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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Clearwell International Ltd v MSL Group Holdings Ltd & Anor [2012] EWCA Civ 1440 (16 November 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2012/1440.html Cite as: [2012] EWCA Civ 1440 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
SIR RAYMOND JACK
HQ11X00933
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE KITCHIN
and
MR JUSTICE PETER SMITH
____________________
Clearwell International Ltd |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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MSL Group Holdings Ltd Martin Clark Paulo Lauretti |
Respondents |
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WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr James Potts (instructed by Trethowans LLP) for the Respondents
Hearing dates: 12th October 2012
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Costs Judgment at bottom
Peter Smith J:
INTRODUCTION
THE DECISION BELOW
BACKGROUND
1) December 2006……….$2,500,000
2) December 2008……….$250,000
3) December 2009……….$625,000
4) December 2010………..$625,000
REVIEW OF THE EVIDENCE BY JUDGE
THE ISSUE
CHALLENGES TO THE DECISION
THE PLEADING POINT
"6 It was orally agreed at a meeting in London at the registered office of the Defendant at 1 Southampton Street, London on 12 December 20064 December 2007between Mr Stefanini, Mr Clark and Mr Lauretti that the licence fee payable by Weatherford pursuant to the Licence and Technical Services Agreements would be divided between Mr Stefanini, Mr Clark and Mr Laurettithe Claimantand Hydropathin the same proportion as their respective shareholdings in the Defendant, namely 13%, 13%26%and 74% and that this would in addition serve as their remuneration for services provided to Weatherford under the Technical Services Agreement. The said agreement ("the Fee Agreement") was made between Clearwell on one hand (acting through its directors Mr Clark, Mr Lauretti and Mr Stefanini), and MSL or Mr Clark, Mr Lauretti and Mr Stefanini on the other. It was understood by the parties that Mr Clark would receive the monies and provide support services to Weatherford through MSL.The Claimant andHydropath would invoice the Defendant annually fortheirMr Stefanini's share of the licence fee. On 9 February 2009 Mr Clark emailed Dalia Stefanini, Mr Nathan Steinberg, asking that Mr Lauretti's share of the licence fee could be invoiced by MSL to make it "...easier for Clearwell's accounts"."
6A. The parties knew that the licence fee from Weatherford would be payable in instalments. However the division of those instalments was determined by the Fee Agreement.
6B. Accordingly the parties to the Fee Agreement were:
(i) Clearwell, who would receive the licence fee from Weatherford; and
(ii) MSL, alternatively Mr Clark, who would receive Mr Clark's share of the fee from Clearwell;
(iii) MSL, alternatively Mr Lauretti, who would receive Mr Lauretti's share of the fee from Clearwell;
6C. The terms of the Fee Agreement were that in consideration for the work undertaken in procuring the business with Weatherford and/or in consideration of the work done and to be done in operating the business arrangements with Weatherford, Clearwell agreed that:
(i) Mr Clark alternatively MSL would receive 13% of the licence fee.
(ii) Mr Lauretti alternatively MSL would receive 13% of the licence fee.
(iii) Mr Stefanini alternatively Hydropath would receive 74% of the licence fee".
Clearwell did not oppose the amendments and re-pleaded its Defence to them.
GROUNDS 4-5
"80 Perhaps more importantly, the meaning to be ascribed to words passing between parties will depend, often very much, on their factual context. This is particularly true in a case such as this, where a very taciturn farmer, given to indirect statements, made remarks obliquely referring to his intention with regard to his farm after his death. At trial, there was much evidence about the relationship between Peter and David, and about Peter's character. Consequently, the Deputy Judge was far better able than any appellate tribunal (even with the benefit of transcripts of the evidence) to assess not only how the statements would have been intended by Peter and understood by David, but also whether any such understanding and any subsequent reliance by David were reasonable. His very full and careful judgment demonstrates that the Deputy Judge took full advantage of this ability, as the observations of Lloyd LJ at http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2008/732.html[2008] EWCA Civ 732, para 66 effectively acknowledge.
81 That does not of course, mean that the Court of Appeal had no power to reverse the first instance decision on the ground that David's understanding of, or reliance on, Peter's statements was unreasonable. However, particularly in a case such as this, where the facts are unusual and the first instance judge has made full and careful findings, an appellate court should be very slow indeed to intervene. It may well be that the Court of Appeal took the view, advanced before your Lordships, that the question of how Peter's statements should reasonably have been understood was a matter of law, and was therefore an issue on which an appellate court was freer to intervene than on questions of primary fact (such as what was said by Peter or how it was understood by David) or of inferences from primary fact (such as what Peter, who could not of course give evidence, intended when making the statements)."
GROUNDS 2 AND 3 ILLEGALITY.
"A company shall not make a distribution except out of profits available for the purpose".
"The provisions of this part are without prejudice to any enactment or rule of law or any provision of a company's memorandum or articles restricting the sums out of which or the case in which a distribution may be made."
"41. It is important to be clear how this part of the defence case has been put. It had to be put, of course, in the alternative to the primary case that there was no agreement. The defence case looked at the instalments of licence fee year by year, accepting that the payments which were made up to 2010 were made in respect of services provided by the directors in the relevant years and seeking to treat the final instalment in isolation. That is not consistent with the agreement as I have found it to be, namely a global agreement covering payment of all the directors' services to Clearwell whenever provided. As I have said, the defence at first put in issue whether Mr Clark and Mr Lauretti had provided any services in 2010. But their evidence that they had was not challenged in cross-examination. Neither side adduced any evidence as to the value of the services which had been provided by the directors prior to December 2006, nor as to the value of the services which might be expected after December 2006, nor as to the value of the services which were in fact provided after December 2006. "
42. In the present case looking at the circumstances as a whole it is clear that the overall object of the exercise was to get the directors' shares of the licence fees receivable by Clearwell to the directors in a tax efficient manner. That was to be done in the context that the directors had provided substantial services to Clearwell and were going to provide further substantial services, for which they expected to be remunerated. (I note here that the services could have been expected to continue until 2014 when the relevant patent expired. Mr Clark and Mr Lauretti will not be providing services until then because of the actions of Dr Stefanini as the controlling shareholder of Clearwell: no evidence was called on behalf of Clearwell that Mr Clark and Mr Lauretti were guilty of any wrongdoing.) It was those services of the directors which brought the licence fees to Clearwell, and so the licence fees were a reflection of the value of the services. It is also important that it was properly expected by the directors in 2006 that Clearwell would have substantial other income which would easily cover its future expenditure. It cannot be said that the amounts allocated to the directors by the agreement were clearly disproportionate to the services.
43. Mr Booth laid great emphasis on it being the claimants' case that the monies were payable regardless of whether the directors provided any services and the acceptance in evidence that the directors were not obliged to provide any services. I have considered these aspects in paragraphs 29 to 32 above. If I am right that the directors were obliged to provide their services, then this point falls away. If I am wrong about that, it was nonetheless an agreement made on the basis that the services had been provided and would continue to be provided. So Clearwell would be getting what it was paying for.
44. The case of Re Halt Garage was concerned with director's remuneration, but was a clear case because no services had been provided in the period in question because the director was ill. Most other cases have been concerned with the transfer of assets. Although MacPherson's case concerned pay, it turned on the insolvency of the company. No authority was cited which concerned issues similar to those arising here.
45. My conclusion is that it has not been established that the agreement of December 2006 involved an unlawful distribution of assets on the ground that the sums involved exceeded the value of the services being paid for. It was not the equivalent of a sale to the company by the directors of assets at an over-value. I conclude that the agreement was a proper one for the directors to make and that they were not in breach of their duties in making it. It was an agreement which was 'for the benefit of and to promote the prosperity of the company' – Re Lee Behrens, because it provided for the proper remuneration of its directors. So these last defences fail."
"A transaction will not be held to be a return of capital, he said, simply because it was a transaction with a shareholder; nor simply because a loss of capital has in fact resulted. Nor will the inadequacy of the consideration necessarily decide the matter. I agree that the cases cited by Mr Dugdale do support his proposition that none of the criteria mentioned by him will, taken by itself, determine the matter; but I accept Mr Ennor's counter-submission that the question which the Court must ask itself is – is this transaction in essence one in which the company divests itself of part of its undertaking in favour of a shareholder otherwise than in the course of a bona fide transaction entered into as a matter of contract, and not as a company-shareholder transaction? If this is the essence of the transaction, then it is in my opinion a return of capital."
Lord Justice Kitchin:
Lord Justice Richards:
Peter Smith J:
"The Appellant do pay the Respondents costs of the Appeal (including the costs of application for permission to appeal) summarily assessed in the sum of £24,948.00."