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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Unicomp Inc v Eurodis Electron Plc [2004] EWHC 979 (Ch) (07 May 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2004/979.html Cite as: [2004] EWHC 979 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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UNICOMP INC |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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EURODIS ELECTRON PLC |
Respondent |
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Charles Harpum (instructed by Nicholson Graham & Jones) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 23rd April 2004
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Crown Copyright ©
"It is hereby agreed that any neglect or forbearance of the Landlord in endeavouring to obtain payment of the said several rents when the same become payable to enforce performance or observance of the said covenants or conditions and any time which may be given by the Landlord to the tenant shall not release or exonerate or in any way affect out liability hereunder."
"Until the expiration of the demise created by the above written Indenture or earlier the date of completion of assignment of the Lease with the Landlord's consent either without guarantor or with such guarantor as the Landlord shall be entitled to require pursuant to the Lease."
"Use reasonable endeavours to procure as soon as reasonably practical and in any event within three months of completion [of the share purchase] the Vendor [the Claimant] and each member of the Eurodis Group shall be released from the guarantees and indemnities given by them or any of them in respect of the obligations of the Company [CEM] as at the Completion Date and pending such release the Purchaser [Holdings] shall with effect from the Completion Date indemnify the Vendor and each member of the Eurodis Group and keep each of them fully and effectively indemnified from and against all liabilities in connection therewith… ."
"In consideration of the Vendor [the Claimant] entering into this agreement Unicomp [the Defendant] unconditionally and irrevocably guarantees to the Vendor as primary obligor and not merely as surety, that the Purchaser [Holdings] will fully and promptly perform and discharge all of its present and future obligations and liabilities (together referred to in this clause 7 as the "purchaser's obligations") under the agreement and undertakes that, if the Purchaser fails so to do, it will itself perform and discharge such obligations and liabilities and indemnify the Vendor against all costs, losses, damages expenses and claims suffered or incurred by the Vendor as a result of or arising out of any failure by the Purchaser promptly to perform and discharge any of the Purchaser's obligations."
"Further to our conversation, I enclose audited accounts for the year ended February 1997 for Unibol Ltd… . The final audited accounts for Unibol Ltd for February 1998 are not available yet but should be available within the next two weeks; they show a profit before tax of £700,000.
We are seeking the consent of the Landlord to assign the lease from CEM Computers Ltd to Unibol Ltd as CEM no longer trades and Unibol are the main occupiers of the building. We also need to release Eurodis Plc [the Claimant] from their guarantee. The ultimate holding company of Unibol, Uni Comp Inc, [the Defendant] would be prepared to guarantee the lease in place of Eurodis."
"As you know Fortwilliam were prepared to agree to an assignment to Unibol despite enquiries demonstrating that both Unibol and Unicomp had made losses in the 12 months prior to November 1998. In order to compensate in one way our client not unreasonably decided to retain the existing Guarantor as a condition of consent. Enquiries have shown the proposed substitute guarantor to be less financially strong than Eurodis… ."
"In consideration of the irrevocable and unconditional release by the plaintiff [Fortwilliam] of the first Defendant [the Claimant] as guarantor of the liabilities of CEM Computers Ltd under an indenture of lease dated 1st November 1992 made between the plaintiff of the one part and CEM Computers Ltd of the other part… ."
A. That by tolerating breach of the covenant against assignment and parting with possession of the premises, contained in the lease, by taking no steps to forfeit the lease on discovering that Unibol was in possession of the premises and paying rent, Fortwilliam materially altered the risk borne by the surety and, pursuant to the rule in Holme v Brunskill [1878] 3 QBD page 495 the surety was discharged from its liability to guarantee the lease as a result.
B. Alternatively Fortwilliam's conduct, by accepting rent from Unibol in respect of its occupation of the premises let between October 1998 and August 2000 constituted Unibol a periodic tenant of Fortwilliam of those premises inconsistently with the continuation in force of the lease. Thus the lease was surrendered by operation of law which surrender carried with it the release of the Claimant from its guarantee of the obligations of CEM under the lease.
C. Holdings obligation under clause 4.11 of the share sale agreement was confined to using its best endeavours to obtain a release of the Claimant from that guarantee. The evidence before the Master did not justify a summary conclusion that Holdings had failed to do so albeit the guarantee was never released by Fortwilliam.
"Surrender by operation of law requires some act by the parties that is inconsistent with the continuation of the lease, in circumstances such that it would be inequitable for them to rely on the fact that there has been no surrender by deed. The matter is determined objectively. The conduct of the parties must point unequivocally to the termination of the tenancy, but their intentions are irrelevant. The basis of this doctrine is the law of estoppel, which operates at the determination of a tenancy much as at the creation of one."