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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Hughes v Groveholt Ltd [2005] EWCA Civ 897 (18 July 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2005/897.html Cite as: [2005] EWCA Civ 897 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM HIGH COURT, CHANCERY DIVISION
Nicholas Underhill QC (Sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge)
HC04C00899
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE JONATHAN PARKER
and
LORD JUSTICE DYSON
____________________
ALAN HUGHES |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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GROVEHOLT LTD |
Respondent |
____________________
Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Nicholas Strauss QC and Neil Kitchener (instructed by Lawrence Graham) for the Respondent
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Jonathan Parker :
INTRODUCTION
"[Mr Hughes] does not, by reason of the disclaimer of the Chelverton Agreement by the liquidator of Chelverton or otherwise, have any right to the payment as debts of the sums of money referred to in clauses 5.1.2, 5.1.3 and 5.1.5 of the Chelverton Agreement [i.e. the £3M] and accordingly such sums are not secured by the Charge."
THE RELEVANT CONTRACTS
The Sainsbury Agreement
The Loan Agreement
The Chelverton Agreement
"5 Payments to the Vendor
5.1 The Purchaser will make the following payments to the Vendor conditional upon or dependent upon the following events: (and within 14 days thereof save for payment under clause 5.1.1. hereof which shall be paid on the Completion Date)
5.1.1 On completion £1,500,000 .
5.1.2 When outline planning consent has obtained for the development of a leisure site within the [Chelverton Land] £500,000
5.1.3 On the obtaining of detailed planning consent for residential development in respect of a minimum of 16.8 acres of net developable area within the [Chelverton Land] £1,500,000
5.1.4 On the obtaining of outline planning consent or local plan inclusion for residential development in respect of a minimum of 25 acres of net developable area within the [Chelverton Land] £2,000,000
5.1.5 On the obtaining of outline planning consent for a food store development on the Sainsbury Land which meets the requirements of the Sainsbury Agreement £1,000,000
."
"6.2 The first charge referred to in 6.1 hereof shall be released by the Vendor from each parcel of land referred to in 5.1 hereof as and when the payment due for that parcel of land is made by the Purchaser to the Vendor or as and when there are no further payments due to the Vendor hereunder PROVIDED THAT if (if either or both) the proviso to clause 5.1 hereof and clause 11 hereof have effect so that the payment which would otherwise be due under clauses 5.1.2 and/or 5.1.3 is not immediately payable then notwithstanding such proviso the Charge over the particular land as identified in clause 5.1.2 and/or 5.1.3 hereof shall be released on the date when such payment would be due in accordance with that particular clause as if the said proviso did not have effect but such payments due under those clauses will be secured by any further charges given to the Vendor hereunder and neither those charges shall be released nor shall any payment be made under clause 8.3.3 hereof until any payments due under clauses 5.1.2 or 5.1.3 hereof (but subject to clause 11 hereof) which have been deferred because of the said proviso (if any) are paid by the Purchaser in accordance with the particular clause."
"8.3.2 The infrastructure Costs and costs of Site Assembly including the costs of the acquisition of the Railtrack Land which is dealt with by Clause 10 hereof shall not exceed Four million five hundred thousand pounds (£4,500,000) and if they do exceed that figure the Vendor will pay or direct to be paid a sum equal to the excess to the Purchaser (it being acknowledged (for the avoidance of doubt) that payment by the Vendor to the Purchaser of any such excess of those costs above Five million pounds (£5,000,000) will meet the obligations of the Vendor to Sainsbury in respect of such excess costs)
8.3.3 Any balancing payment due to be paid to the Vendor out of the sum of Five million pounds (£5,000,000) referred to in Clause 8.2.1 shall be paid to the Purchaser"
"9.1 In the event that a planning consent for a food store on the Sainsbury Land which meets the requirements of the Sainsbury Agreement is obtained the provisions of Clauses 8 and 10 hereof shall apply in relation to Infrastructure Costs and the Costs of Site Assembly including dealing with the Railtrack Land and subject thereto the Purchaser will use all reasonable endeavours to agree the Site Assembly Agreements and subject thereto and to clauses 8 and 10 hereof will organise and effect the Infrastructure Works
9.3 The Purchaser agrees to use all reasonable endeavours as soon as reasonably practicable with regard to agreeing all Site Assembly agreements and as to working up agreeing and obtaining all necessary statutory planning and other approvals for the Infrastructure Works and the Vendor will render all reasonably practicable assistance and co-operation to the Purchaser in respect thereof "
"11. Security for Payments to the Purchaser
As security for the provisions within clauses 8 and 10 in so far as they allow for payment by the Vendor to the Purchaser or the procurement of payment from Sainsbury's (but subject to the provisions of clause 5.1 hereof regarding the payment under clauses 5.1.2 and/or 5.1.3) any payments otherwise due under clauses 5.1.2-5.1.5 hereof shall not be payable until
11.1 the Site Assembly Costs are known and certain by exchange of all the Site Assembly Agreements and the Infrastructure Costs are known and certain to the extent that tenders for the carrying out of the works within a practicable timescale have been received and accepted and the costs thereof (including any fees) thus calculated
11.2 (in the event that clause 10 hereof has effect) the payment due from the Vendor under clause 10.2 is known
and at such time when such costs are so identified and known then any further payments then due and payable to the Vendor under the said clauses 5.1.2-5.1.5 hereof after deducting amounts due to the Purchaser under clause 8.3 and 10 hereof shall be payable to the Vendor such payment being made within ten days thereof"
The Charge
The Deed of Novation
The contractual position in relation to the preparatory costs
- As against Chelverton, Sainsbury was liable for the preparatory costs up to £5M (in effect, they were to come out of the purchase price for the Sainsbury Land under the Sainsbury Agreement).
- In the event that the total amount of the preparatory costs, when finally ascertained, should be less than £5M, Sainsbury was liable to pay the difference (representing the balance of the purchase price for the Sainsbury Land) to Chelverton and Mr Hughes was liable to Chelverton (under clauses 8.3.1 and 8.3.3 of the Chelverton Agreement) to see that it did so.
- Chelverton was liable to indemnify Sainsbury to the extent that the preparatory costs exceeded £5M.
- Mr Hughes was liable to Chelverton (under clause 8.3.2 of the Chelverton Agreement) to pay Chelverton any amount by which the preparatory costs exceeded £4.5M.
THE RELEVANT LEGISLATION
"178. (1) This [section applies] to a company that is being wound up in England and Wales.
(2) Subject as follows, the liquidator may disclaim any onerous property and may do so notwithstanding that he has taken possession of it, endeavoured to sell it, or otherwise exercised rights of ownership in relation to it.
(3) The following is onerous property for the purposes of this section
(a) any unprofitable contract, and
(b)
(4) A disclaimer under this section
(a) operates so as to determine, as from the date of disclaimer, the rights, interests and liabilities of the company in or in respect of the property disclaimed;
(b) does not, except so far as is necessary for releasing the company from any liability, affect the rights or liabilities of any other person.
(5) .
(6) Any person sustaining loss or damage in consequence of the operation of a disclaimer under this section is deemed a creditor of the company to the extent of the loss or damage and accordingly may prove for the loss or damage in the winding up."
THE JUDGE'S JUDGMENT
" , the obligation secured by the Charge is the payment of "the Balance", i.e. the overage payments potentially due under cl. 5.1.2-5. Although the Charge does not expressly refer to cl. 11, it seems plain that it must be construed as referring to cl. 5 as modified by cl. 11: in other words, the liabilities secured are the net liabilities after any deduction that might fall to be made under cls. 8.3 and 10, and which only fall to be paid after the extent of such liabilities has been ascertained .... Indeed this was common ground before me. Mr Kitchener [appearing below], for Groveholt, submits that it follows that no sum is yet due in respect of the cl. 5 permissions which have been granted and the Claimant's application must accordingly fail. (He also submits, though this goes further than he need at this stage of the argument, that no such sum will ever be payable, since the relevant costs have already exceeded £3m .)"
" I do not accept the distinction which Mr. Hill-Smith makes between the overage payments being "due" and their being "payable". I appreciate that there is a sense in which entitlement to the overage payments could be said to have "accrued", in that the cl. 5 permissions had been granted and nothing more remained to be done by Mr. Hughes; and that it is possible to characterise cl. 11 as merely "deferring" or "postponing" that "accrued" entitlement in order to give security for any liability under cls. 8.3 and 10 indeed cl. 11 itself uses the language of "security". But I do not think that such characterisations are determinative of the issue. In the only sense that matters Mr. Hughes had no accrued rights at the moment of disclaimer. In law his entitlement under cl. 5.1 was contingent on the happening of other events, specifically the ascertainment of the preparatory costs in an amount less than £4.5m. That ascertainment had not (indeed it still has not) occurred. As at the moment of the disclaimer he had no immediate right to payment of any of the overage payments and he could not have sued for them. Despite the introductory words of cl. 5.1 the clear effect of cl. 11 is that no right to payment of the overage payments arises until after ascertainment of the preparatory costs. The words "any payments otherwise due under clauses 5.1.2 - 5.1.5 hereof shall not be payable until" are quite explicit. That being so, the disclaimer cannot give Mr. Hughes a right which he did not enjoy apart from it: even if the effect of the disclaimer was indeed to preclude any possibility of the cl. 5 sums being reduced, that effect only arose by reason of the disclaimer itself."
"As a general rule, on the failure or refusal of a purchaser to complete an executory contract for the purchase of land the vendor is not entitled to sue for the purchase money as a debt. He is entitled merely to sue for specific performance or for damages for the loss of his bargain. It is only when the contract has been completed by the execution and acceptance of a conveyance that unpaid purchase money may become a debt and can be recovered accordingly."
"I do not accept that that passage assists Mr. Hill-Smith's submission. The present case is not on all fours with that postulated by Salmond J. Here completion has occurred and the land has been conveyed. The subsequent payments provided for by cl. 5 cannot be treated in isolation as simple unpaid instalments of the purchase price of the land. In every case of this kind it is necessary to analyse carefully what the real consideration for the payment in question is (cf. Hyundai Heavy Industries Ltd. V Papadopoulos [1980] 1 W.L.R. 1129). What the Chelverton Agreement provided for was for Mr. Hughes to receive a net sum calculated by the interaction of cl.5 on the one hand and cl. 8.3 and 10 on the other. The netting off was not a mere matter of convenience. It reflected the commercial reality that the increased value of the land by reason of the grant of planning permission was conditional on the costs of effecting the development remaining within viable limits. If Mr. Hughes were to be entitled to receive the overage payment without any reference to the level of the preparatory costs he would be getting something for which the contract did not provide."
"But in order to ascertain the extent of that claim it is necessary to ascertain what Mr. Hughes has lost by reason of the disclaimer. That requires an assessment of the extent, if any, to which the cl. 5 entitlements (strictly, prima facie entitlements) would have fallen to be reduced by reason of the provisions of cls. 8.3 and 10. The evidence before me is that they would in fact have been extinguished altogether: But that evidence is not accepted save for the purpose of this application and may at some later stage be disputed. I am not therefore in a position to decide, even if the issue were before me, whether Mr. Hughes could in fact have any claim. The only point which I make is that in principle the Charge is capable of securing Mr. Hughes's rights to the same extent as he would have enjoyed had Chelverton not become insolvent. That is commercially the fair result, and accordingly that which Mr. Hughes and Chelverton may reasonably be taken to have intended when the Chelverton Agreement and the Charge were executed. By contrast, the result for which Mr. Hughes now contends would put him in a better position than if the Chelverton Agreement had been performed."
"Although in the instant appeal the Court of Appeal came to the right decision, I cannot accept entirely that part of their reasoning in support of it in which they suggest that the primary obligation of the debtor to continue to pay the instalments which he had promised under clause (IX) of the contact was not ended by the rescission of the contract but remained in existence although the law no longer permitted him to pay them. A legal obligation to continue to perform is inconsistent with the withdrawal of any legal right to do so. The better explanation is that which I have already given, viz., that upon rescission of the contract the primary obligation of the debtor to pay the instalments was converted by operation of law into a secondary obligation either to pay damages for failure to perform it; or, as these were instalments of a debt existing at the date of the contract, it may be a revived obligation to pay the balance of the whole debt immediately.
The guarantor's obligation under his contract of guarantee does not, as the Court of Appeal appear to suggest, depend upon the debtor's primary obligation continuing to exist after the contract had been rescinded. Nor is it affected by whether the debtor's secondary obligation which was substituted for it by operation of law is classified as an obligation to pay damages or as an obligation to pay the debt. It was the debtor's failure to perform his primary obligation to pay the instalments in circumstances which put an end to it that constituted a failure by the guarantor to perform his own primary obligation to the creditor to see that the instalments were paid by the debtor, and substituted for it a secondary obligation of the guarantor to pay to the creditor a sum of money for the loss he thereby sustained. It is the guarantor's own secondary obligation, not that of the debtor, that the creditor is enforcing in his claim for damages for breach of his contract of guarantee."
"The fundamental purpose of these provisions is not in doubt. It is to facilitate the winding up of the insolvent's affairs. There is a further purpose in personal insolvency cases. A bankrupt's property vests automatically in his trustee. The disclaimer provisions operate to discharge the trustee in bankruptcy from all personal liability in respect of the property: .
Equally clear is the essential scheme by which the statute seeks to achieve these purposes. Unprofitable contracts can be ended, and property burdened with onerous obligations disowned. The company is to be freed from all liabilities in respect of the property. Conversely, and hardly surprisingly, the company is no longer to have any rights in respect of the property. The company could not fairly keep the property and yet be freed from its liabilities.
Disclaimer will, inevitably, have an adverse impact on others: those with whom the contracts were made, and those who have rights and liabilities in respect of the property. The rights and obligations of these other persons are to be affected as little as possible. They are to be affected only to the extent necessary to achieve the primary object: the release of the company from all liability. Those who are prejudiced by the loss of their rights are entitled to prove in the winding up of the company as though they were creditors."
"[T]here is a recondite point which must be faced and resolved here as part of the process of interpreting the sections as a whole. It concerns what happens to the lease in this tripartite situation. The point may be stated shortly. A lease either exists, or it does not. If disclaimer has the effect of ending the lease, no further rent can become due, and so the guarantor and original tenant cannot be called upon. It is a contradiction in terms for rent to accrue for a period after the lease has ended. If, however, disclaimer does not end the lease, so that rent continues to accrue, what happens to the lease, bearing in mind that the insolvent's interest in the property has been ended? Possibilities are that the lease vests in the Crown as bona vacantia, or that it remains in being but without an owner, or that it remains vested in the tenant but in an emasculated form. Each of these possibilities raises its own problems.
The starting point for attempting to solve this puzzling conundrum is to note that the Act clearly envisages that a person may be liable to perform the tenant's covenants even after the lease has been disclaimed. A vesting order may be made in favour of such a person: see s 182(3), and see also s 181(2)(b). The proper legal analysis has to be able to accommodate this conclusion. The search, therefore, is for an interpretation of the legislation which will enable this to be achieved as well as fulfilling the primary purpose of freeing the insolvent from all liability while, overall, doing the minimum violence to accepted property law principles.
If the problem is approached in this way, the best answer seems to be that the statute takes effect as a deeming provision so far as other persons' preserved rights and obligations are concerned. A deeming provision is a commonplace statutory technique. The statute provides that a disclaimer operates to determine the interest of the tenant in the disclaimed property but not so as to affect the rights or liabilities of any other person. Thus when the lease is disclaimed it is determined and the reversion accelerated but the rights and liabilities of others, such as guarantors and original tenants, are to remain as though the lease had continued and not been determined. In this way the determination of the lease is not permitted to affect the rights or liabilities of other persons. Statute has so provided."
"I accept, of course, that a disclaimer has as such no direct effect on the rights and obligations of third parties. But in the present case the rights secured by the Charge are, precisely, Mr Hughes's rights deriving from the contract (both his primary rights under the Chelverton Agreement and the secondary rights created by the breach, as explained by Lord Diplock in [Moschi] (loc cit.)). That is an essentially different situation from that considered by the House of Lords in Hindcastle, which concerned the obligations of third parties who had entered into free-standing contractual obligations distinct from the disclaimed contract."
MR HUGHES' GROUNDS OF APPEAL
GROVEHOLT'S RESPONDENT'S NOTICE
THE ARGUMENTS ON THIS APPEAL
The arguments on behalf of Mr Hughes
"It is well established that 'debts owing or accruing' include debts debita in praesenti solvenda in futuro. The matter is well put in the Annual Practice, 1915, p.808: 'But the distinction must be borne in mind between the case where there is an existing debt, payment whereof is deferred, and the case where both the debt and its payment rest in the future. In the former case there is an attachable debt, in the latter case there is not.' If, for instance, a sum of money is payable on a contingency, there is no debt owing or accruing. But the mere fact that the amount is not ascertained does not show that there is no debt."
"In my judgment the retention moneys represented moneys actually earned at the date of the certificate, though in fact these retention moneys, as their name indicates were to be held as a sort of security and in any case subject to having set off against them any cross-claims, which would reduce the amount when the final settlement came and the final certificate was issued. The retention moneys, therefore, were only future in the sense that they were not payable until some future date, and such moneys in my judgment are capable of being the subject of a good and valid legal assignment. Walker v. Bradford Old Bank Ltd (12 QBD 511) is a well-known authority for the principle that there may be a good legal assignment of future debts. Nor is this conclusion affected by the circumstance that [the retention moneys] are not only not payable until the final settlement, but when the final settlement comes may not become payable in whole or in part by reason of the defendants having rights of set off under the various terms of the contract." (My emphasis)
"It is not for a party who relies upon the words actually used to establish that those words effect a sensible commercial purpose. It should be assumed, as a starting point, that the parties understood the purpose which was being effected by the words they used; and that they used those words because, to them, that was a sensible commercial purpose. Before the court can introduce words which the parties have not used, it is necessary to be satisfied (i) that the words actually used produce a result which is so commercially nonsensical that the parties could not have intended it, and (ii) that they did intend some other commercial purpose which can be identified with confidence. If, and only if, those two conditions are satisfied, it is open to the court to introduce words which the parties have not used in order to construe the agreement. It is then permissible to do so because, if those conditions are satisfied, the additional words give to the agreement or clause the meaning which the parties must have intended."
"This robust declaration does not, however, mean that one can rewrite the language which the parties have used in order to make the contract conform to business common sense. But language is a very flexible instrument and, if it is capable of more than one construction, one chooses that which seems most likely to give effect to the commercial purpose of the agreement."
"Where a party to a simple contract, upon breach by the other contracting party of a condition of the contract, elects to treat the contract as no longer binding on him, the contract is not rescinded as from the beginning. Both parties are discharged from further performance of the contract, but rights are not divested or discharged which have already been unconditionally acquired. Rights and obligations which arise from partial execution of the contract and causes of action which have accrued from its breach alike continue unaffected."
The arguments on behalf of Groveholt
"20. As at the date of the Hughes / Chelverton Agreement, Mr Hughes' only interest in the Infrastructure Works and Site Assembly being carried out related to his obligations to Sainsbury's arising out of the agreements referred to in paragraph 6 of Mr Lean's statement. Although the agreements between Mr Hughes and Sainsbury's were confidential, Chelverton knew that the agreement had been entered into providing for the Site Assembly process and the Infrastructure Works to be undertaken. Chelverton did not know or care what the agreements provided in terms of which of the parties (Mr Hughes and/or Sainsbury's) would actually (through a contractor) carry out the Infrastructure Works, or the Site Assembly process. Clause 15.5 of the Loan Agreement provides that the work would be carried out by Sainsbury's. Clause 15.3 anticipates that the parties might agree that Site Assembly Agreements would not be made in the name of both parties.
21. Chelverton was also aware, as is reflected in clause 8 of the Hughes / Chelverton Agreement, that following the obtaining of outline planning consent by Sainsbury's for the construction of a food store on the "Sainsbury's Land" (as defined): (a) Sainsbury's had agreed with Mr Hughes to pay the first £5m of the costs of Site Assembly and the Infrastructure Works and (b) Mr Hughes had agreed with Sainsbury's to pay the remainder.
22. It was also envisaged at the time of the Hughes / Chelverton Agreement that Chelverton and Mr Hughes would seek a novation to Chelverton of the agreement between Mr Hughes and Sainsbury's, as is reflected in clause 8.7 of the Hughes / Chelverton Agreement. It was at the time anticipated that Sainsbury's was likely to agree to the novation, because (a) it would prefer to deal with the owner of the site and (b) Sainsbury's was aware of and concerned about Mr Hughes' parlous financial position at the time. A large part of the purpose of Mr Hughes' obligations to Chelverton in relation to the costs of the Infrastructure Works and Site Assembly was to facilitate Chelverton taking on Mr Hughes' obligations to Sainsbury's as set out above."
CONCLUSIONS
" was not a mere matter of convenience. It reflected the commercial reality that the increased value of the land by reason of the grant of planning permission was conditional on the costs of effecting the development remaining within viable limits".
" the rights secured by the Charge are, precisely, Mr Hughes' rights deriving from the contract (both the primary rights under the Chelverton Agreement and the secondary rights created by the breach, as explained by Lord Diplock in [Moshi])".
RESULT
Lord Justice Dyson:
Lord Justice Auld: