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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Capcon Holdings Plc v Edwards & Ors [2007] EWHC 2662 (Ch) (12 October 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2007/2662.html Cite as: [2007] EWHC 2662 (Ch) |
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CH/2007/APP/0309 |
CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
BETWEEN:
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CAPCON HOLDINGS PLC | Appellant | |
-v- | ||
EDWARDS & OTHERS | Respondents |
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PO Box 1336, Kingston-Upon-Thames KT1 1QT
Tel No: 020 8974 7300 Fax No: 020 8974 7301
Email Address: [email protected]
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr B Shaw (instructed by Evans Dodds) appeared on behalf of the Respondents.
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Crown Copyright ©
"The purchaser shall and shall procure that the company (and/or newco as appropriate) shall, so soon as practicable, following the end of each relevant financial year, and in any event within four calendar months thereof, provide to each of the parties hereto a copy of the draft accounts of the company (and/or newco, as appropriate) and certificate as to the amount of the applicable net profit before tax. Provisions of clause 10 shall apply in relation to such a certificate."
"GMBH
We really must sort this out and put pressure on our advisors. I cannot see why we cannot put a case forward for retention against warranties especially as the advice we have is that an exposure exists. Also, the fact that we relied on Gwen and Jonathan for warm and comfort re ownership, which they led us to believe was with DC. This was also verified in Vantis documents and we now not only find out that this was not the case but, worse still, they have no idea as to the identity of the other shareholder. I suspect the other shareholder is DC, Gwen, or even Jonathan. If it is DC, then it is a straightforward tax fraud. If it is Gwen, it would be more serious under the warranties. And JE even worse. These are the facts as we know to date."
The writer of the memorandum then set out in numbered paragraphs 1 to 15 various considerations that he or she was bearing in mind.
"Now forgive me for being a tiny bit suspicious. We may never find out who the beneficial owner of the other 50% truly is, as they will be bearer shares. A shareholders' meeting may uncover a nominee but we are unlikely to get beyond that mark. We have three options, viz (a) battle on putting resolution after resolution including appointing an MD in Germany; (b) purchase the other 50% (probably no chance as we are likely to find out too much for DC's comfort); (c) sell our 50% to DC or unidentified. For me, (c) is the only realistic option, but we may need pressure from A first. It may just suit DC to get us out to protect its position. Such a sale could be funded out of the business over say three to five years at circa £200 K per annum. Such income could go into a newco."
"Whilst in 2004 Capcon became aware that David Cowling was not the ultimate beneficial owner of the other 50% of the shares in GMBH, Capcon was not aware at the time that it had any legal right to rescind the agreement on the ground of misrepresentation. It was only once Evans Dodds [the claimants' solicitors] had agreed not to proceed with the petition for the winding up of Capcon, that Capcon was advised by its solicitors that the representation gave Capcon the right to rescind the agreement. Accordingly, Duane Morris [Capcon's solicitors] were instructed to rescind the agreement."
"(a) the claimants made the representation; (b) the misrepresentation was false; (c) the claimants made the misrepresentation negligently; and (d) the defendant was induced to enter into the agreement as a result of the misrepresentation."
"In order to found an estoppel the claimants must prove some representation by the defendants that they have waived their right to rescind and some detriment."
"The overwhelming weight of authority shows that detriment is required. But the authorities also show that it is not a narrow or technical concept. The detriment need not consist of the expenditure of money or other quantifiable financial detriment, so long as it is something substantial. The requirement must be approached as part of a broad inquiry as to whether repudiation of an assurance is or is not unconscionable in all the circumstances.
There are some helpful observations about the requirement for detriment in the judgment of Slade LJ in Jones v Watkins 26 November 1987. There must be sufficient causal link between the assurance relied on and the detriment asserted. The issue of detriment must be judged at the moment when the person who has given the assurance seeks to go back on it. Whether the detriment is sufficiently substantial is to be tested by whether it would be unjust or inequitable to allow the assurance to be disregarded—that is, again, the essential test of unconscionability. The detriment alleged must be pleaded and proved."
"…the position of the plaintiff was altered through the defendant's conduct. The defendant knew that, when he assented to the delivery order, the plaintiff, as a reasonable man, would rest satisfied. If the plaintiff had been met by a refusal on the part of the defendant, he could have gone to Maris"
I interpose to say that Maris had gone bankrupt.
"and have demanded back his money, very likely he might not have derived much benefit if he had done so; but he had a right to do it. The plaintiff did rest satisfied in the belief, as a reasonable man, that the property had been passed to him. If once the fact is established, that the plaintiff's position is altered by relying on the statement and taking no steps further, the case becomes identical with…"
The judge then referred to a number of previously decided cases. Later, on page 665 he added this:
In the present case the plaintiff altered his position, relying on the defendant's conduct when the delivery order was presented. The plaintiff may well say, 'I abstained from active measures in consequence of your statement, and I am entitled to hold you precluded from denying that what you stated was true.'"
"Counsel for Capcon says that where restitutio in integrum is impossible, the court can nonetheless do justice by making appropriate adjustments to the price. It can, I am sure that is right, in appropriate cases make adjustments, but in cases of share sale agreements where the business has changed substantially, where, as in the present case, many senior personnel have changed, in particular the loss of the managing director, it is not effectively the same business any more. I do not think that the court is in the business of rewriting an agreement to that extent.
My attention was drawn to the case of The Sheffield Nickel and Silverplating Company v Unwin, which demonstrates that rescission of the share sale agreement may be impossible on the grounds that the company's business has changed since the agreement was entered into. This, I think, is one of those cases."
"A contract voidable for fraud cannot be avoided when the other party cannot be restored to his status quo: Clarke v. Dickinson. For a contract cannot be rescinded in part and stand good for the residue. If it cannot be rescinded in toto, it cannot be rescinded at all; but the party complaining of the non-performance, or the fraud, must resort to an action for damages.
Now, the company, it is clear, accepted the 200 shares, treated the defendant in virtue of his surrender of them as no longer qualified to act as director, and appointed another managing director in his stead. By him the businesses were carried on for upwards of four months before the directors resolved to repudiate the agreement under which the shares had been given up. And in the meantime they disposed of one of the businesses, the resolution for selling which was part of the resolution of the 11th of May, which sanctioned the release of the defendant from his guarantee, and evidently part of one entire arrangement. They also sold one of the patents which was included in the original purchase, and they retained and had the benefit of the patent, one of the five, which was part of the consideration for the release. It is true they had not disposed of the shares, or the last-mentioned patents, nor had they taken a transfer of the shares; but it is clear that the return of these would not have restored the defendant to, or placed the concern in, the same condition in which he or it was at the date of the resolution to release. The position of both parties had been materially altered, and it was therefore too late in October to repudiate the contract."
"…although, of course, it is clear law that restitutio in integrum is essential to a claim for rescission. The plaintiff still holds the shares he bought in 1910. He can hand them back to the defendant. The company is the same as in 1910. Its name only has been changed. The objects of the company have not changed though the assets of the company may have varied. The market valuation of the shares has greatly dropped, but the shares are the same shares."
Later, on page 829 he added:
"The phrase 'restitutio in integrum' is somewhat vague. It must be applied with care. It must be considered with respect to the facts of each case. Deterioration of the subject-matter does not, I think, destroy the right to rescind nor prevent a restitutio in integrum. Indeed, it is only in cases where the plaintiff has sustained loss by the inferiority of the subject-matter or a substantial fall in its value that he will desire to exert his power of rescission."
"The court must fix its eyes on the goal of doing 'what is practically just'. How that goal may be reached must depend on the circumstances of the case, but the court will be more drastic in exercising its discretionary powers in the case of fraud than in a case of innocent misrepresentation. It is clearly stated by Lord Linley MR in the Lagunas case:
'There is no doubt that the reason for the distinction in a case of innocent misrepresentation may be regarded rather as one of misfortune than as one of moral obliquity. There is no deceit or intention to defraud. The court will be less ready to pull a transaction to pieces where the defendant is innocent where, as in the case of fraud, the court will exercise its jurisdiction to the full in order, if possible, to prevent the defendant from enjoying the benefit of his fraud at the expense of the innocent plaintiff. Restoration, however, is essential to the idea of restitution. To take the simplest case, if a plaintiff who has been defrauded seeks to have the contract annulled and his money or property restored to him, it would be inequitable if he did not also restore what he had got under the contract from the defendant. Though the defendant has been fraudulent, he must not be robbed, nor must the plaintiff be unjustly enriched, as he would be if he both got back what he parted with and kept what he had received in return. The purpose of the relief is not punishment but compensation. The role is stated as requiring the restoration of both parties to the status quo ante, but it is generally the defendant who complains that restitution is impossible. The plaintiff who seeks to set aside the contract will generally be reasonable in the standard of restitution which he requires. However, the court can go a long way in ordering restitution if the substantial identity of the subject matter of the contract remains.'"
"The question is whether, even though they knew of the misrepresentation they knew that it gave them the right to rescind the contract. It is clear that they had solicitors acting for them. There is specific evidence by the defendant that they were only advised of their right to rescind in early 2007. Of course, by March 2007 they had exercised that right. The cases are slightly inconsistent as to whether the fact that a party has solicitors acting for them means that they must be treated as having the knowledge of the right to rescind. As I say, the defendants have had a firm of competent solicitors acting for them. Those solicitors may or may not have advised them. There is lurking in the background to the present dispute a possible action for professional negligence, but I do not need to determine that. I am satisfied that counsel for Capcon is right that the mere fact that a firm of solicitors are acting for a party does not in itself mean that those solicitors advised the client that they had a right to rescind."
"The authorities are in conflict, but in my judgment counsel for Capcon is right, that on the evidence before me today I cannot say that the defendant has affirmed a contract."