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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 >> The Football League Ltd v Edge Ellison (a firm) [2006] EWHC 1462 (Ch) (23 June 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2006/1462.html Cite as: [2006] EWHC 1462 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL | ||
B e f o r e :
____________________
THE FOOTBALL LEAGUE
LIMITED |
Claimant | |
- and - |
||
EDGE ELLISON (A FIRM) |
Defendant | |
- and - |
||
(1) ACTIVE RIGHTS MANAGEMENT LIMITED
(2) CLIVE STEPHEN TOWNLEY |
Part 20 Claimant Part 20 Defendants |
____________________
Mr Justin Fenwick QC, Mr Timothy Higginson and Mr Jamie Smith
(instructed by Mayer, Brown Rowe & Maw LLP) for the Claimant
Mr Jonathan
Sumption QC and Mr Tom Adam (instructed by Barlow, Lyde & Gilbert) for the
Defendant and Part 20 Claimant
Miss Sue Carr QC and Mr David Yates
(instructed by Clyde & Co) for the Part 20 Defendants
Hearing dates:
8, 9, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 27 February, 1, 2, 3, 6 March 2006
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE RIMER :
Introduction
The Sky licence
The FLL's constitution
(a) The Board
(b) The FLL Chief Executive
(c) The executive team
(d) The Commercial Committee
"69.2 The [FLL] Board is empowered on behalf of The League to enter into an [sic] commercial contract which is considered to be in the best interests of The League and the Clubs save that the Board is not empowered to enter into any contract or agreement relating to television rights or any other commercial contract which represents more than 25% of the projected income over the period of the contract or agreement unless such contract or agreement has been approved in principle by the Commercial Committee. Any contract [or] agreement so entered into by The League shall be binding upon Clubs and Clubs shall not enter into commercial contracts which are at variance with commercial contracts entered into by The League. The Secretary shall inform Clubs of the relevant terms of all such commercial contracts entered into by The League.
69.3 All commercial contracts relating to television, broadcasting and radio rights and Internet programming and title sponsorship of the First Division shall be negotiated on behalf of the League by a Commercial Committee comprising the Chief Executive, three representatives of the First Division and one representative of the Second/Third Divisions. The committee may co-opt other members as appropriate.
69.4 Any commercial contract negotiated by the Commercial Committee shall be subject to formal approval of the Board."
It is agreed that, under those rules, the Board could not commit the FLL to a contract for the grant of television rights unless it had first been approved in principle by the Committee.
Edge Ellison and Mr Alderson
The Oliver & Ohlbaum reports
ONdigital
The Committee's and Mr Phillpotts's understanding of the commercial considerations relevant to the issues raised by the FLL's claim
"… the FLL was able to and did reach its own view as to whether ONdigital's payment covenant should be relied upon without additional protection from its parent companies. The FLL's view, by the Commercial Committee and Brian Phillpotts, was that ONdigital's payment covenant could not be relied upon without parent company guarantees from Carlton and Granada. Edge Ellison's negligence was in failing to ensure that the [licence agreement of 15 June 2000] contained such a guarantee or to alert the FLL to the absence of such a guarantee in the contractual documentation it was to sign. …"
That admission and assertion was omitted from the FLL's later Reply served on 4 October 2005 (in response to the re-amended Defence), but Mr Fenwick QC, for the FLL, did not disclaim any part of it: he affirmed it still stood. The admission as to the FLL's ability to form its own view on whether it could deal with ONdigital alone, without the protection of guarantees from its parent companies, is of particular importance in the context of the issues in the case – in particular as to whether, as the FLL claims, Edge Ellison had a duty to advise it on matters such as this. The assertion that Mr Phillpotts and the Committee had decided that parent company guarantees were a requirement is disputed.
Stage one of the story: the events up to 9 May 2000
Regulatory considerations
The Television Strategy Document
"1. Ensure the tender process falls within a UK legal framework and accounts for both our current contractual obligations and European competition laws.
2. Consult in the type of tender best appropriate.
3. Assist in the preparation of the tender document.
4. Assist in the formulation of the invitation to tender process.
5. Advise the board as to the legal ramifications of the recommended bid.
6. Advise the Commercial Committee of the legal ramifications of the strategic alliances."
The portal rights
Presentations for the television rights
"29. When I evaluated the bids [those received on 7 June 2000], I did not give consideration to [ONdigital's] financial position. This was not an issue for me. We knew who the shareholders were, Granada and Carlton and this was their venture. [ONdigital] were not completely new entrants into the field but came on the back of the track record of Carlton and Granada. That gave me the comfort that we were dealing with a credible broadcaster. Granada and Carlton were ITV. ITV was putting cash into [ONdigital] for its content and was taking the terrestrial rights. ITV was [ONdigital's] partner. ITV Network made this clear in its letter of 6 June. I had met Carlton people with [ONdigital] repeatedly in the process leading up to the bid. ITV's relationship with the League went back to the beginning of television coverage. ITV had been BSkyB's sublicensee and prior to this had the direct rights. ITV was the home of the League and [ONdigital] was part of this. Carlton and Granada were involved in the whole process. Tom Betts went to meetings and Stuart Prebble and Graeme Stanley openly spoke of the need to get the authorisation of their shareholders."
"13. … I had always thought of potential broadcasters in terms of the traditional broadcasters, such as ITV, the BBC and BSkyB (and, to some degree, Channel 4 and Channel 5). I thought of ONdigital as being in the traditional broadcasters' category, due to its connection with Carlton and Granada. Everyone assumed at that time that ONdigital was going to be a big player because it was backed by Carlton and Granada and it was thought that the acquisition of sports rights would enable ONdigital to establish itself in the marketplace following the BSkyB model."
"25. My perception at that time was that ONdigital was part of the 'ITV Group' and was clearly a new venture of Carlton and Granada. At that stage, ONdigital's discussions with the Commercial Committee centred around: who ONdigital was; what its reach was; and what ONdigital would do with the FLL's rights if it were the successful bidder. I do not recall any discussions regarding ONdigital's corporate structure, although I do recall that it was mentioned up front that ONdigital's shareholders were Carlton and Granada. My perception of the Committee's thinking was that, viewed as part of the 'ITV Group', the FLL regarded ONdigital as a serious player in the market and as an organisation that would be around for a long time."
Active Rights Management Limited
"… a determination of practical and realistic strategies; within any strategic options, identifying the priorities for the Football League; leading deal-making negotiations and recommending and, if accepted, delivering deals which meet the financial and commercial requirements of the Football League. You will be expected to provide vision and leadership within the context of the Football League and its Clubs.
On a more practical level [Mr Townley] is asked to advise on the Broadcasting tender process and tender documents. The process will have to accommodate the separate dynamics of the respective positions of the Football Association and the FA Premier League, both of which are going out to tender within a similar timeframe. Ultimately the Football League may do a joint Broadcasting deal with either or both organisations if that is in the best interests of the Football League and its Clubs."
The draft made clear that "[Mrs and Mr Townley] are fundamental to this appointment even though their respective services will be provided through [ARM]. Nobody else will do and any sub-contracting of these services by ARM requires the prior written consent of the Football League." The draft did not expressly impose upon ARM an obligation equivalent to that in item 7 of the role assigned to the advisers in the Television Strategy Document: ARM was not being required to assess the covenant strength of the bidders for the television rights and Mr Phillpotts confirmed that ARM had not been asked to do so. Mr Sheepshanks also agreed, in particular, that matters relating to the security (if any) for a licensee's covenants were not within ARM's remit; and nobody else on the FLL side suggested anything else. Mr Townley's role in relation to the licensing of the television rights was, I find, to act as a market maker, to assist and guide the tender process, to play the market by deploying his special skills, to act as a negotiator and to maximise the value of the rights. He was not intended to be, nor was, a general commercial adviser. I find that it was no part of ARM's or his functions to assess, or to advise the Committee upon, the covenant strength of particular bidders or to advise the Committee as to the seeking of security for the covenant of any bidder.
The Committee meeting of 6 March 2000
The Committee meeting of 17 March 2000
The Committee meeting of 4 April 2000
The Committee meeting of 11 April 2000
Meetings with broadcasters
The Committee meeting on 28 April 2000
Stage two: the events of 10 and 11 May 2000
The events of 10 May 2000
(a) The Montcalm Hotel
(b) The Committee meeting at Connaught Place
(c)The return to the Montcalm Hotel
The events of 11 May 2000: the morning
The events of 11 May 2000: the afternoon (part one)
"… to take the ONdigital 'bottom line' position on Matching Rights to the [FLL] Board meeting that afternoon. The ONdigital position was that both ONdigital and the Football League would commit to using all means available to them to defend any claim from Sky relating to matching rights through until Jan 31, 2001. If the situation was still unresolved by that stage either party could exit the agreement."
"The comments were made by Barry Hearn in relative terms: that is, was ONdigital as good for the money as BSkyB [Sky]. I recall that I was standing behind Barry Hearn getting a cup of coffee when he was making those comments. I do not recall whether Richard Alderson was also at the meeting."
"Q. That was presumably because if the subject of ONdigital's financial standing was raised on either of these occasions – 10th or 11th May – the board was obviously satisfied about it as far as you could see and needed no further information?
A. Yes, they would have been aware of Carlton and Granada's involvement and would have left it at that.
Q. If you had got the impression that the board or the commercial committee was not satisfied on the information that they had about the financial standing of ONdigital, you would have seen to it that they got more information, would you not?
A. Yes.
Q. The same would have been true whether the issue had been raised on the 10th or the 11th?
A. Yes. …
Q. Am I right in suggesting to you that nobody said to anybody who had been present at the negotiations with ONdigital: what arrangements have been made with them about security? Nobody asked a question of that sort?
A. No."
"We've a terrific deal; let's get the deal done, but let's make sure Ondigital have the cash and that we have safeguards regarding their financial strength."
The events of 11 May 2000: the afternoon (part two)
"The [FLL] Board were be [sic] prepared to accept the ONdigital offer on the other terms outlined, if we could find a process for addressing the matching rights clause. David [Mr Sheepshanks] then left the meeting and wished us well in agreeing a process that we could both live with that would allow the agreement between the Football League and ONdigital to proceed."
Stage three: the events from 12 May to 15 June 2000
The ONdigital bid document dated 7 June 2000
"With its shareholders, Carlton Communications and Granada Media Group, ONdigital brings a heavy-weight presence in UK media. Granada and Carlton are both publicly listed companies, are in the FTSE 100, and are the two largest independent television broadcasters in the UK. Both Carlton and Granada possess other significant pay television assets including cable and satellite channels either wholly owned or in joint-ventures with other UK-based pay television broadcasters. Both also have invested heavily in new media and have significant internet investments. Granada is the largest ITV company with over 40 years experience in the UK of producing and broadcasting live sport and, in particular, football. Carlton owns Carlton 021 which has Europe's largest OB fleet and has been a part of BSkyB's coverage of the FA Premier League since 1992. Representing two thirds of the ITV network, Carlton and Granada possess unique access to ITV and its large terrestrial audience. ONdigital's relationship with these companies at the highest level bring further unique cross promotional resource to the Bid."
"ONdigital and its shareholders will guarantee all funding to the FL [Football League] outlined in this document."
I will call this "the financial arrangements paragraph". What is said about it is that, on one interpretation, ONdigital was saying that Carlton and Granada would guarantee its obligations. Another interpretation is that it was saying no more than that ONdigital had the commercial backing of its shareholders, which had pledged their financial support for it. Whichever interpretation was right, the paragraph was anyway a poor piece of drafting. In particular, the statement that ONdigital would "guarantee" the stated funding was meaningless. ONdigital was going to be on the contractual hook, because it was the proposing licensee and primary obligor: it could not "guarantee" its own obligations. As I shall explain, the evidence at the trial of the guarantee action was that ONdigital did not intend by this paragraph to convey more than that its bid had the commercial backing of its shareholders.
The Committee meeting of 7 June 2000
"Either Mr Townley or Brian Phillpotts (I cannot remember who read out the details of each offer) referred to that part of the ONdigital 7 June 2000 bid document which stated: "ONdigital and its shareholders will guarantee all funding to the [FLL] outlined in this document". At this point and being aware of the financial strength of both Carlton and Granada, my concerns about ONdigital's financial viability evaporated."
"I have been asked what my reaction would have been if the ONdigital bid of 7 June 2000 had not contained what I took to be an offer of a parent company guarantee. My response is that, if not on 7 June 2000 then before any concluded agreement with ONdigital, I would have raised the issue and made it clear that I thought the FLL should have security for ONdigital's obligations."
The events from 7 to 14 June 2000
"We also need to consider whether we are being realistic from a process standpoint if we take a view that it would be in the best interests of the Football League to close matters by Tuesday/Wednesday [13/14 June 2000]. Any arrangements are likely to be subject to contract, which even after Wednesday would not preclude a party withdrawing if the market changed dramatically. The key question however is whether in our view we may get materially less after Wednesday. Our actions should be predicated by our response to this question."
The events of 15 June2000
The negotiation and signing of the licence agreement of 15 June 2000
"18. ONdigital and [the FLL] shall use their best endeavours to execute a long form agreement within 60 days which shall be negotiated with reference to the Football League Pre-Tender Document of 27th March 2000 and ONdigital's Initial Bid dated 7th June 2000 and pre-existing arrangements that [the FLL] has for its portal and 2 side letters from ITV dated 6th and 15th June 2000 and ONdigital dated 13th and 15th June 2000 and will include clauses such as standard legal boilerplate, confidentiality, compensation for ONdigital if there are significant changes in competition structure which adversely affect the value of the rights granted to ONdigital, minimum broadcast commitments, quality guarantees for programmes and competitions and the like."
Stage four: events following 15 June 2000
Negotiation of the long form agreement
The demise of ONdigital
The guarantee action
The grant of the licence to Sky
The FLL's claims in ONdigital's liquidation
The issues
(a) The facts
"… was able to and did reach its own view as to whether ONdigital's payment covenant should be relied upon without additional protection from its parent companies. The FLL's view, by the Commercial Committee and Brian Phillpotts, was that ONdigital's payment covenant could not be relied upon without parent company guarantees from Carlton and Granada. Edge Ellison's negligence was in failing to ensure that the [licence agreement of 15 June 2000] contained such a guarantee or to alert the FLL to the absence of such a guarantee in the contractual documentation it was to sign. …"
(b) Was the claimed duty owed?
"Mr Harman [leading counsel for the plaintiff] sought to rely upon the fact that Mr Stubbs was Geoffrey's solicitor under some sort of general retainer imposing a duty to consider all aspects of his interest generally whenever he was consulted, but that cannot be. There is no such thing as a general retainer in that sense. The expression 'my solicitor' is as meaningless as the expression 'my tailor' or 'my bookmaker' in establishing any general duty apart from that arising out of a particular matter in which his services are retained. The extent of his duties depends upon the terms and limits of that retainer and any duty of care to be implied must be related to what he is instructed to do.
Now no doubt the duties owed by a solicitor to his client are high, in the sense that he holds himself out as practising a highly skilled and exacting profession, but I think that the court must beware of imposing upon solicitors – or upon professional men in other spheres – duties which go beyond the scope of what they are requested and undertake to do. It may be that a particularly meticulous and conscientious practitioner would, in his client's general interests, take it upon himself to pursue a line of inquiry beyond the strict limits comprehended by his instructions. But that is not the test. The test is what the reasonably competent practitioner would do having regard to the standards normally adopted in his profession, and cases such as Duchess of Argyll v. Beuselinck [1972] 2 Lloyd's Rep. 172; Griffiths v. Evans [1953] 1 WLR 1424 and Hall v. Meyrick [1957] 2 QB 455 demonstrate that the duty is directly related to the confines of the retainer."
"Their Lordships are accordingly satisfied that Mrs Mouat required of Mr Boyce no more than that he should carry out the necessary conveyancing on her behalf and explain to her the legal consequences of the transaction. Since Mrs Mouat was already aware of the consequences if her son defaulted Mr Boyce did all that was reasonably required of him before accepting her instructions when he advised her to obtain and offered to arrange independent advice. As Mrs Mouat was fully aware of what she was doing and had rejected independent advice, there was no duty on Mr Boyce to refuse to act for her. Having accepted instructions he carried these out properly and was neither negligent nor in breach of contract in acting and continuing to act after Mrs Mouat had rejected his suggestion that she obtain independent advice. Indeed not only did Mr Boyce in carrying out these instructions repeat on two further occasions his advice that Mrs Mouat should obtain independent advice but he told her in no uncertain terms that she would lose her house if Mr R.G. Mouat defaulted. One might well ask what more he could reasonably have done.
When a client in full command of his faculties and apparently aware of what he is doing seeks the assistance of a solicitor in the carrying out of a particular transaction, that solicitor is under no duty whether before or after accepting instructions to go beyond those instructions by proffering unsought advice on the wisdom of the transaction. To hold otherwise could impose intolerable burdens on solicitors."
"7. It is plain that when a solicitor is instructed by a client to act in a transaction, a duty of care arises. But it is also plain that the scope of that duty of care is variable. It will depend, first and foremost, upon the content of the instructions given to the solicitor by the client. It will depend also on the particular circumstances of the case. It is a duty that it is not helpful to try to describe in the abstract. The scope of the duty may vary depending on the characteristics of the client, in so far as they are apparent to the solicitor. A youthful client, unversed in business affairs, might need explanation and advice from his solicitor before entering into a commercial transaction that it would be pointless, or even sometimes an impertinence, for the solicitor to offer to an obviously experienced businessman."
"14. Their Lordships regard this 'homme d'affaires' categorization of Mr Pickersgill as a misdirection. The scope of a solicitor's duty is governed by the instructions he receives and the circumstances of the case. The scope of a solicitor's duties may in some cases justify his description as an 'homme d'affaires' but the bestowing of that description on him cannot alter or add to the extent of the duty of care that he would otherwise owe. In the present case, in their Lordships' opinion, it was a positively misleading description and apt to suggest a duty to advise on the commercial implications and wisdom of the transaction, a duty that neither Mr Pickersgill's instructions nor the circumstances of the case warranted.
15. In their Lordships' judgment, Mr Pickersgill, in giving clear and correct advice about the risk of taking a contractual indemnity from a limited company, discharged any duty he had to warn Mr Riley of the risk he was taking in accepting the contractual undertaking from [W]. Mr Pickersgill's duty did not extend to investigating and advising on the financial substance of [W] or to advising on the commercial wisdom of accepting the undertaking from [W] or to advising Mr Riley to investigate the financial substance of [W].
16. It is to be borne in mind that the undertaking to be given might need to be called upon at any time over a period of some 28 years. A company with assets originally might cease to have assets. A company with no assets originally might subsequently acquire them. Both Mr Pickersgill and Mr Riley had assumed [W] to be a company of substance but neither the Royal Court nor the Court of Appeal attributed Mr Riley's assumption to any representation made by Mr Pickersgill.
17. It was, in their Lordships' view, a matter for the commercial judgment of Mr Riley whether he was prepared to accept the protection of the contractual undertaking on offer from [W]. He decided to do so, but not in reliance on any advice to do so given by Mr Pickersgill. It was his, Mr Riley's, commercial decision. His decision may, with hindsight, be regarded as imprudent and to have been based on a mistake as to [W's] financial substance at the time of the transaction. But Mr Riley cannot, in their Lordships' opinion, extend Mr Pickersgill's role from that of his solicitor acting on his instructions to that of his commercial adviser, or to that of his insurer against his commercial misjudgement.
18. Mr Pickersgill did not, in their Lordships' judgment owe the extended duty of care as pleaded or as expressed by the courts below as the basis of their respective findings of liability. …"
(c) The expert evidence
2. If there was such a duty, and Mr Alderson had raised the question of bidder solvency with the Committee, what would its instructions have been?
3. Would parent company guarantees have been given if asked for?
4. Did the inclusion of the financial arrangements paragraph in the ONdigital bid document of 7 June 2000 make a difference to Edge Ellison's duties?
5. Would parent company guarantees have been obtained if first sought on the evening of 15 June 2000?
6. Were Edge Ellison in breach of duty by not seeking to negotiate the inclusion of guarantees in the long form agreement?
7. Contributory negligence
8. Quantum
9. The Part 20 proceedings against ARM and Mr Townley
Result