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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 >> Cattles Plc v Welcome Financial Services Ltd & Ors [2010] EWCA Civ 599 (13 May 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2010/599.html Cite as: [2010] 2 BCLC 712, [2010] 2 Lloyd's Rep 514, [2010] EWCA Civ 599 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION
HIS HONOUR JUDGE DAVID COOKE
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LLOYD
and
SIR PAUL KENNEDY
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CATTLES PLC |
Claimant Respondent |
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- and - |
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WELCOME FINANCIAL SERVICES LIMITED THE ROYAL BANK OF SCOTLAND |
Defendants Respondents |
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(3) PARTY A |
Defendant Appellant |
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Robin Dicker QC and David Allison (instructed by Lawrence Graham LLP) appeared on behalf of the Respondent Cattles plc
William Trower QC and Richard Fisher (instructed by Allen and Overy LLP) appeared on behalf of the Respondent Royal Bank of Scotland plc.
The Respondent Welcome Financial Services Ltd did not appear and was not represented.
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Lloyd:
"Preservation of the Bank's Claims
6. Until all claims of the Bank in respect of all of the Obligations of each Debtor have been discharged in full:-
6.1 No Guarantor shall be entitled to participate in any security held by the Bank or money received by the Bank in respect of any Debtor's Obligations
6.2 No Guarantor shall in competition with or in prior to the Bank make any claim against any Debtor or any co-guarantor or their respective estates nor make any claim in the insolvency of any Debtor or any co-guarantor nor take or enforce any security from or against any Debtor or any co-guarantor
6.3 Any payment received by a Guarantor in breach of Clause 6.2 and any security taken by a Guarantor from any Debtor or any co-guarantor shall be held in trust for the Bank as security for the liability of the Guarantors to the Bank under this deed."
"1. The Guarantors in consideration of the Bank giving time or credit or Banking facilities to any one or more of the Companies:-
1.1 Jointly and severally guarantee to discharge on demand all the Obligations of each Debtor with Interest from the date of demand and
1.2 Agree that any item or amount claimed by the Bank to be included in a Debtor's Obligations which is not recoverable in the Guarantors under this deed for any reason on the basis of a guarantee shall nevertheless be recoverable from the Guarantors as principal debtors by way of indemnity and the Guarantors jointly and severally agree to discharge that liability on demand with Interest from the date of demand."
"This deed shall confer upon the Bank the same rights as if it were a separate guarantee and indemnity by each of the Companies in respect of each of the other Companies"
"18. It will be seen that each of the companies party to the Guarantee simultaneously falls within the definition of 'Companies', 'Debtors' and 'Guarantors'. The draftsman has clearly created the separate terms so that the operative provisions may be more intelligible when applied to the many potential permutations to be catered for in the circumstances envisaged by the document, in which each of a number of companies guarantees the obligations of each of the others, and at the same time is the subject of guarantees given by each of them. As clause 16.1 makes clear, the Guarantee is to be construed as if it created as many separate guarantees as required for each company to guarantee the obligations of each other company -- it would obviously be unmanageable in a group of any size to create and administer such guarantees as separate documents.
19. This drafting technique allows the Guarantee to be read in any of the contexts in which it may be relevant, with each party being considered a Guarantor or Debtor as that context may require. For instance, if the context is the amounts claimed by the Bank from Welcome, Welcome is a Debtor and Cattles and all other companies are Guarantors. Each operative provision may, against that context, be read accordingly. If a single term such as 'Companies' had been used throughout, clause 6.3 might have read as follows:
'6.3 any payment received by a Company in breach of clause 6.2 and any security taken by a Company from any Company shall be held in trust for the Bank as security for the liability of the Companies to the Bank under this deed.'
While it may still have been possible to ascertain the intended meaning the result would be at best clumsy and at worst confusing."
"For Party A, Mr Knowles submits that this usage leads to the conclusion that clause 6.2 restricts only the making of any claim which a Guarantor has arising out of its capacity as guarantor -- such as a claim for counter-indemnity by the principal debtor, or contribution from a co-guarantor. Mr Trower for the Bank submits that the terminology is merely a matter of identification of the parties referred to and has no connotations for the interpretation of the substantive obligations."
"The purpose of the clause [that is to say clause 6.2] is obviously to increase the Bank's realisations from the assets of any particular group company"
"Such a restriction would be contrary to the purpose of the clause which, as I have indicated, is to maximise the share of the assets of a Debtor available to the Bank by preventing claims being made 'in competition with or in priority to the Bank'."
"So far as the first issue is concerned therefore, I answer it in the affirmative, save that the obligation of Cattles not to make any claim against Welcome, (including any claim in respect of the Debt) arises only insofar as such a claim would be 'in competition with or in priority to' the Bank. No circumstances were envisaged in which such a claim might be made in priority to the Bank. I was not addressed by both parties on the meaning of 'in competition with' and whether, for instance, it might extend to circumstances other than those in which the Bank had made a demand. I did however put it to Mr Trower, and he accepted, that it would be unlikely that the prohibition was intended to prevent Welcome making payments of its upstream debt in the ordinary course of business, because this would be the only way in which funds would flow back to Cattles to pay its obligations to the Bank and its other creditors."
"If it uses defined terms, the court may be assisted in determining its meaning by the nature of the defined terms used."
Sir Paul Kennedy:
Lord Justice Mummery:
Order: Appeal dismissed