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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> DAR International FEF Co v AON Ltd [2004] EWCA Civ 921 (18 June 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2004/921.html Cite as: [2004] EWCA Civ 921 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT
COMMERCIAL COURT DIVISION
(HIS HONOUR JUDGE KNIGHT QC)
Strand London, WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE MANCE
MR JUSTICE JACKSON
____________________
DAR INTERNATIONAL F.E.F. CO | Claimant/Respondent | |
-v- | ||
AON LIMITED | Defendant/Appellant |
____________________
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 J DRAKE (instructed by Fishers) appeared on behalf of the Defendant
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
"Dear Sirs,
Saudi Arabian Airlines
With reference to the above and our various discussions, we are pleased to confirm the following as a basis of allocation of remuneration.
All earnings generated by Aon in respect of the SAUDI ARABIAN AIRLINES account are to be considered as "revenue".
The "revenue" will be apportioned as follows:
Aon Aviation 40%
FNS Consultant/DAR 60%
Aon Aviation will provide FNS Consultant/DAR with all and any supporting documentation that may be required.
If the revenue received by AON Aviation if the revenue [sic] is less than US$400,000 it is agreed that the above named parties will sit down and discuss in good faith how this situation can be rectified to the satisfaction of all parties.
Payments to FNS Consultant/DAR will be made in accordance with the above pro rata basis, immediately upon receipt of "revenue" by Aon and into a designated Bank Account to be agreed.
Any chances [sic] to this agreement can only be made with the express agreement of all of the following:
AON AVIATION
FNS CONSULTANT
DAR INTERNATIONAL
This agreement is applicable from inception of the first policy and throughout its duration and extends to cover all and any coverage placed by Aon in respect of SAUDI ARABIAN AIRLINES.
Yours faithfully
Jonathan Palmer Brown,
Chairman,
Aviation Division,
AON Group Limited.
F N Sfeir
FNS Consultant
Mohammed Ameer Said
DAR International"
"Mr Head's [that is, counsel for Aon below] consideration argument seems to me must fail. The 13th November agreement followed up the discussions on 12th/13th October, pursuant to which AON sought the co-operation of DAR, which was provided. In my view this supplied adequate consideration."
"The fact that the agreement followed earlier discussions does not mean that anything said at that earlier meeting was promised or provided in return for Aon's promise."
"Even an act done before the promise was made can be consideration for the promise if three conditions are satisfied. First, the act must have been done at the request of the promisor; secondly, it must have been understood that payment would be made; and thirdly, the payment, if it had been promised in advance, must have been legally recoverable."
"1. On the basis that:
a. there was an agreement between the Claimant and the Defendant by which the Defendant would pay to the Claimant and to FNS 60% of all revenues of whatever nature earned by or on behalf of the Defendant on any business for Saudi Arabian Airlines for the years 1998-99 and 1999-2000 and
b. there was an agreement between the Claimant and FNS by which they would share in the aforesaid 60% of revenues in the proportions 75% to the Claimant and 25% to FNS
the Defendant is to pay to the Claimant 75% of 60% of all such revenues found to be due to the Claimant under the said agreement, alternatively damages to be assessed.
"2. An account be taken of the applicable revenues due to the Claim [sic] pursuant to the aforesaid contract and the Defendant provide to the Claimant within 28 days of the date of this Order all supporting documentation, supported by affidavit, in relation to all such applicable revenues. The parties shall agree any necessary and appropriate directions for any further hearing (reserved to His Honour Judge Knight QC) and shall submit the same for approval."
"Creation of joint liability. The presumption is that a promise made by two or more persons is joint so that express words are necessary to make it joint and several."
"Payment to joint creditors, partners, trustees, etc. The payment of a debt to one of a number of joint creditors discharges a debt owed to them jointly."
"It was pointed out on behalf of these defendants that the mandate was a single document, signed by each joint account holder and containing no hint of anything other than a joint obligation save where a joint and several responsibility for any overdraft was expressly provided for. But it is still necessary to consider whether a single obligation owed jointly exhausts what may be taken to be the undoubted contractual intention of the parties so far as the duty of the bank is concerned.
"The defendants agreed to honour instructions signed by both account holders. This no doubt imported a negative duty not to honour instructions not signed by both account holders. This duty also could, in theory, have been owed jointly, but it must (to make sense) have been owed to the account holders severally, because the only purpose of requiring two signatures was to obviate the possibility of independent action by one account holder to the detriment of the other. A duty on the defendants which could only be enforced jointly with the party against the possibility of whose misconduct a safeguard was sought, and where the occurrence of such misconduct through the negligent breach of mandate by the defendants would deprive the innocent party of any remedy, would in practical terms be worthless. Indeed, it would be worse than worthless, because a customer would reasonably rely on the two signature safeguard and refrain from active supervision of the account, only to find when loss (allegedly irreparable) has resulted that the reliance was misplaced."
Order: appeal dismissed, but judge's order to be reformulated.