BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Hall v Saunders Law Ltd & Ors [2020] EWHC 404 (Comm) (27 February 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2020/404.html Cite as: [2020] EWHC 404 (Comm) |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
LONDON CIRCUIT COMMERCIAL COURT (QBD)
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
||
B e f o r e :
Sitting as a Deputy Judge of the High Court
____________________
JOHN HALL (in his own right and as assignee of 1st CLASS LEGAL (IS) LIMITED) |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
||
(1) SAUNDERS LAW LIMITED (2) SUBIR KUMAR KARMAKAR (3) SAUNDERS & PARTNERS LLP |
Defendants |
____________________
(instructed by Knights Plc)
appeared for the Claimant
Mr Daniel Shapiro QC and Mr James Sharpe
(instructed by DAC Beachcroft LLP)
appeared for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 12, 13 February 2020
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MR SALTER QC:
Introduction
Background facts
5.1 On 4 November 2000 Malicorp entered into a contract ("the Concession Contract") with the government of the Arab Republic of Egypt ("Egypt") to design and construct a new airport at Ras Sudr and thereafter to operate that airport for 41 years. On 12 August 2001, Egypt purported to cancel the Concession Contract.
5.2 In April 2004, Malicorp began arbitration proceedings against Egypt in the Cairo Regional Centre for International Commercial Arbitration. In due course, a three-person tribunal was constituted, consisting of an arbitrator appointed by Malicorp, an arbitrator appointed by Egypt, and a tribunal chairman. On 19 February 2006 the Judicial Administrative Court of the Egyptian Council State set aside the arbitration clause in the Concession Contract and ordered the suspension of the Arbitration. The tribunal member appointed by Egypt then resigned. The remaining tribunal members nevertheless issued an award ("the Award") dated 7 March 2006, in which (while rejecting Malicorp' claim for breach of the Concession Contract) they awarded Malicorp USD 14,773,497 by way of damages, interest, costs and expenses under Article 142 of the Egyptian Civil Code.
5.3 Malicorp thereafter attempted to enforce the Award in France. That attempt was unsuccessful, as were further arbitral proceedings brought by Malicorp in the International Centre for the Settlement of Investment Disputes, in which Malicorp sought to allege that the cancellation of the Concession Contract by Egypt was state expropriation.
5.4 In about February 2011, Malicorp then instructed Balsara & Co Ltd ("Balsara") to act for it in proceedings which Malicorp proposed to bring to enforce the Award in England. Balsara was a firm of solicitors in which Mr Karmakar had the equivalent status to a "partner", and he was the person who had primary responsibility for the Malicorp file.
5.5 Balsara helped Malicorp to apply for litigation funding and after the event insurance in connection with these proposed proceedings. On 5 August 2011, Balsara and Malicorp jointly submitted an "ATE Insurance and Litigation Funding Proposal Form" ("the Proposal Form") to the Funder. The Proposal Form was signed by Mr Towey, a director of Malicorp and by Mr Karmakar on behalf of Balsara.
5.6 The introduction to the Proposal Form stated:
The solicitor, in conjunction with the client, should complete this form. All material facts need to [be] disclosed .. Failure to disclose a material fact may invalidate any subsequent insurance/funding agreement .. Once completed the form should be checked for accuracy and signed by both solicitor and client
Under the heading "Insurance & Funding", the Proposal Form stated:
Funding is only available for actions where a financial remedy is sought, and where prospects of success are at least 60-65% ..
Under the heading "Please state your views as to the prospects of success", the box labelled "70%" was marked with a cross. In the Declaration box immediately above the signatures, the Proposal Form stated that:
I/We declare and affirm that all information provided by the proposer and the legal representative in this proposal form is true and correct to the best of our knowledge and belief and that no material facts or information had been withheld
5.7 On 11 November 2011, the Funder, Malicorp and Balsara entered into an agreement ("the Balsara Funding Agreement") under which the Funder agreed to provide funding to Malicorp for the proposed action.
5.8 On about 15 November 2011 the Funder, on behalf of Gable Insurance AG ("Gable"), issued a Litigation Costs Insurance Policy ("the ATE Policy") to Malicorp. Subject to the Policy Wording, the ATE Policy provided an indemnity to Malicorp up to a limit of £350,000 against any failure to recover the amount of its own legal costs in the proposed proceedings and against any liability to pay Egypt's costs. On 16 December 2011, Gable (acting through the Funder) issued a Policy Endorsement increasing the total cover under the policy to £1,476,200.
5.9 The Policy Wording of the ATE Policy included (inter alia) the following provisions:
1. Compliance
(a) The due observance and fulfilment of the terms and conditions of this Policy insofar as they relate to anything to be done or complied with by the Insured and the Legal Representative and the truth of the Insured's statements and answers made or given that the time of entering into the agreement to include but not limited to the Insurance Proposal Form with the Insurer and which may subsequently be included in a statement of truth shall be conditions precedent to any liability of the Insurer to make payment under the Policy.
(b) The Insured and the Legal Representative shall conduct the Proceedings with due care and diligence and shall take all reasonable steps to minimise or avoid the costs and expenses payable under the Policy ..
..
4. Progress of the Proceedings
(a) In acting for the Insured under this Policy the Legal Representative acknowledges and accepts his responsibilities hereunder
(b) The Insured and the Legal Representative shall keep the Insurer informed in writing as promptly as reasonably practicable of all material developments in the Proceedings
(c) The following shall be conditions precedent to the Insurer's liability to make payment under this Policy:
(i) that the Insured shall at all times allow the Insurer direct access to the Legal Representative and any documents held by him and further that the Insured shall cooperate fully with the Insurer in all matters including but not limited to waiving all rights of privilege and confidentiality in favour of the Insurer
(ii) that the Insured shall unconditionally allow the Insurer (or its duly appointed agent) to inspect or to receive from the Legal Representative any information, document or advice whether privileged or otherwise and at the request of the Insurer shall instruct the Legal Representative to release to the Insurer the entire file of papers relating to the Proceedings
..
8. Policy Void or Voidable
In the event of misrepresentation, misdescription or non-disclosure of any material particular by the Insured in relation to either the formation of the contract for this insurance or the conduct of the Proceedings, the Insurer shall become entitled to avoid this Schedule ab initio forthwith upon giving notice of such avoidance to the Insured and the Premium paid to the Insurer shall be forfeited.
9. Third Parties
Any person who is not a party to this agreement has no right by statute or otherwise to enforce any term of this Policy
..
12. Communications
(a) All communications and notices to the Insurer shall be deemed to have been duly given if sent by first class post to the Insurer's address or the address of [the Funder] as set out herein.
(b) All communications and notices to the Insured or the Legal Representative shall be deemed to have been duly given if sent by first class post or facsimile to the last known address of the Legal Representative.
..
Termination
..
2. In cases where the Insurer is informed (or should have been informed) of any material development the Insurer may at its absolute discretion withdraw the benefit of this Policy and will have no liability to make any payment under this Policy from the date upon which the Insurer was notified or should have been notified of such material development. The Insurer shall provide the Insured with a written notification that the benefit under this Policy has been withdrawn
5.10 On 28 February 2012, Malicorp began proceedings ("the Enforcement Proceedings") to enforce the Award in the Commercial Court in London (No 2012 Folio 284). Balsara acted for Malicorp in the Enforcement Proceedings under a conditional fee agreement.
5.11 On 29 February 2012 Flaux J made an order ("Flaux J's Order") giving permission under the Arbitration Act 1996 s 101 to Malicorp to enforce the Award in the same manner as a judgment, subject to the right of Egypt to apply within 10 weeks of being served with the order to set that order aside.
5.12 In about July 2012 Mr Karmakar left Balsara and joined Saunders. Shortly thereafter, Malicorp transferred its instructions in connection with the Enforcement Proceedings to Saunders, who filed a Notice of Change of Solicitors on 2 August 2012.
5.13 On 15 October 2012, Egypt applied to set aside Flaux J's Order.
5.14 On 16 October 2012, Saunders sent a retainer letter to Malicorp ("the Retainer Letter") which set out the basis on which Saunders would act for Malicorp in connection with the Enforcement Proceedings.
5.14.1 Paragraph 1 of that letter, headed "Our Client", stated:
Our client will be the party to whom this letter is addressed. We will not be responsible for providing services to any other party. We will be seeking instructions from you and, as per your instructions, from Mr Paul Towey (whilst acting on your instructions given as the Director of Malicorp and on your behalf) in the conduct of this matter but if you want us to seek instructions from you alone or anybody else on your behalf then please let us have your written instructions identifying that individual and authorising us to seek his instructions with regard to this matter.
5.14.2 Paragraph 2 of that letter indicated that Mr Karmakar would "have ultimate responsibility for your work" and would "be primarily responsible for providing services to you in this matter".
5.14.3 Paragraph 3 of that letter, headed "The services we are retained to provide" stated (inter-alia):
It is always difficult to estimate the exact range of charges and costs that you may be required to meet in pursuing a claim against any party (see below). As we have taken over the conduct of this matter from [Balsara] and as we are continuing to act under [the Balsara Funding Agreement] our entitlement to receive further costs from you for work done in this matter will continue to be determined by the terms as agreed in that funding agreement.
5.14.4 Paragraph 4 of that letter, headed "Charges and expenses - Third Party Funding and Partial Conditional Fee Agreement" set out the terms of the conditional fee agreement between Malicorp and Saunders.
5.15 On 20 December 2012, Malicorp, Saunders and the Funder entered into the Saunders Funding Agreement, the material terms of which are set out later in this judgment.
5.16 It is Mr Hall's case that, at about this time, Gable (acting through the Funder) issued a further Policy Endorsement noting that Balsara had been replaced by Saunders as Legal Representative for the purposes of the ATE Policy. Mr Hall has, however, been unable to produce any copy of that further Policy Endorsement and the Solicitors do not accept (even for the purposes of this application) that any such endorsement was issued.
5.17 On about 11 January 2013, Saunders obtained a copy in English of a judgment handed down on 5 December 2012 by the Cairo Court of Appeal ("the Cairo Court of Appeal Judgment"). The Cairo Court of Appeal Judgment held that, as a matter of Egyptian law, the Award was void and of no effect on the basis that it had been delivered by only two of the three appointed arbitrators.
5.18 According to Mr Hall:
5.18.1 On 17 January 2013, Mr Karmakar advised the Funder that the Cairo Court of Appeal judgment appeared, at first glance, to reduce Malicorp's prospects of succeeding in the Enforcement Proceedings. However, on 20 February 2013, Mr Karmakar informed the Funder that Malicorp's Egyptian counsel had "a bullish view" on the prospects of a successful appeal to the Court of Cassation against the Cairo Court of Appeal Judgment. On that basis, Mr Karmakar advised the Funder that it was his view that Malicorp's prospects of succeeding in the Enforcement Proceedings had not changed.
5.18.2 On 31 May 2013, Mr Charles Hollander QC and Mr Gerard Rothschild from Brick Court Chambers gave advice in a telephone consultation with Mr Karmakar, to the effect that Malicorp's prospects of success in the Enforcement Proceedings were not good. Mr Karmakar did not inform the Funder (or Gable) of this advice.
5.19 On 26 July 2013, Saunders and Malicorp jointly submitted a further "ATE Insurance and Litigation Funding Proposal Form" ("the Second Proposal Form") to the Funder. This sought additional funding of £471,040. The Second Proposal Form was signed by Mr Towey on behalf of Malicorp and by Mr Karmakar on behalf of Saunders.
5.19.1 Under the heading "Please state your views as to the prospects of success", the box labelled "65%" was marked with a cross
5.19.2 Under the heading "What do you consider to be the weaknesses in your case?", Malicorp and Saunders stated:
An application to enforce the award in France was refused. Subsequently the award was recently declared a nullity by the Cairo Court of Appeal. This latest decision of the Cairo Court of Appeal has been challenged on appeal to the Court of Cassation in Egypt. We have received the signed opinion from Doctor Hassam Issa, Professor of Commercial Law in Ein Shama University in Egypt confirming that the Cairo Court of Appeal's decision is wrong and it was his belief that Court of Cassation will cancel the lower court's ruling
5.20 According to Mr Hall, Mr Rothschild thereafter gave further pessimistic advice to Mr Karmakar, which Mr Karmakar did not pass on to the Funder (or to Gable):
5.20.1 On 1 October 2013, when Mr Rothschild advised Mr Karmakar that the Cairo Court of Appeal Judgment was "damaging" to Malicorp's prospects of success;
5.20.2 On 9 October 2013, when he advised in writing that, in relation to 3 of the five grounds relied upon by Egypt, success was heavily dependent on obtaining convincing evidence of Egyptian law;
5.20.3 On 20 May 2014, when he advised that the best likely result would be a stay of enforcement pending the judgment of the Court of Cassation - something which might take 8-10 years;
5.20.4 On 24 and 25 June 2014, when he advised that Malicorp's overall prospects of success in the Enforcement Proceedings were no higher than 50% and that a stay was the most likely outcome of the application.
5.21 According to the Solicitors, the Funder "failed or refused" to provide any funding for the Enforcement Proceedings after about 28 February 2014.
5.22 Egypt's application to set aside Flaux J's Order came on for hearing before Walker J on 16 September 2014. Malicorp had not put in any evidence of Egyptian Law, nor had it instructed counsel. Mr Karmakar applied for an adjournment, but his application was unsuccessful.
5.23 On 19 February 2015, Walker J granted Egypt's application. That effectively ended the Enforcement Proceedings. Walker J's judgment ([2015] EWHC 361 (Comm)) is reported at [2015] 1 Lloyd's Rep 423.
5.24 Thereafter, Malicorp sought an indemnity from Gable under the ATE Policy. Saunders made its files available to Plexus Law, the solicitors for Gable, who reviewed them. On 18 March 2016, Plexus Law wrote on behalf of Gable to Malicorp ("the Plexus Letter"). The Plexus Letter alleged (inter alia) that there had been breaches by "Malicorp/Saunders" of Conditions 1(b) and 4(b) of the ATE Policy in that:
.. Counsel's negative views were routinely ignored or withheld from [the Funder] .. As you know, Malicorp specifically instructed [Saunders] not to keep [the Funder] informed of developments, as it informed [Saunders] that Malicorp would keep [the Funder] advised ..
In consequence:
.. After careful consideration, and subject to consideration of any comments you may wish to make, we consider that Malicorp is not entitled to an indemnity under the [ATE Policy] ..
5.25 On 21 October 2016, Saunders replied ("the Saunders Letter") on behalf of Malicorp to the Plexus Letter. The Saunders Letter contained a lengthy attempt to answer the allegations made in the Plexus Letter, including detailed arguments about the changing and provisional nature of the advice received from counsel. Materially for present purposes, the Saunders Letter also:
5.25.1 Asserted that:
It is Malicorp's position that the [ATE Policy] did not contain any specific provision requiring the Insured or its lawyers to notify the Insurer about any discovery of any fact or advice which materially or adversely affects the Insured's prospects of success in the proceedings. It required him to advise on material developments in the legal proceedings .. and any negative advice from counsel .. is not a material development in the legal proceedings under this Policy ..
5.25.2 Argued that the Enforcement Proceedings had failed only because of lack of funding support, and that Malicorp had every confidence in the merits of the claim, but was deprived of the wherewithal to pursue it; and
5.25.3 Argued that the matters complained of in the Plexus Letter had caused no prejudice to Gable, and so did not entitle Gable to avoid the ATE Policy.
5.26 On 1 March 2017, the Funder went into Administration. On 1 August 2017 that Administration was converted into a Creditors' Voluntary Liquidation. On 4 January 2019 the Funder, acting by its Liquidators, assigned its claims against Malicorp and/or the Solicitors in relation to the Saunders Funding Agreement to Mr Hall.
5.27 The Claim Form in the present action was issued on 13 March 2019 in the Manchester Circuit Commercial Court. Particulars of Claim followed on 10 July 2019. The action was transferred to the London Circuit Commercial Court by the order dated 7 August 2019 of HH Judge Pearce. The Solicitors served their Defence on 27 September 2019 and issued this application at the same time.
The Saunders Funding Agreement
7.1 In the first, the Enforcement Proceedings are successful. In that event, Malicorp irrevocably instructs Saunders to receive the proceeds of the Enforcement Proceedings and, from those proceeds, to pay the Funder back any sums paid out plus the Success Fee payable in that event to the Funder. In clause 6.3 Saunders expressly:
.. acknowledges its obligations under this clause 6 and undertakes to the Funder to comply with its instructions and that it will notify the Opponent's solicitor or legal counsel that it is authorised to receive all Litigation Proceeds ..
7.2 In the second, either the Enforcement Proceedings are not successful or the amount recovered is less than the amount required to repay the Total Funding Amount. In that event, Malicorp undertakes to repay to the Funder the total amount of the funding received from it within 5 business days of receiving payment from Gable.
9.1 Although the Funder will, under the provisions of this Agreement, be responsible for the funding of the Legal Proceedings, [Malicorp] will instruct [Saunders] and have control of the Legal Proceedings, and the Funder will not have control of the Legal Proceedings.
9.2 Obligations of [Malicorp]
9.2.1 [Malicorp] shall:
..
9.2.1.2 Instruct [Saunders] to provide the Funder with any documents or information relating to the Legal Proceedings as may be reasonably requested by the Funder;
9.2.1.3 Instruct [Saunders] to provide the Funder, insofar as is reasonably practicable and proportionate, with copies of draft pleadings, witness statements and significant correspondence, prior to the issue of the Legal Proceedings;
9.2.1.4 Through instructions to [Saunders] and/or on its own account, keep the Funder promptly informed of any significant developments in the Legal Proceedings (including any settlement discussions, any offers received and any information, evidence or advice coming to the attention of [Malicorp] or [Saunders] which may be material either to the prospects of success of the claim or of enforcing any judgment or reward); and
9.2.1.5 Authorise [Saunders], without waving privilege, to provide all information requested by the Funder in respect of the Litigation.
9.2.2 Comply with the terms of the [ATE Policy] (including as to payment of any premium as and when due) and any duty owed to [Gable] and to supply to the Funder a copy of any correspondence from [Gable] threatening to or withdrawing cover.
…
9.3 The parties agree not to do or permit to be done anything likely to deprive each other of any benefit for which the other has entered into this Agreement.
9.4 [Malicorp] agrees that if the Funder requires any advice, given by [Saunders] to [Malicorp] in respect of the Legal Proceedings, to be confirmed by Counsel, [Malicorp] will instruct [Saunders] to instruct Counsel to provide an opinion to [Malicorp] on such advice and to provide a copy of such opinion to the Funder. The Funder agrees to bear the costs of such opinion.
Notwithstanding clause 9 of this Agreement, [Malicorp] undertakes to the Funder that it has instructed, and will continue to instruct, [Saunders] to provide the Funder with monthly reports on the Legal Proceedings [in substantially the form set out at Schedule 5].
However, the copies of the Saunders Funding Agreement that have so far been disclosed do not include any Schedule 5. Nor does the evidence which has been filed for this application suggest that any such monthly reports were in fact produced.
13.1 If [Malicorp] has not already done so, on entering into this Agreement, [Malicorp] will assign to the Funder the benefit of the [ATE Policy] and will ensure that the Funder's Interest in the [ATE Policy] is duly noted by [Gable], so that any payment in accordance with the terms and conditions of the [ATE Policy] is made by [Gable] to the Funder, in order that the legal liability of [Malicorp] in respect of the funding paid by the Funder to [Malicorp] may be repaid.
13.2 [Malicorp] undertakes to the Funder that it will, and it will procure that its officers, employees and agents will, comply with, and will instruct [Saunders] to ensure that they are fully aware of, all the terms and conditions of the [ATE Policy] so that the making of any payment under the insurance is not prejudiced by a failure on the part of [Malicorp] (or [Saunders]) to comply. In particular, [Malicorp] and [Saunders] will keep the Funder, and where applicable [Gable], fully informed of developments during the course of the Legal Proceedings and provide the Funder and where applicable [Gable], with all necessary information pursuant to the terms and conditions of the insurance ..
13.3 [Malicorp] irrevocably undertakes to the Funder to claim under the [ATE Policy] whenever it is able to do so under the terms and conditions of such insurance.
15.3 [Malicorp] warrants to the Funder that it is not (and each of its officers, employees or agents are not) aware of any information in its possession which is, or might reasonably be expected to be, materially relevant either to the outcome of the Legal Proceedings or to the recoverability by [Malicorp] from the Opponent of the Litigation Proceeds ("Relevant Information") and which has not been disclosed to the Funder. At the same time, [Malicorp] warrants to the Funder that, other than as has been disclosed to the Funder before this Agreement has been entered into, there has been no material change to the Relevant Information provided to the Funder during the due diligence process.
15.4 The warranties set out in clause 15.2 and 15.3 of this Agreement shall be deemed to be repeated, throughout the duration of the Agreement, on each day funds are advanced to [Malicorp] by the Funder. If, after the date of this Agreement, [Malicorp] (including its officers, employees or agents) becomes aware of any Relevant Information, [Malicorp] shall instruct [Saunders] immediately to inform the Funder of such information
18.2.1 The Funder is no longer satisfied with the merits of [Malicorp]'s claim in the Legal Proceedings;
18.2.2 The claim is no longer viable to fund; or
18.2.3 The Funder considers that there has been a material breach of this Agreement by [Malicorp] or [Saunders] ..
The correct approach to this application
The correct approach on applications [under CPR Part 24] by defendants is .. as follows:
i) The court must consider whether the claimant 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 his 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 for summary judgment, but also the evidence that can reasonably be expected to be available at trial ..
vi) Although a case may turn out at trial not to be really complicated, it does not follow that it should be decided without a 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 affect the outcome of the case
vii) It is not uncommon for an application under Part 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 that the parties have had an adequate opportunity to address it in argument, it should grasp the nettle and decide it. .. 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 a 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
He argued that the matters in issue in this case ultimately turn on a short point of construction of the Saunders Funding Agreement, which is highly unlikely to be affected by any evidence that is not already before the court. On that basis, Mr Shapiro urged me to "grasp the nettle" and to decide the case summarily.
vii) The court should be especially cautious of striking out a claim in an area of developing jurisprudence, because in such areas decisions on novel points of law should be decided on real rather than assumed facts
In Mr Mitchell's submission, the nature of the relationship between litigation funders and the solicitors retained by those whom they fund is a modern one on which there is little authority. This is a developing issue of considerable relevance in the new landscape conduct of litigation. Accordingly, a decision regarding the scope of that relationship should not be made on a summary basis now, but only after all of the evidence raised by the pleadings is examined at trial.
.. there can be more difficulties in applying the "no real prospect of success" test on an application for summary judgment .. than in trying the case in its entirety .. The decision-maker at trial will usually have a better grasp of the case as a whole, because of the added benefits of hearing the evidence tested, of receiving more developed submissions and of having more time in which to digest and reflect on the materials.
The outcome of a summary judgment application is more unpredictable than a trial. The result of the application can be influenced more than that of the trial by the degree of professional skill with which it is presented to the court and by the instinctive reaction of the tribunal to the pressured circumstances in which such applications are often made ..
Breach of the Saunders Funding Agreement
The pleaded case
41. The Claimant will say at trial that:
(a) On its proper construction having regard to the terms of the agreement as a whole and to the terms of the [ATE Policy], Clause 9.2.1.4 recorded an instruction from Malicorp to Saunders to keep [the Funder] promptly informed of any significant developments which might be material to the prospects of success of the [Enforcement Proceedings]; alternatively,
(b) On its proper construction, having regard to the terms of the agreement as a whole and to the terms of the [ATE Policy], clause 9.2.1.4 imposed an obligation upon Saunders to inform [the Funder] promptly of any significant developments which were material to the prospects of success of the [Enforcement Proceedings] ..
The submissions on behalf of the Solicitors
(i) The court construes the relevant words of a contract in its documentary, factual and commercial context, assessed in the light of (a) the natural and ordinary meaning of the provision being construed, (b) any other relevant provisions of the contract being construed, (c) the overall purpose of the provision being construed and the contract in which it is contained, (d) the facts and circumstances known or assumed by the parties at the time that the document was executed, and (e) commercial common sense, but (f) disregarding subjective evidence of any party's intentions ..
(ii) A court can only consider facts or circumstances known or reasonably available to both parties that existed at the time that the contract or order was made ..
(iii) In arriving at the true meaning and effect of a contract, the departure point in most cases will be the language used by the parties because (a) the parties have control over the language they use in a contract; and (b) the parties must have been specifically focussing on the issue covered by the disputed clause or clauses when agreeing the wording of that provision ..
(iv) Where the parties have used unambiguous language, the court must apply it ..
(v) Where the language used by the parties is unclear the court can properly depart from its natural meaning where the context suggests that an alternative meaning more accurately reflects what a reasonable person with the parties' actual and presumed knowledge would conclude the parties had meant by the language they used but that does not justify the court searching for drafting infelicities in order to facilitate a departure from the natural meaning of the language used ..
(vi) If there are two possible constructions, the court is entitled to prefer the construction which is consistent with business common sense and to reject the other .. but commercial common sense is relevant only to the extent of how matters would have been perceived by reasonable people in the position of the parties, as at the date that the contract was made ..
(vii) In striking a balance between the indications given by the language and those arising contextually, the court must consider the quality of drafting of the clause and the agreement in which it appears .. Sophisticated, complex agreements drafted by skilled professionals are likely to be interpreted principally by textual analysis unless a provision lacks clarity or is apparently illogical or incoherent.
(viii)A court should not reject the natural meaning of a provision as correct simply because it appears to be a very imprudent term for one of the parties to have agreed, even ignoring the benefit of wisdom of hindsight, because it is not the function of a court when interpreting an agreement to relieve a party from a bad bargain ..
(i) Terms are to be implied only if to do so is necessary in order to give the contract business efficacy or was so obvious that it goes without saying;
(ii) It is a necessary but not a sufficient requirement that the term that a party seeks to have implied appears fair or is one that the court considered that the parties would have agreed if it had been suggested to them;
(iii) Construing the words that the parties have used in their contract and implying terms into the contract both involve determining the scope and meaning of the contract;
(iv) Construing the words used and implying additional words are different processes governed by different rules;
(v) In most, possibly all, disputes about whether a term should be implied into a contract, it is only after the process of construing the express words is complete that the issue of an implied term falls to be considered because it is only after the construction exercise has been undertaken that the necessity question and the allied question whether the terms sought to be implied contradict the express terms of the contract concerned can be answered.
The concept of necessity must not be watered down. Necessity is not established by showing that the contract would be improved by the addition. The fairness or equity of a suggested implied term is an essential but not a sufficient precondition for inclusion ..
.. No term may be implied into a contract if it would be inconsistent with an express term ..
Finally, particular care is required when considering implying terms into a sophisticated and professionally drawn and negotiated agreement between well-resourced parties.
The submissions on behalf of Mr Hall
31.1 In the event that adverse advice was received from counsel about the merits of the claim:
31.1.1 That advice would, in the first instance be received by Saunders;
31.1.2 As Saunders would have known:
31.1.2. Malicorp would be under a duty under clause 9.1.2.4 of the Saunders Funding Agreement either itself to report that advice to the Funder or to instruct Saunders to do so;
31.1.2. Both Malicorp and Saunders would be under a duty under clause 4(b) of the ATE Policy to report that advice to the Funder on behalf of Gable;
31.1.3 Under clause 9.3 of the Saunders Funding Agreement, Malicorp and Saunders had both agreed "not to do or permit to be done anything likely to deprive [the Funder] of any benefit for which [the Funder] has entered into this Agreement".
31.2 Accordingly:
31.2.1 Saunders could not permit Malicorp not to report that adverse advice to the Funder; and
31.2.2 Malicorp could not prevent Saunders from reporting that adverse advice.
31.3 The correct construction of Clause 9.1.2.4 in its proper context is therefore that it contains an instruction by Malicorp to Saunders to report developments material to the prospects of success. Malicorp could pre-empt the need for Saunders to carry out that instruction by itself reporting material developments directly to the Funder; but it could only rescind that instruction by making such a direct report.
32.1 One of the benefits for which the Funder had entered into the Saunders Funding Agreement (as referred to in clause 9.3) was to ensure that Malicorp and Saunders did all that was necessary to comply with the terms of the ATE Policy and so to preserve the rights under the ATE Policy which had been assigned to the Funder and on which the Funder was relying as a source of repayment.
32.2 Saunders knew that non-disclosure of material information to the Funder on behalf of Gable would be prejudicial to the Funder's assigned rights under the ATE Policy.
32.3 Accordingly, in order to comply with its obligation not to permit Malicorp to fail to disclose material information, Saunders was obliged to disclose such information itself.
An alternative case
In particular, [Malicorp] and [Saunders] will keep the Funder, and where applicable [Gable], fully informed of developments during the course of the Legal Proceedings and provide the Funder and where applicable [Gable], with all necessary information pursuant to the terms and conditions of the insurance
This provision, Mr Mitchell submitted, contains an express obligation on Saunders to keep the Funder fully informed, which Saunders breached by failing to pass on the adverse advice received from counsel. Although the section of the Particulars of Claim headed "Reporting obligations imposed on Saunders" contains no reference to clause 13.2, that clause is set out in full earlier in the Particulars of Claim at paragraph 34 (albeit with the introductory words "By Clause 13.2, Malicorp[19] undertook to [the Funder] that .."). The allegation in paragraph 63 is simply of "breaches of the Saunders Funding Agreement", without reference to any specific provisions of that agreement. In Mr Mitchell's submission, this alternative basis for his client's case is therefore sufficiently pleaded in the Particulars of Claim, at least for the purposes of surviving an application to strike out or for summary judgment.
Analysis and conclusions
Breach of duty of care/breach of fiduciary duty
.. If a duty of the kind in question was not inherent in the contractual relationship, I do not see how it could possibly be derived from the tort of negligence ..
.. No doubt the fact that one person is placed in a particular position vis-a-vis another through the medium of a contract does not necessarily mean that he does not also owe fiduciary duties to that other by virtue of being in that position. But the essence of a fiduciary relationship is that it creates obligations of a different character from those deriving from the contract itself .. Many commercial relationships involve just such a reliance by one party on the other, and to introduce the whole new dimension into such relationships which would flow from giving them a fiduciary character would (as it seems to their Lordships) have adverse consequences far exceeding those foreseen by Atkin LJ in In re Wait [1927] 1 Ch 606. It is possible without misuse of language to say that the customers put faith in the company, and that their trust has not been repaid. But the vocabulary is misleading; high expectations do not necessarily lead to equitable remedies.
The claim in deceit against Mr Karmakar personally
The breaches of duty pleaded against Saunders above with the result of deliberate decisions on the part of Mr Karmakar to withhold material information from [the Funder]
Paragraph 67 of the Particulars of Claim, under the heading "Loss and damage" then pleads that:
.. alternatively as a result of the deceit pleaded above against Mr Karmakar, [the Funder] sustains the following losses ..
The claim is that Mr Karmakar, knowing he was under an obligation to make reports to [the Funder] on behalf of Saunders, did not make such reports and [the Funder] suffered loss as a result. That is a perfectly proper claim: JD Wetherspoon v Van Dr Berg[33] at [17] ..
.. JD Wetherspoon's real complaint is not that it was told lies at the time of the relevant transactions, but that the defendants kept silent about what was really going on. As a general rule mere silence, however morally wrong, will not support an action for deceit .. However, there are exceptions to that general rule. One such exception is (or at least may be) where the person against whom the claim is made has a duty of disclosure and fraudulently fails to do so: Conlon v Simms ..
.. A breach of the duty to disclose will give rise to the right to rescind the contract but, it is submitted, not to a right to damages even if the other party kept quiet "fraudulently" in the sense of intended deliberately to mislead the claimant. In Conlon v Simms[35] it was said that:
" .. where the breach of the duty of disclosure is fraudulent, a party to whom the duty is owed who suffers loss by reason of the breach may recover damages for that loss in the tort of deceit .. Non-disclosure where there is a duty to disclose is tantamount to an implied representation that there is nothing relevant to disclose."
This, with respect, is very doubtful, and cannot be supported on the ground given. It is well established that breach of the duty of disclosure in insurance does not of itself give rise to an action for damages. A negligent failure to speak may give rise to liability in damages but only if there is a "voluntary assumption of responsibility". If silence when there is a duty to disclose amounted to an implied representation that there was nothing to disclose, that would make even a non-fraudulent non-disclosure into a positive misrepresentation for which damages could be recovered under Misrepresentation Act 1967 s.2(1), unless the non-disclosing party could show that he had reasonable grounds for believing that there was nothing to disclose, whereas it has been held that if the non-disclosure is negligent, it does not give rise to liability in damages under Misrepresentation Act 1967 s.2(1) or, without more, at common law.
It is almost certain that without a voluntary assumption of responsibility there is no liability in damages for merely keeping silent, and it is submitted that this is so even if there was an intention to deceive.
The elements of the tort of deceit are well known. In essence they require: (1) a representation, which is (2) false, (3) dishonestly made, and (4) intended to be relied on and in fact relied on.
Each of those elements of this aspect of Mr Hall's claim ought therefore to have been distinctly pleaded with the required particularity and precision (making due allowance for the asymmetry of information resulting from the fact that Mr Hall has not yet had the benefit of disclosure[39]) in Mr Hall's Particulars of Claim.
The personal claim on behalf of Mr Hall
Other reason for a trial
Conclusion
Note 1 [2007] EWHC 1044 (Ch), [2007] PNLR 28. [Back] Note 2 [2009] EWHC 339 (Ch); approved by the Court of Appeal in AC Ward & Son v Catlin (Five) Ltd [2009] EWCA Civ 1098, [2010] Lloyd's Rep IR 301 at [24], per Etherton LJ, and in Global Asset Capital Inc and another v Aabar Block SARL [2017] EWCA Civ 37, [2017] 4 WLR 163 at [27], per Hamblen LJ. [Back] Note 3 [2006] EWCA Civ 661, [2007] FSR 3 at [5]-[6]. [Back] Note 4 Set out in paragraph 8 above. [Back] Note 5 The relevant parts of which are set out in paragraph 5.14 above. [Back] Note 6 Set out in paragraph 11 above. [Back] Note 7 Set out in paragraph 8 above. [Back] Note 8 [2015] UKSC 36, [2015] AC 1619. [Back] Note 9 [2017] UKSC 24, [2017] AC 1173. [Back] Note 10 [2020] EWHC 58 (Comm) at [26] [Back] Note 11 [2015] UKSC 72, [2016] AC 742. See also Ali v Petroleum Company of Trinidad and Tobago [2017] UKPC 2, [2017] ICR 531. [Back] Note 12 Fn 10 above at [27] [Back] Note 13 Set out in paragraph 5.9 above. [Back] Note 14 See clause 13.1 of the Saunders Funding Agreement, set out in paragraph 10 above. [Back] Note 16 [2009] UKSC 2, [2010] 1 All ER 571 at [9]. [Back] Note 17 See also to similar effect per Lord Collins JSC at [37], cited with approval in BNY Mellon Corporate Trustee Services Ltd v LBG Capital No 1 plc [2016] UKSC 29, [2016] 2 All ER (Comm) 851 at [31] per Lord Neuberger of Abbotsbury PSC. [Back] Note 18 Clause 13 is set out more fully in paragraph 10 above. [Back] Note 19 Emphasis added. [Back] Note 20 See paragraph 5.5 above. [Back] Note 21 See paragraph 5.7 above. [Back] Note 22 See paragraph 5.16 above. [Back] Note 23 Ali v Petroleum Company of Trinidad and Tobago [2017] UKPC 2, [2017] ICR 531 at [7], per Lord Hughes JSC. [Back] Note 24 Arnold v Britton (fn 8 above) at [20] per Lord Neuberger of Abbotsbury PSC. [Back] Note 25 See H G Beale and others, Chitty on Contracts (33rd edn, Sweet & Maxwell 2018) at [14-024]. [Back] Note 26 See eg Tophams Ltd v Earl of Sefton (No 2) [1967] AC 50 at 83, per Lord Wilberforce: “One can, of course, say something as to what is involved in to " permit ": clearly knowledge of what is to be permitted is an essential though not necessarily a sufficient ingredient.Clearly, too, the word presupposes the possibility of control over the actions of the other person concerned” (emphasis added). [Back] Note 27 [1992] 1 AC 294 at 303. See also Tai Hing Cotton Mill Ltd v Liu Chong Hing Bank Ltd [1986] AC 80 at 107-108, per Lord Scarman (“Their Lordships do not, however, accept that the parties' mutual obligations in tort can be any greater than those to be found expressly or by necessary implication in their contract”), as explained by Lord Goff in Henderson v Merrett Syndicates Ltd (No.1) [1995] 2 AC 145 at 186. [Back] Note 28 For the tests that may be used in deciding whether a defendant sued as causing pure economic loss to a claimant owed a duty of care in tort, see eg Customs and Excise Comrs v Barclays Bank plc [2007] 1 AC 181 at [4], and the discussion in Property Alliance Group Ltd v Royal Bank of Scotland plc [2018] EWCA Civ 355, [2018] 1 WLR 3529 at [58] to [67]. [Back] Note 30 [2005] UKHL 8, [2005] 1 WLR 567. [Back] Note 31 See eg John McGee (ed), Snell’s Equity (34th edn, Sweet & Maxwell 2019) at [7-005]. [Back] Note 32 [1995] 1 AC 74 at 98. [Back] Note 34 Fn 25 above at [7-159]. [Back] Note 35 [2006] EWCA Civ 1749, [2008] 1 WLR 484 at [130], per Jonathan Parker LJ, with whom Moore-Bick and Ward LJJ agreed. [Back] Note 36 Fn 28 above at [158]. [Back] Note 37 See eg Three Rivers District Council v Bank of England [2001] UKHL 16, [2003] 2 AC 1 at [184] to [186] per Lord Millett [Back] Note 38 [2006] EWCA Civ 1601, [2007] 1 All ER (Comm) 667 at [251]. See also to similar effect Hayward v Zurich Insurance Co plc [2016] UKSC 48, [2018] 2 All ER (Comm) 755 at [58], per Lord Toulson. [Back] Note 39 See eg Ventra Investments Ltd v Bank of Scotland Plc [2019] EWHC 2058 (Comm) at [22] to [25] and at [36] to [41]. [Back] Note 40 “Non-disclosure where there is a duty to disclose is tantamount to an implied representation that there is nothing relevant to disclose”: Conlon v Simms (fn 35 above). Cf Deutsche Bank AG and others v Unitech Global Limited, Unitech Limited 2013] EWHC 2793 (Comm), [2014] 2 All ER (Comm) 268 at [54] to [56], per Teare J (affmd without discussion of this point [2016] EWCA Civ 119, [2016] 1 WLR 3598). [Back] Note 41 I am here concerned only with what needs to be pleaded in order to assert such a claim. For the argument that a claim on this basis is, in any event, unsustainable in law, even if adequately pleaded, see paragraph 63 above. [Back]