[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Marchmont Investments Ltd. v BFO SA [2007] EWCA Civ 677 (13 June 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2007/677.html Cite as: [2007] EWCA Civ 677 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION
(MASTER MONCASTER)
Strand London, WC2 |
||
B e f o r e :
(Sir Andrew Morritt)
LORD JUSTICE MAY
LORD JUSTICE LLOYD
____________________
MARCHMONT INVESTMENTS LIMITED | Claimant/Appellant | |
-v- | ||
BFO SA | ||
(Formerly Banque Française de L'Orient) | Defendant/Respondent |
____________________
Wordwave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr Andrew Sutcliffe QC (instructed by Messrs Manches, London WC2B 4RP) appeared on behalf of the Appellant
Miss Elizabeth Jones QC and Mr Justin Higgo (instructed by Messrs Watson Farley & Williams LLP, London EC2A 2HB) appeared on behalf of the Respondent
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
"On 20th October 2000 the Defendant wrote to the Claimant seeking repayment of the principal sum then outstanding (£500,000) plus alleged interest of £12,801.64. The Claimant disputed the quantum of its indebtedness and at a meeting held on 21st November 2000 both parties agreed to reconcile the issue."
The rest of what I am about to read is the amended part of this paragraph, and it reads as follows:
"At that meeting (which was attended by Mr Habib on behalf of the Claimant and Messrs Fargialla and Unger on behalf of the Defendant) the Defendant agreed ('the Further Agreement') that, in consideration of the Claimant's agreement to meet with auditors from the Defendant's group in order to review the books of account and seek to achieve a global settlement of the sums due to the Defendant's group from the Breezevale group of companies (of which the Claimant formed part) ('the Breezevale group'), until settlement had been achieved (1) the Breezevale group would not be required to make any repayments on the various loans outstanding and (2) the Breezevale companies would not be considered to be in default of any of the outstanding loans. It was an implied term of the Further Agreement that if no settlement was achieved the Defendant would give the Breezevale group (including the claimant) reasonable notice of its intention to treat the Breezevale group as being in default."
"4. Because there is no written record of the meeting at which the alleged oral agreement was made, and there is a flat conflict between the accounts of that meeting given by the two witnesses who were present at the meeting who gave evidence, Mr Habib and M Unger, such contemporaneous written material as there is which casts light on the matter is of great importance, and I therefore set it out fairly fully. The bank's view of the purpose of the meeting was that it was to consider how to obtain payment from the group and to obtain information from Mr Habib about the group's and his own personal finances and its evidence is that the outcome of the meeting was that Mr Habib was to provide its officials with information about the group's and his own personal position and then put forward a proposal as to how to deal with the indebtedness. Mr Habib's case is that the purpose of the meeting was to consider his complaints about Kirin and Beltana and reach a global settlement and that the outcome of the meeting was that the bank was going to put forward a proposal to settle all the disputes between them after its officials had reconciled the group's books. The bank's evidence about what the purpose of the meeting was (at least as the bank saw it) is completely supported by the internal bank documents which preceded the meeting. Its version of the outcome of the meeting is supported by the report made by the officials after they had visited the London offices in January 2001. Mr Habib's evidence is supported by letters written by him to the bank after the Paris meeting and some months after the London visit. Therefore the submission of Mr Sutcliffe from Marchmont, that 'Mr Habib's evidence is entirely consistent, and Mr Unger's entirely inconsistent, with the contemporaneous documents' is in my view simply wrong, and whether or not Mr Sutcliffe's aphorism 'documents rarely lie' is right or not the contemporaneous documents certainly do not provide 'one simple reason' for me to prefer the evidence of Mr Habib.
5. Further, even if I were to accept Mr Habib's general case that the onus was on the bank to come up with a proposal to settle the differences between the parties, (a case which is supported by his letters in 2000 and 2001) Mr Habib's specific case that there was an agreement that until resolution was reached the group need not make any repayments and would not be considered in default is unsupported by any contemporaneous document. The claim that there was such an agreement was only first put forward in a witness statement by Mr Habib of 15th November 2005, four years after the alleged agreement."
"15. As a witness I unhesitatingly prefer M Unger to Mr Habib. In his evidence in the witness box Mr Habib, who is rather flamboyant, was, so it seemed to me, concerned to argue his case rather than attempting to give an accurate account of events. He was concerned to air his grievances against the bank, rather than to answer the questions put to him. I formed the view that he was a man who is accustomed to getting his own way and expected to do so and is reluctant to accept that a meeting did not go in the way in which he wanted it to go or that matters did not work out in the way in which he wanted them to. He undoubtedly feels very strongly about the Kirin matter, which is now the subject of separate litigation, and that has, I think, distorted his recollection. His evidence of the meeting was rather general terms. He had a tendency to make bad points, such as that it was very odd that the record of a subsequent meeting said that Kirin was not discussed because a record would not state what was not discussed, whereas it plainly was relevant and important for it to be recorded that Kirin was not discussed when Mr Habib had attempted to raise it but the bank officials had declined to do so; that M Unger was mistranslating a French banking term 'en blanc'; and that no borrower would give details of his affairs to a bank that was threatening it. M Unger on the other hand was in my view a careful and accurate witness doing his best to state what occurred at the meeting. Mr Sutcliffe criticises the length of his answers but that was due in my view not to any desire to obfuscate matters but to an honest attempt to deal fully and accurately with the questions put by Mr Sutcliffe in a vigorous, indeed I think it could fairly be described as an aggressive, cross examination."
"(1) When did Mr Fargialla cease working for BFO?
(2) Why did he leave?
(3) Where is he now?
(4) Have you made any attempt to contact him with a view to obtaining a witness statement?"
"7. In the run up to the trial in July 2006 I managed to contact a lawyer friend in Paris whom I met when I was studying law in France in the mid 1970s. This person was unconnected to this case. The person concerned undertook to assist but could make no promises about obtaining up to date information on the whereabouts of Mr Fargialla. The Bank would not readily hand out this information. Unfortunately nothing was forthcoming in time for the trial.
8. In the aftermath of the trial I continued to contact my lawyer friend to ask if there had been any progress. On Wednesday 18 October 2006 I met my friend in Paris and was given a business telephone number for Mr Fargialla. I was travelling to Lebanon and called Mr Fargialla on the telephone from there on Wednesday 25 October 2006. I spoke to Mr Fargialla and explained that I was returning to Europe the following week and that I would contact him again. I telephoned Mr Fargialla on Friday 3 November and agreed to meet him on Monday 6 November in France. Up until that point I had no idea what his evidence might be although I firmly believed that he would tell the truth. We met in the afternoon for approximate one hour and he confirmed to me that he would be prepared to give evidence. I immediately notified Marchmont's lawyers of Mr Fargialla's contact details and they established contact with him the following day in order to prepare a witness statement."
ORDER: Appeal dismissed with costs summarily assessed in the sum of £18,575.