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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Co-Operative Group (CWS) Ltd v Stansell Ltd & Anor [2006] EWCA Civ 538 (09 May 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2006/538.html Cite as: [2006] 1 WLR 1704, [2006] WLR 1704, [2006] EWCA Civ 538 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE CHANCERY DIVISION
MR JUSTICE BLACKBURNE
hc04co3681
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LONGMORE
and
LORD JUSTICE JACOB
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CO-OPERATIVE GROUP (CWS) LIMITED |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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STANSELL LIMITED (2) DAVID ROGER DYER |
Respondents |
____________________
MR JOHN ROSS QC (instructed by Squire & Co ) for the 1st Respondent
Hearing dates : 15th, 16th and 17th February 2006
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Mummery :
Industrial and provident societies
The dispute in outline
"Neither the Employer nor the Contractor shall, without the written consent of the other, assign this Contract."
"but without prejudice to any liability actually incurred by the society which may be enforced against it as if the cancellation had not taken place."
Issues on appeal
1) Statutory construction: does a transfer of engagements effected pursuant to section 51(1) of the 1965 Act override a prohibition against assignment such as clause 18.1.1? Blackburne J observed that overriding the contractual clause must mean that section 51(1) operated as if either the clause prohibiting assignment were not a term of the building contract or as if Stansell's consent under the clause was given to the transfer of the contract.
2) Contractual construction: did section 51(1) operate to cause the benefit of the building contract (in particular the right to bring proceedings against Stansell) to become vested in CWS in circumstances which did not amount to an assignment within the intendment of clause 18.1.1? This issue turns on the meaning of "assign" in clause 18.1.1 and proceeds on the assumption that section 51 does not operate to override the contractual prohibition against assignment.
The 1965 Act
"51(1) Any registered society may by special resolution transfer its engagements to any other registered society which may undertake to fulfil those engagements; and if that resolution approves the transfer of the whole or any part of the society's property to that other society, the whole or, as the case may be, that part of the society's property shall vest in that other society without any conveyance or assignment."
"shall not prejudice any right of a creditor of any registered society which is a party thereto."
"that the creditor retains his rights against the amalgamating or transferor society, and it may be that he can exercise those rights against their assets, after the transaction, in priority to creditors of the amalgamated or transferee society, as the case may be."
Common law background
"Therefore the existing authorities establish that an attempted assignment of contractual rights in breach of a contractual prohibition is ineffective to transfer such contractual rights. I regard the law as being satisfactorily settled in that sense. If the law were otherwise it would defeat the legitimate commercial reason for inserting the contractual prohibition, viz., to ensure that the original parties to the contract are not brought into direct contractual relations with third parties."
"…If it had been intended [by Parliament] to extinguish the rights of third parties, that should have been done " by a clear, definite and positive enactment, not by an ambiguous one such as the section relied on in this case"…"
"..by an executive act transfer to the new body all the contractual rights of the original[parties]in spite of any safeguards against transfer whether express or implied contained in their contracts with third parties[?]. Does it transfer contracts by their terms non-transferable and those such as contracts of service, which at common law could not have been transferred without the consent of both parties? Undoubtedly to effect such a change would be to make a momentous change in the law as it previously stood, a change which from one point of view affects companies only, but from the other, affects many individuals who have entered into contracts with them."
Judgment of Blackburne J
Statutory construction issue
"47. …properly construed, did section 51(1) enable CRS, by the passing of the appropriate resolutions and upon obtaining registration of the special resolution with the Chief Registrar of Friendly Societies (then still functioning), to effect a transfer to CWS of its engagements, including in particular the right to sue Stansell for breach of the building contract, without obtaining Stansell's consent under clause 18.1.1 to the transfer? In short, does a transfer effected pursuant to section 51(1) override a provision such as clause 18.1.1? In the context of a contractual provision such as clause 18.1.1, that must mean that the section operates either as if that clause were not a term of the building contract or as if Stansell's consent under the clause is given to the transfer. The question assumes, without deciding, that the transfer effected is an assignment for which Stansell's consent under 18.1.1 would otherwise be needed."
"50. Given the ease with which a transfer may be effected and the brevity of the material provisions in the legislation, both now and when the power to transfer first appeared in the legislation (effectively in the Friendly Societies Act 1855), my strong inclination is to doubt that, as a matter of clear implication (let alone as a matter of express provision), section 51 has the effect of overriding the contractual rights of third parties.
51. Moreover, it is difficult to think what reasons of policy there could be to suppose that Parliament intended that an industrial and provident society should have conferred upon it the exceptional power-exercisable in the entirely unregulated circumstances that I have set out- to render alienable, at the instance of that society, a chose in action which it and its contractual counterparty have, quite legitimately, declared by their contract to be inalienable. There are, for example, none of the reasons of policy which are in play when a person is made bankrupt and his estate (comprising all of his property save as excepted by clear statutory provision) vests in his trustee for the benefit of his creditors.
52. I am reinforced in this view by the fact that, at the time the provision for the transfer of engagements was first introduced (by section 14 of the Friendly Societies Act 1855 made applicable to industrial and provident societies by section 6 of the Industrial and Provident Societies Act 1852-see paragraph 36 above), there was nothing in the legislation equivalent to the property vesting provision. The trustees of the society (incorporation of a society being still not possible at that time) had to execute a conveyance or assignment if property was to be transferred to the trustees of the transferee society. That remained the position until the property vesting provision was introduced to transfers of engagements by section 6(2) of the Industrial and Provident Societies (Amendment) Act 1954. See paragraph 43 above. I find it difficult to see how, prior to the enactment of section 6(2), exercise of the power to transfer engagements, by passing the requisite resolutions, could, without more, have achieved the overriding effect for which CWS contends and can think of no reason why section 6(2), designed in my view to simplify the process of vesting the property of the transferor society in the transferee society, should have made any difference to the position."
"53. ….(1) the wide language of the section; (2) what he submitted was the ability of the section to bring about a novation of liabilities without the need to obtain the consent of the creditor; (3) the scheme of the 1965 Act; (4) the fact that other statutes have dispensed with (or assumed) the consent of a third party to the transfer of property and (5) the support of certain observations of Warrington LJ in Sun Permanent [1921] 2 Ch 438…."
Conclusions on statutory construction
A. The legislative text
B. The legislative context
C. The authorities
Contractual construction issue: "assign"
"103. …The question is one of the construction of the expression "assign" as used in clause 18.1.1. Adopting the language of Nourse LJ in Marsh v. Gilbert, it connotes "an inter vivos disposition by one party in favour of another as an act of their joint volition." It was in my opinion precisely that result-the disposition of (inter alia) the benefit of the building contract by the one society in favour of the other as an act of their joint volition-that CRS (and CWS) sought to achieve when CRS resolved "to transfer the whole of the property and assets… of the society [ie itself] to [CWS] …". The fact that the transfer resolved upon extended also to liabilities and other obligations owed by CRS to others (as well as to other property and rights) or that section 51(1) speaks of a resolution which "approves" the transfer rather than "transfers" or "assigns" the property in question seems to me to be beside the point. The fact that the resolution would not be effective without its registration by the appropriate registrar and that no conveyance or assignment would be required in order to perfect CWS's title are likewise immaterial. These are matters which go to the mechanics whereby the transfer resolved upon is rendered effective and not to whether there is an assignment by CRS."
Result
Lord Justice Longmore :
"Neither the Employer nor the Contractor shall, without the written consent of the other, assign this Contract."
transfer the whole of [the] property and assets and all the engagements of [CRS] to the Co-operative Wholesale Society Ltd ("CWS")
in consideration for the issue of paid-up shares in CWS to each member of CRS. This resolution was registered under the 1965 Act on 28th March 2000 and took effect on 2nd April. The registration of CRS was then cancelled by the Registrar.
"Any registered society may by special resolution transfer its engagements to any other registered society which may undertake to fulfil those engagements; and if that resolution approves the transfer of the whole or any part of the society's property to that other society, the whole or, as the case may be, that part of the society's property shall vest in that other society without any conveyance or assignment".
"(whether or not capable of being transferred or assigned)".
That is an inappropriate argument of statutory construction. The Building Societies Act of 1986 was a substantial reforming measure in which opportunity was taken to clarify as much as to change the law. Before 1986 the relevant transfer of engagements provision in relation to building societies made no reference to non-alienable rights. But the same question as has now arisen in relation to the Industrial and Provident Societies Act could easily have arisen under the equivalent provision for building societies and would have to have been decided as a matter of construction. The context of the legislation is all-important.
". . . . a Society formed and established under this Act . . . . may be allowed to transfer its Engagements to any other Friendly Society, if any other such Society shall undertake to fulfil the Engagements of such Society . . . ."
It is perhaps pertinent to observe that assignment of even the benefit of contracts was not permissible at common law at that date. This was a rule that was commercially very inconvenient and in and around 1855 Parliament took specific steps to ensure that such assignments were legally permissible in certain spheres of activity. The Bills of Lading Act 1855 is a well-known example. In relation to friendly societies and industrial and provident societies Parliament was concerned, having decided that it should be permissible to assign the benefit of a contract, to ensure that the counterparty to the original contract or engagement was not prejudiced by such permissible assignment. That is why it was provided that the transferee had to undertake to fulfil the engagements of the transferor and, later, that rights against the transferor were to be preserved (see section 11(5) of the Industrial and Provident Societies Act 1876). But I venture to think that, in these examples of statutory assignment, Parliament would be surprised to be told that although it was now to be lawful to transfer the benefits of contracts or engagements, such lawfulness only applied to such transfers as were contractually permissible. That would have defeated the purpose of the beneficial statutory intervention.
Lord Justice Jacob: