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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Courtwood Holdings S.A. v Woodley Properties Ltd & Ors [2016] EWHC 1168 (Ch) (18 May 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2016/1168.html Cite as: [2016] EWHC 1168 (Ch) |
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Case No: HC-2015-002636 |
CHANCERY DIVISION
Rolls Building Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
COURTWOOD HOLDINGS S.A. (a company registered and incorporated under the laws of Panama) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) WOODLEY PROPERTIES LIMITED (a company registered and incorporated under the laws of Jersey) (2) DOUGLAS MAGGS (3) THE HONOURABLE CHARLES GEORGE YULE BALFOUR (4) THE RIGHT HONOURABLE DAVID MELLOR (5) SVEA BALFOUR (6) WHARF LAND INVESTMENTS LIMITED (IN ADMINISTRATION) (7) NIGHT RHYTHM LIMITED (a company registered and incorporated under the laws of Gibraltar) (8) TAMADOT CAPITAL SA (a company registered and incorporated under the laws of Nevis) (9) KINGFISHER HOLDINGS LIMITED (a company registered and incorporated under the laws of Nevis) (10) WOODCOCK LIMITED (11) CHARLESTON MANAGEMENT LIMITED (a company registered and incorporated under the laws of Nevis) (12) CHATEAU MANAGEMENT LIMITED (a company registered and incorporated under the laws of Nevis) |
Defendants |
____________________
Brie Stevens-Hoare QC and Harriet Ter-Berg (instructed by CMS Cameron McKenna LLP)
for D1, D4, D8, D11 and D12
Thomas Robinson (instructed by Isadore Goldman) for D5 and D10
Hearing dates: 19th, 20th and 21st April 2016
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Asplin :
Background
"63.7 According to Mr Maggs' evidence given in his s 236 examination:
63.7.1 Mr Mellor was not a "silent partner" in WLIL and Mr Balfour was the finance person in regular contact with investors;
63.7.2 the directors of WLIL (Mr Maggs, Mr Balfour and Mr Mellor) generally had two round table meetings a week;
63.7.3 Mr Mellor kept abreast of everything concerning WLIL;
63.7.4 WDL, which submitted the planning application in respect of Sandford Farm, was owned equally by Mr Maggs, Mr Balfour and Mr Mellor;
63.7.5 Mr Mellor introduced ANTS in 2007 as the refinancer of SFPL's facility and Mr Balfour probably assisted in formalising the refinancing with ANTS;
63.7.6 Mr Mellor and Mr Balfour were probably involved in attempts to refinance the project in 2009;
63.7.7 Mr Balfour, Mr Mellor and Mr Maggs discussed what remedies would be available to WLIL in 2009. The Claimant infers that all three gentlemen were party to the decision to issue and present a winding up petition against SFPL.
63.7.8 Mr Mellor was actively involved in taking WPL forwards and obtaining funding for it."
Relevant Principles
"The principles
20. It is important to keep in mind the principles to be applied in deciding whether a case is suitable for disposal on a summary basis. The most authoritative up-to-date statement is that of Lord Hope in Three Rivers DC v Bank of England (No 3) [2001] 2 All ER 513:
"In other cases it may be possible to say with confidence before trial that the factual basis for the claim is fanciful because it is entirely without substance. It may be clear beyond question that the statement of facts is contradicted by all the documents or other material on which it is based. The simpler the case the easier it is likely to be to take that view and resort to what is properly called summary judgment. But more complex cases are unlikely to be capable of being resolved in that way without conducting a mini-trial on the documents, without discovery and without oral evidence. As Lord Woolf said in Swain v Hillman, [2001] 1 All ER 91, at p. 95 that is not the object of the rule. It is designed to deal with cases that are not fit for trial at all."
21. Another frequently cited passage on the same theme is the judgment of Colman J in De Molestina v Ponton [2002] 1 Lloyd's Rep 271, 280 para 3.5, speaking of the difficulty of basing summary judgment on inferences of fact in a complex case:
"…, as Three Rivers District Council shows, where the application in such complex cases relies on inferences of fact, the overriding objective may well require the claim to go to trial in the interest of a fair trial. That is because the relevant inference could not be safely drawn without further discovery and oral evidence at the trial. It is thus necessary, where such inferences are relevant, to guard against the temptation of drawing them as a matter of probability, because the achievement of the over-riding object requires a much higher degree of certitude. Where in a complex case, as may often be the situation, the frontier between what is merely improbable and what is clearly fanciful is blurred, the case or issue should be left to trial.""
Is there a serious issue to be tried/does the statement of case disclose no reasonable grounds for bringing or defending the claim or is it an abuse of the court's process/is there no real prospect of succeeding on the claim?
(1) Fiduciary duty?
"48 On 8 November 2005 SFPL and WLIL entered into the PAA in respect of Sandford Farm. Under the terms of the PAA:
48.1 SFPL appointed WLIL to provide property advisory and supervisory services more particularly set out in Schedule 1 to the PAA for the term of the PAA, and WLIL accepted such appointment (clause 1). The services included making recommendations to appoint agents; applying for planning permission, assisting SFPL in a disposition or refinancing of Sandford Farm or part thereof and advising as to investment trends and market research which might affect SFPL's objectives and policies from time to time.
48.2 WLIL agreed that it would:
48.2.1 "provide the Services with due skill and care in accordance with the principles of good estate management, so as to promote [SFPL's] best interests and maximise the returns to [SFPL]" (clause 3.4(a)(i));
48.2.2 "use all reasonable endeavours to protect the interest of [SFPL] in relation to [Sandford Farm] within the context of the Services that [WLIL] is contracted to provide; (clause 3.4(b));
48.2.3 "act in good faith towards [SFPL] and take all reasonable steps to avoid conflicts of interest" (clause 3.4(d)).
48.3 SFPL was to pay WLIL a fee consisting of:
48.3.1 the amount payable to shareholders in SFPL by way of fees dividend or otherwise out of Phase 1 Profits sufficient to provide repayment to the shareholders in SFPL of all loans and capital invested by them in SFPL with an internal rate of return of 24%; and
48.3.2 50% of Phase 1 Profits after payment of the sum calculated under paragraph 48.3.1 above (clause 8.3).
48.4 Phase 1 Profits were defined as the gross amounts sum received by SFPL upon any disposition, refinancing or equivalent of the part of Sandford Farm that was subject to a planning application provided for in an appraisal agreed between SFPL and WLIL every six months, less:
48.4.1 amounts payable to a bank or lender in respect of a loan or finance to purchase of Sandford Farm including principal interest fees and costs;
48.4.2 costs of acquisition and disposal of Sandford Farm; and
48.4.3 SFPL's Operating Costs (as defined in the PAA); all of 48.4.1 to 48.4.3 excluding WLIL's fee under the PAA (clause 8.3).
The Claimant will refer to the PAA at trial herein for its full terms, meaning and effect.
49 On its true construction, and in particular by reason of:
49.1 its express obligation to act in good faith towards SFPL;
49.2 its express obligation to promote SFPL's bests interests;
49.3 its express obligation to maximise the returns to SFPL;
49.4 its express obligation to use all reasonable endeavours to protect the interests of SFPL in relation to Sandford Farm;
49.5 its express obligation to take all reasonable steps to avoid conflicts of interest;
49.6 its role in providing services to SFPL which fell within WLIL's specialist areas of expertise, and in particular planning permission upon which the investment hinged, in circumstances where SFPL had professional directors situated in Jersey with no knowledge of Sandford Farm or the planning considerations associated with it;
49.7 its express obligations to assist SFPL in a disposition or refinancing of Sandford Farm;
49.8 its role in dealing directly with SFPL's bankers; and
49.9 its express right to a fee in, and only in the circumstances prescribed in the PAA (i.e. upon disposition or refinancing of Sandford Farm),
WLIL was subject to an obligation to SFPL of loyalty, properly characterised as a fiduciary obligation to SFPL to act in SFPL's interest to the exclusion of all others, including itself, in relation to WLIL's provision of services and the refinancing and disposition of Sandford Farm.
...
51 WLIL was accordingly under a duty to SFPL not to:
51.1 make an unauthorized profit from its position; or
51.2 place itself in a position where its interests conflicted with its duties to SFPL."
"Breach of fiduciary duty
Despite the warning given by Fletcher Moulton L.J. in In re Coomber; Coomber v. Coomber [1911] 1 Ch 723, 728, this branch of the law has been bedevilled by unthinking resort to verbal formulae. It is therefore necessary to begin by defining one's terms. The expression "fiduciary duty" is properly confined to those duties which are peculiar to fiduciaries and the breach of which attracts legal consequences differing from those consequent upon the breach of other duties. Unless the expression is so limited it is lacking in practical utility. In this sense it is obvious that not every breach of duty by a fiduciary is a breach of fiduciary duty. I would endorse the observations of Southin J. in Girardet v. Crease & Co. (1987) 11 B.C.L.R. (2d) 361, 362:
"The word 'fiduciary' is flung around now as if it applied to all breaches of duty by solicitors, directors of companies and so forth … That a lawyer can commit a breach of the special duty [of a fiduciary] … by entering into a contract with the client without full disclosure … and so forth is clear. But to say that simple carelessness in giving advice is such a breach is a perversion of words."
These remarks were approved by La Forest J. in LAC Minerals Ltd. v. International Corona Resources Ltd. (1989) 61 D.L.R. (4th) 14, 28 where he said: "not every legal claim arising out of a relationship with fiduciary incidents will give rise to a claim for breach of fiduciary duty."
It is similarly inappropriate to apply the expression to the obligation of a trustee or other fiduciary to use proper skill and care in the discharge of his duties. If it is confined to cases where the fiduciary nature of the duty has special legal consequences, then the fact that the source of the duty is to be found in equity rather than the common law does not make it a fiduciary duty.
...
In my judgment this is not just a question of semantics. It goes to the very heart of the concept of breach of fiduciary duty and the availability of equitable remedies.
Although the remedy which equity makes available for breach of the equitable duty of skill and care is equitable compensation rather than damages, this is merely the product of history and in this context is in my opinion a distinction without a difference. Equitable compensation for breach of the duty of skill and care resembles common law damages in that it is awarded by way of compensation to the plaintiff for his loss. There is no reason in principle why the common law rules of causation, remoteness of damage and measure of damages should not be applied by analogy in such a case. It should not be confused with equitable compensation for breach of fiduciary duty, which may be awarded in lieu of rescission or specific restitution.
This leaves those duties which are special to fiduciaries and which attract those remedies which are peculiar to the equitable jurisdiction and are primarily restitutionary or restorative rather than compensatory. 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."
"In the view of the Board the resolution of this case depends upon two fundamental propositions: first, agency is a contract made between principal and agent; second, like every other contract, the rights and duties of the principal and agent are dependent upon the terms of the contract between them, whether express or implied. It is not possible to say that all agents owe the same duties to their principals: it is always necessary to have regard to the express or implied terms of the contract. This fact is fully recognised in the introduction to chapter 5 of Bowstead on Agency, pp. 137-138: the rest of the chapter, including the proposition on which the judge relied, is dealing with the duties which will arise from the terms normally found in a contract of agency.
In a case where a principal instructs as selling agent for his property or goods a person who to his knowledge acts and intends to act for other principals selling property or goods of the same description, the terms to be implied into such agency contract must differ from those to be implied where an agent is not carrying on such general agency business. In the case of estate agents, it is their business to act for numerous principals: where properties are of a similar description, there will be a conflict of interest between the principals each of whom will be concerned to attract potential purchasers to their property rather than that of another. Yet, despite this conflict of interest, estate agents must be free to act for several competing principals otherwise they will be unable to perform their function. Yet it is normally said that it is a breach of an agent's duty to act for competing principals. In the course of acting for each of their principals, estate agents will acquire information confidential to that principal. It cannot be sensibly suggested that an estate agent is contractually bound to disclose to any one of his principals information which is confidential to another of his principals. The position as to confidentiality is even clearer in the case of stockbrokers who cannot be contractually bound to disclose to their private clients inside information disclosed to the brokers in confidence by a company for which they also act. Accordingly in such cases there must be an implied term of the contract with such an agent that he is entitled to act for other principals selling competing properties and to keep confidential the information obtained from each of his principals.
Similar considerations apply to the fiduciary duties of agents. The existence and scope of these duties depends upon the terms on which they are acting. In New Zealand Netherlands Society "Oranie" Inc. v. Kuys [1973] 1 WLR 1126 , 1129-1130, Lord Wilberforce, in giving the judgment of this Board, said:
"The obligation not to profit from a position of trust, or, as it is sometimes relevant to put it, not to allow a conflict to arise between duty and interest, is one of strictness. The strength, and indeed the severity, of the rule has recently been emphasised by the House of Lords: Phipps v. Boardman [1967] 2 AC 46. It retains its vigour in all jurisdictions where the principles of equity are applied. Naturally it has different applications in different contexts. It applies, in principle, whether the case is one of a trust, express or implied, of partnership, of directorship of a limited company, of principal and agent, or master and servant, but the precise scope of it must be moulded according to the nature of the relationship. As Lord Upjohn said in Phipps v. Boardman, at p. 123: 'Rules of equity have to be applied to such a great diversity of circumstances that *215 they can be stated only in the most general terms and applied with particular attention to the exact circumstances of each case."
In Hospital Products Ltd. v. United States Surgical Corporation (1984) 156 CLR 41, 97, Mason J. in the High Court of Australia said:
"That contractual and fiduciary relationships may co-exist between the same parties has never been doubted. Indeed, the existence of a basic contractual relationship has in many situations provided a foundation for the erection of a fiduciary relationship. In these situations it is the contractual foundation which is all important because it is the contract that regulates the basic rights and liabilities of the parties. The fiduciary relationship, if it is to exist at all, must accommodate itself to the terms of the contract so that it is consistent with, and conforms to, them. The fiduciary relationship cannot be superimposed upon the contract in such a way as to alter the operation which the contract was intended to have according to its true construction."
Thus, in the present case, the scope of the fiduciary duties owed by the defendants to the plaintiff (and in particular the alleged duty not to put themselves in a position where their duty and their interest conflicted) are to be defined by the terms of the contract of agency."
Applying those considerations to the present case, their Lordships are of the view that since the plaintiff was well aware that the defendants would be acting also for other vendors of comparable properties and in so doing would receive confidential information from those other vendors, the agency contract between the plaintiff and the defendants cannot have included either (a) a term requiring the defendants to disclose such confidential information to the plaintiff or (b) a term precluding the defendants acting for rival vendors or (c) a term precluding the defendants from seeking to earn commission on the sale of the property of a rival vendor."
"includes absolutely anything which would have affected the way in which the language of the document would have been understood by a reasonable man."
Conclusion:
(2) Receipt of SFPL's property
"… (whether as a consequence of the default notice or of our client's Petition) you have indicated to our client [Wharf] that you will be appointing an Administrator of the Company [SFPL]. As you know, our client, [Wharf] who has been responsible for conducting the dialogue with your bank for some years now welcomes that move and indeed, at the beginning of last week, met with you requesting you to appoint an Administrator. However, following a recent Shareholders dispute and Board Room shake up of the Company, [SFPL] . . . you felt you were unable to continue to deal with our client direct, as you felt our client [Wharf] now lacked locus standi.
Our client has certain serious and sensible proposals that it would wish to make to you or your Administrator (as appropriate) with the intention of procuring that you are paid in full…
…
My clients would hope to develop their proposals with you and/or your Administrator, part of such proposal being that they would have control of the site.
…it would be in your best interests to meet with our client at the earliest possible opportunity…"
"… Tracing is also distinct from claiming. It identifies the traceable proceeds of the claimant's property. It enables the claimant to substitute the traceable proceeds for the original asset as the subject matter of his claim. But it does not affect or establish his claim. That will depend on a number of factors including the nature of his interest in the original asset. He will normally be able to maintain the same claim to the substituted asset as he could have maintained to the original asset. …"
"88 Realisation of freehold mortgages.
(1) Where an estate in fee simple has been mortgaged by the creation of a term of years absolute limited thereout or by a charge by way of legal mortgage and the mortgagee sells under his statutory or express power of sale –
(a) the conveyance by him shall operate to vest in the purchaser the fee simple in the land conveyed subject to any legal mortgage having priority to the mortgage in right of which the sale is made and to any money thereby secured, and thereupon;
(b) the mortgage term or the charge by way of legal mortgage and any subsequent mortgage term or charges shall merge or be extinguished as respects the land conveyed;
and such conveyance may, as respects the fee simple, be made in the name of the estate owner in whom it is vested."
…
101 Powers incident to estate or interest of mortgagee.
(1) A mortgagee, where the mortgage is made by deed, shall, by virtue of this Act, have the following powers, to the like extent as if they had been in terms conferred by the mortgage deed, but not further (namely):
(i) A power, when the mortgage money has become due, to sell, or to concur with any other person in selling, the mortgaged property or any part thereof, either subject to prior charges or not, and either together or in lots, by public auction or by private contract, subject to such conditions respecting title, or evidence of title, or other matter, as the mortgagee thinks fit, with power to vary any contract for sale, and to buy in at an auction, or to rescind any contract for sale, and to re-sell, without being answerable for any loss occasioned thereby: ..."
…
104 Conveyance on sale.
(1) A mortgagee exercising the power of sale conferred by this Act shall have power, by deed, to convey the property sold, for such estate and interest therein as he is by this Act authorised to sell or convey or may be the subject of the mortgage, freed from all estates, interests, and rights to which the mortgage has priority but subject to all estates, interests, and rights which have priority to the mortgage.
(2) Where a conveyance is made in exercise of the power of sale conferred by this Act, or any enactment replaced by this Act, the title of the purchaser shall not be impeachable on the ground -
(a) that no case had arisen to authorise the sale; or
(b) that due notice was not given; or
(c) where the mortgage is made after the commencement of this Act, that leave of the court, when so required, was not obtained; or
(d) whether the mortgage was made before or after such commencement, that the power was otherwise improperly or irregularly exercised;
and a purchaser is not, either before or on conveyance, concerned to see or inquire whether a case has arisen to authorise the sale, or due notice has been given, or the power is otherwise properly and regularly exercised; but any person damnified by an unauthorised, or improper, or irregular exercise of the power shall have his remedy in damages against the person exercising the power. …"
"25 The only effect of the conveyance is to put the legal estate entirely in the purchaser: that follows from section 104, subsection (1), of the Law of Property Act 1925, which provides that a mortgagee shall have power to convey the legal estate; and the whole legal estate can be conveyed free from all estates, interests, and rights to which the mortgage has priority. Section 104, subsection (2), upon which also counsel for the plaintiff relied, does not seem to me to affect the question at all. Its purpose is simply to protect the purchaser and to make it unnecessary for him, pending completion and during investigation of title, to ascertain whether the power of sale has become exercisable. Of course, if the purchaser becomes aware, during that period, of any facts showing that the power of sale is not exercisable, or that there is some impropriety in the sale, then, in my judgment, he gets no good title on taking the conveyance. The result in the present case is, in my judgment, that the sale effected by the contract, assuming, for the moment, that there is no objection to it on any other ground, binds the plaintiff, and that it is too late after the sale for him to tender the mortgage money and become entitled to have the property reconveyed to him."
I was also referred to [26] and [27] of Pumfrey J's judgment:
26 It would seem to follow from this that a completed sale by a mortgagee is not liable to be set aside merely because it takes place at an undervalue. Impropriety is a prerequisite, and section 104(2) makes it clear that the purchaser is not protected if he has actual knowledge of the impropriety. But if the purchaser has no notice of the impropriety, then on the face of it he takes free. Thus, the completed sale by a mortgagee pursuant to his statutory power is vulnerable only if the purchaser has knowledge of, or participates in, an impropriety in the exercise of the power.
27 In Property and Bloodstock Ltd v Emerton [1968] Ch 94, 114 Danckwerts LJ summarised the position as follows:
"The actual decision of Crossman J in Lord Waring's case was: (1) that a mortgagee's exercise of his power under section 101(1)(i) of the 1925 Act to sell the mortgaged property by public auction or private contract is binding on the mortgagor before completion unless it is proved that he exercised it in bad faith; and (2) that the fact that a contract for sale was entered into at an undervalue is not by itself enough to prove bad faith.""
Conclusion:
(3) Knowledge for the purpose of knowing receipt
Conclusion:
(4) Abuse of Process
"71 In my judgment to hold that this fact makes the bringing of the 2005 action an abuse of process would be a substantial and unjustified extension of the law in this respect. It is not right, in my view, to say, as a general proposition of law, that where the claimant in existing proceedings comes to know, in the course of those proceedings, from information provided by the defendant, of an additional cause of action against the defendant, which is quite different from that asserted in his existing claim and one which it would not be reasonable, in the circumstances, to expect him to seek to combine with that existing claim, he must inform the defendant of the fact that he is contemplating bringing such a claim in future before he brings his existing proceedings to trial. Different facts might lead to a different conclusion. For example, it might be different if the information came from another source, so that the parties' knowledge of the facts was not the same. It might well be different if the claims were essentially similar (as in Johnson v Gore Wood & Co [2002] 2 AC 1) or closely related (as in the Aldi Stores Ltd case [2008] 1 WLR 748) so that they could readily have been combined. It might perhaps be different if the information had come to the claimant's knowledge at a much earlier stage than occurred here. But on the facts of this case I cannot, with respect, agree with the master or the judge that the claimant's failure to tell the defendants, before the trial of the 2000 action, that he was contemplating asserting the inducement claim made the bringing of the 2005 action an abuse of the process. The same goes, all the more strongly, for the misrepresentation claim, as to which the claimant did not know all the relevant facts at the time of the trial of the 2000 action.
…
77. Secondly, as the Aldi Stores Ltd case again makes clear and as Sir Anthony Clarke MR stresses, a claimant who keeps a second claim against the same defendant up his sleeve while prosecuting the first is at high risk of being held to have abused the court's process. Moreover, putting his cards on the table does not simply mean warning the defendant that another action is or may be in the pipeline. It means making it possible for the court to manage the issues so as to be fair to both sides.
…
86 In these circumstances, applying the principles identified by Thomas LJ in the Aldi Stores Ltd case [2008] 1 WLR 748 it is as I see it for us to consider afresh whether this action is an abuse of process. While I have ultimately reached the conclusion that, in all the circumstances, this action is not an abuse, I have found this issue more troubling than perhaps Lloyd LJ has done. In particular it seems to me that there are some aspects of the claimant's approach to the first action which were abusive, or at the very least would now be held to be abusive in the light of the guidance in the Aldi Stores Ltd case.
…
88 As Lloyd LJ says, at paras 15 and 16, the relevance of this aspect of the story to the first trial was not the effect of the statements on Mr Vardinoyannis but to enable Mr Linde to show that the claimant was a fantasist, whose evidence should not be believed. Once he had read the witness statement, the claimant knew enough to realise that he might have a claim for inducement of breach of contract against Mr Linde. Yet he decided not to advance the claim. It is plain that this was a deliberate decision made on legal advice. This can be seen from the document quoted by Lloyd LJ, at para 34:
"The claimant's legal advisers …... advised not to obscure the issue of breach of undertaking with other emerging claims, in a situation where the defendants were not disclosing any information, and that such other issues would be better dealt with within subsequent separate proceedings when more information could be gleaned from the defendants, as transpired as a result of cross-examination."
The deliberate decision taken was thus not to raise "other emerging claims" but, in effect, to prepare for "subsequent separate proceedings" after more information had been gleaned from Mr Linde as a result of cross-examination.
89 As Lloyd LJ puts it, at para 16, Mr Linde's story was no doubt explored a good deal more in cross-examination by the claimant in order to show that Mr Linde should not be believed. Thus it was decided by the claimant, on legal advice, to use the material to cross-examine Mr Linde as to his credit for two purposes, first to improve his case at the trial in 2001 and secondly to prepare his case for future proceedings. In short, it was a purely tactical decision. In these circumstances, there appears to me to be a strong case for concluding that the issues arising out of these conversations naturally belonged to one set of proceedings, that it was undesirable for a trial judge to have to reach conclusions on credibility in one action when either the very same or similar issues of credibility were likely to become relevant in a future action, which would be likely to be tried by a different trial judge, with the consequent risk of inconsistent conclusions."
Conclusion:
(5) Assignment and Amendment
"INTRODUCTION
…
(B) The Assignor [SFPL in liquidation] (acting by the Liquidator) has agreed to assign to the Assignee such right, title and interest (if any) as the Assignor may have in the Causes of Action (as defined in clause 1 below at the date of this Agreement on the terms set out below.
…
1. DEFINITIONS AND INTERPRETATION
1.1 In this Agreement unless the context otherwise requires:
….
"Causes of Action" means those causes of action listed in the Schedule but excludes the Excluded Causes of Action;
"Consideration" mans the sum of £17,625,00 . . .together with the Further Consideration, if any;
"Excluded Causes of Action" means any claims which can only be brought by the Liquidator or which the parties agree will be excluded causes of action;
…
2. ASSIGNMENT
In consideration of the payment of the Consideration by the Assignee, the Assignor hereby assigns to the Assignee absolutely all its right, title and interest in and to the Causes of Action tougher with the right absolutely to commence and to continue any and all proceedings in relation to such Causes of Action. In the event that, for whatever reason, the Assignment of any of the Causes of Action are void or invalid this shall not affect the validity of the assignment of any other Causes of Action.
3. FURTHER CONSIDERATION
As further consideration for the assignment of the Causes of Action, the Assignee shall pay to the Assignor a sum equal to 15% . . . of any Net Proceeds. …
…
5. NO WARRANTY
The Assignee acknowledges that nothing in this Agreement shall constitute either a representation or a warranty in respect of the Causes of Action and specifically neither the Assignor nor the Liquidator offer any warranty that any of the Causes of Action exist."
"Any and all other claims that the Assignor may have, other than Excluded Causes of Action."
Conclusion:
"29 Accepting all this, where I have difficulty is in seeing how any of it helps the claimants. In my judgment the flaw in their case is exposed by the decision in Ingall's case [1944] 1 KB 160. What that case decided, by a decision binding upon us, is that a claim purportedly brought on behalf of an intestate's estate by a claimant without a grant is an incurable nullity. Subject only to whatever rule 19.8(1) may empower, it follows that the claim the claimants issued was equally an incurable nullity. The logic of Mr Oakley's submission is however that the force of rule 19.8(1) is to confer a jurisdiction upon the court to turn such a nullity into valid proceedings which may be pursued to judgment.
30 I am unable to accept that and, in agreement with the judge, consider that rule 19.8(1) has no application to the present case. The claimants' invocation of rule 19.8(1) was responsive to the defendant's strike out application. Logically, however, if they are right about rule 19.8(1), they could (indeed should) promptly after issuing their claim form have applied to the court for an order that the nullity they had thereby conceived should have life breathed into it by way of an order that they be appointed to represent the estate of the deceased intestate and the claim permitted to proceed to trial. The reason that any such application should and would have failed is because rule 19.8(1) does not, in my view, have any role to play in the way of correcting deficiencies in the manner in which proceedings have been instituted. It certainly says nothing express to that effect and I see no reason to read it as implicitly creating any such jurisdiction. It is, I consider, concerned exclusively with giving directions for the forward prosecution towards trial of validly instituted proceedings when a relevant death requires their giving. In the typical case, that death will occur during their currency and will usually be of a party. More unusually, it may have preceded them. But on any basis it appears to me clear that it is no part of the function of rule 19.8(1) to cure nullities and give life to proceedings such as the present which were born dead and incapable of being revived. In ordinary circumstances there is no reason why anyone with a legitimate interest in bringing a claim on behalf of an intestate's estate should not first obtain a grant of administration and so clothe himself with a title to sue. I am unable to interpret rule 19.8(1) as providing an optional alternative to such ordinary course. I would dismiss the appeal on the rule 19.8(1) issue."
"47 Secondly, it is not I think suggested that the fact the cause of action was not vested in both claimants at the outset makes the proceedings incurably bad. There was some ancient authority to that effect but the modern law is that even if there is a defect in the proceedings when issued in that either the claimant's cause of action is not then complete, or that the claimant's cause of action is not then vested in the claimant, it is open to the Court to cure the defect. That sufficiently appears from a decision of the Court of Appeal in Hendry v Chartsearch Ltd. [1998] CLC 1382 when Evans LJ said that:
'In accordance with modern practice generally, the Court has a general discretion which should not be restricted by hard-and-fast rules of practice, if not of law, such as that which is suggested here.'
That was a case where the defendants applied to strike out the claim on the ground that the plaintiff was not party to the agreement on which he sued and the plaintiff maintained that shortly before the hearing of the application he had taken an assignment from his company of its claims against the defendants under the agreement. The defendants resisted leave to amend on the ground that it was not appropriate to add a fresh cause of action unless the plaintiff had some valid cause of action at the date of the writ.
48. That was said by all three members of the Court of Appeal in Maridive & Oil Services (SAE) & Anor v CNA Insurance Company (Europe) Ltd [2002] EWCA Civ 369 to be binding on them. See Mance LJ at paragraph [23]:
'We are in my view bound by Hendry v Chartsearch Ltd, which appears to me also to reflect the appropriate modern approach.'
Chadwick LJ at paragraph [54]:
'I agree with his conclusion' - that is Mance LJ's conclusion - 'that we are bound by the decision of this Court in Hendry v Chartsearch Ltd [1998] CLC 1382. There is no absolute rule of law or practice which precludes an amendment to rely on a cause of action which has arisen after the commencement of the proceedings in circumstances where (but for the amendment) the claim would fail.'
And Ward LJ at paragraph [70]:
'I agree with My Lords, whose judgments in draft I have had the chance to read, that we are bound by Hendry v Chartsearch Ltd.'
It is also illustrated by the Maridive case itself. That was not a case of a claimant not having title to sue but not having a cause of action at all at the date of issue of proceedings, the claimant having purportedly made a demand under an instrument called a lease bond in the name of one person and that demand being held to be invalid and the claimant seeking to amend to introduce reliance on a second demand in the name of the right person which was not made until after the proceedings had been issued.
49. The principle was also applied shortly afterwards in Smith v Henniker-Major & Co [2002] EWCA Civ 762, another decision of the Court of Appeal in 2002, in which Robert Walker LJ said at paragraph [92]:
'92. The first argument was that at time of issue of the claim form Mr Smith had no cause of action at all (or if different, no title to sue at all) and that the claim form was therefore a nullity (or of no effect) and could not be cured by amendment. The judge rejected that argument.
93. In my view the judge was right to do so. Mr Symons relied on the decision of this Court in Ingall v Moran [1944] KB 160. But that decision was on a different point (change of capacity); was described (while still extant) as a blot on English jurisprudence; and has since been overturned by Section 35(7) of the Limitation Act 1980 and CPR 17.4(4). So far as it embodied any larger principle it has been overtaken by the modern approach as described by Evans LJ in Hendry v Chartsearch Ltd [1998] CLC 1382, para 23. In that case this Court disapproved the more rigid approach adopted in Eshelby v Federated European Bank Ltd [1932] KB 254.'
That, although a dissenting judgment in the result, was agreed to by both of the judges in the majority, Carnwath LJ at paragraph [103] and Schiemann LJ at paragraph [130]. A further illustration of the principle was drawn to my attention by Mr Lightman, namely a decision of Blackburne J in Finlan v Eyton Morris Winfield (A Firm) [2007] EWHC 914 (Ch) where he said at [46]:
'The modem practice is to allow an amendment, the effect of which is to make good a defect in the claimant's title to sue even though the event relied on did not arise until after the proceedings were issued so that in strict law the claimant did not have a cause of action at the time he issued his process.'
He then referred to Maridive. Both Smith v Henniker-Major and that case, Finlan, are cases where, although there was said to be a cause of action at the date when the claim was issued, the claimant did not have it vested in him and subsequently took an assignment and sought to amend to plead the assignment.
50. The fact that at the date when the proceedings were issued the causes of action were not vested in Mr and Mrs Munday but in Mrs Munday and the official receiver does not therefore present an obstacle to the proceedings being pursued to trial, if necessary after an amendment."
Conclusion:
(6) Further Amendments
Balance of convenience
Conclusion: