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England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions >> Ruttle Plant Hire v Secretary of State for the Environment & Rural Affairs [2007] EWHC 2870 (TCC) (04 December 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2007/2870.html Cite as: [2007] EWHC 2870 (TCC), [2008] 2 All ER (Comm) 264, [2008] 2 BCLC 345, [2007] BPIR 1652, [2008] BCC 790 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Ruttle Plant Hire |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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The Secretary of State for the Environment And Rural Affairs |
Defendant |
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Jonathan Acton Davis QC, Rebecca Stubbs (instructed by Nabarro) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 23rd
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Crown Copyright ©
The Hon Mr Justice Ramsey :
Introduction
Background
These Proceedings
"The above allegations in respect of contractual terms and breaches of contract are not intended to be exhaustive. Rather, Ruttle's intention is to plead the case in sufficient detail to enable the claim for economic duress set out at paragraph 54 below to be determined. Should Ruttle be successful with its primary claim so as to obtain the relief sought in paragraph (1) of the Prayer below, then Ruttle will seek case management directions from the Court including directions for and further necessary statements of case so as to enable an account to be taken of the monies due and owing by DEFRA under the Contract. "
"39. Despite the provision of the necessary documentation and information, and in breach of the term of the Collateral Contract set out in paragraph 36 above, DEFRA unilaterally decided in what appears to FAL to have been about April 2003 to halt the valuation process and/or to seek to settle FAL's potential claim without any or any proper reference to the results of the valuation process contemplated by the parties in entering into and required to be undertaken by the Collateral Contract.
40. Without prejudice to the generality of the averment contained in paragraph 39 above, the particular facts and matters upon which FAL relies in support of its case that DEFRA was in breach of the Collateral Contract are the contents of the letter from Pinsents dated 25th April 2003 referred to in paragraph 41 below, further the facts and matters set out in paragraph 54d below under the heading "DEFRA's Illegitimate Pressure and/or Bad Faith."
"(1) a declaration that the mediated settlement between the parties was entered into by FAL whilst and as a result of being under economic duress;
(2) rescission of the mediated settlement;
(3) an order that an account be taken of the sums due and owing to the Claimant as assignee of FAL's right to the taking of such account;
(4) directions from the Court for the taking of an account;
(5) costs."
This Application
(1) That the Deed of Assignment does not entitle Ruttle to commence proceedings against DEFRA in connection with causes of action which FAL might have because:
(a) FAL's cause of action in economic duress which was capable of being assigned and was assigned under the Deed of Assignment can only be pursued in FAL's name and not in Ruttle's name.(b) Causes of action arising out of the Contract, for breach of the Contract or for an account of monies due and owing under the Contract or causes of Action under the Collateral Contract were not assigned under the Deed of Assignment.(c) Causes of action arising out of the Contract, for breach of the Contract or for an account of monies due and owing under the Contract could not have been properly assigned to Ruttle under the Deed of Assignment because Clause 21.1 of the Contract prohibits such assignment.(2) That paragraphs 10 to 30 and 32 to 40 of the Particulars of Claim do not plead a complete cause of action under the Contract or the Collateral Contract and are irrelevant to a claim for rescission.
(3) That paragraphs 41 to 55 do not plead a complete claim for the tort of economic duress because there is no pleaded claim for damages.
(4) That Ruttle's claim for rescission should not be allowed to proceed unless Ruttle offers counter-rescission or counter-restitution.
The Deed of Assignment
"2. A cause of action arose before winding up of the Company arising inter alia out of the Company's dealings with DEFRA ("the cause of action"). Specifically, the Company entered into a settlement with DEFRA which purported to settle the potential heads of claim of the Company against the Secretary of State for the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs ("The Secretary of State") but which failed adequately to compensate the Company. The Company wishes to re-open the matter;3. The company wishes to seek advice on the said cause of action and, dependant on the results of that advice, to issue proceedings against various parties including the Secretary of State in contract and tort ("the Action");
4. The Liquidator, not having the means to pursue the Action, has proposed to sell to the Assignee his right to commence and thereafter continue to prosecute the Action together with any benefit derived from the Action. All the interests of the Company in the Action and monies sought to be recovered in it will be sold to the Assignee upon the terms that the Assignee shall pay to the Liquidator a sum equal to 33% of any monies recovered in the Action. The Assignee shall take upon itself (in exoneration of the Liquidator and of the Company's assets) the further prosecution of the Action and the costs thereof, which proposal the Assignee has accepted."
"Assignment of rights of action
In consideration of the Assignee's covenants set out below the Liquidator so far as he is able to do so transfers, conveys and assigns to the Assignee absolutely all those rights of the Liquidator to prosecute and carry on the Action against such defendant or defendants ("the Defendants") as the assignee considers proper, and all rights to recover and receive from the Defendants in the Action all such sums of money, property and benefits as shall be awarded and adjudged to the Claimant in the Action or in any appeal, or other proceedings in the Action and as the Company as the Claimant in the Action (but for the insolvency), or as the Liquidator (but for this assignment) would be entitled to, in respect of the subject matter of the Action and the liability of the Defendant(s) thereunder, together with all the rights, powers and authorities which the Liquidator can confer and is entitled to transfer, to the intent that hereafter the Assignee shall be enabled to prosecute the Action and all proceedings consequent thereon in as full a manner as the Company or the Liquidator could have done and free from all control of any interference by the Liquidator."
The Contract
"To supply Products, Labour, Plant and Consumables to MAFF during the [Foot and Mouth Disease] crisis as directed by MAFF and/or [Ministry of Defence]."
"The Supplier shall not assign or sub-contract any portion of the Contract without prior written consent of the Minister. Sub-contracting any part of the Contract shall not relieve the Supplier of any obligation or duty attributable to him under the Contract or these Conditions."
The Proper Claimant
The Scope of the Assignment
Clause 21 of the Contract
(1) That the prohibition in Clause 21.1 states that FAL "shall not assign or sub-contract" and that the prohibition on sub-contracting could only apply during the period when FAL was supplying services. The prohibition against sub-contracting is therefore limited and there should be no distinction between assignment and sub-contracting.(2) That there is nothing in Clause 21.1 to indicate that the prohibition on assignment should endure for ever. This is to be contrasted with Clause 17 which did contain a provision for that provision to continue to apply.
(3) That there is no commercial purpose in having an indefinite prohibition on assignment. To the contrary, Ruttle submits that there are several reasons why a supplier who is in financial difficulty and owed substantial sums by the Defendant should be able to assign the right to payment.
(1) To prevent the Liquidator from exercising his statutory right to assign the Contract and the rights arising under the Contract would undermine his powers under the 1986 Act. This is therefore not a case where, as Lord Browne-Wilkinson said, "There is no public need for a market in causes in action."(2) In this case, Ruttle alleges that the Defendant dealt with FAL's claim in a way which would be likely to, and did cause or contribute to FAL's insolvency and that the Defendant also acted in bad faith. It would therefore be wrong to bar Ruttle from arguing that the Defendant should not be permitted to rely on the assignment clause where the need for the assignment has arisen from the Defendant's conduct.
Duration of Clause 21
"The expiration or termination of the Agreement… shall not affect or prejudice any provision of the Agreement which is expressly or by implication provided to come into effect on, or to continue in effect after, such expiration or termination."
"Clause 16 comes immediately after Clause 15.4, which states that terms shall continue after termination only if that is provided expressly or by implication. There is no express provision for continuation in clause 16.2, and the submissions made by Mr Hantusch and Mr Boardman persuade me that the implication of such provision would be contrary to the commercial purpose of the clause. There is nothing in the Linden Gardens case laying down any inflexible rule. On the contrary Lord Browne-Wilkinson (with whom all their Lordships agreed on this point) emphasised, in the passage already cited, that in each case the issue must turn on the terms of the contract in question"
Clause 21 and the rights of the Liquidator
" Next it is said that, whatever the position when the company was trading, it is different now that the company is in liquidation. Paragraph 6 of SCH 4 to the Insolvency Act 1986 confers on a liquidator 'power to sell any of the company's property by public auction or private contract'.
I do not see that this can entitle the liquidator to sell what the company does not own, or to sell property otherwise than upon the terms on which the company owns it. In Nokes v Doncaster Amalgamated Collieries Ltd [1940] 2 All ER 549, [1940] AC 1014 there was an amalgamation of two companies, and the question arose whether it transferred a contract of service. John Morris KC, in argument, said: "The transfer effected by s154 of the Companies Act, 1929 is only of things which by their nature are assignable" (see [1940] AC 1014 at 1015).
That was the argument accepted in the House of Lords. And Lord Atkin equated s 154 to s 151(2)(a) of the Companies Act 1908, the predecessor of the statutory provision now in question (see [1940] AC 1014 at 1033). A similar conclusion was reached in Re Farrow's Bank Ltd [1921] 2Ch 164, [1921] All ER Rep 511."
Public Policy
"In the face of this authority, the House is being invited to change the law by holding that such a prohibition is void as contrary to public policy. For myself I can see no good reason for so doing. Nothing was urged in argument as showing that such a prohibition was contrary to the public interest beyond the fact that such prohibition renders the chose in action inalienable. Certainly in the context of rights over land the law does not favour restrictions on alienability. But even in relation to land law a prohibition against the assignment of a lease is valid. We were not referred to any English case in which the courts have had to consider restrictions on the alienation of tangible personal property, probably because there are few cases in which there would be any desire to restrict such alienation. In the case of real property there is a defined and limited supply of the commodity, and it has been held contrary to public policy to restrict the free market. But no such reason can apply to contractual rights: there is no public need for a market in choses in action. A party to a building contract, as I have sought to explain, can have a genuine commercial interest in seeking to ensure that he is in contractual relations only with a person whom he has selected as the other party to the contract. In these circumstances I can see no policy reason why a contractual prohibition on assignment of contractual rights should be held contrary to public policy."
Complete Causes of Action under the Contract and Collateral Contract
(1) Para 54 (a): "As a result to the breaches of the Contract referred to in paragraphs 28 above and/or the breaches of representation referred to in paragraph 26 above, DEFRA caused FAL's financial position to become parlous in the manner and to the extent referred to in paragraph 51 above."(2) Para 54(d): "DEFRA breached the Collateral Contract, as set out at paragraphs 38 to 40 above. This, in itself, amounted to illegitimate pressure and/or bad faith, alternatively it amounted to such in circumstances where at all material times DEFRA knew how parlous FAL's financial position was (as set out in paragraphs 51 and 52 above) and/or when it knew that FAL would be unable to issue or prosecute a claim against DEFRA in the event that FAL decided to reject whatever offer DEFRA made to settle its legitimate claims under the invoices (for the reasons set out in paragraph 53 above)."
Tort of Duress
"Now it is important to notice that a claim to rescission is a right of action but can in no way be described as a chose in action or part of a chose in action. It is a claim to be relieved of a mortgage, and such a claim can be made only by the owner of the mortgaged property. The owner cannot assign a right to rescission separately from his property because it would make no sense to acquire a right to have someone else's property relieved of a mortgage. Likewise, the possibility of an abatement of the debt as part of the process of rescission is not a chose in action which can be assigned. It is simply part of the process of rescission, which is a right attached to the ownership of the house itself."
Counter Rescission
Conclusion