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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Organic Group Ltd v Charterhouse Macmillan Group Inc [2007] EWHC 1275 (QB) (01 May 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2007/1275.html Cite as: [2007] EWHC 1275 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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ORGANIC GROUP LIMITED | Claimant/Appellant | |
-v- | ||
CHARTERHOUSE MACMILLAN GROUP INC | Defendant/Respondent |
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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 A TWIGGER appeared on behalf of the Defendant/Respondent.
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Crown Copyright ©
"1.1 The Client engages the Consultant to provide the services to the Client and the Consultant agrees to provide such services upon the terms and conditions set out below.
3.1 The Consultant is retained on a non-exclusive basis to provide the services to the Client for such times and at such locations as may be agreed between the parties from time to time.
3.2 The Consultant shall provide its services with reasonable care and skill and to be the best of its ability.
3.3 The Client and Consultant agree that the services shall be performed by the nominated personnel. No change in personnel shall be made without the Client's prior approval, such approval not to be unreasonably withheld.
4.1 In consideration of the services the Client shall pay to the Consultant the fees set out in Schedule 3.
5.1 This Agreement shall immediately terminate when the sale agreement of even date herewith for the purchase by the Client of Linford Hall and Linford Hall Estate…has been completed and the Consultant has received payment in full of the sums due in accordance of the said agreement in Schedule 3 of this Agreement.
9.1 This Agreement sets out the entire agreement of the parties…"
Schedule 1:
"General business and advisory services and promoting the interests of the client generally at such times and in relation to such projects and matters as may be agreed between the Client and the Consultant from time to time."
Schedule 3A:
"The sum of £147,500 to be paid within such time or in such instalments as may be agreed between the parties but in any event by the earlier of…"
Then there is a blank date which it is agreed should read 1st March 2006.
"…(the first anniversary of the commencement of this Agreement) or on completion of the purchase pursuant to the written agreement between them of the even date herewith.
B: In the event that the purchase is not completed by"
There is then a blank date which the claimant again says should be 1st March 2006 and which is not an agreed date. Then:
"The Client shall in addition pay the Consultant such sum as shall amount to 2% over Lloyds Bank plc base rate from time to time calculated on a daily basis on the sum of £2,950,000 (additional payment) such additional payment to be payable to the Consultant monthly in arrears on the last day of each month until the purchase is completed or as may otherwise be agreed between the parties."
"8.10 The task of the court is to construe the document according to the ordinary tenets of construction and then to determine whether the document as so construed is void for uncertainty.
8.11 Where parties have entered into what they believe to be a binding agreement, the court is most reluctant to hold that their agreement is void for uncertainty and will only do so as a last resort.
8.13 A provision in the contract will only be void for uncertainty if the court cannot reach a conclusion as to what was in the draftsman's mind or where it is not safe for the court to prefer one possible meaning to other equally possible meanings.
8.14 Save in exceptional circumstances the court will not recognise an agreement to agree as having any legal effect."
"Businessmen often record the most important agreements in a crude and summary fashion. Modes of expression sufficient and clear to them in the course of their business may appear to those unfamiliar with the business far from complete or precise. It is accordingly the duty of the court to construe such documents fairly and broadly without being too astute or subtle in finding defects. But on the contrary the court should seek to apply the old maxim of English law verba ita sunt intelligenda ut res magis valeat quam pereat. That maxim however does not mean that the court is to make a contract for the parties or to go outside the words they have used except insofar as there are appropriate implications of law, as for instance the implication of what is just and reasonable to be ascertained by the court as a matter of machinery where the contractual intention is clear but the contract is silent on some detail… Furthermore, even if the construction of the words used may be difficult, that is not a reason for holding them too ambiguous or uncertain to be enforced if the fair meaning of the parties can be extracted."
"The first is that the language used was so obscure. and so incapable of any definite or precise meaning that the court is unable to attribute to the parties any particular contractual intention. The object of the court is to do justice between the parties, and the court will do its best, if satisfied that there was an ascertainable and determinate intention to contract, to give effect to that intention, looking at substance and not mere form. It will not be deterred by mere difficulties of interpretation. Difficulty is not synonymous with ambiguity so long as any definite meaning can be extracted. But the test of intention is to be found in the words used. If these words, considered however broadly and untechnically and with due regard to all the just implications, fail to evince any definite meaning on which the court can safely act, the court has no choice but to say that there is no contract. Such a position is not often found."
The second reason, he went on to explain, was where the agreement was inchoate, i.e. the parties have never in fact completed their agreement, in that case by settling what the terms of the hire purchase agreement integral to the sale of the vehicle were to be.
"The contention that the consideration for the payment of £147,000 [he meant £147,500] failed because services were not provided is plainly unsustainable since the services could not be provided without the defendant's cooperation which it withheld.
(3) However, that apart, it cannot be said that the defendant's contentions have no real prospects of success and the defendant ought not to be precluded from defending the action."
The defendant's contentions he was there referring to plainly were the contention that the contract must be regarded as being void for uncertainty, because he dismissed the alternative argument that there was a total failure of consideration.
"The court may be willing to imply a term that the parties shall cooperate to ensure the performance of their bargain, thus 'where in a written contract it appears that both parties have agreed that something shall be done which cannot effectively be done unless both concur in doing it, the construction of the contract is that each agrees to do all that is necessary to be done on his part for the carrying out of that thing, though there may be no express words to that effect.'"