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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Fairbriar Plc v Van Reyk & Anor [2007] EWHC 2510 (Ch) (31 October 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2007/2510.html Cite as: [2007] EWHC 2510 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Fairbriar plc |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Philip van Reyk Robert Bourne |
Defendants |
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William Trower QC, Lucy Frazer (instructed by Lawrence Graham) for the Defendant (1)
Hearing dates: between 17/10/07 and 19/10/07
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Evans-Lombe:
"Whether the claim by the Claimant against the First Defendant has been compromised and released by an agreement entered into between the Claimant and the First Defendant and VR Development Limited on or about 11th October 2004."
"The parties hereto acknowledge that the terms of the Management Services Agreement and the Investment Agreement have been fully complied with by each party. The parties hereto further confirm that no party has any claim for any antecedent matter whatsoever against another party."
"Exemption clauses must be expressed clearly and without ambiguity or they will be ineffective. The clause must clearly express what its intention is."
Then referring to a decision at the Court of Appeal where it was said "if a person was under a legal liability and wished to get rid of it he could only do so by using clear words" the passage continues:-
"Exemption clauses will therefore be construed strictly, and the degree of strictness appropriate to their construction may properly depend upon the extent to which they involve departure from the implied obligations ordinarily accepted by the parties in entering into a contract of a particular kind and whether the clause purports entirely to exclude an obligation or liability or merely to limit the compensation recoverable from the party in default. However the rules of construction applicable to written contracts apply equally to exemption clauses to ascertain what meaning the words were intended to bear. If the clause is expressed clearly and unambiguously there is no justification for placing upon the language of the clause a strained and artificial meaning so as to avoid the exclusion or restriction of liability contained in it. … Each clause must be considered according to its actual wording, but it must clearly extend to the exact contingency or loss which has occurred if it is to protect the party relying on it."
"8 I consider first the proper construction of this release. In construing this provision, as any other contractual provision, the object of the court is to give effect to what the contracting parties intended. To ascertain the intention of the parties the court reads the terms of the contract as a whole giving the words used their natural and ordinary meaning in the context of the agreement, the parties' relationship and all the relevant facts surrounding the transaction so far as is known to the parties. To ascertain the parties' intentions the court does not of course enquire into the parties' objective states of mind but makes an objective judgment based on the materials already identified. The general principle summarised by Lord Hoffmann in [the ICS case] apply in a case such as this.
9 A party may at any rate in a compromise agreement supported by valuable consideration agree to release claims or rights of which he is unaware and of which he could not be aware even claims which could not on the facts known to the parties have been imagined, if appropriate language is used to make plain that that was his intention."
"The mere fact that the parties were unaware of the particular claim is not a reason for excluding it from the scope of the release. The risk that further claims might later emerge was a risk the person giving the release took upon himself. It was against this very risk that the release was intended to protect the person in whose favour the release was made. For instance a mutual general release on a settlement of final partnership accounts might well preclude an erstwhile partner from bringing a claim if it subsequently came to light that inadvertently his share of profits had been understated in the agreed accounts.
28 This approach however should not be pressed too far. It does not mean that once the possibility of further claims has been foreseen a newly emergent claim will always be regarded as caught by a general release, whatever the circumstances in which it arises and whatever its subject matter may be. However widely drawn the language, the circumstances in which the release was given may suggest, and frequently they do suggest, that the parties intended, or more precisely, the parties are reasonably to be taken to have intended, that the release should apply only to claims known or unknown, relating to a particular subject matter. The court has to consider therefore, what was the type of claim at which the release was directed, for instance, depending on the circumstances, a mutual general release on a settlement of final partnership accounts might properly be interpreted as confined to claims arising in connection with the partnership business. It could not reasonably be taken to preclude a claim if it later came to light that encroaching tree roots from one partner's property had undermined the foundations of his neighbouring partner's house. Echoing judicial language used in the past, that would be regarded as outside the "contemplation" of the parties at the time the release was entered into, not because it was an unknown claim, but because it related to a subject matter which was not "under consideration"."
"WHEREAS:
(A) Fairbriar and VRDL entered into a Management Services Agreement on 30th January 2004 in terms of which VRDL agreed to provide services to Fairbriar and its subsidiaries in return for the fees and upon the terms set out therein (the "Management Services Agreement");
(B) Fairbriar, VRDL and PVR [Mr van Reyk] entered into an Investment and Shareholder's Deed on 30th January 2004 for the regulation of their relationship as shareholders of VRDL (the "Investment Agreement");
(C) VRDL executed a loan stock instrument on 6th April 2004 creating up to £295,000 Redeemable Secured Loan Stock (the "RSLS Instrument"), and on the same date Fairbriar subscribed for £295,000 in nominal value of such loan stock; and
(D) The parties wish to enter into this Supplemental Agreement to record certain amendments to their respective relationships with effect from Friday 1st October 2004 (the "effective date").
it is hereby agreed as follows: "
"The parties hereby undertake and agree that [the Claimant] shall cease to have any rights or obligations under the Investment Agreement and/or the RSLS Instrument, and that the Investment Agreement and RSLS Instrument shall terminate with effect from the effective date as regards [the Claimant]."