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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Downtex Plc v Flatley [2004] EWHC 333 (QB) (27 February 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2004/333.html Cite as: [2004] EWHC 333 (QB) |
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QUEENS BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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DOWNTEX PLC |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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ANDREW JAMES FLATLEY |
Defendant |
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The defendants were not represented
Hearing dates : 23 February 2004
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Tugendhat:
"3. the Defendants shall not do or say anything which alleges or might reasonably be taken to infer:
(a) that the first defendant [sic] is or might be in financial difficulties or might be unable to pay its creditors or that its directors have been guilty of misconduct in the management of its affairs or anything else to the like effect; or
(b) any other similar words harmful to the reputation of the first claimant and/or which might lead a person to cease to deal with the first claimant on substantially equivalent terms to those previously offered or at all."
"I do not know if you are dealing with Downtex Plc of 48 George Street, Manchester.
I received an anonymous letter recently and after some days of research I have decided that it would be appropriate to call a creditors' meeting.
I suggest that this meeting should be held in Manchester or Chester which ever is more suitable and that we engage a solicitor to monitor it, and the possibility of engaging a receiver to keep the company running.
This letter has been sent to the following companies, if you know of any suppliers outside of these please inform me."
"Since receiving an anonymous letter regarding Downtex Plc and being sent a credit report on Downtex from another creditor who impelled me to take some action, I have spent professionally assisted hours looking into the affairs of Downtex Plc and believe …
The bank must take all the responsibility for the situation in which the company is in.
If they had left the directors personal guarantees in place I believe that these same directors would have behaved more responsibly.
They have allowed themselves to take impossible risks with other people's money at the same time as they have taken out of the company more than 10 times their original investment discounting their introduction initially of tangible assets.
I am of the opinion that the bank are in a sueable position but clearly a suitable compromise must be sought in preference to a law suit.
The main points are can this business be salvaged and can we get our money?
…
Enclosed is a copy of a creditor's report sent to me by another creditor who does not wish to be named as he is still struggling for his payment.
The Mond brothers have already informed me of my interest so we need to act quickly."
'It is plain that the two letters which are admitted to be defamatory carry the meaning that Downtex was insolvent or close to insolvency and that the directors had distorted and manipulated the financial figures of Downtex and/or taken "impossible risks with other peoples' money". Neither Miss Addy below, nor Mr Flatley before us, argued to the contrary and it is plain from Mr Flatley's submissions to us that he remains of that opinion. At the same time Miss Addy admitted that insolvency could not be demonstrated and, indeed, that it was not alleged in the sense that Downtex was unable to pay its debts or that circumstances existed which in fact justified the calling of a creditors' meeting. Nor, finally, was it argued that an inference of insolvency or near insolvency arose on the basis of the particular matters pleaded as founding Mr Flatley's 'concern'. All that was done was to assert cause for that concern on a basis which was not precisely specified but broadly asserted to be an unhealthy financial position.'
'Mr Flatley's witness statement …. did not contradict those parts of Mr Mond's witness statement which dealt in detail with the financial situation of Downtex. In that statement, Mr Mond disputed the assertion in the anonymous letter that the profits had dropped from £216,000 to losses of £39,000 in 2001 and pointed out the profits before tax fell from £257,871 in 2000 to £10,046 in 2001. As at 31 December 2001 Downtex had total net assets of £1,437,243, the director's emoluments totalling £151,309. Although the anonymous letter made reference to the value of stock being worth less than £300,000, the figures certified by PriceWaterhouseCoopers in the Annual Report 2001 were £1,632,450. Finally, Mr Mond exhibited a bundle of suppliers' status reports in respect of all the suppliers referred to in the letter of 17 June. These demonstrated that the majority of those suppliers were owed no money at all and that, where there was money due to suppliers, the sums outstanding fell within the credit period agreed and within the 'Creditor Payment Policy' referred to in the Directors' Report, and accounts for 2001'.
i) Letters in the terms cited were circulated by the defendants
ii) They were circulated to the suppliers and other with whom the Downtex had done or might do business, being those who appear on the circulation list, numbering some 20.
iii) Two of those to whom the letters were circulated initially declined to supply goods to the Downtex, although the others gave no reaction to the Downtex indicating that they had been affected. Two others did respond with further enquiries to the Defendants (one expressing worry), but the reaction was minimal, as Mr Flatley described it.
iv) On 30th July 2002 the Downtex themselves wrote to those to whom the two letters had been sent. In their letter Downtex notified the addressees of undertakings given by the defendants, and of Downtex's intention to pursue their action for libel.
v) Downtex's business was substantial. It was a wholesale distributor of household textiles and flat pack furniture accessories. It employed over 120 people at factories at Bolton, Altrincham and Strangeways, and had an administrative centre and showroom in George Street Manchester. The financial position was as is summarised in para [46] of the judgement of Potter LJ cited above.
i) At a meeting on 29th December 2003 (attended by Mr Flatley amongst others) a corporate restructuring of the Downtex was discussed and approved.
ii) The background to this was that from about February 2002 the Downtex began losing money, having been marginally profitable before that. Mr David Mond was by then personally supporting the Downtex financially.
iii) In the restructuring the Downtex 'hived down the whole of its business, stock, debtors to a newly incorporated subsidiary company called Carrwood Ltd'.
iv) The Downtex then sold Carrwood Ltd to David and Jonathan Mond. Carrwood Ltd then re-registered as Carrwood plc.
v) Carrwood plc is now called Downtex plc, having switched names with the First Claimant. The new Downtex plc is trading on a similar basis to that which the Downtex was before.
vi) Downtex, now Carrwood plc, remains publicly quoted, has a market capitalization of about £500,000 and net assets of about £50,000. It has no significant debts, all creditors throughout have been paid in the ordinary way. There has never been any move to liquidate it on any basis.
vii) Downtex, now Carrwood plc, is at present evaluating a number of projects and shareholders are to be advised at the appropriate time. The plans of the Mond brothers are that it will trade in the near future but this is subject to satisfactory completion of negotiations.
In my view the law has always taken a grave view of an allegation of insolvency in a businessman. It is an allegation in which loss and damage are presumed without further proof in an action for slander. As it was put in Jones v. Littler 7 M & W 423 at page 426 by Parke B.:
"Here the imputation is that of insolvency, which must be injurious; for if a tradesman be incapable of paying all his debts, whether in or out of trade, his credit as a tradesman, which depends on his general solvency, must be injured."