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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Mullarkey & Anor v Broad [2009] EWCA Civ 2 (21 January 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2009/2.html Cite as: [2009] EWCA Civ 2 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION
MR JUSTICE LEWISON
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LLOYD
and
LORD JUSTICE MOSES
____________________
IN THE MATTER OF SOUTHILL FINANCE LIMITED (In Liquidation) (1) JOHN FRANCIS MULLARKEY (2) IVOR GOODMAN |
Claimants Appellants |
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- and - |
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JOHN PETER BROAD |
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)
The Respondent was not present or represented
Hearing date: 2 December 2008
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Lloyd:
"83. In wrongful and fraudulent breach of trust and fiduciary duties owed to the company, the First Respondent:
(1) Without authority and not for the proper benefit of the company transferred the property at 18/20 Mill Road Burgess Hill from the company to himself and the First Applicant without making payment therefor and thereafter transferred the property to his sole name by fraudulently obtaining the signature of the First Applicant to such transfer;
(2) Invested the proceeds of the mortgage moneys raised on the security of the property in the sum of £100,000 to invest in further property purchases at 22 and 24 Mill Road Burgess Hill and in the purchase of Life Assurance policies on the lives of third parties;
(3) Disposed of the property at 18/20 Mill Road for the sum of £300,000."
"86. In furtherance of a fraud perpetrated on the fellow subsidiary companies of the company, being, GFL, GFS, and GF, from which the First Respondent transferred monies to the company, without the authorisation of the company, paid away such monies to other companies of which he and / or his family owned such that the company derived no benefit therefrom, in particular:-
(1) Alone or jointly with the Second Respondent made payments to Gentlesound Limited in the sum of £36,941;"
Paragraph 87 was as follows:
"87. In making such advances without adequate security the First Respondent was seeking to further his own interests and not those of the company."
"21(1) No period of limitation prescribed by this Act shall apply to an action by a beneficiary under a trust, being an action
(a) in respect of any fraud or fraudulent breach of trust to which the trustee was a party or privy; or
(b) to recover from the trustee trust property or the proceeds of trust property in the possession of the trustee, or previously received by the trustee and converted to his use."
I have set out the whole section because, although only paragraph (a) was relied on before the judge, the appeal is now brought on the footing that paragraph (b) could and should have been.
"39. In the context of this case this means that the claimants must prove that Mr Broad used his powers as a director of Southill in a way that he knew was contrary to Southill's interests or was recklessly indifferent to whether the use of his powers was in Southill's interests or not; and that he was conscious of (or deliberately turned a blind eye to) the elements of the use of his powers that made the use of them contrary to Southill's interests."
"62. The true position, therefore, is that the original debt due from Mr Broad and Mr Mullarkey to Southill remained outstanding; and the story about an assumption of liabilities and the subsequent reinstatement of the debt was simply a smokescreen. For present purposes, however, the essential point is that Mr Broad and Mr Mullarkey owed Southill just under £85,000 in early 1994."
"66. The pleaded case in relation to the property at 18-20 Mill Road is that Mr Broad fraudulently "transferred the property" to himself and Mr Mullarkey without paying for it. It is not suggested that the purchase price of £135,000 was an undervalue. There is no material, therefore, upon which it would be right for me to conclude that, in principle, a sale of the property for £135,000 was not for the "proper benefit" of the company. It is the case, on the facts, that Southill received some part of the purchase price, in that its mortgage was discharged. But it did not receive the balance of some £85,000. However, it was not put to Mr Broad that, at the time of the purchase, he and Mr Mullarkey had no intention of ever paying the balance. The debt that they owed to Southill did not disappear; and was a debt recoverable by the company by action. The mere fact that a director owes money to the company is, on the face of it, a contravention of section 330 of the Companies Act 1985 which prohibits a company from making a loan to one of its directors. However, the breach of duty consisting of procuring the company to make the loan in the first place took place as long ago as 1989. It is a breach of duty which is committed whether or not the director ever intends to repay. However, in my judgment the mere fact that a director takes a prohibited loan from a company of which he is a director is not of itself fraudulent. If he never intends to repay it might be fraudulent; but that was not the case that was either pleaded or put.
67. Dishonestly concealing from a liquidator the existence of a debt owed by a director to the company would be a fraudulent breach of fiduciary duty. But again that was not the case pleaded. Fraudulent concealment was pleaded against Mr Ian Broad (paragraph 88(7) of the Particulars of Claim); but not against Mr Broad himself. The pleaded case against Mr Broad in this respect is consistent with inadvertent failure to disclose.
68. As an allegation of fraudulent breach of trust against Mr Broad, the pleaded case fails. I do, however, find that the debt owed by Mr Broad and Mr Mullarkey to Southill has not been extinguished. But I heard no argument on whether it was statute barred or whether (if potentially statute barred) the limitation period might have been extended by fraudulent concealment. None of these questions were raised on the pleadings."
"The making of loans to a group company does not raise the same suspicions as an unsecured loan to an outsider. It was not put to Mr Broad or to Mr Ian Broad that at the time when the loans to Gentlesound were made they had no intention that they should ever be repaid; or that they had no reasonable grounds for believing that they would be repaid. The regular payments by Gentlesound to Southill would not have supported such a suggestion."
He continued in paragraph 74:
"In that state of the evidence I am not prepared to find a fraudulent breach of duty on the part of Mr Broad. This part of the case fails."
"78. It is the Applicants' case that the directors have acted in fraudulent breach of trust and duty.
79. It is not believed that there will be a substantial dispute as to the law and that the real issues between the parties will turn on the facts.
80. All monies belonging to SFL were subject to the fiduciary duties owed by the Respondents to CFL and they fall to be treated as a trustee thereof. SFL's monies admittedly under the Respondent's control must be applied for SFL's purposes and in accordance with the Respondent's fiduciary duties. Any misapplication of C's monies is a breach of trust: see Selangor United Rubber Estates Ltd v Craddock (No 3) [1968] 1 WLR 1555, at 1574-7 per Ungoed Thomas J.
81. Where that conduct is fraudulent the Respondents must account strictly for all monies belonging to SFL which they misapplied.
82. In this case it is the Applicants' case that the inevitable result of a detailed examination of the facts is that the Court can only draw an inference of fraud from the conduct of the Respondents."
"84. In all the circumstances and taking the conduct of the Respondents as a whole and individually the only possible conclusion is that the Respondents acted in fraudulent breach of trust when dealing with the Company's money and property."
"MR. BROCKMAN: So far as the application that is made, I nail my colours very firmly to the mast in that we say there has been fraudulent misconduct by the remaining respondents. There has been fraudulent misconduct, and that I will come back to in a moment if I may when dealing with the limitation point, which I will address in the opening." (page 8 of the transcript)
"MR. JUSTICE LEWISON: You have to establish in relation to these loans that they were dishonestly made.
MR. BROCKMAN: What we say is they are simply ignoring the provisions of the Companies Act three times in a row.
MR. JUSTICE LEWISON: Well, you would have to show, would you not, that you knew about the provisions of the Companies Act and ignored them?
MR. BROCKMAN: I say you can infer that from Mr Broad senior's vast experience of companies----
MR. JUSTICE LEWISON: Well, I mean, that is no doubt something we can explore in evidence with him. But that is what you have got to establish as a minimum.
MR. BROCKMAN: Yes, My Lord, that is the end of the factual run-through." (pages 39-40 of the transcript)
.
"MR. JUSTICE LEWISON: Just help me on limitation. Are you going to deal with that or do you simply say it is fraud or bust?
MR. BROCKMAN: I am saying it is fraudulent misconduct and there is no limitation period.
MR. JUSTICE LEWISON: As a matter of law that is right, if it was fraudulent then you are right on the law and, as I understand the way you put your case, it is fraud or bust?
MR. BROCKMAN: Yes. There is which I would like to have a look at, an acknowledgement which I would like to have a look at which was raised during the course of the opening. If we are not fraud or bust I will let you know tomorrow, my Lord.
MR. JUSTICE LEWISON: Right. At the moment I am going to take it it is fraud or bust.
MR.BROCKMAN: Yes, and that is the way I put it." (pages 40-41 of the transcript)
"The stance which an appellate court should take towards a point not raised at the trial is in general well settled: Macdougall v. Knight (1889) 14 App. Cas. 194 and The Tasmania (1890) 15 App. Cas. 223. It is perhaps best stated in Ex parte Firth, In re Cowburn (1882) 19 ChD 419, 429, per Sir George Jessel M.R.:
"the rule is that, if a point was not taken before the tribunal which hears the evidence, and evidence could have been adduced which by any possibility would prevent the point from succeeding, it cannot be taken afterwards. You are bound to take the point in the first instance, so as to enable the other party to give evidence."
Even if the point is a pure point of law, the appellate court retains a discretion to exclude it. But where we can be confident, first, that the other party has had opportunity enough to meet it, secondly, that he has not acted to his detriment on the faith of the earlier omission to raise it and, thirdly, that he can be adequately protected in costs, our usual practice is to allow a pure point of law not raised below to be taken in this court. Otherwise, in the name of doing justice to the other party, we might, through visiting the sins of the adviser on the client, do an injustice to the party who seeks to raise it."
"38. It is not in dispute that to withdraw a concession or take a point not argued in the lower court requires the leave of this court. In general the court expects each party to advance his whole case at the trial. In the interests of fairness to the other party this court should be slow to allow new points, which were available to be taken at the trial but were not taken, to be advanced for the first time in this court. That consideration is the weightier if further evidence might have been adduced at the trial, had the point been taken then, or if the decision on the point requires an evaluation of all the evidence and could be affected by the impression which the trial judge receives from seeing and hearing the witnesses. Indeed it is hard to see how, if those circumstances obtained, this court, having regard to the overriding objective of dealing with cases justly, could allow that new point to be taken."
"51. If, as in the present case, a claim is presented at trial on the basis that it should succeed if bad faith is established, but will not succeed if it is not, it might be said that that was a forensic concession that the only basis on which the claim might succeed was if bad faith was established. We may then debate whether Mr Jones should be permitted to withdraw the concession. But I am inclined to think that this is really a case to which wider principles apply.
52. Civil trials are conducted on the basis that the court decides the factual and legal issues which the parties bring before the court. Normally, each party should bring before the court the whole relevant case that he wishes in advance. He may choose to confine his claim or defence to some only of the theoretical ways in which the case might be put. If he does so, the court will decide the issues which are raised and normally will not decide issues which are not raised. Normally a party cannot raise in subsequent proceedings claims or issues which could and should have been raised in the first proceedings. Equally, a party cannot, in my judgment, normally seek to appeal a trial judge's decision on the basis that a claim, which could have been brought before the trial judge, but was not, would have succeeded if it had been so brought. The justice of this as a general principle is, in my view, obvious. It is not merely a matter of efficiency, expediency and cost, but of substantial justice. Parties to litigation are entitled to know where they stand. The parties are entitled, and the court requires, to know what the issues are. Upon this depends a variety of decisions, including, by the parties, what evidence to call, how much effort and money it is appropriate to invest in the case, and generally how to conduct the case; and, by the court, what case management and administrative decisions and directions to make and give, and the substantive decisions in the case itself. Litigation should be resolved once and for all, and it is not, generally speaking, just if a party who successfully contested a case advanced on one basis should be expected to face on appeal, not a challenge to the original decision, but a new case advanced on a different basis. There may be exceptional cases in which the court would not apply the general principle which I have expressed. But in my view this is not such a case."
"330(1) The prohibitions listed below in this section are subject to the exceptions in sections 332 to 338.
(2) A company shall not
(a) make a loan to a director of the company or of its holding company;
(b) enter into any guarantee or provide any security in connection with a loan made by any person to such a director.
None of the exceptions in sections 332 to 338 appears to be relevant on the facts of this case.
"341(1) If a company enters into a transaction or arrangement in contravention of section 330, the transaction or arrangement is voidable at the instance of the company unless
(a) restitution of any money or any other asset which is the subject matter of the arrangement or transaction is no longer possible, or the company has been indemnified in pursuance of subsection (2)(b) below for the loss or damage suffered by it, or
(b) any rights acquired bona fide for value and without actual notice of the contravention by a person other than the person for whom the transaction or arrangement was made would be affected by its avoidance.
(2) Where an arrangement or transaction is made by a company for a director of the company or its holding company or a person connected with such a director in contravention of section 330, that director and the person so connected and any other director of the company who authorised the transaction or arrangement (whether or not it has been avoided in pursuance of subsection (1)) is liable
(a) to account to the company for any gain which he has made directly or indirectly by the arrangement or transaction; and
(b) (jointly and severally with any other person liable under this subsection) to indemnify the company for any loss or damage resulting from the arrangement or transaction.
(3) Subsection (2) is without prejudice to any liability imposed otherwise than by that subsection, but is subject to the next two subsections.
(4) Where an arrangement or transaction is entered into by a company and a person connected with a director of the company or its holding company in contravention of section 330, that director is not liable under subsection (2) of this section if he shows that he took all reasonable steps to secure the company's compliance with that section.
(5) In any case, a person so connected and any such other director as is mentioned in subsection (2) is not so liable if he shows that, at the time the arrangement or transaction was entered into, he did not know the relevant circumstances constituting the contravention."
"(1) A director of a relevant company who authorises or permits the company to enter into a transaction or arrangement knowing or having reasonable cause to believe that the company was thereby contravening section 330 is guilty of an offence.
(2) A relevant company which enters into a transaction or arrangement for one of its directors or for a director of its holding company in contravention of section 330 is guilty of an offence.
(3) A person who procures a relevant company to enter into a transaction or arrangement knowing or having reasonable cause to believe that the company was thereby contravening section 330 is guilty of an offence.
(4) A person guilty of an offence under this section is liable to imprisonment or a fine, or both.
(5) A relevant company is not guilty of an offence under subsection (2) if it shows that, at the time the transaction or arrangement was entered into, it did not know the relevant circumstances."
Lord Justice Moses
Lord Justice Pill