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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> El Bishlawi & Anor v Minrealm Ltd & Ors (Rev 1) [2010] EWCA Civ 780 (25 May 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2010/780.html Cite as: [2010] EWCA Civ 780 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE CHANCERY DIVISON COMPANIES UNIT
(SIR EDWARD EVANS-LOMBE)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE ETHERTON
MR JUSTICE HEDLEY
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EL BISHLAWI AND ANOTHER |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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MINREALM LIMITED AND OTHERS |
Respondents |
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WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court )
Mr Ashley Roughton (instructed by Cramer Pelmont Solicitors) appeared on behalf of the Respondents.
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Etherton:
Introduction
Background
"5…. The first respondent was incorporated on 1 November 1982 and conducted business from premises at 30 Old Bond Street, London W1. 50% of its share capital is held by the first petitioner and the remaining 50% either by the third respondent, on the petitioners' case, or by the fourth and fifth respondents, on the respondents' case. The directors of the first respondent are the two petitioners and the third to fifth respondents.
6. Since about September 2005, the business of the first respondent has been the making of hotel reservations on behalf of Middle Eastern customers and the subletting of three properties, namely (a) Flat 5, Egerton Court, Harrington Road, London SW7, (b) 48 Lancaster Gate, London W2, and (c) Flat 3, 40 Hyde Park Gate, London W8.
7. Further, the third to fifth respondents accept and aver that since about September 2005 the first respondent has been under the effective control of the fourth and fifth respondents and the petitioners have been excluded from its management.
8. Nevertheless, relations between the parties were initially amicable and negotiations took place between them with a view to the acquisition by the third to fifth respondents of the interests of the petitioners. The petitioners say they trusted the third to fifth respondents to manage the first respondent fairly until such time as the terms of the acquisition were agreed. It seems rents and other monies payable to the first respondent were duly paid into its accounts with the Allied Irish Bank.
9. Unfortunately, in about June 2006, the negotiations between the parties broke down and the petitioners allege that since that time the third to fifth respondents have systematically stripped the assets of the first respondent and diverted its business to themselves or to other companies and parties associated with them. They also allege that the third to fifth respondents have mismanaged and actively sabotaged the interests of the first respondent where their attempts to obtain its assets for their own benefit have failed. These allegations are supported by a number of detailed particulars. However, for the purposes of the application before me, I need only refer to two of them.
10. Specifically, the petitioners say (and indeed the third to fifth respondents admit) that on about 12 June 2006 the fifth respondent opened Abbey accounts no. 42200489 and no. 42200452 in the name of RRR Services Limited ("RRR"), and account no. 42314010 in the name of Leading Services of the World Limited ("LSW"), two companies owned and controlled by the fifth respondent.
11. Further, the petitioners say (and the third to fifth respondents again admit) that since about mid June 2006 all or substantially all rental income derived from Flat 5, Egerton Court, 48 Lancaster Gate and Flat 3, 40 Hyde Park Gate, has been paid into those new RRR and/or LSW accounts, whereas before that time it was paid into the Allied Irish Bank accounts of the first respondent."
Proceedings
"(1) to regulate the conduct of the affairs of Minrealm in future;
(2) to require Minrealm to refrain from transferring its assets (or securing the renewal of assets e.g. leases) to or for the benefit of A A M Soliman, M Soliman and E A Belal or third parties save in so far as any such transactions arise in the course of normal commercial dealings;
(3) to authorize civil proceedings to be brought in the name and on behalf of Minrealm against A A M Soliman, M Soliman and E A Belal (the 2nd to 4th Respondents) to recover assets of Minrealm diverted by the said Directors in breach of their duties to Minrealm and/or generally for breach of their duties as Directors, on such terms as the Court may direct;
(4) further or in the alternative, for the purchase of the shares of A A M Soliman by the Petitioner at fair value as determined by the Court;
(5) that accounts be taken in relation to Minrealm, RRR, and LSW;
(6) for further relief as the Court thinks fit;"
"In this answer the ... Respondents all make the open offer that the shares in [Minrealm] be valued by a Court appointed valuer as at the date of the petition or, alternatively, the 30th day of September 2005 and thereafter the First [appellant's] shares in [Minrealm] be sold to the Fourth and Fifth Respondents for a price determined by the said valuer."
"With reference to paragraph 4 of the Answer, the premise of the offer to buy the shares of the First Petitioner is that (as the Respondents have asserted since 7 June 2006) Mr Ahmed Soliman has already transferred his shares (5 ordinary shares being 50% of the total shares) to M Soliman and E A Belal. No such transfer has been registered with Companies House nor has any documentary proof of transfer or agreement to transfer been produced by the Respondents. Further any offer to purchase as at the date of the petition would need to include the value of the companies RRR Services Limited and Leading Services of the World Limited, to whom the Respondents had wrongly diverted the business of the First Respondent, 'Minrealm', as appears from the consolidated Petition. Interest would need to be paid on the purchase price of the shares from the date of valuation, whether such date be the end of September 2005 or the date of the Petition. The method of dealing with the proceeds of the sale of the property known as Hereford House (in respect of which there was a deemed sale in August 2005 and an actual sale in October 2005) needs to be ascertained and agreed. The Petitioners asked for relief in paragraph 10 of the petition including, at paragraph 10(4) 'the purchase of the shares of [the Third Respondent] by the Petitioner at fair value as determined by the Court'. Alternatively, subject to resolution of the matters identified above and subject to contract, the Petitioners would be content for the Third, Fourth and Fifth Respondents to purchase the First Petitioner's shares in Minrealm at a value to be determined by the Court."
"4. The allegation of exclusion was admitted by the Majority Directors. Their defence to both the main allegations in the petition, exclusion and diversion of assets, was that they believed themselves to have contracted to buy the shares held by one of the Minority Directors in the company which represented a 50 per cent interest and that accordingly their actions could not be categorised as unfairly prejudicial of the Minority Directors. Nonetheless in a late addition to their Answer, the Majority Directors indicated that they would not oppose an order that they purchase the First Petitioner's shares at a price to be fixed by the court.
5. I took the view that a fundamental issue in the merits of the case was whether the Majority Directors were entitled, in the circumstances, to assume that they had made a contract to buy those shares so justifying the proprietary actions with relation to the assets of the Company which followed and the exclusion of the Minority Directors from access to the company's records and to any part in the control of the company's operations.
6. Accordingly, the process that I embarked upon yesterday was an attempt to arrive at a solution of this fundamental issue by looking at the documentary support for the existence of a contract. I have not tried the petition, I have not heard the witnesses, I have not seen all the documents.
…
10. I have already referred to the unusual aspect of this case that the answer presented by the Majority Directors to the petition indicates that they were prepared to accept an order of the Court requiring them to purchase the shares of the first petitioner at a value to be established, if necessary, by a court-appointed arbitrator as at 30 September 2005. However, the answer contains no admission that the Majority Directors were guilty of unfairly prejudicial conduct and that has never been admitted by them.
11. Initially, the Minority Directors sought an order that they be at liberty to purchase the Majority Directors' shares in a company but in their skeleton argument, presented to the Court in anticipation of the hearing, they indicated that they thought that, with the passage of time, the most practical solution and one that they would accept would be an order in the form proposed by the Majority Directors.
12. It was this which caused me to intervene early in the hearing and suggest that the hearing had, effectively, become one that concerned costs alone which I was reluctant to spend the eight days allocated to the hearing trying. In the result, the parties have arrived at an agreed order which disposes of the substantive issues between them."
"7. The problems this sort of situation gives rise to have been the subject of authority summarised in the 2009 White Book at 44.3.7 under the heading "Judicial Review". The notes read as follows:
"The Administrative Court considered the powers of the court in relation to costs in judicial review proceedings concluded without a full hearing. The following principles were identified:
(i) the court has power to make a costs order when the substantive proceedings have been resolved without a trial but the parties have not agreed about the costs;
(ii) it will normally be irrelevant that the claimant is LSC [state] funded.
(iii) the overriding objective is to do justice between the parties without incurring unnecessary court time and consequently additional costs.
(iv) at each end of the spectrum there will be cases where it is obvious which side would have won had the substantive issues been bought to a conclusion. In between the position will, in differing degrees, be less clear. How far the court will be prepared to look into the previously unresolved substantive issues will depend on the circumstances of the particular case, not least the amount of the costs at that stage and the conduct of the parties;
(v) in the absence of a good reason to make any order, the fall back is to make no order as to costs;
(vi) the court should take care to ensure that it does not discourage parties from settling judicial review proceedings, for example by a local authority making concessions at an early stage.
R ...Boxall) v Waltham Forest London Borough Council 4 CCLR 258, Scott Baker J."
…..
9. I have already said that the issues in the case involve oral evidence that would have involved cross-examination and extensive documentation provided on disclosure by both sides which I have only touched the surface of. At my request I was shown the documentary evidence which supported or disproved the Majority Directors' case that in 2005-06, there had come into existence an oral contract to sell the shares held by the first petitioner to the respondents at a price to be arrived at by reference to a valuation by Mr Berry, the company's accountant.
…
13. Adopting what I will call the Boxall case approach, it seems to me that the petitioners probably have a strong case, but not an overwhelming one, that there was never any contract for the sale of the shares. It seems to me that on balance, the documents which I have been shown are against such a finding.
14. However, the possibility that the Majority Directors might have successfully resisted the claim in the petition that there had been unfairly prejudicial conduct by the Majority Directors as against the Minority Directors cannot be ruled out.
15. In these circumstances, it seems to me I am driven to the fallback position in the Boxall case and I will make no orders as to costs."
"(1) If the court is satisfied that a petition under this Part is well founded, it may make such order as it thinks fit for giving relief in respect of the matters complained of.
(2) Without prejudice to the generality of subsection (1), the court's order may --
…
(e) provide for the purchase of the shares of any members of the company by other members or by the company itself..."
The Appeal
"Your Petitions state that our clients have 'excluded' your client and his brother from the management of the Companies. Quite apart from the fact that they voluntarily resigned from any active role in the Companies, this is at odds with the attempts made by our client to settle the differences between them without litigating the matter. Our clients reluctantly agreed to pay to yours the valuation fixed by S Beri & Co but this was rejected. As an alternative, our clients offered an independent valuation by a jointly nominated chartered accountant or one appointed by the Institute. This again was rejected. Our clients offered to meet yours in a round table 'without prejudice' meeting with each party's solicitor being present. That offer was rejected. Finally your client was put on notice of the Board Meeting which was called to be held on 26 June 2006. Your clients did not attend that Board Meeting and offered no explanation for their absence. All those matters will be put to the court when the question of costs in the current proceedings are considered."
Discussion and Conclusion
"[18] As far as Mr Shipley's third point on the law is concerned, there is, in my judgment, no tradition in these matters of there being "no order as to costs" merely because a dispute has been settled except as to costs. No doubt if it is truly impossible to say what the likely outcome would have been it is a possible order. But if one looks at the authorities referred to by Mr Shipley one finds that the position is much more precisely expressed. I refer firstly to R v Holderness Borough Council, ex p James Roberts Developments Ltd. (1993) 5 Admin LR 470. Butler-Sloss LJ said this (at 483-484):
'It is not the function of the courts to make decisions on academic issues of law where there is no dispute to resolve. I have great sympathy with a view as to the undesirability of deciding an important issue in a dispute which no longer exists for the purpose of determining who pays the costs of litigation which has otherwise come to an end. In this case however there are now considerable costs incurred on both sides and, with regret, I cannot see how the court can bar the parties from obtaining a decision as to who should pay those costs. The issue of costs alone may keep litigation alive, see Ainsbury v Millington [1987] 1 WLR 379. The court is not in a position to assess the correct costs order without an evaluation of the prospects of success had the application for judicial review been heard and determined.'
[19] In a dissenting judgment but on this point not substantially dissenting from Butler-Sloss LJ, Simon Brown LJ said (at 478):
'I recognise, of course, that costs applications have to be entertained and resolved. But not, I would suggest, by litigating the case for all the world as if the substantive issues need to be resolved for their own sake. In my judgment an altogether broader approach should be adopted. One which enables the court in a comparatively short time to decide, and decide moreover without giving a fully reasoned judgment, into which general category of discontinuance the case falls'"
Mr Justice Hedley:
Lord Justice Thorpe:
Order: Application allowed