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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 >> Bruce v TTA Management Ltd & Ors [2015] EWHC 936 (Ch) (01 April 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2015/936.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 936 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
The Rolls Building Fetter Lane, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
VICE-CHANCELLOR OF THE COUNTY PALATINE
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David Alastair Bruce |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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TTA Management Limited & 8 Others |
Respondents |
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Jonathan Russen QC (instructed by Penningtons Manches LLP) for the Respondents
Hearing dates: 15 December 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Norris :
"Clearly, there is a relationship between rule 3.4 and rule 24.2. However, the power of the court under part 24, the grounds are set out in rule 24.2, are wider than those contained in rule 3.4. The reason for the contrast in language between rule 3.4 and rule 24.2 is because under rule 3.4, unlike rule 24.2, the court generally is only concerned with the statement of case which it is alleged discloses no reasonable grounds for bringing or defending the claim".
So there is a difference in emphasis. CPR 3.4 is concerned with the statement of case, and what it discloses. Part 24 is concerned with the evidence that (in the instant case) the Claimant would have available to prove the pleaded case, or the Defendant would have available to advance a defence to that pleaded case. But, as paragraph 1.7 of PD3A says:-
"A party may believe he can show without a trial that an opponent's case has no real prospect of success on the facts, or that the case is bound to succeed or fail, as the case may be, because of a point of law (including the construction of a document). In such a case the party concerned may make an application under rule 3.4 or part 24 (or both) as he thinks appropriate".
"The claim is in tort and contract for damages and interest and/or declaratory relief arising from and relating to the expert valuation dated 13.4.2007 and the subsequent sale of [Mr Bruce's] shares in [Management] pursuant to a compromise agreement and share purchase agreement ("SPA") both dated 12.9.2005. The Claimant alleges that his shares were undervalued by the expert valuer as a result of the fraudulent acts of the Defendants, in particular their fraudulent mis-statement of financial and trading particulars to the expert."
a) The Claimant was from the foundation of Management in 1994 until April 2007 a shareholder and non-executive director of Management.
b) Mr Carpenter and Mr Clark were shareholders and executive directors of Management.
c) Management provided services to Travel Trust ("TT"), a company limited by guarantee founded in 1993 and whose primary business was to act as a trade association providing a scheme of trust accounts backed by fidelity insurance for travel agents to use as an alternative to the ABTA bond scheme. (Although it did not feature in the pleaded case, Mr Bruce's evidence was that he and another had advanced all the funding to establish TT's operations).
d) TT was at all material times controlled by Mr Carpenter and Mr Clark.
e) TT was intended to operate as a non-profit making institution (which assertion was not specifically denied in the Defence which Management, Mr Carpenter and Mr Clark filed). Precisely what was meant by "non-profit making" was not clear: it might or might not have meant that any surplus earned by TT was to be extracted by way of management charge payable to Management. But it is clear that at the least it meant that any surplus was not distributable amongst the members (which is why it was accumulated and not paid out).
f) Amongst the services that Management provided to TT was fidelity insurance backing TT's scheme, and also promoting and selling additional travel insurance and travel related products for the members of TT.
g) By clause 3.4 of the Management Agreement between Management and TT it was agreed that in return for the services provided by Management under the agreement that Management should be entitled "to the entire revenues from the insurance services provided to members in respect of their customers together with any other products provided to such members in conjunction with [TT]".
h) The members of TT benefitted from some concessionary arrangements with suppliers of travel services under a scheme known as "the Business Partners Scheme" ("BPS") and the suppliers paid to TT commission at a rate of 1% on business transacted by them with members. Mr Bruce said that Management was entitled to the commission: but Mr Carpenter and Mr Clark said that TT was entitled to the commission.
i) By an agreement in writing dated the 12 September 2005 ("the Compromise") various disputes between Mr Bruce on one hand and Mr Carpenter and Mr Clark on the other were resolved by an agreement that Mr Bruce's shares in Management should be purchased by the company itself.
j) The price to be paid by Management for Mr Bruce's shares was to be determined by Ms Angela Hennessey on the terms of engagement which bound her to act as an expert and not as an arbitrator, and to provide her decision in writing but without disclosing reasons.
k) What her letter of engagement required her to do was to value Mr Bruce's shareholding as a rateable proportion of "the total value of the Company as a going concern without any discount for the fact that the holding [was] a minority holding and assuming a willing buyer and a willing seller".
l) By clauses 1.2 and 1.3 of the Compromise, the parties agreed that Ms Hennessey should be supplied with "comprehensive, accurate and current financial information concerning [Management], including the documents set out in [a] letter of 25 January 2005 (paragraph 5(viii))…"
m) Amongst the documents specified in paragraph 5(viii) of that letter were "forecasts for future trading of [Management] over the next two years" and "copies of the Management contracts between [Management] and [TT]… together with any further information or documentation requested by the expert and considered by [her] in [her] absolute discretion as required for the purposes of [her] valuation".
n) By a letter dated 4 January 2006 Ms Hennessey advised the parties that she regarded the issue of whether the commission income on the BPS formed part of the revenues to which Management was entitled as significant to any consideration of the valuation of Management.
o) At a meeting of the board of Management on 20 February 2006 the board (Mr Carpenter and Mr Clark forming the majority) resolved that it would continue to treat the commission income from the BPS as belonging to TT. This left the profit from the BPS operation accumulating in non-profit making TT, and meant that Management's income stream did not include the BPS income even if it constituted revenue from "any other products provided to such members in conjunction with [TT]".
p) In communicating that resolution to Ms Hennessey the solicitors for Management, Mr Carpenter and Mr Clark said:-
"What the resolution does make absolutely clear is that there is no prospect of [Management] receiving the [BPS] income".
q) On 15 March 2006 Ms Hennessey informed the parties that unless proceedings were issued to determine Management's entitled to income from the BPS she would proceed to complete the valuation on the assumption "that [Management] (either as currently owned or as owned by a prospective purchaser) is unlikely to receive any income from this source".
r) The solicitors for Management, Mr Carpenter and Mr Clark said in response that it was "more accurate to say that there is no real possibility at all of the [BPS] income being paid to [Management]".
s) Mr Bruce did issue such proceedings but Mr John Jarvis QC (sitting as Deputy High Court Judge), declined to determine the question on the footing that where parties chose to select valuation by an expert, then recourse to the Courts was virtually non-existent (except where there had been a true breakdown in the machinery or a frustration of the contract).
t) By a letter dated 13 April 2007, Ms Hennessey formally determined the transfer price for Mr Bruce's shares at £1,485,914.00.
u) Immediately after the completion of the sale of Mr Bruce's shares to Management, during the period from the 1 July 2007 to the 12 November 2007 TT paid to Management sufficient money to enable it to declare a profit of £1.96m on a turnover of £740,000 (as compared to the profit during the year ending 30 June 2007 of £791,000 on a turnover of £2.67 million). The solicitors for Management, Mr Carpenter and Mr Clark explained that the exceptional profit figure
"represents revenue from [TT] which we understand was declared by way of dividend, and is therefore consistent with [Mr Bruce's] own contention to the expert valuer".
v) The "declaration of dividend" was achieved because after the purchase of Mr Bruce's shares they were cancelled by Management, and then TT ceased (in October 2007) to be a company limited by guarantee and was re-registered as a company having a share capital. Its one issued share was registered in the name of Management (itself now in the ownership of Mr Carpenter and Mr Clark and others to the exclusion of Mr Bruce). So TT could now avoid distributing the profits to its general members, avoid transferring them to Management under the Management Agreement (if applicable) and could distribute the accumulated profits by way of dividend to Management (and hence to Mr Carpenter and Mr Clark). The end result was that Management did receive the BPS income, and Mr Carpenter and Mr Clark enjoyed it to the exclusion of Mr Bruce.
"The determination by Ms Hennessey of the transfer price was compromised by the breach of contract and fraudulent misrepresentation by and/or on behalf of [Management] [Mr Carpenter and [Mr Clark] [and others] in respect of which the Defendants conspired together to injure the Claimant".
The causes of action there referred to are breach of contract, fraudulent misrepresentation and conspiracy to injure.
"The representations made by and on behalf of the Defendants that the commission income from the BPS did not belong to [Management] and that there was no real possibility of that income being paid to [Management] were to the knowledge of the Defendants, false. Alternatively the representations were made without belief by them in the truth thereof. In either event, the representations were made fraudulently with the intention of depriving [Mr Bruce] of the true value of his shares."
"In making those misrepresentations the Defendants conspired to injury of the Claimant by reducing the apparent value of his shares in the assessment thereof Ms Hennessey".
I use the description "particularised" because it was said (in my judgment fairly) that from the literal words used it is not apparent what exact form of conspiracy was being alleged. But Mr Green QC (who was not, and nor was his junior Mr Evans, responsible for the form of the Particulars of Claim) submitted that fairly read the words of the pleading meant:-
"In making those fraudulent misrepresentations to Ms Hennessey the Defendants conspired to injure the Claimant by unlawful means by reducing the apparent value of his shares in the assessment thereof by Ms Hennessey".
a) The breach of contract claim was not properly pleaded because it was not clear what breach was alleged:
b) If the breach alleged was a failure to provide "comprehensive, accurate and current financial information" then statements about the likelihood of Management receiving the BPS income in the future were not "information" but rather legal submission and clause 1.2 of the Compromise did not provide a basis for a claim because Mr Carpenter and Mr Clark were entitled to make submissions:
c) In any event Ms Hennessy must have formed a view about whether the BPS income was or was not properly payable to Management (or otherwise taken the issue into account) but because the valuation was a non-speaking one there was no way of knowing how this influenced the valuation:
d) The conspiracy claim was not properly pleaded because it was not clear whether Mr Bruce alleged an "unlawful act" conspiracy or an "unlawful means" conspiracy:
e) It was "hopelessly vague and should be struck out":
f) The claim for fraudulent misrepresentation did not appear to have been given the degree of attention that such a serious claim merited, because it did not allege that Mr Bruce had been influenced by the representations (i.e. that it was "absolutely clear" that there was no prospect of Management receiving the BPS income and that there was "no possibility" of the BPS income being paid to Management) to his detriment:
g) There could be no deceit in relation to the accumulation of the BPS income (which Mr Bruce knew from no later than the date of the board resolution had not been paid to Management):
h) Insofar as Mr Bruce alleged that upon the true construction of the Management Agreement the BPS income was payable to Management, that Mr Carpenter and Mr Clark knew that this was so, and that they intended to pay the BPS income to Management once Mr Bruce's shares had been acquired, he "face[d] real difficulty in establishing subjective fraudulent intent":
i) Further, even if it was the intention of Mr Carpenter and Mr Clark to restructure TT that could only be done by the issue of a share to Management "a step which [they] had no obligation to take":
j) Even assuming a claim in deceit was available it was impossible for Mr Bruce to establish that the representations had any effect on Ms Hennessy because her award was non-speaking ("Quite what she made of the issue and how she rationalised her decision will never be known") and "events appeared to suggest strongly" that they had no effect:
k) In any event, the "representations" were only legal submissions, and meant only that the board resolution had settled the matter (not that Mr Carpenter and Mr Clark were not going to undertake a lawful restructuring of TT and Management):
l) To rely on the October 2007 restructuring as demonstrating the falsity of the representations made in March 2006 amounted to "impermissible backwards temporal reasoning".
" In entering into the compromise agreement, Mr Bruce agreed to the method of valuation which was to be a private valuation by one person….who was not to give any reasons…..If the Court were to interfere in the way sought by Mr Bruce(sc. by granting a declaration that Ms Hennessy was obliged to take into account the BPS income) it would be doing the complete opposite of the agreement of the parties."
"I did not know for certain whether [Ms Hennessy] had taken into account the BPS monies, or whether she had entirely discounted them or whether she had made some partial allowance for them. I also did not know how (if at all) she had valued the BPS revenue".
But he asserted
"Now that I am in possession of more information it is clear to me that the valuation could not have proceeded on the correct basis".
The question was: having acknowledged the former did he have any real prospect of establishing the latter? The Chief Master held not, since
"..because it was a non-speaking valuation there is simply no way of knowing the extent to which, if at all, the BPS income was taken into account".
If you do not know what was done it is fanciful to say that you will establish on the balance of probabilities that what was done was not correct.
a) I do not agree that Mr Bruce was guilty of "impermissible backwards temporal reasoning". In principle the fact that something did happen may properly found the inference that at some earlier point in time it was intended to happen. The period of time between the occurrence of the event and the possible planning of the event goes to the potency of the inference.
b) In the instant case the statements that there was no real possibility at all of the BPS income being paid to Management continued in effect until the formation of the sale contract in April 2007. On the evidence the restructuring occurred in October 2007 (though Mr Bruce said payments began in July 2007). That was not so long a period that drawing an inference (that Mr Carpenter and Mr Clark were simultaneously saying that receipt by Management of the BPS income was impossible and planning to achieve that end) is fanciful and can be summarily dismissed before disclosure and evidence.
c) In fact at trial the allegation of dishonesty will not depend entirely on temporal inference. Mr Bruce will pray in aid similar fact evidence: that in the valuation process Mr Carpenter and Mr Clark were found to have artificially reduced the income of Management by the creation of false invoices.
d) I do not agree that the fact that Management received the BPS income via a dividend rather than by means of a transfer of profits is necessarily fatal. It is true that the statements about the impossibility of Management receiving the BPS income were made in the context of a board resolution having been passed to the effect that Management would not claim the income. But the effect of the statements arguably was that looking forward two years (the period in relation to which information was to be provided) Management would not receive the accumulated BPS income in any form that would affect the valuation exercise. The question was whether this was merely arguable or whether the argument was more than fanciful. I would place it in the latter category.
e) I do not think that the fact that Mr Carpenter and Mr Clark could always have restructured TT and actually and lawfully achieved it by means of procuring the allotment of the sole share in TT to Management is material. The statements made about the BPS income arguably (and more than merely arguably) addressed the outcome not the mechanics.
f) Irrespective of the true construction of clause 3.2 of the Management Agreement binding TT and Management it was and is open to Mr Bruce to say that Mr Carpenter and Mr Clark knew what the clause was intended to say and their attempt to give it some other effect was dishonest. I do not, with respect, agree with the Chief Master when he said that Mr Bruce "faces real difficulty in establishing subjective fraudulent intent arising from the Defendants' belief about the meaning of clause 3.4 which has to be construed objectively". (I am sure that the Chief Master was not meaning to say that a case which faced "real difficulty" was one that was suitable for summary disposal).
g) If Mr Carpenter and Mr Clark did make false statements about the future treatment of the BPS income, and did so dishonestly in order to influence the valuation, then I do not agree that the fact that the valuation was a non-speaking one is as big an obstacle as it is in a pure contract claim. I would attach greater weight than did the Chief Master to the principle noted in Campbell v Edwards [1976] 1 All ER 785 and exemplified by Parry v Edwards Geldard [2001] All ER (D) 109. This is to the effect that whilst parties who agree that a price shall be fixed by a valuer are bound by the resulting valuation, "fraud or collusion unravels everything". That is because as Jacob J explained in Parry "it is absurd to suggest that the parties contracted to be bound where either of them …gave the valuer false information". Of course, the measure of loss may be difficult: but a Court which finds dishonesty to have occurred will in general not say that the victim must go uncompensated.