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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 >> Heis & Ors v MF Global UK Services Ltd [2016] EWCA Civ 569 (21 June 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2016/569.html Cite as: [2016] WLR(D) 318, [2016] EWCA Civ 569 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION
COMPANIES COURT
MR JUSTICE DAVID RICHARDS
CASE No: 9527 OF 2011, [2015] EWHC 883 (Ch)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE VOS
and
LORD JUSTICE SALES
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(1) Richard Heis (2) Michael Robert Pink (3) Richard Dixon Fleming (as joint administrators of MF Global UK Limited in special administration) |
Applicant/Appellant |
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- and – |
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MF Global UK Services Limited (in administration) |
Respondent |
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Mr George Bompas QC and Ms Nicola Timmins (instructed by Fladgate LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 17th and 18th May 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Vos:
Introduction
"3.1 [Services] shall with effect on and from the Staff Transfer Date remain the employer for each Secondee but [Holdings] shall procure that all Payroll Costs for all Secondees shall be met on behalf of [Services] by the Service Recipients to be apportioned on such basis as [Holdings] shall determine from time to time.
3.2 In this clause "Payroll Costs" shall mean the aggregate costs in relation to each of the Secondees in the period of any assignment under this [Services Agreement] of all salary, bonus, and contractual and discretionary cash and non-cash benefits including, but not limited to, medical insurance, pension contributions, employee insurance benefits, company cars or car allowance, statutory and contractual leave entitlements, staff restaurant costs, relocation allowances, payments made on termination of employment and any tax and national insurance contributions thereon and any third party and/or employer's liability insurance cover which [Services] or the relevant Man Financial operating company may reasonably or lawfully require in respect of the employment and/or use of the Secondees.
5.1 [Services] shall discharge and perform all obligations and discharge all liabilities which may be imposed on it by law or otherwise in its capacity as employer of each Secondee ..."
The concession by UK
The judge's judgment
i) The fact that there was no evidence of Holdings either procuring compliance with clause 3.1 of the Services Agreement or determining the basis of any apportionment.
ii) The way in which the employment arrangements were described in UK's and Services' accounts for 2008, but not mentioned in Holdings' accounts.
iii) A memorandum dated February 2009 (the "Memorandum") providing reassurance to Services' auditors in relation to the Scheme's deficit of £1.779 million as at 30th June 2007 recording that Services' directors took on that liability and would pay more contributions to the pension fund as needed as per calculations and "[t]hese increased contributions will be reimbursed by [UK]". The memo was copied to Stephen Cochrane ("Mr Cochrane"), then a director of UK and Services, Kemper Cagney ("Mr Cagney"), then a director of UK, and Steve Craig ("Mr Craig"), then European Financial Controller of the MF Global group.
iv) Some emails in mid-2009 concerning the pension recovery plan contributions recording that a £1 million charge would be "recognised as an expense in UK" and "the auditors only signed [the statutory accounts of Services] as a going concern last year, on the basis that these payments over time would bring [Services] back to a net asset status".
v) Minutes of meetings of the trustees of the Scheme between December 2007 and March 2011 concerning the strength of the employer's covenant and the possibility of obtaining a parent company guarantee to reduce the levy payable to the Pension Protection Fund. In addition, the judge relied on email correspondence in which Mr Cagney thought there was no choice but to fund an additional £900,000 in proposed additional funding once the committed deficit reduction payments ended in 2012, but wanted to know about the accounting implications for UK.
vi) In September 2011, UK provided to the Financial Services Authority an Internal Adequacy Assessment Process report referring to UK considering it reasonable to set aside US$7.7 million of internal capital "versus the risk of deficiencies in the [Scheme]".
vii) Mr Cochrane's witness statement saying that the directors of UK viewed the entire operations of the MF Global group in the United Kingdom as one business even though it was made up of a number of different companies. Decisions were made by the directors of UK and, if necessary, approved by any other relevant group company. Services' activities in supplying seconded staff to other group companies did not require regular decision-making by its directors, and decisions relating to the Scheme were made by the directors of UK. It was always Mr Cochrane's intention and understanding as a director of UK and Services (until 28th April and 12th June 2009 respectively) "that UK would reimburse Services for any and all of the costs and funding requirements in respect of the [Scheme] as it was not possible for Services to fund the [Scheme] without support from UK".
The parties' main arguments
Should UK be permitted to withdraw its concession and to amend its Grounds of Appeal?
The consequences of the withdrawal of the concession
Is it appropriate in all the circumstances to imply a contract between UK and Services, pursuant to which UK paid the expenses of the seconded staff?
Did the implied contract include an obligation on UK to indemnify Services in respect of its section 75 debt?
Conclusions
Lord Justice Sales:
Lady Justice Gloster: