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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Philp & Anor v Cook [2017] EWHC 3023 (QB) (28 November 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2017/3023.html Cite as: [2017] EWHC 3023 (QB) |
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Royal Courts of Justice Strand, London, WC2A 2LL Date: 28/11/2017 |
ON APPEAL FROM EXETER COUNTY COURT
Order of Recorder Christopher Gardner QC
County Court Case No: B09EX053
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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ELAINE PHILP ROBERT IRVING |
Appellants and Claimants |
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- and - |
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LESLEY JOAN COOK |
Respondent and Defendant |
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Clive Wolman for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 13 October 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice May:
Introduction
"1. Interpretation
…
"Warranties"; the representations and warranties in clause 7 and Schedule 3
…
5. Personal Guarantee
5.1 At and after Completion, the Sellers shall continue to provide security for the Bank Loan by way of the Personal Guarantee already provided to Lloyds TSB Bank plc until such time as the loan is renewed or repaid by 2 August 2012.
5.2 The Sellers shall not call in the Personal Guarantee and will comply with all the terms of the Personal Guarantee so as not to affect a default.
5.3 Subject to the Seller's compliance with clause 5.2, between Completion and such time as the loan is renewed or repaid, the Buyer will Indemnify the Sellers on a pound for pound basis in respect of any obligation that may arise for the Sellers to repay the Bank under the Personal Guarantee.
…
7. Warranties
7.1 The Buyer is entering into this agreement on the basis of, and in reliance on, the Warranties.
7.2 The Seller jointly and severally warrants and represents to the Buyer that each Warranty is true, accurate and not misleading on the date of this agreement.
7.3 Without prejudice to the right of the Buyer to claim on any other basis or take advantage of any other remedies available to it, if any Warranty is breached or proves to be untrue or misleading, the Sellers shall pay to the buyer on demand:
7.3.1 the amount necessary to put the Company into the position they would have been in if the Warranty had not been breached or had not been untrue or misleading
7.3.2 the amount necessary to compensate the Buyer if Warranty 2 (Sale Share constitutes all of the issued shares) is untrue or incorrect in any respect; and
7.3.3 all costs and expenses (including, without limitation, damages, claims, demands, proceedings, costs, legal and other professional fees and costs, penalties, expenses and consequential losses whether directly or indirectly arising) incurred by the Buyer or the Company as a result of such breach of 7.3.1 or 7.3.2 or of the Warranty being untrue or misleading.
…
8. Limitations on Claims
8.1 The definitions and rules of interpretation in this clause apply in this agreement.
"Claim": a claim for breach of any of the Warranties.
"Substantiated Claim": a Claim in respect of which liability is admitted by the party against whom such Claim is brought, or which has been adjudicated on by a Court of competent jurisdiction and no right of appeal lies in respect of such adjudication, or the parties are debarred by passage of time or otherwise from making an appeal.
8.2 This clause limits the liability of the Sellers in relation to any Claim.
8.3 The Sellers are not liable for a Claim unless the Buyer has given the Sellers notice in writing of the Claim, summarising the nature of the Claim as far as it is known to the Buyer and the amount claimed:
8.3.1 in the case of a Claim relating to Tax, within the period of 7 years beginning with the Completion Date; and
8.3.2 in all other cases, within the period of 2 years beginning with the Completion Date.
8.4 The Sellers shall not be liable for a Claim unless the amount of all Substantiated Claims together exceeds £500, in which case the whole amount (and not merely the excess) is recoverable by the Buyer.
8.5 Nothing in this clause 8 applies to a Claim that arises or is delayed as a result of dishonesty, fraud, wilful misconduct or wilful concealment by the Sellers, their agents or advisors."
Set-off and the decision in Aries Tanker
"reliance upon equitable set-off and reliance as a matter of defence upon matters of equity which formerly might have called for injunction or prohibition."
It was this third category of set-off on which the Buyer sought to rely before the judge and which he found provided her with an arguable defence to the claim made by the Sellers.
"…In any event the carrier and the ship shall be discharged from all liability in respect of loss or damage unless suit is brought within one year after delivery of the goods or the date when the goods should have been delivered"
As the charterers had brought their counterclaim more than one year after delivery it was time-barred under the contract. The issue was whether this contractual time-bar also prevented the charterers from asserting the right to an equitable set-off in defending the owners' claim against them. Lord Wilberforce found that it did, giving his reasons as follows, at 188C-G:
"My Lords, if this case is to be decided on the terms of the contract it would appear to me to be a comparatively simply one. There is an obligation to pay freight, calculated upon the amount of cargo intaken, which obligation arises upon discharge. There is no dispute as to the amount: it is a liquidated claim. The contract contemplates the possibility of a cross-claim by the charterers in respect of loss or damage to the cargo and it expressly provides by incorporation of article III, r.6 of the Hague Rules that the carrier and the ship shall be discharged unless suit is brought within one year after the date of delivery or the date when delivery should have been made. This amounts to a time bar created by contract. But, and I do not think that sufficient recognition to this has been given in the courts below, it is a time bar of a special kind, viz., one which extinguishes the claim…not one which, as most English statues of limitation (e.g. the Limitation act 1939, the Maritime Conventions Act 1911), and some international conventions (e.g. the Brussels Convention on Collisions 1910, article 7) do, bars the remedy while leaving the claim itself in existence. Therefore, arguments to which much attention and refined discussion has been given, as to whether the charterer's claim is a defence, or in the nature of a cross-action, or a set-off of one kind or another, however relevant to cases to which the Limitation Act 1939 or similar Acts apply, appear to me, with all respect, to be misplaced. The charterer's claim, after May 1974 and before the date of the writ, had not merely become unenforceable by action, it had simply ceased to exist, and I fail to understand how a claim which has ceased to exist can be introduced for any purpose into legal proceedings, whether by defence or (if this is different) as a means of reducing the respondents' claim, or as a set-off, or in any way whatsoever. It is a claim which, after May 1974, had no existence in law, and could have no relevance in proceedings commenced, as these were, in October 1974. I would add, though this is unnecessary since the provision is clear in its terms, that to provide for the discharge of these claims after 12 months meets an obvious commercial need, namely, to allow shipowners, after that period, to clear their books."
"Macquarie's claim about transportation charges was not the subject of the requisite notice, and the question is whether, nevertheless, Macquarie can rely upon it by way of a set off against the… credit. They say that they can, citing Derham The Law of Set-Off (3rd edn, 2003) para 4.39 in support of the proposition that –
'Equitable set-off…is a substantive defence which does not require an order of the court for its enforcement. As a consequence, an equitable set-off may be asserted notwithstanding that the cross-demand upon which it is based is no longer enforceable by action because of the expiration of a limitation period.'
Even assuming this to be so where a period of limitation extinguishes the remedy to enforce a right, the argument is not available to Macquarie in this case because paragraph 2.2 [of the contract] makes it clear that, if notice of a claim is not given, not only the remedy but the liability giving rise to a claim is extinguished"
The relevant notification provisions in Macquarie were different from those in the SPA, being in two parts: para 2.1 of the contract in that case provided that "no claim shall be brought" unless notice was given within a year. Para. 2.2 went on to provide that:
"The liability of the Sellers in respect of a claim notified in accordance with Paragraph 2.1 shall absolutely terminate…if legal proceedings in respect of that claim containing full particulars of it shall not have been properly issued and validly served on the relevant Sellers within nine (9) months of the date of service of that notice."
(i) The heading applied to clause 8, viz. "Limitations on claims";(ii) The wording of clause 8.4: "the Sellers shall not be liable for a claim unless the amount of all Substantiated Claims together exceeds £500...", where a "Substantiated Claim" is one in respect of which liability has been admitted or on which judgment has been obtained.
(iii) His interpretation of "claim" in clause 8, Mr Wolman suggested, was supported by the dicta of Lord Denning in The Brede [1974] QB 233, a case that he said had not been overruled by the House of Lords in Aries Tanker.
Discussion
"..where A has a claim against B which A is entitled in equity to set off against a claim made by B against A, neither the existence nor the exercise by A of this right of equitable set-off has the effect of extinguishing or reducing either claim" (emphasis added)
Conclusion