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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Dominion Corporate Trustees Ltd & Ors. v Debenhams Properties Ltd [2010] EWHC 1193 (Ch) (27 May 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2010/1193.html Cite as: [2010] EWHC 1193 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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(1) DOMINION CORPORATE TRUSTEES LIMITED (2) DOMINION TRUST LIMITED (3) FAREHAM TRUSTEES NO. 1 LIMITED (4) FAREHAM TRUSTEES NO. 2 LIMITED |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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DEBENHAMS PROPERTIES LIMITED |
Defendant |
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Mr Michael Barnes QC (instructed by Walker Morris Solicitors, Leeds) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 4, 5 May 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr. Justice Kitchin:
Introduction
i) Did clause 19 of the Agreement entitle Debenhams to terminate the Agreement on 3 March 2009? If not,
ii) was the failure to pay the £425,000 on the due date a repudiatory breach because time was of the essence? If not,
iii) were the circumstances of non-payment such that the failure to pay on the due date constituted a repudiatory breach?
The relevant contractual terms
"If the Access Date has not occurred by the Longstop Date [1 November 2009, subject to extension] then either the Landlord or the Tenant may at any time thereafter (but not once the Access Date has occurred) by written notice to the other determine this agreement whereupon this agreement shall (save for clause 2.8) absolutely determine and shall be of no further effect but this shall not affect the rights of any party to this agreement against the other or others in respect of any prior breaches."
"6.1 Not later than 6 months or such shorter period as may reasonably be required by the Landlord to consider the relevant details relating to the Tenant's Works prior to the anticipated Access Date the Tenant shall at its own cost prepare in triplicate and submit to the Landlord for approval a plan or plans and a specification (if any) of the Tenant's Works. The provisions of the Lease applicable to alterations shall apply to the Tenant's application for approval of the Tenant's Works.
6.2 As soon as practicable upon the Landlord's approval for the Tenant's Works being obtained, the Tenant shall apply for and obtain all Requisite Consents for the carrying out of the Tenant's Works.
6.3 Subject to the Tenant having obtained the Landlord's approval under clause 6.1 and all Requisite Consents required for the commencement of the Tenant's Works under clause 6.2, the Tenant shall commence the Tenant's Works on or as soon as practicable after the Access Date and if commenced the Tenant shall diligently proceed with the same in a proper and workmanlike manner as soon as reasonably possible so as to achieve completion of the Tenant's Works within 16 weeks of the Access Date (subject to extensions permitted by clause 2.5 as if it applied to the Tenant's Works) to the reasonable satisfaction of the Landlord."
"Access Date means the date upon which the Landlord notifies the Tenant that the Landlord's Works are completed for the purpose of commencing the Tenant's Works provided always that the Access Date shall (notwithstanding the achievement or not of the date of practical completion of the Landlord's Works as stated in the Certificate of Practical Completion) not for the purposes of this Agreement be deemed to occur unless and until all of the following conditions have been fulfilled (unless the Tenant waives any of the conditions by service of written notice on the Landlord to that effect):…"
"13.1 Subject to the clause 13.2 and 13.3, the Landlord will pay the Payment with any VAT due thereon in the following manner and within 10 Working Days of the following dates thus:-
13.1.1 £50,000 within 5 Working Days of the exchange of this Agreement;
13.1.2 the Access Date - £425,000 plus VAT (if payable) (provided access is taken for the purposes of the Tenant's Works);
13.1.3 the date the Premises open for permanent trade - £425,000 plus VAT (if payable).
13.2 Where VAT is payable:
13.2.1 The Tenant is to produce to the Landlord a copy of its election to waive exemption in respect of VAT in respect of the Premises together with evidence that notice of the election has been given to HM Revenue and Customs and acknowledged by them; and
13.2.2 The Tenant is to provide a valid VAT invoice to the Landlord on the making of the Payment in respect of any VAT properly payable.
13.2.3 The Landlord shall pay to the Tenant the Payment as a contribution to the cost of the materials of the flowing parts of the Tenant's Works: Fixed Walls (including plasterboard), Stud walling/fixed partitions, Wall Tiles & wallpaper, Fixed Ceilings (except features), Flooring (except Carpet or raised floors), Screed, Stairwells, Doors & frames, Architraves, skirting, picture rails, etc, 50% of column cladding, Bulkheads (except features), Glass windows, Structural builder's work."
"19.1 If:
19.1.1 either party shall in any respect fail or neglect to observe or perform any of the provisions of this Agreement; or
19.1.2 an Event of Insolvency arises,
then either party may by notice to the defaulting party any time after such occurrence terminate this Agreement, and upon service of such notice this Agreement shall determine but any such determination shall be without prejudice to any pre-existing right of action of any party in respect of any breach by any other party of its obligations under this Agreement
19.2 In the event that the licence fee or any other payment due under this Agreement or any part of this Agreement shall remain unpaid fourteen days after it shall have become due, such licence fee or other payment shall bear interest from the date it became due until payment of such sum oat the Prescribed Rate.
19.3 In the event of the termination of this Agreement for any reason, the Tenant shall remove any Notice or Land Charge entered against the Landlord or the Premises."
"20.1 Any demand, notice, consent or other communication to be made under this Agreement shall be made or delivered in writing…"
Did clause 19 entitle the parties to terminate in the event of any breach of the Agreement?
"failing the punctual and regular payment of the hire or on any breach of this charter party the owners shall be at liberty to withdraw the vessel from the service of the charterers without prejudice to any claim they (the owners) may otherwise have against the charterers."
"The arbitrators decided this issue against the shipowners. The 78 pages in which they expressed their reasons for doing so contained an interesting, learned and detailed dissertation on the law, so lengthy as to be, in my view, inappropriate for inclusion in the reasons given by arbitrators for an award. Their reasons can be adequately summarised as being (1) that "any other breach of this charter party" in the withdrawal clause means a repudiatory breach - that is to say: a fundamental breach of an innominate term or breach of a term expressly stated to be a condition, such as would entitle the shipowners to elect to treat the contract as wrongfully repudiated by the charterers, a category into which in the arbitrators' opinion the breaches complained of did not fall, and (2) that even if that were wrong, the word "on" immediately preceding "any other breach" meant "within a reasonable time of" their first knowledge of the breach; and the shipowners, in the arbitrators' opinion, had not given notice of withdrawal until after such reasonable time had expired.
To the semantic analysis, buttressed by generous citation of judicial authority, which led the arbitrators to the conclusions as to the interpretation of the wording of the withdrawal clause that I have summarised, the arbitrators' added an uncomplicated reason based simply upon business commonsense:
"We always return to the point that the owners' construction is wholly unreasonable, totally uncommercial and in total contradiction to the whole purpose of the N.Y.P.E. time charter form. The owners relied on what they said was 'the literal meaning of the words in the clause.' We would say that if necessary, in a situation such as this, a purposive construction should be given to the clause so as not to defeat the commercial purpose of the contract."
This passage in the award anticipates the approach to questions of construction of commercial documents that was voiced by this House in the very recent case, Miramar Maritime Corporation v. Holborn Oil Trading Ltd. [1984] A.C. 676, which dealt with a bill of lading issued under a charterparty in Exxonvoy 1969 form. There, after referring to various situations which might arise if the construction for which the shipowners in that case contended were correct, I added, at p. 682, in a speech concurred in by my fellow Law Lords:
"There must be ascribed to the words a meaning that would make good commercial sense if the Exxonvoy bill of lading were issued in any of these situations, and not some meaning that imposed upon a transferee to whom the bill of lading for goods afloat was negotiated, a financial liability of unknown extent that no business man in his senses would be willing to incur."
While deprecating the extension of the use of the expression "purposive construction" from the interpretation of statutes to the interpretation of private contracts, I agree with the passage I have cited from the arbitrators' award and I take this opportunity of re-stating that if detailed semantic and syntactical analysis of words in a commercial contract is going to lead to a conclusion that flouts business commonsense, it must be made to yield to business commonsense."
"23.2 If the contractor:
23.2.1 commits a breach of any of its obligations under the Contract… the Council may, without prejudice to any accrued rights or remedies under the Contract, terminate the Contractor's employment under the Contract by notice in writing having immediate effect."
Was time of the essence?
"In conclusion, the statement of the law in Halsbury's Laws of England, 4th ed., vol. 9 (1974), paras. 481–482, including the footnotes to paragraph 482 (generally approved in the House in the United Scientific Holdings case), appears to me to be correct, in particular in asserting (1) that the court will require precise compliance with stipulations as to time wherever the circumstances of the case indicate that this would fulfil the intention of the parties, and (2) that broadly speaking time will be considered of the essence in "mercantile" contracts — with footnote reference to authorities which I have mentioned."
If time was not of the essence, were the circumstances of non-payment such that the failure to pay on the due date constituted a repudiatory breach?
"Rob
Thank you for taking the time to meet with me on Wednesday.
As I pointed out we are currently having difficulty with our builder on site – To date we have paid him almost his full contract sum however he is claiming payment for almost double this which is causing problems not only on the site but with our bankers who are funding this project.
We are fully aware that Debenhams are due part of their capital contribution now and the remainder when the store opens and Ciaran Murdock the owner of the scheme is personally committed to fulfilling his obligations here.
However at the moment our banks are seeking a full review of the project before agreeing to advance us the capital contributions due to Debenhams as a result of the ongoing and escalating dispute with the Builder and the current Global Credit situation.
Can I firstly reiterate that we are fully committed to this project and to Debenhams opening in the Centre. In this regard in order for us to meet our obligations to Debenhams in timely manner I would ask you to consider how much of the Capital contribution you would take as additional rent free – my initial proposal is that we would like to extend the rent free period for the full amount of the Capital contribution due to you
As discussed I think it would be useful if both Ciaran, his Chairman and if necessary myself come to your office on 11th March to explain the current situation.
I look forward to hearing from you in this regard and would appreciate it if you could confirm a time when you/your property director and/or Chief Executive would be available
I look forward to hearing from you
Regards
Declan Flynn
PS – since drafting I understand that a meeting has been arranged in your offices for Wednesday 11 March at 10.30am"
"Ciaran – had a brief conversation with Phil Monaghan – the Property Director at Debenhams – they will want to see us earlier than 11 April
I have said that we are in full dispute with the builder and are not paying him any more money – this came to a head on Wednesday when I said that you told the builder this –
He wanted to know how long the bank review would take? And why we had paid the builder – almost the full contract sum
The above is just a record of the conversation
He will phone me on Monday"
"Rob
I attach an email which we have just received from the developer's agent together with a summary of the deal and progress of the scheme.
The 11th March is in my view too late for a meeting as it reduces our options and I have told the agent that we will need to resolve this by the beginning of next week. I have also indicated that Capital is more important to us than Rent Free and thus his proposal to extend the rent free period to cover the Contribution is unlikely to be acceptable.
Perhaps you can let me have your views so that we can agree the way forward."
"Rob
We served the Notice terminating the Fareham Agreement late yesterday and the Landlord came back immediately and offered to pay the £425,000 today "from his own pocket", which pretty much confirms what you said the other day! I'm not suggesting we should change our minds and I don't believe they can challenge the Termination Notice as there was a clear breach. However there is a risk that if we subsequently sue to recover our costs, an argument may be run by the Landlord that we shouldn't be entitled to abortive fit out costs because immediately after terminating we were offered the contribution in full and therefore were just looking for a way out. I've put this to our lawyers who advise that the balance is in our favour, but it's never clear cut with litigation and doubtless the other side will try to muddy the waters.
Perhaps we could speak briefly before the plug is pulled irrevocably."
"Does the occurrence of the event deprive the party who has further undertakings to perform of substantially the whole benefit which it was the intention of the parties as expressed in the contract that he should obtain as the consideration for performing those undertakings?"
Conclusion