![]() |
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | |
England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Berntsen & Anor v Tait & Anor [2015] EWCA Civ 1001 (13 October 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2015/1001.html Cite as: [2015] EWCA Civ 1001 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT
CHANCERY DIVISION, COMPANIES COURT
Mr Justice Morgan
51292010
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LONGMORE
and
LORD JUSTICE JACKSON
____________________
(1) Innes Keochan Berntsen (2) Christopher Richardson |
Appellants |
|
- and - |
||
Matthew Tait Sarah Rayment |
Respondents |
____________________
Mr Justin Fenwick QC and Mr Ben Smiley (instructed by Mayer Brown International LLP) for the Respondents
Hearing dates: 9-10 June 2015
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
LADY JUSTICE ARDEN:
ISSUE: SUMMARY DISMISSAL OF CLAIM APPROPRIATE?
The court may give summary judgment against a claimant or defendant on the whole of a claim or on a particular issue if-
(a) it considers that-
(i) that claimant has no real prospect of succeeding on the claim or issue; or
(ii) that defendant has no real prospect of successfully defending the claim or issue; and
(b) there is no other compelling reason why the case or issue should be disposed of at a trial.
…CPR 24.1 provides that Part 24 sets out a procedure by which a court may decide a claim or a particular issue without a trial and CPR 24.2 provides that the court may give summary judgment against a defendant on the whole of a claim or on a particular issue if it considers that the claimant "has no real prospect of succeeding on the claim or issue". . . .
107. As I see it, in the vast majority of cases of a substantial nature the question whether an issue or claim should be disposed of summarily should be determined long in advance of the trial so that the preliminary costs of a trial are avoided and so that all parties know what issues are to be decided at the trial. I would expect cases in which it is appropriate to consider striking out a claim or giving summary judgment at the trial to be very rare, although every case depends upon its own circumstances and such cases might occur.
108. Under CPR 3.4 [which provides: "(2) The court may strike out a statement of case if it appears to the court (a) that the statement of case discloses no reasonable grounds for bringing or defending a claim…."] the focus is on the statement of case rather than on the evidence, whereas under CPR 24.2 it is on the evidence which is or is likely to be available at the trial. Under CPR 24.2 the court only has power to give summary judgment against a claimant if the claimant has no real prospect of success on a particular claim or issue. As Lord Woolf MR said in Swain v Hillman [2001] 1 All ER 91 at 92, the word 'real' in the expression 'real prospect of success' distinguishes fanciful prospects of success and directs the court to the need to see whether there is a 'realistic' as opposed to a 'fanciful' prospect of success. I cannot at present envisage a case in which it would be correct to dispose of an issue against a claimant without a trial unless the defendant persuades the court that the claim should be struck out under CPR 3.4 or that the claimant has no real prospect of success in the sense just described under CPR 24.2. Moreover, the test must be the same whenever the application is made and even if (for some good reason) it is made at the trial. The test must also be the same if the question is raised of the court's own motion.
109. As I read them, the CPR do not contemplate conducting a form of trial on the balance of probabilities at the outset without allowing a trial to take place. . . .
HOW THE APPELLANTS' CLAIMS AROSE
"6. The facilities which had been negotiated (and about which there is no dispute) were a term loan and an overdraft. There was in addition a general business loan (but there is a dispute about its availability). The facility about which there is the greatest dispute is a chattel mortgage from Lombard.
7. The term loan had been part of the original funding and was initially £3.4m. But it was increased as the Coniston Hotel project was modified. As a result of the latest extension (signed on only 24 May 2010) at the beginning of June 2010 it afforded a facility of £4.2m which was due for repayment on 30 June 2010. As at 2 June 2010 £83k (taking the highest figure contended for) remained available to be drawn. The position of Mr Berntsen and Mr Richardson is that Mr Flannery had promised them that this would be rolled over into a new facility: the Bank disputes this.
8. The overdraft had also been an original feature. Oddly, it appears not to have had any formal limit, the Bank simply drawing a line when it chose. . . .Mr Berntsen and Mr Richardson say that the Bank was not entitled to impose any limit on the overdraft because the Bank had said that there would be enough money for the development: and further that the overdraft could not be called in.
9. On 21 May 2010 the Bank granted a £350,000 facility known as the "General Purpose Business Loan". Mr Berntsen and Mr Richardson say that this was "intended to assist cash flow issues, caused amongst other things, by VAT payments" i.e. that it was available for any purpose. The Bank says that it was intended to fund VAT payments until they could be recovered at the end of the quarter. The facility had a repayment date of 30 June 2010. It is common ground that this had been drawn down by £199,000 at the material time. Clause 4.1 of the Loan Agreement says:-
"The Customer will repay the Loan from the proceeds of the Company's VAT refund by the Repayment Date or, if earlier, the date the proceeds become available. If those proceeds do not repay the Loan, the Customer will repay the balance of the Loan by the Repayment Date".
10. The Lombard chattel mortgage was intended to be asset finance secured on fixtures and fittings in the Coniston Hotel. Internal Bank documents show that a loan of £400k had been approved in principle by Lombard on or about 3 June 2010 (having originally been declined). The approval was subject to a Second Charge being granted over the Hotel and a joint and several personal guarantees being given by Mr Berntsen and Mr Richardson in the sum of £400k. In these proceedings the Bank's position (supported by an apparently contemporaneous attendance note and an e-mail to Mr Richardson dated 2 June 2010) is (a) that it told Mr Berntsen and Mr Richardson that the facility had not been approved (as was initially the case); but (b) that it did not tell them that a review had led to approval of the funding; and (c) that it took that course because on 3 June 2010 the Bank had discovered that the position was worse than it had expected. In these proceedings Mr Berntsen and Mr Richardson say that they thought that the Lombard chattel loan (which they put at £500k) had been granted (because Mr Flannery had "pre-agreed" it) and indeed that the £225k worth of cheques drawn (but not presented) had been so drawn on the footing that the Lombard funding would be available, and that any demand for a personal guarantee was unlawful. (In a complaint to the Financial Ombudsman Service on 4 October 2010 one of their complaints is that they were "bullied to provide personal guarantees"). They rely on some valuation instructions prepared by the Bank on 11 June 2010 (and which came into their possession during the administration) which state:-
"The Bank has agreed to provide [the LLP] with a loan facility of up to £5,029,000… to assist with the development of Coniston Hotel…"
It is said that this figure only makes sense if the total loan facility includes the Lombard loan. . . .
21. The Lombard loan was not offered to the LLP. The Bank did not commit to providing any further facility that would fund the completion of the Hotel and its opening for trade. . . .
BDO's terms of engagement
17. On 14 June 2010 an Engagement Letter dated 11 June 2010 was signed: Mr Berntsen and Mr Richardson say (in a letter before action from their Counsel Mr Miah dated 1 December 2010) that they relied on legal advice from Vertex Law in signing it. According to its terms it set out the basis on which BDO were to provide professional services to the members of the LLP. The professional services were an Independent Business Review to be undertaken within seven days. Phase 1 entailed:-
(a) a review of the short-term cash requirement of the LLP to 30 June 2010 and of the level of support required from the Bank. The Letter recorded that this support was dependent on the findings of professional agents engaged to provide an assessment of the outstanding work required to complete the construction of the Hotel.
(b) A review and commentary upon the current financial position of the LLP and the immediate options available to the LLP and the Bank.
Phase 2 would involve an examination of the viability of the business itself.
18. According to Appendix A to the Engagement Letter the Bank confirmed the appointment of BDO to undertake this work, and Mr Berntsen and Mr Richardson each on behalf of the LLP confirmed the Bank's instructions and undertook to co-operate with BDO and to be responsible for the fees incurred.
19. The following terms are material to this application:-
(a) Paragraph 2.4 of the Engagement Letter made plain that by accepting the instructions BDO was undertaking a duty of care to the Bank, and in the event of it owing a duty of care both to the LLP and to the Bank then the primary duty of care would be to the Bank.
(b) Mr Tait would be responsible for the conduct of the engagement.
(c) BDO undertook to perform the services with reasonable skill and care and acknowledged liability to the LLP for defined loss caused by negligence, breach of contract, fraud or wilful default up to a specified limit.
(d) Paragraph 7.1 addressed conflicts of interest. It said that although no conflict was anticipated, in the event of such occurring "our primary and overriding duty of care will be to the Bank". BDO reserved the right to restrict to the Bank alone the disclosure of any of the work produced by the rendering of the services, and to do so at BDO's sole discretion without any obligation to consult with the LLP. Paragraph 10.2 of the Terms of Business explained that there may be circumstances in which the LLP's position could not be safeguarded, in which event the services would be terminated.
(e) Paragraph 8.2 said:-
"the [LLP] expressly agrees and understands that the terms in the Engagement Letter apply to all services provided by BDO pursuant to the Engagement, whether such services were performed or provided before or after the signing of the Engagement Letter".
(f) Paragraph 1.2 of the Terms of Business, having defined the term "staff member", went on to provide that (with the exception of liabilities arising from fraud) all liability to the LLP was the sole responsibility of BDO.
(g) Paragraph 18.1 of those Terms said
"It is agreed that, for our interest in limiting the personal liability and exposure to litigation of our staff members, you will not bring any claim in respect of any loss against any of our staff members personally, but this will not limit or exclude the liability of [BDO] for the acts or omissions of its staff members. This exclusion shall not apply to a fraud. You agree that our staff members may rely upon the Contracts (Rights of Third Parties) Act 1999 should they need to enforce this paragraph."
Respondents instructed to advise
12. On 3 June 2010 there was a meeting between the LLP members and the Bank (represented by Mr Burgess and Mr Wade). Mr Berntsen and Mr Richardson said that it was at this meeting that the Bank confirmed its refusal to release any further funds unless they gave additional security for loans which they said had already been agreed to fund the hotel development. There were 70 contractors on site and 65 members of staff recruited to open and run the Hotel.
13. That same evening Mr Richardson (together with someone from Zenon Tax who undertook the book-keeping for and gave tax advice to the LLP) met with Ms Rayment of BDO. Mr Berntsen and Mr Richardson submit that on behalf of the LLP they engaged her (and her colleague Mr Tait) as individual insolvency and restructuring advisers practising from the offices of BDO, and that Ms Rayment and Mr Tait thereby became the fiduciary agents of the LLP. The Respondents do not accept that analysis: they say that it was BDO that was retained as adviser. At that meeting Mr Richardson outlined the problems of the LLP. There is a full attendance note recording these instructions, and at the hearing I indicated that I would rely on this as indicating what Mr Richardson told Ms Rayment: Mr Miah did not argue that I should not. The key points were (a) that when re-assessed in April the project was underfunded by £1.1m; (b) that that shortfall was intended to be funded by an injection of £400k by Mr Berntsen and Mr Richardson (which was made), an eventual £200k VAT refund and £500k from Lombard refinancing the equipment; (c) that the Bank had refused cheques of £80k and that there were uncleared cheques of £190k; (d) that suppliers and trade creditors were owed £280k (of which about £40k was disputed); (e) that there were £180-£260k further completion costs (plus VAT); (f) that there were staff costs which over 2 months were £200k. It appears to me from her notes that she understood (or was told) that an additional £900k was needed to finish the project and begin trading: this would be consistent with what the bank records as its understanding at the meeting held earlier on 3 June 2010.
14. The following day Ms Rayment reported this meeting to the Bank. This report led to a meeting with the Bank's Restructuring Group which Ms Rayment summarised on 9 June 2010 saying:-
"…we are currently not formally engaged by either the LLP or yourselves and are therefore unable to provide any formal written advice to either party. You mentioned you were happy for us to work with the management and didn't think we needed a dual letter of engagement. We are more than happy to proceed on this basis but are mindful of our relationship with the bank and would wish to retain the ability to keep you informed at all stages. We will seek to build this into our engagement letter but it is possible that we may require a dual engagement letter to achieve this."
Mr Berntsen and Mr Richardson say that this demonstrates that from the outset Ms Rayment and Mr Tait had divided loyalties.
15. Mr Berntsen and Mr Richardson were also taking legal advice from Vertex Law. Their lawyer is recorded as informing BDO on 9 June 2010 that there were no funds available from personal sources or from third parties, that there was pressure from subcontractors and a growing level of concern from employees, that the amount required to complete the work had increased significantly above £200k (a figure which did not include the working capital required to open and trade as a hotel) and that the members needed a firm commitment from the Bank. None of this seems to be in dispute. . . .
Independent Business Review
Lombard's funding proposal
Appointment of administrators
. . . sufficient funds had already been agreed to enable the Hotel to complete, open and trade, and the Bank was contractually obliged to make those sums available. . . .
24. Of the existing confirmed facilities, on the members' case when the administration began (a) there was £83k available under the term loan expiring 30 June 2010; (b) the existing overdraft was fully utilised; (c) there was £150k of the "General Business Loan" available until 30 June 2010 (and more until that date if a VAT repayment was received earlier). They would add to that £400k due from Lombard and something available on the corporate credit cards.
25. Although the contemporaneous estimate of the costs to complete and trade was £900k, Mr Berntsen and Mr Richardson have subsequently completed a cash flow forecast which shows that on the footing that construction assets (plant and equipment) could have been sold for £135k, the objective could have been achieved for £368k. On this case therefore receipt of the Lombard loan remained fundamental to rescuing the business as a going concern.
Fresh property valuation: KF instructed and produce much reduced valuation
16. As at 10 June 2010 Mr Berntsen and Mr Richardson thought the hotel was worth £7.7 million as it stood (based on their understanding of a Savills valuation made in February 2010). Mr Tait told the Bank's Restructuring Group that the valuation of the hotel was the "critical issue": and he told the LLP to commission a valuation from Knight Frank ("KF"). . . .
20. The KF valuation as at 15 June 2010 came in (in draft) at £2.5-£3m with the Hotel in its existing state (depending on the marketing period), £3.75-£5m with the Hotel completed and sold as a "turnkey" sale (depending on the marketing period), and £5.5m with established trading. This was obviously insufficient to support any further lending (or, for that matter, a term out loan of 60% LTV by way of refinancing). The total costs to complete the building were £200,000 (on the footing that Mr Berntsen and Mr Richardson remained in control, because they had negotiated very favourable rates with their suppliers). This figure was assessed by GVA Grimley and is on this application agreed to be accurate.
Disposal of the hotel
26. The Hotel was in due course sold as it stood for £4.25m to West Register (a company associated with the Bank) under a sealed bid process. The proceeds (net of costs) were paid to the Bank under its fixed charge. There was a deficiency in the administration of £6.267m. Over £1m remained due to the Bank in respect of the shortfall on its security realisation. Mr Berntsen and Mr Richardson were loan creditors for £4.4m. That is why the LLP is now in liquidation.
Case against the respondents as administrators
The liability of the Joint Administrators is straightforward. It is to be found in IA 1986. The administration complaints are capable of being focused…
- The joint administrators divulged confidential information to the Bank in e-mails dated 21 and 23 June 2010.
- The joint administrators failed to make proper enquiry arising out of the members' representations that adequate loan facilities had been put in place by the bank (enlarged at the hearing of this application into an allegation that the joint administrators failed to sue the bank for breach of contract). . . .
- The joint administrators failed to heed warnings that the KF valuation was not a genuine independent valuation.
- The joint administrators failed to heed warnings not to wrongly sell the Hotel.
- The joint administrators had a close relationship with the bank and acted in the foregoing respects in breach of fiduciary duty. It is true that some of these allegations are unparticularised, and that at present the joint administrators have to trawl through discursive written statements to find the case against them: but that can be remedied (bullet points added)
Mr Berntsen and Mr Richardson say that Mr Tait and those working with him should have refused to agree any further valuation exercise being undertaken in relation to the Hotel (and compelled the Bank to work on the Savills valuation), and they should have "point[ed] out the obvious" that the Bank was contractually bound to advance sufficient money to complete the development, open and trade it without the provision of any additional security such as personal guarantees: and if the Bank did not acknowledge that it was so bound, then they should have advised the LLP to sue the Bank, in which event the Bank, if sued, would have advanced the money, and would have done so before any creditor took any insolvency proceedings, so enabling the project to be completed and opened. (In fact the Bank has been sued in the Queen's Bench Division and has denied any such obligation as is asserted. Summary judgment has been given in favour of the Bank, although that judgment is under appeal. . . (Judgment, [21])
Judgments of Norris and Morgan JJ in these proceedings
Norris J – 1 February 2013
with the result that the Points of Claim do not meet the standard to be expected in insolvency proceedings. I accept the submission that it is not possible to "set an agenda" for disclosure, for evidence or for trial.
But in my judgment it would be disproportionate (or more directly, unjust) to strike out or dismiss the entire claim if by pruning and definition the members' case can be put in a form that the Joint Administrators can address: and Mr Berntsen and Mr Richardson should still be afforded that opportunity . . .([61])
"from and after 22 June 2010 the case that the LLP could have been rescued as a going concern (or at least the development built out and sold on) is not promising. The confirmed facilities had been all but exhausted. The argument depends on establishing that the Bank could have been persuaded to process the Lombard loan offer (and that the required real and personal security would for that purpose have been forthcoming) and would have permitted the application of the loan to support limited trading in administration (to complete the required £200k works). It also depends on demonstrating that the KF valuation would have been challenged by an administrator performing his statutory responsibilities and would (if subjected to sustained criticism) have come more into line with the Savills valuation (or that some other valuer would have been instructed and would have aligned its valuation with Savills) in order to support such lending. It finally depends on establishing that the completed Hotel could have been sold for more than £4.25m plus the completion costs." (judgment, [72])
Morgan J – 30 January 2014
(1) the rescue claim: that the respondents failed to take steps to obtain funding from NatWest.(2) the undervalue claim, that is, the claim that the hotel was sold at an undervalue: the appellants' case is that the respondents were parties to a pre-determined arrangement to enable West Register to acquire the hotel at an undervalue. The judge rejected that because it was not pleaded and was an allegation of serious dishonesty and fraud. The judge found that there was no pleaded case capable of supporting this allegation.
(3) the examination claim: the appellants contended that the court should make an order under para 75 so that the administrators could be examined before the court about the administration and so that they should be prevented from claiming payment of administration costs. This particular claim has not been pursued before us.
Morgan J – 8 April 2014
"[t]he court exists to deal with viable claims. It does not exist to conduct a public inquiry when a judge finds that there may be a matter of public interest which might arise in other cases, but not in this case." ([50])
DISCUSSION
The rescue claim
The undervalue claim
They [the appellants] are very sensitive to the asking price as they believe that KF have undervalued it, culpably so. (appeal bundle 8/556)
The examination claim
Conclusion
Lord Justice Longmore
Lord Justice Jackson