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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Great Hill Equity Partners II LP v Novator One LP & Ors [2007] EWHC 1210 (Comm) (22 May 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2007/1210.html Cite as: [2007] EWHC 1210 (Comm) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Royal Courts of Justice Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Great Hill Equity Partners II LP |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Novator One LP KRC Communications Holdings NV Beleggingsmaatschappij Florissant NV Kenn Robson Andrin Bachman |
Defendants |
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David Waksman QC (instructed by CMS Cameron McKenna LLP) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 26,27,28,29,30 March, 3 April and 3 May 2007
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Field:
Introduction
Each of Florissant, Novator, KRC, Robson and Bachmann warrant and undertake to the Grantee and agree that until expiry of the Option Period or completion of the sale and purchase of all the Option Shares pursuant to the exercise of the Option in accordance with this Deed, whichever is the earlier –
(a) …..(b) the Grantee shall have rights of pre-emption in respect of new issues of shares for cash by Florissant and in respect of any new shareholder loans so that the Grantee shall be entitled to its pro rata share to obtain and maintain a 23 per cent. (subject to adjustment to take into account the Grantee not taking up any rights of pre-emption under this clause (b)) interest in the issued Preferred Shares upon the exercise of the Option and be offered any such new shares or shareholder loans at the same price and on such other terms as are offered to other shareholders;
The competing bids for QXL Ricardo plc ("QXL")
The Florissant SSA
The Edelmira Agreement
Florissant's competing bid for QXL and TAC's riposte
The negotiations leading to the execution of the option deed
The GHP Parties would have a pre-emption right in respect of new issues of shares for cash by Florissant and in respect of any new shareholder loans. In other words, they would be offered their pro rata share at the same price as the other shareholders.
The relevant provisions in the option deed
The Second Amendment to the Florissant SSA
Florissant buys QXL shares in the market – the Keaton loan
GHP seeks to participate in the Keaton Loan
GHP are rebuffed
The failure of the Florissant bid
Repayment of the Keaton loan and the July 2005 issue of shares in Florissant
The parties' basic contentions
The law governing the construction of clause 6.5 (b)
In construing this provision, as any other contractual provision, the object of the court is to give effect to what the contracting parties intended. To ascertain the intention of the parties the court reads the terms of the contract as a whole, giving the words used their natural and ordinary meaning in the context of the agreement, the parties' relationship and all the relevant facts surrounding the transaction so far as known to the parties. To ascertain the parties' intentions the court does not of course inquire into the parties' subjective states of mind but makes an objective judgment based on the materials already identified. The general principles summarised by Lord Hoffmann in Investors Compensation Scheme Ltd v West Bromwich Building Society [1998] 1 WLR 896, at 912-913 apply in a case such as this.
(1) Interpretation is the ascertainment of the meaning which the document would convey to a reasonable person having all the background knowledge which would reasonably have been available to the parties in the situation in which they were at the time of the contract.
(2) The background was famously referred to by Lord Wilberforce as the "matrix of fact," but this phrase is, if anything, an understated description of what the background may include. Subject to the requirement that it should have been reasonably available to the parties and to the exception to be mentioned next, it includes absolutely anything which would have affected the way in which the language of the document would have been understood by a reasonable man.
(3) The law excludes from the admissible background the previous negotiations of the parties and their declarations of subjective intent. They are admissible only in an action for rectification. The law makes this distinction for reasons of practical policy and, in this respect only, legal interpretation differs from the way we would interpret utterances in ordinary life. The boundaries of this exception are in some respects unclear. But this is not the occasion on which to explore them.
I should in passing say that when, in Investors Compensation Scheme Ltd v West Bromwich Building Society [1998] 1 WLR 896, 913, I said that the admissible background included "absolutely anything which would have affected the way in which the language of the document would have been understood by a reasonable man", I did not think it necessary to emphasise that I meant anything which a reasonable man would have regarded as relevant. I was merely saying that there is no conceptual limit to what can be regarded as background. It is not, for example, confined to the factual background but can include the state of the law (as in cases in which one takes into account that the parties are unlikely to have intended to agree to something unlawful or legally ineffective) or proved common assumptions which were in fact quite mistaken. But the primary source for understanding what the parties meant is their language interpreted in accordance with conventional usage: "we do not easily accept that people have made linguistic mistakes, particularly in formal documents". I was certainly not encouraging a trawl through "background" which could not have made a reasonable person think that the parties must have departed from conventional usage.(Page 269)
On principle, the matter is worth pursuing a little, because the present case illustrates very well the disadvantages and danger of departing from established doctrine and the virtue of the latter. There were prolonged negotiations between solicitors, with exchanges of draft clauses, ultimately emerging in clause 2 of the agreement. The reason for not admitting evidence of these exchanges is not a technical one or even mainly one of convenience, (though the attempt to admit it did greatly prolong the case and add to its expense). It is simply that such evidence is unhelpful. By the nature of things, where negotiations are difficult, the parties' positions, with each passing letter, are changing and until the final agreement, though converging, still divergent. It is only the final document which records a consensus. If the previous documents use different expressions, how does construction of those expressions, itself a doubtful process, help on the construction of the contractual words? If the same expressions are used, nothing is gained by looking back: indeed, something may be lost since the relevant surrounding circumstances may be different. And at this stage there is no consensus of the parties to appeal to. It may be said that previous documents may be looked at to explain the aims of the parties. In a limited sense this is true: the commercial, or business object, of the transaction, objectively ascertained, may be a surrounding fact. Cardozo J. thought so in the Utica Bank case. And if it can be shown that one interpretation completely frustrates that object, to the extent of rendering the contract futile, that may be a strong argument for an alternative interpretation, if that can reasonably be found. But beyond that it may be difficult to go: it may be a matter of degree, or of judgment, how far one interpretation, or another, gives effect to a common intention: the parties, indeed, may be pursuing that intention with differing emphasis, and hoping to achieve it to an extent which may differ, and in different ways. The words used may, and often do, represent a formula which means different things to each side, yet may be accepted because that is the only way to get "agreement" and in the hope that disputes will not arise. The only course then can be to try to ascertain the "natural" meaning. Far more, and indeed totally, dangerous is it to admit evidence of one party's objective - even if this is known to the other party. However strongly pursued this may be, the other party may only be willing to give it partial recognition, and in a world of give and take, men often have to be satisfied with less than they want. So, again, it would be a matter of speculation how far the common intention was that the particular objective should be realised. ….In my opinion, then, evidence of negotiations, or of the parties' intentions … ought not to be received, and evidence should be restricted to evidence of the factual background known to the parties at or before the date of the contract, including evidence of the "genesis" and objectively the "aim" of the transaction…" [pp1384-1385]
(1) In the lead up to the option deed the parties never discussed what would occur if the Florissant bid for QXL failed.
(2) If the option deed was executed and announced, Florissant would go into the market and acquire QXL shares at less than the bid price.
(3) Florissant's purchases in the market were likely to be funded by a loan arranged by Novator Limited.
(4) GHP wanted to participate in such market purchases of QXL shares by Florissant.
(5) Any loan from, or arranged by, Novator Limited to finance the acquisition by Florissant of QXL shares in the market would give rise to an entitlement to acquire shares in Florissant.
(6) When Mr Kumin told Mr McInroy on 9 March 2005 that GHP wanted to be able to participate in any shareholder loan to Florissant to fund share purchases, it would have been apparent to any reasonable observer that his interest in doing so was in the event that the Florissant bid failed.
(7) There was no suggestion in fact that any loans to fund market purchases of QXL shares might be on exorbitant terms that would strip value out of Florissant and thereby reduce the value of GHP's option.
(8) By entering into the option deed, GHP was giving up the ability to acquire any significant numbers of QXL shares in the market for its own account.
34. In the view of Lord Nicholls the statement of the rule that pre-contract negotiations are irrelevant is too rigid. He said that (see p583):
"…there will be occasions where the pre-contract negotiations do shed light on the meaning the parties intended to convey by the words they used. There will be occasions, for instance, when the parties in their pre-contract exchanges made clear the meaning they intended by language they subsequently incorporated into their contract. When pre-contract negotiations assist in some such way, the notional reasonable person should be able to take that evidence into account in deciding how the contract is to be interpreted."
35. He continued :
"This would not be a departure from the objective approach. Rather, this would enable the notional reasonable person to be more fully informed of the background context. This would recognise that pre-contract negotiations are themselves part of the background of a contract and that, like other background material, they may be relevant when interpreting a contract. They differ from other background material in that, unlike other background material, they may afford direct evidence of the parties' actual intentions. That is not a reason for banning their use. That would be perverse. That would mean that in deciding the meaning intended to be conveyed by the language chosen by the parties the notional reasonable person would always be barred from having regard to what may be the best evidence of all. He must always conjecture, he must never know. The preferable approach is to recognise that pre-contract negotiations are relevant and admissible if they would have influenced the notional reasonable person in his understanding of the meaning the parties intended to convey by the words used.Whether the notional reasonable person would have been so influenced in a particular case depends upon the facts of that case."
36 In my view, a trial is necessary in this case in order to hear all the pre-contract evidence from both sides in order to establish the facts of the case, including any evidence of pre-contract negotiations that is relevant and admissible for the purpose of ascertaining the meaning of the Preferred Supplier Status provision in the agreement.
Evidence as to negotiations between the parties to a contract leading up to the making of that contract may be admissible for the purposes of interpretation in wider circumstances than I have indicated above, but it is unnecessary for me to go further than those circumstances for the purpose of this appeal. Lord Hoffmann recognises in the ICS case that the boundaries of the rule excluding evidence of pre-contractual negotiations on questions of interpretation is unclear. Moreover, Lord Nicholls has argued in the passage cited by Mummery LJ in para 34 of his judgment and elsewhere, that the rule should be relaxed. The exclusion of pre-contractual negotiations is not on the face of it consistent with the general principle that a contract should be interpreted in the light of its context. Nor, on the face of it, is the application of a meaning which is not that which the parties themselves gave to a term consistent with the general approach of contract law, which is to respect party autonomy. The results may be anomalous. If the judge's ruling in this case expresses the general position in law, the result would be that the parties' meaning would be adopted if they defined the term in their written contract but not if they only did so only in the course of pre-contractual negotiations. Moreover, in that latter event, the meaning given to the term by the court would prevail, and (if the court's meaning is one which is different from that on which both parties in fact proceeded) a party would be able to avoid its contractual obligations deriving from the parties' meaning. That may be the law but, if it is, it is not, on the face of it, an attractive result. There are considerations that may go the other way. Lord Hoffmann's holding is that the exclusionary rule is based on reasons of practical policy (see para (3) of the passage cited above from the ICS case). That policy would have to be carefully considered if evidence of pre-contractual negotiations is to be admitted in evidence in interpretation questions in the future on any wider basis than the law presently permits. In that sense there may be parallels to be drawn with the use of legislative history in the interpretation of statutes. In addition, careful consideration may have to be given to the aims to be achieved by contractual interpretation and the precise extent to which the law requires an objective interpretation, as set out in para. (1) of the passage cited above from the ICS case. It may be appropriate to consider a number of international instruments applying to contracts. It is sufficient to take two examples. The UNIDROIT Principles of International Commercial Contracts give primacy to the common intention of the parties and on questions of interpretation requires regard to be had to all the circumstances, including the pre-contractual negotiations of the parties (article 4.3). The UN Convention on Contracts for the International Sale of Goods (1980) provides that a party's intention is in certain circumstances relevant, and in determining that intention regard is to be had to all relevant circumstances, including preliminary negotiations. Consideration may also have to be given to the question whether some matters outside the text of a contract should be given less weight where (for example) the contract is one to which different persons adhere at different points in time, such as a company's constitution, than in the case of "one-off" contracts between two persons, as in this case.
The other questions in contention –Was the Keaton loan a "shareholders loan" and if so, was it a convertible loan? –If the Keaton loan was within clause 6.5 (b), is GHP entitled to damages? Alternatively, was the July 2005 share issue a new issue of shares within sub-clause (b)?
Conclusion
Postscript
I cannot end this judgement without acknowledging the great assistance I received from the very full and admirably expressed submissions of both counsel.
Note 1 Including an additional 98,010 shares issued to Florissant in exchange for permitting the settlement of the dispute over the ownership of QXL Poland. [Back]