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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Willis Management (Isle of Man) Ltd & Anor v Cable and Wireless Plc & Anor [2005] EWCA Civ 806 (30 June 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2005/806.html Cite as: [2005] EWCA Civ 806 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
MR. JUSTICE COOKE
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE RIX
and
MR. JUSTICE WILSON
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WILLIS MANAGEMENT (ISLE OF MAN) LTD. And WILLIS UK LTD. |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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CABLE and WIRELESS PLC and PENDER INSURANCE LTD. |
Respondents |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Jonathan HIRST Q.C. Andrew MITCHELL and Patrick GOODALL (instructed by Clifford Chance LLP) for the First Respondent and Barlow Lyde & Gilbert (for the Second Respondent)
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Tuckey:
Dear Bill
Cable & Wireless Plc and Pender v Christopher Valentine and Others
Claim No. 2004 Folio 250
I set out below the terms on which Cable & Wireless PLC ("C&W") and Pender Insurance Limited ("Pender") are prepared to defer the joinder of Willis UK Ltd ("Willis UK") and Willis Management (Isle of Man) Ltd into the above proceedings. If you are content with these terms, please sign a copy of this letter and return it to me overnight via pdf and courier.
1. Willis UK and Willis (Isle of Man) Ltd accept legal responsibility to C&W and Pender for the acts and omissions and breaches of duty of Peter Foulger, whether pleaded in Claim No. 2004 Folio 250 (the "Misfeasance Proceedings") or otherwise and will not seek to assert in any negotiations or proceedings (including the Misfeasance Proceedings) that they do not have legal responsibility for his acts and/or omissions and/or breaches of duty as regards C&W and Pender.
2. Save to the extent that in the Misfeasance Proceedings an unappealed judgment at trial establishes that Peter Foulger is not liable to C&W and/or Pender in the respects alleged, Willis UK and Willis (Isle of Man) Ltd accept that the acts, omissions and breaches of duty alleged against Peter Foulger in the Misfeasance Proceedings occurred and will not seek to assert otherwise in any negotiations or proceedings (including the Misfeasance Proceedings).
3. Neither Willis UK nor Willis (Isle of Man) Ltd will seek to argue that they have been served late or out of time nor will they seek to delay the timetable for the hearing of the Misfeasance Proceedings or take any other point or defence of any nature against C&W and/or Pender arising out of C&W and Pender's agreement to defer service of proceedings.
4. Willis UK and Willis (Isle of Man) Ltd will enter into a general standstill agreement extending the limitation period for all other claims that C&W and Pender may have against them arising out of their and/or Peter Foulger's and/or other of their respective employees acts or omissions or breaches of duty owed to C&W and/or Pender.
Yours sincerely
Andrew S Garard
Group General Counsel
Cable & Wireless PLC
.
Bill Bowden, Group General Counsel
Willis Group Holdings Limited
Andrew:
This looks fine, with one caveat, which I believe we both accept, that our acceptance of legal responsibility for what our employee did or didn't do properly is obviously only one aspect of what led to the problem at Pender. In our discussions we have always acknowledged candidly the difficulty of attributing fault to the various parties involved, including the principal bad actors, Pender, C&W and the other third parties you've identified, for the things they did or should have done in connection with what occurred.
I am therefore signing and returning the letter as you've drafted it, but with the understanding that our acceptance of legal responsibility is not intended to be an undertaking of full responsibility for the damages suffered by Pender and C&W, but in effect for a share in them which we are agreeing to discuss pursuant to the kind of standstill agreement that will give both of us appropriate cover as long as such discussions are proceeding in good faith and haven't broken down.
I believe this is what we both intended. If not, please give me a call at any time . to discuss.
Hope you feel better.
Bill
BB [Bowden] confirmed that signing of letter is not acceptance for all losses only Willis' fair share
ASG [Garard] agreed.
ASG and BB agreed they would draft a statement of principles to set out process to agree Willis share.
BB agreed and said no rush
BB repeated that W [Willis] did not want to be joined.
In his witness statement Mr Garard elaborated on his note by saying:
I agreed that his "caveat" was in line with what we had previously discussed and that C & W and Pender agreed that Willis was accepting liability to pay only their fair share of the sums due. Mr Bowden said that the parties would need to agree a mechanism so as to determine or agree what that share should be and, as before, suggested that an arbitration or mediation might provide an appropriate means of doing so.
BB said they were concerned (Willis UK) that they may be accepting liability for all Pender losses
ASG said not the case and Bill's e-mail of 24/11 was right in that W would be paying their fair share along with others (Marsh etc.)
BB wanted to draft a letter to supercede; ASG said no time but could do next week a statement of principles
BB said wanted another letter to supercede; ASG said no need as letter and agreement that W not liable for all CW/Pender losses is enough.
Dear Bill
Further to our discussions of this morning and last night and our written agreement of yesterday, I confirm that today neither C&W nor Pender sought to join any Willis company to the above proceedings.
As you requested, I also confirm our agreement of last night and this morning that (as you point out in your e-mail to me 24 November) Willis' acceptance of legal responsibility is not intended to be an undertaking of full responsibility for the damages suffered by Pender and C&W, but in effect is for a share in them which you and I will discuss in good faith.
Best regards
Whereas Mr Sumption Q.C. argued that this was acceptance for a share to be negotiated and that this amounted to an agreement to negotiate which was unenforceable, Mr Hirst Q.C. for C&W/Pender maintained that the second paragraph of the [caveat] e-mail had to be read in the light of the first paragraph and the prior discussions culminating in the telephone conversation of 25 November where it was agreed that Willis would be liable for "its fair share" which could be determined in any one of a number of different ways. The parties plainly had in mind the possibility of a negotiated conclusion but there had equally been mention of mediation or arbitration and the fact that proceedings were deferred left it open to the parties to refer the matter to the court for decision should that be necessary.
What Willis wanted to be able to argue was that it should not bear the totality of the loss and damage suffered but it should be apportioned amongst the various entities at fault in a manner proportionate to that fault.
This is exactly the sort of exercise which the court performs under the Civil Liability (Contribution) Act 1978.
30. .the effect of the caveat e-mail and the telephone conversation, as Mr Hirst Q.C. accepted, is an acceptance by Willis of its liability for a net share on this basis, taking into account the relative fault of other parties. That would represent a "fair share" being that which it was just and reasonable for it to bear in all the circumstances. There is no difficulty in the courts determining what is fair or what is just and reasonable or equitable as appears from the terms of the 1978 Act, the decision in the Didymi [1988] 2 Lloyd's Rep. 108 at pages 115-116 and 119 and the decision in Mamidoil v Okta [2001] 2 Lloyd's Rep 76 at para. 69.
31. There is no reason to see the second paragraph as giving rise to an obligation to negotiate in order to determine the share for damages for which Willis is liable in respect of Mr Foulger's activities or the e-mail as requiring agreement to be reached on the figure for liability. The acceptance of legal responsibility is of a share in the loss and damage which is just and equitable on the basis of attribution of fault to the various parties involved, which could be the subject of negotiation or mediation or determination by an arbitral tribunal or court. The agreement reached is akin to the kind of agreement frequently reached in litigation where a defendant accepts liability but not causation of damage nor the quantum of the loss claimed. Whilst the situation here is more complex the overall agreement is sufficiently clear in setting out the acceptance of vicarious liability but for a quantum figure which reflects the overall responsibility of all the parties involved in the litigation.
32. This agreement is quite certain enough to be enforced since the court can make any determination that is required. It is perfectly comprehensible and sensible from a commercial view-point and achieved a compromise solution which avoided the necessity for Willis to be joined in the proceedings in November 2004. No further agreement was required since, if the parties failed to reach agreement by good faith negotiation the matter was capable of resolution in the courts.
3. Each of the 16th and 17th defendants is legally responsible to the claimants (and each of them) for the acts, omissions and breaches of duty of the 12th defendant as pleaded in these proceedings (save to the extent that in these proceedings an unappealed judgment at trial establishes that the 12th defendant is not liable to the claimants in the respects alleged) or otherwise and, subject to an assessment by the court or agreement with the claimants as to its share thereof, is liable to account and/or pay damages and/or indemnify the claimants (and each of them) in respect of the same.
4. The 16th and 17th defendants shall not seek or be permitted to assert in these proceedings or otherwise that as regards the claimants:
4.1. each of them is not legally responsible for the acts and/or omissions and/or breaches of duty of the 12th defendant as pleaded in these proceedings or otherwise; and
4.2. the acts and/or omissions and/or breaches of duty by the 12th defendant as pleaded in these proceedings did not occur (save to the extent that in these proceedings an unappealed judgment at trial establishes that the 12th defendant is not liable to the claimants in the respects alleged).
The terms in my judgment are clear. The court which has to decide this matter will do so on the basis of a prior summary determination that there is a legally binding agreement, and will have to come to its own conclusion as to exactly what it is that that means.
The form of the order is certainly consistent with this and says nothing to suggest that Willis had limited its liability. However in view of the conclusion which I have reached on the main part of the appeal I do not think it is necessary to explore this further.
Where parties have entered into what they believe to be a binding agreement the court is most reluctant to hold that their agreement is void for uncertainty, and will only do so as a last resort.
This argument centred on the use of the word "equitably", which they said had no precise or certain meaning and so lacked the certainty necessary for a term of the contract. In this context the expression "equitably" in my judgment means "fairly and reasonably". I am unpersuaded that there is any uncertainty as to the meaning of the word. There are many fields where judges and other adjudicators award general damages on the basis of what they judge to be fair and reasonable.
Mr Sumption accepted this principle and that if the parties had simply agreed that Willis would pay a fair share of the loss (Option 2) there would have been no uncertainty.
Lord Justice Rix:
Mr Justice WILSON: I agree with both judgments.