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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> FM Capital Partners Ltd v Marino & Ors [2019] EWHC 725 (Comm) (28 March 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2019/725.html Cite as: [2019] EWHC 725 (Comm) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS
OF ENGLAND AND WALES
COMMERCIAL COURT (QBD)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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FM CAPITAL PARTNERS LTD |
Claimant |
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- and – |
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(1) FREDERIC MARINO (2) AURẺLIEN BESSOT (3) YOSHIKI OHMURA (4) MARIT SJǾVAAG |
Defendants |
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Laurence Emmett & James Fox (instructed by Cooke Young and Keidan LLP) for the Third Defendant
Written Submissions of February 2019
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Crown Copyright ©
Cockerill J :
i) Whether the First Basis is the appropriate basis for assessment;
ii) As regards the Second Basis whether LAP would have agreed to pay more fees, as alleged by FMCP or at all;
iii) Whether FMCP should give credit for sums recovered from Ms Sjøvaag, Mr Haggiagi and (if any are ever recovered) Mr Marino;
iv) The basis for an award of interest in relation to the equitable compensation for dishonest assistance;
v) Directions for the taking of an account.
Issues relating to the First Basis
"There was [a written contract] later, dated 3rd August 2004. It is agreed that the written contract reflected the July oral agreement. …The contract was for a 2 year term. Mr Jack was to pay Imageview 10% of his monthly salary if Imageview successfully made arrangements for him to sign with a UK club."
Issues relating to the Second Basis
Credit for recoveries
"The general rule is that where the claimant has received some benefit attributable to the events which caused his loss, it must be taken into account in assessing damages, unless it is collateral. In Swynson Ltd v Lowick Rose LLP [2017] 2 WLR 1161, para 11, it was held that as a general rule "collateral benefits are those whose receipt arose independently of the circumstances giving rise to the loss.""
"It is difficult to identify a single principle underlying every case. …the critical factor is not the source of the benefit in a third party but its character. Broadly speaking, collateral benefits are those whose receipt arose independently of the circumstances giving rise to the loss. Thus, a gift received by the claimant, even if occasioned by his loss, is regarded as independent of the loss because its gratuitous character means that there is no causal relationship between them. The same is true of a benefit received by right from a third party in respect of the loss, but for which the claimant has given a consideration independent of the legal relationship with the defendant from which the loss arose. …. The position may be different if the benefits are not collateral because they are derived from a contract (say, an insurance policy) made for the benefit of the wrongdoer… [o]r because the benefit is derived from steps taken by the claimant in consequence of the breach, which mitigated his loss…"
Basis for interest
i) Whatever the very real analogies between equitable compensation and damages, the two are in fact distinct. As Lord Reed says in AIB at [136] that liability for breach of trust is "not generally the same as a liability in damages for tort or breach of contract" and at [137] "structural similarities do not however entail that the relevant rules are identical: as in mathematics, isomorphism is not the same as equality";
ii) Compound interest is most clearly applicable to cases where money has been obtained and retained by fraud or misapplied by a fiduciary;
iii) However, there is a discretion to award compound interest against a non-fiduciary dishonest assistant. That is now clear from:
a) Novoship, where the liability of both fiduciary and non-fiduciary to the remedy of an account of profits was settled. It is noteworthy that the court at [75] also stated that: "a liability to make good loss and a liability to account for profits "follow from the premise that the defendant is held liable to account as if he were truly a trustee to the claimant"" and at [82] "The nature of the liability, as it seems to us, is that the knowing recipient or dishonest assistant has, in principle, the responsibility of an express trustee".
b) The (admittedly non-binding) endorsement of that approach in Central Bank of Ecuador at [185]:
"The Board considers that this is in principle correct, and that the same approach must govern the discretion to award compound interest. There is in this connection no satisfactory reason why those who dishonestly receive and retain, or procure or assist the fiduciary to misapply, the fiduciary assets, should be in any different position from the fiduciary who actually misapplies the assets. This is perhaps particularly obvious in the case of those who have dishonestly procured or assisted the fiduciary to misapply the assets."
Directions