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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Chilli Developments Ltd v The Commission for the New Towns (Known as English Partnerships) & Anor [2008] EWHC 1310 (QB) (18 June 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2008/1310.html Cite as: [2008] EWHC 1310 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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CHILLI DEVELOPMENTS LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) THE COMMISSION FOR THE NEW TOWNS (KNOWN AS ENGLISH PARTNERSHIPS) (2) TEES VALLEY REGENERATION LIMITED |
Defendants |
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Tom Leech (instructed by Eversheds LLP & Dickenson Dees LLP) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 28 April to 9 May 2008
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Jack :
by clause 1.1.2, EP agreed that it would not during the period of each agreement 'invite tenders for or enter into negotiations for the sale, development letting or charging of the Property';
by clause 1.1.3, EP agreed that it would not during the period of each agreement 'allow any person to view, measure, survey or carry out site investigations on the Property unless required to do so by law ..';
by clause 4.1.2, Chilli and EP agreed that 'each owes the other a duty of good faith'.
'The Property' was the area of land adjacent to Middlehaven, to which the negotiations with Chilli for a development agreement related.
(1) During the period of the agreements as extended TVR and EP negotiated with, and provided prohibited information to, a consortium named Placemakers, or entertained a tender from Placemakers, for land including the Property;(2) During the period of the agreements as extended TVR and EP entertained a presentation from Placemakers relating to land which included the Property.
(3) In breach of the duty of good faith it was the intention of EP and TVR throughout the period of the agreements as extended that EP should not enter a development agreement with Chilli. A large number of matters were relied on in support of this allegation as to the intention of EP and TVR, and I will come to them in due course.
It is alleged that TVR induced EP's breaches of agreement.
"However the concept of a duty to carry on negotiations in good faith is inherently repugnant to the adversarial position of the parties when involved in negotiations. Each party to the negotiations is entitled to pursue his (or her) own interest, so long as he avoids making misrepresentations. ….. But that still leaves the question - how is a vendor ever to know that he is entitled to withdraw from further negotiations? How is the court to police such an "agreement"? A duty to negotiate in good faith is as unworkable in practice as it is inherently inconsistent with the position of a negotiating party. It is here that the uncertainty lies. In my judgment, while negotiations are in existence either party is entitled to withdraw from those negotiations, at any time and for any reason. There can be thus no obligation to continue to negotiate until there is a "proper reason" to withdraw. Accordingly a bare agreement to negotiate has no legal content."
(1) It is alleged that at a meeting on 29 October 2002 to discuss finance Mr Docherty was negative and dismissive. In fact following the meeting Mr Docherty sent an e-mail referring to an aspect of the scheme as innovative and interesting. He was not cross-examined about the meeting. I have already referred to Mr Docherty's view as to the likelihood of Chilli obtaining finance.(2) This refers to the availability of the Terrace Hill site, which I have already covered in paragraph 35.
(3) This refers to the suggestion made in October 2002 that Mr Brown might combine with Terrace Hill. It was pleaded that Mr Docherty knew that Terrace Hill would not be interested. This allegation was not pursued in cross-examination and there was no evidence to support it.
(4) This refers to the e-mail of 28 April 2003 (mispleaded as of 29 April). In it Mr Carr, the then Regional Director of EP stated: 'It is obvious that [Chilli] will not be offered a deal by Terrace Hill and that they continue to believe they have a worthwhile investment proposition. We all have doubts about that but I think unless we take [Chilli] seriously there is a danger we could have egg on our faces if [Chilli] manage to create jobs and investment elsewhere outside their home town, although I agree the chances appear slim. The way out of the impasse is to indicate to [Chilli] that a site could be made available ….. .' He ended 'If [Chilli] isn't successful, which is far more likely, then we have lost nothing and have been seen to have given a local entrepreneur a proper opportunity to make his case.' Chilli were given a considerable opportunity to 'make [their] case' but failed. Mr Carr's view that Chilli were likely to fail is not the same as a view that Chilli should be made to fail. Further, as I have said in paragraph 30, in a later email of 4 August 2003 Mr Carr made it further plain that he genuinely thought that Chilli should be given its chance, and asked Mr James to give it top priority.
(5) This is in effect a complaint that Chilli was offered no public funding. Chilli's proposal was that it would finance the development itself without public funding and that the development would make a profit. Placemakers have subsequently required 'gap funding'. That is a different matter to funding the project while it is in progress, which is what Chilli sought assistance with. Gap funding is required by Placemakers because they have calculated that the development will not make a profit, and so, if it is to go ahead, public money is needed to bridge the gap.
(6) and (7) In August 2003 Chilli was told it must make a formal request to be allocated a site. That is correct. I am unclear why this was necessary. It was not examined at the trial. It does not seem to have been of any importance.
(8) By letter of 15 August 2003 Chilli was told that delays were due to the reassessment of the Masterplan and were advised to appoint an appropriate development consultant. As I have stated the Masterplan was then being made and Chilli's problem was that Chilli was ahead of it. The advice as to a consultant was appropriate.
(9), (10 and (11) (9) referred to a letter of 12 September 2003 from Mr Brown to Mr Walker, the Chief Executive Officer of EP apparently complaining about the conduct of TVR. I was given no reference for it, and it does not appear to be included in the trial papers. It did not feature in the trial. (10) and (11) assert that Mr Walker agreed to support Chilli. That hardly suggests that EP were obstructing Chilli.
(12) This concerns guarantees and the Bank of Scotland. EP had always required a guarantee of Chilli's performance. The reason and justification was not investigated at the trial, but is may well have been that Chilli was a company with no funds or experience.
(13) This refers to the e-mail of 19 February 2004, which I have covered under 7A.1(iii) in paragraph 34.
(14) This refers to the problems of accommodating Chilli's design to the Masterplan, which were continuing in early 2004. They were not holding up the discussions of other matters. The Masterplan provided for three separate 'sugar cubes' on the Chilli site. Chilli proposed originally a single long building. A compromise was reached whereby three facades were inserted into the Chilli building. This was a considerable accommodation to Chilli.
(15) This is a complaint about Terrace Hill's exclusivity rights, and asserts that Chilli did not know about them. I refer to paragraph 35 above.
(16) This concerns the difficulties with the Royal Bank of Scotland in the autumn of 2004. The matters complained of were not investigated in evidence.
(17) By e-mail of 1 October 2004 Mr Egan stated; 'Simon's [Mr Brown] letter from the bank does look encouraging although I am slightly worried about the cost engineering that has clearly gone on and the issue of delivering quality.' Mr Egan was entitled to his view. The e-mail was not raised with him in cross-examination.
(18) This refers to the refusal of EP to offer a 7 year lease under the development agreement rather than a building licence. This was in accordance with EP's usual practice.
(19) This simply refers to Laing, O'Rourke' tender and their appointment.
(20) This raises a complaint about the purchase price of the land which Chilli would have been obliged to pay. Chilli had in fact been given a 'credit' against the price of £600,000 on account of the design changes required to meet the Masterplan. The land value which EP required followed a valuation by Lamb & Edge dated 1 February 2005. Mr Brown was refused a copy of the report. This may have been because of comments which EP did not wish Chilli to see. However by e-mail on 16 February Mr Buczynskij told Ms Gill that Lamb & Edge would happily talk to Chestertons – who had been retained by Chilli. That offer was not taken up. It is also complained that EP made the price of land a 'deal breaker'. They were entitled to do so. The figure was accepted by Chilli and matters moved on.
(21) This refers to the setting by EP of deadlines on 21 February 2005, to which I have already referred. It was essential for there to be progress with Chilli. The deadlines were later the subject of generous extension.
(22) The main complaint is as to the refusal to assist Chilli by a guarantee. I have already covered this in paragraph 21.
(23) This asserts that in a telephone conversation on 6 April 2005 Mr Brown asked Mr Docherty if he was aware of any incentive funding and that Mr Docherty told Mr Brown that he was not interested in Chilli developing the property, that he had told Mr Brown at the start that he would not be able to do, and ended by swearing at Mr Brown. Mr Brown made a note of the conversation, which did not include a reference to swearing. I think it unlikely that the note was made close to the event and I do not regard it as reliable. In his witness statement Mr Docherty said that he had no recollection of the conversation. He was not cross-examined about it. I think that there was a conversation in which Mr Brown asked Mr Docherty for assistance with funding, and Mr Docherty did decline. He may well have stated that he had always thought that Mr Brown would have difficulty with funding, as indeed he had. Given his view Mr Docherty is unlikely to have wanted to involve himself with Mr Brown's difficulties. But negotiations continued for another three months, with Chilli being given further opportunity to see if it could put a package together.
(24) This refers to the failure to respond to Ms Gill's requests for an extension to the lock-out agreement. Mr James said in evidence that following the termination of the second lock-out agreement TVR and EP acted on the basis that its spirit still applied. In fact they did not deal with any other party in respect of the land until after the negotiations with Chilli had been terminated. I conclude that TVR and EP did not wish to have a formal extension of the agreement, or a fresh agreement, because of the delays which had taken place and the difficulties which Chilli continued to face, but meanwhile they were not going to deal with the land over Chilli's head. That was a position which they were entitled to take: it was not unfavourable to Chilli. It would have been better is TVR and EP had stated what their position was. It is likely that silence was preferred because they did not want to be tied down.
(25) This refers to e-mails of 19 May and 20 May 2005. In the first Mr Gawthorpe reminded Ms Gill that EP needed both confirmation of who Chilli's alternative funders were and confirmation that the heads of terms were acceptable to those funders. He asked for the latter by close of business the next day, saying that otherwise the offer would be withdrawn. Ms Gill provided the confirmation the next day. It was wholly reasonable for Mr Gawthorpe to require this confirmation. If the new funders were not prepared to proceed on the basis of the heads of agreement, no progress had been made.
(26) On 26 May 2005 Ms Kenny, EP's financial structuring manager e-mailed Mr Brown requesting a list of information required to investigate Chilli's ability to carry out the development. It is asserted that all information was provided.
(27) This refers to Mr Buczynskij's e-mail of 26 May 2005 whereby he set deadlines including agreement of the terms of a development agreement by 30 June. This was sensible.
(28) This refers to concern at Chilli's design, which concerns were referred to in an internal note of 20 June 2005. These concerns were correctly raised because, as a result of the Laing O'Rourke tender being far above what Chilli had allowed, changes were proposed to the design. They were sufficient to require a fresh planning application.
(29) and (30) These refer to the setting up of the meeting on 30 June 2005 as a meeting to discuss design issues and the request that Esh attend the meeting. Mr Buczynskij's e-mail of 27 June, which is referred to, shows that there were wider issues than simply design. The Project Board's minute of 27 June refers to the meeting as 'being organised to view all aspects'. An e-mail from Mr Brown refers to the main focus of the meeting being to convince EP of the design changes and the financial implications. Complaint is made that Esh were asked to attend. The reason seems obvious to me: if the development had gone ahead as a joint venture between Chilli and Esh, Esh would have been the major partner.
(31) This refers to the meeting on 30 June 2005. It complains that Esh were asked to provide a guarantee, and Chilli was asked if it had alternative funding. As I have stated, a guarantee had always been required. It was sensible to make sure that Esh were aware of this. The complaint as to Chilli being asked if it had alternative funding probably refers to Mr James's intervention in the meeting. I will deal here with the meeting in rather wider terms than pleaded here. As I have stated in paragraph 24 the meeting began with discussion of the points as to design. At some later point Mr James spoke in strong terms about Chilli's ability to deliver the project. It was never asserted in terms that Mr James did this with the intention of persuading Esh that they should withdraw and so bringing to an end Chilli's participation: but that was the underlying suggestion. I am quite satisfied that the suggestion should be rejected. Mr James might be criticised for speaking out as strongly as he did, but he did not even come to the meeting with the intention of doing so. I refer to his evidence at Day 7 pages 67 and 68, which I accept. It seems that he is a plain spoken man and his exasperation at the lack of progress, as he saw it, took over. He was frank and straightforward in the witness box about it. What he said at the meeting was not in fact the reason why Esh withdrew: Esh's withdrawal came about as a result of their study of the figures. The other witnesses called by EP and TVR who were present at the meeting were much more reticent about Mr James's part than he was. I was troubled by this. Until Mr James was called it seemed almost that Mr Brown and his witnesses had been at a different meeting. It may be that what Mr James had to say made far less impression on the other EP and TVR attendees than on Mr Brown and his team. It may be that they were protective of Mr James. But this only matters if there was something akin to a plot to derail the negotiations. As I have said, I am satisfied that there was not. I am satisfied that the EP and TVR took part in the meeting with the wholly bona fide intent of seeing the way forward if they could.