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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Attwood & Ors v Maidment [2013] EWCA Civ 119 (26 February 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2013/119.html Cite as: [2013] EWCA Civ 119 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
(CHANCERY DIVISION) (COMPANIES COURT)
HIS HONOUR JUDGE HODGE QC
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE ELIAS
LADY JUSTICE BLACK
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In the matter of ANNACOTT HOLDINGS LIMITED And in the matter of the COMPANIES ACT 2006 ALLAN ATTWOOD and ors |
Respondents |
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- and - |
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GEOFFREY MAIDMENT |
Appellant |
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Mr Andrew Clutterbuck (instructed by Cubism Law) for the Respondent
Hearing date : 30 January 2013
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Crown Copyright ©
Lady Justice Arden:
i) That the company's business should be valued on a going concern and not a liquidation basis (referred to below as a "break up" basis) of valuation.Issue: Mr Maidment contends that this valuation direction was inconsistent with the judge's holding on 22 September 2011 that, failing agreement with Mr Attwood, Mr Maidment should have put the company into liquidation, rather than procure the transfer of properties to himself at an undervalue.My conclusion: For the reasons given below, there was no such inconsistency.ii) That the contingent liability for corporation tax payable on the disposal of the company's properties should be valued at the amount actually paid as tax by the company on the disposal at an undervalue to Mr Maidment.
Issue: Should the judge instead have used the figure of £983,205.52, being an estimate of the tax which would be payable if the properties were sold at valuation?My conclusion: For the reasons explained below, the judge was entitled to decide that the appropriate deduction was an amount equal to the tax actually paid.iii) That there should be no discount for the likely reduction in the proceeds of sale if the company's properties were sold as a single portfolio.
My conclusion: I agree with the judge. There was no need to sell the properties as a portfolio.iv) That there should be no deduction for the costs of selling the properties.
Issue: Would the deduction have been a windfall for Mr Maidment, as the judge appears to have thought?My conclusion: As explained below, I consider that the deduction of the selling costs of the actual sales should have been ordered and would not result in a windfall to Mr Maidment.v) That the rate for quasi-interest should be 2% over Bank of England base rate ("BBR") from 1 October 2005 to 31 October 2008 and 3% over BBR for the period from 31 October 2008 to 16 July 2012. The date in 2008 was chosen to coincide (approximately) with the considerable fall in BBR at that date.
Issue: Was this rate excessive given, for example, that there was no evidence that Mr Attwood had borrowed to buy his shares in the company?My conclusion: For the reasons given below, I consider that the judge's decision to award interest at this rate cannot be set aside.
Issue 1: Inconsistency between direction as to going concern basis and judge's earlier reference to Mr Maidment's obligation to put the company into liquidation?
"[66] It is true that I referred to what should have happened; but it does not follow from what should have happened that I should undertake a valuation of Mr Attwood's shares on a basis which assumes that that had in fact happened, closing my eyes to what in reality had happened, namely a transfer of the properties to Mr Maidment…."
Issue 2: Appropriate allowance for corporation tax on the disposal of the properties
- the sales to Mr Maidment were at an undervalue,
- the sales had taken place over 4 years, and
- in some years the gain on disposal had been set against trading losses.
i) The actual tax charge in 2006 to 2008 was insufficient because (a) prior years' losses were utilised and (b) not all properties were sold.I reject this submission:
- There was no evidence about this before the judge.
- The judge's rejection of Mr Maidment's application to put in that evidence was a matter of case management and thus cannot be set aside save for misdirection or perversity. Neither ground can be shown. As Mr Clutterbuck submits, it was for Mr Maidment to put in evidence to Mr Taub, or alternatively to the court, to show the true amount of the tax burden. Mr Maidment had previously put in evidence without any directions in advance, as the judge himself recorded in his judgments.
ii) The judge should in any event have valued the contingent liability for tax at its full nominal value. It was wrong in law for the judge to take the amount when it became an actual liability as that event occurred subsequent to the Valuation Date.
On being directed by the court to the leading case for the contrary proposition, namely Bwllfa Merthyr Dare Steam Collieries (1981) Ltd v Pontypridd Waterworks Company [1903] AC 426, Mr Grant submits that this case is not authority which supports the proposition. In my judgment, the Bwllfa case is binding on this court for the proposition that in valuing a contingent liability the court should take into account events subsequent to the valuation date which shed light on its value. As Lord Macnaghten said in Bwllfa:"With the light before him, why should [the tribunal] shut his eyes and grope in the dark?"See also for example, Phillips v Brewin Dolphin Bell Lawrie [2001] 1 WLR 143. It is clear that the judge had this well-known principle in mind. I therefore reject Mr Grant's submission as a general proposition of law.iii) As to whether the judge's approach produced a fair valuation of Mr Attwood's shares, Mr Grant reverts to the point that the judge should proceed on a real and not a fictional basis and that he failed properly to engage with the fact that there was no conceivable possibility that the company would continue to carry on its business as it had done in the past because of the financing difficulties to which I have already referred. In my judgment, the judge was entitled to proceed on the basis he did. The fact was that Mr Maidment was continuing to benefit from the properties by having transferred them to himself. He had chosen to transfer them to himself at a depressed figure. He might or might not sell them in the future. As the judge noted, a prudent owner did not have to sell the properties. If he wanted to raise cash he could remortgage them, although, as Mr Grant submits, this would not unlock the whole of their capital value.
Issue 3: Discount for the sale of the company's portfolio of properties in a single lot
Issue 4: discount for selling costs
Issue 5: Quasi-interest
"…At the time I delivered my September [2011] judgment, I had not been addressed on the question whether interest should be awarded on a borrowing, or a lending, basis. It seems to me here that the appropriate basis must be an investment, or lending, basis. Mr Attwood chose to leave his monies invested in Annacott. In those circumstances, it would be wrong for him to be awarded interest on a borrowing basis, particularly in the absence of direct evidence of whether he had been borrowing money, and, if so, at what rates. It seems to me that the appropriate basis for an award of interest should be on the lending, or investment, basis. Mr Attwood has regrettably not chosen to adduce evidence himself of what rate of interest he would have earned. The only evidence comes from Mr Maidment; and, as I have indicated, it seems to me the evidence he has produced is of unduly low rates of interest which do not represent what a prudent investor, with money of the level we are talking about, would have earned had the monies been placed on deposit.
[74] I am left, therefore, with little better guidance than I was in September. Doing the best I can, and based upon my own experience and knowledge, and bearing in mind that base rates have been kept artificially low in order to promote the general interests of the economy and, as a result, have resulted in better deals being around for investors than there might have been if base rates were at a higher level, it seems to me that the appropriate rate to take is a rate of 2% above base up to 31 October 2008 and a slightly higher rate of 3% above base thereafter. That, it seems to me, is the best I can do on the available evidence." (emphasis added)
i) The judge ignored Mr Maidment's evidence showing that the rate paid on deposits with no instant access was approximately 2% on average.ii) The judge held that he was taking a rate appropriate for a lender or investor, but in fact took the higher rate appropriate for a borrower.
iii) Mr Attwood was not a borrower as he was receiving sums from the parties' other company, Tobian Properties Ltd.
iv) The judge wrongly decided the matter on the basis of his personal experience.
i) Mr Maidment's evidence, which the judge considered at the July hearing, was about term rates and household rates and was therefore inappropriate.ii) The judge's rates were consistent with the practice in the Commercial Court: see, for example, Jaura v Ahmed [2002] EWCA Civ 210.
iii) The judge was simply doing the best he could using his experience in a legal sense in making awards under section 35A of the Senior Courts Act 1981.
Conclusion
Lord Justice Elias:
Lady Justice Black: