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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 >> Helmsley Acceptances Ltd v Ali & Anor [2012] EWHC 1591 (Ch) (14 June 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2012/1591.html Cite as: [2012] EWHC 1591 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London. WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge)
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HELMSLEY ACCEPTANCES LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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1) ALTAY ALI (2) DB UK BANK LIMITED |
Defendants |
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The First Defendant appeared in person
The Second Defendant did not appear and was not represented
Hearing date: 4th May 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
Whether, in the events that have happened, the agreement between the parties dated 28 November 2011 has compromised the present claim and, consequently, whether the Claimant is obliged to withdraw its claim or whether the Claimant is still entitled to maintain its claim herein.
The Background to the Original Action
"Background
(i) Mr Ali is the registered proprietor of the property known as Netherbridge Farm, St Giles on the Heath, Launceston, Cornwall, PL 15 9SS, which is registered at HM Land Registry under Title Number DN352025 ("Netherbridge Farm")
(ii) On 17 January 2007, Mr Ali granted db mortgages a first legal charge over the part of Netherbridge Farm which is coloured pink on the Title Plan attached at Annex A of this Settlement Agreement ("the Pink Land").
(iii) On 31 August 2007, Mr Ali granted Helmsley a first legal charge over the part of Netherbridge Farm which is coloured blue, yellow and mauve on the Title Plan attached at Annex A of this Settlement Agreement ("the Development Land").
(iv) On 31 August 2007, Mr Ali granted Helmsley a second legal charge over the Pink Land which ranks behind db mortgages' charge by virtue of a Deed of Priority which was entered into between Helmsley and db mortgages on the same date ("the Deed of Priority").
(v) On 20 December 2010, Helmsley issued a claim against Mr Ali and db mortgages, which is being heard in the High Court under Claim Number HC10C04533 (" the Claim").
(vi) The Claim is an action asking for a court declaration that Helmsley is entitled to certain easements over the Pink Land.
(vii) Mr Ali filed his Defence on 23 February 2011. db mortgages filed its Defence on 11 March 2011.
(viii) Mr Ali has secured funding from Mayfair Estates Property and Investment Funding Limited ("the New Lender") which it is intended to be secured by a first legal charge on that part of the Development Land which is coloured yellow and mauve on the Title Plan attached as Annex A of this Settlement Agreement.
(ix) The parties have agreed the terms set out in this Settlement Agreement.
Agreement between Helmsley and Mr Ali
1. Helmsley agrees to withdraw the Claim against Mr Ali with no order as to Mr Ali's costs.
2. Mr Ali agrees to pay Helmsley the sum of £270,000 in cleared funds by 06 December 2011 ('the Settlement Sum').
3. As consideration for receiving the Settlement Sum, Helmsley agrees to release its security from Netherbridge Farm, namely its first legal charge over the Development Land and its second legal charge over the Pink Land and Helmsley shall deliver to Mr Ali all necessary discharge documents and deeds and forms duly executed and dated as soon as possible after receipt of the Settlement Sum.
Agreement between Helmsley and db mortgages
4. Helmsley agrees to withdraw the Claim against db mortgages.
5. Helmsley agrees to release db mortgages from the terms of the Deed of Priority.
6. Helmsley agrees to pay the legal costs and disbursements incurred by db mortgages in relation to defending and compromising the Claim to be assessed if not agreed between Helmsley and db mortgages.
Agreement between Mr Ali and db mortgages
7. Subject to the conditions set out in paragraph 9 below, db mortgages will:
....
7.2 Consent to Mr Ali granting the New Lender the following easements over the Pink Land in the event that the New Lender enforces its legal charge over that part of the Development Land which is coloured yellow and mauve on the Title Plan attached at Annex A of this Settlement Agreement ("the Title Plan"):
....
8. ....
9. The agreement by db mortgages to consent to the grant of the easements referred to in paragraph 7 above is conditional upon Mr Ali:
9.1 Paying off in full the outstanding arrears on his mortgage account with db mortgages ...
....
9.4 Making the necessary arrangements and executing the necessary documents to ensure that the fishing rights to which reference is made within entry number 3 in the Property Register of Netherbridge Farm are charged to db mortgages;
10. ...
11. ...
12. This Settlement Agreement constitutes the whole agreement made between Helmsley, Mr Ali and db mortgages and supersedes any letters, telephone conversations, faxes, emails or any other communication."
1. Debar the First Defendant from defending the Points of Claim for the failure to serve Points of Defence. This would mean that Helmsley would succeed on its alternative cases of rectification and/or mistake;
2. Determine the preliminary issue on the interpretation and repudiation arguments only;
3. Adjourn the trial of the preliminary issue again making an unless order requiring the First Defendant to serve Points of Defence.
"The language used by the parties will often have more than one potential meaning. I would accept the submission made on behalf of the appellants that the exercise of construction is essentially one unitary exercise in which the court must consider the language used and ascertain what a reasonable person, that is a person who has all the background knowledge which would reasonably have been available to the parties in the situation in which they were at the time of the contract, would have understood the parties to have meant. In doing so, the court must have regard to all the relevant surrounding circumstances. If there are two possible constructions, the court is entitled to prefer the construction which is consistent with business common sense and to reject the other."
"Firstly, it is not a conditional contract for the following reasons:
1. There is no express provision for either a condition precedent or a condition subsequent. The reasonable man would not understand from reading the Settlement Agreement that there was no contractual relationship created until the Settlement Sum was paid. The reasonable man would understand that the Claimant now has a claim in debt as against the First Defendant for £270,000.2. It is not possible to infer such a condition precedent or condition subsequent as that would be contrary to the express terms in the Settlement Agreement. Clauses 1 and 4 create immediate and clear obligations on the Claimant to withdraw the Claim. By contrast, clauses 3, 7 and 9 all contain conditional obligations. In particular, clause 3 (the Claimant's obligation to release its charges) is conditional upon the performance of clause 2. Such a condition would be redundant if the entire Settlement Agreement was conditional upon the performance of clause 2 by the First Defendant.3. Given the protection provided to the Claimant by the conditionality of the obligation to release its charges in clause 3, any such implication of a condition precedent or condition subsequent would be unnecessary.4. Neither the subjective intention of the Claimant (or the Claimant's representatives) nor any pre-contractual correspondence can assist the court with this matter. Clause 12 is an entire agreement clause whereby the parties expressly agree that the Settlement Agreement in its written form supersedes any letters telephone conversations, faxes or other communications.5. Not only is there no express provision that the Settlement Agreement is conditional upon the payment of the Settlement Sum, the inference of such a term would be contrary to the other express provisions of the agreement.
Secondly, the obligation to withdraw is an independent obligation for the following reasons:
6. Clauses 1 and 4 of the Settlement Agreement are unambiguous. The Claimant agreed to compromise and withdraw the Claim. There is absolutely no express provision for that obligation to be conditional upon the payment by the First Defendant of the Settlement Sum pursuant to clause 2. On the face of the Settlement Agreement, the obligations in clauses 1 and 4 are entirely independent obligations.7. In contrast to clauses 1 and 4, there are conditional or dependent obligations contained within the Settlement Agreement. Most pertinently clause 3 provides that the Claimant shall deliver the discharge documents and deeds "as soon as possible after receipt of the Settlement Sum". This is in contrast to the Claimant's obligations in clauses 1 and 4 where no such provision is made. If the parties had intended the obligation to withdraw the Claim to be dependent upon the First Defendant's performance of clause 2 they could and would have done so, as they did for the obligation in clause 3.8. The obligation in clauses 1 and 4 may be further contrasted to those in clauses 7 and 9 concerning obligations of and to the Second Defendant, which are clearly expressed to be both (a) "subject to the conditions set out in paragraph 9 below" and (b) "conditional upon" the performance of other nominated obligations.9. The Settlement Agreement was negotiated between commercial parties advised by solicitors.10. Clause 12 is an entire agreement clause and it is not open to the Claimant to seek to rely on any pre or post contractual emails/correspondence/conversations.11. The Claimant is given adequate protection by clause 3."
1. Recital (viii) is that "Mr Ali has secured funding". The whole agreement assumes the accuracy of that statement of fact and deals with the consequences of Mr Ali paying to Helmsley the funds which he claimed to have secured. The funding and the payment to Helmsley are the foundation of what follows.
2. All the obligations were and remain executory. Helmsley's obligation is to "withdraw" its claim. That expression is not a term of art and is not defined within the agreement. The agreement contains no express stipulation as to the time when Helmsley should withdraw its claim. Mr Morshead submits that the obvious and most logical time for the claim to be withdrawn is once the First Defendant has paid the settlement sum.
3. Other provisions in the Settlement Agreement assume that Helmsley has released its own legal charges which, in turn, is expressly dependent on payment having been made. This assumption appears from a reading of the Settlement Agreement as a whole and in particular the following:
i. The new lending from the New Lender could not be secured as a first legal charge in place (effectively) of Helmsley's first legal charge, until Helmsley had released its own legal charges. This was only to occur explicitly "after receipt" of the Settlement Sum. The New Lender's loan could not be a first charge unless and until Helmsley had released its own first charge. Without a new charge in favour of the New Lender, the Second Defendant's obligation to grant the required easements to the New Lender makes no sense.
ii. Helmsley is obliged to 'release' the Second Defendant from the deed of priority. But 'releasing' the Second Defendant from the deed would not (as it were) affect the priority of the charges were they to continue to subsist because, absent a release of the charges themselves, Helmsley would still have a first-ranking legal charge over the non- Pink Land and a second ranking legal charge over the Pink Land. The idea of the deed of priorities being 'released' is one which assumes that Helmsley has also released the charges whose priorities are regulated by the deed.
iii. The deed of priority also acknowledged that Helmsley had security over the entirety of certain fishing rights. The practical effect of a 'release', therefore, would be that the First Defendant became at liberty to charge the fishing rights to the Second Defendant, as was required of him under clause 9.4 of the Settlement Agreement. But this, too, would make no sense unless Helmsley had also released its security, because the First Defendant cannot charge the fishing rights to the Second Defendant, unless Helmsley has released those rights in favour of the First Defendant as well as the Second Defendant, i.e. by releasing its own substantive charges, following payment by the First Defendant.
4. Mr Morshead also submits that Helmsley is entitled to rely upon the draft Tomlin Order together with correspondence setting out the terms on which it was to be lodged as documents executed contemporaneously with or shortly after the Settlement Agreement and forming part of the same transaction, as an aid to construction of the Settlement Agreement. Helmsley's solicitor had proposed the lodging of a Tomlin order to give effect to the Settlement Agreement. She had also proposed that 'completion' of the agreement would entail not only 'completion' of the Settlement Agreement (in the sense of signing and exchanging it) but also receipt of the Settlement Sum. The Defendants both accepted that arrangement without contradiction.