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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 >> The Sherlock Holmes International Society Ltd v Aidiniantz [2016] EWHC 1076 (Ch) (23 May 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2016/1076.html Cite as: [2016] EWHC 1076 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
COMPANIES COURT
IN THE MATTER OF THE SHERLOCK HOLMES INTERNATIONAL SOCIETY LIMITED
AND IN THE MATTER OF THE INSOLVENCY ACT 1986
On appeal from Registrar Derrett
Royal Courts of Justice Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
The Sherlock Holmes International Society Limited |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Mr John Aidiniantz |
Respondent |
____________________
Mr Hugh Sims QC and Mr Christopher Brockman (instructed by Gordon Dadds LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 3, 4 November 2015, 11 – 14 January 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
Mark Anderson QC :
Introduction
The issue before me
The background
"3. The subscribers to the Memorandum of Association and such other persons as the Board shall admit to membership in accordance with the Articles shall be members of the Company. No person shall be admitted as a member of the Company unless he is approved by the Board. Every person who wishes to become a member shall deliver to the Company an application for membership in such form as the Board shall require executed by him.
30. Until and unless otherwise determined by the Company in General Meeting, there shall be no maximum number of members of the Board and the minimum number shall be one.
32. The Board may from time to time and at any time appoint any member of the Company as a Director, either to fill a casual vacancy or by way of addition to the Board, provided that the prescribed maximum be not thereby exceeded. Any member so appointed shall retain his office only until the next Annual General Meeting, but he shall then be eligible for re-election.
33. Only persons who are members of the Company shall in any circumstances be eligible to hold office as a Director.
38. The Office of a Director shall be vacated:
. . . (c) if he ceases to be a member of the Company.
39. The Board may meet together for the dispatch of business, adjourn and otherwise regulate their meetings as they think fit, and determine the quorum necessary for the transaction of business. Unless otherwise determined, two shall be a quorum."
- 24 March 2005: Ms Decoteau was appointed and Grace resigned
- 1 August 2008: Grace was re-appointed and Ms Decoteau and Ms Riley resigned
- 1 April 2011: Mr Riley was appointed and Grace resigned
- 22 August 2011: Mr Riley resigned and Grace was re-appointed.
i. Rollerteam brought a claim against the Riley siblings in respect of £175,000 taken from Rollerteam's bank account by Ms Riley.
ii. Grace and Ms Decoteau (who had become a director as related in paragraph 22 below) caused the Company to bring a claim against Mr Aidiniantz and the Museum Companies claiming that a large sum of money had been misappropriated from entrance fees. I have already mentioned Mr Aidiniantz's 2013 Defence, which was filed in this claim.
iii. Grace brought a claim against Mr Aidiniantz claiming a declaration that she owned the entire share capital of Rollerteam.
iv. Ms Riley brought proceedings against Mr Aidiniantz for possession of the house in which he lived.
i. The Company's only members, and the only persons entitled under its articles to be appointed as director, were he and Grace.
ii. At all material times, and notwithstanding that he was not a de jure director, he had been in control and a de facto director with the consent of Grace and the other directors from time to time.
iii. Mr Aidiniantz caused Grace and Ms Riley to be appointed as the initial directors in 2004, "(and for the limited purpose of this appointment Mr Aidiniantz and Grace Aidiniantz waived their right to insist that all directors of the Society should be members of it)".
iv. Grace, Ms Decoteau, Ms Riley and Mr Riley "acted as directors of the Society from time to time".
This application
i. minutes of a board meeting of 17 October 2013, again signed by Ms Decoteau, which recorded Ms Decoteau's view that Mr Aidiniantz was not a member of the Company; minutes of a board meeting of 9 June 2014 approving the appointment of Mr Riley as a director;
ii. "the current register of members", showing Grace and the Riley siblings as members, but not Mr Aidiniantz.
The events of 11 January 2016 and their consequences
Summary of the cases advanced by the parties
i. that the articles were amended, by an informal agreement to be inferred from the conduct of the members, to permit the appointment of any person as a director; alternatively
ii. that Mr Aidiniantz is estopped from relying on the membership requirement to impeach Mr Riley's appointment as a director.
i. Were the articles amended and if so, how?
ii. If not, is the application defeated by estoppel?
iii. If not, was Mr Riley's appointment ineffective because the board was inquorate?
iv. If not, did his tenure of office cease on 31 December 2014 or is consideration of that issue barred by laches?
v. Should the defence be struck out as an abuse of process?
Were the articles amended?
Submissions
"Before the Duomatic principle can be satisfied, the shareholders who are said to have assented or waived must have the appropriate or 'full' knowledge. If a shareholder is not even aware that his 'assent' is being sought to the matter, let alone that the obtaining of his consent is at least a significant factor in relation to the matter, he cannot, in my view, have the necessary 'full knowledge' to enable him to 'assent', quite apart from the fact that I do not think he can be said to 'assent' to the matter if he is merely told of it. "
Discussion
Estoppel
"Estoppel by convention may arise where both parties to a transaction 'act on assumed state of facts or law, the assumption being either shared by both or made by one and acquiesced in by the other.' The parties are then precluded from denying the truth of that assumption, it if would be unjust of unconscionable (typically because the party claiming the benefit has been 'materially influenced' by the common assumption) to allow them (or one of them) to go back on it."
Quorum
39 says that "The Board may . . . determine the quorum necessary for the transaction of business. Unless otherwise determined, two shall be a quorum." In my view it is obvious that (i) upon the true construction of article 39, a determination that one be a quorum is unnecessary where there is only one director, or (ii) that where one person serves as a single director, that person implicitly determines, every time he or she decides to transact any business, that one shall be a quorum for the purpose of taking that decision. I do not therefore think that Mr Riley's appointment can be impugned on this ground.
Failure to renew Mr Riley's appointment
"The important point . . . which the judge must have overlooked is that a contention that an action is not properly constituted, due to lack of authority from the named plaintiffs to bring it, is one which cannot be raised by way of defence. It must be raised at the outset, and it must therefore be dealt with at the outset. The only qualification is that even if it is not raised at the outset, but if it then comes to the notice of the court or of the defendants in the course of the proceedings, then it can still be raised as an issue at that stage, but not by way of defence to the action. In the present case it was properly raised at the outset. The judge should therefore have borne in mind that this issue had to be decided at the outset, subject only to the possibility of adjourning the application. Once the issue has been raised, it is, with respect, plainly wrong to decline to decide the issue on the ground that the rights and wrongs as to the control of the company and the propriety of the proceedings may be in doubt, and then to allow the action to go on by dismissing the application without having decided it on the merits. . .
Once it is clear . . . that the action was improperly constituted, this action could not be allowed to proceed. Whatever the form of the order made in that regard, whether the action is dismissed, struck out or stayed, the effect must be, in the words of Viscount Cave, that the proceedings must be brought to an end."
"The doctrine of laches in courts of equity is not an arbitrary or a technical doctrine. Where it would be practically unjust to give a remedy, either because the party has, by his conduct done that which might fairly be regarded as equivalent to a waiver of it, or where, by his conduct and neglect he has, though perhaps not waiving that remedy, yet put the other party in a situation in which it would not be reasonable to place him if the remedy were afterwards to be asserted, in either of these cases lapse of time and delay are most material. But in every case if an argument against relief which otherwise would be just, is founded upon mere delay, that delay of course not amounting to a bar by any statute of limitations, the validity of that defence must be tried upon principles substantially equitable. Two circumstances always important in such cases are the length of the delay and the nature of the acts done during the interval, which might affect either party and cause a balance of justice or injustice in taking the one course or the other, so far as relates to the remedy."
"I have looked in vain for any authority which gives a more distinct and definite rule than this; and I think, from the nature of the inquiry, it must always be a question of more or less, depending on the degree of diligence which might reasonably be required, and the degree of change which has occurred, whether the balance of justice or injustice is in favour of granting the remedy or withholding it. The determination of such a question must largely depend on the turn of mind of those who have to decide, and must therefore be subject to uncertainty; but that, I think, is inherent in the nature of the inquiry."
Abuse of process
Declaration