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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions >> K/S Lincoln & Ors v CB Richard Ellis Hotels Ltd [2009] EWHC 2344 (TCC) (02 October 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2009/2344.html Cite as: 127 Con LR 188, [2009] BLR 591, [2009] EWHC 2344 (TCC), [2010] PNLR 5 |
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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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(1) K/S LINCOLN (2) K/S BARLBOROUGH (3) K/S CHESTERFIELD (4) K/S WICKERSLEY (5) K/S QUAYSIDE (6) K/S MALTHOUSE AVENUE (7) K/S FULWOOD (8) K/S WELLINGBOROUGH |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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CB RICHARD ELLIS HOTELS LIMITED |
Defendant |
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Mr Patrick Lawrence QC (instructed by Reynolds Porter Chamberlain LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 14th September 2009
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Coulson :
Introduction
a) The Particulars of Claim
Paragraph 105 of the Particulars of Claim provides as follows:
"For reasons of convenience and of tax efficiency in Denmark, the transactions were in each case carried out at a rolled-up price inclusive of a buffer of 8%, which sum was assessed to be sufficient to cover all associated costs. This was accomplished by the sellers entering into a side agreement with ESL under which the sellers agreed to deduct 8% of the nominal sale price on the date of completion and pay this to ESL in consideration of ESL's introduction of the purchasers."
There then follows a table in which the two sums (the payment to the sellers and the 8% paid to ESL) are identified in relation to each hotel, thus explaining the total price paid.
b) The Defence
Paragraph 58.2 of the Defence deals with the 8% in this way:
"The 'explanation' for the inclusion of an additional 8% over and above the 'nominal' sale price for the hotels is noted. It appears that the claimants have deliberately added 8% to the true purchase price to disguise the nature of the payment and to circumvent the fact that the professional fees were not tax deductible. Prima facie, and subject to the condition that Danish tax law is not more benevolent to the tax payer than English tax law, this was unlawful tax evasion. The defendant will investigate the position and reserves the right to plead further on this point. If the purchase was structured to obtain an unlawful tax saving, the claims fail for illegality."
c) The Reply
Paragraph 21 of the Reply deals in detail with this allegation in the following terms:
"a) The fact that the price paid was a "rolled-up" price inclusive of some 8% transaction costs was not disguised. It was openly stated in the prospectuses for all 8 claimants. The prospectuses were reviewed by Deloitte, who issued an auditor's declaration in respect of each.
b) The annual financial reports of the claimants, which have been audited by Deloitte, contain a cost price. These annual reports are filed with the Danish Commerce and Companies Agency, and are public documents.
c) There would be no tax advantage to be gained from misleading the Danish tax authorities into believing that the transaction prices (for instance, £5,221,800 in the case of Lincoln hotel) did not include the topping up with transaction costs, since the Danish tax laws permit lawyers fees, surveyors fees, land tax and so on to be included in the capital acquisition sum for the purposes of depreciation. Each year up to a specified percentage of such capital may be set against current income, for the purpose of calculating taxable profit. In 2005 this percentage was 5%; today it is 4%. (In the case of a hotel the value of land acquired, as opposed to buildings, machinery and installation, may not be depreciated.)
d) What has been an issue in Denmark is whether the fee of the promoter of a K/S (in this case Scanplan's fee) may be included in the capital costs thus depreciated. The Danish courts have recently held that this is not permissible. The prospectus highlighted this issue and included a sensitivity analysis of its tax impact.
e) The persons who are responsible for submitting a tax return in respect of such annual profits are the individual limited partners of the K/S. The K/S itself is a "tax transparent" entity in Denmark.
f) The payment of a rolled-up price (covering a whole series of different outgoings and disbursements in respect of transaction costs) contributed to simplicity of presentation, and to administrative convenience and efficiency. But, save in that sense, it did not create any tax advantage.
g) It is denied that the nature of the additional 8% payment was disguised.
h) It is denied, if it should ever be alleged, that the claimants were engaged in unlawful tax evasion.
i) Without prejudice to the above, the last sentence of paragraph 58.2 is, as a matter of law, denied."
The Parties' Competing Submissions
The Nature Of The Defendant's Pleading
The Law Relating To Illegality
"In my judgment the time has come to decide clearly that the rule is the same whether a plaintiff founds himself on a legal or equitable title: he is entitled to recover if he is not forced to plead or rely on illegality, even if it emerges that the title on which he relied was acquired in the course of carrying through an illegal transaction… In my judgment the court is only entitled and bound to dismiss a claim on the basis that it is founded on an illegality in those cases where the illegality is of a kind which would have provided a good defence if raised by the defendants. In a case where the plaintiff is not seeking to enforce an unlawful contract but founds his case on collateral rights acquired under the contract (such as a right of property) the court is neither bound nor entitled to reject the claim unless illegality of necessity forms part of the plaintiff's case."
"… have been unable to recover compensation for unfair or wrongful dismissal or to enforce their contracts of employment in any way. In such cases the contract of employment is tainted by fraud by the illegal use for which it was intended to be put."
"21. The House in Tinsley v Milligan did not lay down a universal test of ex turpi causa. It was dealing with the effect of illegality on title to property. It established the general principle that, once title has passed, it cannot be attacked on the basis that it passed pursuant to an illegal transaction. If the title can be asserted without reliance on the illegality, the defendant cannot rely on the illegality to defeat the title…. The House held that it also applied in the case of both legal and equitable title to realty. The House did not hold that illegality will never bar a claim if the claim can be advanced without reliance on it. On the contrary, the House made it plain that where the claim is to enforce a contract the claim will be defeated if the defendant shows that the contract was for an illegal purpose, even though the claimant does not assert illegal purpose in making the claim; see Alexander v Rayson [1936] 1KB 169, approved by Lord Brown-Wilkinson at page 370."
"26…. The policy can be sub-divided into two principles in relation to contractual obligations.
1) The court will not enforce a contract which is expressly or impliedly forbidden by statute or that is entered into with the intention of committing an illegal act.
2) The court will not assist a claimant to recover a benefit from his own wrong doing. This extends to claims for compensation or an indemnity aspect of the adverse consequences of the wrong doing: see Beresford v Royal Insurance Co Limited [1938] AC 586."
Unfortunately, it does not appear that 21st Century was identified to their Lordships, a case that appears, on its face, to be rather more relevant to the issues than many of those authorities which were cited in argument.
a) Contracts which are entered into with the intention of committing an illegal act will not generally be enforced (Stone & Rolls) although, in exceptional circumstances, the intended illegality may be so remote to the subject matter of the claim as to make the contract enforceable (21st Century).b) In a case where the claimant is not seeking to enforce an unlawful contract but founds his case on collateral rights acquired under that contract, and where illegality does not, of necessity, form part of the claimant's case, the claim may well succeed (Tinsley v Milligan) although the comments by Lord Phillips in Stone & Rolls and by Lord Hoffmann in Gray may indicate that this more generous approach may be confined to property cases.
c) The court will not generally assist a claimant to recover the benefit of his own wrongdoing, whether or not the claimant has pleaded or expressly relied on the illegality on making the claim (Stone & Rolls).
d) Although the test is no longer to ask if the public conscience is affronted by the allowance of such a claim (Tinsley v Milligan), it seems clear that the underlying principle or policy is one of deterrence; that the courts will not encourage illegal acts by allowing claims based upon them.
Analysis
Proportionality
Case Management Decisions
Foreign Law
1. "
Note 1 I make clear that this does not mean that I have ruled in favour of disclosure of documents other than those which are or have been in the control of the claimants in accordance with CPR 31.8. [Back]