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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> ED & F Man Capital Markets Ltd v Come Harvest Holdings Lts & Ors [2022] EWCA Civ 1704 (21 December 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2022/1704.html Cite as: [2022] EWCA Civ 1704 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Mr Justice Calver
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE POPPLEWELL
and
LORD JUSTICE NUGEE
____________________
E D & F MAN CAPITAL MARKETS LIMITED |
Respondent/Claimant |
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- and - |
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1) COME HARVEST HOLDINGS LIMITED 2) MEGA WEALTH INTERNATIONAL TRADING LIMITED 3) STEVEN KAI SHING KAO 4) GENESIS RESOURCES INC. 5) GENESIS PROPERTIES HOLDING LLC 6) GENESIS KINGHWA LLC 7) TRANSCENDENT GLOBAL FINANCE INC. 8) TRANSCENDENT (SG) PTE LTD 9) SAMPO INTERNATIONAL LTD 10) STRAITS (SINGAPORE) PTE LTD -and- WAI KWOK WONG |
Defendants Appellant Third Party |
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Huw Davies KC & Katherine Ratcliffe (instructed by Clyde & Co LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 13 & 14 December 2022
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Males:
Warehouse receipts and metal trading
The facts in outline
MCM's claims
The Settlement Agreement between MCM and ANZ
The rival cases on damages
"In sum, in my judgment the following principles apply in assessing the damages payable where the plaintiff has been induced by a fraudulent misrepresentation to buy property:
(1) The defendant is bound to make reparation for all the damage directly flowing from the transaction;
(2) Although such damage need not have been foreseeable, it must have been directly caused by the transaction;
(3) In assessing such damage, the plaintiff is entitled to recover by way of damages the full price paid by him, but he must give credit for any benefits which he has received as a result of the transaction;
(4) As a general rule, the benefits received by him include the market value of the property acquired as at the date of acquisition; but such general rule is not to be inflexibly applied where to do so would prevent him obtaining full compensation for the wrong suffered;
(5) Although the circumstances in which the general rule should not apply cannot be comprehensively stated, it will normally not apply where either (a) the misrepresentation has continued to operate after the date of the acquisition of the asset so as to induce the plaintiff to retain the asset or (b) the circumstances of the case are such that the plaintiff is, by reason of the fraud, locked into the property.
(6) In addition, the plaintiff is entitled to recover consequential losses caused by the transaction;
(7) The plaintiff must take all reasonable steps to mitigate his loss once he has discovered the fraud."
"561. Two distinct models of the 'transaction' were advanced by the parties as follows:
i) Model A (MCM's conceptualisation): MCM entered into optional repo contracts for the sale and purchase of nickel (WHRs) with Come Harvest and Mega Wealth (the MCM-CH/MW Transactions). Come Harvest and Mega Wealth had an option under the same contracts to repurchase the nickel at a fixed price by a set date.
At the same time, MCM entered into optional repo contracts with ANZ (the MCM-ANZ Transactions). MCM were the sellers to ANZ who were buyers of the nickel with an option for MCM to buy back the equivalent stock by a future date at a fixed price. That option would be exercised by MCM only if the option to repurchase was exercised by Come Harvest and Mega Wealth.
ii) Model B (Straits' conceptualisation): Straits notes that the (i) MCM-CH/MW Transactions and the (ii) MCM-ANZ Transactions were structured so that MCM received the WHRs from Come Harvest and Mega Wealth and would then pass them on to ANZ. Only once the WHRs were with ANZ, would ANZ pay MCM who would then in turn pay Come Harvest and Mega Wealth. Given title to the metal only passed on payment at no point did MCM hold the metal with title to it – it therefore effectively functioned as no more than a conduit for the transaction. In Straits' words, MCM was never 'out of pocket' during the transactions. Straits therefore asserts that the MCM-ANZ Transactions were interlinked with the MCM-CH/MW Transactions and that it is therefore inaccurate to consider them as discrete sets of transactions; rather, they should be viewed as coordinated parts of one broader finance transaction."
The judgment
"38. … the basic measure of damages is the price paid less the benefits received as a result of the transaction which will, in a case where property is acquired, be or include its value at the date of acquisition …"
Submissions on appeal
Analysis
Legal principles
"There is in truth only one legal measure of assessing damages in an action for deceit: the plaintiff is entitled to recover as damages a sum representing the financial loss flowing directly from his alteration of position under the inducement of the fraudulent representations of the defendants."
"The logic of the decision in Doyle v Olby (Ironmongers) Ltd [1969] 2 QB 158 justifies the following propositions.
(1) The plaintiff in an action for deceit is not entitled to be compensated in accordance with the contractual nature of damage, i.e. the benefit of the bargain measure. He is not entitled to be protected in respect of his positive interest in the bargain.
(2) The plaintiff in an action for deceit is, however, entitled to be compensated in respect of his negative interest. The aim is to put the plaintiff into the position he would have been in if no false representation had been made.
(3) The practical difference between the two measures was lucidly explained in a contemporary case note on Doyle v Olby (Ironmongers) Ltd: G.H. Treitel, 'Damages for Deceit' (1969) 32 MLR 556, 558-559. The author said:
'If the plaintiff's bargain would have been a bad one, even on the assumption that the representation was true, he will do best under the tortious measure. If, on the assumption that the representation was true, his bargain would have been a good one, he will do best under the first contractual measure (under which he may recover something even if the actual value of what he has recovered is greater than the price)'."
"38. As is apparent from that summary the basic measure of damages is the price paid less the benefits received as a result of the transaction which will, in a case where property is acquired, be or include its value at the date of acquisition – which, for present purposes was, by agreement, taken as the bill of lading date.
39. In my view there is, in this case, no sufficient reason to take a different date and good reason not to do so. The purpose of the flexibility of approach about the valuation date to which Lord Browne-Wilkinson referred was to ensure that the person duped should not suffer an injustice by failing to recover full compensation in the type of circumstances to which he referred. There is no need to adopt such an approach in order to relieve the fraudster from the general rule as to damages, especially if to do so means that the person defrauded ends up paying more than the cargo was worth at the time that he bought it. This is particularly so in the light of the observations of Lord Blackburn in Livingston v Rawyards Coal Co [1880] 5 App.Cas 25 at 39 that when damage is done maliciously or with full knowledge that the person doing it was doing wrong 'you would say everything would be taken into view that would go most against the wilful wrongdoer'.
40. The crude oil the subject of these proceedings was a commodity bought in the oil trading market. That does not mean that there was a regular market for the sale of the 32 different bespoke blends with a ready supply of buyers and sellers. On the contrary these cargoes were unique and had to be valued by a calculation of the total CIF value of the component crudes discounted on account of the risks and uncertainties involved in buying these odd cargoes which were a mixture of crude oils, condensates and fuel oil. The amount by which the price paid exceeded a price calculated on that basis constitutes the measure of the buyer's loss, representing, as it does, the amount that he has overpaid on account of the seller's deceit. That loss arose when on account of the deceit he acquired the property, for which he had to overpay. The fact, if such it be, that, afterwards, none of the risks to which the discount related materialised cannot alter the fact that the buyer was induced to pay too much when he did so."
"11. The general rule is that loss which has been avoided is not recoverable as damages, although expense reasonably incurred in avoiding it may be recoverable as costs of mitigation. To this there is an exception for collateral payments (res inter alios acta), which the law treats as not making good the claimant's loss. It is difficult to identify a single principle underlying every case. In spite of what the latin tag might lead one to expect, the critical factor is not the source of the benefit in a third party but its character. Broadly speaking, collateral benefits are those whose receipt arose independently of the circumstances giving rise to the loss. Thus a gift received by the claimant, even if occasioned by his loss, is regarded as independent of the loss because its gratuitous character means that there is no causal relationship between them. The same is true of a benefit received by right from a third party in respect of the loss, but for which the claimant has given a consideration independent of the legal relationship with the defendant from which the loss arose. Classic cases include loss payments under an indemnity insurance: Bradburn v Great Western Railway Co (1874-5) LR 10 Ex 1. Or disability pensions under a contributory scheme: Parry v Cleaver [1970] AC 1. In cases such as these, as between the claimant and the wrongdoer, the law treats the receipt of the benefit as tantamount to the claimant making good the loss from his own resources, because they are attributable to his premiums, his contributions or his work. The position may be different if the benefits are not collateral because they are derived from a contract (say, an insurance policy) made for the benefit of the wrongdoer: Arab Bank Plc v John D Wood Commercial Ltd [2000] 1 WLR 857 (CA), at paras 92-93 (Mance LJ). Or because the benefit is derived from steps taken by the Claimant in consequence of the breach, which mitigated his loss: British Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing Co Ltd v Underground Electric Railways Ltd [1912] AC 673, 689, 691 (Viscount Haldane LC). These principles represent a coherent approach to avoided loss. In Parry v Cleaver [1970] AC 1, 13, Lord Reid derived them from considerations of 'justice, reasonableness and public policy'. Justice, reasonableness and public policy are, however, the basis on which the law has arrived at the relevant principles. They are not a licence for discarding those principles and deciding each case on what may be regarded as its broader commercial merits.
12. On the judge's findings, the loss recoverable by Swynson from HMT was that which arose from its inability to recover (i) the 2006 loan which it had made to EMSL on the strength of HMT's reports about Evo's financial strength, and (ii) the 2007 and 2008 loans which it made in a reasonable but unsuccessful attempt to mitigate the loss arising from the 2006 loan. So far as the 2006 and 2007 loans were concerned, that loss was made good when EMSL repaid them. The fact that the money with which it did so was borrowed from Mr Hunt was no more relevant than it would have been if it had been borrowed from a bank or obtained from some other unconnected third party. There was nothing special about the fact that Mr Hunt provided the funds, once one discards the idea that HMT owed any relevant duty to him. The short point is that the repayment of the 2006 and 2007 loans cannot be treated as discharging them as between Swynson and EMSL, but not as between Swynson and HMT.
13. If, in December 2008, Mr Hunt had lent the money to Swynson to strengthen its financial position in the light of EMSL's default, the payment would indeed have had no effect on the damages recoverable from HMT. The payment would not have discharged EMSL's debt. It would also have been collateral. But the payments made by Mr Hunt to EMSL and by EMSL to Swynson to pay off the 2006 and 2007 loans could not possibly be regarded as collateral. In the first place, the transaction discharged the very liability whose existence represented Swynson's loss. Secondly, the money which Mr Hunt lent to EMSL in December 2008 was not an indirect payment to Swynson, even though it ultimately reached them, as the terms of the loan required. Mr Hunt's agreement to make that loan and the earlier agreements of Swynson to lend money to EMSL were distinct transactions between different parties, each of which was made for valuable consideration in the form of the respective covenants to repay. Thirdly, as the Court of Appeal correctly held, the consequences of the refinancing could not be recoverable as the cost of mitigation, because the loan to EMSL was not an act of Swynson and was not attributable to HMT's breach of duty."
"215. We are not concerned in these appeals with additional benefits resulting from a victim's response to a wrong which was an independent commercial decision or with any allegation of a failure to take reasonable commercial steps in response to a loss. The issue of mitigation which arises is whether in fact the merchants have avoided all or part of their losses. In the classic case of British Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing Co Ltd v Underground Electric Railways Co of London Ltd [1912] AC 673, 689 Viscount Haldane described the principle that the claimant cannot recover for avoided loss in these terms: 'when in the course of his business [the claimant] has taken action arising out of the transaction, which action has diminished his loss, the effect in actual diminution of the loss he has suffered may be taken into account …' (emphasis added) Here also a question of legal or proximate causation arises as the underlined words show. But the question of legal causation is straightforward in the context of a retail business in which the merchant seeks to recover its costs in its annual or other regular budgeting. The relevant question is a factual question: has the claimant in the course of its business recovered from others the costs of the MSC, including the overcharge contained therein? The merchants, having acted reasonably, are entitled to recover their factual loss. If the court were to conclude on the evidence that the merchant had by reducing the cost of its supplies or by the pass-on of the cost to its customers (options (iii) and (iv) in para 205 above) transferred all or part of its loss to others, its true loss would not be the prima facie measure of the overcharge but a lesser sum."
Identifying the transaction
The benefits received as a result of the transaction
Was the loss avoided by the Settlement Agreement?
"9.1 Collective interest
It is in the collective interest of the Parties to maximise the recovery of money in respect of the Relevant Loss from litigation recoveries which to the extent received will constitute Recoveries, and the Party shall act accordingly. To the extent permitted by law and the extent that documents are subject to common interest privilege, the Parties shall cooperate with each other and shall provide all necessary documents and information as the Parties may reasonably request from each other in order to be able to pursue the ANZ Litigation Recoveries and the MCM Litigation Recoveries (as defined below)."
"Recovery against Third Parties by MCM
10.1 Recovery
MCM will use best endeavours to pursue recovery of the Relevant Loss, including but not limited to recovery from the following:
(a) Come Harvest;
(b) Mega Wealth; and
(c) the directors, employees, agents and ultimate beneficial owners of the persons referred to in Clauses 10.1(a) and 10.1(b),
(the MCM Litigation Recoveries).
10.2 Action
The actions to be taken by MCM will include but not be limited to direct claims for money against the above referenced entities. The obligation to bring proceedings is subject to obtaining legal advice that the intended proceedings have good prospects of success on the balance of probabilities. …"
"32. … In the present case the act of mitigation of the alleged breach by PJ Pipe was the replacement of the pipes. That was all done by March 1998. The later settlement agreement was not an attempt at mitigation; it was merely a reformulation of the relations between Mobil and Fluor and, once the compromise of Fluor's TIC claim is excluded, it could well be referred to – as my Lord, Lord Justice Aldous, did in the course of argument – as being simply a reorganisation of the terms upon which those two parties were (or were not) going to conduct litigation against PJ Pipe."
The EDFM point
Conclusion:
Lord Justice Popplewell:
Lord Justice Nugee:
Note 1 I am indebted to my Judicial Assistant, Eloise Hewson, for drawing my attention to this case. [Back]