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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Davey & Anor v Lombard Asset Management (Bahamas) Ltd [2006] EWCA Civ 1543 (12 October 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2006/1543.html Cite as: [2006] EWCA Civ 1543 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE CENTRAL LONDON COUNTY COURT
(HIS HONOUR JUDGE COWELL)
Strand London, WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE GAGE
MR JUSTICE BODEY
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DAVEY & ANR | CLAIMANT/RESPONDENT | |
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LOMBARD ASSET MANAGEMENT (BAHAMAS) LIMITED | DEFENDANT/APPELLANT |
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MR R STEWART SMITH (instructed by Messrs Monro Fisher Wasbrough) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
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Crown Copyright ©
"The seller and buyer intend that VATA Section 49 and the Value Added Tax (Special Provision) Order 1995 [Article 5] … (relating to the transfer of the business as a going concern) shall apply to the transfer of the property rental business carried on by the Seller in relation to the Property ("the Business") and, accordingly: …
"b) the buyer (or transferee if different) shall, upon completion, warrant that it is registered for the purposes of Value Added Tax legislation and it has elected to waive the exemption of the VAT in respect of the Property and has notified HM Customs and Excise prior to Completion on such election and that it intends to carry on the same kind of business as carried on by the Seller as at completion ...
"e) the Seller and the Buyer shall use all reasonable endeavours to secure … pursuant to provisions of VATA and the VAT (Special Provisions) Order 1995 referred to above the transfer of the Property under the terms of this Agreement is deemed to be the transfer of a business as a going concern for the purposes of legislation relating to value added tax …
"f) if pursuant to the termination given by HM Customs and Excise any VAT shall be payable on the sale under this Agreement the Buyer shall (if production of tax invoices in respect are the same) pay to the Seller such VAT and any penalty or interest incurred by the Seller for late payment for such VAT."
"2) Whether the [appellant] was able to give the warranty required under clause 12(b) of the contract on the contractual date of completion.
"3) Whether the [respondents] were entitled to delay completion of the sale until the appellant was registered for the purpose of Value Added Tax."
"I think it is important to make this observation at the outset, that it seems to me that the Defendant's argument rested entirely on the proposition … of warranty [sic] in this case, or the word 'warranty', must have been used in the sense mentioned in Chitty on Contracts, 29th edition, … paragraph 12-031, which the editors of Chitty themselves described as "its most technical sense," as meaning a term of contract, the breach of which may give rise to a claim for damages, but not to a right to treat the contract as repudiated.
"So I ask the question - I hope rhetorically - why should the word 'warranty' be confined to that technical meaning? It seems to me there is no reason at all for confining it. It was used in the sense of contractual obligation or promise that something would be done, in this case a warranty that the Defendant was in fact registered - before another undertaking or promise - in this case, the transfer of property would be performed. I would go on to say that maybe upon a breach of that warranty, if it had been persisted in, the vendor would have been entitled to say that the contract had been repudiated by the purchaser and to treat it as a breach of condition, using 'condition' in the technical sense. But it is sufficient for me to say, as I do, and I so decide, that this was quite simply a condition precedent to completion, and nonetheless so by reason of the use of the word 'warranty' which incidentally in many older cases was used in the technical sense of 'condition precedent' as is apparent in footnote 121 in the same page of Chitty. So I think it is wholly disingenuous to latch onto the word 'warranty' as used in contract and give it this highly technical meaning."
"It seems to me that the commercial sense of it in the light of the legislation is that it was absolutely essential if the payment of VAT was to be avoided that at the outset the Defendant should in fact have been registered by the time of completion. That would not absolutely guarantee that no VAT would be payable, for there were other matters such as the business being a going concern which the VAT authorities might wish to check, but it was at any rate essential for a start that the defendant should be so registered for, without that, VAT would undoubtedly be payable. With that crucial starting point in mind it becomes apparent when one reaches paragraphs (e) and (f) that those paragraphs are the provisions which lead to a Determination by the Customs and Excise to the effect that the business was a going concern at the time of … transfer, and that is what those paragraphs (e) and (f) are about."
Order: Appeal dismissed.