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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Marsden v Barclays Bank Plc [2016] EWHC 1601 (QB) (05 July 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2016/1601.html Cite as: [2016] 2 Lloyd's Rep 420, [2016] EWHC 1601 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
LONDON MERCANTILE COURT
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
JONATHAN EDWARD MARSDEN |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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BARCLAYS BANK PLC |
Defendant |
____________________
David Pope (instructed by Dentons UKMEA LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 16 May 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Phillips:
The background facts
(a) Mr Marsden's business and previous swap transaction
(b) The Swaps
(c) Mr Marsden's cashflow problems
(d) The complaint to the Financial Ombudsman Service ("the FOS")
(e) The restructuring of Mr Marsden's indebtedness
" the entry by the Parties into the facility letter dated 27 January 2011 with a loan amount of £3,671,374.00 is in full and final settlement of all complaints, claims and causes of action which arise directly or indirectly, or may arise, out of or are in any way connected with the Swaps."
(f) Mr Marsden's bankruptcy
(g) The Bank's review of the sale of the Swaps
Mr Marsden's claim in these proceedings
The effect of the Settlement Agreement
(i) Consideration
"In determining whether consideration is past, the courts are not, it is submitted, bound to apply a strictly chronological test. If the giving of the consideration and the making of the promise are substantially one transaction, the exact order in which these events occur is not decisive."
(ii) Economic duress
" there must be pressure, (a) whose practical effect is that there is compulsion on, or a lack of practical choice for, the victim, (b) which is illegitimate, and (c) which is a significant cause inducing the claimant to enter into the contract In determining whether there has been illegitimate pressure, the court takes into account a range of factors. These include whether there has been an actual or threatened breach of contract; whether the person allegedly exerting the pressure has acted in good or bad faith; whether the victim had any realistic practical alternative but to submit to the pressure; whether the victim protested at the time; and whether he confirmed and sought to rely on the contract. These are all relevant factors. Illegitimate pressure must be distinguished from the rough and tumble of the pressures of normal commercial bargaining."
" there are a number of cases where English courts have accepted that a threat may be illegitimate when coupled with a demand for payment even if the threat is one of lawful action On the other hand, Goff and Jones Law of Restitution observed that English courts have wisely not accepted any general principle that a threat not to contract with another, except on certain terms, may amount to duress.
We are being asked to extend the categories of duress of which the law will take cognisance. But it seems to me that an extension capable of covering the present case, involving 'lawful act duress' in a commercial context in pursuit of a bona fides claim, would be a radical one with far-reaching implications. It would introduce a substantial and undesirable element of uncertainty in the commercial bargaining process. Moreover, it will often enable bona fides settled accounts to be reopened when parties to commercial dealings fall out. The aim of our commercial law ought to be to encourage fair dealing between parties. But it is a mistake for the law to set its sights too highly when the critical enquiry is not whether the conduct is lawful but whether it is morally or socially unacceptable
Outside the field of protected relationships, and in a purely commercial context, it might be a relatively rare case in which 'lawful act duress' can be established "
(iii) The scope of the agreement
"The circumstances in which this general release was given are typical. General releases are often entered into when parties are settling a dispute which has arisen between them, or when a relationship between them, such as employment or partnership, has come to an end. They want to wipe the slate clean. Likewise, the problem which has arisen in this case is typical. The problem concerns a claim which subsequently came to light but whose existence was not known or suspected by either party at the time the release was given. The emergence of this unsuspected claim gives rise to a question which has confronted the courts on many occasions. The question is whether the context in which the general release was given is apt to cut down the apparently all-embracing scope of the words of the release."
"9. A party may, at any rate in a compromise agreement supported by valuable consideration, agree to release claims or rights of which he is unaware and of which he could not be aware, even claims which could not on the facts known to the parties have been imagined, if appropriate language is used to make plain that this is his intention ...
10. But a long and in my view salutary line of authority shows that, in the absence of clear language, the court will be very slow to infer that a party intended to surrender rights and claims of which he was unaware and could not have been aware."
"However widely drawn the language, the circumstances in which the release was given may suggest, and frequently they do suggest, that the parties intended, or, more precisely, the parties are reasonably to be taken to have intended, that the release should apply only to claims, known or unknown, relating to a particular subject matter. The court has to consider, therefore, what was the type of claims at which the release was directed Echoing judicial language used in the past, that would be regarded as outside the "contemplation" of the parties at the time the release was entered into, not because it was an unknown claim, but because it related to a subject matter which was not "under consideration"."
"32. Materially different is the case where the party to whom the release was given knew that the other party had or might have a claim and knew also that the other party was ignorant of this. In some circumstances seeking and taking a general release in such a case, without disclosing the existence of the claim or possible claim, could be unacceptable sharp practice. When this is so, the law would be defective if it did not provide a remedy."
The disputed causes of action
(i) Public policy/statutory preconditions
"49. In my judgment it cannot credibly be said by the claimant that, even if there was - which I am prepared to assume for the purposes of the argument but without deciding that is at least arguable - a wholesale systematic, deliberate, even dishonest, non-compliance with the regulatory regime in relation to the entry into this and other swap agreements, the consequence is that the swap agreement itself is made void for illegality or otherwise being contrary to public policy. Whilst I appreciate that such a conclusion might at first blush be said to produce an unfair or unreasonable result against Mr. Marshall if the facts are as Mr. Hurst contends, the answer in my judgment is that the law holds that illegality or other cases of conduct contrary to public policy results in agreements being held void only in very limited circumstances. In a case such as the present, where one party is saying that his entry into an agreement was accompanied by and would not have occurred without widespread breaches of the applicable regulations by the other, that is not one of those circumstances which could result in the agreement being invalidated on grounds of public policy. Instead it would afford the claimant, if he was right, the ability to have that agreement unravelled on one or more of the bases which Mr. Marshall would have been entitled to advance in this case, but for the settlement.
50. It seems to me that illegality or other breach of public policy simply does not avail the claimant in this case. The reality is that either a claimant in the position of Mr. Marshall can rely on breaches of regulations which he can establish afford him a civil remedy, which here he could do so but for the effect of the general release, or he cannot, because the statutory framework does not, on its true construction, allow him to do so, and no amount of repeated reference to wholesale, systematic, deliberate or even dishonest breach of the regulations will alter that fundamental position.
51. Furthermore, even if I was wrong about that, it appears to me, despite what Mr. Hurst submitted, that the effect of what is now s.138E(2) of the Financial Services Act 2012, which specifically provides that no such contravention - that is a contravention of a rule made by a regulator - makes any transaction void or unenforceable, quite clearly means that it is simply not possible to advance an argument that, even in the case of alleged wholesale, widespread, systematic, deliberate and even dishonest breaches of the regulations, the underlying transaction is rendered void. I was, I am afraid, not remotely convinced by Mr. Hurst's appeal to what he characterised as the golden rule approach to statutory construction, whereby one can adopt a non-literal meaning to a statutory provision in such cases."
(ii) Deceit
"The statements of fact and opinion in respect of the movement in interest rates were made recklessly as to whether they were true or false. The bank was reckless as to whether the representations in its marketing material and as made by the Approved Person were supported by information and facts sufficient to enable such an opinion to be expressed to a customer. At all material times the bank and the Approved Person well knew:
(1) that the derivatives market had discounted future interest rates for a sufficient period to enable the bank to profit from the intended trade;
(2) that there was no material risk to warrant the customer entering into [a swap]; or risk or likelihood of interest rates materially rising above the rate at the date of the trade, or if so to an extent that might commercially damage the borrower within the timescale of the [swap]."
i) Mr Marsden's pleaded claim places considerable reliance on a written presentation provided to him by the Bank dated 1 June 2006, prior to his entry into the first swap. That presentation does not, though, appear to support the contention that the Bank represented that interest rates were about to rise, instead stating that the future movement of interest rates was unclear, referring to the fact that there were "divergent opinions" on the subject.ii) In the event, the Bank of England base rate rose 5 times between June 2006 and July 2007, indicating that if a view had been expressed in June 2006 that rates would rise, that view was entirely vindicated. It also puts in context the sustainability (or lack thereof) of an allegation that the Bank must have known that rates were unlikely to rise in September 2007, when the Swaps were entered. At that time base rate had been rising since July 2003 (apart from a one-day reduction in August 2005) and did not fall again until December 2007.
(iii) Claim in relation to the conduct of the review
" I heard considerable argument about whether or not it could arguably be said that the review process amounted to a contract as between Mr. Marshall and the bank, as opposed to a non-contractual review process undertaken by the bank pursuant to an agreement with the FSA and with the consent of Mr. Marshall. If the latter, then the case based on contractual obligation simply could not run. It seems to me to be plain from the documents to which I have referred that it could not possibly be regarded as contractual as between Mr Marshall and the Bank. It also seems to me that, despite Mr Hurst's attempt to argue that Mr Marshall gave consideration for the Bank agreeing to undertake a review by forbearing to sue, in fact on any true analysis there was no consideration which could give rise to contractual relations in this case. The reality is that Mr Marshall was simply the beneficiary of the review. He did not give anything away nor did he suffer any detriment nor agree to do anything different as a result of being afforded that review. Therefore, the contractual argument simply cannot run ..."
Challenge to the Particulars of Claim
Conclusion
Note 1 Mr Marsden states in his witness statement in opposition to this application that he first complained to the Bank about the Swaps in 2010. [Back]