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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 >> Closegate Hotel Development (Durham) Ltd & Anor v McLean & Ors [2013] EWHC 3237 (Ch) (25 October 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2013/3237.html Cite as: [2013] WLR(D) 409, [2013] EWHC 3237 (Ch), [2014] Bus LR 405 |
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COMPANIES COURT
Rolls Building, Fetter Lane, London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
(sitting as a Deputy Judge of the High Court)
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(1) CLOSEGATE HOTEL DEVELOPMENT (DURHAM) LIMITED (2) CLOSEGATE (DURHAM No.2) LTD |
Applicants |
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-and- |
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(1) JOSEPH McLEAN (2) DAVID DUNCKLEY (3) BARCLAYS BANK PLC |
Respondents |
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Anthony Trace QC and Adam Smith (instructed by Speechly Bircham LLP) for the First and Second Respondents
Roger Masefield QC (instructed by Addleshaw Goddard LLP) for the Third Respondent
Hearing date: 21 October 2013
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Crown Copyright ©
RICHARD SNOWDEN QC :
Introduction
The standing of the Companies to make the Application
"What, of course, the directors cannot do, and to this extent their powers are inhibited, is to dispose of the assets within the debenture charge without the assent or concurrence of the receiver, for it is his function to deal with the assets in the first place so as to provide the means of paying off the debenture holders' claims. But where there is a right of action which the board (though not the receiver) would wish to pursue, it does not seem to me that the rights or function of the receiver are affected if the company is indemnified against any liability for costs (as here). I see no principle of law or expediency which precludes the directors of a company, as a duly constituted board (and it is not suggested here that they were not a duly constituted board when they took the step of instituting this action) from seeking to enforce the claim, however ill-founded it may be, provided only, of course, that nothing in the course of the proceedings which they institute is going in any way to threaten the interests of the debenture holders."
"We should make it clear that nothing that we have said should be taken to suggest that the costs of bringing the APL action should fall on assets which are charged to GE. It is, we suspect, a necessary feature of cases, such as this — where all the assets of the company are charged to the debenture holder, who does not consent to the action being brought — that the director will have to find outside funds. Further, nothing that we have said should be taken to suggest that the defendant would not be entitled to seek an order that the claimant company provide, from outside funds, security for its (the defendant's) costs. But those considerations do not lead to the conclusion that the action is not properly brought."
The facts
"Certainly, if we do not have a deal finalised and completed by the end of this month, our lawyers will be returning to the High Court at the beginning of December to seek an early CMC and Disclosure".
"We can make no assurance that those discussions will provide a favourable outcome to the Companies; however, we remain open to finding an amicable solution to the dispute between [the Bank] and [the Companies] without having to have recourse to taking further steps in the litigation."
"...no real progress has been made by you and [the landlord] and we can see no benefit in extending the stay further... We have therefore instructed our lawyers to write accordingly to [the Bank's solicitors] this week...."
"We will not, however, agree any further stay of the litigation to accommodate such meeting as this has been delayed long enough."
"We can make no assurance that the on-going discussions relating to the settlement will provide an outcome favourable to [the Companies]; however, we remain open to progress this settlement proposal without recourse to taking further steps in litigation. The completion of [a] settlement will be [in] full and final settlement of all claims (existing and future) against [the Bank] and [the landlord]. In the meantime, all rights are reserved."
(my emphasis)
"Stevan Healy for the Bank emphasised the fact that this was likely to be the last meeting he would need to attend and said that the matter was now "commercial, not litigation" and we understood this to mean that good faith commercial negotiations would continue based upon the principle terms [sic] that had now been agreed, and on the basis that any litigation, i.e. actions that had been threatened previously by either side (enforcement by the Bank and the Companies prosecuting their claims) would not be pursued whilst those negotiations were ongoing.
My notes of the meeting confirm that the Bank confirmed its good intentions and [the Companies' solicitors'] notes confirm that Stevan Healy on behalf of the Bank emphasised that "transparency" was "key"."
"Given that the claim has not progressed following expiry of the last stay, it may be simpler to leave matters as they stand whilst discussions are ongoing. Having said that, if your client would prefer to have a formal stay in place, my clients would be agreeable to [a] further stay until 30 September 2013."
The response of the Bank's solicitors on 7 August 2013 was that the Bank "was prepared to leave matters as they currently stand."
"Just by way of update, it now seems probable that despite their initial reassurances regarding the facility, the Co-op are unlikely to do the deal my clients were originally offered.
As advised previously, my client has been pursuing other funders in case this situation arose and their financial adviser is currently in negotiations with several alternative funders and we met at the hotel last week to discuss the various funding options and in particular, their likely cost.
As soon as we have a firm offer my clients are comfortable with, I will be in touch with you both to hopefully progress matters."
. .the discussions that were taking place had come to an end at the latest on 4 September 2013, but in reality several weeks before then given that progress had stalled and no material information was forthcoming".
The Bank's email then indicated that "after long deliberation" it had determined to make demand on the Companies for the monies owing and indicated that formal demands would be delivered to the Companies' registered office (at its solicitors) the same day.
have set out above; it indicated that the Companies had expended significant sums in the negotiations with The Co-operative Bank; and after referring to the communications between solicitors regarding the stay in August, it concluded that,
"(1) It was understood that the informal stay would last until at least 30 September 2013 and there was no condition with respect to the continuance of that stay.
(2) The Companies had told the Bank that negotiations were continuing and that any firm offer would be communicated.
(3) The Bank had not responded.
(3) In reliance, the Companies had continued to negotiate in good faith in the reasonable expectation that the Bank would riot enforce without reasonable notice to the Companies, which, in the circumstances required reasonable time to conclude negotiations then underway."
On this basis the letter asserted that the Bank had no right to enforce its security on 11 October 2013 and that the appointment of the Administrators was invalid,
"because whatever its strict legal rights, the Bank was estopped from enforcing those rights without first giving reasonable notice as described above."
"..led the Companies to consider that the Bank was, at all times, proceeding in good faith, on the basis of a mutual suspension of any action to seek to enforce any formal rights."
"The Bank's approach both prior to the meeting, in withdrawing its threat to apply to strike out the High Court Claim, in pursuing a stay and inviting the Companies to negotiate, its conduct in encouraging the Companies to pursue more detailed information in relation to replacement funders (including the Co-op) and its comments at the meeting, all led me to conclude that the negotiations were being conducted on a good faith basis and that, should the situation change, the Bank would give the Companies reasonable notice in order to conclude any negotiations then in hand.
At the very latest from the date of this meeting, the Companies also understood (and further committed ourselves) to the negotiations and, and both I and Mrs. Hunt have spent considerable time (I would estimate most days most weeks) and the Companies have spent considerable funds (I would estimate in excess of £700,000) progressing the claim and negotiations."
The Companies Case
"It is the Companies' position that there was a mutual understanding between the Bank and the Companies (which the stays of the [High Court Claim] reflected) that the Bank would not enforce its security or take any other formal action against the Companies without reasonable notice. The understanding merely suspended the rights of the Bank for such time as would have allowed any negotiations in hand with a potential funder to be concluded either to a firm offer or a refusal."
The Respondents' case
The law on promissory estoppel
"...it is the first principle upon which all Courts of Equity proceed, that if parties who have entered into definite and distinct terms involving certain legal results - certain penalties or legal forfeiture - afterwards by their own act or with their own consent enter upon a course of negotiation which has the effect of leading one of the parties to suppose that the strict rights arising under the contract will not be enforced, or will be kept in suspense, or held in abeyance, the person who otherwise might have enforced those rights will not be allowed to enforce them where it would be inequitable having regard to the dealings which have thus taken place between the parties."
"an estoppel, that is to say, the language upon which the estoppel is founded, must be precise and unambiguous. That does not necessarily mean that the language must be such that it cannot possibly be open to different constructions, but that it must be such as will be reasonably understood in a particular sense by the person to whom it is addressed."
Kay LJ said (at page 113) that:
"where no fraud is alleged, it is essential to shew that the statement was of such a nature that it would have misled any reasonable man, and that the Plaintiff was in fact misled by it."
"I am satisfied that, in the second sentence of the above quotation, the meaning is to exclude far-fetched or strained, but still possible, interpretations, whilst still insisting on a sufficient precision and freedom from ambiguity to ensure that the representation will (not may) be reasonably understood in the particular sense required. I do not regard this second sentence as any authority for general qualification of the first. On the contrary, the first sentence governs the second and contains the very proposition for which Low v. Bouverie is rightly cited as an authority."
"In the course of the argument in this case there was considerable discussion as to what Bowen L.J. and McNair J. may have meant. How, it was said, could a statement which was 'precise and unambiguous' be open to more than one construction and how could someone reasonably understand a statement to be clear and unequivocal which was in fact not clear and unequivocal? But though the language used may be open to criticism the thought behind it is not, to my mind, very obscure. Although words used have only one 'true' construction - namely, that which would be placed on them by the court if called upon to decide their meaning - there are different types and shades of ambiguity. Sometimes the ambiguity of the statement may be obvious to anyone but sometimes it may arise from facts not known to the representee. What, I conceive, Bowen LJ. and McNair J. were saying - rightly or wrongly - was that the question to ask was, whether the representee was justified in having no doubt that the words meant what he took them to mean. But one cannot decide questions of this sort without regard to the relationship of the parties for that may be such that the representor ought to be saddled with the risk of the representee putting the best interpretation which he can on language which is undoubtedly equivocal."
"It is reasonably easy to draft a letter containing a representation, the true meaning of which is clear and unequivocal. I would classify such a letter as 'alpha.' It is, however, quite another matter to be able to draft a letter, or anything else, which is not only clear and unequivocal but is also incapable of having extracted from it some possible meaning other than its true meaning. I would classify such a letter, if it exists, as 'alpha plus.' As I understand Bowen L.J.'s judgment, all he was saying was that the language upon which an estoppel is founded must comply with what I call the 'alpha' standard but that it need not come up to 'alpha plus.'"
"There is no doubt that in order to found a promissory estoppel (in the same way as any other estoppel based on a representation of fact) the representation or promise must be clear and unambiguous. But this principle raises a number of subsidiary questions. Does it mean that the estoppel cannot arise unless there is only one possible meaning of the words used or is the existence of other possible (but perhaps less probable) meanings not fatal to the creation of an estoppel where the Court can say that it was reasonable for the representee to have interpreted the words used in the way he did? There is also an issue about the test to be adopted by the Court. Few, if any, statements are not capable of being interpreted in more than one way. The Court's usual role in construing, for example, a contract is to arrive at the legally correct meaning of the words. Their construction is a matter of law arid the Court's function is to resolve any ambiguities in reaching its conclusion. But it is arguable that in the case of estoppel it should not go any further than to identify the existence of any real ambiguities in the language. If the statement is open to more than one reasonable interpretation (one of which is fatal to the estoppel defence) then the representee was not entitled to rely on what was said without further clarification and there is no basis for an estoppel."
Analysis
Conclusion
Postscript