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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 >> European Film Bonds A/S & Ors v Lotus Holdings LLC & Ors [2021] EWCA Civ 807 (28 May 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2021/807.html Cite as: [2021] EWCA Civ 807 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
BUSINESS LIST (CH D)
ANDREW HOCHHAUSER QC SITTING AS
A DEPUTY JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
BL-2018-002267
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE STUART-SMITH
and
SIR NICHOLAS PATTEN
____________________
(1) EUROPEAN FILM BONDS A/S (2) ALLIANZ GLOBAL CORPORATE & SPECIALTY SE (3) ERGO VERSICHERUNG AG (4) KRAVAG-LOGISTIC VERSICHERUNGS-AG (5) BASLER SACHVERSICHERUNGS AG (6) AXA VERSICHERUNG AG (7) BAYERISCHERVERSICHERUNGSVERBAND VERSICHERUNGSAKTIENGESELLSCHAFT (8) SV SPARKASSEN-VERSICHERUNG GEBΔUDEVERSICHERUNG AG |
Claimants/ Respondents |
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- and - |
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(1) LOTUS HOLDINGS LLC (2) LOTUS MEDIA LLC (3) LARKHARK FILMS LIMITED |
Defendants/ Appellants |
____________________
Robert Howe QC and Laura John QC (instructed by Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan LLP and Wiggin LLP) for the Appellants
Hearing date: 19 May 2021
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Stuart-Smith LJ:
Introduction
The background
The parties
The Completion Guarantee
i) tender of delivery of the Sales Agent Delivery Materials by the Delivery Date; and
ii) such action, notices and remedies as the Underwriters might be required to take, provide and/or effect in accordance with the delivery procedure in Schedule 2.
The definition of "Sales Agent Delivery Materials" in clause 1.12 of the Completion Guarantee appears to be synonymous with "Lotus Delivery Materials". I shall refer simply to "Lotus Delivery Materials".
"36. [I]n outline:
(1) The procedure consists of two 'rounds'. First, after receipt of the Delivery Notice, Lotus had to give either an Acceptance Notice (as defined in paragraph 1.1.1 of Schedule 2 ), in which case the Film was accepted and completion and delivery of the Film was effected, or an Objection Notice (as defined in paragraph 1.1.2 of Schedule 2 ), specifying the ways in which the delivered materials were said to be defective.
(2) In the event of an Objection Notice, EFB[2] could then request additional information in relation to it and/or request return of the delivered materials, such return to be "at the requesting party's expense in order to allow EFB to cure the defects in such Lotus Delivery Materials" (paragraph 1.1.2 of Schedule 2 ). [I interpose that any request for the materials to be returned had to be made, if at all, within three days after receiving the Objection Notice or a Response and the materials were to be returned within five business days of receipt of the request.]
(3) After Lotus had complied with these requests, EFB could either redeliver the materials (with defects cured as necessary) with a Cure Notice or serve an Arbitration Notice. This latter course would, in effect, constitute a challenge to the justification for the original Objection Notice. [I interpose that these steps were covered by paragraph 3 of Schedule 2]
(4) In the former event (redelivery of materials with defects cured as necessary), the second 'round' commenced: Lotus could again either give an Acceptance Notice or it could give an Additional Objection Notice. In the latter event, EFB would have a further entitlement to request additional information in relation to the Additional Objection Notice and/or to request return of the re-delivered materials "physically delivered" to Lotus. [I interpose that it is at this stage that the material part of paragraph 5.2 may operate: as to which see below.]
(5) Once these requests had been complied with, EFB could either again redeliver the materials (with defects cured as necessary) with an Additional Cure Notice or serve an Arbitration Notice. This latter course would, in effect, constitute a challenge to the justification for the Additional Objection Notice.
(6) In the former event (second redelivery of materials with defects cured as necessary), Lotus could then either give an Acceptance Notice or it could give an Arbitration Notice.
37. Each of these steps was subject to a time limit. As a general proposition, the second 'round' was intended to be more compressed than the first 'round' for both Lotus and EFB. Thus:
(1) On Lotus's side, in 'round' one, Lotus had 30 days from its receipt of the Delivery Notice in which to give an Objection Notice or an Acceptance Notice (paragraph 1.1 of Schedule 2 ). In 'round' two, Lotus had 15 Business Days from its receipt of the Cure Notice in which to give an Additional Objection Notice or an Acceptance Notice (paragraph 5 of Schedule 2 ). ("Business Days" were defined in clause 2.2 as being "any day other than a Saturday, Sunday or a day on which banks in Germany or England are required to be closed".)
(2) As for EFB, in 'round' one, if it received an Objection Notice, EFB had to redeliver the cured materials and give a Cure Notice within 30 days of the later of "(i) receiving the Objection Notice or the Response, as applicable, or (ii) the return of any Lotus Delivery Materials " (paragraph 3.1 of Schedule 2 ). In 'round' two, if EFB received an Additional Objection Notice, the time for redelivery of the cured materials and the giving of an Additional Cure Notice was no later than within 15 Business Days of the later of "(i) receiving the Additional Objection Notice or the Second Response, as applicable, or (ii) the return of any Lotus Delivery Materials " (paragraph 6.1 of Schedule 2 ). [I interpose that the periods of 30 days and 15 Business Days respectively were described as the "Cure Period".]
38. A tight timetable was maintained in Schedule 2 from the giving of the original Delivery Notice through to the end of any arbitral process. For example, paragraph 11 of Schedule 2 provides that any arbitration was to be "expedited"; two arbitrators were to be appointed within five Business Days of any Arbitration Notice, with a third to be appointed three Business Days later; the arbitration was to commence within seven Business Days thereafter; the arbitrator was to issue an award not later than one day after the conclusion of the arbitration.
39. Schedule 2 also spelt out the consequences of any failure to complete a step within the specified time:
(1) In the event of a failure by Lotus to respond with either an Acceptance Notice or an Objection Notice within the time periods specified, it would be deemed to have given an Acceptance Notice (see paragraphs 2 and 9 of Schedule 2 ). It would no longer be possible for any objection to be made, an Acceptance Notice shall be conclusively presumed to have been given and "completion and delivery of the Film shall be conclusively presumed to have been effected".
(2) In the event of a failure by EFB to deliver either a Cure Notice or Arbitration Notice with the time periods specified, an Arbitration Notice would be deemed to have been given (paragraphs 4 and 7 of Schedule 2 ). The provisions permitting the cure of defects would therefore come to an end. EFB would thus be deprived of the opportunity to cure any of the defects alleged and be compelled to arbitrate on the basis of the Film as it was."
"If [ ] gives an Additional Objection Notice and in such notice the Sales Agent contends that some or all of the Lotus Delivery Materials are not suitable for the making of commercially acceptable release prints or broadcast materials, to the extent that the Lotus Delivery Materials which the Sales Agent contends are not of technical quality suitable for the making of commercially acceptable release prints or broadcast material (as appropriate) have been physically delivered to the Sales Agent within three (3) days after the Sales Agent's receipt of EFB's written request (which request EFB shall make (if at all) within five (5) Business Days after receiving the Additional Objection Notice), the Sales Agent shall return those Lotus Delivery Materials requested by EFB at the Guarantor's expense, in order to allow EFB to cure the defects in "such Lotus Delivery Materials as appropriate." (Emphasis added to highlight the critical word return)
"If (i) the Sales Agent fails to give any of the notices described in paragraphs 5.1, 5.2, 8.1 or 8.2 above or (ii) the Sales Agent fails to return to EFB the Lotus Delivery Materials within the time period specified in paragraph 5.2 above, then completion and delivery of the Film shall be conclusively presumed to have been effected and the Sales Agent shall be conclusively presumed to have issued an Acceptance Notice. EFB shall thereupon give notice to the Beneficiaries that completion and delivery of the Film shall be conclusively presumed to have been effected and that the Sales Agent shall be conclusively presumed to have issued an Acceptance Notice but failure to give such notice by EFB to the Beneficiaries shall not affect the fact that completion and delivery of the Film shall be conclusively presumed to have been effected and that the Sales Agent shall be conclusively presumed to have issued an Acceptance Notice."
What happened
"40. Following EFB's delivery of the Lotus Delivery Materials and giving of the Delivery Notice on 30 May 2018, the subsequent steps of the Delivery Procedure were followed. In particular, pursuant to paragraph 1.1 of Schedule 2 to the CGA:
(1) Lotus's response was required within "30 days from and after its receipt of the Delivery Notice" (i.e. by 29 June 2018). On 27 June 2018, Lotus gave an Objection Notice stating: "This notice constitutes an Objection Notice for the purposes of Schedule 2 of the [Completion Guarantee]". The Objection Notice made various complaints, which included complaints that the Lotus Delivery Materials were not in accordance with the Approved Picture Specification, defined in paragraph 1.1.2 of Schedule 2 to the CGA and attached a quality control report alleging objections that the delivered materials were not if technical quality suitable for the making of commercially acceptable release prints.
(2) Any request for additional information was required "within 3 Business Days after receiving [the] Objection Notice" (i.e. by 2 July 2018). On 2 July 2018, EFB made such a request for additional information.
(3) Lotus had "3 Business Days after its receipt of [the] request" in which to respond in good faith thereto (i.e. by 5 July 2018). On 5 July 2018, Lotus responded, stating "This is a response, prepared in good faith for the purposes of Schedule 2 "Delivery Procedure" clause 1.1.2 of the [Completion Guarantee] All of [Lotus's] rights in each and any jurisdiction are reserved."
(4) Any request for return of the Lotus Delivery Materials had to be made "within 3 Business Days after receiving the Objection Notice or a Response, as applicable". On 10 July 2018, EFB requested return of the Lotus Delivery Materials to "EFB c/o Paul Dray at Lip Sync Productions LLP, 195 Wardour Street, London W1F 8ZG."
(5) Lotus were required to return the Lotus Delivery Materials to EFB "within 5 Business Days after the Sales Agent's receipt of EFB's written request" (i.e. by 17 July 2018). On 16 July 2018, the Lotus Delivery Materials were delivered to EFB (c/o Lip Sync as requested). They had been collected by FedEx from Lotus at 3.45pm (LA time) on 13 July 2018 (a Friday) and had arrived at Stansted Airport the following day. Since it appears that Lotus had not elected for weekend delivery, they were not delivered until Monday 16 July 2018.
41. Pursuant to paragraph 3.1 of Schedule 2 , the cured Lotus Delivery Materials had to be delivered to Lotus, and a Cure Notice had to be given, "no later than 30 days after the later of (i) receiving the Objection Notice or the Response as applicable, or (ii) the return of any Lotus Delivery Materials as appropriate which EFB has requested in order to cure any claimed defects" (i.e. by 15 August 2018, "30 days after the return of [the] Lotus Delivery Materials which EFB . ha[d] requested"). On 14 August 2018 the Lotus Delivery Materials were delivered to Lotus by EFB. They were collected by a courier, Team Air, at 6.00pm (London time) on 13 August 2018 and delivered to Los Angeles the following day at 5.55pm (LA time). The Cure Notice was given on 15 August 2018.
42. That led to 'round' two. Lotus had "15 Business Days from and after receipt of [the Cure Notice] and the relevant Lotus Delivery Materials" in which to give an Additional Objection Notice or an Acceptance Notice: paragraph 5 of Schedule 2 to the CGA (i.e. by 6 September 2018).
(1) On 17 August 2018, Lotus wrote confirming that, under paragraph 5 of Schedule 2 , and in the light of the intervening August bank holiday in England on 27 August 2018, the date required for a response was 6 September 2018. On 5 September 2018, Lotus gave an Additional Objection Notice (again including a quality control report). On that occasion reference was made only to "clause 5.2 of Schedule 2 ". .
(2) Any second request for additional information was required "within 3 Business Days after receiving [the] Additional Objection Notice ": paragraph 5.2 of Schedule 2 (i.e. by 10 September 2018). On 10 September 2018, EFB made a request for additional information.
(3) Lotus had "3 Business Days after its receipt of [the] request" in which to respond: paragraph 5.2 of Schedule 2 (i.e. by 13 September 2018). On 13 September 2018, Lotus responded. The letter stated: "This is a response, prepared in good faith for the purposes of Schedule 2 "Delivery Procedure" clause 5.2 of the [Completion Guarantee] All of [Lotus's] rights in each and any jurisdiction are reserved".
(4) Any request for the return of the Lotus Delivery Materials "physically delivered" to Lotus had to be made "within 5 Business Days after receiving the Additional Objection Notice": paragraph 5.2 of Schedule 2 (i.e. by 12 September 2018). In contrast to 'round' one, the time for the request for the return of materials was fixed by reference to the date of receipt of the Additional Objection Notice alone. EFB could not wait until after the receipt of the second response to the request for additional information. On 12 September 2018, EFB requested the return of the Lotus Delivery Materials. Once again, the request specified that the return should be made to "EFB c/o Paul Dray at Lip Sync Productions LLP, 195 Wardour Street, London W1F 8ZG." Given the 8 hour time difference between the UK and Los Angeles, the request would have to be received early in the morning by Lotus.
(5) Lotus were required to return the Lotus Delivery Materials to EFB "within 3 days after the Sales Agent's receipt of EFB's written request": paragraph 5 of Schedule 2 (i.e. by 15 September 2018). It is common ground that the Lotus Delivery Materials were not delivered to EFB by that date. Part of the Lotus Delivery Materials were delivered on 17 September 2018 and part were delivered on 18 September 2018."
The hearing below
i) The Judge commenced his reasons at [81(1)] by saying "[i]n my view the starting point is that the normal use of the word "return" means arriving at the destination to which it was intended to return."
ii) Second, he regarded the tight timetable, with deadlines becoming increasingly short as the process progressed as "indicative that the parties regarded time as being of the essence."
iii) Third, having noted that the "return" triggered the commencement of the Cure Period in "round 1" or the Additional Cure Period in "round 2" to enable EFB to remedy any defects, he expressed the view that this must be tied to the date of receipt of the Lotus Delivery Materials and not the date of sending them. He reinforced the point by reference to the definition of the Additional Cure Period in paragraph 6.1 of Schedule 2 which states that "no later than 15 Business Days after the later of (i) receiving the Additional Objection Notice or the Second Response as applicable, or (ii) the return of any Lotus Delivery Materials as appropriate requested by EFB". Given that the first of these two limbs was clearly based upon receipt, he considered it would be odd if the second was subject to a different approach.
iv) Fourth, he regarded it as clearly important that EFB should know when the Additional Cure Period begins, so as to put in place a timetable of works to enable it to meet the deadline for the redelivery of the cured materials and the giving of an Additional Cure Notice. The Appellants accepted that, on their interpretation, the Respondents would not know when "return" took place and the Additional Cure Period commenced, and therefore would not know the extent of any erosion of the Additional Cure Period caused by time in transit. He was unpersuaded by the suggestion of an implied term requiring the Appellants to notify the Respondents when the Lotus Return Materials were handed over to the carrier; and he was unpersuaded by the suggestion that the Respondents' interpretation also required an implied term that they would notify the Appellants upon delivery, because the Appellants would always have access to tracking information that would include the time of delivery.
v) Fifth, the Judge referred to the fact that there was no prescribed method of delivery by which to return the Lotus Delivery Materials, which meant that it was open to the Appellants to choose a method that substantially eroded the Respondents' Additional Cure Period. He did not consider that this was the intention of the parties, given the tight timetable they had agreed and the apparent symmetry by which, in "round 2" Lotus had 15 Business Days to give an Additional Objection Notice and EFB had 15 Business Days to give an Additional Cure Notice after the "return" of the Lotus Delivery Materials.
vi) Sixth, he was unconvinced by the suggestion that the Respondent did not need the "returned" Lotus Delivery Materials in order to commence remedial works. In his view, paragraph 5.2 envisaged that the Lotus Delivery Materials that were required to be remedied would be physically available to the Respondents throughout the Additional Cure Period.
vii) Seventh, he was also unconvinced by the suggestion that there should be a further implied term (in any one of a number of its formulations) to the effect that the mode of delivery had to be consistent with and cognisant of the agreed timetable. He was influenced in this conclusion by the fact that the proposed implied term would ameliorate but not obviate the underlying problem, namely that the Additional Cure Period available to the Respondents would be eroded by the period taken to deliver the Lotus Delivery Materials. No equivalent difficulty would arise with the Respondents' interpretation: the Appellants' obligation would be to tender delivery; and if the Respondents made delivery impossible, they could not rely upon that fact to establish a breach of the Delivery Process.
viii) Turning to the Appellants' exclusion clause argument, his primary reason for rejecting it was that no breach of contract by the Respondents had been or could be established, so that the question of excluding liability did not arise. If he was wrong on that, he did not accept that the contra proferentem principle applied to a contract negotiated by sophisticated businessmen, legally advised and of equal bargaining power.
ix) Lastly, he was not persuaded that there was such a difference in the gravity of outcome in the deeming provisions in paragraphs 2 and 9 on the one hand and paragraphs 4 and 7 on the other. "If [the Appellants] failed to deliver the Lotus Delivery Materials on time, the end result would be that the Beneficiaries would indeed lose the right to call upon the guarantee, but if [the Respondents] failed to deliver an Additional Cure Notice within the required time period, [they] would be deemed to have served an Arbitration Notice, and the arbitration would be based on the uncured Lotus Delivery Materials. If there were substance in the complaints contained in the Additional Objection Notice, which [the Respondents] would not have had the chance to remedy, it is likely that [the Respondents] would lose the Arbitration and the Beneficiaries would obtain the benefit of the Guarantee. Although the latter process will take longer, it would have serious consequences for [the Respondents], provided a justifiable Additional Objection Notice has been served."
The appeal
i) The Judge was right for the reasons he gave: there is no ambiguity and therefore no need to resort to an assessment of business common sense in order to resolve the dispute. This submission rested upon close analysis of the terms of Schedule 2 to which I return below;
ii) The Appellants have not established that a three-day time period for delivery is unreasonable, unreasonably tight or such as reasonable commercial parties in the position of the contracting parties in the present case would have regarded as an unacceptable allocation of risk that was not in accordance with business common sense;
iii) The Appellants now accept that the Respondents may well need to have the Lotus Delivery Materials before they can start work to cure alleged defects. This is because defects in the Lotus Delivery Materials can arise either (a) because there is a defect in the master copy or (b) because of some glitch which occurred when compiling the Lotus Delivery Materials. It follows that the Respondents will typically need to have the Lotus Delivery Materials in their possession to see whether they agree with the allegation of defect and, if so, how it occurred. Reconstituting another set of the Lotus Delivery Materials from the master, as was suggested by the Appellants, is not satisfactory because the compiling glitch (if that was the cause of an alleged defect) may not be replicated. The contractual framework has to work for all eventualities, including those where the Respondents need to have the Lotus Delivery Materials;
iv) In any event, on a proper construction of paragraph 5.2, the contractual purpose of the "return" of the Lotus Delivery Materials is so that the Respondents can work on them.
The principles to be applied
"(1) The court's task is to ascertain the objective meaning of the language which the parties have chosen to express their agreement. It has long been accepted that this is not a literalist exercise focused solely on a parsing of the wording of the particular clause, but that the court must consider the contract as a whole and, depending on the nature, formality and quality of drafting of the contract, give more or less weight to elements of the wider context in reaching its view as to that objective meaning.
(2) Interpretation is a unitary exercise; where there are rival meanings, the court can give weight to the implications of rival constructions by reaching a view as to which construction is more consistent with business common sense. But, in striking a balance between the indications, given by the language and the implications of the competing constructions, the court must consider the quality of drafting of the clause.
(3) The court must also be alive to the possibility that one side may have agreed to something which with hindsight did not serve his interest. This exercise involves checking each suggested interpretation against the provisions of the contract and investigating its commercial consequences. Similarly, the court must not lose sight of the possibility that a provision may be a negotiated compromise or that the negotiators were not able to agree more precise terms.
(4) Textualism and contextualism are not conflicting paradigms in a battle for exclusive occupation of the field of contractual interpretation. Rather, the lawyer and the judge, when interpreting any contract, can use them as tools to ascertain the objective meaning of the language which the parties have chosen to express their agreement. The extent to which each tool will assist the court in its task will vary according to the circumstances of the particular agreement or agreements.
(5) Account should be taken of the fact that negotiators of complex formal contracts may often not achieve a logical and coherent text because of, for example, the conflicting aims of the parties, failures of communication, differing drafting practices, or deadlines which require the parties to compromise in order to reach agreement. There may often therefore be provisions in a detailed professionally drawn contract which lack clarity and the lawyer or judge in interpreting such provisions may be particularly helped by considering the factual matrix and the purpose of similar provisions in contracts of the same type."
Assessment and conclusion
i) Once again the word "return" does not appear in isolation, but the reference is to the Appellants failing to return the materials to the Respondents, which I take as another indicator that supports the Respondents' interpretation and not that of the Appellants;
ii) The use of the word "thereupon" supports the Respondents' submission that the date on which the materials are "returned" should be capable of certain assessment by the Respondents so that they can tell when the Appellants are out of time and "thereupon" notify others of the conclusive presumption. On the Appellants' interpretation, this certainty cannot be achieved unless they inform the Respondents when they "return" the materials by entrusting them to the carrier or other organisation or person, which they are not obliged to do (and, as a matter of passing interest but not as an aid to contractual interpretation, did not do in the present case).
Sir Nicholas Patten:
Asplin LJ:
Note 1 I shall usually refer generically to the Appellants and the Respondents unless it is necessary to the issues to be more precise, or where quoting from the Judgment below. [Back] Note 2 The Delivery Procedure permits steps to be taken by EFB or the Guarantor. For convenience, the Judges outline referred only to EFB. [Back]