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England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions >> Transparently Ltd v Growth Capital Ventures Ltd [2022] EWHC 144 (TCC) (26 January 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2022/144.html Cite as: [2022] EWHC 144 (TCC) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND & WALES
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT (QBD)
7 Rolls Buildings, Fetter Lane London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
TRANSPARENTLY LIMITED |
Applicant |
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- and |
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GROWTH CAPITAL VENTURES LIMITED |
Respondent |
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Jamie Morgan (instructed by The Endeavour Partnership LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 19th January 2022
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Crown Copyright ©
Covid-19 Protocol: This judgment was handed down by the judge remotely by circulation to the parties' representatives by email and release to BAILII. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 26 January 2022 at 10.30am.
MRS. JUSTICE O'FARRELL:
Background to the dispute
i) an 'alpha' or baseline version of the product, comprising a first pass implementation of the functionality described in the SOW, to enable initial review and testing with end users, the resultant feedback to be reported to the developers;
ii) a 'beta' or final version of the product, comprising the fully developed software ready for service, incorporating all functionality described in the SOW and all lessons learned from the alpha version so that it could be operated in an unsupervised manner by customers free from non- trivial defects.
"2.6 the service provider shall, over the term of the agreement:
2.6.1 supply to the customer the work in accordance with this agreement and materially as set out in these statement of work; specifically, the bespoke software and additionally, as may be necessary and agreed to achieve the specification, the service provider shall supply the service providers software, the third party software and the open-source software
2.6.2 supply to the customer all documentation appropriate to the product software delivered under clause 2.6.1
2.6.3 supply to the customer the work pursuant to this clause 2.6 at the price set out in summary in the statement of work and specifically to schedule 1 and to the terms and conditions of this agreement."
"the aggregate price for the work as summarised in the statement of work and as calculated and subject to the terms and conditions of schedule 1 ("the commercial terms")."
"9.1 the commercial contract terms of this agreement are as given in schedule 1 and as in headline form here and in the statement of work, as of the date of this agreement:
9.1.1 a total, maximum contract value due to the service provider of £339,600; comprising
9.1.2 a cash sum payable by the customer of up to £200,000; and
9.1.3 an equity consideration payable by the service provider of up to £139,600, pursuant to clause 29.2 of schedule 1, by set off against a cumulative discount allowed on all invoices by the service provider, where such equity arrangement will be to the terms and conditions of the conditional equity purchase agreement referenced in the recitals of this agreement."
"the agreed total cost of £339,600 as assigned by the service provider to the work to be completed to deliver the product to the customer, in accordance with the statement of work in effect and of same date to this agreement."
"the accrued value of the discounts derived from the application of the discount percentage to the total net of taxes, of each commercial invoice submitted by the service provider to the customer over the term of this agreement."
"the percentage of approximately forty one percent agreed between the parties that shall be applied in the calculation of the cumulative discount; calculated as the maximum cumulative discount divided by the contract value, as both exist at the date of this agreement."
"10.1 the intellectual property rights in the bespoke software, including any derivative component of the service provider software integrated by the service provider into the bespoke software in such a way as to render the bespoke software non-functional or unable to meet the specification were it to be removed, shall vest in the customer immediately following the later of:
10.1.1 acceptance in accordance with clause 8; or
10.1.2 the payment by the customer to the service provider of:
10.1.2.1 the price, in full or as otherwise agreed by the parties, or as may result from the termination of this agreement pursuant to clause 18; and
10.1.2.2 of all other sums, including interest, third party costs and fees and expenses that are or would be due and payable under this agreement (which shall, for the avoidance of any doubt, include the equity consideration in accordance with paragraph 29.2 of schedule 1 and the terms and conditions of the conditional equity purchase agreement referenced in the recitals of this agreement);
and the service provider agrees to assign by way of present and, where appropriate, future assignment all such intellectual property rights pursuant to this clause 10.1 to the customer
10.2 the service provider shall do and execute, or arrange for the doing and executing of, each necessary act, document and/or any request that the customer may consider necessary or desirable to perfect the right, title and interest of the customer in and to the intellectual property rights in the bespoke software described in clause 10.1."
"18.1 without prejudice to any rights that have accrued under this agreement or any of its rights or remedies, either party may at any time terminate this agreement with immediate effect by giving written notice to the other party if: the other party commits a material breach of any term of this agreement the other party repeatedly breaches any of the terms of this agreement
18.6 other than as set out in this agreement, neither party shall have any further obligation to the other under this agreement after its termination
18.7 any provision of this agreement which expressly or by implication is intended to come into or continue in force on or after termination of this agreement, including, without limitation, clause one, clause 10, clause 14 to clause 17, and clause 18 shall remain in full force and effect
18.8 termination of this agreement shall not affect any rights, remedies, obligations or liabilities of the parties that have accrued up to the date of termination, including the right to claim damages in respect of any breach of the agreement which existed at or before the date of termination
18.11 on termination of this agreement for any reason, the customer shall immediately pay any outstanding unpaid invoices and interest due to the service provider
18.12 the parties understand that termination of this agreement will trigger a completion pursuant to the terms of the conditional equity purchase agreement, referenced in the recitals of this agreement
18.13 on termination of this agreement for any reason, the service provider shall, given settlement pursuant to clause 18.11 and completion pursuant to clause 18.12
18.13.1 deliver to the customer the product in full or as may exist in part, including all software, source code and any work in progress as may exist or as will be created up to and including the date of termination and
18.13.2 assign to the customer all intellectual property rights and grant all licences to such work pursuant to clause 10 "
"29.2.1 under the terms of the conditional equity purchase agreement, it has been agreed that the service provider will offer a discount to its price to deliver the product to the company and in return, the company has agreed to accept such discount in consideration of such shares in the company as may be calculated equivalent in value
29.2.2 the "discount percentage" shall be applied to the service provider invoices over the term of this agreement as given in illustration at full term, in the invoice and payment summary in clause 29.3
29.2.2.1 discount percentage: 41.1%
29.2.3 the cumulative discount shall be calculated over the term of this agreement as given in illustration at full term, in the invoice and payment summary in clause 29.3
29.2.4 maximum cumulative discount: £139,570
29.2.10 the customer agrees to pay the resulting net total cash value of this agreement, equal to (i) the total non-recurring costs payable less (ii) the cumulative discount accrued, over the term of this agreement (the "contract cash value"), in accordance with the invoice and payment schedule as given in illustration at full term, in clause 29.3
29.2.11 contract cash value (maximum): £200,030
29.2.12 for the avoidance of doubt
29.2.12.1 in the event of the cancellation of the project and/or the termination of the software development agreement pursuant to clause 18 then, without prejudice to the rights of either party under this agreement, the contract equity consideration shall be equal to the cumulative discount accrued against the project non-recurring costs, from commencement up to and including the date of cancellation or termination
29.2.12.2 in the event of the cancellation of the project or the termination of the software development agreement pursuant to clause 18 then, without prejudice to the rights of either party under this agreement, the contract cash value shall be equal to the cumulative cost for the work carried out by the service provider from commencement up to and including the date of cancellation or termination, reduced by the cumulative discount accrued up to and including such date;
29.2.13 the allotment of shares in the company, pursuant to this clause 29.2, will be strictly in compliance with the terms of the conditional equity purchase agreement of same date as this agreement and conditional on the execution, by the service provider on the date of completion, of a 'deed of adherence' to the shareholder agreement of the company"
"2.1 subject to the company's right to waive any condition in accordance with clause 2.2, completion shall be conditional on the following conditions and each condition to this agreement
2.1.1 there being an acceptance certificate or
2.1.2 the software development agreement having been terminated under the terms of that agreement and pursuant to clause 7; and
2.1.3 the agreed discount being equal to £139,570 or to a lesser amount only as agreed in and pursuant to clause 3.2."
"3.1 it is agreed that the consideration payable by the purchaser for the shares will be paid by way of set off against the accrued value of the agreed discount owed to the purchaser by the company at completion
3.2 for the avoidance of doubt, in the event that either the purchaser or the company terminates the software development agreement pursuant to clause 7, then the consideration shall be equal in value to the value of the agreed discount accrued against all work carried out by the purchaser up to the date of termination of such agreement."
"4.2 at completion:
4.2.1 the purchaser hereby applies for the allotment and issue of the shares to it and the company shall accept such application an shall issues such shares at the share price, on receipt of the consideration by way of set off in accordance with clause 3;
4.2.2 the purchaser and the company shall execute the deed of adherence in the form set out in schedule 1 to confirm the purchaser's willingness to be bound by the terms of the shareholder agreement."
"this agreement will continue in effect until the date of completion or if earlier, until that date that either the purchaser or the company terminate the software development agreement under the terms of that agreement, whereupon this agreement will terminate automatically, the consideration shall be calculated pursuant across 3.2 and completion will take place within 10 working days of such date pursuant to clause 4."
i) Clause 9 and Schedule 1 of the SDA provided that the contract price was a cash sum of £200,030 together with equity value of £139,570 in TL, calculated as a discount of 41.1% against each invoice submitted during the project, a total contract value of £339,600.
ii) Clause 10 of the SDA provided that intellectual property rights in the software would vest in TL following the later of (a) acceptance of the product by TL or (b) payment in full of the contract price, including the equity consideration.
iii) Clause 18 of the SDA provided that termination would trigger a completion under the CEPA.
iv) Clauses 3, 4 and 7 of the CEPA provided that, on termination of the SDA, the accrued value of the discount would be calculated and TL would issue to GCV shares in the company at the agreed share price in the CEPA up to the value of the discount within ten days of termination.
v) Clause 18.13 of the SDA provided that following termination for any reason, GCV would deliver to TL all software, source code and any work in progress, assigning all intellectual property rights in the same, subject to (a) payment of any unpaid invoices and (b) completion under the CEPA.
i) 41% of the alpha specified functionality and 10% of the beta specified functionality has been delivered but, this functionality contains a significant number of bugs, other issues and omissions that require further investigation and rectification;
ii) 33% of the alpha specified functionality and 14% of the beta specified functionality has been delivered in part but this functionality contains errors and defects as reported to GCV;
iii) 26% of the alpha specified functionality and 76% of the beta specified functionality has not been delivered; this includes functionality deferred to beta that has not been delivered and those areas of functionality within both alpha and beta listed in the SOW that have not been completed;
iv) the mobile and desktop native applications of the software have not been produced or delivered as required by Appendix B of the SOW;
v) GCV has failed to deliver to TL documentation relating to the software as required by the SDA, detailing matters such as final architecture, operating instructions, change control, error reporting, fault diagnosis, security policies and other matters.
i) during the project, TL required changes to the software and, as a result, the scope of the work significantly increased;
ii) the majority of the bugs identified by TL are functional changes or additions or changes to the project scope;
iii) TL was not prepared to make any additional payments in respect of the requirements that GCV considers to be outside the agreed project scope;
iv) as a result GCV stopped further work on the project from about April/May 2021.
" GCV has not fulfilled its obligations to deliver the completed works by the contracted date or at all.
Such software that has been released or made available [but not delivered since it is not accepted] is incomplete, defective and does not perform materially and substantially in accordance with the requirements of the contract specification or SOW. Software that has been made available is not fit for submission to the integration and interoperability testing by the Customer [part of the acceptance testing following GCV's alpha testing and beta testing and Acceptance certification process] prescribed by SDA clauses 7 and 8 and is not accepted. Such software that has been released or made available to TL on various dates that has been subjected to Functional Testing by TL is not ready for service as defined by the contract and clearly must have failed any reasonable alpha testing process carried out by GCV if any at all."
"GCV is therefore in material breach of contract as regards the Software Development Agreement and has repeatedly failed in the past to remedy breaches identified to it or which were obvious.
By this letter, Transparently is exercising its rights to terminate the Software Development Agreement
TL will also seek damages under SDA clause 18.8 and at common law and other relief including delivery up of the software and all related documentation for the software [and each version released to TL] as it has been developed to date including all software change and configuration control records and test specifications and test results from tests carried out by GCV to date.
GCV is required to and should now comply promptly with its obligations under SDA clause 18.10 and 18.13. This includes all provision of all materials, access codes and any other information to enable TL to secure, control and make use of the software hosting platforms used for this project.
GCV is required to and should now deliver up to TL the source code [all versions developed including any versions not yet released] and any related software development items immediately "
"By notice dated 25 October 2021 Transparently purported to terminate the SDA under its terms and on the basis of a repudiatory breach claiming that the CEPA was automatically terminated. Our client does not accept that a material breach of the SDA had arisen but waives its right to raise issue with the notice of termination and accepts that the SDA has been terminated. Alternatively, our client treats your notice of termination as itself constituting a breach of the SDA and/or a repudiatory breach, such that the SDA hereby stands terminated.
Under clause 18.12 of the SDA termination of the SDA triggers a completion pursuant to the terms of the CEPA.
Clause 4.2 of the CEPA compels Transparently to accept our client's application for the allotment and issue of shares to it and to provide a deed of adherence for our client to sign, which, for the avoidance of doubt, our client provides an engrossed copy of with this letter.
Our client stands ready to comply with clause 18.13 of the SDA upon completion pursuant to the CEPA and to deliver the product, including all software, source code(s) and work in progress as well as assigning all IP rights to Transparently and granting any necessary licences to the work."
TL's application
i) deliver up to the applicant all software source code and executable software items including any associated documentation produced by the respondent under the contract for software development made on 16 May 2019 made between the parties for the development of the intended 'Transparently' software product along with any design documentation and third party software items integrated with other software to create the version 1.1.20 of the software released in executable form to the Applicant on 18 May 2021 within [7] Days of this Order;
ii) deliver up to the applicant all software source code and documentation including test records for all versions of the Transparently software released to the applicant between December 2019 and May 2021 together with all project development records including any configuration management records within [14] days of this Order;
iii) deliver up to the applicant all necessary information and authorisation codes to enable the applicant to take effective control of the account or accounts held with DigitalOcean hosting the Transparently software product [Staging and Production Servers] and the Transparently Website within [3] days of this Order;
iv) take all necessary and reasonable steps to transfer the current GCV/DigitalOcean account(s) entered into for Transparently software and website hosting services to the applicant [or cause a replacement DigitalOcean account to be set up between Transparently and DigitalOcean] for access to the existing 'Transparently' servers within [7] days of this Order.
Applicable test
i) Is there a serious question to be tried?
ii) Would damages be an adequate remedy for a party injured by the court's grant of or its failure to grant an injunction?
iii) If not, where does the balance of convenience lie?
i) The overriding consideration is which course is likely to involve the least risk of injustice if it turns out to be wrong, in the sense of granting an interlocutory injunction to a party who fails to establish their right at trial or would fail if there was a trial, or alternatively in failing to grant an injunction to a party who succeeds or would succeed at trial.
ii) In considering whether to grant a mandatory injunction the court must keep in mind that an order which requires a party to take some positive step at an interlocutory stage may well carry a greater risk of injustice if it turns out to have been wrongly made, than an order which merely prohibits action, thereby preserving the status quo.
iii) It is legitimate where a mandatory injunction is sought to consider whether the court does feel a high degree of assurance that the claimant will be able to establish this right at trial. That is because the greater the degree of assurance the claimant will ultimately establish their right, the less will be the risk of injustice if the injunction was granted.
iv) But even where the court is unable to feel any high degree of assurance that the claimant will establish their right, there may still be circumstances in which it is appropriate to grant a mandatory injunction at an interlocutory stage. Those circumstances will exist where the risk of injustice if this injunction is refused sufficiently outweighed the risk of injustice if it is granted.
Serious issue to be tried
Adequacy of damages
Balance of convenience
i) TL has not identified an arguable case that it is entitled to delivery up of the software, source code and documents, so as to satisfy the court that there is a serious issue to be tried. On the contrary, the terms of the SDA and CEPA indicate that GCV has much the better argument on this issue. Therefore, the court does not have a high degree of assurance that TL will establish its right at trial.
ii) TL has produced incomplete and unsatisfactory evidence as to its financial position and its ability to raise funds, so as to demonstrate that it would collapse if the injunction were refused. The estimates provided by TL in its evidence show that it could quantify its loss so as to support a claim for damages by way of compensation. Therefore, damages would be an adequate remedy for TL if the injunction were not granted and it succeeded at trial. However, on its face, the limited financial information produced by TL indicates that it would not have funds to satisfy any award of damages to GCV. Therefore, damages would not be an adequate remedy for GCV if the injunction were granted and it succeeded at trial.
iii) The balance of convenience lies in maintaining the status quo. TL has a simple solution if the court does not order delivery up as sought; it can comply with its obligations under the SDA and the CEPA. TL can allot and issue the shares to GCV in return for which it will obtain the software, code and documents that will allow it to raise further funds and complete what it anticipates will be a very profitable project.