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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 >> Ntzegkoutanis v Kimionis & Ors [2023] EWCA Civ 1480 (12 December 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2023/1480.html Cite as: [2024] 1 BCLC 354, [2024] Bus LR 339, [2023] EWCA Civ 1480, [2024] BCC 68, [2023] WLR(D) 517 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
INSOLVENCY AND COMPANIES LIST (ChD)
His Honour Judge Klein (sitting as a Judge of the High Court)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE SNOWDEN
and
LADY JUSTICE WHIPPLE
____________________
GIANNIS NTZEGKOUTANIS |
Petitioner/ Appellant |
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- and - |
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(1) GEORGIOS KIMIONIS |
Respondent to the Petition and Appeal |
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(2) COINOMI LIMITED (3) COINOMI HOLDINGS LTD (CYPRUS) (4) COINOMI LTD (BVI) |
Respondents to the Petition |
____________________
Stephen Robins KC (instructed by DAC Beachcroft LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 1 November 2023
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Newey:
Basic facts
i) On 12 October 2018, the third respondent to the petition, Coinomi Holdings Ltd ("Coinomi Cyprus"), was incorporated in Cyprus at Mr Kimionis' instigation;
ii) On 12 December 2018, Coinomi Cyprus applied to register the "Coinomi" trademark with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office;
iii) On 20 December 2018, Mr Kimionis gave instructions for ownership of the "coinomi.com" domain name to be transferred to Coinomi Cyprus;
iv) In the autumn of 2019, Mr Kimionis gave instructions for the developer of the Coinomi app given in the Google Play Store and the Apple App Store to be changed from the Company to Coinomi Cyprus;
v) On 25 November 2019, a further company called "Coinomi Ltd" ("Coinomi BVI"), the fourth respondent to the petition, was incorporated in the British Virgin Islands ("the BVI") at Mr Kimionis' instigation as a subsidiary of Coinomi Cyprus;
vi) By the end of January 2020, Mr Kimionis had procured the transfer of the intellectual property in respect of the source code of the Coinomi app to Coinomi Cyprus. Coinomi Cyprus subsequently licensed Coinomi BVI to use that source code;
vii) On 29 July 2020, Coinomi Cyprus applied to register Coinomi's logo with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office; and
viii) Mr Kimionis is the ultimate beneficial owner of Coinomi Cyprus and Coinomi BVI.
"30.1 Coinomi Cyprus and Coinomi BVI are liable to the Company as knowing recipients in respect of such of its assets as they received and hold all such assets and their proceeds on constructive trust for the Company.
30.2 Further or alternatively, Coinomi Cyprus and Coinomi BVI dishonestly assisted Kimionis' breaches of fiduciary duty to the Company referred to in paragraph 26 above and are liable to the Company on that basis."
"The Petitioner therefore prays as follows:
32.1 for an order that Kimionis do sell his shares in the Company to the Petitioner, at a valuation reflecting the losses caused to the Company by his conduct;
32.2 for an order that the First, Third and Fourth Respondents [i.e. Mr Kimionis, Coinomi Cyprus and Coinomi BVI], as applicable, do account and/or pay damages to, and/or compensate the Company in respect of their gains and the Company's losses resulting from the conduct complained of in this Petition;
32.3 for declarations of constructive trust in favour of the Company in respect of such property in the hands of the First, Third and Fourth Respondents as properly belongs to the Company;
32.4 in the alternative and to the extent necessary, the Petitioner seeks authorisation to pursue such litigation on behalf of the Company as may be necessary to vindicate its interests and obtain compensation and/or other remedies pursuant to the conduct complained of in this Petition; and
32.5 for such other order as the Court thinks just."
"[T]he Coinomi business never belonged to [the Company]. Rather, it belonged initially to Mr Kimionis personally and subsequently to Dollzen, which retained [the Company] to act as its agent and to perform the various functions identified above. The transfer of Dollzen's assets to Coinomi Cyprus did not involve any misappropriation of [the Company's] property. Rather, it was part of a restructuring of the business which was ultimately beneficially owned by Mr Kimionis. Since Dollzen did not have any creditors or any shareholders other than Mr Kimionis, it was not improper for him to restructure his business by transferring Dollzen's property to Coinomi Cyprus in this way."
Unfair prejudice petitions
"(a) that the company's affairs are being or have been conducted in a manner that is unfairly prejudicial to the interests of members generally or of some part of its members (including at least himself), or
(b) that an actual or proposed act or omission of the company (including an act or omission on its behalf) is or would be so prejudicial."
"(1) If the court is satisfied that a petition under this Part is well founded, it may make such order as it thinks fit for giving relief in respect of the matters complained of.
(2) Without prejudice to the generality of subsection (1), the court's order may—
(a) regulate the conduct of the company's affairs in the future;
(b) require the company—
(i) to refrain from doing or continuing an act complained of, or
(ii) to do an act that the petitioner has complained it has omitted to do;
(c) authorise civil proceedings to be brought in the name and on behalf of the company by such person or persons and on such terms as the court may direct;
(d) require the company not to make any, or any specified, alterations in its articles without the leave of the court;
(e) provide for the purchase of the shares of any members of the company by other members or by the company itself and, in the case of a purchase by the company itself, the reduction of the company's capital accordingly."
The Judgment
"whether the petitioner ought to be permitted to proceed to trial on the petition in respect of matters, which could have been litigated against [Mr Kimionis], [Coinomi] Cyprus and [Coinomi] BVI by way of a derivative claim, which, [Mr Kimionis] argued, by being pursued by way of an unfair prejudice petition, outflanked the limitations in [the 2006 Act] on making derivative claims".
"It is a rare and exceptional case which the court will permit to proceed by way of an unfair prejudice petition when it would otherwise be brought by way of a derivative claim, because to permit the case to proceed by way of an unfair prejudice petition subverts the regime (now the statutory regime) which imposes limitations on making derivative claims. In deciding whether the case before it is exceptional, the court will focus on the relief claimed and ought only to permit the case for that relief to proceed by way of an unfair prejudice petition if, at the earliest stage of the proceedings, the court is satisfied at least that that relief can be conveniently adjudicated on as part of the unfair prejudice petition proceedings. If the court is not so satisfied, to the extent of the relief in issue, the case will be an abuse of process and ought not to be permitted to proceed."
"91. Turning then to my reasons, I am satisfied that, as Mr Mather also partially accepted, if the misappropriation allegations had been pleaded in a derivative claim, they would have been more fully pleaded than they are now, and that, in order for a court to determine liability in respect of the compensation claim and the constructive trust claim, the misappropriation allegations would need to be more fully pleaded. The petitioner would have to particularise '[the Company's] business and assets' (and, possibly, also 'the corporate opportunity associated with [the Company]') which he says [Mr Kimionis] misappropriated. He would also have to particularise those of [the Company's] assets he contends [Coinomi] Cyprus and [Coinomi] BVI received. Unless the court made findings about the misappropriation and/or the receipt of particular assets, it would be difficult, at least, to quantify the compensation claim or grant specific declarations as part of the constructive trust claim.
92. Further, as Mr Mather also accepted, correctly in my view, any valuation for, say, a buy-out order may not need to take into account precisely the loss to [the Company] arising from any misappropriation the petitioner establishes, or the gain made by [Mr Kimionis], [Coinomi] Cyprus or [Coinomi] BVI. On the other hand, if the compensation claim is permitted to proceed to trial and liability is established, it is much more likely that the court would have to undertake a complex quantification exercise to determine [the Company's] loss or the gains of [Mr Kimionis], [Coinomi] Cyprus and [Coinomi] BVI."
"(i) but for the petition, the compensation claim and the constructive trust claim would have been pursued by way of a derivative claim, (ii) I am not able to decide that, if a derivative claim had been made, at the permission stage the court would have permitted the claim to proceed, (iii) the compensation claim and the constructive trust claims cannot be conveniently tried as part of the petition proceedings and (iv) the Chime approach ought to apply in this case".
That being so, and the Judge being "satisfied that, if those claims proceed by way of the petition, the court's process would be used for a purpose or in a way significantly different from its ordinary and proper use", the Judge concluded that "their place in the petition is an abuse of process" and "it is appropriate to strike out those claims against [Mr Kimionis]": paragraph 117. The Judge observed, however, in paragraph 120:
"Although [Mr Kimionis] has succeeded on the application, it may turn out that the result is unsatisfactory for him. The petitioner may now begin a derivative claim against [Coinomi] Cyprus and [Coinomi] BVI, making the misappropriation allegations, and the compensation claim and the constructive trust claim. If he does so, it may be that the case management of the petition will be delayed as a result, and it may turn out that the compensation claim and the constructive trust claim are tried at the same time as the petition."
The appeal
The impact of section 260(2) of the 2006 Act
Chapter 1 of Part 11 of the 2006 Act
"(1) This Chapter applies to proceedings in England and Wales or Northern Ireland by a member of a company—
(a) in respect of a cause of action vested in the company, and
(b) seeking relief on behalf of the company.
This is referred to in this Chapter as a 'derivative claim'.
(2) A derivative claim may only be brought—
(a) under this Chapter, or
(b) in pursuance of an order of the court in proceedings under section 994 (proceedings for protection of members against unfair prejudice).
(3) A derivative claim under this Chapter may be brought only in respect of a cause of action arising from an actual or proposed act or omission involving negligence, default, breach of duty or breach of trust by a director of the company.
The cause of action may be against the director or another person (or both) …."
"The sections in Chapter 1 of this Part introduce a two-stage procedure for permission to continue a derivative claim. At the first stage the applicant will be required to make a prima facie case for permission to continue a derivative claim and the court will be required to consider the issue on the basis of the evidence filed by the applicant only, without requiring evidence from the defendant. The courts must dismiss the application if the applicant cannot establish a prima facie case. At the second stage – but before the substantive action begins – the court may require evidence to be provided by the company. The sections set out a list of the matters which the court must take into account in considering whether to give permission and the circumstances in which the court is bound to refuse permission."
Mr Kimionis' case
"proceedings in England and Wales … by a member of a company—
(a) in respect of a cause of action vested in the company, and
(b) seeking relief on behalf of the company".
That definition applies as regards the claims made in paragraphs 32.2 and 32.3 of the petition. To that extent, the petition involved proceedings by Mr Ntzegkoutanis as a member of the Company "in respect of a cause of action vested in the company" and "seeking relief on behalf of the company". That, Mr Robins argued, is evident from the terms of the petition. Paragraph 32.2 asks that Mr Kimionis account and/or pay damages "to … the Company" and/or "compensate the Company" and paragraph 32.3 seeks declarations of constructive trust "in favour of the Company" (emphasis added in each case). Moreover, such relief is said to be warranted because of breaches by Mr Kimionis of duties he owed to the Company as a director. Parliament can be seen to have had in mind, Mr Robins argued, the grant of relief such as would vindicate a company's cause of action and preclude future proceedings in respect of it. That would be the case, Mr Robins said, as regards the relief claimed in paragraphs 32.2 and 32.3 of the petition.
"In my judgment, the position here in the BVI is clear. A derivative action requires permission under section 184C [of the Business Companies Act 2004]. In considering whether to grant permission, the Court here is mandated to take into account a number of important considerations. The Court may not give permission unless it is satisfied that the company itself does not intend to make the claim and that it is in the interests of the company that conduct of the proceedings should not be left to the company or to a majority of its board or of its members (emphasis added). These conditions are of so stringent a nature that in my judgment it is an abuse of the process to attempt to mount a derivative claim without the consent of the Court under section 184C. If that permission is granted, then it seems to me that it is a matter of case management whether the derivative claim is prosecuted as part of unfair prejudice proceedings or is tried together with them or separately, but to attempt to bring such a claim without permission is, in my judgment, an abuse."
Mr Robins pointed out that Bannister J arrived at this conclusion even though the BVI legislation did not contain a provision corresponding to section 260(2) of the 2006 Act.
Analysis
"Whether or not a court hearing an 'unfair prejudice' petition has jurisdiction in the strict sense to order a respondent against whom a breach of duty to the company has been established to pay compensation, or to make restitution, to the company, there is no doubt at all that in many cases the jurisdiction to do so has been assumed, that many orders of that sort have been made, and that it is highly convenient that they should have been made."
i) are not "in respect of a cause of action vested in the company" within the meaning of section 260(1)(a) but are rather in respect of the cause of action vested in Mr Ntzegkoutanis as a shareholder by virtue of Part 30; and
ii) are not "seeking relief on behalf of the company" within the meaning of section 260(1)(b) but are rather brought by Mr Ntzegkoutanis on his own behalf, to obtain relief for his own benefit.
The "Chime approach" and its application
Authorities
"I would not say that there is no such jurisdiction in the theoretical sense of the type of case that the court is capable of entertaining. And even in the practical sense of the circumstances in which it is proper for the court to entertain the case or to make a particular order, I stop short of saying that there is absolutely no such jurisdiction. I would not rule out the possibility of circumstances in which it can be seen that such an order could properly be made. But such circumstances, even if they can arise, would in any case of complexity be rare and exceptional."
Bokhary PJ said in paragraph 28 that no such circumstances had arisen in the case before the Court, adding:
"Quite apart from anything else undesirable, pursuing relief in respect of the CAL loans by way of an unfair prejudice petition rather than by way of a derivative action would entail the risk of the respondents or one or more of them facing a claim for such relief in a derivative action after the petitioners had failed to obtain the same in the petition."
"61. Although … the court has jurisdiction, in the strict sense, to make the orders sought (other than the order against CAL which is not a party to the petition) it would not, in my opinion, be proper for the court on this petition to entertain what would, in effect, be Chime's action against the directors for their breach of duty in causing the loan to be made. If there is misconduct it can be established in a derivative action. If the court, on hearing the petition, thinks that a derivative action prosecuting this alleged misconduct should be brought, it can make an order to that effect under s.168(2)(b). It could also, if persuaded it were a convenient course to adopt, order that the petition and the derivative action be tried together.
62. As a general rule, in my opinion, the court should not in a s.168A [i.e. unfair prejudice] petition make an order for payment to be made by a respondent director to the company unless the order corresponds with the order to which the company would have been entitled had the allegations in question been successfully prosecuted in an action by the company (or in a derivative action in the name of the company). If the order does not so correspond then, either the company will have received less than it is entitled to, in which case it will be entitled to relitigate the issue in an action against the director for the balance, or the company will have received more than it was entitled to, in which case a clear injustice to the director will have been perpetrated. Nor, in my opinion, should the court allow a prayer in the petition for payment by the respondent director of compensation or of restitution to the company to stand unless it is clear at the pleading stage that a determination of the amount, if any, of the director's liability at law to the company can conveniently be dealt with in the hearing of the petition. In any other case, in my opinion, if the allegations against the director are proper to be relied on as evidence of unfairly prejudicial conduct, the appropriate relief to be sought would be an order under s.168A(2)(b) for a derivative action to be brought for the recovery of the sum legally due. It would be proper for the company to express its views as to whether it would be in its interests for such an action to be brought."
"Unfair prejudice proceedings are concerned to bring mismanagement to an end; derivative actions are concerned to provide a remedy for misconduct: see Re Charnley Davies Ltd (No.2) [1990] BCLC 760; Re Chime Corp Ltd (2004) 7 HKCFAR 546. While the court may have jurisdiction in the strict sense on a petition under s.168A to order payment of compensation to the company, the derivative action is the proper vehicle for obtaining such relief where the plaintiff's complaint is of misconduct rather than mismanagement: see Re Chime Corp Ltd at p.571."
"27. The first question to be addressed, therefore, is whether an order for payment of damages to the company whose affairs have allegedly been conducted in an unfairly prejudicial manner can be sought and made in an unfair prejudice application. Another way of putting the question is whether a cause of action allegedly vested in the company can be prosecuted to judgment in an unfair prejudice application. It would, of course, always be essential for the parties allegedly liable on the cause of action to be respondents to the proceedings. But that is not a problem in the present case.
28. There is nothing in the wide language of article 143(1) [which corresponded to section 996 of the 2006 Act] to suggest a limitation that would exclude the seeking or making of such an order: the court 'may make such order as it thinks fit for giving relief in respect of the matters complained of'. The point was raised and considered by the Hong Kong Court of Final Appeal (the CFA) in In re Chime Corpn Ltd (2004) 7 HKCFAR 546. An unfair prejudice application had been made in respect of Chime and one of the issues was whether the court had power on such an application to make an order for the payment of damages or compensation to the company. The CFA held that the court did have power to make such an order: see the judgment given by Lord Scott of Foscote, at paras 39–49, concurred in by the other members of the court, and the cases there cited. No reason has been advanced to their Lordships on this appeal why the decision in the Chime case should not be followed. Accordingly, no objection to Gamlestaden's prayer in its article 141 application for an order that the directors pay damages to Baltic for breach of duty can be taken at this strike-out stage."
"In my judgment, these authorities all speak with one voice. They show that ss.994–996 provide a wide and flexible remedy where the affairs of a company have been conducted in a manner that is unfairly prejudicial to the interests of some or all of its members. A s.994 petition is appropriate where, for whatever reasons, the trust and confidence of the parties to a quasi-partnership has broken down. Relief can be granted to remedy wrongs done to the company, and in such a situation the alleged wrongdoers must be made parties to the petition. Non-members of a company who are alleged to have been responsible for such conduct can be joined as respondents, and, in an appropriate case, such non-members can be made primarily or secondarily liable to buy the petitioners' shares. Artificial limitations should not be introduced to reduce the effective nature of the remedy introduced by ss.994–996."
"In my judgement Lord Scott in that passage is not to be seen as laying down preconditions which must necessarily be fulfilled before the court can ever permit a claim seeking such relief to be brought. Rather he was giving guidance, albeit potent guidance, as to the circumstances in which it was likely to be or not to be appropriate for the court to permit such a claim to be made. That interpretation follows from Lord Scott's acceptance that the court had power to grant such relief and his indication that the question was the propriety of the inclusion of the claim in the particular case. Moreover, it is of note that Lord Scott expressly stated that he was setting out his assessment of what was appropriate 'as a general rule' rather than setting out preconditions for the exercise of the jurisdiction. The distinction is a narrow one because at the lowest the passage provides powerful guidance as to when it will be appropriate for the court to permit such a claim. It follows that it will rarely be appropriate for the court to permit a claim of this kind in circumstances where the two elements identified by Lord Scott are not present. However, I do not understand Lord Scott to have been saying that such a course could never be appropriate."
Earlier in his judgment, in paragraph 46, Judge Eyre QC had said:
"The purpose of s.994 is to provide redress in cases where the affairs of a company have been conducted in a way which is unfairly prejudicial to the interests of a shareholder as shareholder. It is concerned to address mismanagement of the affairs of the company rather than to provide redress for misconduct which has harmed the company. However, the mismanagement of the affairs of a company can take the form of a breach of duty by those in control of a company and the same acts can be both mismanagement which is unfairly prejudicial to a minority shareholder and misconduct in breach of a director's duties and causing harm to the company. The question of whether a claim is properly to be seen as appropriately brought by way of a s.994 petition or as being in reality a derivative claim is a matter of analysis of the true nature of the particular claim. In that analysis particular regard is to be had to the relief sought and even more to the nature of the complaint. The court has to consider whether the complaint is in reality in respect of the harm caused to the relevant company by the misconduct (in which case there should be a derivative claim) or in respect of the impact on a petitioner's position and rights as a minority shareholder (in which case s.994 proceedings are appropriate)."
"I agree with this analysis of the petition. As regards the proper relationship between petitions under s.994 and derivative actions, consideration of the authorities suggests that it is highly sensitive to the precise circumstances of the case and the relief claimed: see the judgments of Lord Scott in the Court of Final Appeal of Hong Kong in Re Chime Corp Ltd (2004) 7 H.K.C.F.A.R. 546 and in the Privy Council in Gamlestaden Fastigeheter AB v Baltic Partners Ltd [2007] UKPC 26; [2007] BCC 272. Whatever that relationship may be, it does not arise in the present case, which does not involve any claim for relief for the benefit of the company, either in substance or even, very largely, in form. The central point in this case is that, while the petition alleges breach by directors of their duties to the company, it does not allege that the company, as opposed to [the petitioner], has suffered any loss."
"In jurisdictional terms I can accept that Mr Goodchild could have sought to introduce into the unfair prejudice proceedings the derivative claims in respect of the WIP and Account of Profits. The real question, as I see it, is whether he should have done, such that his failure to do so renders an abuse of process the subsequent proceedings brought by the Company raising these claims."
"An allegation that the acts complained of are unlawful or infringe the petitioner's legal rights is not a necessary averment in a sec. 27 petition. In my judgment it is not a sufficient averment either. The petitioner must allege and prove that they are evidence or instances of the management of the company's affairs by the administrator in a manner which is unfairly prejudicial to the petitioner's interests. Unlawful conduct may be relied upon for this purpose, and its unlawfulness may have a significant probative value, but it is not the essential factor on which the petitioner's cause of action depends.
Mr Oliver asked: 'If misconduct in the management of the company's affairs does not without more constitute unfairly prejudicial management, what extra ingredient is required?' In my judgment the distinction between misconduct and unfairly prejudicial management does not lie in the particular acts or omissions of which complaint is made, but in the nature of the complaint and the remedy necessary to meet it. It is a matter of perspective. The metaphor is not a supermarket trolley but a hologram. If the whole gist of the complaint lies in the unlawfulness of the acts or omissions complained of, so that it may be adequately redressed by the remedy provided by law for the wrong, the complaint is one of misconduct simpliciter. There is no need to assume the burden of alleging and proving that the acts or omissions complained of evidence or constitute unfairly prejudicial management of the company's affairs. It is otherwise if the unlawfulness of the acts or omissions complained of is not the whole gist of the complaint, so that it would not be adequately redressed by the remedy provided by law for the wrong. In such a case it is necessary to assume that burden, but it is no longer necessary to establish that the acts or omissions in question were unlawful, and a much wider remedy may be sought.
A good illustration of the distinction is provided by Re a Company No. 5287/85 (1985) 1 BCC 99,586. In that case the petitioners, who were minority shareholders, alleged that the respondent, who was the majority shareholder, had disposed of the company's assets in breach of his fiduciary duty to the company and in a manner which was unfairly prejudicial to the interests of the petitioner. Hoffmann J refused to strike out the petition, holding that the fact that the petitioners could have brought a derivative action did not prevent them seeking relief under sec. 459.
Again, I respectfully agree. The very same facts may well found either a derivative action or a sec. 459 petition. But that should not disguise the fact that the nature of the complaint and the appropriate relief is different in the two cases. Had the petitioners' true complaint been of the unlawfulness of the respondent's conduct, so that it would be met by an order for restitution, then a derivative action would have been appropriate and a sec. 459 petition would not. But that was not the true nature of the petitioners' complaint. They did not rely on the unlawfulness of the respondent's conduct to found their cause of action; and they would not have been content with an order that the respondent make restitution to the company. They relied on the respondent's unlawful conduct as evidence of the manner in which he had conducted the company's affairs for his own benefit and in disregard of their interests as minority shareholders; and they wanted to be bought out. They wanted relief from mismanagement, not a remedy for misconduct."
"It is accepted that on the facts alleged in the petition, the truth of which, of course, remains to be tried, the petitioners would be able to mount a derivative shareholders' action of the kind exemplified by Wallersteiner v. Moir [1974] 1 W.L.R. 991 against H. in order to require him to account for such of the company's assets as he may have disposed of without authority. But it is said that such an action should be commenced separately by writ and that it would not be proper to seek the equivalent relief within a petition under section 459.
Looking at the matter from a practical point of view that does not seem to me to be very convenient. It would mean separate proceedings having to be commenced by writ and separate pleadings delivered in respect of matters which would very substantially overlap, if not duplicate, the issues canvassed in the petition and affidavits under section 459. It would then be necessary for both sets of proceedings to be heard together. I would be reluctant to come to the conclusion that this form of duplication was necessary unless it was clear that the jurisdiction under sections 459 and 461 did not permit the whole matter to be dealt with upon the petition. It seems to me that although it is true that section 462(2) shows that the normal order under section 461 will be an order against the company or another member, there is no reason why the words of section 461(1) should not be given their full effect and allow the court to give relief in respect of a complaint that the company's affairs have been conducted in a manner unfairly prejudicial to the interests of members, even when this would involve giving relief against a respondent who is no longer a member. For that reason, I am not willing to strike out H. as a party to the petition."
Conclusions on the legal principles
i) The Court has power to grant relief in favour of the company on an unfair prejudice petition. The Hong Kong Court of Final Appeal said as much in Chime, and in Baltic Partners the Privy Council confirmed that "an order for payment of damages to the company whose affairs have allegedly been conducted in an unfairly prejudicial manner can be sought and made in an unfair prejudice application". Fi Call, Hut Group and Taylor Goodchild are to similar effect;
ii) At least generally, the Court should not in unfair prejudice proceedings make an order for relief in favour of the company unless the order corresponds with an order to which the company would have been entitled had the relevant allegation been successfully prosecuted in an action by the company (or in a derivative action in the name of the company) (to adapt slightly a point which Lord Scott made in Chime);
iii) It can potentially be an abuse of process for a petitioner to claim relief in favour of the company by way of unfair prejudice petition. I cannot envisage any circumstances in which a petition claiming only such relief would be proper. The right course in such a case would surely be for the petitioner to issue a claim form and seek permission to proceed with it pursuant to Part 11 of the 2006 Act. A petition could also be struck out as an abuse of process if, although it included a claim for relief which was available only in unfair prejudice proceedings (such as an order for the purchase of shares), it could be discerned that the petitioner was not genuinely interested in obtaining such relief and was, instead, trying to bypass the filter for which Part 11 of the 2006 Act provides;
iv) Where, on the other hand, an unfair prejudice petition seeks both relief in favour of the company and relief that would not be available in a pure derivative claim, and the petitioner appears to be genuinely interested in obtaining the latter, I do not think that it would ordinarily be appropriate to strike out either the petition or any part of the relief sought. It is not difficult to conceive of a situation in which it would make sense for a petitioner to include in an unfair prejudice petition a claim for, say, an order for a respondent to buy or sell shares and an order for a payment to be made to the company on the basis of a breach of duty by a respondent. In such a case, it would "not seem … to be very convenient" "from a practical point of view" (to echo Hoffmann J in Re a Company (No. 005287 of 1985) to insist that the claim for relief in favour of the company be the subject of a separate claim form. Even supposing that, on the particular facts, it would make more sense for the order in favour of the company to be pursued in a distinct derivative claim, it seems to me that it would rarely be right to deem the petition or any relief sought in it to be abusive if all the heads of relief were being pursued otherwise than to evade the requirements of Part 11 of the 2006 Act. As Judge Eyre QC remarked in Hut Group, "the same acts can be both mismanagement which is unfairly prejudicial to a minority shareholder and misconduct in breach of a director's duties and causing harm to the company". If a petitioner considers, for example, that such facts could warrant a share purchase order or, failing that, at least the grant of relief in favour of the company, I should not have thought that it would be improper to claim both in an unfair prejudice petition. As Vos J said in Fi Call, sections 994-996 of the 2006 Act "provide a wide and flexible remedy" and "[a]rtificial limitations should not be introduced to reduce the effective nature of the remedy introduced by ss.994-996";
v) Where in unfair prejudice proceedings a petitioner asks for relief in favour of the company as well as relief that could only be granted on an unfair prejudice basis, case management issues should be addressed. The best course may be for all the issues to be dealt with at the same time, in a single hearing. Sometimes, however, it could be desirable for matters relating to a claim for relief in favour of the company to be deferred either entirely or in part. It might, for example, be advantageous to determine at the main hearing whether a respondent was liable to the company for a breach of duty but to defer any issue as to quantum. I do not myself share the view that a Court should not "allow a prayer in the petition for payment by the respondent director of compensation or of restitution to the company to stand unless it is clear at the pleading stage that a determination of the amount, if any, of the director's liability at law to the company can conveniently be dealt with in the hearing of the petition" (to quote Lord Scott in Chime, at paragraph 62). To my mind, the mere fact that it might not be "clear at the pleading stage that a determination of the amount, if any, of the director's liability at law to the company can conveniently be dealt with in the hearing of the petition" would not render a claim for compensation to be paid to the company in respect of such a liability abusive, but would rather call for case management;
vi) I do not, with respect, consider that what the Judge called "the Chime approach" represents the law in this jurisdiction. In particular, I do not think that it is only a "rare and exceptional case" that the Court "will permit to proceed by way of an unfair prejudice petition when it would otherwise be brought by way of a derivative claim", nor that the Court "ought only to permit the case for that relief to proceed by way of an unfair prejudice petition if, at the earliest stage of the proceedings, the court is satisfied at least that that relief can be conveniently adjudicated on as part of the unfair prejudice petition proceedings".
The present case
Conclusion
Lord Justice Snowden:
"A derivative action is an exception to the elementary principle that A cannot, as a general rule, bring an action against B to recover damages or secure other relief on behalf of C for an injury done by B to C. C is the proper plaintiff because C is the party injured, and, therefore, the person in whom the cause of action is vested. This is sometimes referred to as the rule in Foss v. Harbottle (1843) 2 Hare 461 when applied to corporations, but it has a wider scope and is fundamental to any rational system of jurisprudence….
The classic definition of the rule in Foss v. Harbottle is stated in the judgment of Jenkins LJ in Edwards v. Halliwell [1950] 2 All E.R. 1064 as follows … (1) The proper plaintiff in an action in respect of a wrong alleged to be done to a corporation is, prima facie, the corporation…."
"Whilst we noted the tendency of applicants to bring section 459 proceedings in respect of matters which could have given rise to a derivative action, we do not consider that the two should be entirely assimilated. They are different in principle - one gives rise to a personal right which the shareholder can enforce, the other relates to the company's cause of action - and although they may cover some of the same ground, this will not always be the case."
"an action by a member of a company where the cause of action is vested in the company and relief is sought on its behalf."
"There are three elements to this: the action is brought by a member of the company; the cause of action is vested in the company; and relief is sought on the company's behalf."
"[Section 260(1)] defines what is meant by a derivative claim. There are three elements to this: the action is brought by a member of the company; the cause of action is vested in the company; and relief is sought on the company's behalf."
Lady Justice Whipple: