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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 >> Franbar Holdings Ltd v Casualty Plus Ltd [2011] EWHC 1161 (Ch) (11 May 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2011/1161.html Cite as: [2011] EWHC 1161 (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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FRANBAR HOLDINGS LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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CASUALTY PLUS LIMITED |
Defendant |
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Stephen Moverley Smith QC (instructed by Magwells, solicitors) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 12 April 2011
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Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Proudman :
"If there is any disagreement about any amount that falls to be calculated under this Schedule 3 then the disagreement shall be referred to the Independent Accountant who will, acting as expert and not as arbitrator, determine such amount. The Independent Accountant's costs in performing this role shall be shared equally between the [claimant and the defendant]. The Independent Accountant's decision will, in the absence of manifest error or illegality, be final and binding upon the parties to this agreement."
Clause 13 of the Agreement provides (subject to certain requirements as to his qualifications and independence) for the Independent Accountant ("IA") to be appointed by the claimant alone.
"to apply to seek to discontinue the Shareholders' Action and the Petition in the event that the first preliminary issue ordered hereunder is decided such that the 2005 accounts of [the Company] apply to determine the price to be paid… "
The hearing of the preliminary issues
"…whether [the claimant and the defendant] reached a binding agreement as set out in the Chairman's Statement to the 2005 accounts of [the Company], that the Adjusted EBITDA as defined in the Shareholders' Agreement dated 28th July 2005 ("the Agreement") for [the Company] for the year 2005 and for the purposes of the option price formula in the Agreement was £524,830"
"If you are right, and we are wrong, the independent accountant will be required to determine the disagreement and it does not matter whether that determination occurs before or after the trial of the third preliminary issue, which, although it was given expedited status, has taken nearly a year to come on by reason of your client's appeal and your client's witness unavailability.
Our reference to the independent expert was expressly stated to be without prejudice to the third preliminary issue were our client successful in it and that is the basis on which our client has appointed the independent expert. It is not to be inferred, and indeed cannot be inferred from that, that we have abandoned the third preliminary issue.
Please confirm whether you wish the independent accountant to receive any further documents from you…and any further comments…"
"The whole point of the process is that it does indeed prejudice, i.e. it is intended to be final and binding.
In these circumstances, if your client continues with a reference to the independent accountant without our client's consent or agreement, we can only infer that your client has chosen to abandon its third preliminary issue. Your client cannot have it both ways."
Summary judgment
Final and binding
Manifest error/ failure by the IA to act in accordance with his instructions
"the EBITDA adjusted to take account of the factors in paragraphs 4, 5 and 6 of this Schedule 3."
EBITDA was defined as,
"Earnings before interest charges, taxation, depreciation and amortisation as determined by GAAP as amended or updated from time to time."
Earnings was defined as,
"The total profit generated by the Company in the ordinary course of business, excluding exceptional and extraordinary revenues and costs."
Paragraphs 5 and 6 are not applicable in the events which happened. Para 5 applied where the Company opened new premises within four months of a relevant financial year, and required the EBITDA to be increased by the amount of the cost of opening such premises. Para 6 determined how to deal with the costs of premises operated by the company at the date of the Agreement but then re-branded as premises of the defendant.
"A management fee for providing head office functions and services is to be charged by Casualty to the Company and deducted from the EBITDA for the relevant financial year. Such management fee will be in respect of such periods and in such amounts as set out in the Business Plan [annexed to the Agreement]."
"5.5 The accounts for the 2005 financial year show an expense for management fees of £109, 366. Both experts have treated this charge as an expense chargeable in arriving at Adjusted EBITDA.
5.6 The Chairman's Statement in the 2005 accounts that the Adjusted EBITDA was £524,830 was clearly wrong in that it added back the management fee in arriving at Adjusted EBITDA, rather than deducting it.
5.7 Mr Andrews suggested in his report that on the wording of the …Agreement, the management fee should be deducted from the EBITDA a second time. That is to say that having been charged as a deduction in arriving at EBITDA in the first place, the charge should then be further deducted from the resultant EBITDA, having the net effect of deducting the amount twice. However, in the agreed figure for Adjusted EBITDA in the joint statement both experts agree that the management charge should be deducted once.
5.8 In my opinion there is no logic in deducting the management fee twice and in the absence of express wording to the effect that it should be deducted twice, I put this interpretation down to some imprecise drafting of paragraph 4 of Schedule 3 to the Agreement."
"Any number of issues could arise under the various sub-paragraphs [of the contract] as to the application of the wording of those sub-paragraphs to particular facts. All these issues are capable of being described as issues of law or mixed fact and law, in that they all involve issues as to the true meaning or application of wording in [the relevant paragraph]. I cannot read the categorical wording of paragraph 7 as meaning that the determination of the accountants or of the expert shall be conclusive, final and binding for all purposes 'unless it involves a determination of an issue of law or mixed fact and law in which case it shall only be binding if the court agrees with it.
Accordingly, in my judgment, because Coopers did precisely what they were instructed to do, the plaintiffs cannot challenge their determination of the amount of the sales."
"The parties clearly intended by this clause to empower the named accountants- and in default of agreement by them, the experts- to decide all matters necessary to determine the amount of the sales, and not just to leave to them matters of mathematical calculation. There was good reason for the parties to take this course…and therefore a speedy method of determining this figure made sound business sense. In my judgment, therefore, Coopers did exactly what the parties had contracted they should do…"