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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 >> Charles Stanley & Co Ltd v Adams [2013] EWHC 2137 (QB) (19 July 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2013/2137.html Cite as: [2013] EWHC 2137 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(sitting as a Judge of the High Court)
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CHARLES STANLEY & CO LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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JOHN ADAMS |
Defendant |
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The defendant appeared in person
Hearing date: 25 June 2013
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Crown Copyright ©
Sir Raymond Jack :
"Fundamental to the Contract for Services of all self employed Brokers engaged by the Company is the understanding and acceptance that they share in the income they generate on their clients and may, in some circumstances, have personal financial liability for losses arising from those clients. While the Company may have professional indemnity insurance to cover certain losses, such insurance shall be invoked by the Company at its absolute discretion. Where any such claim is made by the Company under its policy, then it shall not look for recovery of the same from the Broker, although the Broker may still be liable for any excess under the policy."
The background to this is that a self-employed broker has a substantial share of commissions earned on his clients, which in Mr Adams' case was 40%.
"This procedure applies to all losses being borne by the Company or those profits accruing to the Company from errors made by anyone (whether inside or outside the Company). A non-exhaustive list includes:
- bad debts,
- booking errors,
- dealing errors,
- loss of securities,
- putting right unsuitable investment advice or management,
- mistakes/misunderstandings by the client which the Company puts right,
- registrars' or CREST errors,
- admin/back office errors,
- other liabilities of clients (e.g. …)
- compensation paid by the Company (whether or not ordered by the Financial Ombudsman Service, the FSA or any other authority) and any associated fees and charges,
……….."
- threshold: Profits and losses up to £200 will be divided 50:50. These will not be subject to the Determination Procedure set out below.
- Determination Procedure Principles: The objective of the procedure is to allocate liability for losses and error profits which exceed £200 as reasonably as possible amongst the parties responsible for them. For example, where it can be clearly ascertained that a loss has been incurred by an error made by a Broker alone, it will be allocated 100% to the Broker, and vice versa when it is a General Office or Dealing Room error. In many cases there will be a conflict of evidence, or a genuine misunderstanding (say between a Broker and the Dealers) or it is caused entirely externally, and the loss will be allocated 50:50. In other cases an assessment may be made of the degrees of responsibility on each side, with the loss shared accordingly, e.g. one-third/two-thirds.
- …… The degree of care which you exercise may be a factor in any assessment. In relation to bad debts, each case will be considered on its own merit. However the Company would expect that the liability would be as follows:
- 50% if the Company's credit rules are complied with,
- 100% if not complied with.
……."
"Although the jurisdiction of a domestic tribunal is founded on contract, express or implied, nevertheless the parties are not free to make any contract they like. There are important limitations imposed by public policy. The tribunal must, for instance, observe the principles of natural justice. …..Another limitation arises out of the well-known principle that parties cannot by contract oust the jurisdiction of the court…. . They can, of course, agree to leave questions of law, as well as questions of fact, to the decision of the domestic tribunal. They can, indeed, make the tribunal the final arbiter on questions of fact, but they cannot make it the final arbiter on questions of law."
"… it does not seem to me that any question arises as to the ouster of the jurisdiction of the court. The court clearly has a role to play. The problem is to define the extent of that role.
I see the force of the submission that it is unusual for one party to a contract to be constituted the sole arbiter of the validity of any claim made against it. There is therefore attraction in the argument that the determination under cl.IX is merely, …, a first stage determination….. . I have come to the conclusion, however, that this argument must be rejected."
So the court was not concerned in the circumstances there by the fact that the contract made Cristal judge in its own cause.
"The real question, as it seems to me, is not whether the parties intended that the plaintiff should be left to decide these matters; but whether that is a bargain which the law permits them to make. I start from the position that the courts should be slow to strike down a sensible commercial bargain, made between parties experienced in their field, unless there is some clearly identifiable element of public policy which requires that to be done.
I am satisfied that there is no rule of public policy which prevents parties from agreeing to submit to the final and conclusive decision of a third party some issue which involves questions of construction or of mixed fact and law. … .
It is necessary, therefore, to go on to consider whether different considerations must apply where the effect of their bargain is that the parties have sought to entrust the decision to one or other of themselves rather than to an independent expert. I can see no reason, in principle, why a different approach is required.
It is, of course, necessary to keep in mind that there are some questions of law which it would be repugnant to the very existence of a legally enforceable contract to leave to the exclusive determination of one party. An obvious example would be a decision as to the existence or otherwise of contractual liability in given circumstances. It must also be kept in mind that in many, if not most, situations it will be inherently unlikely that one party will intend to leave a question of law to be decided by the other party. Further an agreement wholly to oust the jurisdiction of the courts is against public policy and is void. But I can see no objection in principle to a bargain in which one party is left to decide (i) what the facts are in relation to some matter which is to arise in the future and which is plainly intended to have some contractual consequence under a provision of the agreement which they have made and (ii) whether or not that combination of facts does fall within that provision. The jurisdiction of the court is not ousted in those circumstances; provided that the agreement which the parties have reached on that matter allows the court to interfere if the decision-making party has acted unreasonably, perversely or in bad faith. It seems to me that the court will be ready (in the absence of express words to the contrary) to construe the agreement, if necessary by implying an appropriate term, so as to impose on the decision-making party an obligation to act reasonably and in good faith. An agreement which did not permit of such a construction would, I think, be void; but that is not an issue in the present case."
"The likelihood is that the judge [Lightman J in two other cases] had in mind decided cases where the court interpreted a contractual term dependent on the exercise of the will of one party as by implication restricted to a decision taken in good faith and on reasonable grounds, e.g. a clause entrusting a decision as to the adequacy of performance to the absolute discretion of one party. The foundation of such an implication is to satisfy the reasonable expectations of the parties."
Lord Steyn referred to the West of England Shipowners and Brown cases cited above as examples.