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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Schumacher & Anor v Clarke & Ors [2020] EWHC 3381 (Ch) (25 November 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2020/3381.html Cite as: [2020] EWHC 3381 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
PROPERTY, TRUST & PROBATE LIST
Fetter Lane London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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PATRIK SCHUMACHER |
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- and – |
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BRIAN CLARKE RANA HADID THE RIGHT HONOURABLE PETER GARTH BARON PALUMBO MARIE NOELLE M JANSSENS ALBERTO BARBA GUERRERO CHRISTIAN GIBBON THE ZAHA HADID FOUNDATION |
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Elspeth Talbot-Rice, James Brightwell and Max Marebon (instructed by Quinn Emanuel Urquart & Sullivan LLP) for the 1st to 3rd Defendants
Nicole Langlois (instructed by Stevens & Bolton LLP) appeared for the 4th Defendant
Richard Dew (instructed by Withers LLP) appeared for the 5th Defendant
Adam Cloherty (instructed by Hausfeld) appeared for the 6th Defendant
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Unit 1 Blenheim Court, Beaufort Business Park, Bristol, BS32 4NE
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Crown Copyright ©
Dame Zaha's Will
(1) "The Companies": they were defined as comprising Zaha Hadid Holdings Limited ("ZHH") in which Dame Zaha held all the shares and was the sole director. ZHL had a wholly owned subsidiary Zaha Hadid Limited ("ZHL") which was the main trading entity through which she ran her architectural practice. Dame Zaha's companies also included Zaha Hadid Design Limited ("ZHD") and Zaha Hadid (Services) Limited ("ZHS") which were wholly owned by her.
(2) "The Beneficiaries": for present purposes, there are three persons or classes that are relevant. The first is the claimant, Mr Schumacher, the second is "the past, current and future employees and office-holders of the Companies" and the third is the Foundation.
(3) "Trust Fund": this comprised Dames Zaha's entire residuary estate.
"In my will, I have made substantial cash gifts to a number of named individuals. Save as provided below, I would like the remainder of my assets to pass to the Zaha Hadid Foundation the details of which appear in my will. In carrying this wish into effect, I would like you as far as reasonably possible to ensure the following:
(i) …
(ii) That my business continues to trade, adopting the same principles and business patterns as have been adopted in my lifetime.
(iii) Patrik Schumacher should, as far as practicable, be in control of the business of ZHL and ZH Design Limited, and should benefit from at least 50% of their income and capital and the balance to be for the benefit of other employees."
The Trustees
The section 50 claim
(1) It is of importance that under paragraph 2 of the application, the Trustees sought a blessing on their decision to enter into the settlement agreement.
(2) They also sought an order that the costs of the application be paid out of the estate but, of course, such an order would only be appropriate if the court were satisfied, on usual principles, that in the exercise of its discretion such an order should be made. This would necessarily involve considering whether the surrender of discretion and the application for approval were justified.
(3) The agreement which the court was asked to approve provided for all the costs of the claim to be paid out of the estate. Hypothetically, had one side acted unreasonably in bringing or defending the section 50 claim, the court was not to have any oversight over the costs that had been incurred and I am told that these costs are very substantial.
(4) Without the court accepting a surrender on discretion on the first point, there could be no second stage to deal with. The agreement was conditional upon the surrender of discretion being accepted.
The Settlement Agreement
(1) Clause 3 records that the parties have reached full and final settlement of the dispute (as defined) and clause 10 contains a wide release of claims between the Trustees.
(2) Clause 4 provides for a transfer of the shares that ZHH holds in ZHL to an Employee Benefit Trust ("the EBT"). For these purposes, Mr Schumacher has forsaken the 50 per cent share of ZHL in accordance with the letter of wishes. It is, however, only current employees and office holders of ZHL who are to be beneficiaries under the EBT. Past employees do not automatically qualify despite, at least on one view, Dame Zaha having expressed a wish that they should do so. Past employees merely have the right to apply to be added as beneficiaries of the EBT on the basis of agreed criteria, and only in accordance with the absolute discretion of the EBT trustees.
(3) Under clause 5, ZHH is to be appointed to the Foundation and is obliged to pay to ZHL £1,879,000 million. This is an agreed sum that is said to settle a disputed debt between these two entities.
(4) Under clause 6, the shares in ZHD are to be appointed to the Foundation. Furthermore, either ZHD or ZHH is required to pay £6,231,000 to the EBT or to ZHL. There are also provisions that enable those in the design cluster of employees working for ZHL to apply for transfer to ZHD.
(5) Under clause 7, provision is made for the disposition of Dame Zaha's works and the intellectual property in those works.
(6) Clause 8 concerns steps taken to follow through with the DAC Beachcroft investigation into allegations made by a whistle-blower against Mr Schumacher. They are intended to ensure that the EBT board is aware of the conclusions of the investigation so that the EBT may take such steps as it wishes.
(7) Under clause 9, the outstanding fees of Weil Gotshal, Forensic Risk Alliance and DAC Beachcroft are to be paid by ZHH. Those fees are of the order of £900,000.
(8) Clause 10, I have mentioned, contains the release.
(9) Clause 11 contains provision for legal costs which I, again, have mentioned.
(10) Finally, under clause 17, there are provisions that relate to the investigations into Mr Schumacher's alleged conduct.
The Evidence
"While I do not want to return to the disputes about the defendants, it is well-documented that I consider them to have been hostile towards me and consider that they have sought to minimise the extent to which I benefit. The settlement agreement has been reached with the defendants and me essentially taking opposing sides. In those circumstances, I believe that the interests of all the potential beneficiaries have been adequately represented and the settlement agreement represents a fair outcome for everyone."
"The agreement takes into account the fact there has been a protracted dispute between Patrik on the one hand and Rana, Peter and me on the other. In our view (and, it is also to be inferred, Patrik's) the settlement agreement provides for a reasonable division of the interests."
(1) Has as a track record of abusing veto powers even when held in a fiduciary capacity;
(2) When exercising fiduciary powers, he has previously failed to distinguish between his own interests and the interests of those to whom he owes fiduciary duties; and
(3) Has demonstrated a lack of commitment to basic principles of corporate governance.
"The trustee defendants worked with Mr Schumacher and have now signed an agreement providing for the completion of the administration of the estate and final dispositions out of the will trust. Given Mr Schumacher's entrenched role at ZHL, it is my view that any other different composition of trustees would have encountered the same difficulties and incurred a similar level of costs in doing so."
"We took and take the view that it was and is better for the beneficiaries for us to complete the administration of the will trust than to hand over to a new trustee, who would encounter exactly the same problems with Mr Schumacher that we encountered, but who would have had to start from ground zero and duplicate much of the work we have done."
"I understand Brian, Rana and Peter share this view, that we have found an appropriate solution to a difficult problem." [my emphasis]
The Representative Defendants
(1) Class 1: the current and future employees and office-holders of ZHL;
(2) Class 2: the former employees and office-holders of ZHL, and;
(3) Class 3: the former, current and future office-holders of the non-ZHL companies (ZHH, ZHD, ZHS and the Foundation).
The Law
"The approach of the court has been summarised both in England and overseas as requiring the court to be satisfied after proper consideration of the evidence that:
"(1) the trustees have, in fact, formed the opinion that they should act in the way for which they seek approval;
"(2) the opinion of the trustees was one which a reasonable body of trustees, correctly instructed as to the meaning of the relevant clause, could properly have arrived at; and
"(3) the opinion was not vitiated by any conflict of interest under which any of the trustees was labouring."
"The second requirement involves two aspects. First: process. Has the trustee properly taken into account relevant matters and not taken into account irrelevant matters? Second: outcome. Is the decision one with a rational trustee could have come to?"
(1) It bears emphasis that the giving of approval is a matter of discretion. Trustees have no entitlement to demand a blessing if the relevant criteria are met. The court is exercising a broad discretion as part of its supervisory powers. Of course, as a general rule, the court will wish to be supportive and helpful to trustees if it is indeed the case that the decision is momentous. That said, and I agree with the observation made in Lewin, that the court acts with caution because the result of giving approval is that the beneficiaries cannot later complain that there has been a breach of trust, provided full disclosure to the court has been given.
(2) The court is entitled to take into account the consequences of refusing to approve the trustees' decision. I observe, however, that this is not a case where the Trustees have faced conflict with the beneficiaries, and the approval will resolve a dispute not with the beneficiaries but between the trustees. The beneficiaries have only been brought in (other than Mr Schumacher, that is) at a very late stage.
(3) A failure to acknowledge a conflict of interest and to explain how it has been managed may be fatal. Reference is made to the decision in Hawksford Jersey Ltd v A [2018] JRC 171. Hawksford is, however, a very different case to this one because there the court was asked to approve the sale of the trust's only asset, which was a property in London. The trustee failed to acknowledge the very substantial amount of fees the trustee was owed which on a sale would be paid. However, I accept the general proposition which the court put forward at [51] in the judgment, that where there are conflicts, the court will give heightened scrutiny to the decision.
(4) There appears to have been little discussion in the authorities about how a conflict of interest may "vitiate" the decision the trustees have reached. It seems to me that for these purposes, "vitiate" is used in the sense of "impair". It is not used in the alternative sense of the decision being entirely set aside or destroyed.
Conclusions
"The agreement resolves a long-term dispute that has been most unsettling for us as individuals vested with our careers in, devoted to the future and with our livelihoods depending on the continued prosperity of Zaha Hadid Architects, a practice we helped to build."
(1) The reliance by the Trustee Defendants upon Ms Hadid's third statement at the recent hearing make it quite impossible for the court to accept that they have a genuine belief that the conflicts of interest under which Mr Schumacher is labouring, which he acknowledges, have been properly managed. Their evidence, in summary, is that he cannot be relied upon to manage conflicts. However, nothing in this judgment should be taken as the court endorsing the views that the Trustee Defendants have expressed about Mr Schumacher or their evidence.
(2) The parties mutually accuse each other of acting in a non-fiduciary manner. Those accusations remain unresolved. It is simply inconsistent for them to maintain those allegations and to ask the court to approve the dispositions they wish to make as trustees on the premise that they have acted properly as fiduciaries.
(3) The Trustees only invite limited scrutiny to their decision-making processes and the decisions they have made. I am much troubled by their decision to drop their initial application seeking an approval of the agreement and to replace it with a request for approval of part of the agreement. This has left a substantial mismatch between the evidence upon which they rely and the current application. The Trustees all understood when they made their witness statements that the court was being asked to approve the agreement. It transpired that the original application was put on one side, albeit the basis upon which that can happen in procedural terms is not explained. Leaving that procedural point aside, in the circumstances of this case, I do not consider it is open to the Trustees to withdraw part of their agreement from the approval application or at least, if they do so, they cannot expect the court to be willing to give approval to the elements they choose to place before the court. I have referred to the terms of the agreement and noted the fact that it settles the dispute (that is, this claim) and that the parties agree to their costs of the proceedings being paid out of the estate. Their personal interest in reaching that agreement conflict directly with those of the beneficiaries. I am told that the costs of the Trustee Directors alone in these proceedings are nearly £2.7 million. It is not an answer to say that if limited approval is given, the beneficiaries are entitled to challenge the legal costs. In reality, such a challenge is unlikely to happen because of the costs and risks that beneficiaries would face in making such a challenge.
(4) The evidence of the processes the Trustees have adopted is unsatisfactory. It is clear that each side has adopted an intransigent approach. Mr Wilson submitted there is nothing wrong with an agreement that is the fruit of strong disagreement. As a general principle, I agree. Disagreement can be a positive force and vigorous debate can lead to sound decisions. The position is different, however, where the Trustees have been at loggerheads for a period of years. When conflicts of interest are added to the mix, there is a degree of potential infection that could be fatal to the proper exercise of the duties of a fiduciary. The evidence is that the Trustees have achieved a compromise package that accommodates their strongly held views. However, it appears to be much closer to the compromise of a dispute than being the fruit of proper engagement between fiduciaries.
(5) Perhaps most importantly, the Trustees do not require the court's approval for the dispositions they wish to make. They have the powers they need and they can exercise them. Indeed, there is no reason to suppose that they cannot, or will not, do so. I accept that if they do proceed, they will be open to the possibility of a claim by the beneficiaries. However, they are already, on the basis of their revised application, willing to take that risk concerning the settlement of the dispute and the costs they have incurred in the Section 50 claim. It seems to me, in any event, the risk of a claim is a risk of their own creation.
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