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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Irvine & Ors v Irvine & Anor [2006] EWHC 583 (Ch) (23 March 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2006/583.html Cite as: [2006] EWHC 583 (Ch), [2006] 4 All ER 102 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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(1) PATRICIA MARY IRVINE (2) MICHAEL CLEOBURY THATCHER AND PATRICIA MARY IRVINE AS TRUSTEES OF THE ACCUMULATION AND MAINTENANCE SETTLEMENT DATED 6 AUGUST 1993 |
Petitioners |
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- and - |
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(1) IAN CHARLES IRVINE (2) CAMPBELL IRVINE (HOLDINGS) LIMITED (No 2) |
Respondents |
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Nigel Dougherty (instructed by Charles Russell LLP) for the respondents
Hearing date: 16 March 2006
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Blackburne :
"In the case of the shareholder who acquires shares from another at a price which is discounted because they represent a minority it is to my mind self-evident that there cannot be any universal or even a general rule that he should be bought out under section 75 on a more favourable basis, even in a case where his predecessor has been a quasi-partner in a quasi-partnership. He might himself have acquired the shares purely for investment and played no part in the affairs of the company. In that event it might well be fair - I do not know - that he should be bought out on the same basis as he himself had bought, even though his interests had been unfairly prejudiced in the meantime. A fortiori, there could be no universal or even a general rule in a case where the company had never been a quasi-partnership in the first place.
In summary, there is in my judgment no rule of universal application. On the other hand, there is a general rule in a case where the company is at the material time a quasi-partnership and the purchase order is made in respect of the shares of a quasi-partner … It seems clear to me that … that is [namely, a valuation on a non-discounted basis], in general, the fair basis of valuation in a quasi-partnership case, and that it should be applied in this case unless the respondents have established that the petitioners acted in such a way as to deserve their exclusion from the company."
"Shares are generally ordered to be purchased on the basis of their valuation on a non-discounted basis where the party against whom the order is made has acted in breach of the obligation of good faith applicable to the parties' relationship by analogy with partnership law, that is to say where a "quasipartnership" relationship has been found to exist. It is difficult to conceive of circumstances in which a non-discounted basis of valuation would be appropriate where there was unfair prejudice for the purposes of the 1985 Act but such a relationship did not exist. However, on this appeal I need not express a final view on what those circumstances might be."
"The rationale for denying a discount to reflect the fact that the holding in question is a minority holding lies in the analogy between a quasi-partnership company and a true partnership. On the dissolution of a partnership, the ordinary course is for the court to direct a sale of the partnership business as a going concern with liberty for any of the former partners who wish to bid for the business to do so. But the court has power to ascertain the value of a former partner's interests without a sale if it can be done by valuation, and frequently does so where his interest is relatively small: see Syers v Syers (1876) 1 App Cas 174. But the valuation is not based on a notional sale of the outgoing partner's share to the continuing partners who, being the only possible purchasers, would offer relatively little. It is based on a notional sale of the business as a whole to an outside purchaser.
In the case of a company possessing the relevant characteristics, the majority can exclude the minority only if they offer to pay them a fair price for their shares. In order to be free to manage the company's business without regard to the relationship of trust and confidence which formerly existed between them, they must buy the whole, part from themselves and part from the minority, thereby achieving the same freedom to manage the business as an outside purchaser would enjoy."