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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 >> Apvodedo NV v Collins [2008] EWHC 775 (Ch) (17 April 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2008/775.html Cite as: [2008] EWHC 775 (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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APVODEDO NV |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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TERRY COLLINS |
Defendant |
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Mr Thomas Grant and Mr Thomas Munby (instructed by Beachcroft LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 12 March 2008
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Henderson:
Introduction and Background
The Exclusivity Agreement
"or six weeks from the date [LAH] or its advisers receive documentation relating to the Transaction including but not limited [to] such documentation as a prudent purchaser would require in order to purchase the Property and/or the shares in a company owning the Property ("the Documentation") if later than 8 January 2007 (subject to clause 10 of this Agreement)."
"1.4 [LAH] is proposing to purchase the Property or the shares in the company owning the Property and sell the Property or shares … to [Apvodedo].
1.5 [LAH] and [Apvodedo] acknowledge that [Mr Collins] has come to an understanding with [Mr Lee] that when [Apvodedo] sends £1,000,000 to Mr Lee, Mr Lee (or his advisers) will release the Documentation (as hereinafter defined) to [Mr Collins] or [LAH] to enable [LAH] to proceed with the purchase of the Property or the shares in the company owning the Property for £250,000,000 and then for [LAH] and [Apvodedo] … to proceed with the Transaction …
1.6 [Mr Collins] confirms the understanding in clause 1.5 above. [Mr Collins] confirms his understanding is that Mr Lee or a company/organisation of Mr Lee has the exclusive right to buy the Property or the shares in the company owning the Property."
"If [LAH] has not received the Documentation from its vendor by 15 February 2007 or such reasonable extension to that date as [LAH] reasonably demonstrates that the Documentation is on its way (but in any event by 28 February 2007) (with the exception of clause 10, 11 and 12 which will remain in full force and effect) this Agreement shall automatically terminate without prejudice to any then accrued claims of either party against the other."
"10.1 On the date hereof [Apvodedo] paid Mr Lee £1,000,000 so that Mr Lee would release the Documentation to [LAH] (and/or its advisers).
10.2 In the event [LAH] has not received a draft agreement entitling Mr Lee or anyone associated with Mr Lee to purchase the Property and/or the shares of a company owning the Property and title documents for the Property and a further agreement to sell such interest as is acquired to [LAH] by 15 February 2007 (as extended by clause 9) [Mr Collins] shall pay [Apvodedo] £1,000,000 on 31 March 2007."
It can thus be seen that Mr Collins undertook an apparently unqualified and unconditional obligation to pay £1 million to Apvodedo on 31 March 2007, in the event that LAH had not received the specified documents by 15 February 2007 (or any extension of that date up to 28 February 2007 granted pursuant to clause 9).
The fraud comes to light
"222. Neither Mr Lee nor Mr Dolan had ever had any contact with the Barclays or any representative of theirs, and nor were they ever … intermediaries on behalf of the Barclays.
…
There was no prospect of Mr Lee and Mr Dolan acquiring the Ritz for £200 million or selling it on to LAH for £250 million, nor could they possibly have had any grounds for believing that they did have any such prospect. Neither Mr Lee nor Mr Dolan had any contract or any agreement of any kind with any other person for the acquisition of the Ritz. The necessary paperwork for the acquisition of the Ritz was never collated by or on behalf Mr Lee and Mr Dolan.
…
224. I find that no other purchaser had ever approached Mr Lee or Mr Dolan willing to pay more for the purchase of the Ritz. No such person has ever been named, and no documentation of any kind has ever been disclosed in relation to any such purchaser.
225. Neither Mr Lee nor Mr Dolan ever had any intention of repaying the £1 million. They immediately set about spending the money. Neither of them had any significant assets. Mr Lee was an undischarged bankrupt. Mr Dolan's only significant asset appears to have been his interest in [a property], which he has since purported to put into the sole name of his wife."
The present proceedings
"8. In the circumstances, the Exclusivity Agreement was void ab initio by reason of the common mistake of the parties in that, contrary to the common understanding and assumption of the parties at the time of signing the Exclusivity Agreement:
8.1 the subject matter of the Exclusivity Agreement, namely the Documentation, did not exist;
8.2 further or alternatively, Mr Lee had no entitlement to purchase the Property or to sell any interest in it to LAH or to any purchaser;
8.3 further or alternatively, Mr Lee had no relationship (contractual or otherwise) with the owners of the Property nor any realistic prospect of being able to procure the sale of the Property by them; and
8.4 in all the circumstances, performance of the Exclusivity Agreement was impossible, or alternatively fundamentally different from what was contemplated by the parties, or alternatively such that the parties would not have entered into the Exclusivity Agreement had they known the true state of affairs."
"That of course was why cl 10 of the Exclusion [sic] Agreement was included, specifically to provide for the possibility that for whatever reason the Documentation might not be forthcoming – precisely as has occurred."
"30. At the time the Exclusivity Agreement was entered into, all the parties to that agreement … believed that Mr Lee was a genuine property dealer with the benefit of an agreement entitling him to acquire the Ritz for £200 million, and that the Documentation existed at either Mr Farrell's offices or the offices of Berwin Leighton Paisner.
31. I had been introduced to Mr Lee through a chain of professional people. We had conducted lengthy and detailed negotiations over a period of several months. Neither Ms Maguire, nor Mr Tombolis of Beachcroft had "smelled a rat". Perhaps most persuasively, we had all been told by Mr Farrell (who was a solicitor) that the Documentation existed and was being [compiled] at his offices. Besides, the extent of Mr Lee's dishonesty (as it has subsequently emerged) was so remarkable that it was simply not the sort of thing that one would suspect.
32. I had told Mr Boekhoorn all I knew about Mr Lee and the proposed transaction; [Apvodedo's] knowledge of the transaction and the players involved corresponded with my own. I had been entirely open with them, that I believed that the Documentation was with Mr Lee's lawyers and they had also heard directly from Mr Tombolis and Ms Maguire."
"My understanding is that Mr Boekhoorn and his advisers are very significant figures in the world of finance in the Netherlands. They devoted a considerable amount of time to this deal (including flying a team of Mr Boekhoorn and several others to London for a two day negotiation). They were advancing £1 million (without security other than my promise to repay in certain circumstances and without provision for interest) with a view to securing what would have been a very substantial transaction. … I do not believe it is plausible that they would have taken on this time, expense and risk unless they had shared my belief that there was a real property transaction to be done, with the Documentation ready in Mr Lee's lawyers offices to support it. It was in support of that belief that [Apvodedo] obtained a bank guarantee … payable to [LAH] in the sum of £25 million …
34. With regard to the provision in clause 10 for the repayment of the £1 million, of course we were all aware of the possibility that the documents might not be forthcoming. Mr Lee had threatened several times that he would accept another bid or give the deal to someone else. In that case, it was not of course envisaged that [LAH] or I would be able to keep the £1 million; it would have to be returned to Apvodedo and I had received express confirmation of this from Mr Lee. The possibility that Mr Lee was a fraudster who was embarking on an elaborate sting or that the Documentation did not actually exist, had not even entered my mind. The guarantee given by me at clause 10 simply reflected my absolute belief that Mr Lee would make good his end of the deal, failing which he would return the £1 million payment."
Summary judgment: the test to be applied
The claimant's submissions
"the following elements must be present if common mistake is to avoid a contract: (i) there must be a common assumption as to the existence of a state of affairs; (ii) there must be no warranty by either party that that state of affairs exists; (iii) the non-existence of the state of affairs must not be attributable to the fault of either party; (iv) the non-existence of the state of affairs must render performance of the contract impossible; (v) the state of affairs may be the existence, or a vital attribute, of the consideration to be provided or circumstances which must subsist if performance of the contractual adventure is to be possible."
He submitted that elements (i), (iv) and (v) were not satisfied in the present case: element (i), because the parties had dealt expressly with the risk of non-performance by Mr Lee; element (iv), because there was nothing impossible about Mr Collins' obligation to pay the £1 million; and element (v), because the existence of the Documentation and the honesty of Mr Lee were not vital attributes of the circumstances which had to subsist if the contractual adventure (i.e. in this context payment of the £1 million by Mr Collins) was to be possible.
Discussion and conclusion