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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> R & D Construction Group Ltd v. Hallam Land Management Ltd [2009] ScotCS CSOH_128 (16 September 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2009/2009CSOH128.html Cite as: [2009] ScotCS CSOH_128, [2009] CSOH 128 |
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OUTER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION
[2009] CSOH 128
|
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CA63/08
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OPINION OF LORD HODGE
in the cause
R & D CONSTRUCTION GROUP LIMITED
Pursuer;
against
HALLAM LAND MANAGEMENT LIMITED
Defender:
________________
|
Act: Clark QC; Maclay Murray & Spens LLP
Alt: Borland; Harper MacLeod LLP
16 September 2009
[1] The pursuers are the assignees of Robison & Davidson
Limited ("R&D"),who were a party to the land purchase contract which is the
subject matter of this action. The defenders are Hallam Land Management
Limited ("Hallam"), who were the other party to the contract. The parties
agreed to a proof of all matters raised on record other than articles 10
and 11 of condescendence and the corresponding answers in the defences, which
dealt with causation and damages.
Background
[2] In November 1999 Hallam entered into an option agreement with
a landowner, Mrs Barbara Kerr ("Mrs Kerr") in which Hallam were
given an option to purchase up to 21.1 acres of land at Wester Windyedge
Farm, Cleland, Lanarkshire, at a price to be agreed. In 2003 R&D entered
into a contract with Hallam by which R&D contracted to buy 4.685 acres
of the option subjects ("the purchase subjects") from Hallam at a price of
£571,314. The purchase contract, which comprised an offer dated 29 January 2003, a qualified acceptance dated 24 September 2003 and a letter concluding the bargain dated 1 October 2003, was subject to conditions precedent. One of
conditions precedent, which is at centre of the dispute in this action, is
clause 4.1.10 which provided:
"The Missives shall be essentially conditional upon:
....
4.1.10 the Seller [Hallam] agreeing a purchase price for the Subjects with the current proprietor in terms wholly acceptable to the Seller (the Seller being required to use all reasonable endeavours in this regard)"
[3] Two principal issues arose in the proof; one was legal, the
other was primarily factual and partly legal. The first was whether the
obligation to use all reasonable endeavours in the provision which I have
quoted was enforceable; the second was whether, if the provision was capable of
enforcement, Hallam were in breach of contract.
The contractual context
[4] Hallam trade in land. As part of their business they
negotiate option agreements with landowners and also back to back agreements
with developers. When doing so they seek to make a satisfactory profit on the
differential in price between the two contracts. Someone other than the
landowner bears the cost of attempting to obtain planning permission to develop
the land and the landowner under the option agreement is entitled to a purchase
price fixed by reference to a percentage of the resulting market value.
[5] I summarise below the material provisions of the
two contracts in this case.
(a) The option agreement between Hallam and Mrs Kerr
[6] In return for an option fee of £7,000, Mrs Kerr gave
Hallam the option, which was exercisable for five years after the delivery
of the option agreement, to purchase all or parts of the option subjects after
Hallam had obtained a planning permission with which they were satisfied.
Hallam undertook to use all reasonable endeavours to obtain a satisfactory
planning permission as soon as reasonably practicable. Once the planning
permission was in place, Hallam were empowered by clause 6.2.1 to serve a
provisional notice in writing on Mrs Kerr stating that they were
considering exercising the option and specifying the extent of the relevant
land. The service of the provisional notice obliged the landowner to negotiate
the amount of the purchase price of that land.
[7] Clause 6.2.3 of the option agreement required Hallam and
Mrs Kerr to use all reasonable endeavours to agree the amount of the
purchase price as soon as reasonably practicable. If agreement was not reached
within twenty days after Hallam served the provisional notice, either
party could give notice in writing referring the fixing of the purchase price
to the decision of an expert. Clause 6.2.4 provided that Hallam were
entitled to exercise the option within one calendar month after the agreement
of the price or its determination by the expert by serving a written option
notice. Clause 7 provided that service of the option notice constituted
the sale of the subjects of the option and clause 8 set out the terms of
the sale.
[8] The purchase price of the option subjects was defined in the
second schedule to the option agreement as the higher of (i) seventy five per
cent of the open market value of the relevant land at the date of the service
of the provisional notice or (ii) the sum of £75,000. Thus on service of the
provisional notice the parties were to agree or the expert was to fix an open
market value and thereby ascertain the purchase price. In the market for land
as it existed in 2003 and 2004 the fall back sum of £75,000 was irrelevant.
Parties therefore had to address the agreement of an open market value as at
the date of service of the provisional notice. Mrs Kerr would receive
seventy five per cent of that value and Hallam would retain the balance.
(b) The purchase agreement between R&D and Hallam
[9] Clause 4 of the purchase agreement between R&D and
Hallam contained a number of suspensive conditions in addition to that which I
have set out in paragraph [2] above. As a result R&D were not bound
to purchase unless, among other things, they had received a detailed planning
permission in relation to the purchase subjects in terms which were wholly acceptable
to them. Other relevant suspensive conditions provided that such things as a
road construction consent (clause 4.1.3), other statutory consents
(clause 4.1.4), a site survey, ground conditions report and an
environmental assessment of the subjects (Clause 4.1.5) and a report on
the title deeds (clause 4.1.9) were to be wholly acceptable to R&D.
[10] Clause 10 of Hallam's qualified acceptance dated 24 September 2003 introduced a long-stop date. It provided that Hallam
had seven months to complete the purchase of the subjects from the current
owner after their solicitors had received a written notice from R&D's
solicitors purifying or waiving condition 4.1.5. Thereafter Hallam were
entitled to resile from the purchase agreement without penalty.
The sequence of events
[11] After Hallam had entered into the option agreement with
Mrs Kerr in 1999 some time passed before they sought to market the
development opportunity. They obtained outline planning permission for
residential development of the purchase subjects in September 2000. Hallam
initiated a marketing exercise which involved erecting a "For Sale" sign on the
site in February 2001 and placing advertisements in "The Scotsman" and "Herald"
newspapers and in a trade publication on various dates in February and March
2001. R&D in December 2002 informed Hallam that they calculated the value
of the land for a thirty five unit development at £571,314 and submitted
an offer in that sum dated 29 January
2003 but the bargain was not
concluded until 1 October
2003. Shortly thereafter, on
6 October 2003, R&D's solicitors, Burness LLP,
notified Hallam's solicitors, MacRoberts, of the purification of
clause 4.1.5 of the purchase missives. This started the clock on the
long-stop date to which I referred in paragraph [10] above which would entitle
Hallam to resile from the missives without penalty.
[12] Hallam's solicitors intimated the missives to Mrs Kerr's
solicitors, Dale & Marshall, and in early November 2003 Mr Gary Smith, a land buyer employed by Hallam, met
Mrs Kerr and her advisers. He reported that Mrs Kerr appeared to be
content in principle with £571,314 as the open market value, provided that
Hallam produced evidence to satisfy her that they had properly marketed the
option subjects. Hallam provided evidence of the marketing exercise and on 20 November 2003 Mrs Kerr's solicitor, Mr John Dale,
wrote to her accountant acknowledging that Hallam had made an effort to market
the subjects. There was also an issue over the proposed layout of the purchase
subjects as Mrs Kerr wished to reserve a substantial strip of ground from
development in order to obtain vehicular access to the remainder of her land to
permit future residential development.
[13] On about 26 November 2003 R&D's solicitors wrote to Hallam's
solicitors confirming that the planning authority had granted detailed planning
permission and encouraging them to make progress with the transaction. In fact
the planning authority on 19 November
3003 had only resolved to
grant planning permission for R&D's proposed development of thirty
five housing units as R&D had yet to agree the financial contribution
which it would make to an off-site play area. On 12 December 2003 Hallam served on Mrs. Kerr a provisional
notice under clause 6.2.1 of the option agreement, declaring that they
were considering purchasing the 4.685 acre site which they had agreed to sell
to R&D. This notice was important as it established the valuation date.
[14] Two issues emerged to prolong the negotiations between Hallam
and Mrs Kerr. First, against the background of a rising land market,
Mrs Kerr remained concerned that the price which R&D had offered and
which Hallam were advancing as the market value of the purchase subjects did
not reflect the open market value of the subjects as at 12 December 2003. As early as October 2003 Mrs Kerr expressed
scepticism about the thoroughness of Hallam's marketing exercise. Aftondale
Ltd ("Aftondale") had submitted offers for the purchase subjects, including an
offer of £578,000 in August 2003, and she believed that Hallam had turned away
developers who had visited her and had proposed higher offers. Secondly, a
dispute arose between Hallam and Mrs Kerr over the extent of the land
which she was entitled to reserve as an access route. Hallam wished to confine
the reservation to agricultural access and thus gain control of the development
of the retained land. Mr Dale informed Mrs Kerr of this by letter
dated 22 January 2004. That would not have contributed to good
relations. Unknown to Hallam, Mrs Kerr also had an interest in deferring
any contract with them until after 5 April 2004 for tax reasons. As Mr Dale explained in his
evidence, Mrs Kerr was very suspicious of Hallam and wished to be free of
her contract with them.
[15] On 22 December
2003 Mr Dale asked
Hallam to provide copies of the approved layout plans for R&D's
development. Mr Ken Hopkins, Hallam's area manager for Scotland, replied on 5 January 2004 and explained that no planning permission
had yet been granted pending the resolution of the amount of R&D's capital
contribution towards the cost of an off-site play area. On the following day
Mr Hopkins sent Mr Dale a copy of the layout plan which was the
subject of the resolution to grant and referred to the provision of a
3.5 metre agricultural access on the southern boundary between the
purchase subjects and the land which Mrs Kerr retained. On 7 January 2004 Mr Dale wrote to Hallam stating that
Mrs Kerr's valuation of the purchase subjects was £630,000.
[16] Hallam's solicitors responded by fax dated 14 January 2004
asking for a plan showing the access which Mrs Kerr wanted and seeking
confirmation that the open market value of £571,314 was acceptable to her.
Mr Dale's response on 15 January
2004 was to re-iterate the
view that the open market value should be £630,000. He wrote on the same day
to Mrs Kerr asking her to solicit a written offer from Aftondale in that
amount. R&D learnt of Mrs Kerr's stance at a meeting with
Mr Hopkins on 16 January
2004 in Hallam's offices. On
20 January 2004 Messrs Sneddon Morrison, solicitors, submitted Aftondale's
offer, which was subject to Aftondale's satisfying themselves as to ground
conditions and also obtaining an acceptable planning permission.
[17] R&D's response to Mrs Kerr's assertion of a higher
market value was to consider raising the price which they were prepared to
offer. On about 19 January 2004 Mr John Hume, R&D's
chairman and chief executive, instructed his colleague, Mr Derick Reid,
who was their sales and marketing director, to write to Mr Hopkins
offering to increase the price to £610,000 and to suggest that Hallam should
"take the hit" for the difference between that sum and £630,000. In his oral
evidence Mr Hume explained that the offer was to be available for
immediate acceptance, failing which the price would revert to the missives
price of £571,314. Mr Reid gave evidence that he telephoned
Mr Hopkins on the same day and told him of R&D's intention to increase
its offer to £610,000 and that Hallam should "take the hit" for the difference
between that price and Mrs Kerr's desired valuation of £630,000. He said
that Mr Hopkins had told him that Hallam were not prepared to do so.
While Mr Hopkins in his evidence did not remember the telephone
conversation, he affirmed that Hallam would not have been prepared to accept a
payment from R&D which would result in them receiving as income from the
deal less than the twenty five per cent differential between the open market
value and the option price. Nothing came of R&D's proposal.
[18] In response to the Aftondale offer, Mr Hopkins spoke to
Mr Dale on the telephone on 21 January 2004 and wrote to him on
27 January pointing out that that offer required to be reduced by £70,000
to allow for the cost of grouting works and also the capital contribution to
the off-site play area, both of which had been absorbed by R&D's fixed
price offer. He re-asserted that the open market value was £571,000. This
caused Mr Dale to ask Mrs Kerr to investigate whether Aftondale's offer
took account of those deductions. Over the next month correspondence between
Hallam and Mr Dale concentrated on the location of the mining works which
needed to be grouted and Mrs Kerr's demand for the extensive reservation
of land for access to the retained land. But on 16 February 2004 Mr. Hopkins again sought confirmation that £571,314
was acceptable as the market value of the purchase subjects.
[19] It is necessary to focus in more detail on events in March 2004
as, while R&D in their written pleadings had asserted that Hallam were in
breach of clause 4.1.10 of the purchase agreement before March, they
focused their criticisms of Hallam after the proof on the period between
2 March and 17 March 2004. It is clear that in early March each of
the three parties changed their position but that, by late March, the principal
opportunity to strike a deal which would have been acceptable to all had
passed.
[20] On 2 March
2004 Mr Hume spoke on
the telephone to Mr Hopkins. Mr Hume did not recall the conversation
in detail but was able to reconstruct it with the assistance of a file note
dated 3 March 2004 of a meeting between Hallam officials and
their solicitors. He inferred from that note that he must have offered to
increase the price which R&D would pay to £630,000. Mr Hopkins did
not recall the offer but explained that he did not follow it up as he would not
have acted without a formal amendment of the price which R&D offered in the
missives.
[21] Also on 2 March Mr. Dale wrote to Mr Hopkins seeking
agreement of the "purchase price" at £606,000. He confirmed in evidence that
the letter should have referred to the open market value rather than the
purchase price and parties were agreed that the letter should be so construed.
[22] Mr Hume of R&D also wrote to Mr Hopkins on
2 March after his telephone discussion with him. Mr Hume explained
that he had described the telephone discussion to Mr Reid and had asked
him to draft a letter for his signature. In that letter he discussed Mrs Kerr's
demand to reserve land for access to the retained land and the effect that that
had on R&D's proposed layout. One option for R&D was to reduce by two
the number of houses which they proposed to build in order to give
Mrs Kerr the reserved strip of land which she requested. In that event
the letter stated:
"we would be willing to keep our purchase price for the land at the same value i.e. £565,000 even with the loss of 2 units, reducing the overall development from 35 units to 33."
[23] On 3 March
2004 Mr Hopkins and Hallam's
in-house solicitor, Mr Chris King, attended a meeting in MacRoberts'
offices with Hallam's solicitor, Ms Anne Fergusson. Unfortunately,
the court did not hear the evidence of Mr King or Ms Fergusson and
Mr Hopkins's recollection of the meeting was sketchy. The file note of
the meeting, which Ms Fergusson prepared, recorded that Mr Dale
accepted an open market value of £606,000 and that his client would receive 75%
of that sum. It noted that R&D were willing to go up to £630,000 but it
was agreed that Hallam "would just turn the deal at £606K." It recorded that
Mr Hopkins advised that R&D would accept the access rights which
Mrs Kerr demanded and that it was agreed that he would fax
Ms Fergusson the correspondence and plans so that she could write to
Burness to confirm how the deal was to be structured. Finally, it recorded
that, once that deal had been struck, Hallam would not seek to purchase the
rest of the option subjects.
[24] I am prepared to accept the file note, which was not
challenged, as an accurate statement of Hallam's position on 3 March 2004. But there was no evidence as to what were the
arrangements which Ms Fergusson was to agree with Burness in order to
structure the deal. There was no evidence that Mr Hume's letter of
2 March had reached Hallam in time to be considered at that meeting and I
infer from the terms of the file note that it had not. There is also no
evidence that R&D were aware at this time of Hallam's proposal to take
£630,000 from them while paying seventy five per cent of only £606,000 to
Mrs Kerr. On the contrary, Mr Hume's evidence was that he had not
agreed to a deal on that basis at that time. In the following weeks, however,
he changed his position.
[25] On 24 March
2004 Mr Hume and
Mr Reid met Mr Hopkins and agreed a deal along the lines envisaged by
Hallam at the 3 March meeting. R&D agreed to pay Hallam £630,000 for
the purchase subjects. It was also agreed that Hallam would pay Mrs Kerr
a price based on a valuation of £606,000 and that Hallam could retain the
differential as a "finder's fee." R&D would pay Hallam £606,000 by 30 April 2004 and they would pay a further £25,000 in May 2004.
The purpose of the staggered payments was to allow parties to amend the
missives to show the price of £606,000 so that they would not have to disclose
the further payment to Mrs Kerr if she demanded sight of the revised
missives.
[26] Both Mr Hume and Mr Reid spoke to this deal and I
accept their evidence. They understood at the time that Hallam had already
agreed a price of £606,000 with Mrs Kerr and that they had reached a deal
with Hallam which the lawyers could formalise. Mr Hopkins's position was
that he did not recall the detail but that the proposal of the payment of
£606,000 and a further £25,000 may have been made and he may have agreed to
consider it and put it to his board. I do not accept the suggestion that he
told R&D that he did not have authority to agree the deal and that only the
board of Hallam could do so. No such case was pleaded. I therefore accept
that a deal in principle between R&D and Hallam was reached on 24 March 2004. Unfortunately for R&D, by then it was too late
as Mrs Kerr's aspirations had been enhanced.
[27] On 17 March
2004 Laverty & Co,
solicitors, wrote to Mr Dale on behalf of Homepark Builders Limited
("Homepark") offering to buy the purchase subjects for £675,000. On
24 March Mr Dale wrote to Mr Hopkins enclosing Homepark's offer
and stating that the offer was made without deductions. Ms Fergusson
responded on Hallam's behalf by letter dated 26 March 2004, noting that the valuation date under the option
agreement was 12 December
2003 and that the Homepark
offer was therefore irrelevant to the determination of the open market value on
that date.
[28] On 30 March
2004 R&D's solicitors
wrote to Ms Fergusson intimating purification of several suspensive
conditions in the missives. On the same day Ms Fergusson sent
Mr Dale a fax in which she referred to his letter of 2 March and
sought confirmation that Mrs Kerr had accepted the open market value of
£606,000.
[29] As the chance of a deal at this price had gone by this time, I
can summarise the events which followed quite briefly. On 1 April 2004 R&D improved their informal offer to Hallam by
suggesting that they would pay no more than £631,000 and also the amount by
which grouting costs were less than the £70,000 for which they had budgeted.
Thereafter Mrs Kerr's expectations were again raised. Mr Hopkins
arranged a meeting with Mr Dale for 7 April 2004 but the meeting never took place. On 6 April 2004 Mr Dale wrote to Ms Fergusson to announce
that Mrs Kerr had had an approach from another developer who had offered a
higher figure for the purchase subjects and had stated that that valuation
would have applied at 12 December
2003. R&D appear to have
lost patience at this stage and, on the instructions of R&D's board,
Mr Reid visited Mrs Kerr at her home on 15 April to discuss the
deal. He stated in his evidence, which I accept, that at that meeting he had
confirmed that she was aware of R&D's offer of £606,000 but he had not
mentioned other sums, such as £630,000. On the following day Mr Dale
wrote a letter to Ms Fergusson in which he referred to the offer which
Mrs Kerr had received from another party and expressed the view that
Hallam had conducted a closed sale. He referred to the meeting between
Mr Reid and his client and stated that the open market value should be
£750,000, with a price of £562,500 being due to his client. On 21 April
Mr Hume wrote to Mr Hopkins to state that R&D were prepared to
extend their contract with Hallam if Hallam wished to refer the price to an
expert under the option agreement. Hallam did not take up that offer.
Mr Hopkins was annoyed that R&D had interfered in the negotiation with
Mrs Kerr and expressed his disappointment in a fax dated 21 April 2004. This elicited an apology from Mr Reid in a fax
dated 22 April in which he stated that he had explained that R&D's
offer of £606,000, of which Mrs Kerr was aware, was after deduction of
grouting costs, so that there was a top line value of about £680,000. He
confirmed that R&D "would be standing by" the figure which they had
recently quoted. That appears to be a reference to their improved oral offer
of 1 April.
[30] On 4 May
2004 R&D's solicitors
wrote to Hallam's solicitors and offered to extend the existing missives if
MacRoberts would extend the long-stop date. They did not offer to increase the
price included in those missives. Not long thereafter Hallam decided to end
their agreement with R&D: on 26 May 2004
MacRoberts wrote to Burness intimating that Hallam resiled from the purchase
agreement as they had not been able to complete the purchase of the subjects
within the seven month period of the long-stop provision.
[31] Some time later Mr. Dale approached Burness to see if R&D
would offer £750,000. R&D carried out an investment appraisal and decided
to do so. On 29 July
2004 Burness submitted a
formal offer on R&D's behalf to MacRoberts to buy the purchase subjects for
£750,000. This was not accepted. In June 2004 Hallam sought the appointment
of an expert to fix the open market value of the purchase subjects. In their
submission to the expert Hallam's advisers argued that the market value of the
subjects at 12 December
2003 was £650,000. The
expert thereafter fixed the open market value at that date at £701,000 and in
March 2005 Mrs Kerr sold the purchase subjects to Hallam for £525,750,
which was seventy five per cent of the expert's valuation. Hallam resold the
subjects to a third party for £875,000 plus VAT.
The disputed issues: (a) whether clause 4.1.10 was enforceable
[32] Mr Borland on behalf of the defenders submitted that the
action was irrelevant as the reasonable endeavours obligation in
clause 4.1.10 of the purchase agreement was unenforceable. He advanced
his submission on two grounds. First, he submitted that the clause amounted to
an agreement to agree and was therefore unenforceable. He cited several cases
in a long line of authority which supports the proposition that the courts
cannot enforce such an agreement as there are not objective criteria which they
can apply to give the provision sufficient certainty. Secondly, he argued that
the object of the agreement, namely a price "wholly acceptable" to Hallam, was
also too vague and uncertain to have contractual force. Again, no objective
criteria could be applied. The court had no role in saying what should have
been wholly acceptable to Hallam; that was a management issue for Hallam's
officers to decide and they had an unfettered discretion in so doing. If,
contrary to his primary position, the court held that the clause was
enforceable, he submitted that Hallam were entitled to take account of their
own interests in fulfilling the reasonable endeavours obligation.
Discussion
[33] There are many cases in which it has been held that an
agreement to agree cannot be enforced as it is too uncertain. In Foley v
Classique Coaches Ltd [1934] 2 KB 1 Maugham LJ (at p.13) stated:
"It is indisputable that unless all the material terms of the contract are agreed there is no binding obligation. An agreement to agree in the future is not a contract; nor is there a contract if a material term is neither settled nor implied by law and the document contains no machinery for ascertaining it."
In May and Butcher Ltd v The King [1934] 2 KB 17 Lord Buckmaster (at p.20) stated
"It has long been a well recognised principle of contract law that an agreement between two parties to enter into an agreement in which some critical part of the contract matter is left undetermined is no contract at all."
Viscount Dunedin in the same case (at p.21) said:
"To be a good contract there must be a concluded bargain, and a concluded contract is one which settles everything that is necessary to be settled and leaves nothing to be settled by agreement between the parties. Of course it may leave something which still has to be determined, but then that determination must be a determination which does not depend upon the agreement between the parties. In the system of law in which I was brought up, that was expressed by one of those brocards of which perhaps we have been too fond, but which often express very neatly what is wanted: "Certum est quod certum reddi potest.""
[34] While in recent years some judges have questioned whether the
court would now reach the same conclusion on the facts as the House of Lords
did in May and Butcher Ltd, the courts have confirmed the
proposition that an agreement to agree cannot be enforced. Where terms which
the law treats as essential or which parties have agreed are essential for
their bargain have not been agreed and cannot objectively be ascertained, the
contract is unenforceable. Thus in Little v Courage Ltd (1994) 70 P&CR 469 Millett LJ, in a passage which judges have adopted in later
cases, stated (at p.476):
"An undertaking to use one's best endeavours to obtain planning permission or an export licence is sufficiently certain and is capable of being enforced: an undertaking to use one's best endeavours to agree, however, is no different from an undertaking to agree, to try to agree, or to negotiate with a view to reaching agreement; all are equally uncertain and incapable of giving rise to an enforceable legal obligation."
[35] Another case to which judges have often referred in recent
years is Walford v Miles [1992] 2 AC 128. In that case the
defendants entered into an oral agreement to negotiate exclusively with the
plaintiff for sale of a photo processing business. The plaintiff's counsel
submitted that there was an implied term that the defendants would continue to
negotiate in good faith with the plaintiff so long as the defendants wished to
sell the business. He also argued that the defendants could only terminate the
negotiations "for a proper reason" but he submitted that the test of whether
the reason given for termination was a proper reason was a subjective one: the
defendants could be irrational so long as they acted honestly. The House of
Lords decided that the agreement was unenforceable. Lord Ackner (at p.138C-G)
stated:
"The reason why an agreement to negotiate, like an agreement to agree, is unenforceable, is simply because it lacks the necessary certainty. The same does not apply to an agreement to use best endeavours. This uncertainty is demonstrated in the instant case by the provision which it is said has to be implied in the agreement for the determination of the negotiations. How can a court be expected to decide whether, subjectively, a proper reason existed for termination of negotiations? The answer suggested depends upon whether the negotiations have been determined "in good faith." However the concept of a duty to carry on negotiations in good faith is inherently repugnant to the adversarial position of the parties when involved in negotiations. Each party to the negotiations is entitled to pursue his (or her) own interest, so long as he avoids making misrepresentations. To advance that interest he must be entitled, if he thinks it appropriate, to threaten to withdraw from further negotiations or to withdraw in fact, in the hope that the opposite party may seek to reopen the negotiations by offering him improved terms. .... How is the vendor ever to know that he is entitled to withdraw from further negotiations? How is the court to police such an "agreement?" A duty to negotiate in good faith is as unworkable in practice as it is inherently inconsistent with the position of a negotiating party. It is here that the uncertainty lies. In my judgment, while negotiations are in existence either party is entitled to withdraw from those negotiations, at any time and for any reason. There can be thus no obligation to continue to negotiate until there is a "proper reason" to withdraw. Accordingly a bare agreement to negotiate has no legal content."
[36] The courts have taken a similar approach in P & O
Property Holdings Ltd v Norwich Union Life Insurance Society (1994) 68 P & CR 261, Lord Browne-Wilkinson at p.268, East Anglian Electronics
Ltd v OIS plc 1996 SLT 808, the Lord President (Lord Hope) at
p.812E-F, Phillips Petroleum Co UK Ltd v Enron Europe Ltd [1997]
CLC 329, Potter LJ at pp.343-344, London &
Regional Investments Ltd v TBI Plc
[2002] EWCA Civ 355, Mummery LJ at paras 39 and 40, Fletcher Challenge Energy Ltd v
Electricity Corporation of New Zealand [2002] 2 NZLR 433, at paras 114-117
and Multiplex Construction (UK) Ltd v Cleveland Bridge UK Ltd [2006] EWHC 1341 (TCC), Jackson J at paras 633-637.
[37] Hallam's first ground of challenge relied on these authorities
and categorised clause 4.1.10 as an agreement to agree. Their second ground of
challenge also rested principally on the uncertainty of the requirement that
the price to be agreed should be "wholly acceptable" to them. Mr Borland
submitted that the lack of an objective standard by which to measure the
acceptability of the price meant that the clause was unenforceable. He referred
to Baird Textiles Holdings Ltd v Marks & Spencer plc [2002] 1 All ER (Comm) 737, Sir Andrew Morritt VC at para 30 and Phillips Petroleum,
Potter LJ at pp.343G-344A. He submitted that the court had to construe the
clause having regard to the circumstances which existed when the parties
entered into the purchase agreement. In support of that contention he referred
to Lord Hope's opinion in East Anglian Electronics Ltd at p.813F.
Further, he submitted that the court had no power to review Hallam's decision
honestly arrived at: Howard Smith Ltd v Ampol Petroleum Ltd [1974] AC 821, Lord Wilberforce at p.832E-F. I accept that the "wholly acceptable"
criterion is subjective and also that Hallam were entitled to take their own
interests into account in any negotiations. But, as I explain below, I do not
consider that the clause is unenforceable either for that reason or because it
is an agreement to agree.
[38] There is not in this case any real question whether the parties
intended their words to have contractual effect. When parties agree orally, or
in relatively informal correspondence, as for example, in Courtney &
Fairbairn Ltd v Tolaini Brothers (Hotels) Ltd [1975] 1 WLR 297, or
enter into heads of agreement, as in Fletcher Challenge Energy Ltd, such
a question may arise. In cases where there is uncertainty as to whether the
parties intended to create contractual relations the court is neutral on the
issue of contract formation: Fletcher Challenge Energy Ltd, at para 58.
Dicta from such cases need to be read in their context.
[39] While the courts require legal certainty and do not enforce an
agreement if parties have not sufficiently formulated an intention, judges have
repeatedly stated the position that where they are satisfied that parties
intended to enter into binding obligations they should attempt, so far as is
consistent with essential principle and binding precedent, to give effect to
the agreement and not be the destroyer of bargains: Hillas and Co Ltd v Arcos
Ltd [1932] 147 LT 503, and G Scammell and Nephew Ltd v HC and JG
Ouston [1941] AC 251, Lord Wright at p.268. In R & J Dempster Ltd v
Motherwell Bridge and Engineering Co Ltd 1964 SC 308, in a passage which
appears relevant to the present case, Lord Guthrie (at p.332) stated:
"The object of our law of contract is to facilitate the transactions of commercial men, and not to create obstacles in the way of solving practical problems arising out of the circumstances confronting them, or to expose them to unnecessary pitfalls. I know of no rule of law which prevents men from entering into special agreements to meet the requirements of special circumstances."
More recently Lord Steyn has stressed that, when considering contractual problems, the courts should seek to uphold the reasonable expectations of honest men: G Percy Trentham Ltd v Archital Luxfer Ltd [1993] 1 Lloyd's Rep 25 at p.27, First Energy (UK) Ltd v Hungarian International Bank Ltd [1993] 2 Lloyd's Rep 194 at p.196 and his article, "Contract law: fulfilling the reasonable expectations of honest men" (1997) 113 LQR 433. The yardstick in a commercial contract is the reasonable expectations of sensible businessmen.
[40] The task of the court of attempting to uphold such expectations
will vary depending on the nature of the alleged contract. Where the contract
provides an objective criterion, such as the current open market price, and
states that the parties are to agree the price, the court can determine the
price if the parties fail to do so: Scottish Wholefoods Collective Warehouse
Ltd v Raye Investments Ltd 1994 SC 65, Didymi Corporation v
Atlantic Lines and Navigation Co Inc [1987] 2 Lloyd's Rep 166, [1988] 2
Lloyd's Rep 108. In such circumstances the requirement to agree may be seen as
inessential to the operation of the clause and the court itself may apply the
objective criterion or standard. Thus, where the court is able to identify the
objective criterion, it may provide the machinery for ascertaining the price
where the contractual machinery has broken down: Sudbrook Trading Estate Ltd
v Eggleton [1983] 1 AC 444, Lord Fraser of Tullybelton at p.484C.
As Lord Hope stated in Total Gas Marketing Ltd v Arco British Ltd [1998] 2 Lloyd's Rep 209 (at p.223), "commercial contracts should so far as possible
be upheld".
[41] In this case the disputed clause is in formal missives drafted
by skilled solicitors. There can be no doubt that the clause is part of a
document which the parties intended to have contractual effect. It was clear
from the evidence that both parties at the time acted on the basis that
clause 4.1.10 imposed a legal obligation on Hallam. In particular Mr
Hopkins saw Hallam as so bound. I recognise that when commercial lawyers
negotiate binding deals on behalf of their clients they often have to act
within significant time constraints. They sometimes are not able to tie up all
loose ends and that reasonable endeavours clauses may be the result. But in
this case the clause was not a result of any inability of R&D and Hallam to
agree; it was a mechanism which was important to the parties in the context of
the back to back agreements. Hallam had the option to purchase from
Mrs Kerr but before concluding the purchase agreement with R&D had
not, for understandable commercial reasons, served a provisional notice on
Mrs Kerr nor agreed a price with her under clauses 6.2.1 and 6.2.3 of
the option agreement. Thus Hallam needed to make their agreement with
Mrs Kerr of the price which was wholly acceptable to them a condition
precedent of R&D's purchase. And R&D, who by this stage would have
spent significant sums on obtaining detailed planning permission and satisfying
themselves in relation to the other conditions precedent in their contract with
Hallam, would have wanted to bind Hallam to attempt to agree the price with
Mrs Kerr. I can see no reason why Hallam's solicitors, acting honestly,
would have included in the condition precedent a protection for R&D which
was merely a statement of aspiration. In this context the court should hold
the clause to be unenforceable only if the law compels it to do so. Where is
that compulsitor?
[42] The compulsitor is not because the clause can be categorised as
an agreement to agree nor is it significant that it spoke of all reasonable
endeavours and not best endeavours. In the cases where the court has held to
be unenforceable a "reasonable endeavours to agree" clause, which was contained
in a document which was clearly intended to have contractual effect, the court
has been compelled to do so because of uncertainty as to either or both of the
object of the endeavours and the means by which the object could be realised.
See Lord Ackner's explanation in Walford v Miles which I have
quoted in paragraph [35] above. Similarly, in Phillips Petroleum Co Ltd Potter
LJ (at p.343C-D) stated:
"The unwillingness of the courts to give binding force to an obligation to use 'reasonable endeavours' to agree seems to me to be sensibly based on the difficulty of policing such an obligation, in the sense of drawing the line between what is to be regarded as reasonable or unreasonable in an area where the parties may legitimately have differing views or interests, but have not provided for any criteria on the basis of which a third party can assess or adjudicate the matter in the event of a dispute."
[43] In Fletcher Challenge Energy Ltd the majority of the
Court of Appeal of New Zealand also discussed this difficulty in the
following passage (at para [115]):
"The end in view (the full agreement) is insufficiently precise for the Court to be able to spell out what the parties must do in exercising their reasonable endeavours. Where the objective and the steps needing to be taken to attain it are able to be prescribed by the Court, a best endeavours or reasonable endeavours obligation will be enforceable. That may be possible in relation to some contractual negotiations of relative simplicity and predictability (Coal Cliff Collieries). But a negotiation of complex contractual terms is such a variable matter, both in process and in result, and so dependent on the individual positions which each party may reasonably take from time to time during the bargaining, that it is impossible for a Court to define for them what they ought to have done in order to reach agreement. The Court neither knows the result nor is able to say how each offer should have been made, nor whether it should have been accepted."
(The reference is to Coal Cliff Collieries v Pty Ltd v Sijehama Pty Ltd (1991) 24 NSWLR 1.)
[44] In some cases the courts will enforce what can properly be
called an agreement to agree. Thus in The Queensland Electricity Generating
Board v New Hope Collieries Pty Ltd [1989] 1 Lloyd's Rep 205 (PC),
the Privy Council considered that an implied obligation to make reasonable
endeavours to agree the terms of supply and failing which to do everything
reasonably necessary to procure the appointment of an arbitrator could be
enforced as it was implicit in the agreement that the terms of the price
structure would be fair and reasonable and the agreement laid down broad
guidelines as to how a fair and reasonable price was to be ascertained. Much
depends upon the terms of the particular contract and whether judges can
construe, or imply terms into, the contract so as to give it ascertainable
criteria.
[45] In this case the reasonable endeavours are directed towards a
particular object. It is not the negotiation of a complete agreement of some
complexity. Clause 4.1.10 spoke of the "terms" being wholly acceptable.
That referred to the terms of the purchase price such as the amount and the
date or dates of payment. The object of the endeavours was therefore only the
agreement of a price in the context of a contractual mechanism in the option
agreement between Hallam and Mrs Kerr which governed the other terms of
the proposed sale. Further, there is no conflict between Hallam's duty to
R&D to use all reasonable endeavours and Hallam's self interest in the
negotiation of the price with Mrs Kerr. That is because the object of the
endeavours was to be a price wholly acceptable to Hallam.
[46] If the courts are prepared to police an obligation to use
reasonable endeavours to obtain a planning permission or an export licence, as
Lord Ackner suggested in Walford v Miles, or to use all
reasonable endeavours to secure a planning agreement with a local authority (Yewbelle
Ltd v London Green Developments Ltd [2008] 1 P & CR 17 (CA)),
the court should be able to police the negotiation of a price so long as the
object of the negotiations can be objectively ascertained. See also IBM United Kingdom Ltd v Rockware Glass Ltd (1980) FSR 335. In Total
Gas Marketing Ltd the House of Lords did not comment adversely on an
obligation to use reasonable endeavours to become a party to an allocation
agreement where it was provided that the obligor did not have to accept
unreasonable terms: see Lord Hope at p.224. In The Queensland Electricity
Generating Board, the Privy Council implied into the contract an obligation
to make reasonable endeavours to agree a price. In this case the object is a
price "wholly acceptable" to Hallam.
[47] I accept that by agreeing that the price had to be "wholly
acceptable" to Hallam, the parties excluded any question of the reasonableness
of what Hallam found acceptable or not acceptable. Thus where R&D's
written pleadings asserted that there was a price which "ought to have been
wholly acceptable" to Hallam that assertion was irrelevant. Mr Clark QC
for R&D did not argue otherwise. R&D cannot seek to imply into the
contract an objective standard such as a reasonable price or a fair and
reasonable or equitable price which the court could address. Such a term would
be inconsistent with Hallam's stipulation that the price had to be wholly
acceptable to them. Mr Borland submitted that, if the clause were
enforceable, Hallam, in using all reasonable endeavours to agree the purchase
price on terms which they found wholly acceptable, were entitled to take into
account their own commercial interests: UBH (Mechanical Services) v Standard Life Assurance Co The Times 13 November 1986, Terrell
v Mabie Todd & Co Ltd [1952] RPC 234 and Rackham v
Peek Foods [1990] BCLC 895. I agree.
[48] There is thus no conflict between Hallam's own interests in the
negotiation of the price and their obligation to use all reasonable endeavours
to agree the wholly acceptable price. There is not the "inherent repugnancy"
which concerned Lord Ackner. Nor is there the problem, to which Potter LJ
referred in Phillips Petroleum, of drawing a line between reasonable and
unreasonable behaviour where a party had to balance an obligation to endeavour
to agree with his self interest in the negotiations. That is because the
clause required Hallam to use all reasonable endeavours to get Mrs Kerr to
accept a price which they were prepared to pay.
[49] I therefore do not see any insuperable obstacle which would
prevent the courts from reaching a view as to the means of achieving that
object and deciding whether Hallam had used all reasonable endeavours to agree
the price. The question then becomes: can the court ascertain the object of
the endeavour?
[50] It is correct, as Mr Borland submitted, that the "wholly
acceptable" price is a subjective criterion but that does not mean that the
court cannot ascertain it if there is evidence from which it may be inferred.
Judges in criminal courts regularly direct juries that they are entitled to
infer a person's state of mind from the circumstances and in particular from
what he said or did. So also can a judge in a civil case. I do not think that
the subjective nature of the object of the endeavours creates legal
uncertainty. It is a question of fact. The parties to the purchase agreement
could not tell when they made that agreement what price would be acceptable to
Hallam; but that does not make the agreement ineffective for uncertainty as
that fact might become ascertainable and ascertained in the future. See
Chitty on Contracts (30th ed.) para 2.133, in which it is stated:
"An agreement is not ineffective for uncertainty merely because the facts on which its operation is to depend are not known when it is made. The requirement of certainty will be satisfied if those facts become ascertainable and are ascertained, without the need for further negotiation, after the making of the agreement."
See also Welsh Development Agency v Export Finance Ltd [1992] BCLC 148, Dillon LJ at p.159. Nevertheless, the "wholly acceptable" criterion created an evidential difficulty for R&D. As long as Hallam acted in good faith, they had a wide discretion as to what price was acceptable in the circumstances as the court would not be concerned with the reasonableness of their view. The price which Hallam had to agree with Mrs Kerr was defined in the option agreement as seventy five per cent of the open market value. There was thus an objective standard about which Hallam and Mrs Kerr had to negotiate. But the acceptability of that price to Hallam could depend on what they were entitled to receive from R&D. There might come a point, if Hallam had acted perversely, at which the court would infer that they had been acting in bad faith. Absent bad faith, it was for Hallam to determine the acceptability of the price to which Mrs Kerr would agree.
[51] I therefore consider that R&D have a claim under the clause
if they can demonstrate (a) that there was for a sufficient period of time a
price to which Mrs Kerr would have agreed and which was wholly acceptable
to Hallam in the circumstances that then existed and (b) that during that
window of opportunity Hallam did not use all reasonable endeavours to agree
that price with her.
[52] Mr Borland suggested, further, that in the missives with
R&D there was no obligation on Hallam to exercise the option in their
contract with Mrs Kerr and that this was an additional element of
uncertainty. He did not develop the argument to any extent but I am not
satisfied that the argument has any substance. While in the contract with Mrs
Kerr Hallam were not bound to exercise the option and in the missives with
R&D there was a condition precedent that Hallam complete the purchase from
Mrs Kerr (clause 4.1.11), I consider there is a strong argument for
implying a term into the contract with R&D requiring Hallam to exercise the
option if an acceptable price had been agreed which had been matched by
R&D's offer and the purchase contract was otherwise unconditional. The
condition precedent in clause 4.1.11 protected Hallam from any failure on Mrs
Kerr's part to implement her bargain with them; it did not give them a licence
to decide not to complete their contract with her after agreeing a wholly
acceptable price.
[53] Hallam's legal challenge therefore fails.
[54] For completeness I record that Mr Clark referred me also to Lambert
v HTV Cymru (Wales) Ltd
[1998] EMLR 629 in which Morritt LJ drew a
distinction between (i) a contract between A and B in which they included an
uncertain term and (ii) a contract between A and B in which B undertook to use
all reasonable endeavours to agree a contract with C. He opined that there was
scope for the law to enforce the reasonable endeavours clause in the second
type of contract, even if the precise rights to be acquired had not been
defined, as, if B made no effort at all, A would be entitled at least to
nominal damages. I do not have to rely on Morritt LJ's approach in this case
because I have decided that the object of the endeavours could become
ascertainable and ascertained and thus had sufficient certainty.
[55] In light of the view which I have taken I do not need to
discuss the extent to which the law might recognise an obligation to negotiate
in good faith. Mr Clark referred to the judgment of Longmore LJ in Petromec
Inc v Petroleo Brasiliero SA [2006] 1 Lloyd's Rep 121, at
paras 115-121 and to the judgment of Clarke J in Tramtrack Croydon Ltd v
London Bus Services Ltd [2007] EWHC 107 (Comm) at para 86 and
following. Lord Neill of Bladon has questioned the distinction between an
obligation to use reasonable endeavours to agree and an obligation to negotiate
in good faith: (1992) 108 LQR 405. See also Sir Anthony Mason in
(2000) 116 LQR 66. Lord Steyn, in the article to which I referred in
paragraph [39] above, also saw scope for the development of the concept of
good faith in contract and hoped that the decision in Walford v Miles
might be reviewed in the light of fuller argument. Whether, as
Lord Ackner stated in Walford v Miles, an obligation to use
reasonable endeavours to agree is properly distinguishable from an obligation
to negotiate in good faith may depend on the terms of the particular contract.
But that may be a matter for the Supreme Court on another day.
The disputed issues: (b) whether Hallam broke their contract with R&D
[56] The second issue is both evidential and legal: have R&D
established in evidence that Hallam failed to use all reasonable endeavours to
agree a price with Mrs Kerr which was wholly acceptable to them?
[57] Mr Clark's principal submission was that the evidence
established that Hallam had, in their negotiations with Mrs Kerr, identified a
price which she would accept and which was wholly acceptable to them but had
failed to take any step to agree that price with her during a period when such
an agreement could have been reached. In particular in March 2004 they failed
to agree such a price without delay in the context of a rising land market. In
his written submission he also suggested that clause 4.1.10 of the missives
imposed on Hallam the obligation to "progress matters" with R&D. This
appears to mean that Hallam had to act as broker and to reach, or confirm, a
deal with R&D by which R&D increased the price which they offered in
the missives in order to make the price which Mrs Kerr would take acceptable to
Hallam. These submissions were the core of R&D's case. I consider each
submission in turn. Before doing so I deal with two other submissions which
were made but which were not so central.
[58] It is clear that in January 2004 Hallam were content to agree
an open market value at £571,314 and take as their income from the deal the
twenty five per cent of that value which they would retain under their contract
with Mrs Kerr. While R&D averred that Hallam were in breach of contract
because they had not used all reasonable endeavours in January 2004, Mr Clark did not put any emphasis on that allegation. Both
Mr Hume and Mr Reid expressed the view in their evidence that Hallam
were entitled to try to reach a deal at £571,314 in January 2004 as the offer
from R&D was the only offer which their marketing exercise had elicited.
It was reasonable for Hallam to argue that R&D's offer should be treated as
best evidence of market value. I agree. It was also reasonable for Hallam to insist
upon the valuation date of 12 December
2003 and to question the
relevance of later offers in a rising market. That was an important
negotiating stance both to deter Mr Dale from relying on later offers and
to preserve their position if they later referred the fixing of the price to an
expert. Mr Clark in his submissions criticised Hallam for relying on
R&D's offer of £571,314, which had been formulated in December 2002 and
submitted in January 2003, as the measure of the market value of the purchase
subjects almost one year later; but nothing turns on that criticism. That was
the price which Hallam were contracted to accept from R&D. But
Mrs Kerr was not prepared to accept the valuation of £571,314 in January
2004.
[59] I am also satisfied that there is no substance in
Mr Clark's criticism of Hallam for failing to obtain an independent
valuation of the purchase subjects. While such a valuation might have alerted
Hallam to the fact that R&D's offer was not a good measure of the market value
as at 12 December 2003 as a result of increases in land values in
2003, what Hallam was obliged to do was to use all reasonable endeavours to
agree a price which they found wholly acceptable. As they were contracted to
R&D to sell the purchase subjects for £571,314, it was movement by R&D
on that price rather than any independent valuation which would have governed
Hallam's approach to agreeing a price with Mrs Kerr. R&D appear to
have been aware of that when they made their ephemeral proposal to pay £610,000
in January 2004 and when they made their further proposals in March 2004.
[60] Mr Clark, although critical of Hallam's apparent
inactivity towards agreeing a price with Mrs Kerr in February 2004,
concentrated his attack on Hallam on the events in March 2004 in the period
before Mrs Kerr received the offer of £675,000 from Homepark. This was
his principal submission in his oral presentation. Dale & Marshall had
proposed an open market value of £606,000 on 2 March 2004 and Mr Dale gave evidence that Mrs Kerr
would have accepted that sum until she received the higher offer from
Homepark. Mr Clark's case was simple: the evidence established that on 3 March 2004 Hallam found the price of £606,000 wholly acceptable
in the light of the comfort provided by Mr Hume's indication in the
telephone conversation of 2 March that R&D would pay £630,000 for the
purchase subjects. Between 3 March and 17 March Hallam took no steps
to secure a deal with Mrs Kerr at that valuation nor did they approach
R&D to progress matters. There was thus a significant period of time
during the negotiations when Mrs Kerr was prepared to agree a price on
terms wholly acceptable to Hallam which they failed to use all reasonable
endeavours to secure. Accordingly, Mr Clark submitted, they were in
breach of contract.
[61] I note that Mr Dale's letter of 2 March 2004, which proposed the valuation of £606,000, was stated
to be "without prejudice." It is not clear whether Hallam would have obtained
Mrs Kerr's unequivocal agreement to that valuation before 17 March,
when the receipt of the Homepark offer might have encouraged her either to
delay any agreement or to seek an expert valuation. But I am not concerned
with causation of loss at this stage of the proceedings. The questions therefore
are (a) was the valuation of £606,000 wholly acceptable to Hallam during that
period and (b) did they fail to use all reasonable endeavours to secure
agreement of that valuation?
[62] Mr Hopkins's position was straightforward: there was never
an acceptable price on the table because he wanted certainty that R&D would
pay Hallam the price they were to pay Mrs Kerr. Hallam would not reach
agreement with Mrs Kerr at a price in excess of £571,314 until they had
accepted a formal offer from R&D to increase the price which R&D were
offering. R&D never made any formal offer to increase the price and Hallam
could not expose themselves to the risk of agreeing a valuation with
Mrs Kerr without a matching agreement with R&D. Otherwise Hallam
would not obtain the income which they sought from the deal.
[63] Mr Clark invited me not to accept Mr Hopkins's
evidence which, he submitted, was contradicted by the documentary evidence. In
particular he submitted that the file note on 3 March 2004 showed that
Hallam were prepared to accept Mr Dale's offer of a valuation of £606,000,
relying merely on the comfort of Mr Hume's oral statement that R&D
would pay £630,000 for the purchase subjects. Further, MacRoberts' email of 30 March 2004 seeking confirmation of that valuation supported the
view that Hallam remained prepared to agree a price with Mrs Kerr without
the certainty of amended missives with R&D.
[64] If Hallam had been obliged to buy the purchase subjects on
agreeing the purchase price with Mrs Kerr, they would, as Mr Clark
submitted, have been at risk even if they and R&D had formally amended the
missives to increase the price which R&D were to pay: the missives were
then not unconditional. It was therefore, Mr Clark submitted,
unreasonable for Hallam not to act on an oral offer when a formal offer would
have given them no more certainty. In reality Hallam were content to act on
R&D's informal undertaking. I am not persuaded that that is so. Hallam
were not bound to buy from Mrs Kerr immediately after they agreed the
price with her. They could have taken steps to ensure that the outstanding
conditions in the missives with R&D were purified in the month between
agreeing a price with Mrs Kerr and exercising the option.
[65] I am not entirely satisfied by Mr Hopkins's evidence. In
particular his recollection of events was very limited and was therefore not
reliable. He recalled that on one or two occasions R&D had indicated that
they might increase the price which they had offered. He did not appear to
have considered carefully the terms of the option agreement with
Mrs Kerr. In particular he appeared to have thought that Hallam would be
bound to proceed if they agreed a price with Mr Kerr whereas under clause
6.2.4 of the option agreement they would have had one calendar month after
agreeing a purchase price to decide whether to exercise the option. It may be
that he thought, incorrectly, that Hallam would be bound to buy from
Mrs Kerr if their missives with R&D became unconditional, but he did
not make his position clear. If Hallam's position was that they required a
formal amendment of the price in the missives, it is surprising that there was
no evidence that anyone from Hallam ever encouraged R&D to submit such an
amendment. Nevertheless, I formed the view that Mr Hopkins was doing his
best to recall events and I see no basis for refusing to accept as accurate the
broad tenor of his evidence that Hallam were not prepared to settle the price
with Mrs Kerr until they had greater certainty than they received that
R&D would at least match that price.
[66] The evidence which Mr Clark led on behalf of R&D was of
higher quality. Mr Reid was a straightforward and honest witness who gave
a clear account of the progress of negotiations. Mr Hume, while less
directly involved in the detail of the transaction, was an impressive witness
who was able to support his oral evidence by detailed diary entries. He
frankly admitted when his recollection was not reliable. He also struck me as
a competent and honest businessman. I accept his evidence that he considered
himself bound after he had made the oral offer to pay £630,000 on 2 March 2004. He explained that when he made that offer he had
not been aware that Mrs Kerr would have settled for a valuation of
£606,000 and thus give Hallam a windfall of £24,000. While he was displeased
to learn of that, he nevertheless considered himself bound by his offer and
agreed a deal on that basis on 24 March. In his view many deals in the
property development business were done orally and parties had to act on trust
when putting together such arrangements. He saw no reason why Hallam could not
have concluded a deal with Mrs Kerr shortly after 3 March 2004.
[67] There was an opportunity for Hallam to reach a deal with
Mrs Kerr at the valuation of £606,000. It appears from the file note of
the meeting on 3 March 2004 that Hallam were then prepared to reach
agreement with Mrs Kerr at that valuation while taking £630,000 from
R&D. No explanation was given as to why MacRoberts did not carry out the
instructions to write to Burness to structure the deal once Hallam had given
them the correspondence and plan relating to the reservation of access. Hallam
did not lead the evidence of either Mr King, their in-house solicitor, or
Ms Fergusson of MacRoberts. In the absence of their evidence I am not
inclined to make inferences favourable to Hallam from the inactivity which
followed without clear evidence to support them.
[68] But the question remains: have R&D proved that the
valuation of £606,000 offered by Mr Dale on 2 March 2004 was wholly acceptable to Hallam? That acceptability
depends on the comfort which Hallam received from R&D. It appears that
there may have been a misunderstanding between R&D and Hallam. It is
likely that R&D's letter of 2 March 2004 which
spoke of sticking at a price of £565,000 will have muddied the waters. While
Mr Hume and Mr Reid dismissed that figure as a typographic error,
R&D never corrected the error in writing or otherwise. Thus the oral
proposal to pay £630,000 was followed by this letter which would have been
likely to cause Hallam to be cautious about what to expect from R&D. Nor
did R&D ever offer in any writing, formal or informal, to increase the sum
in the missives above £571,314. Earlier, R&D had temporarily offered
£610,000; later they offered £631,000. Their position changed over time. I
infer from that that R&D's actions did not give Hallam any certainty as to
their position. It is also clear that as at 3 March 2004 Hallam did not have R&D's assent to implement the
deal which had been discussed in MacRoberts' office; at that time Mr Hume knew
nothing of Mr Dale's proposed valuation of £606,000. Thus while I got no clear
explanation from Hallam as to why they did not follow up the decision reached
on 3 March 2004, I consider it likely that R&D's actions created sufficient
uncertainty to cause Hallam to hesitate.
[69] The second document on which Mr Clark founded to
contradict Mr Hopkins was MacRoberts' fax of 30 March 2004. He suggested that it demonstrated that MacRoberts
were prepared to accept a valuation of £606,000 without having obtained an
amendment of the missives with R&D as they asked Mr Dale to confirm
his letter of 2 March that Mrs Kerr had accepted that that sum was
the open market value. That, he submitted, had also been Hallam's position on 3 March 2004. I do not agree: after 24 March MacRoberts knew that
Mrs Kerr was seeking a substantially greater sum and was, apparently, no
longer prepared to accept that valuation. I do not infer from Hallam's
willingness at that time to agree £606,000 as the valuation without the
certainty of amended and unconditional missives with R&D that they were
prepared to do so in early March. By the end of March R&D and Hallam had
agreed a basis for proceeding in the meeting on 24 March. With the arrival of
the Homepark offer it appeared that matters were slipping away from them.
MacRoberts' fax of 30 March reads like a forlorn-hope in the
circumstances.
[70] It was the essence of Mr Clark's case that in fact Hallam
had decided on 3 March
2004 to pay Mrs Kerr the
price calculated from a market valuation at £606,000, relying only on the
comfort which Mr Hume's informal offer of £630,000 gave them. But I do
not accept that the file note of 3 March 2004 and
MacRoberts' email of 30 March
2004 justify that inference.
[71] I am not satisfied that R&D have established that
Mrs Kerr's apparent willingness on 2 March 2004 to accept a market
valuation of £606,000 and Hallam's decision at the meeting of 3 March 2004
meant that there was then a price "wholly acceptable" to Hallam without their
having received from R&D the comfort of a formal offer to increase the
price which they had offered. That formal offer was never made. It may have
been, as Mr Hume suggested, that Hallam could have been content with his
informal offer to pay £630,000. It may have been reasonable for Hallam to have
been satisfied by that, particularly as the agreement of the price with Mrs
Kerr did not bind them to exercise the option. But the reasonableness of
Hallam's view of the nature of the arrangement with R&D which would make
the price which Mrs Kerr would take "wholly acceptable" is not in issue.
[72] I turn then to the second question: were Hallam obliged to use
all reasonable endeavours to make the price which Mrs Kerr would take wholly
acceptable to themselves by taking the initiative to renegotiate the price in
the missives with R&D?
[73] I have concluded that they were not. The contractual
obligation on Hallam to use all reasonable endeavours to agree a price falls to
be construed in the contract in which it is contained. In that contract
R&D were bound to pay and Hallam were bound to accept £571,314 for the
purchase subjects if the conditions precedent were purified. I am not
persuaded that Hallam's contractual duty of "all reasonable endeavours"
extended to the initiation of the amendment of the missives price, for example
by submitting a formal offer to accept an enhanced price or writing informally
to R&D inviting them to offer such a price. I do not construe the clause
as requiring Hallam to take the initiative to bring about an amended deal with
R&D in order to render acceptable to them the price which Mrs Kerr was
prepared to take. Even if Hallam were content to reach agreement without a
formal amendment of the price in R&D's offer, I do not construe the clause
as requiring Hallam to act as a broker to obtain clear but non-binding
undertakings from R&D.
[74] Clause 4.1.10 of the missives created a condition precedent principally
to protect Hallam and required that Hallam had agreed the purchase price with
Mrs Kerr before they could be compelled to sell the purchase subjects to
R&D. The reasonable endeavours provision in that clause was to protect
R&D's interest in the outcome of discussions between Hallam and
Mrs Kerr in which they had no part. I interpret the endeavours which the
clause required of Hallam to be directed principally towards their negotiations
with Mrs Kerr rather than the alteration of their back to back agreement
with R&D. It may be that the parties to the missives, when they
incorporated clause 4.1.10 into their contract, or reasonable people in their
position, could have envisaged rapidly rising land prices. But they did not
provide any contractual mechanism by which R&D would improve the price
which they offered in order to allow Hallam to meet Mrs Kerr's
expectations. Nor did they provide that Hallam should take the initiative in
seeking to amend the missives to that end.
[75] It was for R&D to make the formal offer to amend the
missives in order to make the price, to which Mrs Kerr would agree, wholly
acceptable to Hallam. Had they done so, Hallam could not have ignored that
offer and then argued that Mrs Kerr's price was not acceptable because the
missives with R&D had not been amended. In that context good faith in
relation to what was "wholly acceptable" would have required Hallam to accept
R&D's formal offer to achieve the back to back arrangement which they
required. R&D's offer would have been on the table and that would not have
involved Hallam in negotiating a deal with them. But that is not what
happened.
[76] I am therefore satisfied that R&D have not proved on
balance of probabilities that the valuation of £606,000 which Mrs Kerr was
prepared to accept on 2 March 2004 gave rise to a price which was wholly
acceptable to Hallam without some further reassurance than that which R&D
gave during the period before Homepark's offer altered Mrs Kerr's
expectations. Hallam were not under any contractual duty to accept R&D's
oral undertakings or to elicit from them a clearer commitment to an enhanced
price when deciding what was a wholly acceptable price to pay Mrs Kerr.
As a result I am also satisfied that Hallam did not fail to use all reasonable
endeavours to agree such a price with Mrs Kerr.
[77] If I had construed Hallam's contractual obligation in clause
4.1.10 of the missives as imposing on them a duty to negotiate with R&D to
achieve an offer which would make the price which Mrs Kerr would take
acceptable to them, my conclusion would have been different. I consider that
Mr Hume was an honourable man who considered himself bound by the oral
offer of £630,000 and that R&D would have amended their missives to
increase the price which they offered if Hallam had secured a deal with
Mrs Kerr. Thus if there had been an obligation on Hallam, in using all
reasonable endeavours, to act as a broker by seeking to obtain from R&D an
enhanced offer to match or exceed the market valuation which Mrs. Kerr was
prepared to accept in early March 2004, I would have found that Hallam's
inactivity in the weeks after 3 March 2004 amounted to a breach of their
contract with R&D.
Conclusion
[78] R&D's action therefore fails. Accordingly, I sustain the defenders'
third plea in law and assoilzie them from the conclusions of the summons.