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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 >> National Private Air Transport Company & Anor v Sheikh Abedlelah M. Kaki [2017] EWHC 1496 (Comm) (22 June 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2017/1496.html Cite as: [2017] EWHC 1496 (Comm) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Rolls Building, 7 Rolls Buildings Fetter lane, London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
(Sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge)
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NATIONAL PRIVATE AIR TRANSPORT COMPANY NATIONAL AIR SERVICE LIMITED (subsequently known as National Air Services with CR No. 4030127927) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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SHEIKH ABEDLELAH M. KAKI |
Defendant |
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Erin Hitchens (instructed by Clyde & Co) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 16 June 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
CHRISTOPHER BUTCHER QC :
i) By clause 2.1 it was provided that"[The Claimant] agrees to sell the interest to [the Defendant], and [the Defendant] agrees to purchase the interest from the [Claimant] on the Delivery Date"ii) By clause 4.1 it was provided that
"[The Claimant] predicts that delivery of the Interest shall occur on or about the predicted delivery date specified in schedule 1 although the seller is unable at the date hereof to ascertain the actual delivery date with any certainty."iii) Clause 4.2 provided that
"[The Claimant] shall, by not less than sixty (60) days' prior written notice to [the Defendant], notify [the Defendant] of the Expected Delivery Date."iv) By clause 9.2 it was provided that, prior to delivery, the Claimant was obliged to make arrangements satisfactory to the Defendant with respect to the registration of the interest with the relevant aviation authority.
i) That it "takes as its starting point" Cooke J's finding that the Defendant never acquired an interest in any aircraft; and that the extensive services which the Claimant provided to the Defendant were provided on a false basis, namely a belief that he was an owner of the Aircraft;ii) That had the Claimant known that the Defendant was not an owner of the Aircraft it would not have allowed him to take advantage of the services which it offered to aircraft owners under the Management Agreement;
iii) It would be "self-evidently unjust" if the Defendant were able to take advantage of the benefits available under the Management Agreement over a period of 3-4 years without paying the price of accessing those benefits, namely purchasing the interest in the Aircraft.
i) That the Defendant was in breach of Recital A of the Management Agreement, whereby, so it is said, "he expressly agreed that he owned an interest in the Aircraft".ii) That the Claimant entered into the Management Agreement as a result of a misrepresentation by the Defendant that he owned an interest in Aircraft N450NS. The Claimant, it is accordingly said, is therefore entitled to rescind the Management Agreement or to claim damages.
iii) That the Management Agreement is void for common mistake, on the basis that both parties entered into it on the express understanding, which it is said was fundamental to the bargain, that the Defendant owned an interest in the Aircraft.
These matters, so it is said, entitle the Claimant to rescission of the Management Agreement, if necessary, and restitution of the market value of the services which it provided to the Defendant, or to damages in an equivalent amount.
Breach of Contract
"Owner [ie the Defendant] owns the percentage interest(s) (the "Interest") in the Aircraft set forth in the Schedule such interest(s) having been acquired by Owner pursuant to a purchase agreement(s) between NAS [ie the Claimant], as seller, and Owner, as buyer (the "Purchase Agreement(s)")."
"The above Recitals and Schedules attached hereto shall be deemed integral and interpretative parts of this Agreement."
Misrepresentation
i) The Claimant entered into the Management Agreement with the Defendant on 28 March 2008. The present proceedings were only commenced, as I have said, on 18 December 2015.ii) If it is right that the time period for claiming rescission, in a case not involving fraud, expires 6 years after damage is suffered by the agreement being entered into, then the claim to rescind is manifestly time barred.
iii) If on the other hand time only started to run when the Claimant was or could with reasonable diligence have been aware of the facts giving rise to the claim, that time appears to me clearly to have been also at the time of the entry into of the Management Agreement. At that point, the Claimant was, or with reasonable diligence could have been, aware of the terms of the Purchase Agreement, which provided for delivery of an interest to take place subsequently, and not less than 60 days after the date of the agreement; and also provided that the responsibility for notifying a time for delivery, delivering the interest and making arrangements for registration of that interest rested on the Claimant. Equally, the Claimant must have known, or clearly could with reasonable diligence have known, that it had not in fact taken steps which notified a time for delivery, or amounted to a delivery of the interest for the purposes of the Purchase Agreement. These were matters within the Claimant's own knowledge and control.
iv) The same reasoning applies to the claim for damages for misrepresentation, although here the Limitation Act applies directly rather than by analogy.
Mistake
i) A contract will not be considered void for mistake "where the mistake consists of a belief which is entertained by him without any reasonable grounds for such belief" (Associated Japanese Bank v Credit du Nord [1989] 1 WLR 225 at 268H per Steyn J). Here, the Claimant cannot have believed that the Defendant had an interest in an aircraft at the time of contracting or, if it did, it had no reasonable grounds for such belief.ii) A contract will not be considered void for mistake if the non-existence of the relevant state of affairs is attributable to the fault of either party (The Great Peace [2002] EWCA Civ 1407 at [76]). Here the fact that the Defendant did not have an interest was due to the fault of the Claimant in failing to notify a delivery date, deliver an interest or register an interest, which were its obligations under the Purchase Agreement and which it had not performed.
iii) A contract will not be considered void for mistake if the non-existence of the relevant state of affairs does not render performance of the contract impossible (The Great Peace at [76]). Here the fact that the Defendant did not own an interest in Aircraft N450NS did not render performance of the contract impossible.