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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 >> Debt Collect London Ltd & Anor v SK Slavia Praha- Fotbal A S [2010] EWHC 57 (QB) (02 February 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2010/57.html Cite as: [2010] EWHC 57 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
Debt Collect London Ltd & Anr |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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SK Slavia Praha - Fotbal A S |
Defendant |
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Mr Thomas Keith (instructed by Eversheds) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: Friday 15th January 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Tugendhat:
THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE PARTIES
DISPUTED ISSUES OF FACT AND LAW
"12 One of the underlying principles of Czech company law, as regulated by the Czech Commercial Code (Act no. 513/1991 Coll.) is the principle of shareholder loyalty towards a company. Although this principle is not directly mentioned in the text of the law, it was expressly acknowledged in the case –law of the Czech Supreme Court (See Exhibit RM23). Thus it was there stated : "It should also be stated in this respect that legal theory has already concluded that the principle of the shareholder loyalty towards the company, which is the basis for all his obligation is one of the principles governing the Commercial Code. The principle of loyalty is an interpretation rule that must be used to construe the individual obligations is one of the principles governing the Commercial Code. The principle of loyalty is an interpretation rule that must be used to construe the individual obligations of a shareholder towards a company (see Cerná, S.: Obchodni právo. Aklová spolecnost. 3. díl (Commercial Law, Joint-Stock Company, Part 3), ASPI, Prague 2006, p 185 et seq).
13 The underlying principle of loyalty of a shareholder towards a company requires the shareholder to follow the aim for which the company has been established, to comply with its Articles of Associations and to respect the company's legitimate interests. The loyalty is the basis which must be applied to all conduct of a shareholder towards a company. The principle of loyalty has considerable practical implications, as follows: (i) it is a general rule within which framework the particular shareholder's duties towards the company are to be interpreted (ii) it can be a general regulation in situations which are not regulated in detail by statutory rules; and (iii) it can have a derogatory (that is, limiting) effect in situations where there is a special rule but its application will result in a breach of the loyalty obligation. The practical implication has been developed mainly in the German legal system but acknowledged also by Czech legal theory (See Exhibit RM24) and Czech case law.
14 It is an essential part of the loyalty duty to the company not to place the company in danger which is to an inappropriate degree and without justification.
15 In addition, Section 66(6) of the Czech Commercial Code (see Exhibit RM25) explicitly incorporated the consequences resulting, under certain circumstances, from a breach of the loyalty obligations by a shareholder, stipulating that the provisions of this law and special legal regulations on the responsibility and liability of the members of a Czech company's governing and controlling bodies also apply to persons who, based on an agreement, interest in the company or some other fact, substantially affect the company's conduct by having substantial influence over a company's business. The Second Claimant as a major shareholder of the Defendant would without doubt be a person with substantial influence over the Defendant's business." [emphasis added]
"16 … It is the Defendant's case that that amounts to conduct endangering the existence of the Defendant to an inappropriate degree and without justification in the circumstances of the Claimants knowing full well that the Defendant can only pay off the loans by selling players in the FIFA transfer windows.
17 It is obvious that the Second Claimant has decided to acquire the repayment of all its claims through the First Claimant to oppress the Defendant and use any judgement it may obtain for its own shareholder dispute with the company Key Investments AS.
18 The Claimants' demand for full repayment of any judgement obtained in these proceedings will very likely result in the liquidation or declaration of bankruptcy over the Defendant and be a clear and substantial breach of the general loyalty obligation of the Second Claimant as a shareholder (formally the majority shareholder) towards the Defendant. Such conduct is considered under Czech law to be against good morals and/or the principles of fare business conduct.
19 Any act which by its content or purpose violates or evades the law or is contrary to good morals is invalid and void under Section 39 of the Czech civil code [references are given and a copy is exhibited] the exercise of a right which contradicts the principles of fair business conduct".
"19 … It is submitted that the First Claimant as an assignee, cannot be in any better position than the Second Claimant. The mere legal device of an assignment cannot create a greater right than that employed by the assignor, as a matter of principle.
20 It follows accordingly that the claimants cannot, in the circumstances take steps leading to immediate liability for repayment of the loans, but must allow the defendant reasonable opportunity to pay and the claimants must affect an agreement with the defendant on reasonable terms to achieve that. In effect, the claimants must allow the defendant the opportunity, using its best endeavours, to sell players so as to provide funds to settle the loans and interest accrued to date of payment. The claimants are fully protected in the meantime by the accrual of interest".
"5 The principle of shareholder loyalty towards a company is one of the underlying principles of Czech company law as set out in Part II of the Czech Commercial Code and is applicable to all shareholders of a Czech company irrespective of the shareholder's nationality. This principle must be applied to all conduct of a shareholder towards a company as explained in my fourth Witness Statement, paragraphs 12-13. The fact that a specific contract concluded between the company and its shareholder is governed under English law by choice of law made by the parties has no effect on the general applicability of the loyalty principle to all relations between a company and its shareholders.
6 Accordingly, it is no answer to say simply that the loan agreements are governed by English law. One cannot ignore the relationship of the parties, which overrides any specific contracts they enter into. It is a relationship issue, not a contractual one. The First Claimant, as a bare assignee, cannot, it is submitted, be in any better position, in effect acquiring greater rights by virtue of the lack in its case of the behaviour standards which govern the Second Claimant, than its assignor.
7 Section 66b (1) of the Czech Commercial Code (see "Exhibit RM32") set forth that:
"Concerted conduct" (in Czech "jednáná ve shode) means conduct by two or more persons undertaken in mutual agreement with a view to acquiring or conveying or exercising voting rights in a specific person (entity) or utilising voting rights to exert joint influence on the management or operation of such person's enterprise or to elect that person's (entity's) statutory organ (or most of its members) or supervisory organ (or most of its members), or otherwise influence that person's (entity's) conduct. Under Section 66b (2) of the Czech Commercial Code concerted conduct means conduct under subsection (1) undertaken in particular by (a) a legal entity and its statutory organ or a member of such, or persons directly managed by such, a trustee (settlement administrator) or an administrator concerned with enforced administration, or mutually between these persons; (b) the controlling person and persons controlled by it, (c) persons (entities) controlled by the same controlling persons or (d) persons (entities) forming a holding type-group.
Under Section 66b (4) of the Czech Commercial Code persons involved in concerted conduct must meet the duties (obligations) arising there from jointly and severally…
9 Under Czech law the loyalty principle of the shareholder towards a company is also applicable to the persons and entities controlling the shareholder based on the concerted practice liability. The Second Claimant cannot get around the application of the loyalty principle by relying only on its "shell company" registered in Luxembourg in cases when all shareholder's rights and duties have always been effectively performed by the Second Claimant represented in most cases by Matthew Collacott and ENIC as the Defendant's formal shareholder is fully controlled and influenced by the Second Claimant". [emphasis added]
INTEREST AND THE DFA
"As I understand it well, we sign our "discounted…"; you sent us 900 th GBP in several payments and we should repay 1 mil. GBP. The deadline was 31.1.2006 interest to this date is "somehow" in the difference 100 th GBP and as we didn't repay it at 31.1.2006 we should calculate the interest from this date (under the same conditions like other loan contracts so I put it into the sheet)".
THE EVIDENCE OF MR MATOUS
"The defendant is not sought to incur the substantial extra costs of obtaining an independent opinion from a professor of Czech law, at this stage. No disrespect to the court is intended. The Defendant has very limited resources. The purpose of this witness statement is to demonstrate that there are real triable issues, and the Defendant has a defence under Czech law, given the relationship of the parties".
CONCLUSION