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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 >> McGIll v Huang & Ors [2021] EWHC 938 (Ch) (21 January 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2021/938.html Cite as: [2021] EWHC 938 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS IN NEWCASTLE
BUSINESS LIST (ChD)
B e f o r e :
sitting as a judge of the High Court
____________________
MR ANTHONY MCGILL | Claimant | |
and | ||
MR HAIZHE HUANG | ||
MR BARRY WILKINSON | ||
MR PAUL BRACEWELL | Defendants |
____________________
sitting on 21 January 2021 at a MS Teams in respect of which
notice was given of arrangements for the media and public to attend
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
This is the final judgment as handed down in writing no further transcript is required.
Judge Kramer
a. Are there sums due to the partnership from Vivo 1 for which Mr Huang is liable to account?
b. Was the partnership dissolved by the email dated 6th December 2016?
c. Is Mr Huang liable to account to the partnership for the profits from Vivo 3?
A further issue to be determined, which concerned the effect of assignments to Mr McGill of the second and third defendants' rights in any monies Mr Huang is ordered to pay in these proceedings, was resolved prior to trial. There is no longer a challenge to the effectiveness of the assignments.
The Background
The parties' contentions on the facts
a. Mr Huang's own evidence is that he took part in an arrangement to fool the Chinese authorities that a transaction for £1.4 million was in fact for £1.9 million. In his statement he said that it was Xiaofei who was responsible for this sham but in his evidence he said that 'we' were responsible.
b. In relation to Vivo 2, Mr Huang was responsible for the production and use of forged bank statements and payment advices. He admits the existence of the forgeries but says they were the work of Xiaofei, who has since apologised to him for their production. Mr Goldberg says that on the evidence this explanation is unconvincing. He asks me to accept the evidence of Lily Zhan who claims that she saw the forger, Li Ying, receiving instruction from Mr Huang's wife, Yupei, to produce the forged documents.
Vivo 1
a. The account consists of charges, which are items debited against the accounting party on the incoming side and discharges. An accounting party is charged with all property coming into their hands in an official capacity, whether personally or through an agent, the test of receipt being whether the accounting party has control so as to be able to apply the property for an authorised or unauthorised purpose; Snell's Equity (34th Ed) Ch 20-19.
b. A discharge extinguishes an accountable party's responsibility for their receipt. An accounting party is entitled to discharge in respect of all dispositions within their mandate. Relevant for present purposes are those used for proper administrative outlays; Snell Ch 20-20.
c. It is for the beneficiary, for practical purposes in this case Mr McGill, to prove the surcharges, i.e. what should be debited on the incoming side, including any money which he says should have been received but due to Mr Huang's fault was not, and the accounting party, i.e. Mr Huang, to prove their discharge.
£ | |
4 May 2016 Lagardère invoice paid by Relecy Investments |
5,000 |
16 May 2016-Shanghai Zhongfeng Ltd transferred all but 94,500 Yuan, which it kept as commission, to Xiaofei | 10,000 |
2 IPhones to Leo | 1,000 |
Cash Fee to Leo | 4,000 |
2 Gucci Belts and Chanel Earrings as gifts for Xiaofei Samuel and his wife. | 1,000 |
Wine | 20,000 |
Trip to China (Wilkinson, Bracewell and Huang) | 9,526.92 |
Internal travel in china, hotels and ancillary expenses | 8,068.21 |
Total | 58,631 |
Mr Huang points out that his expenditure exceeded the £50,000 by about £9,000.
Discussion and Conclusion
Account
Sums paid in discharge £ | Amount charged to the account £ | |
40,000 | ||
Wine | 20,000 | |
Lagardère | 5,000 | |
Travel and entertainment exp | 7504 | |
Gifts purchased at airport | 1,000 | |
Gift to Leo and other | 5,000 | |
Total | 38,504 |
Was the partnership dissolved in December 2016?
a. A partner can determine the partnership at any time by giving notice of his intention to do so to the all the other partners; section 26 of the Partnership Act 1890.
b. "A dissolution notice must be clear and unambiguous but is not necessary that the partner giving it appreciates its legal effect." (Ch 24-28, Lindley & Banks on Partnership 20th Ed.)
c. There is no technical language required for an effective notice of dissolution. All that is required is a clear intimation that the defendant did not wish the partnership to continue, even if the defendant did not think there was a partnership but nevertheless indicated that if there was he wanted it brought to an end; see Syers v Syers (1876) 1 App Cas 174 per Lord Cairns LC at 183.
d. "A dissolution notice, once given, cannot be withdrawn without the consent of all the partners." (Ch 24-30 Lindley & Banks)
"I will get all the evidence show the things and financial side.
I had enough with all this and all the distrust!!!! I am out!!!
Good luck!!!!"
The email went on to respond to the criticisms levelled at him. In answer to the complaint that he had disregarded the other partners interests and kept Mr McGill in the dark, he said:
"Bullshit!!! Anyway this is end now.!"
Mr McCreath says that the email is the clearest intimation that Mr Huang did not want the partnership to continue. Alternatively, I should infer that there had been dissolution as a quarrel between partners is an obvious basis for such an inference; see Hopton v Miller [2010] EWHC 2232 (Ch) per HHJ Behrens at [71].
Conclusion
Vivo 3
The parties' contentions
"(1) Every partner must account to the firm for any benefit derived by him without the consent of the other partners from any transaction concerning the partnership, or from any use by him of the partnership property name or business connection.
(2) This section applies also to transactions undertaken after a partnership has been dissolved by the death of a partner, and before the affairs thereof have been completely wound up, either by any surviving partner or by the representatives of the deceased partner."
Vivo 3 and the post dissolution agreement
Discussion and conclusion
"Even after Investors Compensation Scheme v West Bromwich Building Society,2 it remains the case that "the primary source for understanding what the parties meant is their language interpreted in accordance with conventional usage": BCCI v Ali [2002] 1AC 251 per Lord Hoffman. The court "reads the terms of the contract as a whole, giving the words used their natural and ordinary meaning in the context of the agreement, the parties' relationship and all the relevant facts surrounding the transaction so far as known to the parties": BCCI v Ali per Lord Bingham.
"38 After the dissolution of a partnership the authority of each partner to bind the firm, and the other rights and obligations of the partners, continue notwithstanding the dissolution so far as may be necessary to wind up the affairs of the partnership, and to complete transactions begun but unfinished at the time of the dissolution… But not otherwise.
42(1) where any member of the firm has died or otherwise ceased to be a partner, and the surviving or continuing partners carry on the business of the firm with its capital or assets without any final settlement of accounts as between the firm and the outgoing partner or his estate, then, in the absence of any agreement to the contrary, the outgoing partner or his estate is entitled at the option of himself or his representatives to such a share of the profits made since the dissolution as the court may find to be attributable to the use of his share of the partnership assets, or to interest at the rate of 5% per annum on the amount of his share of the partnership assets."
a. On dissolution of the partnership, the partnership contract is at an end save to the extent provided for in section 38 of the 1890 Act. "In the absence of agreement to the contrary by all the surviving partners… nothing is to be done with regard to the business save with a view to winding it up and, for that purpose, realising the value of all the assets, by sale if necessary, and applying the assets in payment of the partnership's debts, and paying a surplus to the partners…" see Hopper per Etherton LJ at [46].
b. The meaning and effect of S.42 is that where, following the dissolution the business of the former partnership, it is continued by one or more former partners, not for the purposes of winding up the partnership but for the personal benefit of those continuing to run the business, all "non-participant former partners are "outgoing partners;" and they… are entitled, in the absence of agreement to the contrary, to such share of the profits made since the dissolution as the court may find to be attributable to the use of their shares of the partnership assets or, at their option, to 5% per annum on the amount of their shares. If they have reached agreement as to some other entitlement… Then they will be entitled to what they have agreed." Hopper per Etherton LJ at [49]
c. There is a potential overlap between the duty to account under section 29 of the 1890 Act and section 42; see John Taylors (a firm) per Arden LJ at [38].
d. A fiduciary relationship between partners arises from the duty of good faith which each partner owes to the other. Because the partnership is deemed to continue for the purposes of winding up, the duty continues until the affairs of the partnership are settled; see Don King Promotions per Morritt LJ at [40] approving the judgement of Sir John Pennycuick V.-C. in Thompson's Trustees in Bankruptcy v Heaton [1974] 1 W.L.R. 605 at 613.
e. A fiduciary is under an obligation "to account a person to whom the obligation is owed for any benefit or gain (i) which has been obtained or received in circumstances where a conflict or significant possibility of conflict existed between his fiduciary duty and his personal interest in the pursuit of a possible receipt of such a benefit or gain or (ii) which was obtained or received by use or by reason of his fiduciary position or of opportunity a knowledge resulting from it." See Don King Promotions per Morritt LJ at 40, referring to, and subsequently applying the judgement of the High Court of Australia in Chan v Zacharia (1984) 154 C.L.R. 178 per Deane J at 198-199.
f. The key questions to ask when considering whether a partner must account for his dealings between dissolution and winding up is whether they fall into either or both of Deane J's two categories; see Don King Promotions per Morritt LJ at [42]-[43].
g. A former partner's use of intangible property such as the goodwill or business opportunity of the partnership for his own benefit will, without more, fall into either both categories, see Woodfull, as will the use of partnership assets such as a licence granted during the continuance of the partnership to occupy a petrol service station and sell the licensors products, see Pathirana, or a licence to occupy premises as a livestock market granted after dissolution in succession to a provisional licence granted during the continuance of the partnership, see John Taylors (a firm). Post dissolution successive renewals of a business opportunity or obtained through the use of the partnership's goodwill may also fall into these categories; see Woodfull per Arden LJ at [28] and [42]. A relevant consideration in respect of such renewals is whether it can be inferred that the former partner obtained the renewal because he had successfully discharged the earlier contract; see Woodfull per Arden LJ at [28] - this may be an answer to Mr McCreath's successive renewal problem in that there may come a time when the inference that it was the successful discharge of a contract formed during the partnership which led to renewal can no longer be drawn.
h. For the purposes of accounting no distinction is made between the former partner and a corporate entity through which he operates; see Woodfull per Arden LJ at [27].
i. It is open to the partners to allow use of the goodwill after the dissolution by other partners for their own benefit. Often there will be some appropriate compensation for the excluded partners, see John Taylor's (a firm) per Peter Gibson LJ at [45]
a. Mr Huang is liable to account to the partnership for the proceeds of Vivo 1 in the sum of £1,496.
b. The partnership was dissolved by notice on 6th December 2016.
c. Mr Huang is not liable to account to the partnership for the profits arising from the proceeds of sale from Tomorrow Sunshine for Vivo 3 or the Lagadère commission.