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England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Persaud v Beynon [2005] EWHC 3073 (Comm) (15 September 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2005/3073.html Cite as: [2005] EWHC 3073 (Comm) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
DR MARK CHRISTOPHER PERSAUD |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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DR JONATHAN ANDREW BEYNON |
Defendant |
____________________
MR P EMERSON (Instructed by Fox William) appeared on behalf of the DEFENDANT
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE SIMON:
Background
"… the open market value, at the specified date, of the business and assets of IMS as between a willing buyer and a willing seller contracting at arm's length, determined on the presumption that the business is a going concern. Such presumption shall only be rebuttable in the event that there is persuasive evidence that a sale of the business as a going concern at the specified date was not commercially viable. The open market value used shall be computed without the application of any discount pertaining to, or arising from, the fact that the business might be encumbered with any liability to [Dr Beynon]."
"…except that he must (a) generally act in good faith to [Dr Beynon]."
Clause 14 concluded:
"Otherwise [Dr Persaud] shall have complete freedom to manage and direct IMS in such ways as he shall in his absolute discretion see fit, and he shall not be obliged by anything in this agreement to seek to maximise Turnover, Market value, Net Proceeds or the profit of IMS."
Clause 18 provided for the resolution of any dispute arising under the agreement by a sole arbitrator.
"(5) The highest open market value of IMS is the highest value of the business and assets on the following basis ('the valuation basis').
(b) The value as between a willing buyer and a willing seller at arm's length, determined on the presumption that the business was a going concern, such presumption to be rebuttal in the event that there is persuasive evidence that a sale of the business as a going concern was not commercially viable; the highest open market value shall be computed without the application of any discount arising from any liability to … [Dr Beynon]."
"In accordance with paragraph 1(d) of the directions of 15 September on the basis that Dr Beynon would have exercised his option under clause 4 of the agreement at the time between 1 July 2004 and 30 November 2005 when IMS reached its highest open market value, and so Dr Beynon would have been entitled to final commission of 8 per cent of that open market value, and the sale of IMS did not determine that issue."
"2.1 Mr Eales [Dr Persaud's expert] and Mr Kerr [Dr Beynon's expert] agree that the multiplier/multiplicand method of valuation is the appropriate method for valuing the IMS Companies. They also agree that this method involves making adjustments to reported profits in respect of exceptional and/or non-recurring costs and revenues.
2.2 It is acknowledged that this method also requires the net asset position of the business to be addressed in finalising the valuation."
"It is also necessary in finalising the valuation to look at the balance sheet position of the business, for example, where there is cash at bank well in excess of its working capital requirement, this would need to be reflected in the valuation. Conversely, if the balance sheet position showed net liabilities this would need to be investigated and the results reflected in the valuation."
"Mr Eales is of the opinion that in the event of any deficit on net assets, such deficit should be subtracted from the value derived on a capitalised earnings basis (ie the multiplier applied to the multiplicand). Mr Kerr understands the principle which Mr Eales is seeking to apply. However, as will be seen in Mr Kerr's separate report he does not accept that all of these adjustments should be seen as having balance sheet effect."
I shall return later in this judgment to the particular adjustments to which Mr Kerr refers.
"…if, as suggested by Mr Eales, there is a deficit on net assets, such a deficit arises, in my opinion, entirely as a result of [Dr Persaud's] policy of extracting surplus cash from the IMS Companies for personal expenditure, the funding of this litigation, costs associated with the abortive sale of [IMS] and payments relating to the purchase of shares issued to Ms Middleton and Ms Saltwell. And, as a result, I consider that in this case it would be inappropriate to make an adjustment of the nature suggested by Mr Eales."
"37. Mr Kerr and Mr Eales also disagreed on which accounts and figures to use in the valuation process, on the multiplier and on the effect on the valuation of a net deficiency in assets.
38. Their final calculations of the value of the IMS business was a follows:
(a) Mr Kerr: Using his 2003 final adjusted PBT of £1.37 million and a multiplier of between 6 and 8, his valuation was between £8.2 million and £11 million with no deduction for any deficiency of assets.
(b) Mr Eales: Using his 2004 final adjusted PBT of £779,000 and a multiplier of 5 or 6, his capitalised earnings total was between £3.895 million and £4.674 million from which he deducted a net deficiency of assets to produce a final value of £1.035 million to £2.424 million."
(1) 5 out of the 7 items which Mr Eales took into account did not result in any liability or add to any asset deficiency (paragraphs 74 to 76). These were the adjustments which, in Mr Kerr's view expressed at paragraph 2.11 of the joint statement, had not had "balance sheet effect".
(2) He noted that Dr Persaud's accounting policies ignored liabilities and that both Mr Kerr and Mr Eales agreed that these liabilities must be recognised in the adjusted PBT so as to reduce the profits.
(3) He recorded Mr Kerr's view that it was wrong to make a deduction from value since the asset deficiency was caused by Dr Persaud's policy of extracting value from IMS by making substantial withdrawals from the business (paragraph 72 and 77). The arbitrator therefore accepted Mr Kerr's views about the treatment of the two remaining items.
(4) The arbitrator recorded the arguments of counsel on these points (paragraph 79 to 80). Mr Emerson, then, as now, appearing for Dr Beynon, had submitted that Mr Kerr's approach was correct, since on the facts Dr Persaud had acted in breach of his obligation of good faith to Dr Beynon by withdrawing excessive sums. Mr Padfield QC, then, as now, counsel for Dr Persaud, had submitted that the valuation exercise required IMS to be valued as it was, not as it might have been in other circumstances. If Dr Persaud had extracted value by paying bonuses and dividends before the valuation date, then the valuation had to reflect that. Dr Persaud had been entitled to withdraw as much value from IMS as he liked, even if it reduced the value of IMS to nil.
(5) The arbitrator noted Dr Persaud's significant withdrawal from the business at paragraph 86 and recorded further payments made at paragraph 87:
"In August 2003, Dr Persaud made his admission of liability and after I gave directions on 15 September 2003, the valuation process started. Starting in October 2003, Dr Persaud started to approve the massive payments apparently for Ms Saltwell and Ms Middleton and these continued until early 2004. The total paid apparently to Ms Saltwell and Ms Middleton in the 6 months from January to July 2004 was about £1.6 million."
(6) At paragraphs 84 to 94 the arbitrator considered in detail Dr Persaud's conduct, and concluded at paragraph 95:
"I conclude that Dr Beynon has established that the substantial sums which were paid out of IMS and which have resulted in the net asset deficiency calculated by Mr Eales is the result of Dr Persaud acting in breach of his duty of good faith to Dr Beynon."
"I have considered whether it would be fair to find that Dr Persaud has acted towards Dr Beynon without good faith as Dr Persaud has not given evidence and has not had the opportunity to defend himself or answer cross examination. In the circumstances I am sure that it is fair."
"97. Dr Persaud has been fully aware throughout this arbitration that Dr Beynon has made and continued to make serious allegations against Dr Persaud. From Fox Williams letter on behalf of Dr Beynon in September 2001 onwards, Dr Beynon has accused Dr Persaud of acting in breach of his duty to act in good faith. This was expressly pleaded in the Particulars of Claim served in this arbitration. Dr Beynon's case on liability was, in effect, that Dr Persaud had attempted to cheat Dr Beynon by diverting IMS business to secret companies and by inventing a sham sale of the IMS business to Ms Saltwell, and that he pursued this attempt to cheat Dr Beynon by maintaining the falsehood that these IMS companies were not controlled by him and did not do IMS business.
98. Dr Persaud has also been fully aware that throughout the arbitration Dr Beynon's advisers have persisted in repeated complaints that Dr Persaud has failed to give proper disclosure of documents and the correspondence between the solicitors has been extremely heated at times on this issue.
99. Dr Persaud knew that a number of Mr Kerr's requests for information and documentation had not been answered because Dr Persaud was asked for the information and documentation and he had not given the information nor supplied the documents.
100. In his Report Mr Kerr made it clear that he did not accept that the substantial payments to Ms Saltwell and Ms Middleton were "bonus" payments as Dr Persaud claimed; Mr Kerr's conclusion, noted above, was that these payments appeared to relate to the transfer from these ladies to Dr Persaud. Further, in his case summary served after receipt of Dr Persaud's witness statement, Mr Emerson made it clear that Dr Persaud's credibility was in issue. Against this background Dr Persaud decided not to give evidence.
101. No explanation has been given for Dr Persaud's failure to disclose relevant documents relating to the alleged bonus payments nor for the inconsistency between those documents and the information given by Dr Persaud to Mr Kerr in the January 2004 interviews."
The 1996 Act
"(1) A party to arbitral proceedings may, upon notice to the other parties and to the tribunal, apply to the Court challenging an award in the proceedings on the ground of the serious irregularity affecting the tribunal, the proceedings or the award."
"(2) Serious irregularity means an irregularity of one or more of the following kinds which the Court considers has caused, or will cause, substantial injustice to the applicant.
(a) Failure by the tribunal to comply with section.33 (the general duty of the tribunal to act fairly and impartially);
(b) The tribunal exceeding its powers (otherwise and exceeding a substantive jurisdiction. See section.67);
(c) Failure by the tribunal to conduct the proceedings in accordance with the procedure agreed by the parties;
(d) Failure by the tribunal to deal with all the issues that were put to it."
There are other provisions, (2)(e) to (i), which are not material to this application; and the powers of the Court to grant relief are set out in (3).
The submissions
(1) The directions of 15 September 2003 and the interim award of 30 November 2004 established an agreed basis of valuation for the determination of quantum: namely, an arm's length transaction between willing buyer and willing seller. They also established an agreed procedure as to how the experts should approach the determination. The arbitrator's role was confined to arbitrating the differences between the experts.
(2) The arbitrator departed from this agreed approach in two ways: first, since a willing buyer would undoubtedly have taken into account a deficiency of net assets, he departed from the agreed basis of valuation; second, he made a finding of bad faith against Dr Persaud.
(3) In so acting the arbitrator had acted in excess of his jurisdiction. First, his substantive jurisdiction was confined to making findings on the agreed basis and in accordance with the agreed procedure. Second, it did not extend to make findings about lack of good faith. These submissions give rise to the claim under section 67.
(4) In the alternative, and for similar reasons, there had been a serious irregularity within the meaning of section 68 of the 1996 Act. First, the arbitrator was not entitled to depart from the agreed basis and procedure for calculating damages, and to have done so was unfair. Secondly, Dr Persaud was denied a proper opportunity to meet the case of lack of good faith; to defend himself against it or to object to the course adopted. Mr Padfield relied on subsections (a) to (d) of section 68(2) of the Act, and the cases Co-operative Group (CWS) v International Computers [2003] EWCA civ. 1955 and Vogon International Limited v The Serious Fraud Office [2004] EWCA civ. 104.
(5) The serious irregularity has caused, or will cause, substantial injustice to Dr Persaud as described in his two witness statements, dated 7 June and 24 August 2005.
(1) So far as the section 67 claim was concerned the arbitrator acted within his powers, which were derived from clause 16 of the 1996 Agreement. Nothing subsequent to the commencement of the arbitration confined the arbitrator's substantive jurisdiction either as to how he should proceed or as to how the damages should be calculated. The orders made by the arbitrator on 15 September 2003 and 30 November 2004, and the reference to the open market value of the business and assets as between willing buyer and willing seller, simply reflected the formula by which commission was earned on the exercise of an option to receive a final commission under clause 4 of the 1996 Agreement. Neither the orders of the arbitrator nor the conduct, either expressly or impliedly, limited the arbitrator's jurisdiction.
(2) So far as the section 68 claim was concerned, first, Dr Beynon's case that Dr Persaud had "extracted surplus cash" from IMS was set out in Mr Kerr's report. Mr Kerr also made it clear in his report at paragraph 4.26 that this policy of Dr Persaud made it inappropriate to subtract any deficit in net assets from the value on a capitalised earnings basis. Secondly, for whatever reason, Dr Persaud decided on the day before the hearing that neither he nor his accountant would give evidence in the arbitration and, therefore, deprived himself of the opportunity to explain the payments that had been made from IMS. Thirdly, as noted by the arbitrator in paragraph 89(a) of the award, Dr Persaud's disclosure in relation to these unconventional payments and cash withdrawals were both late and unsatisfactory. Fourthly, the issue of Dr Persaud's good faith was raised in closing submissions and recorded by the arbitrator at paragraph 79 to 80 of his award. Fifthly, significantly in the context of the test of "substantial injustice" in section 68(2), Dr Persaud had failed to adduce any evidence as to how he would have addressed the issue of lack of good faith if he had had more notice of it.
Conclusions
The claim under section 67 of the Act
(1) Paragraph 5(b) of the directions of 15 September 2003 simply reiterated the method of calculating loss under the contract. The paragraphs in the 30 November 2004 award, which were relied on by Mr Padfield, including paragraphs 13 and 19, dealt with specific admissions in Dr Persaud's letter of 14 August 2003, as recorded in paragraph 1 of the 15 September 2003 directions. To the extent there was a formula for calculating damages it was a formula which had its provenance in the 1996 Agreement. The 30 November award did no more than give further directions which were intended to provide for the assessment of damages in a way which reflected the loss of Dr Beynon's contractual entitlement.
(2) While an arbitrator's jurisdiction may be confined to adjudicating on disagreements between experts, this was plainly not such a case. The arbitrator was concerned with the assessment of damages for breach of contract. The parties might confine their case by a form of pleading or in their experts' report, but it does not follow from this that the arbitrator's jurisdiction is so confined so as, for example, to prevent him allowing a pleading to be amended so as to expand a case. Whether it is fair to do this may give rise to a different question.
(3) I should add that I am not satisfied, in any event, that the point of lack of substantive jurisdiction was taken at the time of the arbitration (see section 73). This is not a criticism of Dr Persaud or his legal advisors, more an indication that it did not strike those taking part in the arbitration that the matter of complaint was a matter that went to substantive jurisdiction.
Claim under section 68 of the Act
"26 Third, the issue is not whether the Arbitrator came to the right conclusion. The sole issue is whether he committed a serious irregularity in coming to the conclusion that he did: see paragraph 64 of the extract of the Judgment of Lawrence Collins J in Warborough.
27. Fourth, in deciding whether a serious irregularity has caused substantial injustice, the Court should…try to assess how the aggrieved party would have conducted his case but for the irregularity. Only if the aggrieved party has suffered a substantial injustice because he was unable to present his case and so obtain a fair hearing of his case will the irregularity be treated as falling within section.68: see Checkpoint per Ward LJ at paras 57-58, Warborough per Jonathan Parker LJ at paras 55-59.
28. Fifth, the test of "substantial injustice" is intended to be applied by way of a support of the arbitral process and not by way of interference with that process. It is only in those cases where it can be said that what is happened was so far removed from what could reasonably be expected of the arbitral process that the Court will interfere. Section 68 is a long stop which is only available in extreme cases where the arbitrator has gone so wrong in his conduct of the arbitration that justice calls out for it to be corrected. It is not a soft alternative to an application for leave to appeal: see Checkpoint per Ward LJ at para 59.
(1) This case is very far removed from the Co-operative Groups (CWS) case and the Vogon case, on which Mr Padfield relied. In the present case there was no "obvious unfairness" in the arbitrator's decision to make the findings that he did. The arbitrator was bound to calculate the damages suffered as a result of Dr Persaud's breach. Dr Beynon was entitled to damages which compensated him for the loss of his bargain: his rights under the 1996 Agreement. Those rights included contractual compensation on the basis of the exercise of good faith by Dr Persaud. As the arbitrator noted in paragraphs 19 to 21 of the additional award of 4 July 2005, Dr Persaud was given notice that the point was being taken and argued that he was entitled to run IMS in any way he liked, even if this involved reducing its value to nil. The arbitrator took a different view, but that does not give rise to objectionable irregularity. This is not a case of a new point being taken in a way which prevented Dr Persaud dealing with it, nor is it a case of the arbitrator deciding a dispute on the basis of an entirely new point which had not been canvassed.
(2) In paragraph 96 of the award the arbitrator addressed the question whether it would be fair to find that Dr Persaud had acted without good faith to Dr Beynon in the light of the fact that he had not given evidence. In paragraphs 97 to 101 he set out his reasons for concluding that it was fair. Although those reasons are not determinative of the issue of injustice, they demonstrate that the arbitrator was conscious of the issue of fairness and directed himself in relation to it.
(3) I am also, for the reasons which I have set out in relation to the claim under section 67, unpersuaded that the arbitrator exceeded his procedural powers. It seems to me that section 68(2)(b) is concerned with a significant abuse of power if the qualifying word "serious" in the expression "serious irregularity" is to given its proper weight. The present case is not one in which "justice calls out" for a correction to be made.
(4) The challenge under section 68(2)(c) fails for similar reasons to those I have set out in my conclusion in relation to section 67. There was no procedure agreed by the parties which prevented the arbitrator from conducting the arbitration as he did and reaching the conclusion which he did. To use the language of section 33, the arbitrator adopted procedures suitable to the circumstances of the particular case.
(5) I also reject the contention that the arbitrator failed to deal with the issues which were before him within the meaning of section 68(2)(d). It seems to me that Dr Persaud's real complaint is that the arbitrator erred in his conclusion as a matter of analysis. He should have valued the claim having regard to a deficiency in net assets. But, if anything, that gives rise to an application for permission to appeal.
(6) Dr Persaud has to show that the irregularity upon which he relies has caused substantial injustice. Although he has made three witness statements in support of the claims, there is no evidence as to what he would have said about the allegations of lack of good faith if he had been given the opportunity which he says that he was denied. In the terms of the St George's Investment case "the Court should…try to assess how the aggrieved party would have conducted his case but for the irregularity." Dr Persaud has not provided the Court with any materials on which he could make this assessment. In paragraph 89 of the award the arbitrator set out a number of issues about the payments which he considered should have been addressed. Dr Persaud has declined to address them, and there is nothing to refute the inferences which the arbitrator drew. There has been no frank or adequate explanation for the payments and the matter has been made no clearer by (a) the claims by Dr Persaud's solicitors to recover the payments and (b) by the concession in Dr Persaud's closing submissions to the arbitrator that if a willing buyer and a willing seller considered that the payments to the employees were recoverable, it would reduce the net asset deficit.
(7) It is clear from paragraph 21 of the 4 July award that if the arbitrator had not made the finding about net asset deficiency, of which Dr Persaud complains, then the valuation would have been £7,327,000 rather than £9 million, and Dr Beynon's entitlement would be £586,160 rather than £720,000. In such circumstances, if I had been persuaded to exercise my powers under section 68, I would only have done so in relation to £133,840 of the sum awarded.