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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Knight & Anor v Haynes Duffell, Kentish & Co (a firm) [2003] EWCA Civ 223 (14 February 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2003/223.html Cite as: [2003] EWCA Civ 223 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION
MANCHESTER DISTRICT REGISTRY
(HIS HONOUR JUDGE HOWARTH
(sitting as a deputy High Court Judge))
Strand London, WC2 |
||
B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE KAY
LORD JUSTICE JONATHAN PARKER
____________________
(1) TREVOR KNIGHT | ||
(2) DAVID NORMAN KEAY | Claimants/Appellants | |
-v- | ||
HAYNES DUFFELL, KENTISH & CO (A FIRM) | Defendant/Respondent |
____________________
Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR MICHAEL POOLES QC and MR GLENN CAMPBELL (instructed by Messrs Browne Jacobson, Nottingham NG1 7BJ) appeared on behalf of the Respondent
____________________
(AS APPROVED BY THE COURT)
Crown Copyright ©
"1. On or before the 30th April 1990 (completion) the B shareholders will pay to the Company or its Solicitors the sum of £200,087 of which £30,000 has been paid by way of deposit, such payment to entitle the B shareholders to 33% of the issued share capital of the Company.
2. The Company will on completion assign to the B shareholders the exclusive right to use the trading name of 'Wetherall' subject to the conditions set out below for the consideration of one pound.
3. The B shareholders will forthwith grant a licence to the Company for the exclusive use of the said trading name subject to the provisions as to determination as set out or referred to below.
4. The B shareholders will on or before completion be allotted between them in the proportions
[50% to the said David Hodgkinson
25% to the said Trevor Knight and
25% to the said Lee McIntosh.] 33% of the ordinary shares exclusively described as B shares such shares to carry the right to appoint a director but otherwise to rank pari passu with the other ordinary shares.
5. The said trading name shall forthwith be re-assigned to the Company (for the consideration of one pound) in the event of flotation of the Company or of a sale (as defined or referred to in clause 8(b)(i) in the Loan Stock Agreement between the Company and Henry & Thompson Plc [as drafted 18.04.90]."
"2. The Company will as soon as practicable after completion assign to the B shareholders the exclusive right to use the trading name of 'Wetherall' subject to the following conditions:- ..."
"You will recall that it was agreed that the Company would assign its trading name of Wetherall to the B shareholders and indeed 'Heads of Agreement' were signed by the relevant parties before completion and a typed up version of this has been signed since. I am under some pressure but not urgent pressure to complete this Assignment. I am not necessarily convinced that the Assignment will be totally valid because of the Debentures that have been created in favour of F & S Limited and subsequently Farnley Investments Limited although I suppose it can be argued that there was a contractual obligation for the Company to enter [into] the Assignment, arrangement before they created the Debentures. The solicitor Mr Silk who attended at Liverpool representing the B shareholders has submitted a draft Assignment to me but I have done nothing further on this score since I felt it appropriate that the revision of the B shareholding structure should be finalised before this aspect is pursued further."
"It is strongly rumoured that McIntosh has been declared bankrupt.
Presumably the Official Receiver in Birmingham would be handling his affairs. ...
More significant is (my) suggestion that Bracelon [Mr Knight's company] (or Trevor Knight) take a (free) assignment of any rights McIntosh may enjoy against Linnells and Street on a similar basis to that relating to Hodge's assignment.
McIntosh has exactly the same rights as Trevor but may not be so aware. Counsel has already advised that Trevor's claim has the same chances of success as that of Hodge and further he regards Hodge's chances as 'good'.
Inasmuch as it took some time for the Official Receiver to finalise the assignment of cause of action to Hodge and in view of the passage of time since the cause of action arose can I ask you to contact Hodge's Receiver (who presumably is favourably disposed) to alert McIntosh's Receiver to the possible claim and to persuade him to assign the cause of action to Bracelon (or Knight) so that at the appropriate time Trevor (and/Bracelon) can present a united front.
If you want me to undertake the negotiations I shall be pleased to do so on the usual terms."
"I think the first step is to check whether it is in fact true that McIntosh has been declared bankrupt. The next step is to seek Trevor Knight's instructions that he does want McIntosh to transfer his rights of action to Bracelon and upon what basis. I can clarify the instructions from Trevor if you wish, but it sounds as though you may have already received from him some indication on that. For instance, I was wondering whether you had Trevor's agreement to the offered consideration. I am also a little bit sceptical as to there being any really material persuasary power over McIntosh who if he is bankrupt, must surely not be particularly bothered about his creditors at all now.
Anyway whilst I await your observations on this, I will get in touch with the Official Receiver to check whether McIntosh is bankrupt and to notify him of the claim and seek Proof of Debt form."
"I am aware that you would like to incorporate into your claim McIntosh's right of action against Linnells and Street. I am afraid that that is a little more complicated. Although I am aware that Silk has apparently been making some efforts to trace McIntosh to obtain his right to action over the last year or so, nothing concrete has been presented to me. In order to proceed with McIntosh's claim we would need to obtain his right of action from the Official Receiver. Being a bankrupt, any property that he has, including the right to pursue a debt belong to the Official Receiver or to the Trustee in Bankruptcy (who you may be aware takes over the role of an Official Receiver once a bankruptcy is properly underway). I cannot imagine that there would be too much difficulty in obtaining the Official Receiver's consent, as the right of action is probably worthless to him in the sense that in order to pursue it, he would have to risk losing the same as you would in costs. The main factor against us, in using McIntosh's right of action is the time involved. In Hodgkinson's case we were required to obtain from the Official Receiver a similar Assignment of Right, and that took many months to conclude. It may be possible to approach the Official Receiver for McIntosh, but it will almost certainly be after the expiry of the limitation period before we have the right to go ahead. The limitation period does not necessarily mean that McIntosh's right of action cannot be added to your own, but a Court will take persuading that it is fair and reasonable that you be entitled to do so. I wonder whether the Assignment is actually necessary in any event. According to Hodgkinson's statement you invested £66,667.00 on McIntosh's behalf because he did not have sufficient funds available. If McIntosh did not repay that money to you the claim for the lost investment is yours in any event. Could you please let me know whether McIntosh repaid you?"
The defendants' applications for permission to appeal
"90. Thus I conclude that Mr Knight agreed to pay the money for the B shares in Trimsoft to Linnells on condition that those solicitors did not part with that money except in return for three things, firstly the allotment of the requisite number of B shares in Trimsoft, secondly the completion of the purchase of the Wetherall assets from the receiver who was offering them for sale and thirdly the execution by Trimsoft of an assignment of the Wetherall trade name in favour of the B shareholders in accordance with the terms of the manuscript version of the Heads of Agreement. These three conditions had to be satisfied all at the same time. Mr Street either expressly agreed to these conditions as did the management buy out team or he and they agreed to them by implication by remaining silent and later (in the case of Mr Street) by accepting the money into the firm's client account and using it on compilation on 30 April 1990."
"Mr Keay formed the impression that Mr Street was expecting his phone call. Mr Keay explained that he would subscribe for B shares in Trimsoft on precisely the same terms as Mr Knight had done. Mr Keay told Mr Street that he would be sending a cheque for the amount needed to acquire the B shares and Mr Street told him the account number of Linnells' client account (and presumably the sort code of the branch of the bank at which it was maintained). Mr Street said that this money would be held in the client account and would only be released when the Wetherall trade name was assigned to the B shareholders. On or about 8 May 1990 Mr Keay sent his cheque with a compliments slip to Mr Street at Linnells. The slip explained that the money which would be transferred after presentation of the cheque was 'For Trimsoft shares and trade name'."
"... that Mr Ashby and Mr Birtley had told him that Mr Street was arranging for the completion of everything, namely the issue of shares in Trimsoft, the purchase of the Wetherall business assets and the assignment of the trade name to the B shareholders. He explained to Mr Street that he intended to invest in B shares in Trimsoft and the trade name on the same terms as Mr Knight. There was no mention of a debenture. He was 100% certain that he discussed the trade name with Mr Street and had no doubt whatsoever about this. What he was doing was telling Mr Street what he had been told by Mr Knight, Mr Hodgkinson and everyone else.
Mr Ashby and Mr Birtley had told Mr Keay that they would have to obtain the consent of the other B shareholders to the assignment of the trade name to Mr Keay in addition to them. From this Mr Keay inferred that the name had already been assigned to Mr Knight and Mr Hodgkinson. In his conversation with Mr Knight it appeared that Mr Knight believed that he already had the right to the benefit of the trade name. Everybody was telling him that Mr Street would give undertakings as to the use of money only for the acquisition of shares and for the assignment of the trade name. Later on Mr Ashby and Mr Birtley told him that they had discussed matters with the other B shareholders and it was all sorted out. The promise of the assignment of the Wetherall trade name persuaded Mr Keay to invest in B shares."
"Accordingly I accept Mr Keay's evidence as to the detail of this phone call and of the events which preceded it. I accept that Mr Ashby and Mr Birtley asked Mr Keay to subscribe £66,667.00 for B shares in Trimsoft and told him that if he did so then on completion he would become one of the B shareholders who would then have had the Wetherall trade name assigned to them. I also accept that in the telephone conversation with Mr Street, Mr Keay told him he was going to subscribe for that number of B shares in Trimsoft and it had been agreed between Mr Ashby, Mr Birtley and him that he should do so on precisely the same terms as applied to Mr Knight's subscription for B shares. I accept that on the balance of probabilities Mr Keay told Mr Street during the course of the telephone call that he was not only subscribing for B shares in Trimsoft but was also taking the Wetherall trade name on the same terms as Mr Knight.
94. ... In other words Linnells received the sum of £66,667 on the basis that they would only release it to Trimsoft at the same time as Trimsoft did two things, firstly issue B shares in Trimsoft to Mr Keay and secondly caused the completion of the assignment of the Wetherall trade name to Mr Keay and the other B shareholders. Mr Keay and the other B shareholders would in return have had to grant to Trimsoft the exclusive licence to use the trade name."
"Thus, the circumstances under which the solicitor can part with money from client account are regulated by the instructions given by the client: they are not part of the trust on which the property is held. I do not intend to cast any doubt on the fact that the moneys held by solicitors on client account are trust moneys or that the basic equitable principles apply to any breach of such trust by solicitors. But the basic equitable principle applicable to breach of trust is that the beneficiary is entitled to be compensated for any loss he would not have suffered but for the breach. I have no doubt that, until the underlying commercial transaction has been completed, the solicitor can be required to restore to client account moneys wrongly paid away. But to import into such trust an obligation to restore the trust fund once the transaction has been completed would be entirely artificial. The obligation to reconstitute the trust fund applicable in the case of traditional trusts reflects the fact that no one beneficiary is entitled to the trust property and the need to compensate all beneficiaries for the breach. The rationale has no application to a case such as the present."
The claimants' applications for permission to appeal
"Whilst I have formed a favourable view of the prospects of success of the Original Action, I have to accept that it would have been decided on the evidence which would have even called in that action and not on the evidence called before me, though, of course, some of it is likely to have been very similar. In addition the Original Action would have been tried before a different tribunal and the judge presiding over it may have held different views as to the law. For these reasons Mr Knight and Mr Keay cannot recover the full sum which they would have been awarded in the Original Action if it had been completely successful. I must discount such sum to reflect the respective chances of success and failure of the Original Action."
"However, Mr Jackson submits that the court should take into account as a matter of generality the prospects of settlement, the risks of litigation, the possibility of a payment into court and the risks attendant on it, the risk that an expert witness may change his mind ... In a personal injury case when a judge comes to assess damages, in nearly every case it is he who achieves the compromise, arriving at a figure somewhere between that claimed by the claimant and the figure put forward by the defendants. I would accept Mr Jackson's general submission that if there is evidence to support the contention then the judge should, on the facts of a particular case, make an allowance for the risks attendant on litigation and the risk of failure to recover damages at all if such a risk exists, but there must be facts and evidence which support such a deduction being made and, subject to the point which I will come to now, there was no such evidence in this case."
"I think that the time has now come when I have to stand back and view the case in the Original Action (either as it was pleaded or as it ought to have been pleaded) as a whole. It seems to me that it is at this point in particular that a broad brush has to be used, with the aid of over 40 years experience of the law. Doing the best I can I have concluded that the Original Action, if correctly constituted and tending towards a generous assessment (as directed by Sharif v Garrett & Co) where that is permissible, would have stood a chance of success (if it had been brought to trial or to a compromise agreement) of between 50 and 60 per cent. Accordingly I assess that chance at 55 per cent."
"It is my view of the facts that there is a clear case of professional negligence on the part of the Solicitors in doing as little as they did in relation to the proposed assignments."
Against that background, Mr Cousins submitted that the judge had gone wrong in principle when he came to his conclusion in paragraph 111 of his judgment. There he said:
"It seems to me that there is a startling omission in the evidence before me. There has been no evidence from the trustee in bankruptcy of Mr McIntosh. Would he have been prepared to assign such claim? If he had been prepared to do so, what terms would have applied to any such assignment? For example, would he have demanded a share of any money recovered, and, if so, what would that share have been? I can, of course speculate on these matters, but they do not seem to me to be matters of which the Court can take judicial knowledge. In the end the burden of proof rests on Mr Knight and Mr Keay to prove on a balance of probabilities that as a result of the professional negligence of the Solicitors they have suffered at least a certainly quantified sum by way of damages in respect of that cause of action. In this case, I take the view that the Claimants have failed to produce any evidence in this regard and so this part of the claim must inevitably fail."
Interest
"The original trial Judge would have been faced with a difficulty, it seems to me, in regard to interest prior to the commencement of the original action on the 17th April 1996. Would he have given interest going back to April 1990? Would he have given interest for part of the period or would he have given it at a reduced rate? All of it, it seems to me, is speculative."
The judge then went on to consider whether it would be appropriate to grant interest back to April 1990 and concluded that it would not have been.
ORDER: Applications for permission to appeal refused; appeal of the claimants allowed; order that the sum of £15,000 paid in on behalf of the defendants on 20th September 2002 is paid out in partial satisfaction of this judgment, with the interest accrued thereupon; the respondents to pay 95 per cent of the appellants' costs; a draft minute of order to be lodged by counsel.
(Order not part of approved judgment)