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The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions >> Brazier & Anor v. Bramwell Scafolding (Dunedin) Ltd & Ors (New Zealand) [2001] UKPC 59 (18 December 2001) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKPC/2001/59.html Cite as: [2001] UKPC 59 |
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Privy Council Appeal No. 7 of 2001
(1) Colin Joseph Brazier and
(2) Brazier Scaffolding Ltd. Appellants
v.
(1) Bramwell Scaffolding (Dunedin) Limited
(2) Bruce Leonard Harvey and
(3) Bramwell Scaffolding Limited Respondents
FROM
THE COURT OF APPEAL OF NEW ZEALAND
JUDGMENT OF THE LORDS OF THE JUDICIAL
COMMITTEE OF THE PRIVY COUNCIL,
Delivered the 18th December 2001
------------------
Present at the hearing:-
Lord Slynn of Hadley
Lord Hutton
Lord Hobhouse of Woodborough
Sir Martin Nourse
Sir Murray Stuart-Smith
[Delivered by Sir Murray Stuart-Smith]
------------------
Introduction
Background to the dispute
"3.3 Reefton, Brazier Scaffolding and Bramwell Southland Restraint of Trade
Reefton, Brazier Scaffolding and Bramwell Southland undertake that in consideration of the settlement each company will not for a period of five years from settlement date either directly or indirectly carry on or be engaged, concerned or interested either alone or in partnership with or as manager, agent or servant of any other person in any scaffolding business within [the Dunedin area].
3.4 Brazier Restraint of Trade
Brazier undertakes that in consideration of the settlement he will not for a period of five years from the settlement date either directly or indirectly carry on or be engaged, concerned or interested either alone or in partnership with or as manager, agent or servant of any other person in any scaffolding business within [the Dunedin area].
3.6 For the purposes of the restraint of trade covenants:
(a) An indirect interest in a scaffolding business includes actual or beneficial ownership of shares in a company or loans made to a business and specifically includes shares owned by a family trust or loans made by a family trust where the family trust directly or indirectly benefits Brazier, Harvey or either of their spouses or children.
(b) An interest in a scaffolding business includes the hire of scaffolding, plant or material to another scaffolding business."
(i) In Dunedin the real participants were BSL and United Scaffolding Limited (a company independent of the parties in this case); this was so until the arrival of the fourth defendant Able Scaffolding Limited (Able). Able was formed in September 1997 and its sole director and shareholder is Mr Murray Clydesdale (Mr Harvey's former partner in Bramwell Dunedin). The operations of Able and Mr Brazier's relationship to it lie at the heart of the case. A fourth company Boral Acrow had effectively dropped out of the picture.
(ii) In Invercargill there are two companies operating, Brazier Scaffolding and Bramwell Southland, both controlled by Mr Brazier, though this was not apparent in the case of Bramwell Southland.
The decision of the judge
(i) The evolution of the appellants' case. Originally on the application for an injunction no evidence was put in giving the sale explanation. This was not fully explained by Mr Chapman's evidence, but this omission was on his advice. This was followed by the different case disclosed in the affidavits of December 1997 and that which emerged at trial to the effect that this was a variation following Mr Chapman's advice. This change was necessitated by the disclosure of the solicitor's file.
(ii) The lack of documents of unquestioned authenticity evidencing a bona fide sale. There were no proper invoices; the invoices which were produced did not cover all the deliveries; these invoices did not tie up with the summation document; a number of faxes which appeared to be relevant to the relationship had been destroyed.
(iii) The contents of the solicitor's file was not easy to reconcile with the varying accounts of the sale contract.
(iv) There was very substantial oversupply. This was evident from the discrepancies between the invoices and the summation document; the fact that there had been other documents in relation to which there were no records; there was evidence that on four sites alone much more Anglok scaffolding was in use than could be accounted for in the documents produced.
(v) If this was a genuine sale it was not properly dealt with in the accounting documents of Brazier Scaffolding or Able. GST was not accounted for by Brazier Scaffolding and not claimed as the in-put tax by Able, thereby losing $22,000. The explanation for this was incredible.
(vi) Deliveries continued to be made after the issue of the injunction.
(vii) A number of apparently relevant entries in Mr Brazier's diary were obliterated. The explanation for this was incredible.
(viii) There were a number of other pieces of circumstantial evidence which pointed to the same conclusion, including the fact that Mr Brazier's interest in both Bramwell Dunedin and Bramwell Southland was not disclosed to the public.
"Mr Brazier, in any event, must be treated as in essence the proprietor of all or some of the shares in Able with Mr Clydesdale (in respect of those shares) just a front for him so that, in that sense, Mr Brazier is, thereby, interested or concerned in the business of Able." (Vol. 1 p 397)
"Where the Court has jurisdiction to entertain an application for an injunction or specific performance, it may award damages in addition to, or in substitution for, an injunction or specific performance."
"The power given is to award damages to the party injured, either in addition to or in substitution for an injunction. If the damages are given in addition to the injunction they are to compensate for the injury which has been done and the injunction will prevent its continuance or repetition. But if damages are given in substitution for an injunction they must necessarily cover not only injury already sustained but also injury that would be inflicted in the future by the commission of the act threatened. If no injury has yet been sustained the damages will be solely in respect of the damage to be sustained in the future by injuries which the injunction, if granted, would have prevented."