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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 >> Bains v Arunvill Capital Ltd & Anor [2020] EWCA Civ 545 (23 April 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2020/545.html Cite as: [2020] EWCA Civ 545 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS
CHANCERY APPEALS (ChD)
MR JUSTICE FANCOURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
Lord Justice Moylan
and
Mr Justice Mann
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Mr Jas Bains |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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(1) Arunvill Capital Limited (2) Hollbeach Solutions LLP |
Respondents |
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Mr A McCluskey (instructed by Macfarlanes LLP) for the Respondents
Hearing dates: 13th February 2020
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Crown Copyright ©
Covid-19 Protocol: This judgment was handed down remotely by circulation to the parties' representatives by email, release to BAILII and publication on the Courts and Tribunals Judiciary website. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 10:30am 23rd April 2020.
Lord Justice Moylan:
Background
"This Agreement may be terminated by either Party in the event of the other Party having materially breached any of the provisions of this Agreement and not having remedied such breach within 21 days after the service of written notice by the first Party requiring the same to be remedied."
"I am writing to advise you that Arunvill … believes, that by your actions, you are in material breach of the Consultancy Agreement …
In particular it has come to the attention of the Directors … that you have both verbally and in writing, advised of your intention not to perform your contractual obligations under the Agreement (namely, the provision of Services to the Company, as set forth in Clause 2.1).
The Company therefore submits that you are in breach of Clause 3.4 of the Agreement. By this letter the Company hereby serves you notice and requests that you remedy such breach within the timeframe set forth in the Agreement, such timeframe commencing as of the date of deemed receipt of this notice."
"Mr Bains does not accept that he advised Arunvill … both verbally and in writing of an intention not to perform his contractual obligations …
Without prejudice to the above, Mr Bains confirms that he does intend to perform his contractual obligations under the … Agreement and therefore you should consider a breach (if any) remedied."
The Judgments Below
"129 … the claimant was plainly not ready, willing and able to work, and his empty assertion of his readiness was not sufficient to remedy the breach. He had actually to provide some services. He was a retained consultant whose role … and status were such that he was not to be directed by his employers on a daily basis. On the proper construction of the Arunvill Agreement the services which the claimant was to provide to the first defendant were services the precise nature and extent of which he was, in a sense, to determine himself. They submit that there is no evidence of him having done any further work after service of the notice …"
"130 … The fact that it refers to a refusal to provide services in the future does not mean, in my judgment, that it is incapable of constituting a breach of the agreement. A refusal to work is, in my judgment, a refusal to provide the services in clause 2.1, identified in the notice. There was, therefore, a breach of clause 3.4 of the Arunvill Agreement and it was right, therefore, that the defendant ask the claimant to remedy the breach. The proper remedy in the circumstances of this case is not merely the communication of an intention to work in an unspecified way, but it is to continue to provide the services which the claimant was contracted to provide under the Arunvill Agreement."
He then considered what had happened and whether the claimant had provided the services he was contracted to provide within the 21-day period. His conclusion was as follows:
"131 The evidence shows that the claimant did not in fact work, nor attempt to do so: he did not provide the "Services". The real cause may be that, of course, for the reasons I have already explained, it was not possible for him to provide the "Services" because the NCS were not capable of being effectively structured or implemented. Perhaps the truth of that suggestion lies in the fact that when Mr Davidson described what the claimant had been doing in the course of his retainer, no emphasis at all was placed on the structuring or implementation of the NCS but on other things he was doing, but he did not, in any event, do those other things either in the period after the notice of termination had been served. In those circumstances, the Arunvill Agreement terminated on 26th April, 21 days after service of the notice.""
"i) The material breach of contract, viz. refusing to continue to provide the Services, was remedied by letter from the appellant's solicitors dated 20 April 2016, stating that he did intend to perform his contractual obligations, and that the Judge was wrong to conclude that performance of the Services was also required within the 21 day period in order to remedy the breach;
ii) Alternatively, if that did not amount to a remedy, the Judge was wrong to conclude that the appellant had to provide the Services thereafter, in order to remedy the breach, because Arunvill did not require him to provide any services, having rejected the strategies that he had previously devised. "
The latter argument was not pursued in the appeal to this court.
"20 I reject the argument that the letter of 20 April 2016 remedied the breach and do not accept the equestrian analogy. The background to the breach notice as found by the Judge was the following. First, the obligation of the appellant to provide the Services was not dependent on any cooperation or input of Arunvill. Second, Arunvill had declined to make use of the NCS that the appellant had devised, on the ground that they amounted to a fraud. Third, the appellant had been doing other work for Arunvill, since the rejection of the NCS, though Arunvill had refused to accept that the expenses of his trip to Hong Kong in early 2016 were their responsibility on the ground that he went there for his own purposes. Fourth, Arunvill had decided by early 2016 that it was unwilling to continue to employ the appellant. Fifth, the reason why the appellant said that he would not perform his contractual obligations was that Arunvill would not pay his bonus, a profit share and/or his expenses. Sixth, the appellant made an unequivocal statement in a meeting of 24 February 2016 that he would not provide any more Services to either of the respondents until he was paid the sums that he claimed were due. The Judge found that he "plainly showed an intention no longer to perform his obligations for either Hollbeach or Arunvill unless he were paid …" There is no challenge by the appellant to any of these conclusions.
21 The breach notice was therefore given to the appellant at a time when he had already ceased to perform his contractual obligations and was refusing to provide the Services. He should have been, but was not, providing the Services to Arunvill. The notice stated that, by his actions, the appellant was in material breach, in particular by advising of his intention not to perform his contractual obligations. The material breach specified is therefore not, properly construed, simply that the appellant had indicated that he would not work in future. It is that the appellant was refusing to resume work for Arunvill. In those circumstances, a remedy of the breach required the appellant not just to write a letter saying that he would perform in future, and then wait to be asked to do something, but to resume work within the 21-day period. The letter was a statement intended to countervail previous contrary statements and was asserted to be a remedy of the breach, but it was at best (if taken at face value) an indication that the appellant would work if and when asked to do something.
22 There was a live issue at trial as to whether the appellant was only obliged to provide the Services with the input or cooperation of Arunvill or whether his obligation was freestanding. The appellant's case was the former, but the Judge found for Arunvill. Accordingly, to remedy the refusal to work, the appellant had to start providing the Services, not wait for Arunvill to instruct him to do something.
23 Mr Davidson's equestrian analogy can therefore be seen to be a false analogy. The true analogy is with a jockey whose contract obliges him to exercise the trainer's racehorses on a daily basis, not just to ride in races as and when requested to do so. In such circumstances, the jockey would not remedy his breach of contract by stating that he would perform but not in fact doing so. By the end of the 21-day period, it would be apparent that the letter was no more than a piece of paper and that the breach had not been remedied at all."
Submissions
Determination
"2. Deposit
As security for the correct fulfilment of this Agreement the Buyer shall pay a deposit of 10% (ten per cent) of the Purchase Price within 3 (three) banking days after this Agreement is signed by both parties and exchange by fax/email. This deposit shall be placed in the Sellers' nominated account with the Royal Bank of Scotland PLC, Piraeus and held by them in a joint interest bearing account for the Sellers and the Buyers, to be released in accordance with joint written instructions of the Sellers and the Buyers …
13. Buyers' default
Should the deposit not be paid in accordance with Clause 2, the Sellers shall have the right to cancel this Agreement, and they shall be entitled to claim compensation for their losses and for all expenses incurred together with interest.
Should the Purchase Price not be paid in accordance with Clause 3, the Sellers have the right to cancel the Agreement, in which case the deposit together with interest earned shall be released to the Sellers. If the deposit does not cover their loss, the Sellers shall be entitled to claim further compensation for their losses and for all expenses incurred together with interest."
"[23] In my judgment the language of the MOA does provide that the sellers might recover the amount of the deposit in any event. That intention is to be found in cl 2 of the MOA, which expressly describes the payment as a deposit for the purpose of providing security for the correct fulfilment of the MOA. That indicates that when the deposit accrued due, as it did on 5 May before the MOA was terminated on 6 May, it accrued due unconditionally. The rights provided by cl 13 of the MOA are in addition to the right to claim the deposit as a debt."
"10. The basic fallacy in this argument is that limb 1 of clause 13 does not prescribe what is to happen if the deposit is unpaid. It does no more than to afford to sellers an express contractual right or rights exercisable in the event that the deposit is not paid. These contractual rights are to be distinguished from those which arise under the general principles governing discharge by breach. The right to cancel given by limb 1 of clause 13 is not dependent upon proof that failure to pay the deposit on time is repudiatory in nature. Indeed, until the decision of this court in Samarenko v Dawn Hill House Ltd [2013] Ch 36, it would not have been clear that a failure to pay the deposit on time is, without more, repudiatory of the buyers' obligations. Limb 1 of clause 13 therefore confers upon sellers a valuable contractual remedy over and above the remedy which they already enjoy at common law, the availability of which latter remedy is however attended by uncertainty. That uncertainty was greater before the decision of this court in Samarenko, and thus at the time when limb 1 was introduced. Whatever the position now, a contractual remedy of termination which has no need to characterise the defaulting buyers' conduct as repudiatory is a valuable addition to sellers' armoury. The circumstances out of which buyers' repudiation must be spelled are not always clear cut. A contractual right of termination exercisable upon the happening or non-happening of an event usually brooks of less argument. The express entitlement to compensation together with interest for losses and expenses is also at the least a valuable clarification of a right to which the sellers were in any event entitled at law, which is henceforth made available as an express term of the contract."
Mr Justice Mann:
Lord Justice Patten: