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The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions >> Christchurch Pavilion Partnership No.1 & Ors v. Deloitte & Touche Tohmatsu Trustee Company Ltd (New Zealand) [2002] UKPC 4 (4 February 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKPC/2002/4.html Cite as: [2002] UKPC 4, [2002] BCC 636 |
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Christchurch Pavilion Partnership No.1 & Ors v. Deloitte & Touche Tohmatsu Trustee Company Ltd (New Zealand) [2002] UKPC 4 (4 February 2002)
Privy Council Appeal No. 16 of 2001
Christchurch Pavilion Partnership No. 1 and Others Appellants
v.
Deloitte & Touche Tohmatsu Trustee Company Limited Respondent
FROM
THE COURT OF APPEAL OF NEW ZEALAND
---------------
JUDGMENT OF THE LORDS OF THE JUDICIAL
COMMITTEE OF THE PRIVY COUNCIL,
Delivered the 4th February 2002
------------------
Present at the hearing:-
Lord Slynn of Hadley
Lord Mustill
Lord Scott of Foscote
Sir Christopher Staughton
Sir John Roch
[Delivered by Lord Scott of Foscote]
------------------The background
The 1978 Act
“The Bill … will require commercial entities offering securities to the public to do so by way of a registered prospectus, to appoint an independent person to look after the interests of investors, to keep and disclose adequate financial information and to be subject to official scrutiny.”
and that
“The Bill is aimed at redressing the balance in favour of the investor, who, in many of the financial collapses in recent years, had had little or no way of ensuring that his investment has been responsibly and properly managed.” (see NZPD vol 416, 14 December 1977).
“No participatory security shall be offered to the public for subscription, by or on behalf of an issuer, unless –
(a) The issuer of the security has appointed a person as a statutory supervisor in respect of the security and both the issuer and that person have signed a deed of participation relating to that security; and
(b) A copy of the deed of participation has been registered by the Registrar pursuant to section 46 of this Act; and
(c) [This relates to amendments to the deed of participation].”
“Void irregular allotments - (1) No allotment of a security offered to the public for subscription shall be made unless at the time of the subscription for the security there was a registered prospectus relating to the security.
(2) No allotment shall be made of an equity security or a participatory security offered to the public for subscription if the allotment is the first allotment of such security to the public unless the amount stated in the registered prospectus relating thereto as the minimum amount which, in the opinion of the directors of the issuer, must be raised by the issue of the securities in order to provide for the matters specified in regulations made under this Act, is subscribed, and that amount is paid to, and received by, the issuer within 4 months after the date of the registered prospectus; and, for the purposes of this subsection –
(a) A sum shall be deemed to have been paid to, and received by, the issuer if a cheque for that sum is received in good faith by the issuer and the directors of the issuer have no reason to suspect that the cheque will not be paid:
(b) The amount so stated in the registered prospectus shall be reckoned exclusively of any amount payable otherwise than in cash.
(3) No allotment of a participatory security offered to the public for subscription shall be made unless, at the time of allotment the statutory supervisor holds a written statement signed by the subscriber authorising the subscription for that particular security.
(4) Any allotment made in contravention of the provisions of this section shall be invalid and of no effect.
(5) Where subscriptions for securities are received by or on behalf of an issuer, but, by virtue of this section, the securities may not be allotted, or for any reason the securities are not allotted, the issuer shall ensure that –
(a) At all times while held by it, the subscriptions are kept in a trust account on behalf of the subscribers; and
(b) The subscriptions, together with such interest (if any) as has been earned thereon, are repaid to the subscribers as soon as reasonably practicable.
(6) If any subscriptions to which this section applies are not so repaid within 2 months after the date on which the subscriptions were received by or on behalf of the issuer (or, in any case to which subsection (2) of this section applies, within 5 months after the date of the registered prospectus), the issuer and all the directors thereof shall be jointly and severally liable to repay the subscriptions, together with interest at the rate of 10 percent per annum from the date on which the subscriptions were received by or on behalf of the issuer:
Provided that a director shall not be so liable if he proves that the default in the repayment of the subscriptions was not due to any misconduct or negligence on his part.”
“… a participatory security the terms of which require that the price for the security is payable by instalments over a period specified in the registered prospectus relating to the security with the first such instalment payable on subscription for the security.” (paragraph 2(1)).
“… in respect of any offer of specified participatory securities in so far as that subsection provides that no allotment of the specified participatory securities shall be made unless the … minimum amount … is paid to and received by the issuer within 4 months after the date of the registered prospectus.”
“(b) the provisions of any deed relating to the securities are no longer adequate to give proper protection to the security holders.”
The Deed of Participation
“The Statutory Supervisor shall exercise reasonable diligence to ascertain whether or not any breach of the terms of this Deed or of any offer of interests to members of the public has occurred and, except where it is satisfied that the breach will not materially prejudice the interests of the Participants, shall do all such things as it is empowered to do to cause any breach of those terms to be remedied.”
The Investors' pleaded case
“16. The 1st Defendant breached its duty as statutory supervisor in permitting the investments of the partners in the Plaintiffs to be accepted by the promoter and in permitting the Christchurch Pavilions development to proceed, notwithstanding the breaches of the requirements of the Registered Prospectus and of the Deed of Participation, as particularised in paragraph 12.
17. The 1st Defendant further breached its duty as statutory supervisor through failing to hold, as at [23 December] 1987 written statements from the partners of the Plaintiffs authorizing their subscription for securities under the Registered Prospectus, as required by section 37(3) of the Securities Act.”
The trial before Cartwright J
The Court of Appeal
“But the investors cannot complain that the full amount of $4.5m was not paid as at 23 December 1987. This is because the prospectus required only $3.24m to have been paid at that date, which was the date on which allotment was to take place. Indeed there was nothing legally wrong, in terms of s 37(2) with the second tranche being delayed beyond the date of allotment provided it was paid within 4 months of the date of the prospectus. That date was 12 November 1987.” (para 8).
This passage shows that the Court of Appeal were adopting a view as to the meaning of “subscribe” in section 37(2) which their Lordships think was in error. But it shows also that the real issue being debated, the investors' real complaint, was that the full $3.24m had not been paid by 23 December 1987 (see also paras 14 and 15 of the judgment).
“The allotment was … in breach of s 37(2). Deloitte should have picked this up and taken such steps as it could to prevent the allotment from taking place. … [Mr Lusk] argued however that the breach was not material in causative terms because from the point of view of cash flow the venture was always structured on the basis of two tranches; the fact that the second was outside the time permitted by s 37(2) can therefore have had no causative effect on the ultimate financial failure.
We accept that proposition which Mr Wilson [counsel for the investors] did not seriously challenge. The fact that the second tranche was paid outside the parameters of s 37(2) cannot logically have had any causative bearing on the investors' losses because they subscribed on the premise that their second payment would be made some 8 months after the first and, if and to the extent that this caused difficulties for the venture, the investors must be deemed to have taken the risk that that would be so. They cannot complain in causative terms of what they knew full well was to be the position, albeit strictly an unlawful one. Thus although Deloitte was in default in this respect its default did not cause the loss. The only way it could be said to have done so is by the application of a wholly ‘but for’ approach to causation which in present circumstances would not be appropriate, as Mr Wilson properly recognised” (paras 20 and 21).
“HGC passed on a total exceeding £4.625m to Farnsworth and thereby procured full payment of what was required to satisfy the up front obligations under the building contract. The same position was therefore reached as would have obtained if the building contractor had been an independent party” (para 40).
and that:
“ … we are satisfied that Deloitte cannot be regarded as being at fault on the basis that the venture was under-capitalised. It was not.” (para 50).
The appellants' case
“… even if Deloitte had been at fault in some material respect, the investors would still have faced major difficulties in showing that such default caused the loss of their investments.”