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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Joseph v Deloitte NSE LLP [2019] EWHC 3354 (QB) (05 December 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2019/3354.html Cite as: [2019] EWHC 3354 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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David Joseph |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Deloitte NSE LLP |
Defendant |
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Paul Goulding QC and George Molyneaux (instructed by Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 27 November 2019
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Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Whipple:
Introduction
Facts
i) Stage 1, where the Board gives a Notice of Retirement.
ii) Stage 2, where the partner "feels aggrieved" in respect of the Board's decision to give him a Notice of Retirement, the partner has the right within 7 days after receipt of the Notice of Retirement to make his or her point of view known to the chairman of Deloitte and to present his or her case to a meeting of the Board by way of written memorandum or personal presentation. At least 7 days' notice of the Board meeting must be given to the partner. Thus, this is a right to ask the Board to review its earlier decision ("Board's review").
iii) Stage 3, where "the Board has not withdrawn the Notice of Retirement" and the partner is "still aggrieved", that partner may "within seven (7) days of the date of such Board meeting" notify the chairman of Deloitte that he or she wishes the Board to convene a partners' meeting "to review the Board's decision to issue a Notice of Retirement", in which case the Board shall convene a partners' meeting within 14 days.
"Further to my email below, this email is to confirm the practical details for the upcoming board meeting in Oslo, as well as to provide you with the relevant documentation.
The meeting of the NSE Board will be held on 2 October 2019 at 5:30pm (local Oslo time) at the Deloitte offices in Oslo, Norway (please note that this date has been amended since my email to you below).
[…]
The Board Meeting will commence at 5:30pm and I would be grateful if you were available outside the meeting room before this time. Please note that the time allocated to you is expected to be from 5.50pm to 6.10pm. The final Board decision following this meeting will be communicated to you by no later than 9 October 2019."
"In the event that the Board has decided not to withdraw the Notice of Retirement and pursuant to my rights under the LLP Agreement, I would request that the Board convene a "special meeting of all the Partners" within 14 days to review its decision to issue the Notice of Retirement."
"Need to understand from Farrers what he's trying to get out of this process. Put it to him and to them that he's out of time. Rather than denying him the right to bring the meeting".
The second contains references to having a "sensible conversation" but that he is "out of time".
Evidence
I. Contractual Analysis
Construction of Clause 16.2(b)
i) The purpose of the partners' meeting, set out in clause 16.2(b), is for the partners to review the Board's decision to issue a Notice of Retirement (ie the stage 1 decision), not for them to review the Board's review decision (stage 2). Thus, the Claimant's arguments are based on a false predicate: the right of appeal to the partners is not from the stage 2 review by the Board, but against the stage 1 Board decision to issue a Notice of Retirement. It is not necessary to the working of clause 16.2(b) that the partner or partners should know the outcome of stage 2 before embarking on the stage 3 appeal to the partners.
ii) The two pre-conditions for the operation of stage 3 can still be met even if the partner has not been informed of the outcome of the Board review (stage 2). The Notice of Retirement remains in place unless and until it is withdrawn. In circumstances where the partner has not been told the result of the Board review, it follows that the Board "has not withdrawn the Notice of Retirement". Withdrawal must include communication of that fact to the partner: after all, the Board has given the partner Notice of Retirement and until the partner is told that the Notice has been withdrawn, it remains effective. For so long as the partner is in receipt of a Notice of Retirement, which has not been withdrawn, he may very well be "still aggrieved".
iii) Importantly, and as a matter of construction, the partner is afforded greater protection on this analysis, because the partner's right to call for a partners' meeting cannot be thwarted by the Board delaying its decision on review; the partner can take the matter to his or her fellow partners, regardless. Although the Board is under an obligation to notify the partners of their decisions (cl 8.2) there is no timeframe imposed on that obligation; it is possible to conceive of a situation where the Board has not made or notified its decision even at the 6 month point, when the partner's Notice of Retirement expires. On the Claimant's analysis, in such a scenario the partner would be left without any right of appeal to the partners. That would be an unfair erosion of an important protection afforded to individual partners under the LLPA.
iv) Further, the Deloitte construction gives the individual partner important leverage over the Board to press for the Board's decision to be reached and communicated swiftly – the partnership would doubtless not be impressed to be called to a meeting in circumstances where the Board had failed, in the absence of some very good reason, to give a decision on review.
v) The LLPA is a carefully drafted document which sets out the rights and responsibilities of Deloitte's equity partners, a sophisticated user group who can be expected to have entered into the LLPA with their eyes open. That is a further reason why the LLPA should be construed according to its natural meaning.
Implied Term
i) To imply such a term is not necessary to give business efficacy to clause 16.2(b). As stated above, the clause works fine, in fact, in my view, it works rather better, if the time runs from the date of the Board meeting regardless of when the outcome is communicated.
ii) To imply such a term would conflict with the express words of clause 16.2(b) which provide that the partner "may within seven (7) days of the date of such Board meeting" call for a partners' meeting. To change it to "may within 7 days of the date on which the outcome of such Board meeting is communicated" is to provide for a very different and contrary rule.
iii) It is far from obvious that such a provision was intended by the parties. The contrast between the language of cl 16.2(a) and cl 16.2(b) is telling in this context. In cl 16.2(a), the partner can request a Board review "within seven (7) days after receipt of such notice" (my emphasis). This shows that it would have been easy to express the term which the Claimant says should be implied into cl 16.2(b). The absence of such expression is, in my judgment, deliberate.
iv) Again, the LLPA is a carefully drafted document for a sophisticated group of signatories. They can be taken to know and understand the plain words of the LLPA.
Conclusion on contractual analysis
II. Estoppel
Estoppel by Representation and Promissory Estoppel
Estoppel by Convention
Conclusion on estoppel
Conclusion
Appendix
Cl 16.2 of the LLPA
"16.2 Notice from the Board
Subject to Clause 7.6(f), and this Clause 16.2, the Board may at any time give to an Equity Partner written notice of retirement (a Notice of Retirement). The Board shall give such period of notice as the National Practice of which the relevant Equity Partner is a National Member would be obliged to give to such Equity Partner or, where none is specified, not less than six (6) months' notice (unless the NSE CEO, the Geography CEO of the relevant National Practice and the Equity Partner concerned shall together agree a shorter notice period) and such Equity Partner's retirement from the Firm shall become effective on the expiration of such notice period (or such shorter notice period as may have been agreed). Any Equity Partner to whom the Board gives notice under this Clause 16.2 shall automatically be treated as also having been given notice of retirement from any National Practice of which he or she is a National Member.
(a) Where any Equity Partner feels aggrieved in respect of any decision of the Board to give him or her a Notice of Retirement, such Equity Partner shall have the right within seven (7) days after receipt of such notice:(i) to make known his or her point of view to the NSE Chairman; and(ii) if such Equity Partner so wishes, to present his or her case either by way of written memorandum or personal presentation to a meeting of the Board of which not less than seven (7) days' notice shall have been given to such Equity Partner.(b) If following the meeting of the Board referred to in Clause 16.2(a)(ii), the Board has not withdrawn the Notice of Retirement and such Equity Partner is still aggrieved, that Equity Partner may within seven (7) days of the date of such Board meeting notify the NSE Chairman that he or she wishes the Board to convene a special meeting of all the Equity Partners pursuant to Clause 3.1 to review the Board's decision to issue a Notice of Retirement to such Equity Partner under this Clause 16.2, in which case the Board shall by notice to the Equity Partners convene such special meeting within fourteen (14) days of the date of such notification to the NSE Chairman.(c) The notice to the Equity Partners shall be in writing and shall contain sufficient detail of the matter to be discussed, including any written representations submitted by the aggrieved Equity Partner together with a draft of any resolution to be put to the Equity Partners in respect of such Equity Partner's retirement.[…]"