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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> LHS Holdings Ltd v Laporte Plc [2001] EWCA Civ 278 (12 February 2001) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2001/278.html Cite as: [2001] EWCA Civ 278, [2001] 2 All ER (Comm) 563 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM HIGH COURT
CHANCERY DIVISION (Mr Justice Rattee)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL Monday 12th February 2001 |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE MAY
and
LORD JUSTICE JONATHAN PARKER
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LHS HOLDINGS LTD |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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LAPORTE PLC |
Respondent |
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Smith Bernal Reporting Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr Michael Brindle QC (instructed by Messrs. Slaughter and May for the Respondent)
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Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE JONATHAN PARKER
INTRODUCTION
"A declaration as to which of the Items referred to in [the] purported Dispute Notice are not properly the subject of a Dispute Notice because they do not give reasonable details of the grounds of the dispute within the meaning of clause 5(C) of the agreement."
"A determination as to what issues [Laporte] is entitled to raise pursuant to the provisions of clause 5(C)."
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
"(C) The Seller shall be entitled at any time within the period of 30 days following receipt by it of the draft Completion Accounts, Completion Statement and Net Asset Reconciliations to dispute the draft Completion Accounts and/or the Completion Statement by notice in writing (a "Dispute Notice") to the Purchaser setting out reasonable details of the grounds for dispute. If no Dispute Notice is given by the Seller before the expiry of such 30 day period, the Completion Accounts and the Completion Statement shall be deemed to have been agreed by the Seller and the Purchaser. ......(D) The Seller and the Purchaser shall use all reasonable endeavours to resolve any dispute(s) and agree the Completion Accounts and the Completion Statement within 14 days after the date of receipt of a Dispute Notice by the Purchaser. If they fail to do so by the expiry of 14 days after the date of receipt by the Purchaser of the Dispute Notice, the Seller or the Purchaser may refer the dispute to an independent firm of chartered accountants agreed by the parties, or in default of agreement within two Business Days of such expiry to the London office of an independent firm of chartered accountants nominated by the President for the time being of the Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales (in either case, the "Expert"), with a request that the Expert determine the matters in dispute within 28 days of receiving the reference. Any reference to the Expert shall be a joint reference by the Seller and the Purchaser and in any reference, the Expert shall act as an expert and not as an arbitrator. In making such determination, the Expert shall state which of, and to what extent (if at all), those adjustments which have been requested by the Seller in its Dispute Notice are necessary to the Completion Accounts and/or the Completion Statement and the Expert shall not consider or propose any adjustments which have not been requested by the Seller in its Dispute Notice or which do not affect the Completion Statement. The determination of the Expert shall, in the absence of fraud or manifest error, be final and binding on both parties."
"The Completion Accounts shall comprise profit and loss accounts for the period from the Accounts Date to the Completion Date and net assets statements as at the Completion Date which shall be prepared on an aggregated basis for the Group and on an individual basis for each Company and Subsidiary, using for each Company and Subsidiary the same accounting categorisations, principles, policies, treatments and practices used in respect of it in the Accounts [a defined expression meaning the unaudited aggregated financial information of the Group for the years 1995/6/7] as there applied, including in [sic] the application of accounting discretion and judgment (the "Accounts Basis"), subject, if required, to the following modification if, under the Accounts Basis, the Working Capital Amount or the Taxation Amount are in any material respect not in accordance with accounting practices generally accepted in the United Kingdom: the Combined Working Capital and Taxation Amounts shall be adjusted by the minimum amount necessary to comply with accounting practices generally accepted in the United Kingdom, taking into account "overs" and "unders"."
"We refer to Clause 5(C) .... of the Agreement. Unless otherwise defined in the letter or the context otherwise requires, words and expressions used in this letter and the accompanying schedule (collectively, "the Dispute Notice") shall have the same meanings as are ascribed to them in the Agreement.Pursuant to the terms of Clause 5(C) we hereby give you notice that the Company disputes the terms and content of the draft Completion Accounts and Completion Statement prepared by [PWC], dated 2nd March, 1999.
Details of the grounds of the dispute are set out in the schedule hereto which forms a part of this Dispute Notice and should be read alongside this letter."
THE HEARING BEFORE RATTEE J
"I accept, of course, that, if the court is satisfied by evidence that a word in, for instance, a shipping document has a special meaning to those engaged in the business of shipping, that word will be treated as having that meaning in the document. However, there is nothing in the experts' reports that I have read that suggests that the prima facie ordinary words used in Clause 5(C) of the Sale Agreement or the Dispute Notice have some special meaning to an accountant. LHS's purpose in seeking to adduce its expert evidence is not, in my view, to show that the words of the Dispute Notice have some special meaning to accountants, but to prove that those words, according to their ordinary meaning, are too generalised to constitute reasonable details of the alleged grounds for dispute in accordance with the requirement of Clause 5(C) of the Sale Agreement. In my judgment, given that the meaning of the words used is clear, whether they constitute reasonable details of the grounds for dispute is a matter for the court's decision unaided by the opinion of expert or other witnesses. Accordingly I do not consider it appropriate to admit the evidence of the two accountants who have made reports in this case."
"In my judgment this is the only conclusion that makes commercial sense of the dispute procedure laid down by Clause 5(C) and (D) of the Sale Agreement. For Laporte to be at liberty [to] serve a Dispute Notice containing no grounds for an alleged dispute, but thereby setting the dispute procedure in motion would make nonsense of that procedure. Mr Brindle's contention that it would be sufficient to Laporte to be under a contractual obligation to provide details of its dispute at a later stage, if not included in the Dispute Notice, is unacceptable in the context of the tight timetable laid down for the implementation of that procedure."
"Thus, in my judgment the Dispute Notice served on 31 March 1999 by Laporte is a valid Dispute Notice within the meaning of Clause 5(C) of the Sale Agreement in respect of each of the lettered items referred to in it. In reaching the conclusions I have expressed in relation to each of those items, I have not overlooked [LHS'] submission that it is apparent from documentary and oral evidence that Laporte did, by 31 March 1999, have available to it information in relation to some of the items that would have enabled it to have included more detail in the Dispute Notice. In my view the availability of such information does not alter the fact that, particularly having regard to such explanations as were given by LHS's accountants for their proposed adjustments of the accounts, and the nature of Laporte's objections thereto, the Dispute Notice does give reasonable details of the grounds of the disputes raised thereby, so as to comply with the requirements of Clause 5(C) of the Sale Agreement. I am comforted in this conclusion by the fact that LHS itself clearly considered that it did, up to a point at which it had actually co-operated with Laporte in submitting the whole of the Dispute Notice to the proposed Expert, on the footing that there was no defect in the Notice."
"This court declares that the document described as a Dispute Notice and dated 31st March 1999 and served by the defendant on the claimant is a valid dispute notice for the purposes of clause 5(C) of [the Agreement] as to the items described therein in relation to all items therein (save in relation to [an immaterial exception])".
THE ISSUES ON THIS APPEAL
THE ISSUES IN THIS APPEAL
"Certainty is a crucial foundation for commercial activity. Certainty is only achieved when the vendor is left in no reasonable doubt not only that a claim may be brought but of the particulars of the ground upon which the claim is to be based. .... Thus there is merit in certainty and accordingly in our judgment the point taken by the appellants [that a notice of claim served by the respondents was insufficiently particularised] is not a matter of mere technicality and it is not without merit."
CONCLUSIONS
LORD JUSTICE MAY
"[Laporte] shall be entitled … to dispute the draft Completion Accounts and/or the Completion Statement by notice in writing (a "Dispute Notice") … setting out reasonable details of the grounds of dispute."
LORD CHIEF JUSTICE