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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 >> Halton International Inc & Anor v Guernroy Ltd [2006] EWCA Civ 801 (27 June 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2006/801.html Cite as: [2006] WTLR 1241, [2006] EWCA Civ 801 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM
Mr Justice Patten
HC03C3778
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE TUCKEY
and
LORD JUSTICE CARNWATH
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HALTON INTERNATIONAL INC & ANR |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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GUERNROY LTD |
Respondents |
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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)
Paul Girolami QC & Catherine Addy (instructed by Messrs. Allen & Overy LLP) for the Respondents
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Carnwath :
Background
"Guernroy Limited will ensure that all of the existing shareholders of British Mediterranean are given the opportunity to participate on a pari passu basis in all financing proposed during the period of the authority described below.
The directors of Guernroy are of the opinion that in order to protect the interests of British Mediterranean, a full authority must be granted to Guernroy..."
The arrangements were to "remain in effect for so long as the British Airways franchise continues".
4.2 …. in any manner which Guernroy, in its absolute discretion, considers fit including for the avoidance of doubt funding raised pursuant to or in connection with a fresh issue of Shares (whether by way of rights or otherwise) or other securities in the Company or by way of bank borrowings or other borrowings of any nature whatever…."
"Thereafter, on 6 February 1997 at a short noticed EGM of BMed, Guernroy, who waived notice for the meeting on behalf of the Cs, used its powers under the voting agreement to ensure that 27.5 million new shares in BMed were issued at a price of 20p each to (a) Guernroy, which received 16.25 million of them; to (b) Lord Hesketh, the chairman of BMed's board and a personal friend of Mr Said, who was allotted 5 million of them; and to (c) two other companies controlled by personal friends of Mr Said, who between them received the remaining 6.25 million shares. In particular, D used the voting agreement to pass a resolution disapplying the Cs' rights of pre-emption under BMed's articles. The effect of these allotments was to increase D's holding in BMed from 20.1% to 50.9% and to reduce the holding of C1's predecessors from 23.6% to 4.9%, and C2's holding from 17.5% to 3.7%. The Judge has found as a fact that the Cs had on 29 November 1996 been sent a letter by D which gave them notice that investment in BMed shares was being invited by D but that they chose not to take part.
The Cs did not become aware of the allotments of February 1997 until September 2001. At that time there was a further issue of shares in BMed. The Cs were invited to participate on the basis of their holdings as diluted by the allotments of February 1997, which was how they discovered that their interest had been diluted. They decided not to participate at that stage because they did not wish to prejudice their case that the dilution of their interest was wrongful and that they should have been offered the opportunity to purchase shares based on their holding pre-6 February 1997."
"… Mr Said asked to be given carte blanche and that is what in terms Guernroy received. To superimpose on this a radically different set of obligations would be quite inconsistent with the relevant circumstances in which the voting agreement came to be made, as reflected in the terms of the agreement itself."
He went on to hold that in any event the claim was time-barred, the proceedings having been commenced more than six years after the critical actions on 6th February 1997.
The basis of the claim
"…it is appropriate to consider what, in their barest essentials, the facts relevant to limitation are. On the Cs' case these are that D held a power of attorney over Cs' shares in BMed ("the voting agreement"). The immediate purpose of this was to enable D to exercise the votes that were attached to those shares ("the votes").
For the purposes of this part of the appeal it must be assumed that (contrary to the findings of the Judge) D was under a fiduciary obligation to exercise those votes for the benefit of the Cs. By reason of that obligation it was prevented from exercising the votes for its own benefit without first obtaining the informed consent of the Cs. In breach of that fiduciary obligation it exercised the votes to allot new shares in BMed to itself ("the new shares").
The Cs seek an order requiring D to make available to the Cs a portion of the new shares, based pro rata on the proportion of BMed that they owned before allotments, in return for payment of the cost price. The basis of this proprietary claim is that the shares when acquired by D were as to that portion held by it on constructive trust for the Cs."
The legal framework
"21(1) No period of limitation prescribed by this Act shall apply to an action by a beneficiary under a trust, being an action—
(a) in respect of any fraud or fraudulent breach of trust to which the trustee was a party or privy; or
(b) to recover from the trustee trust property or the proceeds of trust property in the possession of the trustee, or previously received by the trustee and converted to his use…"
By section 38, applying the Trustee Act 1925 s 68(17), trusts for these purposes include "implied and constructive trusts". For these purposes, as was explained by Millett LJ in Paragon Finance plc v DB Thakerar & Co [1999] 1 AER 400, 408, it is necessary to distinguish between two possible uses of the term "constructive trust":
"… the expressions 'constructive trust' and 'constructive trustee' have been used by equity lawyers to describe two entirely different situations. The first covers those cases… where the defendant, though not expressly appointed as trustee, has assumed the duties of a trustee by a lawful transaction which was independent of and preceded the breach of trust and is not impeached by the plaintiff. The second covers those cases where the trust obligation arises as a direct consequence of the unlawful transaction which is impeached by the plaintiff…."
Only the first category ("class 1") is treated as a "trust" for the purposes of the section 21 exception to the ordinary limitation rules.
"Before 1890, when the Trustee Act 1888 came into operation, a claim against an express trustee was never barred by lapse of time. The Court of Chancery had developed the rule that, in the absence of laches or acquiescence, such a trustee was accountable without limit of time. The rule was confirmed by Section 25(3) of the Judicature Act 1873, which provided that no claim by a cestui que trust against his trustee for any property held on an express trust, or in respect of any breach of such trust, should be held to be barred by any statute of limitation.
The explanation for the rule was that the possession of an express trustee is never in virtue of any right of his own but is taken from the first for and on behalf of the beneficiaries. His possession was consequently treated as the possession of the beneficiaries, with the result that time did not run in his favour against them: see the classic judgment of Lord Redesdale in Hovenden v. Lord Annesley (1806) 2 Sch. & Lef. 607 at pp. 633-4.
The rule did not depend upon the nature of the trustee's appointment, and it was applied to trustees de son tort and to directors and other fiduciaries who, though not strictly trustees, were in an analogous position and who abused the trust and confidence reposed in them to obtain their principal's property for themselves. Such persons are properly described as constructive trustees." (p 408 f-j)
He rejected the argument that this distinction had not survived the Limitation Act 1939.
"… These persons, though not originally trustees, had taken upon themselves the custody and administration of property on behalf of others; and though sometimes referred to as constructive trustees, they were, in fact, actual trustees, though not so named. It followed that their possession also was treated as the possession of the persons for whom they acted, and they, like express trustees, were disabled from taking advantage of the time bar…." (p 651)
The effect of that decision was summarised by the Privy Council in Clarkson v Davies [1923] AC 100, 110:
"… it was there laid down that there is a distinction between a trust which arises before the occurrence of the transaction impeached and cases which arise only by reason of that transaction."
"… The judge made no finding that any payments made by GVDC to Lasco, or any payments made out of the current account, were improperly made. The only thing wrong with them was Mr Koshy's failure, in his separate capacity as director of GVDC, to make full disclosure to that Board of the nature and extent of his own financial interest
…
If that is the correct analysis, then it is clear in our view that any trust imposed on Mr Koshy is a class 2 trust, within Millett J's classification … [In Harrison] the director transferred to himself property which had previously belonged to the company, and in relation to which he had 'trustee-like responsibilities' before the transaction in question. By contrast, Mr Koshy's liability to account for undisclosed profits, and any constructive trust imposed on those profits, do not depend on any pre-existing responsibility for any property of the company. They arose directly out of the transaction which gave rise to those profits, and the circumstances in which it was made. The fact that Mr Koshy was in a pre-existing fiduciary relationship with the company was not enough, by itself, to bring the case within class 1…" (p 165 paras [118]-[119])
"….On the Claimants' case (Guernroy) acquired the shares through its own breach of duty in circumstances which give rise to what amounts to a remedial constructive trust. The case can be distinguished from the position of (eg) a director of a company who controls the property of the company and owes pre-existing duties to the company in respect of it: see JJ Harrison (Properties) Ltd v Harrison [2002] 1 BCLC 162. Guernroy owed no duties to anyone in respect of the unissued share capital of BMed. The company issued the shares in return for the issue price which was paid. The Claimants' case is that the acquisition of the shares constituted a breach of duty to the existing shareholders, but it is not alleged that Guernroy in any sense held the unissued shares for the Claimants prior to the alleged breach. The most that can be said is that it owed fiduciary duties to the Claimants in respect of the voting powers and that it is through the alleged misuse of those powers that the shares have been acquired. In my judgment, this brings the case within class 2: see Gwembe Valley Development Co. Ltd v Koshy [2004] 1 BCLC 131 at p.165 g-i."
The arguments on the appeal
"(In Gwembe), although there was a fiduciary relationship between the parties prior to the transaction, it did not attach to any particular property. It was merely a relationship that gave rise to a liability to account once the transaction giving rise to the profit had occurred. In the present case D had powers in relation to specific property of the Cs, namely the voting rights attached to the Cs' shares in BMed, that pre-existed the transaction in question and which were themselves the means to obtain the further property (the shares obtained in 1997 and 2001) that is held on trust for the Cs. The voting rights constituted in that sense property held under a pre-existing trust relationship which were as much the means of enabling D to obtain the new shares as the money subscribed for those shares. Had the money itself been held on trust for Cs the shares so acquired would undoubtedly be trust property within category 1. There is no reason why the result should be any different where the means of acquisition was the use of the voting rights when those rights were themselves held on trust for the Cs." (emphasis added)
"… the effect of the Judge's approach is to regard the character of the property obtained by D as determinative of the class of trust to which it is subject in D's hands. It is submitted that this is a red herring. The fact that the new shares did not come into existence save through the transaction impeached by the Cs is a mere accidental characteristic of the property that D obtained. If, for example, a director, in breach of his fiduciary duty, used his powers as director to obtain for himself shares in a subsidiary he would hold them on a class 1 trust. He would not be able to benefit from the Limitation Act by saying that he owed no duty in respect of the shares before he procured them to be issued to himself. Why should D be in a different position from such a director?"
Discussion
Lord Justice Tuckey:
Chancellor of the High Court:
Note 1 See Paragon at p 411b, Clarkson v Davies [1923] AC 100. I should note that, although the judgment in Gwembe (to which I was a party) proceeded on the premise that fraud was sufficient to bring the case within section 21(1)(a)) (para [120]), the ultimate decision may be better explained by reference to the alternative ground of fraudulent concealment: s 32. [Back]