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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Medsted Associates Ltd v Canaccord Genuity Wealth (International) Ltd [2019] EWCA Civ 83 (06 February 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2019/83.html Cite as: [2019] EWCA Civ 83, [2019] WLR 4481, [2019] CTLC 181, [2019] 2 All ER (Comm) 486, [2019] 1 WLR 4481, [2019] WLR(D) 80, [2019] 2 All ER 959, [2019] 2 FLR 959, [2019] 1 CLC 253 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE TEARE
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
THE RIGHT HONOURABLE LORD JUSTICE PETER JACKSON
and
THE RIGHT HONOURABLE LADY JUSTICE ASPLIN
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MEDSTED ASSOCIATES LIMITED |
Appellant/ Claimant |
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- and - |
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CANACCORD GENUITY WEALTH (INTERNATIONAL) LIMITED |
Respondent/Defendant |
____________________
Mr Hodge Malek QC, Mr Matthew Slater & Mr Rupert Coe (instructed by Devonshires LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 5th December 2018
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Crown Copyright ©
See: Order at bottom of this judgment.
Lord Justice Longmore:
Introduction
Factual Background
Outline of business conducted by the Medsted and Collins Stewart
Relevant events
i) Mr Valasakis raised the subject of an introducing broker agreement and a non-circumvention agreement ("NCA"). On 24th July 2018, Mr Valasakis sent to Mr Lovett a draft agreement and a draft NCA; and
ii) Mr Lovett asked to know the terms on which Medsted and MAN were operating. On 25th July 2018, Mr Xenophontos informed Collins Stewart that the clients paid (i) a commission of 0.7%, of which 0.25% was paid to Medsted; and (ii) a financing charge of 6.2%, of which 4.5% was paid to Medsted.
Medsted's appeal
"134. On the one hand, given that secret commissions are "objectionable as they inevitably tend to undermine trust in the commercial world" (see FHR European Ventures LLP v Mankarious [2015] AC 250, para 42, per Lord Neuberger PSC), it can be said that the court should not assist Medsted to recover its secret commission. On the other hand, Collins Stewart agreed to pay commission to Medsted, knowing (see Mr Jouan's telephone call with Mr Valasakis on 13th May 2009 and the e-mails sent by Mr Valasakis and Marios on 5th February 2010) that the split was to be kept secret from the clients. In those circumstances it may be said that Collins Stewart cannot take the benefit of the objectionable secret commission of which it was aware.
135. The competing policy arguments were identified by counsel but the court was given little guidance as to how the conflict should be resolved. There is authority for the proposition that the remedy of damages can be denied on the grounds of policy, namely that damages cannot be claimed where the root of the damage was the claimant's own wrong: see Weld-Blundell v Stephens [1920] AC 956, 976 (although the decision in that case can also be explained on the basis of causation, see the discussion in McGregor on Damages, 19th Ed (2014), para 8-207). In my judgment the court should not assist Medsted to profit from its own breach of fiduciary duty to its clients. Were it to grant Medsted judgment for substantial damages to be assessed it would be doing so. For this reason the court cannot give such judgment. Medsted is only entitled to nominal damages for Collins Stewart's breach of contract."
1) The decision of Teare J to refuse relief, other than an award of nominal damages, on the ground of public policy was unjust because of a serious procedural irregularity and/or the judge's failure to give Medsted a proper opportunity to address him on the point.
2) Medsted did not owe fiduciary duties to the clients that it introduced to the respondent.
3) Medsted did not breach any fiduciary duties owed to the clients.
4) The judge misapplied the principles of public policy (including the ex turpi causa principle) in reaching his decision.
5) The judge wrongly disallowed Medsted's claims in respect of secret trading by the respondent with the introduced clients that did not involve any breach of fiduciary duty on the part of Medsted towards the introduced clients.
6) The judge was wrong to conclude that the appellant had no claim in debt to its share of the commission and funding rebates requested (or at a reasonable rate in respect of other trading) in respect of the secret trading because such commission and rebates were never received by the respondent.
Procedural irregularity
Fiduciary duty as between Medsted and the investors
"…and so the role of the broker, such as Medsted, was to introduce them to a regulated financial institution, such as Collins Stewart, who could deal with a first-tier provider of CFDs. There was no other evidence of the relationship between the clients and Medsted. The clients were not paying a commission to Medsted and so must have assumed that Medsted was receiving payment from the financial institution."
He said later (para 93):-
"There is no evidence of any advice or recommendation which Medsted gave to the clients. But it is to be inferred that Medsted at least impliedly represented to them that the terms offered by Collins Stewart were competitive."
"We would not be mindful to go quite that far, but the absence of any of these main characteristics must nonetheless be a significant pointer away from the characterisation of a particular relationship as one of agency, even though there may be rare exceptions."
If one reads this passage literally it appears to go further than Lord Falconer's submission. That submission was that if "none" of the three characteristics one to be found, there would be no agency whereas the majority of the court said that in the absence of "any" the three characteristics there was unlikely to be agency.
"at least impliedly represented to them that the terms offered by Collins Stewart were competitive."
To that extent at least the clients/investors reposed trust and confidence in Medsted; to my mind that gives rise to a duty which can be legitimately categorised as "fiduciary".
Scope of the duty
"where [the principal] leaves the agent to look to the other party for his remuneration or knows that he will receive something from the other party, he cannot object on the ground that he did not know the precise particulars of the amount paid. Such situations often occur in connection with usage and custom of trades and markets. Where no usage is involved, however, the principal's knowledge may require to be more specific."
"Here I think the requirement is more special. Borrowers like the defendants coming to the non-status lending market are likely to be vulnerable and unsophisticated. A statement of the amount which their broker is to receive from the lender is, I think, necessary to bring home to such borrowers the potential conflict of interest.
37. There is nothing about any of this which should come as a surprise to any lender or broker working in the non-status lending market…"
He continued:-
"38. Obviously if there has been no disclosure the agent will have received a secret commission. This is a blatant breach of his fiduciary duty but additionally the payment or receipt of a secret commission is considered to be a form of bribe and is treated in the authorities as a special category of fraud in which it is unnecessary to prove motive, inducement or loss up to the amount of the bribe. The principal has alternative remedies against both the briber and the agent for money had and received where he can recover the amount of the bribe or for damages for fraud where he can recover the amount of any actual loss sustained by entering into the transaction in respect of which the bribe was given: Mahesan s/o Thambiah v Malaysia Government Officers' Housing Co-operative Society Ltd [1979] AC 374, 383. Furthermore the transaction is voidable at the election of the principal who can rescind it provided counter-restitution can be made: Panama and South Pacific Telegraph Co v India Rubber, Gutta Percha and Telegraph Works Co (1875) LR 10 Ch App 515, 527, 532-533.
39. But "the real evil is not the payment of money, but the secrecy attending it": Chitty LJ in the leading case of Shipway v Broadwood [1899] 1 QB 369, 373. Is there a half-way house between the situation where there has been sufficient disclosure to negate secrecy, but nevertheless the principal's informed consent has not been obtained? Logically I can see no objection to this. Where there has only been partial or inadequate disclosure but it is sufficient to negate secrecy, it would be unfair to visit the agent and any third party involved with a finding of fraud and the other consequences to which I have referred, or, conversely, to acquit them altogether for their involvement in what would still be breach of fiduciary duty unless informed consent had been obtained. There is no authority which sheds any light on this question."
"…the only disclosure made to the defendants was by means of the claimant's document which the defendants signed. The broker's letter said nothing about any disclosure which he had made; nor did Mr Fellows suggest that anything else had been disclosed by anyone. By signing the document the defendants must be taken to have understood what it said but no more. Quite apart from this, the passage from Bowstead & Reynolds on Agency which I have cited in para 35 says that it is for the agent to establish that sufficient disclosure has been made. Here the claimant knew that the broker was the defendants' agent and so it had to show that it paid commission to him in circumstances where its borrowers had given their informed consent to such a payment. That was obviously the purpose of the document the defendants were asked to sign. The question is whether it achieved that purpose.
43. Did it negate secrecy? I think it did. If you tell someone that something may happen, and it does, I do not think that the person you told can claim that what happened was a secret. The secret was out when he was told it might happen. This was the recorder's view and I agree with him.
44. Was the defendants' informed consent obtained? I do not think it was. The passage which I have quoted was muddled although, read carefully, for the reasons given by Mr Seymour, it may not in fact have been ambiguous. But it could and should have been clearer and informed the defendants that a commission was to be paid and its amount and done so in terms which made it clear that the defendants were being asked to consent to this. I also think this statement should have been accompanied by the warning recommended by the Office of Fair Trading to the effect that its payment to the broker might mean that he had not been in a position to give unbiased advice.
45. So for these reasons I do not accept either party's submissions about the disclosure. This is a half-way house case. The claimant did not pay the broker a secret commission but procured the broker's breach of fiduciary duty by failing to obtain the defendants' informed consent to the broker acting in the way he did.
46. This conclusion means that the defendants are not entitled to deploy the full armoury of remedies which would have been available if this had been a true secret commission case."
"41. In that regard one critical factor is the nature of the borrowers. This was not "non-status" lending as defined by the Office of Fair Trading in its Guidelines for lenders and brokers, OFT 192 revised November 1997. Non-Status borrowers are there defined as those with impaired or low credit ratings who would find it difficult generally to obtain finance from traditional sources on normal terms and conditions. The Claimants did not fall into that category. They were not however financial sophisticates. They were people of relatively modest means with a history of credit problems. They were vulnerable, in that they had debt which was for them substantial in respect of which they needed assistance in finding a loan to ease the burden of servicing that debt and to put them a position where they could carry out an improvement to their home."
"A fiduciary is someone who has undertaken to act for or on behalf of another in a particular matter in circumstances which give rise to a relationship of trust and confidence. The distinguishing obligation of a fiduciary is the obligation of loyalty. The principal is entitled to the single-minded loyalty of his fiduciary. This core liability has several facets. A fiduciary must act in good faith; he must not make a profit out of his trust; he must not place himself in a position where his duty and his interest may conflict; he may not act for his own benefit or the benefit of a third person without the informed consent of his principal. This is not intended to be an exhaustive list, but it is sufficient to indicate the nature of fiduciary obligations. They are the defining characteristics of the fiduciary. As Dr Finn pointed out in his classic work Fiduciary Obligations (1977) p 2, he is not subject to fiduciary obligations because he is a fiduciary; it is because he is subject to them that he is a fiduciary."
But this statement of principle does not absolve the court from deciding the scope of the fiduciary's obligations. If, in fact, the agent has, in the light of the facts of the case, no obligation to disclose the actual amount of commission he is paid when his principal knows he is being paid by the third party to the transaction, it does not advance the matter to say that, because he is a fiduciary, he must disclose the actual amount he is being paid. It is the scope of the agent's obligation that is important, not the fact that he may correctly be called a fiduciary. As Lord Wilberforce said in New Zealand Netherlands Society 'Oranje' Inc v Kuys [1973] 1 WLR 1126, 1130 A:-
"the precise scope of [the duty] must be moulded according to the nature of the relationship."
See also Hospital Products Ltd v United States Surgical Corporation (1984) 156 CLR 41, 102 per Mason J:-
"… it is now acknowledged generally the scope of the fiduciary duty must be moulded according to the nature of the relationship."
Public Policy
Conclusion
Lord Justice Peter Jackson:
Lady Justice Asplin:
UPON hearing junior counsel for the Appellant and leading counsel for the Respondent;
AND UPON reading the documents in the Appeal Bundle;
AND UPON the Court handing down its judgment on the Appellant's appeal;
IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that:
(a) Paragraph 1 is varied to read "Judgment is to be entered for the Claimant on liability. There is to be an assessment of the damages due to the Claimant from the Defendant in respect of that liability with regard to the trading undertaken with the Defendant by the clients numbered 1-16, 17, 19, 20 and 22 in the Appendix to the Agreed List of Issues and an order for the payment to the Claimant of the damages found due on such assessment".
(b) Paragraph 4 is varied to read "The Defendant is to pay 75% of the Claimant's costs of the liability proceedings assessed on the standard basis in a detailed assessment, if not agreed. Such assessment may proceed forthwith if no agreement is reached by 4 pm on 26th April 2019
(c) Paragraph 5 is to be set aside.
Dated: 6 February 2019