i) in the following terms:
(ia) In order to enable [KKK] to carry out the O.N.E. joint venture and by reason of their close relationship, [KKK] encouraged and/or persuaded [K-Euro] to breach the Agreement. Further or alternatively it is reasonable to infer that [K-Euro] would have been unwilling to breach its Agreement with [JKL] in the absence of encouragement or persuasion and/or some form of protection from [KKK].
(ib) Further or alternatively, the establishment and operation of the O.N.E. joint venture disabled [K-Euro] from performing the Agreement and constituted a transaction or arrangement which was inconsistent with the Agreement. This conduct in turn procured and/or induced and/or encouraged and/or persuaded [K-Euro] to breach the Service Agreement.
(3) There is added a new paragraph 26A under the heading "Intention" in the following terms:
26A.The Claimant will contend that the breach of the Agreement by [K-Euro] was a means by which [ KKK] would ensure that O.N.E. was able to take over responsibility for the haulage operations which were the subject-matter of the Agreement. The O.N.E joint venture could not be performed without the breach of the Agreement. [KKK] was actively seeking to take over and obtain a direct economic benefit or advantage from the operation of the haulage business.
(4) There is added a new paragraph 27 under the heading "Causation" in the following terms:
The establishment of O.N.E. by [KKK] and its take-over of the haulage operations under the Agreement were instrumental in causing or facilitating the breach of the Agreement by [K-Euro]. Further or alternatively in the event that [KKK] had not encouraged and/or persuaded [K-Euro] to breach the Agreement, [K-Euro] would or could have sought to maintain the Agreement with [JKL] rather than acting in breach of the Agreement. It is reasonable to infer that [K-Euro] would have been unwilling to breach its Agreement with [JKL] in the absence of encouragement or persuasion and/or some form of protection from [KKK].
The Judgment
The arguments
The merits test
(1) It is not enough that the claim is merely arguable; it must carry some degree of conviction: ED & F Man Liquid Products Ltd v Patel [2003] EWCA Civ 472 at paragraph 8; Global Asset Capital Inc. v Aabar Block SARL [2017] 4 WLR 164 at paragraph 27(1).
(2) The pleading must be coherent and properly particularised: Elite Property Holdings Ltd v Barclays Bank Plc [2019] EWCA Civ 204 at paragraph 42.
(3) The pleading must be supported by evidence which establishes a factual basis which meets the merits test; it is not sufficient simply to plead allegations which if true would establish a claim; there must be evidential material which establishes a sufficiently arguable case that the allegations are correct: Elite Property at paragraph 41.
The law governing the tort of inducing breach of contract
(1) there must be a breach of contract by B;
(2) A must induce B to break his contract with C by persuading, encouraging or assisting him to do so;
(3) A must know of the contract and know his conduct will have that effect;
(4) A must intend to procure the breach of contract either as an end in itself or as the means by which he achieves some further end;
(5) if A has a lawful justification for inducing B to break his contract with C, that may provide a defence against liability.
Inducement
"20. ……liability under Lumley v Gye 2 E & B 216 requires only the degree of participation in the breach of contract which satisfies the general requirements of accessory liability for the wrongful act of another person: for the relevant principles see CBS Songs Ltd v Amstrad Consumer Electronics plc [1988] AC 1013 and Unilever plc v Chefaro Proprietaries Ltd [1994] FSR 135."
"36. This treats the distinction as turning simply upon whether there was communication, directly or through an agent, between the defendant and the contract-breaker. But, like Lord Denning in the Daily Mirror case, I cannot see why this should make a difference. If that is what the distinction between "direct" and "indirect" means, it conceals the real question which has to be asked in relation to Lumley v Gye 2 E & B 216: did the defendant's acts of encouragement, threat, persuasion and so forth have a sufficient causal connection with the breach by the contracting party to attract accessory liability? The court in Lumley v Gye made it clear that the principle upon which a person is liable for the act of another in breaking his contract is the same as that on which he is liable for the act of another in committing a tort. It follows, as I have said, that the relevant principles are to be found in cases such as CBS Songs Ltd v Amstrad Consumer Electronics plc [1988] AC 1013 and Unilever plc v Chefaro Proprietaries Ltd [1994] FSR 135."
"178. With hindsight it is evident that application of the Lumley v Gye tort to a 'prevention' case was unfortunate. There is a crucial difference between cases where the defendant induces a contracting party not to perform his contractual obligations and cases where the defendant prevents a contracting party from carrying out his contractual obligations. In inducement cases the very act of joining with the contracting party and inducing him to break his contract is sufficient to found liability as an accessory. In prevention cases the defendant does not join with the contracting party in a wrong (breach of contract) committed by the latter. There is no question of accessory liability. In prevention cases the defendant acts independently of the contracting party. The defendant's liability is a "stand-alone" liability. Consistently with this, tortious liability does not arise in prevention cases unless, as was the position in GWK, the preventative means used were independently unlawful."
….
180 Given this difference between prevention and inducement, it is confusing and misleading to treat prevention cases as part and parcel of the same tort as inducement cases. The rationale is not the same, nor are the ingredients. But the rationale and ingredients of liability in prevention cases are the same as those of the tort of interference with a business by unlawful means. Prevention cases should be recognised for what they are: straightforward examples of the latter tort, rather than as exemplifying a wider version of Lumley v Gye labelled "interference with contractual relations"."
"However, to prevent performance of a contractual obligation is not the same thing as inducing its breach. The former may give rise to the tort of causing loss by unlawful means. The latter requires the defendant's conduct to have operated on the will of the contracting party: see Lord Nicholls' speech in the OBG case [2008] 1 AC 1 paras 174-180."
Intention
"42. The next question is what counts as an intention to procure a breach of contract. It is necessary for this purpose to distinguish between ends, means and consequences. If someone knowingly causes a breach of contract, it does not normally matter that it is the means by which he intends to achieve some further end or even that he would rather have been able to achieve that end without causing a breach. Mr Gye would very likely have preferred to be able to obtain Miss Wagner's services without her having to break her contract. But that did not matter. Again, people seldom knowingly cause loss by unlawful means out of simple disinterested malice. It is usually to achieve the further end of securing an economic advantage to themselves. As I said earlier, the Dunlop employees who took off the tyres in GWK Ltd v Dunlop Rubber Co Ltd 42 TLR 376 intended to advance the interests of the Dunlop company.
43. On the other hand, if the breach of contract is neither an end in itself nor a means to an end, but merely a foreseeable consequence, then in my opinion it cannot for this purpose be said to have been intended. That, I think, is what judges and writers mean when they say that the claimant must have been "targeted" or "aimed at". In my opinion the majority of the Court of Appeal was wrong to have allowed the action in Millar v Bassey [1994] EMLR 44 to proceed. Miss Bassey had broken her contract to perform for the recording company and it was a foreseeable consequence that the recording company would have to break its contracts with the accompanying musicians, but those breaches of contract were neither an end desired by Miss Bassey nor a means of achieving that end."
"191. I turn next to the mental ingredient of the Lumley v Gye tort. The mental ingredient is an intention by the defendant to procure or persuade ("induce") the third party to break his contract with the claimant. The defendant is made responsible for the third party's breach because of his intentional causative participation in that breach. Causative participation is not enough. A stranger to a contract may know nothing of the contract. Quite unknowingly and unintentionally he may procure a breach of the contract by offering an inconsistent deal to a contracting party which persuades the latter to default on his contractual obligations. The stranger is not liable in such a case. Nor is he liable if he acts carelessly. He owes no duty of care to the victim of the breach of contract. Negligent interference is not actionable."
Application of the law to the facts of this case
Inducement: encouragement or persuasion
Inducement: inconsistent dealing
"[13] Fourthly, A must induce B to break his contract with C by persuading, encouraging or assisting him to do so. In Delictual Liability (3rd ed) at p 39, Professor Joe Thomson states that the inducement must be directed at B, the person in the contractual relationship with the victim, C, and refers to Middlebrook Mushrooms Ltd v Transport and General Workers' Union. In that case a trade union carried on a campaign against an employer by distributing leaflets to shoppers outside supermarkets to which the employer supplied its mushrooms, urging the shoppers to boycott the employer's produce. The Court of Appeal held that the trade union had not committed the tort of inducing a breach of contract as the defendant's members directed their persuasion to the purchasing public and not the (allegedly) contract breaking supermarket. See also Calor Gas Ltd v Express Fuels (Scotland) Ltd, Lord Malcolm at 2008 SLT, p 135, para 47. It is clear from BMTA v Salvadori and BMTA v Gray that the tort or delict is not confined to circumstances where A has to persuade B to break his contract but can also be committed where A has dealings with B which A knows are inconsistent with the contract between B and C. In either event A induces or assists B to do something (or to refrain from doing something) which involves B breaking his contract with C."
"Again, so far from persuading or inducing or procuring one of the parties to the contract to break it, the third party may commit an actionable interference with the contract, against the will of both, and without the knowledge of either, if, with knowledge of the contract, he does an act which, if done by one of the parties to it, would have been a breach. Of this type of interference the case of G.W.K v Dunlop Rubber Co Ltd 42 TLR 376 affords a striking example."
"But the contract breaker may himself be a willing party and there seems to be no doubt that if a third party, with knowledge of a contract between the contract breaker and another, has dealings with the contract breaker which the third party knows to be inconsistent with the contract, he has committed an actionable interference……"
"361. If the fine dividing line in this case between prevention and inducement turns upon the ability to categorise Michael's actions as a diversion of funds away from HHL then, on the particular facts of this case and even in the absence of any unperformed contractual obligation to fund HHL, he was guilty of that. Although those funds did not reach HHL's bank account, they could and should have done so. Whereas a simple finding that Michael could have made the funds available to HHL, but simply chose not to, might arguably leave PB on the wrong side of that fine line, my further conclusion that he should in the circumstances have done so sustains their claim under para 10.2 of the RAPOC."
Intention
Conclusion
Lord Justice Henderson :
Lord Justice David Richards :