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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Perhar v Freestone & Ors [2024] EWHC 945 (Ch) (06 March 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2024/945.html Cite as: [2024] EWHC 945 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Fetter Lane London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
BETWEEN:
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SOPHIE REBECCA PERHAR | Claimant/Appellant | |
- and - | ||
(1) LOUISE FREESTONE | ||
(2) PAUL MALLATRATT | ||
(3) SYNERGY IN TRADE LIMITED | Defendants/Respondents |
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MR J MORGAN KC (instructed by Howes Percival LLP) appeared on behalf of the Third Defendant/Respondent.
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE MICHAEL GREEN:
"1. The applicant, Sophie Perhar, incorporated The Sustainable Bathroom Company Ltd in January 2019. She is its sole shareholder, director and employee. It carried on business as a wholesaler of environmentally sustainable bathroom products developed by Mrs Perhar, initially a mosquito repellent called Mozzipatch and later an electric bamboo toothbrush. The Mozzipatch project was initially a success but ultimately came to grief as a result of the insolvency of the long established company entrusted with its distribution. By early 2022, the company had developed the toothbrush to the point of having in place a supply agreement with Aldi, the German supermarket chain.
2. Synergy in Trade Ltd is a provider of business finance. In March 2022, it agreed to provide the company with a line of credit on the terms (as varied) set out in a letter dated 11 April 2022 and accepted by the company on 12 April 2022. In essence, Synergy agreed to pay, or issue letters of credit on behalf of the company to, its suppliers for the cost of the goods in return for remuneration in the form of a share of profits, [that is] 70% in favour of the company, 30% in favour of Synergy. The facility was subject to a maximum aggregate principal of £350,000. The company agreed that a designated account would be set up, details of which would be quoted on invoices to its customers (in effect Aldi at this stage). This was because Synergy was funding the supply of goods to the company from China and wanted to ensure that it received the income generated by the sale of those goods so that, in the words of Mr Slinger, a director of Synergy, the company could not use the receipts as its own general working capital.
3. The facility was supported by a debenture dated 10 March 2022. Mrs Perhar and her husband also gave personal guarantees."
"4. Agreeing the deal with Aldi and arranging the supply of goods from China was a laborious process, but business began in early 2023, and Aldi was invoiced. As a result of an error, the invoices did not contain full and accurate details of the designated account into which payments were to be made: they gave the wrong IBAN of the account. Instead of making payments into the designated account, in late February 2023, Aldi made payments to a Euro Revolut Business account held by the company which Mrs Perhar says had been set up in connection with establishing an EU branch in Ireland. As Mr Morgan KC says in para.13 of his skeleton argument, the court is not in a position to make findings as to the circumstances which led to this, but, for present purposes and on the basis that it appears to have been Synergy which set up the account, I will assume, but without making any finding, that Mrs Perhar is correct in blaming Synergy for what she describes as a 'critical mistake', although, as Mr Morgan says, the IBAN error does not explain how money that should have been received into the designated account found its way into the Revolut account."
So, from that, the Judge assumed that it was Synergy's own fault that the monies received by the company were paid into the wrong account.
(1) that the court made findings of fact akin to fraud and dishonesty without hearing evidence;
(2) that there was an erroneous interpretation of the contract in implying the terms on the grounds of business efficacy;
(3) that the Judge's findings on waiver or promissory estoppel were wrong; and,
(4) that there were wrong findings in relation to the process of appointing the administrators.
"The second matter relied on as a triggering event does require some explanation. Whatever may be in dispute about how money that should have gone into the designated account ended up in the Revolut account, it is plain that it did, and Mrs Perhar does not contest that. It is also plain that, in breach of trust, she used funds which should have gone into the designated account, but were in any event held on trust for Synergy, to pay others, herself, Hopkins & Jones and Capability Holdings (pawnbrokers she had used) and Alison Jaques Ltd, a gallery run by a friend from whom she had borrowed and who was threatening to take legal action."
"[Mr Morgan KC] goes on to deal with matters of interpretation. He begins by citing Andrew Sutcliffe QC, sitting as a High Court Judge, in the Re ARL 009 Ltd case, accepting (at paragraph 50) that the question before him, whether the floating charge was enforceable within the meaning of paragraph 16, was 'to be assessed objectively and that such assessment involves consideration of all the circumstances including the terms of the debenture or other security document between the parties, any collateral contract or agreement, whether between the parties or between the floating chargeholder and a third party, any promissory estoppel, and any statutory provision.' In other words, a debenture is subject to the usual rules of construction when it comes to ascertaining its meaning and effect."