[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 >> ED&F Man Sugar Ltd v T&L Sugars Ltd & Ors [2016] EWHC 272 (Comm) (10 February 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2016/272.html Cite as: [2016] EWHC 272 (Comm) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
ED&F MAN SUGAR LTD. |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
||
T&L SUGARS LTD. MR IAN BACON MR JAHN WIDMER |
Defendants |
____________________
Mr R Howe QC and Ms L Powel (instructed by Hill Dickinson LLP) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 8-10 February 2016
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Leggatt :
i) the conversion claim;ii) the entire conspiracy claim;
iii) the claim for inducing a breach of contract; and/or
iv) the conspiracy claim insofar as it is made against the two individual defendants.
I will consider each of these four limbs in turn.
"The defendants rely upon the simple proposition that a claimant should not be permitted to pursue a case which is based on mutually inconsistent allegations of fact."
The authorities relied on in support of this proposition are all examples of a party attempting simultaneously to advance two inconsistent cases in the same legal proceedings. None of them is an example of a claimant being prevented from pursuing mutually inconsistent cases against different parties in different proceedings. The authorities are therefore dealing with a different situation and are nothing to the point in this case.
"The Conspiracy involved the deliberate deception of [the claimant] by inducing [the claimant] to believe that SRB intended to and would pay the Sale Contract Price in the normal contractual way and thus to part with control of the cargo. It was not just a case of deception by silence. Mr. Massaro's email of 19 February 2014, which stated that the claimant should send all documents, except the invoice, to Silvertown and the invoice should be sent to SRB's address in Cesena, Italy, contained a clear implied representation that, as at 19 February 2014, SRB intended to pay the claimant for the Antonia shipment."
It is then alleged that in fact SRB had decided that it was not going to pay the claimant and that the defendants were aware of this.
"By reason of T&L's involvement in the altered arrangements for delivery of the Antonia Shipment to Silvertown, and by entering into the 18/19 March Agreement with SRB, T&L knowingly colluded in and/or facilitated and/or induced SRB's breach of the Sale Contract which is pleaded above."
"SRB's planned and intentional breach of the Sale Contract by entering into the 18/19 March Agreement with T&L at a time when SRB had already decided not to pay [the claimant] the Sale Contract Price, or any sum, in respect of the Antonia Shipment;"
The fact that this is the breach of the Sale Contract which T&L is said to have induced is confirmed by subparagraph (vi) of paragraph 91, which cross-refers both to subparagraph (iii) and to paragraph 95. What is therefore alleged is (1) that, by entering into a sub-sale agreement on 18 or 19 March 2014 with T&L, SRB committed a breach of the Sale Contract, and (2) that T&L induced or procured that breach by helping to arrange for delivery of the shipment to Silvertown and by entering into the sub-sale agreement with SRB.
i) That SRB had already decided that it was not going to pay the contract price;ii) That the email was intended by its author dishonestly to give the claimant a contrary impression;
iii) That the relevant defendant knew what SRB had decided; and
iv) That the defendant knew that the email was being sent and the purpose for which it was being sent and connived in the sending of it.
"SRB's planned and intentional breach of the Sale Contract by commencing and prosecuting the Italian Proceedings in breach of the arbitration clause;"
The "Italian proceedings" are proceedings in which SRB is alleging that the Sale Contract is invalid. The claimant's case is that those proceedings are an illegitimate tactical device brought in bad faith in order to try to frustrate the claimant's attempts to recover the contract price.
"must have been reached at a very senior level within SRB, involving the directors and the joint venture partners, that is to say including the Defendants herein."
Then at paragraph 85 it is pleaded that the claimant:
"relies on both the unlawful nature of the Italian Proceedings (commenced as they were in breach of an arbitration clause) and on the wholly unfounded nature of the allegations made by SRB therein (which are mirrored by similarly unfounded allegations by SFIR in the Italian Arbitration) as evidence of SRB and SFIR's absence of good faith in relation to the Sale Contract and the Antonia Shipment. That absence of good faith infected also the minds of the Defendants and each of them. Based on the similarities between the Italian Arbitration and the Italian Proceedings, the very close relationship between SFIR and SRB and the facts and matters pleaded above, it is to be inferred that:
(i) SRB had decided to issue the Italian Proceedings (or similar proceedings) by 17 March 2014 at the very latest;
(ii) The Defendants were aware of this;
(iii) Mr Bacon and Mr Widmer as directors of SRB … were party to the decision to commence the Italian Proceedings."