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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 >> Ham v Ham & Anor [2013] EWCA Civ 1301 (30 October 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2013/1301.html Cite as: [2013] EWCA Civ 1301 |
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ON APPEAL FROM BRISTOL DISTRICT REGISTRY
HIS HONOUR JUDGE MCCAHILL QC
1BS30953
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LEWISON
and
LORD JUSTICE BRIGGS
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JOHN RONALD HAM |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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RONALD WILLIAM HAM & LORNA JEAN HAM |
Respondent |
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Mr Nathaniel Duckworth (instructed by Michelmores LLP) for the Respondent
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Lewison:
Introduction
The approach
"… to build up a herd of dairy cattle, between whose conception and first lactation at least three years must elapse, takes time and planning, whilst to disperse the work of a lifetime of careful breeding is but the task of an afternoon by a qualified auctioneer."
The partnership deed
"3.1 The capital of the partnership shall consist of the following items:
(a) Such assets as are specified in a statement of affairs to be prepared by Messrs Hucker & Booker Chartered Accountants … which assets shall be credited to the Partners as therein specified
(b) Any further sums or assets which any Partner may with the consent of the others from time to time contribute for capital purposes which shall be credited to his or her capital account
3.2 The Partners shall keep books of account and such other records as are usual in a business of the same type as the partnership business and such accounts shall in addition show the account of each Partner in respect of his or her share of the capital and the profits of the partnership
…
3.5 The financial year of the partnership shall end on 28th February each year and an annual balance sheet and profit and loss account shall be prepared as at that date and as soon as possible afterwards showing what is due to all Partners in respect of the capital and profits of the partnership. Such balance sheet shall forthwith be signed by all Partners who shall be bound by the contents of the balance sheet and the profit and loss account unless some manifest error is found within 6 months after he or she has signed in which case such error shall be rectified
3.6 All Partners shall be entitled to draw out of the partnership bank account on account of his or her share of the profits such monthly sum as shall be agreed between the Partners. As soon as the Partners have signed the balance sheet they shall agree to make such further drawings (or repayments as the case may be) in respect of profits or capital or both as are prudent in the circumstances having regard to the requirements of the partnership business."
"4.1 The partnership may be terminated by any of the Partners giving to the others not less than three months' notice in writing at any time
4.2 If the partnership is terminated in any way then the partners to whom notice is given or the surviving or solvent Partner or Partners on whose application an order for the dissolution of the partnership was made may within twenty-one days after the notice was given or the event occurred which gave rise to the termination give notice to the other Partner or Partners or his or her personal representatives trustee or receiver as the case may be electing either to have the partnership wound up under the Partnership Act 1890 or to purchase the share of the other Partner or Partners [at] the net value of such share
4.3 The net value for the purpose of clause 4.2 shall be agreed between the Partners or their respective successors (as the case may be) or in default of such agreement shall be determined by the partnership accountants. In so determining the accountants shall act as experts and not as arbitrators and their professional charges shall be borne by the Partners in equal shares"
Some more relevant facts
i) Fixed assets consisting of freehold property, plant & machinery, motor vehicles, agricultural buildings and milk quota;
ii) Current assets and current liabilities;
iii) Long term liabilities.
Discussion
"By the capital of a partnership is meant the aggregate of the sums contributed by its members for the purpose of commencing or carrying on the partnership business, and intended to be risked by them in the business. The capital of the partnership is not therefore the same as its property: the capital is a sum fixed by the agreement of the partners; whilst the actual assets of the firm vary from day to day, and include everything belonging to the firm and having any money value. … The amount of each partner's capital ought…always to be accurately stated, in order to avoid disputes on a final adjustment of account; and this is more important where the capitals of the partners are unequal, for if there is no evidence as to the amounts contributed by them, the shares of the whole assets will be treated as equal."
"As Lord Lindley pointed out there is a fundamental distinction between a firm's capital on the one hand and its assets (sometimes confusingly called its capital assets) on the other. That distinction is critical to an understanding of the true nature of capital and is, moreover, frequently overlooked by partners and their advisers. It has already been pointed out that a partner's capital should be expressed in cash terms, whether the contribution from which it derived took the form of cash or a specific asset, e.g. land or goodwill. … Once a partner has brought in the asset and been credited with his agreed "capital" value in the firm's books, the asset as such will cease to be his property and will thereafter belong to the firm. Equally, the partner's capital will be unaffected by fluctuations in the value of the asset, which will represent capital profits or losses potentially divisible between the partners in their capital profit/loss sharing ratios."
"… in the absence of special agreement the rise or fall in value of fixed plant or real estate belonging to a partnership was as much profit or loss of the partnership as anything else. If a man said "I bring in no money capital—I have not got money, but here is a mill and machinery worth £20,000 which I bring in," and he was credited in the books with £20,000—then the mill and machinery became partnership property just as much as if the partner had brought in money, and the partnership had with that money bought the mill and machinery. It was suggested that the mill and machinery were Robinson's, and that the partnership had only paid rent for them; but tenants did not generally lay out money on their landlords' property, especially under circumstances such as those of the present case. There must be a declaration that Ashton was entitled to one-half of the proceeds of sale after payment thereout of the debts of the partnership and the capital appearing by the books to be due to each partner."
"Nevertheless, agreements are encountered in which capital is treated as synonymous with the partnership's assets, so that the value of the firm's capital base, and thus of each partner's contribution will constantly fluctuate."
"What is meant by the share of a partner is his proportion of the partnership assets after they have been realised and converted into money, and all the debts and liabilities have been discharged. That it is, and this only, which on the death of a partner passes to his representatives, or to a legatee of his share, which under the old law was considered as bona notabilia, which on his bankruptcy passes to his trustee…"
"Although it would be more accurate to speak of a partner's entitlement to a proportion of the net proceeds of sale of the assets, the correctness of the statement of principle embodied in the above passage cannot seriously be questioned, reflecting as it does the proper application of sections 39 and 44 of the Partnership Act 1890."
"… it is considered that Lord Lindley's definition is, as such, incomplete and that a full understanding of the nature of a share… is only possible if that entitlement is analysed at three stages in the life of a firm, namely (1) whilst the partnership is continuing (2) on a general dissolution and (3) on the death, retirement or expulsion of a partner."
"… is notoriously difficult to define, not least because its meaning differs according to the context in which it is used."
"… the requirement for unanimity in respect of any increase in capital provides a strong indication that the partners did not intend the accounts to contain a regular re-valuation of significant assets. Clause 6(c) would be largely ineffective if a partner could insist upon a re-valuation of the capital assets and then obtain payment of the increase in value as profit free of the restriction on withdrawing his "A" capital. To meet the payment, the partnership would be forced either to borrow significantly or to sell the land on which the continuation of the partnership depends."
"The partners might well have taken the view, that if a partner dies, he should receive his aliquot share of the value of the partnership assets. But, equally, they may all have agreed ahead of time that it was more important that the surviving partner should be able to continue the business. In those circumstances, the fair value of the farmland is almost a theoretical matter because it was likely that the business could not be carried on without the assets in question. It is possible that the farmland could be sold and leased back to the surviving partner but, unless the partnership deed enables or requires a fair value to be taken for the farmland, there is nothing to suggest that the partners intended the surviving partner to take the risk that in the event finance was not available at reasonable cost."
Result
Lord Justice Briggs:
Lord Justice Rimer: