BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Smith v Charles Building Services Ltd & Anor [2005] EWHC 654 (Ch) (22 April 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2005/654.html Cite as: [2005] EWHC 654 (Ch) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
STEVEN SMITH |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
||
(1) CHARLES BUILDING SERVICES LTD (2) TERRY SMITH |
Defendants |
____________________
Mr. M. Collings (instructed by Messrs. Pinsent Masons) for the Defendants.
Hearing dates: 8th, 9th, 10th, 11th, 14th & 15th March 2005
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Mann:
Introduction
The background and the facts
"Further to my recent telephone conversation I now enclose an extract from the Articles of Association of the Company relating to the particular point I referred to.
It is quite clear that the directors (i.e. you) can issue shares as they see fit with no reference to other shareholders and therefore as we discussed we can issue bonus shares to you from the profit and loss account balance up to the sum of say £10,000 which will dilute your brother's shareholding to an extent that it becomes irrelevant. At that stage whether or not the share transfer form is valid the share itself becomes valueless.
In the course of the next few days we will put into motion the issuing of the bonus shares and forward to you the relevant documentation."
Terry has written at the top of the letter, in his own hand, "share increase justification".
The witnesses
i) In the Transfers register he entered Steve as a transferor of one share to Terry with a date of 29th September 1997.ii) In the register of members and shares held, there are facing pages for each of Terry and Steve. The first line of the entry on Terry's pages show his share acquired in "Nov 94". The next line shows a share transferred to him. The figure "1" for the consideration and one other figure are admitted by Barry Smith to be his. There are two other entries for Transfer numbers and folio which are not. The date "29.09.97" in the date column is Barry Smith's. However, it is written on tippex which obscures another date which it can be seen is "SEPT 97" in unknown handwriting. On the right hand page there are three other tippex blobs, over "Date of entry of transfer" (which can be seen to be 29.09.97), transfer no. and folio number. The date under the "date of entry" tippex is clearly Barry Smith's handwriting, though he does not say so (and was not asked). The next line reflects the allotment of 9,998 shares to Terry. The handwriting on this is not Barry Smith's except for the date "23.12.98", which is. Again, this appears on tippex. The tippexed date underneath is less clear, but it appears to be "APRIL 99". The pen used by Mr Smith appears to be the same on each occasion. He accepts that it is possible, though he cannot remember, that he applied the tippex. He surmises that at some stage after he saw the stock transfer form he checked to see whether the register had been updated to record the transfer, noted that only the month had been recorded in each case and corrected the date. In the case of the allotment date, he guesses that the original compiler of the record took April 99 as being the relevant date because that is when Terry signed the resolution (apparently), so he re-dated it to show the correct date when he saw the record of the relevant resolution (dated 8th April 1999). Barry Smith's suggestion that this was a formalisation as a result of a check some time after the stock transfer does not ring true, and I find it hard to believe that he does not remember the circumstances of doing what must be an unusual act. I think that the circumstances were other than those he has "guessed", and he does not want to say what they were. The entries were probably made at the same time (hence the same pen), at some time after April 1999 (they cannot have been earlier because of the April date appearing under the tippex on this page). I think it likely that they were made at some point when it was appreciated that the registers, whenever they were first made up, did not fully correspond with Terry's detailed case on dates.
iii) The next two facing pages relate to Steve's shares. They record his original share, and on the right hand side entries reflect a transfer on "SEPT '97". This handwriting on this entry looks as though it matches the same date under the tippex on Terry's pages. On the next line down three entries have been tippexed out. Under "Date of allotment" the date "SEP 97" is obscured and single figure entries under Transfer No and Folio have also been obscured. Nothing is written in over the top. I think it likely that these were tippexed by Barry Smith as part of the same exercise. At the top right hand side of the page Barry Smith has completed the "Ceased to be a member on the …. 19 …" entry by making the date read "29 September [19]97". His witness statement says that he expects he would have done this to update the register to reflect the date on which Steve signed the stock transfer form. That is unlikely, because this entry is quite clearly in a different pen from his other entries, so it is almost certainly the product of a different occasion. He has completed an entry for the resignation date for Mr Tully in what is apparently the same pen on a later page, on which nothing else turns.
iv) He also completed a share certificate for Terry reflecting the transfer of Steve's share to him, and dated it 29th September 1997. It is bound into the back of the register book. That dating is plainly wrong, because the certificate can plainly not have been issued then, but it does demonstrate a subconscious desire to make sure that what was perceived as the important date appeared on all the documents.
The reconstruction of the transfer
i) There is the stamped form. That has been carefully stuck together, making the torn edges match as closely as possible. It is a careful job. The form contains Karen Briddon's writing for the company, the shares transferred and the names and addresses of the transferor and transferee. The dating is not in her writing. According to Terry's story it ought to be Mr Savjani's but he did not recognise it as his. It comprises the numbers for the day, month and year with dashes in between.ii) The next available copy is a photocopy of the form as signed but without the date. The photocopy is very likely to be of the form as sellotaped together, so it occurred sometime between that sellotaping and the dating. It was found on Wagstaffs' files. No-one has been able to account for its existence. One can see that it is probably a version of the sellotaped form from the extent to which the joins are visible on the photocopy, which are identical to how they appear on a photocopy of the dated version.
iii) The third copy is plainly a copy of the same pieces, and it is dated, but it differs in two material respects from the stamped and dated copy. First the dating is plainly in a different form. The handwriting is probably different and the numbers are separated by colons. So there is no doubt it is a different dating from that appearing on the original. Second, the pieces are not as well aligned as on the sellotaped original. It was accepted by counsel, and I think that it is right, that it looks as though the pieces have been put on the photocopier, not stuck together, and then photocopied. That being the case, the date must have been put on the photocopy (because it does not appear on the original, which is dated differently). So this version of the document must have preceded the dated original sent to the Stamp Office. No-one explained how this came into existence, but this was the version that was sent to Steve under cover of Wagstaffs' letter of 16th January 2001. If it was created by Wagstaffs (which is the only sensible explanation) then there ought to exist the original in the form of the photocopy of the bits with an original manuscript dating on it, but Wagstaffs have not produced it (a third party disclosure order was made against them in respect of relevant documents) so presumably it no longer exists. Drawing sensible inferences, I think it likely that the document was created so that it could be sent to Steve.
i) The original form as dated and submitted for stamping cannot have been dated as at 16th January 2001. What was available for photocopying were the undated and unreconstructed bits. If the actual form had been dated by this time in its final dated form then it is likely that a photocopy of that would have been sent, not the thing that was actually sent.ii) For the same reason, the bits had not been stuck together by that time.
iii) Accordingly, the form cannot have been dated at or even shortly after the meeting between Terry and Mr Savjani – the dating occurred after 16th January 2001.
iv) In the circumstances Terry's account of the meeting shortly after the autumn meeting cannot be correct. The form cannot have been dated then. It is, I suppose, true that the bits might have been photocopied for the purposes of that meeting so that the photocopy could be dated, and that the 29th was the date then identified as the date of the autumn meeting, but I would expect someone to have remembered that course of events if it were true, and no-one's evidence suggested that that occurred. Terry does not refer to that as happening; Mr Savjani does not say anything about that; and while Barry Smith was not at that meeting nothing in his evidence suggests that such a version of the transfer existed as at that time. Furthermore, why would Mr Savjani procure the dating of a photocopy? If the dating had happened at that point in time, it was presumably intended as some sort of formal act, so one would have expected him to have arranged for the dating of the original.
Was Steve supposed to have an interest in CBS?
i) As a matter of the presentation of evidence and witnesses, I prefer Steve as a witness on this point. His evidence was credible, and was presented credibly. Overall Terry was not such a credible witness.ii) If Terry were right about this, Steve would have been perpetrating a fraud in procuring a share for himself and then insisting on it. Having seen him give his evidence, I do not believe that he would defraud his brother in that way.
iii) Steve's evidence is supported by the background to the matter. CBS was going to undertake work that was not done by CCL – it was to be a main contractor undertaking building works, and not merely a painting and decorating company. However, at least in the initial stages it was, and was going to have to be, closely associated with CCL and, more importantly, reliant on its resources. In this way it was a spin-off of CCL and it is understandable that the shareholders in CCL would also have an interest in CBS, and not particularly understandable that they would not. In this context I am referring to the fact that CCL was actually the contractor for some time, until CBS established its own reputation, but so far as customers were concerned and so far as suppliers were concerned, it was CCL they were dealing with. CCL funded the early months to a considerable extent, and provided resources.
iv) Furthermore, Steve participated in setting it up, did the dormant company accounts while it was dormant, and then provided accountancy services and bookkeeping supervision, as well as such other input as Terry required, until he was supplanted by Wagstaffs between May and September 1997. Terry says that these activities were voluntary and he was grateful, but I do not accept that they were voluntary in the sense he intends. In the circumstances I do not think that Steve would have been giving his services in this way, and I do not actually think that Terry thought he was. Steve was (as Karen Pett said) doing for CBS what he did for CCL. This was because CBS was a sort of extension of CCL, and that extension included a shareholding. Terry had taken no steps to get someone else to carry out Steve's functions (or not until mid-1997 – he had investigated Wagstaffs a couple of year's previously, but he did not revive it when he started CBS's trading), so he must have anticipated that Steve would do it.
v) I do not rely on the fact that Terry signed documents containing express or implicit references to Steve's shareholding. I have referred to these above. However, those documents, and the other documents that inevitably existed, meant that sooner or later the "fraud" alleged by Terry would have come to light and the issue would have to be confronted. That would lead to a potentially large dispute. If Steve was misleading Terry he can hardly have expected Terry merely to accept it. I think it is fundamentally unlikely that Steve would have set up an inevitable dispute in this way.
vi) This finding is corroborated by Mr Evan-Hart's evidence that he was told by Terry that Steve had a shareholding, or perhaps interest in profits. He got the shareholding wrong (or Terry got it wrong) but I am satisfied that Terry said something about it, and that that demonstrates that Terry knew Steve had one.
The status of the share transfer
i) Steve's version of events involves him subjectively wishing to reserve his position on transferring (pending a satisfactory outcome of the remainder of the negotiation) while at the same time doing a very positive act indicating willingness (signing the transfer). That raises some doubts about this version of events. His evidence that the form was signed as a gesture to his brother is odd – it does not strike me as an entirely natural thing for him to do for that purpose, even if he had wanted to make a gesture.ii) Terry's involves a clear transfer at the outset, but then it involves him establishing a dishonest act on the part of his brother, namely asking for the return of the transfer form on a pretext so that he could then destroy it. That involves two difficulties for him. First, it involves him establishing dishonesty on the part of a man who is otherwise an honest man. That is obviously not impossible, but it raises an additional significant hurdle for Terry's case. Second, it implicitly acknowledges a link in Steve's mind between signing the transfer and getting what he wants out of CCL – when he did not get it he tore up the transfer. If there were that degree of conditionality in his mind, why would Steve apparently sign the transfer unconditionally in the first place? Why would Steve give away a bargaining chip like that? Each side's account therefore has certain inherent improbability problems.
i) Terry says he took the pieces round to Wagstaffs very soon afterwards. His witness statement did not say what he told them. I have already given my reasons for saying that his account of the meeting cannot be correct (because of the dating point). That does not increase one's confidence in his account of the tearing up. I think that it is likely that at some point between the date of the meeting and mid-November (when the company return reflecting the transfer was signed) he did take the pieces to Wagstaffs and had a discussion about them with Mr Savjani. In his oral evidence Mr Savjani accepted he had advised that it could be registered. However, in a letter dated 30th July 2001 Mr Savjani had said that "We did not proffer any advice concerning the registration of the stock transfer form between yourself and Mr T Smith". That was therefore inaccurate. If they gave some sort of advice one would have expected them to have asked, and to have been told, what had happened. If Terry had told them the version of events now maintained one would have expected either that a note would have been made by the accountants, or that a letter would have been sent to Steve to record events, or that at least it would have stuck in Mr Savjani's mind what it was that he had been told (or perhaps even all three of those things). However, none of those events occurred. By the time he wrote to the Stamp Office Mr Savjani remembered only that the tearing up had occurred "accidentally", something that he claimed to have assumed for himself. In his evidence in chief he said that he had been told that the transfer had been torn after it had been handed over (which, so far as it goes, is consistent with Terry's case), but that is all. As a piece of evidence, delivered in the context in which it appeared, it was very weak. All that damages Terry's version of events.ii) It then appears that there were still lingering (or more substantial) doubts as to whether Terry still had a share at the time of the proposed increase of the share capital – see Barry Smith's letter referred to above. This tends to demonstrate a continuing sensitivity.
iii) Subsequently Steve sought to take matters up with Terry (through Wagstaffs) in correspondence. The course of that correspondence is set out above. Even allowing for Terry's distaste for paperwork, his failure to procure a response does not encourage a belief in his version of events. If he were right he had a good answer to Steve's letter of 18th January 2001, yet it was not given for many months.
Conclusion