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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Amin & Anor v Amin & Ors [2010] EWHC 528 (Ch) (16 March 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2010/528.html Cite as: [2010] EWHC 528 (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) VATSAL BABUBHAI AMIN (2) ANJU VATSAL AMIN |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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(1) UDHYAM BABUBHAI AMIN (2) RAHULKUMAR J DESAI (3) PUSHPABHEN BABUBHAI AMIN (4) CHAMPABEN KANTIBHAI PATEL (5) MANJULABEN BHARATBHAI PATEL (6) SANGITABEN VIPINBHAI PATEL (7) BHARATBHAI J PATEL (8) VIPINBHAI PATEL (9) HASMUKBHAI J PATEL (10) INDUBEN H PATEL (11) BAKULKUMAR HARSHADRAY PATEL (12) NAYANA BAKUL PATEL (13) HARSHIKA RAHUL DESAI (14) SWATIBEN B PATEL (15) PRASHANTBHAI N PATEL (16) BHAVINESHBHAI N PATEL (17) BHAVINI UDHYAM AMIN (18) BHAVINBHAI B PATEL |
Defendants |
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And Between : |
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4833 of 2005 (1) VATSAL BABUBHAI AMIN (2) ANJU VATSAL AMIN |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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(1) UDHYAM BABUBHAI AMIN (2) BHAVINI UDHYAM AMIN (3) PUSHPABEN BABUBHAI AMIN (4) VU CHEM LIMITED |
Respondents |
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Mr P Talbot QC and Mr D McCourt Fritz (instructed by Messrs Stephenson Harwood ) for the First,Ninth,Tenth, and Seventeenth Defendants
Mr T Braithwaite (instructed by Messrs Cumberland Ellis) for the other Defendants (excepting the fourth and eighth defendants)
Hearing dates: 8th & 9th March 2010.
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Warren :
Harshika's claim to a quantum meruit
a. Market value is the prima facie measure of recovery based on the provision of services freely accepted (as they were, I accept, in the present case).
b. The burden is on the partners in Cashco to persuade the court that the benefit it received was worth less than the market value of the service.
c. A defendant may be able to do this by proving that the subjective benefit received was worth less than the market value.
a. Harshika would have agreed to serve for whatever remuneration the Father determined. But, since he was universally respected as an honourable and honest man, she would, on the one hand, be confident that he would not, contrary to his word, leave her with nothing. However, she must accept, on the other hand, that he would not pay her more than the business could afford and would, in assessing that amount, take into account the family philosophy of ploughing profits back into the business. For the years now in question, it is not what the Father would have agreed since he was no longer alive. There is no reason to think, however, that his death changed the principles on which Harshika's quantum meruit should be assessed.
b. In my judgment, it is permissible (and correct) to take that factor into account. It is a factor which provides a strong steer to the value which Harshika's services had to Cashco. If, acting reasonably, the Father could have acquired Harshika's services for £X pa, that figure being one which she would accept without complaint, then the fact that "full" restitution would be a larger amount does not lead to the conclusion that that larger amount is the value of the services to Cashco rather than the amount (£X) which all concerned would have considered fair and reasonable. This is not, I consider, to introduce into the law of unjust enrichment the imposition of some sort of judicial yardstick of fairness. Rather, it is to recognise that the search is for the value of the services to Cashco. In an ordinary case, the market price at which an employer would need to pay an employee to perform services equivalent to those carried out by Harshika is an appropriate proxy for the value of the services to the employer. But if, in particular circumstances, a particular employer acting fairly and reasonably would be able to obtain the services of a particular person for less than that market rate, there is no reason, I consider, to grant a remedy of "full" restitution since "full" restitution would not reflect the underlying principle.
c. The accounts of the business show a steady, but not spectacular, increase in gross profit for trading over the period in question – 1999 to 2005. Starting at just over £280K for 1999, it rises to over £580K in 2004 with a similar rate of gross for the period ending in February 2005. But net profit is much lower, reflecting accounting policies introduced in 1998 when depreciation was shown for the first time. Net profit was just over £61.6K in 1995, decreasing to £11.6K in 1996, and then steadily rising to just over £231.4K in 2004. But net profit for the period to February 2005 was at a lower rate of less than £80K pa. Those are the figures in the accounts; but as will be apparent from my main judgment, there must be serious doubt about what the real profits were.
d. Some care must be taken in how these figures are used. It is obviously not right to judge the value of Harshika's service by conducting a minute analysis of the profits of Cashco year by year. These figures have to be taken as a whole to show the sort of profit which was being made and the sort of figures which the business could therefore afford to pay or, perhaps more importantly, could be seen as able to afford to pay at the time when the relevant services were being rendered. Account should therefore be taken not only of profitability in the years in question but in the years prior to 1999 as indicative of what the business would be able to afford. As to that, the accounts for 1992 to 1994 show gross profits of just over £244.7K rising to just over £280.3K with net profit figures being nearly £148K to just over £140K. But earlier years show markedly lower net profits; indeed for 1981 to 1984, there was a net loss and net profits did not rise above £50,000 until 1992.
e. Remuneration at the sort of level which Harshika is now claiming would have made a large dent in those profits and had a serious impact on the profits available to the partners for distribution or ploughing back into the business. It would produce, I consider, a disproportionate benefit for Harshika as compared with Udi and Vatsal. This is particularly so in the case of Udi who was himself heavily engaged in the strategic management of Cashco and spent a considerable amount of his time on its affairs. In any event, Cashco was the entity through which Udi derived the bulk of his income in running the family enterprises generally; and to some extent, it can be said that Vatsal derived some of his income from Cashco rather than VU Chem even though his actual working time was spent almost exclusively on VU Chem business.
f. The next factor, to which I do not attach much weight, but it is a factor, is that Harshika's husband was a partner – by his own account a sleeping partner who had not contributed to the business. Her own immediate family therefore already had some interest in the business.
a. Managing staff on a daily basis, giving them instructions.
b. Organising the display of goods.
c. Attending customers.
d. Reviewing and ordering goods.
e. Attending supplier representatives.
f. Often dealing with banking for Cashco and the retail shops: I do not know what this involved but I think it relates to day to day matters such as banking cheques and not to discussions with the bank about overdraft facilities or matters of that sort.
g. Organising deliveries to VU Chem and conducting banking for the pharmacy chain.
h. She says she was the main person who did all the data entry for the Cashco business and dealt with checking of pricing on invoices to computer data.
i. She said her job description would not be easy one to put down but "in essence I have being doing everything needed to preserve and grow the Cashco business in the same way I would have done if I was the sole owner of the business".
a. Supervising and managing employees (including human resources responsibility and disciplinary action).
b. Settling margins which involves checking the market place of the products and thereafter setting Cashco's selling prices.
c. Negotiating and placing orders with and maintaining good relations with suppliers.
d. Assessing, formalising and reviewing appropriate credit limits customer.
a. First, under the heading "Administrative and secretarial occupations", he focuses on the categories "Numerical clerks and cashiers Accounts and wages clerks, bookkeepers and other financial clerks Counterclerks and cashiers".
b. Secondly, under the heading "Sales and customer service occupations" he focuses on the categories "Sales assistants and checkout operators Sales assistants Retail cash desk and check-out operators".
a. For his first categories, the mean for 1999 was £13,604 and for 2005 was £18,305. For his second categories, the corresponding figures were £9,170 and £12,001.
b. The average of these two sets of figures for 1999 was £11,387 for 1999 and £15,153 for 2005. Taking a straight line basis between those two figures give a mid-point of was £13,270.
c. The total for 6 years was £79,620.