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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 >> Caribbean Steel Company Ltd v Price Waterhouse (a Firm) [2013] UKPC 18 (09 July 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKPC/2013/18.html Cite as: [2013] UKPC 18 |
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[2013] UKPC 18
Privy Council Appeal No 0055 of 2012
JUDGMENT
Caribbean Steel Company Limited (Appellant) v Price Waterhouse (a Firm) (Respondent)
From the Court of Appeal of Jamaica
before
Lord Hope
Lord Wilson
Lord Sumption
Lord Carnwath
Lord Toulson
JUDGMENT DELIVERED BY
LORD TOULSON
ON
9 July 2013
Heard on 16 April 2013
Appellant Denise E. Kitson QC Trudy-Ann Dixon-Frith Mark Reynolds (Instructed by MA Law (Solicitors) LLP) |
Respondent Sandra Minott-Phillips QC Alexis Robinson (Instructed by Myers, Fletcher & Gordon) |
LORD TOULSON:
Introduction
PW's engagement
PW's valuation
"Despite the company's fairly consistent operational performance and results, its financial condition has steadily deteriorated …
Beginning in 1992, the company increased its indebtedness to finance capital expenditures which included the purchase of approximately US $500,000 of new machinery. This machinery was fully in place by the end of the first 1st quarter of 1993. However, the planned expansion into US-type cables had to be postponed as a result of the strike in April 1993 and a drop in existing sales from the general uncertainty surrounding the elections in early 1993 and the delay of the budget until the summer of 1993. These circumstances combined to deplete Carib Cable's working capital. Since then, liquidity has progressively worsened as a result of depressed cash flow generation from operations attributable to general economic conditions, increased interest rates and devaluation losses. As a result, the company's revolving debt has increased and has been used mainly to pay interest charges, with none being available to provide the working capital required for the company's planned export expansion."
"The $13,897,000 pension fund surplus may be brought back into the company. This income would be taxable but the tax would be offset through utilisation of the company's tax losses."
"As this is a balance of cost plan, the past service surplus disclosed is available to provide benefit improvements or to reduce the employer's contribution rate, or a combination of both."
At the date of PW's share valuation Carib Cable had borrowed approximately J $1,400,000 from the pension fund. The actuaries' report did not show any loan to the company in the funds' assets, and so it would seem that this borrowing occurred in the same period that its revolving bank debt was increasing. PW made no reference to the borrowing from the pension fund in its share valuation report, but it is accepted that the company's repayment liability would have been reflected in its current liabilities in the company's financial statements used by PW in assessing its maintainable earnings.
Carib Steel's claim
"Failing to advise itself or the Plaintiff properly or at all as to the benefits that can accrue to companies, including Carib Cable, from their Pension Fund surpluses and/or whether or not Carib Cable could properly claim the said pension fund surplus as an asset of the company."
However, the pleading made no reference to the rules of the 1974 scheme, nor did it state in what respect the note in the valuation report was deficient or what should have been said regarding the benefits of the value of the pension surplus, beyond complaining that PW ought to have drawn attention to the borrowing by the company from the fund.
"… if the false representations and/or acts of negligence and breach of contractual and/or statutory duties had not been made, then it would not have acquired the shares in Carib Cable or, alternatively, would have taken steps promptly and timeously to rescind or otherwise challenge the agreement to acquire the said shares on the basis of misrepresentation and/or fraud as soon as the said depletion of the pension fund became known to the plaintiff."
In summary, therefore, the essence of the claim was that the value of the pension fund had been materially depleted by the company borrowing from it and that Carib Steel would have acted very differently if it had known of the borrowing prior to its acquisition of a majority shareholding.
"3. The Claimant alleges that the Defendant was negligent in providing the Claimant with a valuation report which stated that the Company's pension scheme showed a surplus of $13,849,000 as at September 1994, which surplus would be brought back into the company, and was therefore a relevant consideration in placing a value on the company.
4. The Claimant relied on the Defendant's valuation report to invest $32M in acquiring 50.1% interest in the cable company. The Claimant contends that in so doing it was put to loss and expenses as a result of the Defendant's negligence and/or breach of contract, and/or breach of fiduciary duties.
5. The Defendant's valuation report did not disclose the fact that the two owners/managers had been borrowing from the Pension Fund. Instead it described the management as "experienced" with many years in the industry. The Claimant contends that the Defendant was in a special position of knowledge as auditors for both the Claimant and Caribbean Cable, and that they were under a continuing duty to disclose such information to the Claimant both in reference to the contract for valuation of the company and the audit of the consolidated accounts thereafter.
6. The Defendant failed to disclose that the loans from the pension fund depleted the surplus. The loans were themselves classified as trade payables in the audited accounts prepared by the Defendant and were not separately identified for the scrutiny of the Claimant's Board. The Claimant alleges that the Defendant was negligent in its accounting treatment of the said loans.
7. The loans from the pension fund were never repaid, and the Claimant lost its investment. The Claimant contends that the loss of its investment was caused by the Defendant's conduct as aforesaid."
"Having read the complete report Carib Steel made a decision to purchase at a premium. I expected to find the pension fund surplus in cash. I found that part of it was borrowed by the company, Carib Cable. We found that out subsequently after we bought it."
Expert Evidence
i) The type of pension plan;
ii) The date of the most recent actuarial study;
iii) The extent of any under-funding;
iv) The recommendations for funding and whether the company was complying with them;
v) The employer's contributions for the year with comparative figures for the previous year.
i) PW's estimate of the value of the company was in his opinion reasonable and had been properly carried out.
ii) The pension fund surplus could be considered an asset of the company.
iii) Loans extended to the company from the pension fund would not have diminished the amount of the surplus, as the loans were receivables repayable by the company to the pension plan on demand.
iv) Assets could take various forms, including receivables.
"In the 1990's it was commonplace in Jamaica for pension plan surpluses to be used to reduce the company's (employer's) contribution rate to the pension plan and so give the company a "holiday" from future contributions (see clause 4.4 on page 11 of the [Actuaries'] valuation). In that event, the surplus could be considered an asset of the company."
"They [the loans] were not an impairment as they were immaterial given the value of the fund. That is, they would be repayable in accordance with the terms of the borrowing. The company could take a holiday and would reduce the expense. This would be until the surplus was exhausted. There were more aggressive employers that would take the money back, and others would take it back in contributions. Either by taking it back as a lump sum, which would increase the assets [sic]. The contribution holiday would allow a reporting of higher profits. Contributions would normally be monthly. If one takes a contribution holiday one would not take the money right away if the business is a going concern. I think the value was reasonable and the methodology was reasonable. … I found the methodology good. I have personally done a valuation on a company. … Where there are loans it is a matter of materiality. An audit opinion of the company affairs taken as a whole. The materiality of the balance is what one looks at. It would depend on the circumstances. "
Negligence
"42... The Pension Fund Rules provide that while the Company is a going concern any surplus disclosed in the actuarial valuation may be used to reduce the contribution payable by Carib Cable or used to improve benefits. It also provides that on the closure of the Pension Fund any surplus would revert to Carib Cable as an asset.
Price Waterhouse contends that the pension fund surplus under the rules can be applied by Carib Cable to provide relief from future contributions to the pension fund as long as the surplus exists. This they say is a form of bringing the asset back into the company. Stephen Holland agreed with Price Waterhouse's inclusion of the pension fund surplus as an asset. They point out that assets can take varying forms, cash or receivables, so whether or not the money was loaned to Carib Cable at the time when Carib Steel acquired the majority shareholding in February 1995, the asset remained.
44… The argument by Price Waterhouse that the Pension Fund surplus is an asset as Carib Cable would be able to access it by taking a "contribution holiday" is unsound, as in any event that asset would be subject to discount as an income stream over time. This fact was never made clear in the notes to the Estimate of Value given to Carib Steel."
"45... The court accepts Collin Greenland's view that having regard to the nature of the valuation requested of Price Waterhouse by Carib Steel; the multiple professional relationships that existed between them; and the fact that the Defendant ought to have realised the importance of the status and value of the Pension Fund surplus to the whole valuation exercise, then any activity affecting the Pension Fund (e.g. the borrowing by Carib Cable) ought to have been reported to Carib Steel a prospective 50.1% shareholder of Carib Cable. I accept that this is an obvious case, requiring the application of common sense and which does not require any expertise in share valuation itself."
Causation
Conclusion