[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Brown & Ors v Innovatorone Plc & Ors [2010] EWHC 2281 (Comm) (28 July 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2010/2281.html Cite as: [2011] ILPr 9, [2010] EWHC 2281 (Comm) |
[New search] [Help]
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
B e f o r e :
B E T W E E N :
____________________
ANDREW BROWN & Ors. Claimants | ||
- and - | ||
INNOVATORONE PLC (in liquidation) & Ors. Defendants |
____________________
Official Shorthand Writers and Tape Transcribers
Quality House, Quality Court, Chancery Lane, London WC2A 1HP
Tel: 020 7831 5627 Fax: 020 7831 7737
[email protected]
LLP) appeared on behalf of the Claimants.
MR. H. MALEK QC and MR. A. TABACHNIK (instructed by Laytons) appeared on behalf of MFC
Merchant Bank SA.
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MR. JUSTICE HAMBLEN:
INTRODUCTION
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
The Innovator Schemes
(a) each Partnership would carry on a business consisting of the acquisition and exploitation of technology which was said to be information communication technology for the purposes of the Capital Allowances Act 2001;
(b) the acquisition would be made by the Partnership from a technology vendor, also referred to in scheme documents as the technology developer, pursuant to an Acquisition Agreement ("AA"), and the business would be carried out on behalf of the partnership by an exploiter, pursuant to an Agency Exploitation Agreement;
(c) the acquisition of the technology would be funded as to approximately 20% by money raised from subscribers, termed "capital contributions" in the Information Memorandum ("IM"), and as to approximately 80% by way of a loan obtained by the Partnership from the bank;
(d) subscribers would each be able to claim tax relief by way of first year capital allowance in respect of his or her share of the loss incurred by the Partnership arising from its expenditure on acquiring the technology, such loss to include a pro rata proportion of the 80% loan;
(e) the relief available to the subscribers would thus be 40% of the expenditure on the technology by the Partnership, such that for each investment of £20 by way of capital contribution, tax relief of £40 would be available.
(a) a facility agreement entitled "Term Loan Facility" between a named LLP and MFC, whereby MFC agreed to make an advance of a specified amount, in all cases being the same as the amount of the loan as stated in the IM;
(b) a debenture between the same parties whereby the Partnership gave security for the loan;
(c) a Technology Developer ("TD") pledge agreement between the purported technology vendor and MFC.
(a) MFC agreed to make an advance to the named LLP for a specified purpose, subject to various terms, including conditions precedent, representations, warranties and undertakings;
(b) two accounts needed to be established with MFC: an LLP account in the name of the relevant LLP and a collateral account in the name of the technology vendor;
(c) upon a drawdown notice being issued by the relevant LLP to MFC, MFC was required to pay the advance to the LLP account for immediate onward transfer to the collateral account by way of cash collateral. Both the facility agreement and the TD pledge agreement provided for the pledging of the cash collateral by a technology vendor to MFC as security for the loan.
THE INNOVATOR LITIGATION
(a) Innovatorone plc ("Innovator") the entity principally responsible for the establishment, promotion and operation of the schemes;
(b) Mr. Paul Carter ("Mr. Carter"), who is a chartered accountant and was, amongst other roles, the Managing Director of Innovator and who purportedly constituted the claimants as partners in the various Partnerships by executing DAs, purportedly acting on their behalf under the terms of a Power of Attorney ("PA") contained in each subscription form;
(c) Mr. Bjorn Stiedl, the controlling mind of and the driving force behind Innovator, and also the establishment, promotion and operation of the Innovator Schemes;
(d) Collyer Bristow, solicitors ("CB"). The claimants contend that CB played a substantial role in the establishment, promotion and operation of the schemes;
(e) Mr. John Bailey who was, amongst other roles, a partner of CB and a director of Innovator;
(f) Mr. Jonathan Roper, who was, among other roles, a partner of CB;
(g) the LLPs in which the claimants were purportedly made partners;
(h) Mr. Gates who was, among other things, a financial adviser and director of Capital Planning UK Ltd., and held out as Managing Director of Money Growth Financial Services and Money Growth Financial Services Ltd. which promoted the GT1 and GT2 schemes;
(i) the technology vendors who purported to sell technology pursuant to AAs;
(j) the banks that purported to advance loans to the LLPs in order to fund the acquisition of technology from technology vendors, namely MFC and Bank Leumi;
(k) Chancery Lane Finance Ltd. ("CLFL") which was a company, now in liquidation, that purported to loan monies to some of the claimants in order to finance their capital contributions to the Innovator Schemes and also bridging loans.
(a) they were never made partners in any scheme; Mr. Carter and Mr. Gates who purported to make subscribers partners by signing DAs or LLP Deeds, were not authorised to do so;
(b) several conditions were required to be fulfilled before they could become partners in any of the Partnerships;
(c) subscription money paid by them and held by CB was held by CB on trust pending fulfillment of these conditions;
(d) the conditions were not fulfilled and consequently: (i) they did not become partners in the relevant Partnerships, (ii) payments made by CB out of the subscription money were made in breach of trust.
(a) the Innovator schemes were nothing more than sham vehicles for a fraud directly by Mr. Stiedl;
(b) there never was any real technology, that is technology as represented in the IMs and having the valued exploitation prospects stated in the IMs;
(c) arrangements for each Innovator Scheme constituted or involved one or more Collective Investment Schemes ("CIS") as defined in section 235 of the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 ("FSMA");
(d) the establishment, promotion and operation of the Innovator Schemes gave rise to a complex series of relationships and liabilities on the part of a number of entities involved with the Innovator Schemes, giving rise to various causes of action and liabilities including (i) breach of contract, (ii) breach of duties of care in tort, (iii) breach of fiduciary and equitable duties, (iv) breach of trust, (v) liabilities under FSMA, and (vi) accessory liabilities including dishonest assistance and knowing receipt.
THE CLAIM AGAINST MFC
(a) by a letter dated 27th April 2007, MFC wrote to the Charit Email Technology Partnership Ltd. In the letter MFC demanded repayment of the loan plus interest, together said to be £29,383,376.40, by 27th May 2007;
(b) by a letter dated 31st May 2007, MFC wrote to Vermilion stating: "We have made all reasonable efforts to secure the principal and interest owed by the Charit 2 LLP. The partnership has not met its obligation of repayment. We wish to have Vermilion repay £29,383,376.40 outstanding in satisfaction of that guarantee;
(c) on 31st May 2007 Vermilion wrote to MFC authorising the transfer of the deposit amount to satisfy the LLP's obligations under the loans;
(d) by a letter dated 1st June 2007, Vermilion wrote to Charit 2 LLP saying that it had satisfied the LLP's obligation to MFC. Further, on 4th June 2007, MFC wrote to Charit 2 LLP stating that Vermilion had discharged the LLP's obligations and that all of MFC's rights, including the right to repayment, had vested in Vermilion.
"The Claimants and each of them claim declaratory relief against all Defendants, including declarations that:
3.4.2.1 the Claimants and each of them never were nor are partners of any LLP or GP related to any of the schemes;
3.4.2.2 neither the Claimants nor any of them nor any LLP were liable under any loan arrangements made by or with the banks or CLFL."
THE APPLICABLE LEGAL PRINCIPLES
"Thus, that requirement of a connection did not derive from the wording of Article 6(1) of the Brussels Convention but was inferred from that provision by the Court of Justice in order to prevent the exception to the principle that jurisdiction is vested in the courts of the State of the defendant's domicile laid down in Article 6(1) from calling into question the very existence of that principle (Kalfelis, paragraph 8). That requirement, subsequently enshrined by the judgment in Reunion Europeenne SA v. Spliethoff's Bevrachtingskantoor BV [2000] QB 690, paragraph 48, was expressly enshrined in the drafting of Article 6(1) of Regulation No 44/2001, the successor to the Brussels Convention (Roche Nederland BV v. Primus [2006] ECR I-6535, paragraph 21."
"It is for the national court to assess whether there is a connection between the different claims brought before it, that is to say a risk of irreconcilable judgments if those claims were determined separately and in that regard to take account of all necessary factors in the case file which may, if appropriate, yet without its being necessary for the assessment, take into consideration the legal basis of the actions brought before that court."
"To begin with, there must be a genuine claim or a claim which is properly brought against the defendant who is being sued in the courts of his domicile. It is obvious that the claim against this anchor defendant cannot be allowed to be an entirely spurious one and if there is no proper claim against the one defendant it will be impossible to satisfy the requirement that it be necessary to hear and determine the claims against two defendants together to avoid the risk of irreconcilable judgments resulting from separate proceedings."
Then at the end of that paragraph:
"There must of course also be a proper basis for making a claim against
the co-defendant for just the same reason."
DISCUSSION
(1) Whether the claimants have a seriously arguable claim that the English Court would grant the declaratory relief which the claimants seek as against MFC.
submit that the termination of those rights and liabilities impacts directly on the potential liability of the claimants themselves to the Partnerships. In particular, the claimants contend that they put in issue whether there were ever any loans or, if there were any loans, the status of any money so advanced, and the validity of the financing arrangements as a whole. They seek declarations in respect of each of these issues. They submit that each of the claimants would be affected by a determination of these issues relating to the validity of the financing arrangements.
(1) MFC's position that neither the claimants nor the Partnerships have any liability to them has consistently been made clear. In their evidence it is stated that: "Advances from MFC to the relevant Partnerships have been repaid in full and have been treated by MFC as such, and MFC thus regards all obligations in respect of them as fully performed. MFC does not consider that any of the Partnerships or any of the claimants is under any liability to it arising out of the Innovator Schemes. For these reasons MFC has no intention of making any claim against any of the Partnerships or any of the claimants in relation to such matters."
(2) The declaratory relief sought against MFC will not assist the claimants so far as their legal position against the Partnerships and technology vendors is concerned. Further, and in any event, the Partnerships and technology vendors are themselves defendants to these proceedings so they will be bound by the finding of the court on (a) who was the partner in the Partnerships, and (b) whether the financing arrangements were a sham. There is no additional advantage to any claimant in proceeding against MFC also. The fact that a claim by a technology vendor regarding the cash collateral will in effect be a subrogated claim or arise from a deemed statutory assignment makes no difference. There will be a determination binding as between the technology vendors and their privies and the claimants following the resolution of the main action. Further and in any event, there will be a determination binding as between the Partnerships and the claimants. This is the crucial point, given that the technology vendors do not have any direct rights of action against the claimants, and the claimants are only at possible risk from contribution claims against them by the Partnerships.
(3) This is borne out by consideration of the position regarding the Charit Scheme 14, which is the only instance identified of any threat being made to the claimants of further claims against them regarding the loans. The relevant Partnership and technology vendor are, as with the other schemes, before the court. The court's determination of the relevant issues will accordingly be binding on those parties as have the ability to take aggressive action resulting in claims on the claimants by or through the Partnerships. This provides the claimants with all the protection they reasonably need or require. Further, it is noteworthy that the defendants of Vermilion and the Charit Email Technology Partnership LLP do not assert a counterclaim against the claimants, and no other Partnership or technology vendor has threatened or asserted similar claims affecting the claimants.
"The power to make declarations is a discretionary power. As between the parties to a claim the court can grant a declaration as to their rights or as to the existence of facts or as to a principle of law ( Financial Services Authority v. Rourke [2002] CP Rep 14 Neuberger J). When considering whether to grant a declaration or not, the court should take into account justice to the claimant, justice to the defendant, whether the declaration would serve a useful purpose, and whether there are any other special reasons why or why not the court should grant the declaration."
"... (1) the power of the court to grant declaratory relief is discretionary.
(2) There must, in general, be a real and present dispute between the parties before the court as to the existence or extent of a legal right between them. However, the claimant does not need to have a present cause of action against the defendant. (3) Each party must, in general, be affected by the court's determination of the issues concerning the legal right in question. (4) The fact that the claimant is not a party to the relevant contract in respect of which a declaration a sought is not fatal to an application for a declaration, provided that it is directly affected by the issue."
(1) there is no real and present dispute between the parties before the court as to the existence or extent of the legal right between them. The relevant right is MFC's right to reclaim repayment of the loan, but it is accepted by MFC that it has no such right and any liability to it in respect of the loan has been long discharged. Insofar as any other party could assert that right, it is not necessary for MFC to be joined for that purpose. There is only one party who has asserted any such right, Vermilion, although not in these proceedings, and even if other parties might do so they are all joined to the action and therefore would be bound by any declaration which the claimants succeed in obtaining.
(2) MFC will not be affected by the court's determination of the issues concerning the legal right in question. Whatever the court may determine, MFC's position is that it has no right and any liability to it has been extinguished.
(3) The claimants will not be directly affected as against MFC by any determination of the issue in its favour as MFC already acknowledges it has no right or claim. Any effect on the claimants would be as a result of the determination of the issue as against the Partnerships and the technology vendors.
(2) Whether there is a risk of irreconcilable judgments arising from separate proceedings
"Thus, if MFC was not a party to the proceedings in England, it generates a risk of further claims in Switzerland. For example, I am advised that it would in principle be possible for technology vendors which had claimed to have forfeited deposits under loan arrangements held to be ineffective in the English courts, to seek some form of redress against MFC. That will be on the basis that they had forfeited collateral deposits and obtained no right to subrogation and therefore no benefit from meeting the partnerships' obligations. If MFC had not been a party to the Commercial Court proceedings, it would be open to the Swiss courts in such a claim to decide the question of the validity of the loans afresh and potentially inconsistent with the English courts. Moreover, there is a possibility that MFC would seek to pursue the partnership and in turn the claimants on the basis of those inconsistent findings."
(1) there is no evidence of any technology vendor, whether Vermilion or anyone else, threatening to pursue MFC;
(2) it is unclear what claim a technology vendor would have in the circumstances that Mr. Green refers to. If the loan arrangements were ineffective as a sham, it is not clear what possible claim can be made by a technology vendor against MFC. Further, it is MFC's uncontroverted evidence that any claims arising out of relevant contracts would be time-barred;
(3) if there was anything in the scenario envisaged by Mr. Green, it would be a matter for the technology vendors. But none of them have either intimated or threatened such a claim against MFC, nor sought to have MFC joined as a party to these proceedings;
(4) the claimants are in any event protected by their having joined to these proceedings the Partnerships. This is because the only entity that could bring a claim of the type that Mr. Green expresses concern about is a Partnership.
CONCLUSION