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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 >> Ventura Capital GP Ltd v DNANudge Ltd & Ors [2023] EWHC 1631 (Ch) (30 June 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2023/1631.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 1631 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
BUSINESS LIST
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
VENTURA CAPITAL GP LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and – |
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(1) DNANUDGE LIMITED (2) PROFESSOR CHRISTOFER TOUMAZOU (3) DAVID LYONS |
Defendants |
____________________
David Peters (instructed by Dorsey & Witney (Europe) LLP) for the Defendants
Hearing date: 19 April 2023
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE FREEDMAN :
I Contents
SECTION NUMBER |
SUBJECT | PARAGRAPH NUMBER |
I | Contents | |
II | Introduction | 1-8 |
III | The contractual documents | 10-28 |
IV | The issues | 29-31 |
V | Summary judgment – legal principles | 32-34 |
VI | Construction: The 18 January Email | |
(a) | The submissions of the Defendants | 35 |
(b) | The submissions of Ventura | 36-37 |
(c) | The law | 38-43 |
(d) | Discussion | 44-64 |
VII | Variation issue | |
(a) | The submission of Ventura | 65-69 |
(b) | The submission of the Defendants | 70-72 |
(c) | Discussion | 73-75 |
VIII | Conclusion | 76 |
II Introduction
III The contractual documents
(i) Clause 1.1 identified the shares which DNA was to receive for its investment.
(ii) Clause 1.2 provided for the relevant "Investment Round" to be in a sum of up to £50m.
(iii) Clause 1.4 (which was stated to be legally binding) provided for Ventura to pay a "Ventura Deposit" of £502,999 by 30 November 2020, in return for which it was to receive 214 shares in DNA at a price of £2,350 per share.
(iv) Clause 1.5 (which was stated to become legally binding upon payment of the Ventura Deposit) provided Ventura with an option to make "the Initial Ventura Investment" of £10m within 60 days of the Heads of Terms (i.e., by 6 December 2020). In return, it was to receive shares in DNA at a price of £2,350 per share.
(v) Clause 1.6 (which was stated to be legally binding upon completion of the Ventura Deposit and the Initial Ventura Investment) granted Ventura an option to invest a further £15m in DNA. The amount of the further investment (defined as "the Subsequent Ventura Allotment") which Ventura wished to make pursuant to this option was to be notified to DNA within 60 days (i.e., by 6 December 2020). The Subsequent Ventura Allotment was to be completed within 90 days (i.e., by 5 January 2021).
(vi) Clause 3.3 stated that the Heads of Terms was subject to the conclusion of definitive legally binding agreements relating to the Investment Round.
(i) Clause 1.1 identified the shares which DNA was to receive for its investment.
(ii) Clause 1.2 provided for the relevant "Investment Round" to be in a sum of up to £50m.
(iii) Clause 1.4 acknowledged that Ventura had paid the Ventura Deposit of £502,999 and stated that the shares in DNA which were to be issued to Ventura in return for that payment would be issued to Ventura upon completion of the Initial Ventura Investment.
(iv) Clause 1.5 dealt with the Initial Ventura Investment. It provided that Ventura would have the right to subscribe for up to £10m worth of shares in DNA (at a price of £2,350 per share). The right to subscribe for these shares was stated to last for 60 days from the date of the Term sheet – i.e., until 18 January 2021.
(v) Clause 1.6 dealt with what the Term Sheet refers to as "the Subsequent Ventura Allotment". It granted Ventura the right to subscribe for up to £40m worth of shares in DNA (at a price of £2,350 per share). It provided that Ventura was to notify DNA of the amount of the Subsequent Ventura Allotment which it intended to take up within 60 days of the date of the Term Sheet (i.e., on or before 18 January 2021), and that the Subsequent Ventura Allotment was to be completed within 90 days (i.e., by 17 February 2021).
(vi) Clause 3.3 stated that the Term Sheet was subject to the conclusion of definitive legally binding agreements relating to the Investment Round.
(i) Ventura thereby irrevocably applied and subscribed for the issuance and allotment of 4256 shares for the amount of £10,001,600 (the "Initial Subscription"). This was a price of £2,350 per share;
(ii) DNA granted Ventura "the first right to apply and subscribe for the issuance and allotment of up to 17,021 shares for the amount of up to GBP40,000,000 ("the Subsequent Subscription").
"Ventura will notify [DNA] in writing of the specific amount of its commitment for the Subsequent Subscription on or before 18 January 2021 (or such later date as Ventura and [DNA] may agree in writing). To the extent that Ventura does not so notify [DNA] and commit for some or all of the Subsequent Subscription, [DNA] shall be free to grant rights to other investors to apply and subscribe for the issuance and allotment of the remaining Shares under the Series A Offering (subject always to compliance with any governing agreements, instruments or documents applicable to the [DNA])."
"The closing of the Subsequent Subscription (if any) shall occur upon receipt of all Approvals on or before February 18, 2021 (or such later date as Ventura and [DNA] may agree in writing) when Ventura shall remit by electronic transfer the Subsequent Subscription amount (exclusive of bank charges) to the Company Bank Account as referenced above."
"Pursuant to the terms of our term sheet we are notifying you in writing regarding the Subsequent Ventura Allotment. We intend to take up the entire £40 million subsequent Ventura Allotment. Please note that we have a substantial portion of this additional capital £20 million already committed and we are in process of firming up the remainder via several parties known to you who will be helpful to the Dna Nudge diagnostic and consumer health businesses."
"Further to the Subscription Letter of 17 December 2020, the Subsequent Subscription is now to close on 6 April 2021 (Closing Date.).
I would be grateful if you could confirm the amount of the Subsequent Subscription which we can expect on the Closing Date."
"We confirm entering into binding documentation with several groups for an additional £28 million and (subject to receipt of funds) we confirm to remit to you not less than this amount on or around April 6th.
Please note this amount does not include the receivable from Sumitomo Mitsui Trust Bank who have today also received final approval for their £2m investment."
(i) Pursuant to the Term Sheet and the Subscription Letter Ventura:
(a) subscribed for 4,256 series A preferred shares in DNA in the sum of £10,001,600 which was closed and funded on 21 January 2021; and
(b) was granted rights to make a further subscription for shares up to the amount of £40 million.
(ii) By 7 April 2021 Ventura had funded and transferred to DNA via separate tranches an additional total amount of £23,730,570 pursuant to the rights for further subscription.
(iii) A reduced price per share was agreed.
(iv) Ventura had transferred a further sum of £6,006,834 pursuant to the rights for further subscription.
(v) Due to the change in the valuation of DNA, DNA had agreed with Ventura to issue additional shares to Ventura:
(a) The initial allotment of 4,256 preference shares would be increased to 6,047 preference shares.
(b) Any and all additional shares that were to be issued to Ventura pursuant to the rights for further subscription would be calculated and based upon the reduced price.
(i) The replacement of the price per share with the new reduced price (and similarly in respect of the pre-money valuation of DNA).
(ii) The increase of the number of shares issued to Ventura initially from 4,256 shares to 6,047 shares.
(iii) Any and all additional shares to be issued to Ventura pursuant to the agreements to be calculated and based on the amended price of £1,654 per share.
(iv) The terms and conditions and all rights granted to Ventura under the pre-existing agreements would remain in force and unchanged, save as amended by the Deed of Amendment and save that they were amended to the extent necessary to give effect to the purpose and intent of the Deed of Amendment (Section 2.1).
"This Deed of Amendment contains the entire understanding of the parties hereto with respect to its subject matter and supersedes any and all prior agreements, notices or other arrangements or correspondences, oral or written between the Parties and neither it nor any part of it may in any way be altered, amended, extended, waived, modified, discharged or terminated except by a written agreement signed by each of the Parties hereto." (Section 6).
IV The issues
IV Summary judgment – legal principles
(i) The court must consider whether the claimant (or defendant) has a "realistic" as opposed to a "fanciful" prospect of success.
(ii) A "realistic" claim is one that carries some degree of conviction. This means a claim that is more than merely arguable.
(iii) In reaching its conclusion the court must not conduct a "mini-trial".
(iv) This does not mean that the court must take at face value and without analysis everything that a claimant says in its statements before the court. In some cases it may be clear that there is no real substance in factual assertions made, particularly if contradicted by contemporaneous documents.
(v) However, in reaching its conclusion the court must take into account not only the evidence actually placed before it on the application, but also the evidence that can reasonably be expected to be available at trial.
(vi) Although a trial may turn out not to be really complicated, it does not follow that it should be decided without the fuller investigation into the facts at trial than is possible or permissible on summary judgment. Thus the court should hesitate about making a final decision without a trial, even where there is no obvious conflict of fact at the time of the application, where reasonable grounds exist for believing that a fuller investigation into the facts of the case would add to or alter the evidence available to a trial judge and so effect the outcome of the case.
(vii) On the other hand, it is not uncommon for an application under CPR 24 to give rise to a short point of law or construction and, if the court is satisfied that it has before it all the evidence necessary for the proper determination of the question and the parties have had an adequate opportunity to address it in argument, it should grasp the nettle and decide it. The reason is quite simple: if the respondent's case is bad in law, he will in truth have no real prospect of succeeding on his claim or successfully defending the claim against him, as the case may be. Similarly, if the applicant's case is bad in law, the sooner that is determined, the better. If it is possible to show by evidence that although material in the form of documents or oral evidence that would put the documents in another light is not currently before the court, such material is likely to exist and can be expected to be available at trial, it would be wrong to give summary judgment because there would be a real, as opposed to fanciful, prospect of success. However, it is not enough simply to argue that the case should be allowed to go to trial because something may turn up which would have a bearing on the question of construction.
(i) The purpose of summary relief is to help resolve the litigation.
(ii) The court must have regard to the overriding objective.
(iii) The court should be slow to deal with single issues in cases where there will need to be a full trial on liability involving evidence and cross-examination in any event and/or where summary disposal of a single issue may delay (because of appeals) the ultimate trial of the action. The court should consider whether the objective of dealing with cases justly is better served by summary disposal or by letting matters go to trial so that they can be fully investigated and a properly informed decision reached.
(iv) Summary disposal is frequently inappropriate for complex cases.
(v) It is inappropriate at an interim stage where there are issues of fact involved unless the court is satisfied that all the relevant facts can be identified and clearly established.
VI Construction: The 18 January Email
(a) The submissions of the Defendants
(i) It was sent on 18 January 2021 – the day on which the Option was due to expire.
(ii) It was headed "Notification of the Subsequent Ventura Investment".
(iii) It stated in terms that it was sent "Pursuant to the terms of our Term Sheet". That is formal language consistent only with the 18 January Email being intended as a contractual notification of some description. In context, the only such formal notification which Ventura could or would have been sending on 18 January 2021 was notice of exercise of the Option. It is immaterial that the email refers to the "Term Sheet" rather than the "Subscription Letter". It related to the same subject matter, and the Mr El-Husseiny is not a lawyer but a businessman.
(iv) The sentence "we intend to take up the entire £40 million Subsequent Ventura Allotment" is the form of words one would expect to find in a notice exercising the Option. Ventura is identifying the amount of the further investment in DNA which it intended to make in accordance with the parties' then subsisting contractual rights. Here too, it matters not that Mr El Husseiny used the words "Subsequent Ventura Allotment" rather than "Subsequent Subscription".
(v) The third sentence does not contain anything which undermines that conclusion. It provides DNA with technically superfluous information concerning the steps which Ventura was taking to raise the finance which it would require to comply with its obligation to complete the Subsequent Ventura Allotment. It did not contain any request for an extension of time for the exercise of the Option or for payment under it.
(vi) The reference in the final sentence to Ventura "look[ing] forward to completing the Series A Investment Round" is consistent with the exercise of the Option rather than letting it expire. Further the reference to the Series A Investment Round is consistent with the Initial and Subsequent Subscriptions being referred to in the Subscription Letter as "the Series A Offering".
(b) The submissions of Ventura
(i) The 18 January Email did not comprise an unqualified exercise of an option and/or was not a clear and/or unequivocal acceptance of the right conferred in the Subscription Letter.
(ii) The 18 January Email expressed only an intention to take up the allotment: "we intend to take up" (emphasis added), which was not the language of final and unqualified expression of assent. This was an intention that it would wish to purchase further subscription shares, but that it was not ready to do so at that stage.
(iii) The 18 January Email specifically stressed that Ventura did not have the funds committed by investors (indeed it only had half of the necessary funds) but was "in [the] process of firming up the remainder". The language of the January Email itself was that Ventura was not committing to the investment of funds until it had committed funds from those third-party investors. In the circumstances, it was apparent that Ventura was not and could not be entering into a binding obligation on behalf of the funds and it was not expressing final and unqualified assent to acquiring shares in a binding fashion.
(iv) This was different from the language of commitment used in the Subscription Letter itself, namely "Ventura hereby irrevocably applies and subscribes for the issuance and allotment of 4,256 Shares…" (emphasis added). The January Email did not contain language of firm commitment or specificity, which did not identify "the specific amount" of any commitment, whether in the number of shares or the specific sum of money to be paid as required by the Subscription Letter. Indeed, £40 million did not correspond to the nearest pound to an exact number of shares.
(v) The January Email is to be construed against the factual matrix, a part of which is that DNA knew that Ventura was building a book for investment from third parties and that it was the investment funds which were investing in the Preferred Shares: Ventura simply acted as General Partner on behalf of the fund, such that it operated on the basis that it would only commit to the investment of funds once its investors had committed funds and that the commitment to invest would only be confirmed when the monies had been paid to DNA. (This factual matrix is not accepted by the Defendants who deny that they knew prior to this email (or even following it) that Ventura operated on this basis.)
(vi) Although the time for the exercise of the option was about to expire, and there was no specific request for an extension, the 18 January Email was to the effect that Ventura was not in a position to commit on behalf of the funds, and, as stated, it needed more time to lock in commitments from its investors.
(c) The law
"An acceptance is a final and unqualified expression of assent, whether by words or conduct, to the terms of an offer. The objective test of agreement applies to an acceptance no less than to an offer. On this test, a mere acknowledgement of the receipt of an offer does not amount to an acceptance; nor is there acceptance if a person, to whom an offer to sell goods had been made, merely replies that it is his "intention to place an order" or asks for an invoice." (emphasis added)
"As I understand that passage, it amounts to this, that, as regards this option, there was between the parties only one contract, namely, the contract constituted by the provisions in the lease which I have read creating the option. The notice exercising the option did not lead, in my opinion, to the creation of any fresh contractual relationship between the parties, making them for the first time vendors and purchasers, nor did it bring into existence any right in addition to the right conferred by the option."
"An option is not strictly speaking either an offer or a conditional contract. It does not have all the incidents of the standard form of either of these concepts. To that extent it is a relationship sui generis. But there are ways in which it resembles each of them. Each analogy is in the proper context a valid way of characterising the situation created by an option."
" (2) The question is not how the landlord understood the notices. The construction of the notices must be approached objectively. The issue is how a reasonable recipient would have understood the notices. And in considering this question the notices must be construed taking into account the relevant objective contextual scene. The approach in Reardon Smith Line Ltd. v. Yngvar Hansen-Tangen [1976] 1 W.L.R. 989, which deals with the construction of commercial contracts, is by analogy of assistance in respect of unilateral notices such as those under consideration in the present case. Relying on the reasoning in Lord Wilberforce's speech in Reardon Smith, at 996D to 997D, three propositions can be formulated. First, in respect of contracts and contractual notices the contextual scene is always relevant. Secondly, what is admissible as a matter of the rules of evidence under this heading is what is arguably relevant. But admissibility is not the decisive matter. The real question is what evidence of surrounding circumstances may ultimately be allowed to influence the question of interpretation. That depends on what meanings the language read against the objective contextual scene will let in. Thirdly, the enquiry is objective: the question is what reasonable persons, circumstanced as the actual parties were, would have had in mind. It follows that one cannot ignore that a reasonable recipient of the notices would have had in the forefront of his mind the terms of the leases. Given that the reasonable recipient must be credited with knowledge of the critical date and the terms of clause 7(13) the question is simply how the reasonable recipient would have understood such a notice. This proposition may in other cases require qualification. Depending on the circumstances a party may be precluded by an estoppel by convention from raising a contention contrary to a common assumption of fact or law (which could include the validity of a notice) upon which they have acted: Norwegian American Cruises A/S (formerly Norwegian American Lines A/S) v. Paul Munday Ltd. (The "Vistafjord") [1988] 2 Lloyds Rep. 343. Such an issue may involve subjective questions. That is, however, a different issue and not one relevant to this appeal. I proceed therefore to examine the matter objectively."
(d) Discussion
(1) The language of intent to take up the allotment in the second sentence instead of containing a definitive statement that the subscription is being thereby taken up. The Defendants submit that the language of intent is akin to the language of taking up the subscription, whereas Ventura contrast an intention to do something with the language of irrevocably subscribing in the Subscription Letter;
(2) The third sentence referring to what is to happen is (a) on the Defendants' construction one of the provision of non-essential information and is otiose (in the event that the subscription is being taken up), or (b) on Ventura's construction it is information of how Ventura hopes to be in a position to proceed when the remaining funds have been raised in the hope or expectation that DNA will permit the subscription to take place after the money has been raised;
(3) The opening words of the first sentence might be formal and consistent with the exercise of the right to subscribe. On the other hand, they refer not to the Subscription Letter but refer to the term sheet. The caption "Notification of Subsequent Ventura Allotment" was not precise in that it ought to have referred to the Subsequent Subscription. These matters by themselves may have been capable of being read in a manner consistent with a subscription under the Subscription Letter, but the imprecise language adds to the state of confusion and imprecision.
(1) the contextual scene;
(2) the meaning the language would have against the objective contextual scene;
(3) the interpretation of the reasonable recipient of the notice who would construe the document objectively based on all of the knowledge available to the recipient at the time.
"7. As each of the Defendants knew and understood (both before and following this email), Ventura operated on the basis that it would only commit to the investment of funds when its investors had committed funds and that the commitment to invest would only be confirmed when the monies had been paid to DNA and the shares were about to be allotted. Ventura was seeking to raise funds and wished to maximise its investment, but was unable to confirm the specific amount.
8. … As DNA knew and understood, Ventura sought the opportunity to apply for up to £40 million in additional shares and could not commit to a specific amount until it had itself received commitments from investors to a specified amount."
(i) This is a case where the terms of the January email require a greater context to be understood. It is what Lord Steyn in Mannai referred to as "evidence of surrounding circumstances…to influence the question of interpretation" and the meaning of the notice "read against the objective contextual scene". A much more extensive investigation of this may take place at a trial than is currently before the Court.
(ii) There are indicators that both parties are able to rely upon in support of their case, but the critical question is what the third sentence would mean to parties having the relevant background knowledge. It is clear that there is much more to be gleaned by evidence of contemporaneous documents and oral evidence, but that has not been placed before the Court. That is understandable because it does not suit the respective cases of construction of the January email if they are to find the short cut of a Part 24 application.
(iii) However, the Court sometimes has to resist the trap of an over-simplistic short-cut. The Court ought to allow for the evidence which is likely to be before the Court at trial. A fuller investigation is required into the facts at trial than is possible or permissible on summary judgment. The Court should hesitate about making a final decision without a trial where reasonable grounds exist for believing that a fuller investigation into the facts of the case would add to or alter the evidence available to a trial judge and so affect the outcome of the case.
(iv) This is reinforced by the fact that in the instant case, a summary judgment will not bring the proceedings to an end. The misrepresentation case and the construction case in respect of the January email are likely to involve evidence from the same sources. The same witnesses can be expected to give evidence about how investments are made in Ventura and what DNA knew about the source of the investments. There is a danger that any decision at an interim stage about part of the case may be rendered questionable by more informed assessments at a subsequent trial of the misrepresentation case.
(v) This is not a case of what Sir Robert Megarry V-C once referred to as "all surmise and Micawberism" (The Lady Anne Tennant v Associated Newspapers Ltd [1979] FSR 298, 303) which is the mere hope that something may turn up at trial. This is a case where relevant information relating to the factual matrix is likely to exist, but the inference is that it has not been adduced by both sides in the danger that it may detract from summary judgment applications. Given especially that summary judgment will not obviate the need for a trial about closely related matters, the Court should allow the material to be deployed alongside the related material that might be deployed about the trial of the matters not subject to the summary judgment application.
"The inadmissibility of a subsequent contract as an aid to construction of a written contract is merely one aspect of the general principle of English contract law that (save in exceptional circumstances not applicable in the present case) the subsequent conduct of the parties cannot be looked at to interpret a written contract: see James Miller & Partners v Whitworth Street Estates [1970] AC 583 per Lord Reid at 603D–E; Schuler AG v Wickman Machine Tool [1974] AC 235 per Lord Reid at 252C–F; Lewison: The Interpretation of Contracts 4th edition para 3.15. It seems to me that the principle that the subsequent contract is inadmissible is equally applicable whether it is made the following day or long after."
VII Variation issue
(a) The submission of Ventura
(b) The submission of the Defendants
(c) Discussion
VIII Conclusion