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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Bailey & Anor (The Joint Liquidators of D & D Wines International Ltd) v Angove's Pty Ltd [2014] EWCA Civ 215 (07 March 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2014/215.html Cite as: [2014] EWCA Civ 215 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION
HHJ PELLING QC
IN THE MATTER OF D & D WINES INTERNATIONAL LIMITED (IN CREDITORS' VOLUNTARY LIQUIDATION)
AND IN THE MATTER OF THE INSOLVENCY ACT 1986
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LEWISON
and
LADY JUSTICE SHARP
____________________
(1) KERRY BAILEY (2) TREVOR BIRCH (THE JOINT LIQUIDATORS OF D & D WINES INTERNATIONAL LIMITED) |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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ANGOVE'S PTY LIMITED |
Respondent |
____________________
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 Nicholas Craig (instructed by APP Law Solicitors) for the Respondent
Hearing date : 14 February 2014
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Patten :
"37. Upon termination of this Agreement for any reason whatsoever:
(a) each party must pay to the other all money owing up to and including the date of termination in respect of the sale of Products and Angove PBPs and/or commission thereon, without any deduction, withholding or set-off for any reason whatsoever;
(b) Angove will have the right to purchase (and D&D is obliged to sell) any current stock of Products or Angove PBPs then in the hands of D&D which D&D has paid for, at a price equal to "net landed cost".
For the purposes of this sub-clause, "net landed cost" means the aggregate of the Net Selling Price paid by D&D plus any freight and insurance charges and duties paid by D&D in respect of such stock. D&D will ship the same at the direction of Angove FIS to the warehouse nominated by Angove in the Territory. D&D warrants, and shall procure, that any re acquired stock will on its re-delivery be in all respects in the same condition as that in which it was delivered to D&D by Angove;
(c) D&D must promptly deliver to Angove, or at its direction, all point of sale and promotional brochures, displays, banners and other related materials and information in its possession or control; and
(d) Angove will not be obliged, from the date of termination, to fill any orders placed by D&D on its own account which have not yet been delivered to D&D; and
(e) D&D must cease any and all use of Angove's IP Rights.
Termination of this Agreement does not affect the accrued rights or remedies of either party. Obligations expressed to arise or continue on or after termination of this Agreement survive its termination."
"Angove confirms that from the Effective Date D&D shall be its sole agent and distributor for the sale:
(a) of all Products exported by Angove, or by any company or entity wholly owned by Angove, to customers in the Off Trade and the On Trade; and
(b) of all PBPs exported by Angove, or by any company or entity wholly owned by Angove, to customers in the On Trade, provided that D&D's appointment under this sub-clause 2(b) shall be limited to supplying Angove PBPs to Matthew Clark for onward distribution in the On Trade, on and subject to the terms and conditions of this Agreement."
"Where sales of Products or Angove PBPs are made by D&D as agent for Angove, the Terms and Conditions of Sale set out as Annexure A to this Agreement, and as amended by Angove from time to time, shall apply to such sales. Angove shall be responsible for communicating the Terms and Conditions of Sale to such customers, and for determining the timing of such notification. Failure by a customer to agree to the Terms and Conditions of Sale does not constitute a breach of this Agreement by D&D, provided that Angove shall be entitled to decline to deal with any such customer without liability to D&D."
"1. ACCEPTANCE OR ORDERS. Orders must be submitted to Angove in writing and must include full customer details, and a description of goods ordered including quantity and pricing by product. All orders are subject to acceptance by Angove, and Angove reserves the right to reject any order. Any quotation given by Angove lapses if not accepted within 30 days.
2. TERMS OF PAYMENT. Payment terms are 90 days from bills of lading in the absence of prior agreement with Angove (or through its agent) subject to the shipment being covered by Export Insurance. If payment is not made within the above terms, Angove is entitled to calculate and charge daily interest at a rate not greater than the interest rate charged by Angove bank on commercial overdrafts from time to time plus five (5) per cent.
...
"Angove" means Angove Pty Ltd, and includes D&D Wines International Limited, where it acts as agent for Angove Pty Ltd."
"20. Payment for Products ordered by or on behalf of D&D must be made, whether by D&D or the customer, on or before 90 days from the date of bill of lading, or otherwise as may be agreed, by direct credit in Australian dollars into the bank account nominated from time to time by Angove.
21. Angove will pay to D&D commission:
(a) in such amounts as shall be agreed between Angove and D&D based on the Net Selling Price of every sale of Products or Angove PBPs to a customer in D&D's allocated sectors within the Territory arranged by D&D during the term of this Agreement (other than on its own account);
(b) on any Bulk Wine supplies made by Angove, or by any company or entity wholly owned by Angove pursuant to clause 17 during the term of this Agreement.
22. Commission due under clause 21(a) shall be paid to D&D as follows:
(a) Angove will issue an invoice addressed to D&D (identifying the customer as consignee) for the relevant goods, together with a credit note for the amount of D&D's commission on that sale;
(b) D&D will be responsible for collecting payment of the amount of Angove's invoice from the customer;
(c) D&D will pay the amount of Angove's invoice, less the amount of the credit note, on or before the due date in accordance with clause 23.
23. Angove will pay any other commissions due to D&D quarterly after, and only to the extent that, payment for the relevant Products or PBPs has been received by Angove but will pay commission monthly to D&D in respect of any late payment by customers for Products or PBPs.
…
45. Nothing in this Agreement may be deemed to constitute D&D as the employee, joint venturer or partner of Angove. D&D is Angove's agent and distributor only to the extent set out in this Agreement."
"33. It was submitted on behalf of the Liquidators that because the effect of Clause 22(c) was to impose on the Company the obligation to pay the whole invoice sum due for the goods sold less commission in respect of which a credit note was to be issued for the benefit of the Company that necessarily negatives the true relationship between the Company and Angove being one of principal and agent. I am not able to accept that submission.
34. First, as I have said, the contract clearly distinguishes between those transactions in respect of which the Company is described as acting as agent and those where it is buying for its own account. It is only in respect of those transactions in respect of which the Company is described as acting as agent that commission is payable and to which the Clause 22 mechanism applies. Clearly therefore the parties considered that the transactions to which this mechanism applied were different from sales to the Company for its own account, which were expressly excluded from its application by Clause 21(a).
35. Secondly, I do not accept the premise of the submission – namely that because the Company undertakes a direct obligation to pay, that necessarily negatives the relationship being one of principal and agent in relation to transactions to which the mechanism applies. In Teheran – Europe Co. Ltd v. S.T. Belton (Tractors) Ltd [1968] 2 WLR 523, Donaldson J as he then was recognised at 528F that there were three ways in which an agent could conclude a contract on behalf of his principal, the second of which was by creating privity of contract between the third party, the principal and the agent. The outcome of that case was varied on appeal but there was no any disagreement by the Court of Appeal with this part of Donaldson J's analysis. In the result, it does not follow that because an agent undertakes direct obligations owed to the principal therefore the relationship cannot be one of principal and agent.
36. I do not accept either the more restricted submission that because the obligation undertaken is one that involves accepting an obligation to pay for the goods that are being sold to the third party that necessarily prevents the relationship from being one of principal and agent. English law has long recognised the concept of a del credere agent – that is an agent who in consideration of a commission guarantees to his principal that third parties with whom he contracts on behalf of the principal will duly pay the sums due under those contracts.
37. As I have said the ADA must be read as a whole. So read, it applies specifically to at least two types of transaction. It applies primarily to sales to customers identified and introduced by the Company as agent for Angove (in respect of which commission is payable and the Clause 22 mechanism applies) and excepts from this mechanism sales to the Company for its own account. In relation to transactions falling within the last mentioned category the ADA imposes only the limited obligations I mentioned earlier."
"55. The contract contemplates that the Company is entitled to deduct its commission from the price collected by it before accounting to Angove. However, it is not clear whether the entitlement to deduct arises as soon as sufficient money to meet the commission due has been collected and in reality whether it does has no practical significance because of the personal obligation of the Company to indemnify Angove in respect of such part of the price payable by the third party purchaser as has not been collected by the agreed payment date. All this make it unlikely that it was intended to create a beneficial interest in the sums collected by the Company."
"42. If and to the extent that the Company owed Angove an obligation to collect payment from DWL and PLB, it came to an end when the termination took effect. This is so as a matter of general law – see Bowstead on Agency, 19th Ed., Paragraphs 10-023 – 10-024 and 10-029. This effect may be altered by express agreement but it was not in this case. The proviso to Clause 37 of the ADA makes clear that it is only obligations expressed to arise or continue after termination that survive termination. If and to the extent that Clause 22(b) imposes on the Company an obligation to collect, that obligation is not so expressed. If and to the extent that the transactions with DWL took effect outside the ADA (and as I have said neither party contends for that outcome) and if and to the extent the arrangements that applied to those transactions included any authority being given to the Company to collect the sums due from DWL, then that authority was expressly terminated by the statement in the Notice of termination that "... By terminating the Agreement, we also hereby terminate ... [the Company's] ... authority to collect any further payment ..." from DWL and PLB.
43. It follows that any sum actually received by the Company after the date of termination would be held on trust for the payer – in this case DWL and PLB. By the same token neither DWL nor PLB would obtain a discharge of their respective obligations to Angove by any payment made thereafter at any rate if the fact of termination was known to them at or before the time of payment."
"Even if the agency relationship between Salads and the claimants did come to an end, by force of circumstances, as soon as the receivers were appointed, that could not by itself alter the right of Salads and its receivers to seek outstanding sums due from customers, or the bank's charge on those book debts. Mr Bannister's use (in his skeleton argument and his oral submissions) of the expression 'defeasible' underlines the difficulty: even if the agency relationship has come to an end, why (whatever sympathy is felt for them as relatively small businesses suffering from the insolvency of a larger business) should the established titles of the marketing agent and its chargee be defeated in favour of the claimants?"
The only persuasive answer to that question is, to my mind, that the claim of the disappointed principal will prevail if (and only if) the circumstances are such that it would be wholly unconscionable for the receivers or the bank to oppose the claim."
"The general rule, which is perhaps not widely understood, is that the authority of an agent, whether given by power of attorney, or informally, even if for consideration, and whether or not expressed to be irrevocable, is revocable, without prejudice to the fact that such revocation may be wrongful as between principal and agent. The revocation may be oral whether or not the authority was conferred in writing. There is a power to revoke: but there is not necessarily a privilege to exercise the power-there may indeed be a duty not to do so, with the result that the revocation is a breach of contract. This is subject to the rules as to irrevocable authority set out in Article 118.
The rule is based on policy, and is the same as that relating to dismissal of persons working under contracts of service: "the proper conduct of the affairs of life necessitates that this should be so". It is reinforced by the separate rule that a contract of agency will not usually be enforced by a decree of specific performance. Frequently, of course, the revocation or renunciation constitutes the acceptance of a repudiatory breach by the other party."
"Given the situation of PSL when the last payment was received, any reasonable and honest directors of that company (or the actual directors had they known of it) would, I feel sure, have arranged for the repayment of that sum to the plaintiffs without hesitation or delay. It would have seemed little short of sharp practice for PSL to take any benefit from the payment, and it would have seemed contrary to any ordinary notion of fairness that the general body of creditors should profit from the accident of a payment made at a time when there was bound to be a total failure of consideration. Of course it is true that insolvency always causes loss and perfect fairness is unattainable. The bank, and other creditors, have their legitimate claims. It nonetheless seems to me that at the time of its receipt PSL could not in good conscience retain this payment and accordingly that a constructive trust is to be inferred."
"The constructive trust is imposed because it would be unconscionable for the Company, as agent, to receive money as agent knowing that it could not account for it to its principal. In this context, the passage from Bowstead quoted in Napier (see paragraph 17 above) is relevant and in my judgement the only answer which could be given to the question there posed is that the rights of the Vendors are sufficiently strong, and differentiable from other claims, for the Vendors to be entitled to a prior position in respect of them on the Company's insolvency (whether the question arises in an administration, a voluntary arrangement or a liquidation). The joint administrators have not, of course, acted unconscionably: they have, quite properly, brought the matter before the court. But it would, in my judgment, be unconscionable for them to continue to assert any claim to the monies."
"In my judgment, the case does fall within the expenses principle. It is accepted by Mr Phillips, quite correctly, that prior to the payment of an instalment, the chose in action representing each Vendor's right as against Olympic to its share of the purchase price belonged to that Vendor: it did not belong beneficially to the Company and there had been no assignment by each Vendor to the Company of its rights. Accordingly, when the Company accepted payment of an instalment as agent of the Vendors, it could do so only on the hypothesis that there was a valid agency agreement. In receiving an instalment of the purchase price, the Joint Administrators were making beneficial use of the property of the other Vendors that is to say their respective shares of the purchase price. If the joint administrators chose to take the benefit of that continuing agency relationship, and thereby make use of the other Vendors' property, they must, I consider, meet the obligations of the Company pursuant to the agency agreements by allowing the Vendors to recover to the extent of the benefit received by the Joint Administrators. This approach conforms with the approach adopted in Ex parte James (1864) 9 Ch App 609: in effect, an officer of the Court should behave in a high-minded and honourable way which would not be the case, in my judgment, if I were to allow the joint administrators to retain the instalment payment for the benefit of general creditors of the Company: it would be dishonourable for the Joint Administrators to seek to retain this windfall."
Lady Justice Sharp :
Lord Justice Lewison :