BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Lexi Holdings Plc v Luqman & Ors [2009] EWCA Civ 117 (26 February 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2009/117.html Cite as: [2009] BCC 716, [2009] 2 BCLC 1, [2009] EWCA Civ 117 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT, CHANCERY DIVISION
MR JUSTICE BRIGGS
HC06C04067
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE RICHARDS
and
LADY JUSTICE HALLETT
____________________
LEXI HOLDINGS PLC (IN ADMINISTRATION) |
Appellant |
|
- and - |
||
LUQMAN & ORS |
Respondent |
____________________
WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MONUZA LUQMAN & ZAURIAN LUQMAN did not appear and were not represented.
Hearing dates : 27 January 2009
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
The Chancellor:
"By reason of their total inactivity while directors [Monuza and Zaurian] breached the fiduciary and common law duties of care which they owed to Lexi....and are liable to [Lexi] in damages and/or to compensate [Lexi] in equity in respect of any losses caused by such breaches of duty arising out of the transactions..."
Briggs J directed that there be a trial of the outstanding issues as between Lexi and Monuza and Zaurian.
"if the syndicate chose to enforce its rights by appointing receivers or administrators, the incoming office-holders would find [it] very difficult adequately to enforce Lexi's rights against its borrowers, those being the principal rights to which the lending syndicate would need to have recourse in making a significant recovery. Furthermore...that, in flagrant breach of its obligations under the Facility Agreement, Lexi had been lending not merely on short-term bridging loans, but on an extended basis, to fund speculative property transactions and developments."
"The objective test sets the basic standard. It is no excuse for a director to say that, in fact, she did not have the general knowledge, skill or experience reasonably to be expected of a person carrying out her appointed functions. The subjective test potentially raises the standard by reference to any greater general knowledge, skill or experience which the particular director actually has."
"The first stage in the causation analysis is therefore to ascertain what steps, relevant to the preservation of Lexi's assets from fraud by their brother, each of Monuza and Zaurian would have taken, had they complied with those duties to the requisite standard, rather than adopted an attitude of total inactivity. For that purpose, the court does not assume a bare minimum compliance on the one hand, or an ideal compliance on the other. The question is simply one of probability."
"...the oral evidence did not displace the clear indication to be derived from the documents that Zaurian was the beneficial owner of the Lexi shares. Nonetheless the effect of the evidence, taken as a whole, was that Shaid was so clearly the dominant family member in relation to Lexi that his domination must also have extended, as a matter of family understanding, to Zaurian's exercise of her rights as shareholder. In other words, although on any particular day Zaurian was the beneficial owner, I have no doubt that, if asked by Shaid to do so, she would readily have transferred the shares to him, or to some other member of the family, or exercised her rights as shareholder at his bidding."
"should have informed their fellow directors on Lexi's board of what they knew about Shaid's criminal convictions in the 1990s, if they were not personally to supervise Shaid's day to day conduct of the company's affairs. They had no reason to suppose that their fellow directors knew the relevant facts. It was special knowledge which, despite their family ties, their duty to Lexi required them to communicate to their colleagues on the board."
"The question therefore arises whether on the balance of probabilities Shaid would have been able to persuade them to their reasonable satisfaction that the loan account was legitimate."
The judge answered that question 2/[68] in the affirmative but then posed another:
"The critical question is whether he would have satisfied them to such an extent that it would not have been reasonably incumbent upon them to raise the matter with their colleagues on Lexi's board, who would of course have recognised that Shaid had given two substantially different explanations as to the source of his investment in the company, both of which could not simultaneously be true."
"I am not persuaded that, after Shaid's best endeavours to deal with any concerns expressed by his sisters about the loan account, they would still have been left in sufficient doubt as to require them to refer the matter to their colleagues. One thing that emerges from the sorry account of Lexi's affairs with complete clarity, is that Shaid was a persuasive, sophisticated, charming and highly intelligent liar. On that issue, Mr Jewson's and Mr Gresham's evidence was in unison. Furthermore, the fact that Shaid was able to talk his way out of the tight corner constituted by having his misconduct in and before 2004, by then the subject of grave judicial findings, reported to Barclays by Lexi's former auditors (as I shall describe in more detail in due course) speaks for itself. By comparison with the difficulties which he successfully evaded on that occasion, satisfying his sisters as to the genuineness of his loan account would in my judgment have been for him a relatively easy task."
On that basis, it followed that, in the judge's words, 2/[70] Monuza and Zaurian would, without breach of duty, "have been fobbed off by lies from Shaid".
"The outcome of this necessarily lengthy analysis is, in my judgment, that due compliance with their duties as directors in relation to the matters alleged would have required Monuza and Zaurian to raise with their colleagues on Lexi's board first, Shaid's previous convictions , as matters critically relevant to the need for his supervision, and secondly, some loans and transactions with connected companies which suggested contraventions of section 330 and 320. I am not persuaded that Monuza and Zaurian's duties to Lexi required them to report any of those matters to Barclays, or its advisers, still less to the police. I can see no reason why a reasonable appreciation of Lexi's best interests would have required any of those additional steps to be taken."
"....at the end of a necessarily long and tortuous analysis, that if Monuza or Zaurian had complied with their duty to inform their fellow directors of Shaid's previous convictions, those would probably have come to the attention of Barclays in mid-November 2004, but probably not earlier."
"There is always a risk that the complexity of a causation analysis may lead to an inability to see the wood for the trees. It is therefore necessary to stand back and check whether the outcome of the detailed analysis makes sense against the broader picture. In the present case I have recognised that a superficial view might lead to a conclusion that Shaid's fraud would somehow have been stopped once those with the requisite power learned that Judge Howarth's findings related to a man with an alleged criminal record. Looking at the matter in the round however, I consider that the principal feature in the landscape is the undoubted fact that, with the full benefit of those findings, revealing as they did a fraudulent concealment by Shaid of which the bank lenders were the intended victims, Barclays nonetheless concluded that its interests favoured the cooperative approach, even to the point of buying out its dissentient syndicate member. The administrators' success in recoveries to date, together with the large benefit of the Ten Acre charge, by no means suggests that Barclays was wrong to conclude that its own best interests would not be served by early intervention. In that context, an allegation reaching Barclays via Lexi's former auditors that Shaid had previous convictions would in my judgment probably not have been enough to change the course of history."
"...that Lexi's case that Monuza and Zaurian's undoubted breaches of duty caused Lexi the loss primarily occasioned to it by Shaid's fraud, together with his brother Waheed's assistance, wholly fails."
"A proper degree of delegation and division of responsibility is of course permissible, and often necessary, but total abrogation of responsibility is not. A board of directors must not permit one individual to dominate them and use them, as Mr Griffiths plainly did in this case. Mr Davis commented that the appellants' contention (in their affidavits) that Mr Griffiths was the person who must carry the whole blame was itself a depressing failure, even then, to acknowledge the nature of a director's responsibility. There is a good deal of force in that point."
Lord Woolf MR reiterated the point on the following page where he added:
"(1) It is of the greatest importance that any individual who undertakes the statutory and fiduciary obligations of being a company director should realise that these are inescapable personal responsibilities. The appellants may have been dazzled, manipulated and deceived by Mr Griffiths but they were in breach of their own duties in allowing this to happen. They can count themselves fortunate to have received the minimum period of disqualification and to have had the benefit of immediate orders under s 17 of the Act."
As will be seen, it is the submission of counsel for Lexi that in a number of passages Briggs J used the ability of Shaid to deceive his sisters and other co-directors as a factor in their exculpation rather than as a further breach of duty on their part.
(1) allow the appeal of Lexi from the order of Briggs J made on 22nd July 2008 insofar as it impliedly dismissed their claim against Zaurian and Monuza made in paragraphs 4 to 5C in the prayer for relief contained in its re x 7 amended Particulars of Claim;
(2) declare Zaurian to be liable to Lexi in respect of that claim in the sum of £41,968,294;
(3) declare Monuza to be similarly liable in the sum of £36,968,988.
Lord Justice Richards
Lady Justice Hallett