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England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Molton Street Capital LLP v Shooters Hill Capital Partners LLP & Anor [2015] EWHC 3419 (Comm) (26 November 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2015/3419.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 3419 (Comm) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
MOLTON STREET CAPITAL LLP |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) SHOOTERS HILL CAPITAL PARTNERS LLP (2) ODEON CAPITAL GROUP LLC |
Defendants |
____________________
Mr Conall Patton (instructed by Nabarro LLP) for the Second Defendant
Hearing dates: 26 -30 October, 3 November 2015
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Popplewell:
Introduction
The rival arguments in outline
(1) There was no concluded contract by reason of Odeon's disclaimer ("the Disclaimer") which provided in relevant part:
". …. Indicative prices, bids, offers are not Firm unless so indicated and trades cannot be considered 'good trades' without express consent of the Principals of the firms."
The effect of the Disclaimer is that the express consent of Mr Schwartzberg and Mr Van Alstyne as Principals was required as a condition precedent to the existence of a binding contract, and no such consent was ever given.
(2) Alternatively the contract was voidable, and has been avoided, by reason of dishonest non disclosures by Mr Rohailla which contravened the United States Securities Exchange Act 1934 ("the 1934 Act"). The non disclosures relate to what Mr Rohailla knew about potential problems with City & Continental delivering the Bonds and what he said to persuade City & Continental to confirm the trade.
(3) Alternatively the contract was validly rescinded for unilateral mistake under New York law, Odeon's mistake being (primarily) that there was no issue with City & Continental's prospects of delivering the Bonds.
(4) Alternatively the contract contained an implied term, whether governed by New York law or English law, that Odeon would be excused from performance if City & Continental failed to perform.
(5) Alternatively if the contract is governed by English law, it was subject to an implied term that Molton Street had not breached or would not breach s. 89 of the Financial Services Act 2012. Molton Street was in breach of the implied term by reason of Mr Rohailla's dishonest statements to Mr Agresta (a) that he had sold the Bonds to Morgan Stanley at 22 and (b) that Morgan Stanley had sold the Bonds on.
(6) Alternatively Molton Street's damages claim fails (a) as being too remote or (b) under the principle ex turpi causa non oritur actio, the offending conduct relied on for this aspect of the defence being a series of lies told by Mr Rohailla to Morgan Stanley to the effect that City & Continental were offering the Bonds at mid 30s or 35 whereas they were being offered to Mr Rohailla at 21 or 22.
(1) if the putative proper law of the contract is New York law, defences (1) to (4) and (6)(a) fall to be decided in accordance with New York law and defence (5) does not arise (although it was also agreed that in the absence of New York law evidence on some of the sub issues on defence (1), the Court should apply English law to those sub issues);
(2) if the putative proper law is English law, defences (1), (4), (5) and (6)(a) fall to be decided under English law; and defences (2) and (3) do not arise;
(3) whatever the putative proper law, the ex turpi causa defence (6)(b) falls to be decided in accordance with English law, both because the principle is one of judicial abstention under the lex fori, and because in any event there was no evidence of New York law (save for one aspect in relation to the indemnity claim), so that the Court proceeds on the fiction that New York law on the issue is the same as English law.
Narrative
Monday/Tuesday 9/10 June 2014
Friday 13 June 2014
Monday 16 June 2014
(1) Mr Rhodes: "He's looking for mid 30s?"; Mr Rohailla: "that is what he is looking for yeah …"
(2) Mr Rhodes: "34 bid for that". This was said decisively, after a considered pause, indicating a firm bid. It was confirmed as a firm bid in a Bloomberg message at 1456 during the course of the call, in which the 34 price is unqualified. Mr Rohailla understood it as a firm bid because his next communication to Mr Ashiq was a firm bid (see below).
(3) Mr Rhodes: "He wants 34 or he wants mid 30s?" Mr Rohailla: "Yes, correct".
(4) After Mr Rohailla had said that he would seek to get Mr Rhodes a firm offer, Mr Rohailla went on "I just want to see where he is say[ing] they can get to on this … I'll try to save you some bucks and then you can pay me whatever you want", to which Mr Rhodes agreed.
Tuesday 17 June 2014
"YES…AGREED…BUT U DO UNDERSTAND THAT THEY BACKING AWAY FROM THE TRADE AND SAYING THEY NEVER OFFERED AND ALL THEY WANTED TO DO WAS 'RE-ENGAGE' THE SELLER …COMPLETE NONSENSE … I JUST ASK THAT YOU TRY AND BREAK THE TRADE W/ YOUR BUYER … I WOULD LIKE TO THINK THEY WOULD UNDERSTAND WHAT WE ARE DEALING W/
[…]
JUST TO REITERATE, THIS IS THE WHOLE TRANCHE THAT ISNT GONNA BE DELIVERED … THERE ARE NO OTHER BONDS TO SOURCE IN THE TRANCHE TO MAKE DELIVERY … YOUR BUYER REALLY HAS NO OTHER CHOICE BUT TO BREAK THE TRADE…"
Wednesday 18 June 2014
"Odeon has been notified that the seller will not be able to deliver the bonds and settle this transaction, therefore Odeon in its riskless principal role is cancelling both sides of this trade prior to settlement date."
Thursday 19 June 2014
Morgan Stanley's position
The Issues
(1) When and how was a contract formed, ignoring for these purposes the effect if any of the Disclaimer?
(2) What was the putative proper law of the contract?
(3) Did the Disclaimer prevent a contract being concluded?
(4) Was the contract rescinded by reason of contravention of the 1934 Act (if applicable)?
(5) Was the contract validly rescinded for unilateral mistake under New York law (if applicable)?
(6) Did the contract contain an implied term that Odeon would be excused from performance if City & Continental failed to perform?
(7) Was Molton Street in breach of an implied term that it had complied or would comply with s.89 of the 2012 Act (if applicable)?
(8) Is the claim irrecoverable as being too remote?
(9) Is the claim irrecoverable by virtue of the ex turpi causa doctrine?
Issue 1: Contract formation (ignoring any effect of the Disclaimer)
Issue 2: Putative Proper Law
"Applicable law in the absence of choice
1. To the extent that the law applicable to the contract has not been chosen in accordance with Article 3 and without prejudice to Articles 5 to 8, the law governing the contract shall be determined as follows:
(a) a contract for the sale of goods shall be governed by the law of the country where the seller has his habitual residence;
2. Where the contract is not covered by paragraph 1 or where the elements of the contract would be covered by more than one of points (a) to (h) of paragraph 1, the contract shall be governed by the law of the country where the party required to effect the characteristic performance of the contract has his habitual residence.
3. Where it is clear from all the circumstances of the case that the contract is manifestly more closely connected with a country other than that indicated in paragraphs 1 or 2, the law of that other country shall apply."
(1) Odeon's role was relatively insignificant, the terms having been negotiated by Shooters Hill, with Odeon's involvement being "a matter of chance" because Shooters Hill was unable to contract as principal. All the "work" in negotiating the contract was done by Shooters Hill, which is reflected in the fact that it received 90% of the mark up and Odeon only 10%.
(2) The contracts immediately up and down the chain were governed by English law because in each case the seller (City & Continental and Molton Street respectively) was based in London.
(3) The place of delivery of the Bonds would be London rather than New York.
(4) Molton Street is based in London and regulated by the FCA. It would be odd if Mr Rohailla's conduct in London, which is subject to English criminal law and English regulatory provisions, should simultaneously give rise to overlapping, but distinct, New York law civil and regulatory consequences.
(1) Odeon's role was not, as he submitted, relatively insignificant and was not a matter of chance. It was always contemplated by Molton Street and Shooters Hill when the contract was being negotiated that Odeon would be Molton Street's counterparty, and therefore it was, or at least ought to have been, contemplated that Odeon would ultimately have a discretion whether to decide to be bound, since Shooters Hill did not have authority to contract on its behalf. The role of principal contracting party is a significant one as everyone involved must have appreciated. It involves assuming counterparty risk, which is why regulatory authorities impose capital requirements, which Shooters Hill was unable to fulfil. The fact that negotiations took place between exclusively English parties carries little weight when they were conducted on the understanding that the contract would be with a US party, and against the background that it ought to have been contemplated that the US party would itself have to decide whether to give its independent assent by adopting the outcome of those negotiations.
(2) As to the upstream and downstream contracts being governed by English law, Mr Atrill referred to Haeger & Schmidt GmbH v MMA IARD [2015] QB 319 in which the European Court of Justice said at paragraph [49] "significant connecting factors to be taken into account include the presence of a close connection between the contract in question with another contract or contracts which are, as the case may be, part of the same chain of contracts, and the place of delivery of the goods." Mr Atrill also relied on cases concerned with networks of contracts involving letters of credit, insurance and reinsurance contracts and guarantees, referring compendiously to the cases identified by Blair J at paragraph [34] of his judgment in British Arab Commercial Bank Plc v Bank of Communication [2011] EWHC 281 (Comm); [2011] 1 Lloyd's Rep 664. None of those cases involved a chain of contracts of sale, which raise different considerations. Moreover they were all cases on the Rome Convention 1980 and for the reasons I have endeavoured to explain, decisions on the Rome Convention must be used with caution in view of the difference in approach and language of the Rome 1 Regulation, as the editors of Dicey Morris & Collins observe at paragraph 32-079. It would no doubt be generally conducive to commercial coherence that in a chain of contracts for purchase and sale of goods or securities on back to back terms, the same proper law should govern each contract. That may be promoted or impeded by express or implied choice of law in individual contracts. But leaving aside considerations of choice of law, there is a conceptual difficulty of where to start if the quest is to seek to achieve a single system of law governing all contracts in the chain. Contracts in the chain may have sellers resident in a number of different jurisdictions with such contracts not having even the slightest connection with countries with which other contracts in the chain have their closest connection. It would not be conducive to the general desirability that all contracts should be governed by the same law to treat the Odeon/Molton Street contract as most closely connected with England if others in the chain had no English party or connection; nor to treat it as so because City & Continental was an English seller, when the seller to City & Continental may have been based in New York or indeed any other financial centre which trades in junk bonds; and its seller might have been based in the same jurisdiction with the result that their contract overwhelmingly had its closest connection with the place of business of both parties, as it surely would if they were both based in New York. Indeed if taken to its logical conclusion, Mr Atrill's argument would involve all the contracts being governed by New York law, not English law, because that would be the proper law of the contract at the beginning of the chain, being a sale by Tilden Park whose business is in New York (assuming, which raises a further complication, that one were applying English conflicts rules). Accordingly the proper law of the contracts above and below the Odeon/Molton Street contract is not a strong connecting factor to the proper law of that contract, at least where the proper law of those other contracts is based on the location of the seller or closest connection of those contracts with England (different considerations might apply in the case of an express choice of law known to the parties).
(3) Contrary to Mr Atrill's third point, I have concluded that the place of delivery of the Bonds was New York rather than London.
(4) The fact that Molton Street is based in London, regulated by the FCA and subject to English criminal law, is neutral. Odeon is based in New York and regulated by the SEC and FINRA and subject to New York criminal law. Different conflicts of law principles apply to criminal and civil obligations, and indeed to different kinds of civil obligation. The fact that conduct of one party inducing a contract may be criminal conduct under English law has no necessary bearing on the proper law of the contract.
Issue 3: The Disclaimer
(1) As a matter of construction the provision was impermissibly vague and meaningless.
(2) As a matter of construction the Disclaimer only applies to Bloomberg messages and has no application to a contract concluded by trade tickets.
(3) As a matter of construction the Disclaimer required Odeon to disavow the contract within a reasonable time, which had expired before the cancellation on 18 June 2014.
(4) Odeon waived reliance on the Disclaimer.
(1) Extrinsic evidence does not become available as an aid to construction unless the words are ambiguous; if the language of a contract is clear and unambiguous, courts will interpret the plain meaning, including any clear and unambiguous express terms, within the four corners of the document. Ambiguity exists where "a reasonably intelligent person viewing the contract objectively could interpret the language in more than one way": Two Locks Inc v Kellogg Sale Co 68 F Supp.3d 317 at [13][14][15] The determination of whether ambiguity exists involves considering the entire contract: ibid at [17]. Mr Atrill submitted that it is unclear exactly what information that "reasonably intelligent person" is assumed to have about the context for the transaction; that it makes little sense to give that hypothetical person no context – words have no meaning without context; and that evidence of market practice and background should be available for this purpose, as it would be under English law, in the absence of a clear contrary indication in the New York case law before the court. Mr Patton submitted that resort to anything outside the four corners of the document was impermissible, relying on Ashwood Capital Inc. v OTG Management Inc. (2012) 99 A.D.3d 1 at [5]: "Whether a contractual term is ambiguous must be determined by the court as a matter of law, looking solely to the plain language used by the parties within the four corners of the contract to discern its meaning and not to extrinsic sources". A District Court decision referred to in Mr Gelber's report, Deen v New School University No 05 Civ 7174 (KMW), 2007 WL 1032295 refers at paragraph *4 with apparent approval to Alexander v Alexander 136 F.3d at 86 (which was not independently cited by either expert) as "noting that contract ambiguity can arise "either from the language itself or from inferences that can be drawn from this language"". In contrast to the English law approach which favours resort to all context which would reasonably have been available to the parties as a guide to meaning, it appears that the effect of New York law is that in determining ambiguity the context cannot stray from the language of the four corners of the contract and its subject matter, together with inferences from such language, providing a bright line rule which at least excludes evidence of market practice being admitted for the purpose of this exercise. In this case ambiguity must be determined by looking at the terms of the Disclaimer, and the documents in which it is contained and incorporated (the Bloomberg exchanges and the trade ticket), in the immediate context of the subject matter of the putative contract. Beyond that it is not permissible to go when determining whether the ambiguity gateway is opened for the purposes of admitting extrinsic evidence.
(2) Admissible extrinsic evidence can include the conduct of the parties after conclusion of the contract.
(3) There was some debate about the applicability of the contra proferentem rule and whether it was a tool of construction of last resort. I conclude that it is not a rule applicable where a contract is entered into between sophisticated parties of equal bargaining power (preferring Professor Karmel's evidence on this point) so that it plays no part in this case.
(4) As under English law, a New York court will strive to avoid finding that a contractual provision is meaningless or too vague to enforce. It would only do so as a last resort where any attempt to give meaning was futile.
(5) As to the implication of terms, the task of the court in deciding whether to imply terms into a contract is to determine what the parties would have intended if they had explicitly considered the issue: Great Lakes Transit Corp. v Marceau 154 F2d 623, 628.
Ambiguity
(1) It was said that Odeon's construction rendered the whole trade ticket superfluous because it was a confirmation. This is not so. If, in the absence of a contrary intention expressed in a disclaimer, contract formation takes place by acceptance of firm bids/offers, and the trade ticket is merely evidence of such fact, collecting the contract terms into a single document, there is nothing inconsistent with the nature of a trade ticket in it repeating a conditionality which was already part of what was agreed in the bid/offer acceptance process. If the transaction is subject to a condition precedent to its formation because of the inclusion of the Disclaimer at that stage, there is nothing inconsistent with the nature of the trade ticket that the condition precedent should be repeated. On the contrary, the trade ticket is fulfilling its function of recording the terms agreed, including the condition precedent to contract formation. It is for the parties to determine when they intend to be bound.
(2) It was said that Odeon's construction conflicted with the unqualified language in the trade ticket "Odeon sells to Molton - thanks". I see no such conflict. This argument proceeds on the unpromising premise that any conditionality in the language of the Disclaimer is meaningless such that the court should give up as futile an attempt to give any meaning to the relevant words; and ignores the imperative in New York law to assess ambiguity by looking at all parts of the document. A document which in one part identifies a sale and in another identifies that it is subject to Principal consent contains no ambiguity. The two parts can properly be read together, and indeed must be if the court is to look at the whole document and seek to avoid treating any part of the language as meaningless.
(3) It was said that the settlement date (implicit in the terms contained in the contractual exchanges as a matter of normal market practice in the absence of contrary agreement, and explicit in the trade ticket) can only be achieved if the agreement is binding on the date concluded. This is not apparent from the documentation itself and so is not an ambiguity which arises on the document. Nor is it necessarily so. There will be at least two days between trade and settlement within which the counterparty can secure certainty over whether Principal consent is given, following which he will still be in a position to settle if consent is given. If he chooses to conclude an unconditional matching trade without waiting for consent, he runs the risk that if consent is not forthcoming he will be unable to fulfil it. That is simply the consequence of the Disclaimer, not a basis for ambiguity.
(4) A related point was that the Disclaimer uses superfluous language which is inapplicable to at least some of the circumstances in which it is used. For example the reference to bids being indicative only is inapplicable to a trade ticket; and it appears that the Disclaimer is included in internal Odeon communications, to which its language is inapposite. This is not relevant to the issue being considered, which is whether the wording requiring consent of Principals is ambiguous when used between negotiating parties in a written bid/offer exchange or a trade ticket.
(1) The term is not impermissibly vague so as to be meaningless. It is clearly and unambiguously a condition precedent.
(2) The term is not inapplicable to a trade ticket. If, as I have held (and as Molton Street submitted) a contract would be concluded in the absence of the Disclaimer by an acceptance of a firm bid or offer prior to exchange of trade tickets, its inclusion in a trade ticket, whose primary purpose is evidential rather than contractual, is entirely appropriate to make clear that the trade ticket is not intended to supersede what is already a legally effective condition precedent to the conclusion of a contract. Its inclusion in the trade ticket fulfils the function of the trade ticket which is to evidence the terms already agreed, which were themselves subject to the condition precedent in the Disclaimer.
(3) The term does not require Odeon to disavow the contract within a reasonable time. It requires consent as a condition precedent, without which there is never a binding contract. In New York law, as in English law, where a contract does not fix a time for the performance of a contractual obligation, the law usually implies that it shall be performed within a reasonable time. However, the error in Molton Street's argument is that the Disclaimer does not purport to impose an obligation on Odeon to obtain the consent of its Principals: on the contrary, it renders the existence of a binding contract subject to such consent. There is, accordingly, no justification for implying a "reasonable time" limitation. The Disclaimer makes perfect sense without it: unless and until consent is provided, there simply is no binding contract. It is notable that, in the Azimut-Benetti case the Appellate Division did not consider that any question arose of implying a term that the defendant's attorney's approval should have been given within a reasonable time of signature of the preliminary contract.
Waiver
"93. When it comes to estoppel by representation or promissory estoppel, it seems to me very unlikely that a claimant would be able to satisfy the test of unconscionability unless he could also satisfy the three classic requirements. They are (a) a clear representation or promise made by the defendant upon which it is reasonably foreseeable that the claimant will act, (b) an act on the part of the claimant which was reasonably taken in reliance upon the representation or promise, and (c) after the act has been taken, the claimant being able to show that he will suffer detriment if the defendant is not held to the representation or promise. Even this formulation is relatively broad brush, and it should be emphasised that there are many qualifications or refinements which can be made to it.
94. The requirement for these three features, at least in relation to estoppel by representation, was very clearly put by the Privy Council in Tai Hing Cotton Mill Ltd –v- Liu Chong Hing Bank [1986] AC 80 at 110, in the following terms: 'the essence of estoppel is a representation (express or implied) intended to induce the person to whom it is made to adopt a course of conduct which results in detriment or loss…"
Issue 4: Contravention of the 1934 Act
The alleged contravention
(1) The concerns expressed by Mr Agresta about City & Continental's ability to deliver the Bonds. This is a reference to the conversation with Mr Ashiq at 1729 in which Mr Ashiq explained that he had had an email from the seller's side saying wait for an email confirmation (which may have been a reference to the "[not] done yet" email at 1718 which Mr Rohailla did not see); and to the three way conversation at 1733 during which Mr Agresta said "we have been told by the seller that the trade has not been confirmed…" and asked for Mr Rohailla's help saying that "you need to say to the guy [i.e. Mr Rohailla's buyer] that the trade has not been confirmed."
(2) Mr Rohailla's reckless lie to Mr Ashiq, after Mr Agresta had dropped off the 1733 conversation, that Morgan Stanley had already sold on the Bonds, intended, so Odeon submits, to encourage City & Continental to confirm the transaction.
The provisions of the 1934 Act
"(a) It shall be unlawful for any person, directly or indirectly, by the use of the mails or any means or instrumentality of interstate commerce, or of any facility of any national securities exchange, or for any member of a national securities exchange—
(4) If a dealer, broker, security-based swap dealer, major security-based swap participant, or other person selling or offering for sale or purchasing or offering to purchase the security, a security based swap, or security-based swap agreement with respect to such security, to make, regarding any security other than a government security, any security not so registered, any security-based swap, or any security-based swap agreement with respect to such security, for the purpose of inducing the purchase or sale of such security, such security-based swap, or such security-based swap agreement any statement which was at the time and in the light of the circumstances under which it was made, false or misleading with respect to any material fact, and which that person knew or had reasonable ground to believe was so false or misleading."
"To use or employ, in connection with the purchase or sale of any security registered on a national securities exchange or any security not so registered, or any securities based swap agreement any manipulative or deceptive device or contrivance in contravention of such rules and regulations as [the SEC] may prescribe as necessary or appropriate in the public interest or for the protection of the public interest or for the protection of investors."
"It shall be unlawful for any person, directly or indirectly, by the use of any means or instrumentality of interstate commerce, or of the mails, or of any facility of any national securities exchange,
(a) to employ any device, scheme, or artifice to defraud;
(b) to make any untrue statement of a material fact or to omit to state a material fact necessary in order to make the statements made, not misleading; or
(c) to engage in any act, practice, or course of business which operates or would operate as a fraud or deceit upon any person, in connection with the purchase or sale of any security."
"Every contract made in violation of any provision of this title or of any rule or regulation thereunder, and every contract . . . heretofore or hereafter made the performance of which involves the violation of, or the continuance of any relationship or practice in violation of, any provision of this title or any rule or regulation thereunder, shall be void (1) as regards the rights of any person who, in violation of any such provision, rule, or regulation, shall have made or engaged in the performance of any such contract, and (2) as regards the rights of any person who, not being a party to such contract, shall have acquired any right thereunder with actual knowledge of the facts by reason of which the making or performance of such contract was in violation of any such provision, rule or regulation . . ."
(1) A violation requires at least the following elements: (a) a misstatement or omission, (b) of material fact, (c) made with a wrongful state of mind known as "scienter" and (d) in connection with, or to induce, the purchase or sale of a security.
(2) Where, as in the present case, the violation is said to consist of an omission, there must be a duty to speak. Although s. 9(a)(4) refers to making false statements, it also applies to omissions where there is a duty to speak, in a similar way to Rule 10b-5.
(3) The test for materiality is whether there was a "substantial likelihood" that its disclosure "would have been viewed by the reasonable investor as having altered the total mix of information made available": Matrixx Initiatives Inc v Siracusano 131 S.Ct 1309. As Mr Gelber emphasised, there is no duty to disclose "a mere speculative possibility" (Pennsylvania Public School Employees' Retirement System v Bank of America Corporation 874 F Supp.2d 341 341 at 351), which as Professor Karmel observed, is no more than an aspect of the requirement that the misstatement/omission must be of facts which are material facts.
(4) "Scienter" is a mental state embracing an intent to deceive, manipulate or defraud and requires at least reckless behaviour, which is defined as an extreme departure from the standards of ordinary care such that the danger is either known to the party or so obvious that he must have been aware of it. Mere negligence is insufficient.
(5) Although s. 29(b) itself suggests that a contract made in breach of the 1934 Act, or the rules made thereunder, is void ab initio, this provision has been interpreted by the courts as meaning "voidable at the option of the innocent party": Berckeley Investment Group Ltd v Colkitt 455 F 3d 195 (2006) at 205. Where a contract is induced by a misstatement or omission which involves a violation of the 1934 Act, the contract is voidable under s. 29(b) even though the contract itself could be performed perfectly lawfully.
(1) whether the transaction in this case falls within the territorial scope of the 1934 Act;
(2) whether Molton Street had a duty to speak; and
(3) whether, in order to obtain rescission, Odeon must prove that it reasonably relied on Molton Street's omission.
Extraterritoriality
"In concluding that these complaints do not state a claim upon which relief may be granted, we do not suggest that the presence of some foreign element in a transaction necessarily means that Congress did not include it in the coverage of §10(b). To borrow Morrison's metaphor as to the effect of a minor domestic element on the nature of an overwhelmingly foreign transaction: Section 10(b) would indeed be a craven watchdog against securities fraud if it retreated to its kennel whenever a fraud involved some foreign activity. The potential for incompatibility between US and foreign law is just one form of evidence that a particular application of a statute is extraterritorial. It is neither a safe harbor nor the only relevant consideration in the extraterritoriality analysis. It predominates in this case because of the dominance of the foreign elements we have outlined above." [emphasis in original]
Duty to speak
Reliance
Misstatement
Scienter
Materiality
Issue 5 Unilateral mistake
"Where a mistake of one party at the time a contract was made as to a basic assumption on which he made the contract has a material effect on the agreed exchange of performances that is adverse to him, the contract is voidable by him if he does not bear the risk of the mistake under the rule stated in §154 and
(a) the effect of the mistake is such that enforcement of the contract would be unconscionable; or
(b) the other party has reason to know of the mistake or his fault caused the mistake."
Odeon under a mistake
Reliance
Materiality
Mr Rohailla's state of mind
Issue 6 Implied term as to performance
Issue 7: Implied term as to criminal conduct under English law
Damages
Issue 8: Remoteness
"(1) Damages are not recoverable for loss that the party in breach did not have reason to foresee as a probable result of the breach when the contract was made.
(2) Loss may be foreseeable as a probable result of the breach because it follows from the breach
(a) in the ordinary course of events; or
(b) as a result of special circumstances, beyond the ordinary course of events, that the party in breach had reason to know."
(1) The Court will only award damages for consequential loss if they satisfy the "tacit agreement" test set out in the decision of the New York State Court of Appeals in Kenford v County of Erie 67 NY2d 257, 262 (1986). In that case, the County had agreed with the plaintiffs to build a stadium, which would then be subject either to a 40-year lease or, in the event of a failure to agree the lease, a 20-year management contract operated by the plaintiffs. The stadium was never built, and the plaintiffs claimed damages for the fees they would have earned during the 20-year management period. Such losses were reasonably foreseeable as flowing from the wrongful non-construction of the stadium, but the court quashed a jury verdict for such damages. Having noted that claims for consequential damages such as lost profits needed to be fairly within the contemplation of the parties at the time of the contract, the Court went onto say that there was nothing in the contract itself which suggested that the County would bear the heavy responsibility of paying damages for 20 years of lost management fees. It observed:
"In the absence of any provision for such an eventuality, the commonsense rule to apply is to consider what the parties would have concluded had they considered the subject. The evidence here fails to demonstrate that liability for loss of profits over the length of the contract would have been in the contemplation of the parties at the relevant times."
(2) A court may limit damages for foreseeable loss by excluding recovery for lost profits if it concludes that in the circumstances justice so requires in order to avoid disproportionate compensation. The principle is set out in paragraph 351(3) of the Restatement, which goes on to explain in the commentary:
"f. Other limitations on damages. It is not always in the interest of justice to require the party in breach to pay damages for all of the foreseeable loss that he has caused. There are unusual instances in which it appears from the circumstances either that the parties assumed that one of them would not bear the risk of a particular loss or that, although there was no such assumption, it would be unjust to put the risk on that party. One such circumstance is an extreme disproportion between the loss and the price charged by the party whose liability for that loss is in question. The fact that the price is relatively small suggests that it was not intended to cover the risk of such liability. Another such circumstance is an informality of dealing, including the absence of a detailed written contract, which indicates that there was no careful attempt to allocate all of the risks. The fact that the parties did not attempt to delineate with precision all of the risks justifies the court in attempting to allocate them fairly. "
The loss of profit claim
(1) Molton Street was a small broker dealer whom it was not contemplated would be running a position by holding the Bonds. This is readily apparent from the negotiations, which were premised on prices being bid and offered up and down the line from Mr Rohailla. It was therefore objectively contemplated by Odeon, Shooters Hill and Molton Street (whatever Mr Rohailla's fraudulent intentions) that Molton Street would sell on in a matched or riskless principal transaction, both because it was a small broker dealer which only traded as a matchless principal, and because that was the stated assumption on which negotiations were conducted.
(2) It was the evidence of Mr Schwartzberg and Mr Van Alstyne that in a riskless principal transaction, a standard and usual mark up for bonds of this nature would be in the region of 0.25 to 0.5%.
(3) Mr Rohailla's evidence was that previously he had managed to get as much as a full point on a trade i.e. 1% but he did not suggest that he had ever previously made a greater turn.
(4) In a recent Complaint brought by the SEC against traders at Nomura Securities International Inc for making an illegal turn on residential mortgage asset backed securities by lying about the bid and offer prices, Nomura's standard going rate for a payment on top was said to be 8 ticks.
(5) 0.5% was the mark up which Mr Rhodes agreed Mr Rohailla should get, on the assumption that that was Mr Rohailla's entire profit from the transaction as being additional to the price which Mr Rohailla was paying his seller.
(6) On the Friday evening, Mr Ashiq added 0.5% to Mr Agresta's original indication of 20.5% before offering it on, and then disclosed to Mr Agresta that he had done so.
(7) Ultimately 1% was the mark up negotiated by Shooters Hill for Odeon (buying at 21 and selling at 22), which fell to be split as to 0.9% to Shooters Hill and 0.1% to Odeon.
The indemnity claim
The market value claim
Issue 9: Ex turpi causa
(1) the Bloomberg message at 1408 by telling Mr Rhodes that the seller was looking for a bid in the mid 30s;
(2) the telephone conversation at 1455 by again telling Mr Rhodes that the seller was looking for a bid in the mid 30s;
(3) the Bloomberg message of 1504 by telling Mr Rhodes that the offer was 35 and suggesting going in with a bid of 32; and
(4) the Bloomberg message at 1710 by telling Mr Rhodes that the Bonds were offered at 35.
(1) The claim for loss of profit is for the very profit which Mr Rohailla procured by practising his deception on Mr Rhodes. The damages are based on the difference between the purchase price and the sale price to Morgan Stanley in circumstances where the latter was procured by Mr Rohailla's fraudulent conduct. Mr Atrill argued that Mr Rohailla's deception did not play any part in inflating the claimed loss: the relevant counterfactual is what would have happened if the representations had not been made, not if they had been true; and Mr Rhodes would have been prepared to bid 35.5 irrespective of Mr Rohailla's deception, as is evident from his bid at 40 in the BWIC. I would not accept that argument. The relevant counterfactual is indeed what would have happened had the misstatements not been made; but it is a fallacy to posit that in those circumstances Mr Rhodes would simply have bid blind without inquiring what Mr Rohailla was being offered by his seller; when dealing with a small broker dealer like Molton Street, Mr Rhodes would have based a bid only on what he thought was being offered up the line, which is why Mr Rohailla practised his deception about that in this case. The counterfactual is therefore that if any sale to Morgan Stanley would have been achieved at all, it would have been based on the true price being offered to Molton Street. Odeon's broad submission, that the loss of profit claim involves an attempt by Molton Street to secure the fruits of its own fraudulent conduct, is well founded.
(2) The same reasoning does not directly apply to the indemnity claim, which would fall to be quantified by reference to the difference between the price at which Morgan Stanley bought and the price at which it sold or could have sold to its customer, or market value if that is different. If Morgan Stanley was deceived into paying more than it otherwise would, that goes to diminish, not inflate, the quantum of the indemnity claim. Nevertheless the exposure to liability towards Morgan Stanley under a contract procured by fraud would in my view inextricably link the claim for an indemnity with the fraud so as to attract the operation of the ex turpi causa doctrine if the test is that identified in Hounga.
"Both subrogation and implied indemnification are equitable causes of action. The purpose of these equitable remedies is to shift a debt or obligation to a party who more properly should be accountable in order to prevent unjust enrichment and an unfair result. However, equitable remedies are barred by the doctrine of unclean hands where the party seeking to assert them "has committed some unconscionable act that is 'directly related to the subject matter in litigation' and has injured the party attempting to invoke the doctrine." Additionally, public policy precludes indemnification for those who commit intentional torts or active negligence. Thus, the equitable powers of the courts should not be exerted on behalf of one who has acted fraudulently or has gained an advantage by deceit."
Conclusion