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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Lombard North Central Plc v Nugent & Ors [2013] EWHC 1588 (QB) (06 June 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2013/1588.html Cite as: [2013] EWHC 1588 (QB) |
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QUEENS BENCH DIVISION
LEEDS DISTRICT REGISTRY
MERCANTILE LIST
Oxford Row Leeds LS1 3BG |
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B e f o r e :
sitting as a Judge of the High Court in Leeds
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LOMBARD NORTH CENTRAL PLC |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) GORDON NUGENT (2) JOHN CLARK (3) CHRISTOPHER CRABTREE |
Defendants |
____________________
Louis Browne (instructed by Joliffe & Co) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 25, 26 March and 6 June 2013
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Crown Copyright ©
Judge Behrens :
1 Introduction
Balance Outstanding at 29/10/2006 | 143,884.08 | |
Less | ||
Rent from Drink Pac Ltd | 7,050.00 | |
Rent from Drink Pac UK Ltd | 32,550.00 | |
Sale proceeds | 42,500.00 | |
VAT adjustment | 7,437.50 | |
89,537.50 | 89,537.50 | |
Balance Due at 24/1/2011 | 54,346.58 |
1. There is a dispute as to the precise nature of the machinery which was the subject of the Lease Purchase Agreement. Both sides agree that it included a Tetrapak Tetra Prisma Asceptic 250 ml Filling Machine including PT19, serial number 21005/83751 ("the Prisma 250 ml Filling Machine"). Lombard contend that the Prisma 250 ml Filling Machine was the only piece of machinery included in the Lease Purchase Agreement. The Defendants, on the other hand, contend that it included the line of 7 or so pieces of machinery of which the Prisma 250 ml Filling Machine forms the main part. The significance of the dispute relates to the value of the machinery included within the Lease Purchase Agreement. If the Defendants are correct it was much more valuable to Lombard than if Lombard is correct.
2. There is a dispute as to the rent received and the sale proceeds. It is the Defendants case that the machinery was worth more than the £143,884.08 outstanding as at the date of the administration.
1) They contend that Lombard should have taken steps to sell the machinery in early 2007. They rely on an offer made by Mr Clark in January 2007 to buy back the machinery at the settlement figure.
2) They contend that rental received by Lombard was too low. A rent of £1,000 per month was too low. In any event there were long periods over which no rent was paid. There were 51 months between October 2006 and January 2011. Rent has only been received for 33 or 34 of those months.
3) They contend that the price received by Lombard in January 2011was too low.
3. At one time Mr Browne raised a minor dispute as to the moneys owing as at 24th January 2011. This dispute relates solely to VAT. Lombard has credited Waterfront with £7,437.50 which is 17.5% of the sale price of £42,500. This was the VAT rate as at the date of the Lease Purchase Agreement. However the VAT rate at the date of the sale by Lombard was 20% and Lombard received £8,500 VAT. The issue was whether Waterfront should have been credited with the sum of £8,500 rather than the £7,437.50 a difference of some £1,062.50. As I pointed out the resolution of this dispute depended on the relevant VAT regulations and I left it to the parties to determine whether it should be pursued and if so to refer me to the relevant provisions. In the event neither Counsel has pursued this dispute. Accordingly I take it to have been abandoned.
2 The facts
2.1 The acquisition of the line.
Such lines are supplied to suit the requirements of each individual customer. In addition to the standalone filling machine that is the principal component of a line there are many end of line/downstream options available including
I would suggest that is most common for a customer to purchase a complete line however the same could be configured with any number of the options detailed above. It is however possible that a Company may already be in possession of packing equipment or wish to purchase packing equipment from an alternative supplier and therefore only purchase the filling machine from Tetra Pak.
2.2 Negotiations leading to the Lease Purchase Agreement.
Goods Description Tetrapak Tetra Prisma Asceptic Filling Machine including PT19 (the "Goods").
Sale of Tetra Prisma Asceptic Filling Machine including PT19 Machine No 21005/83751 250 ml.
Sale of Tetra Prisma Asceptic Filling Machine including PT19 Machine No 21005/83751 250 ml.
2.3 The Lease Purchase Agreement
Tetrapak Tetra Prisma Asceptic Filling Machine including PT19. It gave the serial number as 21005/83751.
You will pay to us all of the Rentals and other amounts that have become due to us but remain unpaid and all Rentals and other amounts that would, save for the termination, have become due less such rebate we calculate at our absolute discretion.
If you have not exercised your right to become the owner of the goods and this Agreement has terminated we will try and sell the goods if they are in our possession. If you have paid to us all amounts that are due to us on termination we will pay to you the Net Proceeds of Sale we receive as soon as practicable after we receive them. The Net Proceeds of Sale will be the proceeds from selling the goods after deducting VAT payable on the sale, any costs of repossession or that we or any party who has acted for us may have incurred. If we have not sold the goods within 28 days of our repossessing them and if you have paid to us all amounts due on termination we may but shall not be obliged to have the goods valued at a forced sale valuation if sold to the trade by a dealer of goods of a similar kind to the goods. We will deduct from the amount we are to pay to you the costs relating to the valuation, any costs of repossession . We will then treat this amount as the net proceeds of sale under the provisions of this clause.
2.4 The Guarantee
(1) Hereby guarantee the payment to you on demand of all sums that become payable by the Customer under the Agreement and the due performance and observance by the Customer of all the terms and conditions of the Agreement.
(2) Hereby indemnify you against any failure by the Customer to observe the Customer's obligations set out in the Agreement and agree to pay you on demand any sums which the Customer has agreed to pay you under the Agreement and any sums which may become payable to you as a consequence of the Customer's said failure.
2.5 Termination
2.6 Events following the administration
Asset valued at £27,222 → 33% devalue per year.
He says that he has had the equipment valued by Tetra Pak at £275K and that the line would be worth about £800k to replace with new kit. He says it is likely that the newco will approach us with a poor offer. I have agreed that I will get the valuation double checked and will try to push the Admin into settling the agreement if it appears there is equity. [Mr Clark] says that he would be happy if the administrator settles the balance in full, however if it appears that this is not going to happen then he intends to settle. I have not commented on whether this would be acceptable.
Re offer for the Tetra Pak Machine, further to conversations with the supplier it seems that this machine was supplied by them and invoiced in 2001. The cost of an equivalent machine today is circa £275,000 and Tetra Pak have a similar machine manuf in 2000 for sale at £50,000. It is my opinion that we will be lucky to achieve in XS of £40,000 after costs for this machine. Therefore the offer of settlement seems reasonable.
You confirmed that you would be prepared to settle the above outstanding balance in full in the event that [Drink Pac Ltd] were not able to do the same.
At the moment title to the asset is disputed and we are working with the Administrators [to] ensure the co-operation of [Drink Pac Ltd]. We have not yet received offers from [Drink Pac Ltd] but they have indicated that they would not be prepared to pay the outstanding amount in full.
Please can you provide confirmation of your offer in writing so that we may refer to it if negotiations with [Drink Pac Ltd] should fail?
I would like to confirm that I will buy the machine back for £143,984.08 if [Drink Pac Ltd] do not do the same I have a buy back proposal, if I do not hear from you within 14 days I consider the matter closed and I will inform the other parties accordingly.
Drink Pac Ltd have agreed to relinquish their title claim over the Tetra Pak 250 Line. They have expressed an interest in purchasing the line but they have confirmed that they are not prepared to settle the full outstanding balance.
We will allow you ten days from the date of this letter to settle the agreement. Please arrange for the balance of £143,984.08 to be paid
You will need to contact Rick Hallberg at Drink Pac Ltd to discuss arrangements to remove the equipment
If we do not receive the settlement within this timescale then we will enter into negotiations with Drink Pac and possibly with third parties. Although we will endeavour to achieve a fair market value it is likely that there may be a shortfall for which you will be personally liable.
Hire of Goods Invoice in relation to the following: Tetrapak 250 ml prisma asceptic filling machine with PT19 attachment Hire period 3/11/06 3/5/07. Cost £1,000 per month plus VAT.
For the avoidance of any doubt we confirm that payment of this invoice by Drink Pac Ltd does not constitute any novation or similar such act of this agreement with yourselves and does not bestow on Drink Pac Ltd any rights under the said agreements. Should Drink Pac Ltd agree to purchase the goods at the end of or during this period we will refund seventy percent of the hire charge to date against the agreed sale price.
Date | Payor | Amount |
8/05/07 | Drink Pac Ltd | £7,050 |
11/03/08 | Drink Pac UK Ltd | £11,750 |
23/03/09 | Drink Pac UK Ltd | £7,000 |
12/06/09 | Drink Pac UK Ltd | £3,450 |
26/05/10 | Drink Pac UK Ltd | £10,350 |
Total | £39,600 |
Used Tetrapak 250 ml prisma asceptic filling machine with PT19 attachment Serial no: 21005/83751
3 The expert evidence
The Tetra Pak Line | Oct-06 | Jan/Aug 2011 |
Sale Price | 160,000 | 87,500 |
Commission | 16,000 | 8,750 |
Costs of Dismantling | 17,500 | 17,500 |
Storage | 3,500 | 3,500 |
Marketing | 4,250 | 4,250 |
Net Sale Proceeds | 118,750 | 53,500 |
Rental | 3,500 | 3,500 |
The Filling Machine | Oct-06 | Jan/Aug 2011 |
Sale Price | 80,000 | 45,000 |
Commission | 8,000 | 4,500 |
Costs of Dismantling | 12,250 | 12,250 |
Storage | 1,750 | 1,750 |
Marketing | 4,250 | 4,250 |
Net Sale Proceeds | 53,750 | 22,250 |
Rental | 1,750 | 1,750 |
4 The construction issue.
(1) the ultimate aim of interpreting a contractual provision is to determine what the parties meant by the language used, which involves ascertaining what a reasonable person would have understood the parties to have meant;
(2) the reasonable person is one who has all the background knowledge which would reasonably be available to the parties in the situation they were at the time of the contract;
(3) where a term of a contract is open to more than one interpretation, it is generally appropriate to adopt the interpretation which is most consistent with business common sense.
1. In the Investors case Lord Hoffmann defined this in wide terms as including
absolutely anything which would have affected the way in which the language of the document would have been understood by the reasonable man.
However some doubts have been expressed about the width of this principle. In BCCI v Ali [2001] 1 AC 251 Lord Hoffmann made it clear that he meant "anything that a reasonable man would have regarded as relevant. [For a fuller discussion see Lewison The Interpretation of Contracts 5th Ed at paragraph 1.04]
2. The law excludes from the admissible background the previous negotiations of the parties and the declarations of subjective intent. The inquiry is objective. The question is what reasonable persons would have had in mind. It is furthermore clear from the decision in Chartbrook that evidence of previous negotiations is inadmissible as an aid to construction. [See Lewison paragraph 3.08 for a detailed discussion]
5 The obligations owed by Lombard on termination of the Lease Purchase Agreement.
The mortgagee when selling mortgaged property is under a duty to a guarantor of the mortgagor's debt to take reasonable care in all the circumstances of the case to obtain the true market value of that property [See American Express v Hurley [1985] 3 ARE 564 at 571 and the discussion in Chitty on Contracts 31st Ed Vol 2 paragraph 44-119]
On being sued by the creditor for payment of the debt guaranteed a surety may avail himself of any right of set off or counterclaim which the principal creditor possesses against the creditor. [See Chitty on Contracts Vol 2 para 44-085].
In every case in which it is said that some provision ought to be implied in an instrument, the question for the court is whether such provision would spell out in express words what the instrument read against the relevant background would be reasonably understood to mean.
In the circumstances:
1. I agree with Miss Jackson that this case is not governed by the law relating to mitigation of damages. Waterfront was not in breach of contract. The Lease Purchase Agreement was not terminated as a result of breach of contract.
2. I also agree that it is unnecessary to bring in equitable obligations such as arise as between mortgagor and mortgagee. As Miss Jackson points out the Machine was not held by Lombard as a security.
3. However there were, in my view, the implied terms set out above in the disposal clause. In so far as there was a breach of the implied terms Waterfront would have been entitled to set off or counterclaim for any loss is suffered against the sums otherwise due under the termination payment clause. In those circumstances it is open to the guarantors to avail themselves of such set off or counterclaim as a defence or partial defence to the claim under the guarantee.
6 The offer made by Mr Clark
1. I am not satisfied that Lombard was in breach of the implied term in not accepting the offer of 10th January 2007 within 14 days. In my view Lombard's conduct in seeking to sort out the title and responding in the way it did on 22nd February 2007 was not unreasonable.
2. I am not in any event satisfied that Waterfront and/or the guarantors suffered any loss as a result of the alleged breach because I am not satisfied that Tetra Pak would have provided the funds to enable the purchase of the machine at £143,984.
7 The proceeds of sale and rents received.
8 Conclusion
Note 1 This sum did not allow any discount for early payment but nothing turns on this. [Back]