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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Bishop v Golstein [2014] EWCA Civ 10 (05 February 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2014/10.html Cite as: [2014] 1 Ch 455, [2014] 3 All ER 397, [2014] CH 455, [2014] WLR(D) 75, [2014] 1 CH 455, [2014] 2 WLR 1448, [2014] EWCA Civ 10 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT CHANCERY DIVISION
Mr. Nugee QC
HC11C01339
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
Vice President of the Court of Appeal, Civil Division
LORD JUSTICE SULLIVAN
and
LORD JUSTICE BRIGGS
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BISHOP |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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GOLSTEIN |
Respondent |
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ROBERT SALIS (instructed by SIMONS MUIRHEAD & BURTON) for the Respondent
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Briggs :
Introduction
"wilfully or persistently commits a breach of the partnership agreement, or otherwise so conducts himself in matters relating to the partnership business that it is not reasonably practicable for the other partner or partners to carry on in partnership with him."
i) if, rather than dissolve by agreement, Mr. Golstein had sought a dissolution under Section 35(d) of the Act by proceedings commenced at the end of June 2010, he would have succeeded;ii) the conduct of Mr. Bishop which had by then made it not reasonably practicable for Mr. Golstein to carry on business in partnership with him had consisted of breaches of the partnership agreement, and
iii) those breaches had indeed been the cause of the early, consensual, termination of the partnership.
"For the avoidance of doubt Mr. Bishop does not challenge any of the individual adverse findings reached with regard to particular allegations made against A (the Appellant) (the primary facts) nor the judge's overall assessment of A's conduct in the context of the partnership relationship (the evaluation of the facts) and in particular his findings that the underlying cause of the dissolution was A's conduct."
i) None of the breaches of the partnership agreement identified by the judge were continuing as at the date of termination. Rather, many of them had ended, or been remedied, some months previously, and the latest of them had occurred, or been remedied, by March 2010.ii) Thereafter Mr. Golstein elected to affirm the partnership agreement, both by asserting the continued existence of the partnership relationship in correspondence, by his solicitors during March and April 2010, by continuing to work in the furtherance of the partnership business and to receive drawings, and by continuing to participate in the management of the firm.
iii) Although all this had been pleaded, the judge had failed to deal with it in his judgment. He had not considered the consequences of these matters during the period March to June 2010, and had in particular identified no further breach during that period capable of amounting to a 'last straw' within a doctrine habitually applied to the repudiation of employment contracts, upon which a case of continuing breach as at the end of June 2010 could be constructed.
Summary
Affirmation
Last Straw
"Although the final straw may be relatively insignificant, it must not be utterly trivial: the principle that the law is not concerned with very small things (more elegantly expressed in the maxim "de minimis non curat lex") is of general application."
"Miss Eilledge submitted that for the last straw doctrine to apply there had to be some triggering event which constituted the final straw, and on the facts there was none here. However it seems to me that Mr. Salis is right when he says that where conduct is continuing, it may not be necessary to identify a specific act which constitutes the trigger. If an employer is squeezing out an employee, or a partner is conducting himself in such a way as to make it impracticable to carry on in business with him, this may well be enough even if it is not easy to point to a specific act."
Waiver
Continuing breach
"was symptomatic of an attitude that Mr. Bishop had that he need not consult Mr. Golstein on matters pertaining to the partnership."
"since around November 2009 ignoring the Claimant (Mr. Golstein) on many occasions and refusing to discuss matters of any nature with him."
An example was given of such a refusal, by an email in December 2009. At paragraph 154 the judge found that allegation proven. He said that:
"I am satisfied that at that date Mr. Bishop had stopped communicating with Mr. Golstein entirely on partnership matters save for the correspondence being conducted with Healys" (Mr. Golstein's solicitors)
The judge sets no end-date to his conclusion that, as alleged, Mr. Bishop simply ceased discussing partnership matters with Mr. Golstein. My reading of the judge's conclusion is that, therefore, it continued until the partnership actually dissolved, at the end of June 2010. Nothing in the judgment, nor even in the evidence which Miss Eilledge showed us about what did happen in the three months prior to dissolution, suggested any other conclusion.
"Mr. Bishop did indeed make unilateral decisions in relation to management without reference to Mr. Golstein, and carried on making decisions in relation to the practice very much as he had done before the merger."
He found that this was a breach both of the Heads of Agreement and of Mr. Bishop's general obligation to manage the firm jointly with Mr. Golstein, rather than unilaterally. His finding contained, again, no end-date and I read it as including a conclusion that it continued until the firm was in fact dissolved.
"I have detailed the matters above and do not need to repeat them all, but Mr. Bishop's persistent obstructiveness in co-operating in having accounts drawn up and agreed; his ignoring of Mr. Golstein in making unilateral decisions in relation to the partnership premises, the staff, and other matters; and his undermining of Mr. Golstein's position in the firm in my judgment cumulatively meant that it was not reasonably practicable for Mr. Golstein to carry on in partnership with him. I accept Mr. Salis's submission that his position had become intolerable and that by June 2010 he was at the end of his tether."
Later, at paragraph 209, he said:
"I find however that it was the cumulative effect of Mr. Bishop's behaviour as set out above which made it intolerable for Mr. Golstein to continue. … I have detailed above matters which led me to the conclusion that it was not reasonably practical for Mr. Golstein to continue to carry on practice in partnership with Mr. Bishop; and I find that it was the cumulative effect of these matters which led to the partnership coming to a premature end."
"The reality of the situation is that the relationship between us has been damaged beyond repair. I cannot believe that you would seriously think to suggest otherwise. It is time that we both recognised that fact and went our separate ways. How we get to that point is almost secondary."
"Our client believes that it is possible (at least for the present) for the partnership to subsist for practical purposes and does not except that dissolution is inevitable. Insofar as it may be considered by the Court to be inevitable in due course, then this is a direct result of your, not our client's, conduct which has been the subject of previous correspondence."
Later, in relation to Mr. Bishop's sub-paragraph 7, they said:
"Our client believes that the partnership can subsist until the end of the four year period. If it cannot, then this is a result of your breaches of the Heads of Agreement and conduct about which complaint has previously been made."
"As to whether our client will agree to a dissolution, we believe we have already made his position clear. Your client has made the continuance of the partnership extremely difficult but the practical reality is that our client is 63 years old and simply seeks the monies due to him and to be compensated for his loss of future income in the event of dissolution. If you concede in open correspondence that our client is entitled to such compensation on dissolution, then we believe that matters can be resolved without recourse to litigation, which would be to all parties' benefit."
Conclusion
Lord Justice Sullivan
Lord Justice Maurice Kay