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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 >> Jackson v Dear & Anor [2012] EWHC 2060 (Ch) (25 July 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2012/2060.html Cite as: [2012] EWHC 2060 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
ALEXANDER EDWARD JACKSON |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) PATRICK GILES GAUNTLET DEAR (2) READE EUGENE GRIFFITH |
Defendants |
____________________
Lord Anthony Grabiner QC and Miss Camilla Bingham (instructed by Simmons & Simmons LLP) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 21 and 22 June 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Briggs :
Introduction
"(i) Mr Jackson would not be removed as a director of TFG; and
(ii) The parties to the agreement in cl.5(b) of the Agreement, namely Messrs Dear & Griffiths and PCH II, would procure that Mr Jackson would not be removed as a director of TFG
between Annual General Meetings of TFG for so long as Mr Jackson wished to be a director of TFG and provided that no cl.5(b) Termination Event had occurred."
"The parties agree to take such other actions as may be reasonably required to authorise, and approve and otherwise give effect to this Agreement."
The second preliminary issue is whether, as alleged in paragraph 15 of the Particulars of Claim:
"By reason of clause 7, the parties to the Agreement are required:
i) To give effect to clause 5 of the Agreement;
ii) Not to invoke article 88(e) of the articles of TFG in order to remove Mr Jackson from office as a director of TFG;
iii) Not to invoke any other power to remove Mr Jackson from office as a director of TFG and
iv) To take steps formally to disapply, delete or amend article 88(e) of the articles of association of TFG so as to remove the power of removal therein set out insofar as it might otherwise be invoked against Mr Jackson,
Provided in the case of (ii)-(iv) inclusive above that a clause 5(b) Termination Event has not occurred."
The admissible background facts
"The parties acknowledge Alex Jackson's request to be elected to the board of directors of Tetragon Financial Group Limited. Reade Griffith, Patrick Dear and Alex Jackson agree to work in good faith to develop a mutually acceptable structure to satisfy Alex Jackson's request, acknowledging that certain practical and legal issues exist. The obligations of Holdco and Alex Jackson in this agreement are conditional on the implementation of arrangements satisfactory to Alex Jackson with respect to such request, including satisfactory protection against removal without his consent."
In the event the founders have since then held their interests in PCH II in the proportions: Jackson 40 per cent, Dear 20 per cent and Griffith 40 per cent. Mr Jackson was not at that time, and never had been, a director of TFG.
"Unless otherwise determined by Resolution of the Voting Shares, the number of Directors shall be seven. At no time shall a majority of Directors be residents of the United Kingdom."
"(a) Subject to the provisions of the Law, the Memorandum and these Articles and to any directions given by Resolution of the holders of Voting Shares, the business of the Company shall be managed by the Directors, who may exercise all the powers of the Company in any part of the world. No alteration of the Memorandum or these Articles and no such direction shall invalidate any prior act of the Directors which would have been valid if that alteration had not been made or that direction had not been given. The powers given by this Article shall not be limited by any special power given to the Directors by these Articles, and a meeting of Directors at which a quorum is present may exercise all powers exercisable by the Directors.
(b) Subject to the Law, every discretion vested in the Directors shall be absolute and uncontrolled, and every power vested in them shall be exercisable at their absolute and uncontrolled discretion, and the Directors shall have the same discretion in deciding whether or not to exercise any such power."
"The holders of Voting Shares by Resolution shall have power at any time, and from time to time, to
(i) appoint any person to be a Director, either to fill a vacancy or as an additional Director (subject to the eligibility requirements hereof and any requirements of the Law), and
(ii) remove any person from office as Director for any reason."
Article 87 provided for a director to retire from office by giving notice.
"Without prejudice to the provisions regarding retirement contained in the Articles, the office of a Director shall be vacated if:
(a) he ceases to be a Director by virtue of any provision of the Law or becomes prohibited by law from, or is disqualified from, being a Director; or
(b) he becomes bankrupt or makes any arrangement or composition with his creditors generally; or
(c) he resigns his office by notice to the Company; or
(d) he becomes of unsound mind; or
(e) he is given notice by all other Directors (not being less than two in number) to vacate office; or
(f) he is absent from meetings of the Directors for four successive meetings without leave expressed by a resolution of the Directors and the Directors resolve that his office should be vacated; or
(g) the Company so resolves by Resolution of the Voting Shares; or
(h) he becomes a resident of the United Kingdom and, as a result thereof, a majority of the Directors are residents of the United Kingdom. "
It will be noted that provisions in article 88 repeat, dovetail or otherwise overlap with provisions in articles 80, 86 and 87 to which I have already referred.
The Agreement
"(a) This Section 5 shall become operative upon receipt by Dear and Griffith of a written notice from Jackson prior to October 30, 2008 notifying them that Jackson wishes to be a director of Tetragon.
(b) Subject to Section 5(a) above, Jackson, Griffith, Dear and PCH II agree that (i) at the next annual shareholders meeting for Tetragon Financial Group Limited, a Guernsey company ("Tetragon"), which shareholders meeting is expected to be held prior to December 31, 2008, PCH II shall, subject to applicable laws (including applicable stock exchange and regulatory requirements), (A) nominate each of Jackson, Griffith and Dear as the sole non-independent directors of Tetragon (each a "TFG Non-Independent Director") and (B) vote all shares of Tetragon held by PCH II at such shareholders meeting in favour of the appointment of each TFG Non-Independent Director as a non-independent director of Tetragon and (ii) subject to applicable laws (including applicable stock exchange and regulatory requirements), to continue to nominate, and to vote all shares of Tetragon held by PCH II in favour of the appointment of Jackson as a TFG Non-Independent Director at each subsequent annual shareholders meeting for Tetragon; provided, however, that such right of Jackson to be nominated and reappointed shall terminate and the shares of Tetragon held by PCH II may be voted to remove Jackson as a director of Tetragon if Jackson (i) breaches his fiduciary duties or other obligations as a director of Tetragon under applicable laws (including applicable stock exchange and regulatory requirements), (ii) is found pursuant to a judgment by a court of competent jurisdiction, to have engaged in or to be responsible for fraud or wilful misconduct, (iii) is found by a competent authority not to be a fit and proper person to be involved in a regulated business or is otherwise disqualified from being involved in any part of the business of Tetragon or any of its subsidiaries or affiliates, (iv) transfers his interests in PCH and PCH II such that he holds, directly or indirectly through controlled affiliates, less than 15% of the aggregate voting and economic interests of either PCH or PCH II and their respective subsidiaries or (v) resigns as a director of Tetragon and notifies Griffith, Dear and PCH II that he does not wish to be reappointed as a Tetragon director; provided, further, however, that in the event Griffith or Dear transfer their shares in PCH II to a controlled affiliate (including, but not limited to, in the case of Griffith to REG Holdco), such transfer shall not be effective unless and until such transferee agrees to be bound by this Section 5."
I shall continue to refer to the five specified events mentioned in the proviso as terminating Mr Jackson's nomination and re-appointment entitlement, and entitling PCH II to remove him, as the Termination Events. It will be immediately apparent that, despite an element of overlap (such as resignation) the list of Termination Events is quite separate and distinct from the events and matters listed in TFG's article 88 as giving rise to the vacation of office by a director, whether automatically or as the result of a directors' resolution to remove.
Subsequent events
i) In view of the irretrievable compromise of trust between members of the Boards, Mr Jackson was no longer considered as a suitable or appropriate nominee for directorship of the Fund.ii) That in the event of re-nomination and appointment of Mr Jackson to the board of TFG by PCH II, the directors each intended to bring about his immediate removal by a further notice in accordance with article 88(e).
iii) They approved a draft solicitors' response to Mr Jackson's request (again through solicitors) for undertakings as to his re-appointment.
"Based on consideration of the foregoing conduct on the part of Mr Jackson, each of the Directors of Tetragon have unanimously confirmed, as the Boards of Tetragon, their prior decision to each give notice to Mr Jackson to vacate office and resolved that were Mr Jackson to be reappointed to the Board of TFG, the Directors each intend to take immediate action to remove him as a director. His reappointment to the Board of TFG, being the board of a listed company, is untenable. Any insistence on nomination and re-appointment is futile and the Boards, on behalf of Tetragon, ask your client, in the circumstances, to desist in his request."
The Law on Construction and Implied Terms
Objective process
(i) Construction (or as I would prefer to call it interpretation) is, in relation to any point at issue, the ascertainment of the meaning which the document would convey to a reasonable person having 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.
(ii) For that purpose, even though the point in issue may be a narrow one, the interpretation of the relevant provision depends upon an understanding of its context within the agreement as a whole.
(iii) The court's function is to ascertain the meaning of the agreement rather than to seek to improve upon it, or put right any inadequacies of meaning. Nonetheless the court recognises that draftsmen may make mistakes, may use occasionally inappropriate language and may fail expressly to address eventualities which may later occur.
Implied terms
(iv) The implication of terms is no less a part of the process of ascertaining the meaning of an agreement than interpretation of express terms. Implication addresses events for which the express language of the agreement makes no provision.
(v) In such a case the usual starting point is that the absence of an express term means that nothing has been agreed to happen in relation to that event. But implied terms may be necessary to spell out what the agreement means, where the only meaning consistent with the other provisions of the document, read against the relevant background, is that something is to happen.
(vi) Although necessity continues (save perhaps in relation to terms implied by law) to be a condition for the implication of terms, necessity to give business efficacy is not the only relevant type of necessity. The express terms of an agreement may work perfectly well in the sense that both parties can perform their express obligations, but the consequences would contradict what a reasonable person would understand the contract to mean. In such a case an implied term is necessary to spell out what the contract actually means.
Commercial common sense
(vii) The dictates of common sense may enable the court to choose between alternative interpretations (with or without implied terms), not merely where one would "flout" it, but where one makes more common sense than the other. But this does not elevate commercial common sense into an overriding criterion, still less does it subject the parties to the individual judge's own notions of what might have been the most sensible solution to the parties' conundrum.
"the implication of contract terms involves a different and altogether more ambitious undertaking: the interpolation of terms to deal with matters for which, ex hypothesi, the parties themselves have made no provision. It is because the implication of terms is potentially so intrusive that the law imposes strict constraints on the exercise of this extraordinary power."
"Conduct of either promisor or promisee which can be said to amount to himself "of his own motion" bringing about the impossibility of performance is itself a breach."
Analysis
Conclusion