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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 >> Dilworth & Anor v Wosskow Brown Solicitors LLP & Ors [2024] EWHC 903 (Ch) (22 April 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2024/903.html Cite as: [2024] EWHC 903 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS IN BRISTOL
BUSINESS LIST (ChD)
2 Redcliff Street, Bristol, BS1 6GR |
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B e f o r e :
(Sitting as a Judge of the High Court)
____________________
(1) JOHN DILWORTH (2) LINDA DILWORTH |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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(1) WOSSKOW BROWN SOLICITORS LLP (2) MICHAEL WOSSKOW (3) DAVID ERIC BROWN (4) IAN DAVID BROWN (5) SALLY MALLINSON |
Defendants |
____________________
STEVEN FENNELL (instructed by WOSSKOW BROWN SOLICITORS) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 26, 27, 28 March 2024
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
CHIEF INSOLVENCY AND COMPANIES COURT JUDGE BRIGGS:
The Claim
"Subject to clause 6.3 the Facility is repayable in tranches of not less than £25,000 subject to either party serving 3 months written notice on the other requesting or offering repayment as appropriate PROVIDED THAT no such notice shall be served within 12 months from the date hereof and the Borrower shall not be bound to make a repayment in excess of £25,000 in any 2 month period."
The reason provided for non-payment following notice of a Repayment Event
"During May and June 2017, a series of discussions by telephone and in person took place between the First Claimant and the Third Defendant, supplemented by e-mail correspondence. The Third Defendant no longer recalls the precise dates of such discussions, nor the precise contractual words used between the parties. The outcome of the said discussions was an oral agreement…between the Claimants (represented by the First Claimant) and the First Defendant (represented by the Third Defendant) as follows:
The Claimants would release the First Defendant from its liability to each of them under the [Loans].
In consideration of the said release, the First Defendant would procure that the Claimants receive 1,500 preference shares each in John Banner Centre Limited." (emphasis added)
"At the beginning of May 2017 I discussed with the First Claimant that the Personal Injury department of WBLLP would not be as profitable as it used to be and in order to safeguard his position it was agreed that he would convert £300,000 of the loans into preferential shares of the [John Banner Centre Limited] in the names of him and the Second Claimant in the sum of £150,000 each being 1,500 shares worth £100. On 3 May 2017, the First Claimant emailed me setting out the revised agreement on the basis that shares would be allocated in JBCL in place of his agreement with WB LLP. I responded on 3 May 2017 in confirmation. There was a further exchange of emails and on 22 May 2017 I emailed the First Claimant to advise that the shares had been issued and he responded by email on the same day that the shares should be split equally between himself and the Second Claimant. On 19 June 2017 I emailed the First Claimant with confirmation of the agreement that we had reached. In particular I advised the First Claimant that "the original loan was guaranteed by the then partners of WBLLP which consisted of Michael Wosskow, David Brown, Ian Brown and Sally Mallinson". I went on to say that "Sally Mallinson had left the practice some three years ago and the ongoing guarantee would be continued by Michael Wosskow, David Brown and Ian Brown. I also sent a copy of this email to his solicitor, PJ Albury of Bartons… I met with the First Claimant in January 2018 and he emailed me on 15 January 2018 acknowledging that the share capital had been placed in JBCL and also making reference to the dividend payment and the best way of managing it…am firmly of the opinion that the original loan to WBLLP which was guaranteed by the Second, Third, Fourth and Fifth Defendants, was discharged and in its place an arrangement was reached whereby the Claimants were issued with shares and dividend payments were made to them."
Contemporaneous correspondence
"restructure into a combination of loans and shares to take advantage of tax free income. Should you wish I will be happy to discuss with you buying a few of my main Shares [in the Company] at the current price from your loans. Over the last few years we have paid a £6 per share dividend but this is expected to increase over the next few years.
This could give you growth potential as well as income which over a period could be set up to ensure you could take advantage of capital gains allowance."
"I would suggest the following way forward.
We will continue with the existing loan for a further period of at least 18 months ie continue to pay 10% of loan. The only thing we need to find out from you is whether you want interest only in which case the monthly interest payment will reduce pro rata or you wish the payment to stay the same in which case the balance of the loan will reduce.
Your next payment is due on the 25th January when your total loan will be £450k. If you still receive the £50k per year your capital account will be reduced by £5k
over the year. I still feel you may be better off with some of this money in Shares as £5k per year per person is tax free. We can leave this till we meet."
"I am happy with your suggestion to continue as per our agreement and would be more than happy to continue with the £2500 per month which would include some loan repayment."
"In sept 2015 we started a new practice Wosskow Brown Legal Services Ltd which took over all non-personal injury work. The LLP ceased trading but continued with its licence as solicitors with the new business working on the remaining injury files. We transferred your loan to the new practice who have continued to make interest payment to you."
"The practice which you lent money to some 9 yrs ago Wosskow Brown solicitors LLP was heavily involved in personal injury claims. This was very profitable for many years but due to fraud in the claim industry began to be regulated. We made a decision 4 yrs ago to reinvent the practice as a private client specialist and invested heavily in publicity and marketing and replaced the falling injury claim income with general work such as probate conveyancing and commercial work. In sept 2015 we started a new practice Wosskow Brown Legal Services Ltd which took over all non personal injury work. The LLP ceased trading but continued with its licence as solicitors with the new business working on the remaining injury files. We transferred your loan to the new practice who have continued to make interest payment to you. It has now become clear that there is a substantial amount of fraud cases which we will have to write off. This could be as high as £500k.
I am prepared to provide assets to cover the loss in LLP but if the control went out of my hand then the legal situation is that your loan is with LLP and this could be used to write off the shortfall. I accept that you could claim from myself and Michael but in this unlikely situation we would have little to offer.
I propose that the bulk of your loan is used to buy new non-voting preferential shares in [the Company] so your money would no longer be available to write off any losses.
Your return would be reduced to 6% after tax as the shares will guarantee a fixed dividend… The remaining money can remain as a loan and be repaid over a period to ensure that your overall income does not reduce too much over the next few years…
I have sold some of my shares to LLP which it will sell on to them. 1will write off any money I would have received to clear the shortfall expected when all ongoing cases are settled If your money has been used to buy new shares their is no other alternative. I felt is essential that this is put in place during April. I will be closing down our accounts next Tuesday and Wednesday.
I propose that you either buy 400 non voting shares at £100 each with a guaranteed dividend of £6 each. The remaining loan of just under £50k would be repaid over say 5 years to supplement your income. Or alternatively you buy 10% (1000 )of the ordinary shares at £150 each the standard price which has been used in all recent transactions plus 250 new none voting shares @ £100 each. This would give you a less return but opportunity to sell in the short term to the people referred to above as well as voting interest."
"I had not realised that you were in such financial trouble…on 24-4-17 you sent me the email which I have to say shocked me. You seem to be offering me either option 1 or option 2 or lose my money. The figures for the shares did not stack up to the value of the outstanding loans."
"On 25-7-16 you received an email from me requesting drawdown of the loan as per the agreement with 3 months notice for £25,000 and a further three months notice for a further £25,000.
On 21-10-16 you sent an email wanting to reduce the interest rate to 8%. You also offered shares which would produce a dividend of £6 or more per share. I responded by telephone that I would be happy to accept early repayment of the loan without penalty when you found someone who would provide loans at the new rate to replace mine.
On 23-11-16 you sent me an email confirming payment of the drawdown loans and suggested continuing the payment to me of £2,500 per month which would include interest on my loan and an element of loan repayment. Lin's loan would be unaffected as she had not received any drawdown. You also confirmed that there would be a continuation of the original loan agreement for a minimum of 18 months.
However if following along option ! (sic), I would need a guaranteed exit path which would provide full repayment of the shares at the purchase price paid from the loan. I would also need a defined schedule as I need to repay a mortgage from the monies originally loaned.
Whilst on the issue of the ongoing loan, I request a £25,000 drawdown from both my loan facility and Lin's loan facility in three months time.
I am sure you would also advise me to seek advice from a solicitor and when we reach a way forward will refer to Philip Albery who handled the original loan agreement and on the same terms.
I hope that you will find a solution to the problem which provides a full repayment of the loans and gives you ongoing financial stability"
"I would be looking for guarantees perhaps connected to the current personal guarantee
1-that the dividend is paid at 6% on each 12th [of the] month after the start date of the agreement
2-that the monthly payments are paid on the 20th of each month as per the agreement
3-that by giving three months' notice shares would be transferred from Linda or John Dilworth at the value of at least £100 per share and money is paid directly to the relevant bank account
The shares would be allocated at £150,000 each to John and Linda Dilworth with the remaining part of the loan staying as a loan. I need to look at Linda's situation as this is her only source of income and as you can see she only just reaches the taxable threshold, so can she reclaim the tax paid on the shares?"
"I confirm that your calculations are acceptable and I have noted your request for 2 x £25k loan repayments. I think your idea of amending the original agreement is a good idea. The loan account would be covered in any event. As far as the shares are concerned we can come up with something that suits both parties".
"I set out in this letter the terms that we have agreed relating to the balance outstanding and the loan facilities granted by you and Linda.
Part of the original loan has been repaid and you and Linda have agreed to use part of your monies to purchase 1,500 shares in The John Banner Centre Limited. These shares are preferential, none voting shares each giving a fixed divided of £7 per year. The purchase price is £100 per share which means that each outstanding loan has been reduced by £150,000.
Under the new arrangement a fixed amount will be paid each month which will consist of interest and a loan repayment.
Attached to this letter is a document produced by you which sets out the opening balance of yours and Linda's account. From the loan account will be made a monthly payment as indicated in the schedule and this will consist of interest payments together with capital repayments.
Dividends each year will be paid into the individual's loan account and the income and expenditure of the loan accounts as shown in the attached schedule.
A further £25,000 will be repaid at the end of July and a further £25,000 will be repaid three months later. The original loan was guaranteed by the then Partners of the LLP which consisted of Michael Wosskow, David Brown. Ian Brown and Sally Mallinson.
Sally Mallinson left the Practice some three years ago and the ongoing Guarantee will be continued by Michael Wosskow, David Brown and Ian Brown.
It is agreed by the company and the Guarantors that the figures shown in your schedule are correct and accurate and payment will be made in accordance with this document."
"just write to the company (in reality me or another director) saying you wished to sell shares and refer to the original letter. I or my family will buy these back at the rate agreed under the original document although with the future plans for the building there should be a lot more interest."
"last year you wished to convert £300,000 of the loan liability to the asset of share capital, leaving the outstanding loan to be paid with 10% pa interest. The share capital has been placed in the John Banner Centre Ltd which is a property-owning development company raising revenue from rental of the property. The business would always have positive net asset value…any help from you in bringing forward payments would be greatly appreciated. To maximise the 6% dividend payment we would need to cash in shares at the agreed price just after the dividend is paid in April of each year. Could you agree to dividend be paid proportionately when shares are released, so that there is no pressure on April cashflow."
"When we have cash available to make a capital repayment to you I will contact you. Remember we are still paying the 10% on the balance of your original loan which is generating income for you . Any loan repayments we make to you over the next few months must come from this balance . As far as the sale of shares in concerned we may if cash flow is ok at the relevant time arrange for the company to buy back and cancel the shares rather than finding a third party buyer. This is something for us to look at later this year."
"We will not be in a position to make your loan repayments for the months January, February and March 2020…we will however continue to make loan repayments to Linda…"
"You have sought to vary the Agreement on various occasions but this has never been agreed by our client."
"our client denies exchanging his loan for shares. For clarity there was a discussion over whether our client would give up the loan for a shareholding within a company. However such position was never finalised. You have provided one email dated 27 October 2017 without any context around it and without any other supporting documentation."
"Agreements do not have to be in writing. I recall at least 1 telephone conversation when we agreed to go forward. We agreed that you would keep records of payment and dividends when due and you produced at least 2 schedules at different times showing dividend impact on loans."
Witness evidence
"On 6 December 2017, I sent an email to the Third Defendant suggesting a meeting to iron out a way forwards. We had this meeting on 11 January 2018. The meeting was to discuss the way forward in order that full repayment of the loan would be fulfilled. I told the Third Defendant that I felt he was bullying me regarding changing the Loan Agreement. I did not feel that there had ever been a verbal agreement regarding the shares and we agreed that the monthly payments would continue. The Third Defendant was a solicitor, I was not."
"My loan was with the First Defendant and JBCL are not a party in any form to the loan agreements for either Linda or I. [The Company] or the Defendants have not explained this at any point."
"At no point did I agree to transfer my loan to shares. Further, I would not have wanted to enter into such an agreement unless we had full security. The personal guarantees were key to this."
"I met with the First Claimant in January 2018 and he emailed me on 15 January 2018 acknowledging that the share capital had been placed in [the Company] and also making reference to the dividend payment and the best way of managing it."
"The First Claimant replied by email on 27 October 2019 declining my suggestion and he suggested the following:- "the capital invested to you personally was at £500,000 and is now some £401,500 and with £3,000 worth of shares in The John Banner Centre"
"After a period of negotiation, formal terms were agreed for my departure and me and other members signed a retirement deed on 20 December 2012 which provided form my release from any remaining guarantees…I was also given an indemnity against all personal claims that might be made against me by the creditors of the first Defendant…"
Oral evidence
Legal principles
Authority
Memory
Contract
"The court should not impose binding contracts on parties which they have not reached. All will depend upon the circumstances."
"In the Pagnan case it was held that, although certain terms of economic significance to the parties were not agreed, neither party intended agreement of those terms to be a precondition to a concluded agreement. The parties regarded them as relatively minor details which could be sorted out without difficulty once a bargain was struck. The parties agreed to bind themselves to agreed terms, leaving certain subsidiary and legally inessential terms to be decided later."
"(1)In order to determine whether a contract has been concluded in the course of correspondence, one must first look to the correspondence as a whole . . . (2) Even if the parties have reached agreement on all the terms of the proposed contract, nevertheless they may intend that the contract shall not become binding until some further condition has been fulfilled. That is the ordinary subject to contract case. (3) Alternatively, they may intend that the contract shall not become binding until some further term or terms have been agreed . . . (4) Conversely, the parties may intend to be bound forthwith even though there are further terms still to be agreed or some further formality to be fulfilled. . . (5) If the parties fail to reach agreement on such further terms, the existing contract is not invalidated unless the failure to reach agreement on such further terms renders the contract as a whole unworkable or void for uncertainty. (6) It is sometimes said that the parties must agree on the essential terms and it is only matters of detail which can be left over. This may be misleading, since the word essential in that context is ambiguous. If by essential one means a term without which the contract cannot be enforced then the statement is true: the law cannot enforce an incomplete contract. If by essential one means a term which the parties have agreed to be essential for the formation of a binding contract, then the statement is tautologous. If by essential one means only a term which the court regards as important as opposed to a term which the court regards as less important or a matter of detail, the statement is untrue. It is for the parties to decide whether they wish to be bound and if so, by what terms, whether important or unimportant. It is the parties who are, in the memorable phrase coined by the judge [at p 611] the masters of their contractual fate. Of course the more important the term is the less likely it is that the parties will have left it for future decision. But there is no legal obstacle which stands in the way of the parties agreeing to be bound now while deferring important matters to be agreed later."
Late amendment
"12A. During May and June 2017, a series of discussions by telephone and in person took place between the First Claimant and the Fourth Defendant, supplemented by e-mail correspondence. The Fourth Defendant no longer recalls the precise dates of such discussions nor the precise contractual words used between the parties. The outcome of the said discussions was an oral agreement ("the 2017 Agreement") between the Claimants (represented by the First Claimant) and the First Defendant (represented by the Fourth Defendant) as follows.
a. The Claimants would partially release the First Defendant from £150,000 of its liability to each of them under the JD Loan Agreement and the LD Loan Agreement (i.e. a release of £300,000 in total).
b. In consideration for the said release, the First Defendant would procure that the Claimants receive 1,500 preference shares each (total 3,000 shares) ("the Preference Shares") in The John Banner Centre Limited, a company incorporated in England and Wales with registered number 03454079 ("JBCL"). JBCL owned and continues to own valuable freehold properties, including the First Defendant's business premises. The First and Fourth Defendants, and persons connected to them, were and are the other shareholders in JBCL.
c. The Preference Shares would be entitled to an annual dividend of £6.00 per share.The said annual dividend equated roughly to the interest payable under the JD Loan Agreement and the LD Loan Agreement.
d. The Preference Shares would each have the right to payment of a fixed value of £100 per share on the winding up of JBCL. The total value of the Preference Shares would thus be £300,000, being approximately the amount then owed by the First Defendant to the Claimants.
e. The balances remaining due under the JD Loan Agreement of £98,125.00 and under the LD Loan Agreement of £50,000 and the payment of dividends by JBCL would be made to the Claimants on the terms of a schedule of payments set out in an email sent by the First Claimant to the Third Defendant on 2 May 2017.
12B. Alternatively, a contract in writing to the same effect was created by the following exchange of emails passing between the Third Defendant (acting for the First Defendant) and the First Claimant:
a. An email dated 24 April 2017 from the Third Defendant to the First Claimant, in which the Third Defendant made two alternative offers to the Claimant to convert all or part of the aggregate balance due under the JD Loan Agreement and the LD Loan Agreement to preference shares in JBCL;
b. An email dated 3 May 2017 from the First Claimant to the Third Defendant, in which the First Claimant made a counter-offer on the terms set out at paragraphs 12A(a) to 12A(e) above; and
c. An email dated 5 May 2017 from the Third Defendant to the First Claimant in which the Third Defendant accepted the First Claimant's counter-offer."
Decision
Oral Agreement
Alternatively a contract in writing
"You seem to be offering me either option 1 or option 2 or lose my money."
"I am sure you would also advise me to seek advice from a solicitor and when we reach a way forward will refer to Philip Albery who handled the original loan agreement and on the same terms."
"Sorry not been back to you but I confirm that your calculations are acceptable and I have noted your request for 2 x £25 k loan repayments. I think your idea of amending the original agreement is a good idea." (emphasis added)
Authority
Conclusion