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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 >> Hall v Cable and Wireless Plc [2009] EWHC 1793 (Comm) (21 July 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2009/1793.html Cite as: [2009] EWHC 1793 (Comm), [2010] Bus LR D40, [2010] 1 BCLC 95 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
Derek William Hall |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Cable and Wireless PLC |
Defendant |
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William Donald Parry and Elaine Parry |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Cable and Wireless PLC |
Defendant |
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Benjamin Strong and Nicholas Sloboda (instructed by Slaughter and May) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 9 July 2009
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr. Justice Teare :
i) Mr. Hall
Purchases: | 19 June 2001, 64,000 shares @ 407 pence |
14 August 2002 38,000 @ 146.75 pence | |
14 August 2002 20,000 @ 145.45 pence | |
Sales: | 14 November 2002 122,000 shares @ 73 pence |
Loss: | £256,546 |
ii) Mr and Mrs. Parry
Purchases: | Between August 1999 and 2002 31,784 @ average price of 331 pence |
Sales: | 18 November 2002 31,784 @ 76 pence |
Loss: | £81,050 |
iii) Mr. Martin
Purchases: | Between 1997 and 2001 21,234 as follows |
7,739 @ 738.99 pence | |
5,422 @ 553.3 pence | |
5,241 @ 884 pence | |
2,832 @ 383.25 pence | |
Sales: | 12 December 2002 21,234 @ 46 pence |
Loss: | £134,591.14 |
"3. As a publically listed company the Defendant had obligations, set out more fully below, to disclose any information which was not public knowledge and may affect the market price of the Defendant's shares. The escrow requirement was not disclosed when details of the agreement were first announced in August 1999 and was not subsequently announced until 6th December 2002. In 1999 Moody's rating of the Defendant was A3. Between that date and 6th December 2002 the Defendant's credit rating deteriorated, in August 2002 it was A3, on 6th December 2002 it was reduced from Baa2 to Bal, known as a "junk" rating.
……….
5. Before 6th December 2002 the Defendant had issued public statements and statutory accounts (including but not limited to the accounts for the years ending 2001 and 2002) stating that it held net cash of approx £2.65 billion and omitting any reference to the escrow requirement (hereinafter the "published information"). On the 5th August 2002 in response to a reduction in the credit rating of Moody's the Defendant confirmed that there was no new material information since the Defendant's annual accounts were issued on the 15th May 2002 and that the Defendant had one of the strongest balance sheets in the industry. On the 13th November 2002 the Defendant announced a company restructuring and expected substantial losses without revealing the escrow requirement. On a date or dates unknown to the Claimants before the 6th December 2002 the Defendant held unsuccessful meetings with Moody's in order to persuade them not to downgrade its credit rating. The effect of the announcement of the escrow requirement on the 6th December was that the market concluded that there had been a material non-disclosure and the share price fell sharply.
"7. By reason of the above the Defendant was in breach of the Listing rules made under section 73A of the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 ("FSMA") known as the "part 6 rules" as provide as follows:-
a. Listing Rule 9.1. "A company must notify the Company Announcement Office without delay of any major new developments in its sphere of activity which is not public knowledge and which may:-
i. by virtue of the effect of those developments on its assets and liabilities or financial position or on the general course of its business, lead to a substantial movement in the price of its listed securities; or
ii. In the case of a company with debt securities listed, by virtue of the effect of those developments on its assets and liabilities of financial position or on the general course of its business, lead to substantial movement in the price of its listed securities, or significantly affect its ability to meet its commitments."
b. Listing Rule 9.3A. "A company must take all reasonable care to ensure that any statement or forecast or any other information it notifies to the Company Announcements Office or makes available through the UK Listing Authority is not deceptive and does not omit anything likely to affect the import of such statement, forecast or other information."
c. Listing Rule 9.10. "A company must notify the Company Announcements Office without delay (unless otherwise indicated) of the following information relating to its capital; New issues of debt securities (b) where a company has listed debt securities, any new issues of debt securities, and in particular any guarantee or security in respect thereof:"
d. By listing Rule 10, consent for the escrow requirement should have been obtained from shareholders in advance.
………….
9. Further, the Defendant was in breach of section 118 of FSMA in that it committed market abuse as therein defined in that it deliberately withheld information which might damage its share price since:-
a. knowledge of the escrow requirement was not generally available, would have been thought by a regular user of the market to be relevant to the market price of the share, and would be thought by the same regular user to be a failure by the person withholding it to observe the standard of behaviour expected of a person in his position in relation to the market, and
b. by so doing the Defendant was disseminating information likely to mislead.
10. Further, the Defendant made misrepresentations in the company accounts for the years ending 2001 and 2002 (the omission of any reference to the escrow requirement and the assertion of a net cash balance of approximately £2.65 billion) and in other formal statements made to the market between those dates upon which the Claimants were entitled and did rely in acquiring the said shares and in holding the shares whilst the share price declined throughout 2001 and 2002. As a result of the said misrepresentation the Claimants suffered damages as set out hereafter.
11. Further the Defendant owed the Claimants a duty of care to publish information about the escrow requirement because of the Defendant knew or ought to have known that otherwise misleading statements were being put into general circulation and were likely to be relied upon by person considering acquiring the Defendant's shares and once, acquired, in deciding whether to hold them or sell them. The Claimants suffered damage as a result of the Defendant's failure to comply with such duty of care as set out hereinafter.
Breach of statutory duty
i) It is to be inferred from the fact that section 150 excluded listing rules from the cause of action created by section 150 against authorised persons that breach of such rules was intended to give rise to a cause of action for breach of the listing rules.
ii) Section 90 provides that a person responsible for listing particulars is liable to pay compensation to person who has suffered loss as a result of any untrue or misleading statement in the particulars. Such liability applies to all breaches of the listing rules.
iii) In any event it would be absurd if a breach of the listing rules were not actionable at the suit of a private person.
Market abuse
Misrepresentation
Negligence
Limitation
"Realisation of the security does not create the lender's loss, nor does it convert a potential loss into an actual loss. Rather, it crystallises the amount of a present loss, which hitherto had been open to be aggravated or diminished by movements in the property market."
" 23. As I have explained, in enacting the 1980 Act Parliament substituted "deliberate concealment" for "concealed fraud". This is a different and more appropriate concept. It cannot be assumed that the law remained the same. But reference to the old law explains why Parliament enacted section 32(2) and did not rely on section 32(1)(b) alone to cover the whole ground. With all reference to fraud or conscious impropriety omitted, there was an obvious risk that "deliberate concealment" might be construed in its natural sense as meaning "active concealment" and not as embracing mere non-disclosure. Section 32(2) was therefore enacted to cover cases where active concealment should not be required. But such cases were limited in two respects: first, the defendant must have been guilty of a deliberate commission of a breach of duty; and secondly, the circumstances must make it unlikely that the breach of duty will be discovered for some time."
24. Given that section 32(2) is (or at least may be) required to cover cases of non-disclosure rather than active concealment, the reason for limiting it to the deliberate commission of a breach of duty becomes clear. It is only where the defendant is aware of his own deliberate wrongdoing that it is appropriate to penalise him for failing to disclose it.
25. In my opinion, section 32 deprives a defendant of a limitation defence in two situations: (i) where he takes active steps to conceal his own breach of duty after he has become aware of it; and (ii) where he is guilty of deliberate wrongdoing and conceals or fails to disclose it in circumstances where it is unlikely to be discovered for some time. But it does not deprive a defendant of a limitation defence where he is charged with negligence if, being unaware of his error or that he has failed to take proper care, there has been nothing for him to disclose.
Causation
Conclusions
i) They have no cause of action for breach of statutory duty, market abuse or negligent misrepresentation pursuant to the Misrepresentation Act 1967.
ii) Whilst they have a cause of action in negligence which may not be time barred there is no real prospect that they will establish that the alleged negligence caused them any loss because they sold their shares on 14 and 18 November 2002 and so did not suffer the losses caused by the disclosure of the Ratings Clause on 6 December 2002.