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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Doherty v Fannigan Holdings Ltd [2018] EWCA Civ 1615 (12 July 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2018/1615.html Cite as: [2018] EWCA Civ 1615 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
INSOLVENCY AND COMPANIES LIST
Mr Stephen Smith QC sitting as a Deputy Judge of the High Court
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE COULSON
and
SIR COLIN RIMER
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PATRICK JOSEPH DOHERTY |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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FANNIGAN HOLDINGS LIMITED |
Respondent |
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Andreas Gledhill QC and Peter Head (instructed by Ignition Law) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 12 June 2018
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Crown Copyright ©
Sir Colin Rimer :
Introduction
The facts
'2. AGREEMENT FOR TRANSFER OF SHARES
Subject to the terms of this Agreement, FHL shall transfer or cause to be sold and PJD shall take transfers of each Tranche of the Shares subject to the Full Payment of the respective Tranche being made on the respective Tranche Payment Day free from all Encumbrances and in all other respects with full title guarantee. On receipt of each respective Full Payment the relative Shares for that Tranche shall be transferred with all rights attaching to them and subject to the provisions of this Agreement including the rights to receive all dividends and other distributions declared, paid or made at or after Payment is made for the respective Tranche of Shares. The parties agree that pending transfer of the Shares under this agreement FHL shall not be entitled to receive any dividend payments or financial benefits in respect thereof.
3. CONSIDERATION
The Shares shall be transferred for the Consideration as follows: each Tranche of Shares comprising Tranches A to H inclusive shall be transferred for and in consideration of the Full Payment by PJD to FHL of the respective Tranche payment set out in the definition of each Tranche and each Tranche payment shall be made no later than the respective Tranche Payment Date as set out herein in each case. …
5. COMPLETION OF EACH TRANCHE
5.1 In CONSIDERATION of the respective Tranche Payment by PJD to FHL on the respective Tranche Payment Date to FHL's Solicitors Client Account by CHAPS transfer from PJD's solicitors client account being the respective Tranche Payment as part of the total Consideration but being the Full Payment of the respective Tranche Payment FHL shall deliver or procure the delivery to PJD of a transfer or transfers of the respective Tranche Shares duly executed by the respective registered holders thereof in favour or PJD or his nominees together with the relative share certificates or an indemnity in ordinary form duly executed in relation to any missing certificate(s). The figure stated as consideration in each Stock Transfer Form shall be at PJD's discretion having regard to a debt purchase element and may not necessarily be the whole of the amount paid on the relevant Tranche. For avoidance of doubt the sums actually payable on each Payment Date shall be the Full Payment of each Tranche A to H inclusive. …
8. NON COMPLETION OR DEFAULT
8.1 In the event that PJD fails to pay any Tranche on the relative Payment Date FHL shall have the right to serve a notice of default on PJD requiring payment within twenty eight days. If the relative Payment is made within the time specified in the Default Notice then this agreement continues but in the event that PJD fails to make the relative payment within the time set out in the Default Notice then FHL shall have the right at any time thereafter to serve a Termination Notice immediately and effectually terminating all and any obligations of any party hereunder save in respect of any liability for any breaches or defaults occurring prior to the Termination Date set out therein.'
The decision of Mr Registrar Jones
'… a pre-ascertained liability under the agreement which gives rise to it … [including] a contractual liability where the amount due is to be ascertained in accordance with a contractual formula or contractual machinery which, when operated, will produce a figure.' (See McGuinness v. Norwich & Peterborough Building Society [2011] EWCA Civ 1286, [2012] BPIR 145, per Patten LJ at [36]).'
'30. When read as a whole, taking into account the factual background for the purpose of objective construction, but with particular reference to clauses 2, 5 and 8, in my judgment the Purchase Agreement requires the payment of £2 million in order to receive the relevant tranche of shares. Mr Doherty must pay and FHL must deliver executed share transfers to him. The two are not and cannot be disconnected. The former sets up and enables completion. The Purchase Agreement does not create a debt to be claimed irrespective of compliance with the obligation to transfer the shares. Payment is a contractual obligation which, if breached, gives rise to a claim for specific performance and/or damages or termination and damages under clause 8. …
32. [Counsel for FHL] also submits that it is sufficient for FHL to be ready, willing and able to transfer the shares following payment of the £2 million. In my judgment that submission fails to apply the contractual connection between payment and transfer. This is not a case where the price is payable irrespective of whether Mr Doherty receives the shares. Thus, clause 2 identifies the underlying obligation as a transfer of the shares subject to the terms of the Purchase Agreement which include payment. Obviously but expressly provided within clause 3, the consideration for the transfer of the shares is payment. Under clause 2, the transfer takes place upon receipt of payment. Clause 5 identifies the procedure for completion based upon receipt of funds in a client account. That is when the transfer occurs and it is to be implied that the payment will remain in the client account until completion. Clause 8 provides for time to cure a breach of contract by non-payment on time not the creation of a debt. When the default notice expires without the breach being cured, a right to terminate is expressly created. This sustains the construction that there is no debt but a damages claim in circumstances of the beneficial interest in the relevant shares remaining with FHL.
33. Insofar as necessary, the point can be demonstrated by considering the content of a Part 7, CPR claim form should one be issued by FHL. It will plead breach of contract following expiry of the default notice [a reference to a notice under clause 8] and (in the absence of termination) pray for specific performance and/or damages. In the event of termination, it will pray for damages taking into account retention of the shares. FHL could not enter and then execute judgment for £2 million ignoring the fact that it retains legal and beneficial ownership of the shares.'
The decision of the Deputy Judge
'24. … It is entirely right that payment and transfer of the shares are connected events but it is in my judgment quite clear that payment must come first and if it does not occur, there is no obligation on FHL to transfer the shares. The payment is the trigger for the obligation to transfer but the obligation to pay the tranches is not an optional obligation, it is an absolute one.
25. In this connection, I refer back to some other provisions … from the May 2012 agreement, in particular, the definition of the completion of tranche E, which is the day on which FHL receives the full payment in respect of tranche E irrespective of whether the shares have by then been transferred. Similarly, the definition of payment date is 1 July 2015 irrespective of whether the tranche E shares are also transferred on that date. Clause two of the agreement makes it clear that FHL is not obliged to procure the transfer of – it says "relative shares"; "relevant" may be a more appropriate description – "until receipt of each respective payment". Clause three provides towards the end that each tranche payment shall be made no later than the respective tranche payment date. The otiose clause four concerns the guarantee for Mr Doherty, which is a guarantee of payment of each tranche on the respective payment dates, with no reference to the shares having to be transferred before the obligation guaranteed arises. Clause 5.1 concludes that the sums actually payable on each payment date shall be the full payment of each relevant tranche, and again makes no reference to the shares having been transferred simultaneously or indeed at all before the sums are to be payable. Clause eight provides that FHL may serve a notice to terminate the agreement in the event of a failure to pay any tranche on the relevant payment date and does not refer to any constraint on that right by reference to the shares having already been transferred by FHL to Mr Doherty. Then finally clause 11.4 provide for interest to run from the relevant payment date on any unpaid tranche, again irrespective of whether any shares have been transferred.
26. Those provisions, it seems to me, all point in one direction, which is that the tranches fell due for payment on the dates set out in the definition section of the agreement and from those dates they amounted to a debt for a liquidated sum payable to FHL; and until the relevant tranche was paid, FHL was under no obligation, whether under the agreement or as a matter of insolvency law, to transfer the shares before it could present a statutory demand in respect of non-payment. I should record for completeness that in response to Mr Doherty's witness statement in support of his application to set aside the statutory demand, a director of OEHL, a Mr Paul Manning, served a witness statement in which he states that OEHL is ready and willing to perform its side of the bargain as regards the tranche E shares if and when Mr Doherty makes payment of the £2 million and any other amounts due under the agreement. …
30. Thus, on the question of construction of the June 2012 agreement, I with regret and great respect disagree with the learned registrar. The payment of the tranche monies was not dependent on a simultaneous transfer of shares and the amount unpaid did, in my judgment, amount to a debt for a liquidated sum. That, I think, suffices to determine this appeal. The appeal should be allowed and the statutory demand reinstated.'
The appeal to this court
'Relation of the promises. In the first place, it is necessary to discover the relation to one another of the promises which form the contract. They may be either independent or dependent. Promises are said to be independent when the obligation of one party is absolute and not conditional upon the performance by the other party of his part of the bargain. They are said to be dependent when the obligation of one party depends upon the performance, or the readiness and willingness to perform, of the other ….'
'… Which species of obligation has been created is a question of interpretation, but if the obligation constitutes the whole or a substantial part of the consideration for the contract, the court is likely to interpret it as a dependent obligation.'
The author writes that 'So, for example, in a contract for the sale of land, the vendor's obligation to convey and the purchaser's obligation to pay the purchase price are dependent obligations' and refers to Heard v. Wadham (1801) 1 East 619. That case concerned a contract for the sale of land, but Mr Shaw's submission is that the like principle applies equally to a contract for the sale of shares such as that in this case. Lord Kenyon CJ said, at 629:
'… but it is as clear that these are dependent covenants. I never expected to hear it said that these were independent covenants; where one man agrees to pay a certain sum of money on a given day, and another covenants to convey an estate to him on the same day; can it be contended for an instant, that though the one has not conveyed he may call upon the other to pay the money. Common sense revolts at such a proposition. …'
'… well brought without an averment of the conveyance of the land; because it shall be intended that both parties have sealed the specialty. And if the plaintiff has not conveyed the land to the defendant, he has also an action of covenant against the plaintiff upon the agreement contained in the deed, which amounts to a covenant on the part of the plaintiff to convey the land; and so each party has mutual remedy against the other. But it might be otherwise if the specialty had been the words of the defendant only, and not the words of both parties by way of agreement as it is here. And by the conclusion of the deed it is said that both parties had sealed it; and therefore judgment was given for the plaintiff, which was afterwards affirmed in the Exchequer Chamber, Trin. 22 of King Charles the Second.'
'But where the covenants, &c. are dependent, it is necessary for the plaintiff to aver and prove a performance of the covenants, &c on his part, to entitle himself to an action for the breach of the covenants on the part of the defendant. … The difficulty lies in the application of the rule to the particular case. It is justly observed, that covenants, &c. are construed to be either dependent or independent of each other, according to the intention and meaning of the parties, and the good sense of the case; and technical words should give way to such intention. … In order therefore to discover that intention, and thereby to learn, with some degree of certainty, when performance is necessary to be averred in the declaration, and when not, it may not be improper to lay down a few rules, which will perhaps be found useful for that purpose.'
'4. But where the mutual covenants go to the whole consideration on both sides, they are mutual conditions and performance must be averred. …'
Discussion
'Contracts for the sale of land are in a special position as regards completion because it has long been recognised that save where the contract makes alternative provision, the balance of the purchase money has to be handed over simultaneously with the transfer of title to the property concerned and to that end a regime of undertakings and/or assurances has been established by, I think, the Law Society in standard terms. That is very far removed from the situation which appertains in the case of the June 2012 agreement.'
Disposition
Lord Justice Coulson :
Lord Justice Patten :