![]() |
[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 >> W H Smith Travel Holdings Ltd v Twentieth Century Fox Home Entertainment Ltd [2015] EWCA Civ 1188 (26 November 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2015/1188.html Cite as: [2015] EWCA Civ 1188 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
ON APPEAL FROM QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
BRISTOL DISTRICT REGISTRY
His Honour Judge Havelock-Allan QC
9BS40280
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE KITCHIN
and
LORD JUSTICE CHRISTOPHER CLARKE
____________________
W H Smith Travel Holdings Ltd |
Claimant/ Respondent |
|
- and - |
||
Twentieth Century Fox Home Entertainment Ltd |
Defendant/ Appellant |
____________________
Stephen Cogley QC and Koye Akoni (instructed by TLT LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 6 October 2015
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Kitchin:
Introduction
Background
"4. Unfortunately Deluxe operated a "wholesale matching process" or system of "bulk clear downs" whereby, instead of matching deductions by Smith to the Fox invoice and Fox credit note to which the deduction related, Fox invoices and credit notes and Smith debit notes, were accumulated and matched arithmetically in large sums. The result was that Fox credit notes were used to cancel Smith debit notes relating to Fox invoices issued much earlier in point of time and with which the credit note had no connection. By the time VWA inherited the Fox account, it was impossible individually to match credit notes and debit notes to the original Fox invoice so as to ascertain whether a net sum, and if so what net sum, was due to Fox in respect of any particular invoice or series of invoices and to reconcile that indebtedness to the sums paid by Smith."
The proceedings, trial and judgment
"2.1 Part of the methodology [I have applied] included an exercise to follow credit notes (or a sample thereof) raised by Fox through to its ledger. Based on the results of this exercise, I am able to accept Fox's assertions that credits in relation to the disputed items were raised and booked to its ledger."
"2.2 However, the presence of credit notes on a supplier's ledger does not, by itself, automatically mean that the customer has received the benefit of those credit notes. The impact of the credit notes on the customer has to be ascertained."
"3.3 However, in order for the benefit of the credit notes to be received by way of off-set against a debt or an outstanding balance on the ledger, the existence of that debt or outstanding balance has to be agreed between supplier and customer.
3.4 The disagreement between WHS and Fox over the existence of the debt or outstanding balance owed by WHS (against which the [disputed] amounts … could be off-set and the benefits thereof derived by WHS) is the crux of the dispute between the parties and arises because of inconsistencies in the position reflected by their respective ledgers."
"… the majority of items in dispute will not be capable of resolution without a full reconciliation of the parties' ledgers."
The trial
The judgment
"50. Smith undoubtedly bears a persuasive burden to make good its claim to payment. But Mr Cogley is right that the initial evidential hurdle is overcome by the admitted existence of Fox credit notes to the value of the debt claimed which have not been the subject of an agreed off-set in the course of the account and which cannot be readily shown to have already been off-set.
51. Fox asserts in response that the credit notes have already been exhausted and have no further value. There is a persuasive and evidential burden on Fox to prove that assertion, especially since it was the foundation of a counterclaim for a balance payable to Fox in the early stages of the action."
The appeal
"What dealings are "mutual" within the meaning of the section appears to me to be determined by the intention of the parties to those dealings, expressed to each other or to be inferred from the character of the dealings. Thus, the relationship of banker and customer upon a current account implies from its very nature an intention on the part of both parties that debits and credits arising between them shall be brought into a running account upon which, by reason of the customary method of keeping such account, there will at any given moment be an outstanding debit or credit balance. Similarly, producers of such commodities as fruit and vegetables, who market them through selling agents in, for example, Covent Garden, normally, if not necessarily, deal with those selling agents upon a running account in which credits in their favour will arise in respect of proceeds of sales received by the agents, with related debits for commissions and sale expenses incurred by the agents in disposing of the goods or making allowances for quality deficiencies. These are only examples which could be almost indefinitely multiplied by taking into consideration such other relationships as those of a landlord and his rent collectors, or transactions of collection of outstanding debts. The common and essential characteristic of all such dealings, which I regard as the type of mutual dealings contemplated by the section, although many others less comprehensive and of shorter continuity would also be included, is that by the intention of the parties expressed or implied, they each extend to the other credit in respect of individual sums of money until such time as such sums are brought into account and in the account set off against other sums, in totality, in respect of which the other party has given credit; to be contrasted are dealings of a kind which may occur either in isolation or within the complex of a continuous run of dealings, which are themselves mutual, of such a kind that it is clear from their character that the parties intend that the monetary outcome of them shall be separately settled between the parties and not treated as a mere item on one side or the other of a running account."
"Since the decision of this Court in Richardson v Commercial Banking Co of Sydney Ltd (1952) 85 CLR 110, the term "running account" has achieved almost talismanic significance in determining when the ultimate, rather than the immediate and isolated, effect of a payment is to be examined for the purpose of a determination under s 122 of the Bankruptcy Act. However, the significance of a running account lies in the inferences that can be drawn from the facts that answer the description of a "running account" rather than the label itself. A running account between traders is merely another name for an active account running from day to day as opposed to an account where further debits are not contemplated. The essential feature of a running account is that it predicates a continuing relationship of debtor and creditor with an expectation that further debits and credits will be recorded. Ordinarily, a payment, although often matching an earlier debit, is credited against the balance owing in the account. Thus, a running account is contrasted with an account where the expectation is that the next entry will be a credit entry that will close the account by recording the payment of the debt or by transferring the debt to the Bad or Doubtful Debt A/c.
If the record of the dealings of the parties fits the description of a "running account", that record will usually provide a solid ground for concluding that they conducted their dealings on the basis that they had a continuing business relationship and that goods or services would be provided and paid for on the credit terms ordinarily applicable in the creditor's business. When that is so, a court will usually be able to conclude that the parties mutually assumed that from a business point of view each particular payment was connected with the subsequent provision of goods or services in that account. Sometimes, however, the transactions recorded in the account may be so sporadic that a court cannot conclude that there was the requisite connection between a payment and the future supply of goods even though the account was kept "in the ordinary form of a running account in which debits and credits are recorded chronologically and in which payments are not shown as attributable to any particular deliveries but are brought generally into credit" Re Weiss [1970] Arg LR 654 at 659. Thus, it is not the label "running account" but the conclusion that the payments in the account were connected with the future supply of goods or services that is relevant, because it is that connection which indicates a continuing relationship of debtor and creditor. It is this conclusion which makes it necessary to consider the ultimate and not the immediate effect of individual payments cf Rees (1964) 111 CLR 210 at 221-223, per Kitto J."
(footnote (72) omitted)
"In my judgment, and leaving aside for the moment the possible claim under clause 10, the short answer to these submissions is that the Commercial Credit's right of retention under standard condition 3B(iii) in respect of any amount prospectively chargeable to the company as a debit to the current account is a matter not of set off but of account. In Halesowen Presswork & Assemblies Ltd. v National Westminster Bank Ltd. [1971] 1 Q.B., Buckley L.J. said, at p. 46:
"Where the relationship of the banker and customer is a single relationship such as I have already mentioned, albeit embodied in a number of accounts, the situation is not, in my judgment, a situation of lien at all. A lien postulates property of the debtor in the possession or under the control of the creditor. Nor is it a set-off situation, which postulates mutual but independent obligations between the two parties. It is an accounting situation, in which the existence and amount of one party's liability to the other can only be ascertained by discovering the ultimate balance of their mutual dealings."
Counsel for the company put forward a sophisticated analysis of the various provisions of the agreement to show that, despite the wording of clause 4, the discounting charge was not integral to the ascertainment of the purchase price but, like the administration charge, a true contra item. In my judgment, however, the crucial factor is not the definition of the purchase price, but the extent of Commercial Credit's obligation to pay. This is to be found in clause 6, and it is an obligation to pay, not the purchase price, which is merely a credit in the current account, but the balance shown on the current account subject to the right of retention. The right of retention thus constitutes a contractual limitation on the company's right to require payment of the balance on the current account. It is an essential safeguard against overpayment since, except at the end of the month when the discounting and administration charges are debited, and in the unlikely event of there being no bad debts at all, the balance on the current account can never represent the true amount owing by Commercial Credit. The sum payable by clause 6, therefore, is in effect a provisional payment only and represents the best estimate that can be made at the time of the true state of account between the parties.
In my judgment, this is not a case of set off at all, for there are no mutual but independent obligations capable of being quantified and set off against each other. There are reciprocal obligations giving rise to credits and debits in a single running account, a single liability to pay the ultimate balance found due on taking the account, and provisions for retention and provisional payment in the meantime.
If this analysis is correct, it also provides an answer to the company's claim that the right of retention in standard condition 3B(iii) constitutes a registrable charge, for there is no relevant property capable of forming the subject matter of the charge. The only asset which the company could charge is its chose in action, i.e. the right to sue Commercial Credit for the sum due under the agreement, but this already contains within it the liability to suffer a retention. Counsel for the company naturally stressed the fact that the right of retention is expressed to be by way of security, but that is of no avail if, as I hold, it secures Commercial Credit, not against default by the company in the performance of its obligations, but against overpayment by itself."
"5. Terms of payment
5.1 The Seller shall be entitled to invoice WH Smith on or at any time after delivery of the Goods or performance of the Services, as the case may be, and each invoice shall quote the number of the Order.
5.2 Unless otherwise stated in the WH Smith Vendor Buying Agreement, WH Smith shall pay the Price of the Goods and the Services within 90 days after the end of the month of receipt by WH Smith of a proper invoice or, if later, after acceptance of the Goods or Services in question by WH Smith.
5.3 WH Smith shall be entitled to set off against the Price any sums owed to WH Smith by the Seller or their clients.
5.4 Any sums which are not paid by WH Smith by the due date and which are not in dispute shall thereafter attract interest on a daily basis at a rate of 4% per annum above the base lending rate for the time being of Barclays plc.
5.5 WH Smith shall deduct the cost of any products which are returned by WH Smith from the next payment due to the Seller. Where the return of goods puts a supplier into a debit position, and WH Smith is unable to deduct the balance from a payment due, WH Smith will require settlement of the debit note by the seller within 14 days of the debit note date."
"The third factor which undermines Ms Radhakrishnan's confidence in the receivables figure on the Fox AR Ledger is the way in which that figure has been extinguished in the course of Phase 1, not by off-set of the credit notes on which Smith relies but by concession made by Fox that the receivables figure needed further adjustment. Whilst Fox's AR Ledger recorded that approximately £1,228,000 was due from Smith in April 2006 after deducting Smith's figure of £882,000, the admission made in paragraph 9 of Fox's Amended Defence and Counterclaim that further adjustments amounting to £931,000 needed to be made in Smith's favour contradicts any argument that the debt of £1,228,000 cancels out some or all of the balance of Smith's claim since none of the items comprised within the £931,000 has been shown to be referable to any of the credit notes relied on by Smith."
Lord Justice Christopher Clarke:
Lord Justice Laws: