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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 >> Bains v Arunvill Capital Ltd & Anor [2019] EWHC 1749 (Ch) (05 July 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2019/1749.html Cite as: [2019] EWHC 1749 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
CHANCERY APPEALS (ChD)
On appeal from the County Court at Central London
(His Honour Judge Dight CBE)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
Jas Bains |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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(1) Arunvill Capital Limited (2) Hollbeach Solutions LLP |
Respondents |
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Mr Nicholas Davidson QC (instructed by ELS Law Limited) for the Appellant
Hearing date: 18 June 2019
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Fancourt :
"Structuring and implementation of various equity finance strategies within the Company or elsewhere within the Recipient group, and management of various Newly Created Strategies".
"Newly Created Strategies" were defined as:
"strategies which are devised, created, and managed by the Consultant, or strategies which are based substantially on intellectual property produced by the Consultant, and from which the Consultant is entitled to a Profit Share in accordance with the terms of the Schedule".
"This Agreement may be terminated by either Party in the event of the other Party having materially breached any of the provisions of this Agreement and not having remedied such breach within 21 days after the service of written notice by the first Party requiring the same to be remedied."
Under clause 3.1, either party could terminate the agreement by six months written notice.
The Arunvill consultancy agreement
i) The material breach of contract, viz. refusing to continue to provide the Services, was remedied by letter from the appellant's solicitors dated 20 April 2016, stating that he did intend to perform his contractual obligations, and that the Judge was wrong to conclude that performance of the Services was also required within the 21 day period in order to remedy the breach.
ii) Alternatively, if that did not amount to a remedy, the Judge was wrong to conclude that the appellant had to provide the Services thereafter, in order to remedy the breach, because Arunvill did not require him to provide any services, having rejected the strategies that he had previously devised.
"130. … A refusal to work is, in my judgment, a refusal to provide the services in clause 2.1, identified in the notice. There was, therefore, a breach of clause 3.4 of the Arunvill Agreement and it was right, therefore, that the defendant asked the claimant to remedy the breach. The proper remedy in the circumstances of this case is not merely the communication of an intention to work in an unspecified way, but it is to continue to provide the services which the claimant was contracted to provide under the Arunvill Agreement.
131. The evidence shows that the claimant did not in fact work, nor attempt to do so: he did not provide the "Services". The real cause may be that, of course, for the reasons I have already explained, it was not possible for him to prove provide the Services because the NCS were not capable of being effectively structured or implemented. Perhaps the truth of that suggestion lies in the fact that when Mr Davison [sic] described what the claimant had been doing in the course of his retainer, no emphasis at all was placed on the structuring or implementation of the NCS but on other things he was doing, but he did not, in any event, do those other things either in the period after the notice of termination had been served. In those circumstances, the Arunvill Agreement terminated on 26th April, 21 days after service of the notice."
The Hollbeach Agreement
"149 … Standing back, what one has to recognize that the purpose of the agreement was to ensure that the claimant was intended to assist Hollbeach in settling its dispute with Varengold. There was a real risk, it was thought, of litigation with Varengold.
150. The intention lying behind the agreement, as expressed by the words used in it, was to buy off that risk of litigation. The sale of shares by Arunvill, which was not a party to the agreement, may have one of the features of the settlement [sic], but that was a collateral part. In my judgment the key objective of the agreement could not be achieved unless the risk inherent in the continuing existence of potential litigation was brought to an end.
151. When one looks at the contract itself, one can see the basis for that conclusion. Paragraph 1, which I set out above, refers to the fact that there has to be some sort of "acceptable resolution". "Acceptable" is a word which perhaps is less than clear, but what has to be resolved is perfectly clear, namely, "the dispute with Varengold/Solo".
152. The dispute with Varengold/Solo is referred to elsewhere in the document. There was a risk that there would be litigation in respect of that dispute, which Hollbeach wanted to avoid. The fact that Hollbeach wanted an overall settlement is also apparent from the part that I have already referred to and which is described by Mr Davidson as the "third section": "As per your discussion with Martin, we would also propose to pay you 25% of any up-front profit generated from settlement with Solo or others in relation to the dispute." One has to give meaning to both of the words "settlement" and "the dispute".
153. It seems to me that the only proper meaning is that the parties intended there to be an overall settlement of the dispute which gave rise to the risk of litigation because the settlement would thereby remove that risk. Simply settling one issue would not, in my judgment, fulfil the intended purpose expressed by the agreement. "
i) The Judge misinterpreted the Hollbeach Agreement as requiring a comprehensive settlement of all issues before compensation was payable to the appellant;ii) The Judge was wrong to conclude that the payment of €5m was not a trigger for payment of compensation;
iii) The Judge was wrong to conclude that the appellant was not instrumental or effective in resolving the dispute to that extent, and
iv) In any event, the Judge was wrong to conclude that instrumentality or effect was a condition of payment of compensation.
"… agreed to act as an intermediary between [Hollbeach/Argon and Varengold/Shah] and to assist in helping to facilitate a settlement of the Dispute. In the event that the Claimant managed to facilitate a settlement, [Hollbeach] would pay the Claimant 25% of the value of the upfront profit of the settlement sum."