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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 >> Secretary of State for Trade & Industry v Carr & Ors [2006] EWHC 2110 (Ch) (10 August 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2006/2110.html Cite as: [2006] EWHC 2110 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
COMPANIES COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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The Secretary of State for Trade and Industry |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Richard Carr & others |
Defendants |
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Stephen Parkinson, Solicitor Advocate (instructed by Kingsley Napley) for the First Defendant
Hearing dates: 19 and 20 December 2005
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Crown Copyright ©
The Honourable Mr Justice David Richards :
Introduction
Background
Ford claim and settlement: the facts
"Full provision has been made for all liabilities at the balance sheet date, including guarantees, commitments and contingencies where the items are expected to result in significant loss. Other such items, where in our opinion provision is unnecessary, have been appropriately disclosed in the financial statements.
We are not aware of any pending or threatened litigation, proceedings, hearings, claims or negotiations which may result in significant loss to the company."
The failure to disclose the claim forms the subject of the first set of allegations against Mr Carr, to which I shall return.
"Further to your discussions with Bill Jeffrey today, I am writing to confirm that the following proposals are acceptable to TransTec.
The total payment of US $18.0 million will be made by way of deduction from our account against part numbers yet to be nominated by TransTec, i.e. the methodology will be additional cost down allowance. The payments will be made as follows:-
November 1997 US $2.0 million
December 1997 US $3.0 million
January 1998 US $1.0 million
Thereafter commencing March 1998 an amount of US $1.5 million will be paid and repeated at each quarter date with the final payment to bring the total sum agreed to US $18.0 million made in December 1999.
This offer is on the understanding that TransTec receive an order equivalent of 50% of the DPV for the SOHC cylinder head and recognising the participation of Teksid, the other provider."
"Full provision has been made for all liabilities at the balance sheet date, including guarantees, commitments and contingencies where the items are expected to result in significant loss. Other such items, where in our opinion provision is unnecessary, have been appropriately disclosed in the financial statements."
"In manufacturing exceptional costs of £14,099,00 principally comprise the write off of foundry development costs and tooling expenditure of £9,288,000, redundancy and reorganisation costs of £4,061,000…"
The Ford compensation was included in the figure of £9,288,000. There was no provision for the compensation of $6 million (£3.6 million) payable in 1999. The accounts were signed by Mr Carr on 12 April 1999.
"Tooling contributions to Ford by way of Ford debit notes of £7.3 million have been made in the year. £5.4 million has been expensed in the profit and loss account being Campise related tooling costs not considered by management as being recoverable from future income and £1.9 million capitalised in respect of specific tooling and capital projects in relation to the Lynx and Puma projects. We have reviewed notes of discussions with Ford and other internal discussions which support the treatment adopted in preparing the Group Accounts and understand that the Board have discussed the overall strategy adopted for negotiation with Ford and the treatment of these tooling costs."
"As you will have gathered from our meetings and telephone conversations, the recent developments concerning the claim by Ford in respect of Campsie and the related accounting irregularities have come as a very unwelcome shock to the Lending Group and have severely damaged the Lender's confidence in the Group…
In all the circumstances, given the current doubts over the viability and value of the business, and the uncertainties created by the recent revelations about the problems with Ford, the Lenders are not in a position to confirm the continuation of support until the 31st January 2000, nor at this stage are the Lenders in a position to give any comfort, moral or otherwise, as to the level of facilities which might be available to the proposed new management team."
"9.132: The disclosure of the Ford claim was the last straw for the lenders. Even with Mr Carr and Mr Jeffrey gone, the lenders had apparently lost their desire to deal any further with TransTec, declining even to explore a seemingly genuine offer to buy the whole Group. They turned to Arthur Anderson instead.
9.133: Had the Ford claim not been disclosed to PwC by Ms Ma when it was, it is likely that the lenders would have confirmed the £9 million additional facility up to the end of January 2000 and, with Ford willing to support the Group, would have commenced discussions about medium term funding. In simple terms, then, it was the disclosure of the Ford claim that de-railed the process of orderly disposal – although of course it may simply have accelerated the appointment of receivers rather than caused it. In any event, TransTec was already facing its end."
The Ford claim and settlement: the allegations against Mr Carr
i. Mr Carr deliberately failed to disclose the Ford claim in the company's 1996 consolidated accounts, either as a contingent liability or by way of a note.
ii. In so doing, Mr Carr was responsible for the production of accounts which he knew were materially misleading.
iii. Mr Carr deliberately failed to disclose the Ford claim to the company's auditors in relation to the 1996 accounts.
iv. Mr Carr authorised the signing of a letter of representation to the auditors which did not disclose the Ford claim. He did so deliberately and with an intention of misleading the auditors.
v. Mr Carr deliberately failed to disclose the Ford claim to the full board of the company at the time that it arose or in relation to the 1996 accounts approved by the board on 25 April 1997.
The criminal charge against Mr Carr in relation to these accounts was false accounting, in that there was no accounting for the claim in the accounts. If by that was meant that there should have been a provision, as opposed to disclosure, it is not an allegation of unfitness made against Mr Carr. Even if it meant only disclosure in the accounts, I am satisfied on the evidence in these proceedings that the above grounds of unfitness are established. Grounds (iii) to (v) were not part of the charges.
"9.1 A company must notify the Company Announcements Office without delay of any major new developments in its sphere of activity which are not public knowledge which may:
(a) by virtue of the effect of those developments on its assets and liabilities or financial position or on the general course of its business, lead to substantial movement in the price of its listed securities…
9.2 Where to the knowledge of a company's directors there is such a change in the company's financial condition or in the performance of its business or in the company's expectation of its performance that knowledge of the change is likely to lead to substantial movement in the price of its listed securities, the company must notify to the Company Announcements Office without delay all relevant information concerning the change."
(a) there were no legal proceedings against the group and "nor is there any claim or any fact likely to give rise to a claim, which…may have or has had during the 12 months preceding the date hereof a significant effect on the financial position of the Enlarged Group"; and
(b) no group company has, since 31 December 1996, "entered into any contract or commitment …of an unusual or onerous nature which, in the context of the Placing, might be material for disclosure…there has been no material adverse change in the financial or trading position or prospects of the Group".
In the representation letter, Mr Carr stated that none of the warranties was untrue or misleading. At that time Ford and the company were still in the course of negotiations in relation to Ford's claim. The most recent offer by the company, made on 1 July 1997, was worth $14 million over three years.
"In our view, TransTec should have treated the compensation as a loss in respect of the period from May 1996 to 31 March 1997, as advised by Ford in its letter of 23 April 1997. Since none of the compensation had been charged against profits for 1996, the whole amount (not just the £3 million falling due in the year) should have been charged against profits in 1997."
They continue that the compensation should have been accounted for in full in the interim accounts, which would have turned a reported profit before tax of £7.6 million into a loss of over £3 million. Reported group net assets of £68 million would have been reduced by an estimated £7.5 million (the additional charge of nearly £11 million less tax relief).
"The total payment of US $18.0 million will be made by way of deduction from our account against part numbers yet to be nominated by TransTec, i.e. the methodology will be an additional cost down allowance."
vi. Mr Carr deliberately caused or permitted the 1997 consolidated accounts to be produced without accounting for the debit notes which related to 1997.
vii. Mr Carr was, as a result, responsible for the production of accounts which he knew were materially misleading.
viii. Mr Carr deliberately misled the auditors as regards the claim, the settlement and the debit notes which were received in 1997.
ix. Mr Carr signed the letter of representation to the auditors, with the intention of misleading them.
x. Mr Carr deliberately failed to disclose the Ford claim and its settlement to the board at any time before the 1997 accounts were approved.
"It might be thought that, in one way or another, a large part of the compensation (nearly half of it) was written off in 1998 and that this would lessen the seriousness of our concerns about the failure to account for it properly in 1997. That would be, and is, quite unacceptable. The 1996 and 1997 accounts are misleading. The notes to the 1998 accounts further mislead the reader into believing that something had happened when it had not happened. Fixed assets in 1998 contained a material bogus item. It is not and was not in any way acceptable that some of the false debtors carried in the balance sheet during the fourteen months to 31 December 1998 eventually got written off, described within exceptional items."
i. Mr Carr deliberately caused or permitted the 1998 consolidated accounts to be produced reflecting the debit notes received in 1997 and 1998 as "contributions to tooling", some of which were then written off, and with an entirely misleading description.
ii. Mr Carr was therefore responsible for the production of consolidated accounts which he knew were materially misleading.
iii. Mr Carr deliberately failed to disclose the Ford claim and its settlement to the auditors in relation to the 1998 accounts.
iv. Mr Carr deliberately misled the auditors as to the 1998 accounts in relation to the Ford claim, its settlement and the debit notes received in 1997 and 1998.
v. Mr Carr deliberately failed to disclose the Ford claim and its settlement to the board and misled the board in relation to the 1998 accounts.
i. Mr Carr deliberately caused or permitted the 1999 interim accounts to show £1.9 million of bogus assets.
ii. Mr Carr deliberately caused or permitted the 1999 interim accounts to be produced without reflecting any of the amounts due under the settlement with Ford in respect of debit notes received on or before 30 June 1999.
iii. Mr Carr was therefore responsible for the production of interim accounts which he knew were materially misleading.
iv. Mr Carr deliberately failed to disclose the Ford claim and its settlement to the board at the time of the approval of the 1999 interim accounts.
The criminal charges as regards the 1999 interim accounts were essentially the same as the charge in relation to the 1998 final accounts.
The Rover payment
"Subject: Rover Payment - £400,000
Every effort should be made to construct an arrangement with Rover so that the £400,000 inducement to obtain the new generation sump order is capitalised and not shown as an expense against this year's profits. Two ways this could be achieved are as follows:-
- TransTec Bourne [i.e. BSK] makes a contribution of £400,000 towards new tooling in addition to an already commercially agreed deal i.e. where the piece part price and related tooling contribution are already determined
- TransTec now pays for tooling already in existence at Bourne to the tune of £400,000
In regard to ownership, TransTec could separately provide Rover with a letter waiving any economic interest in the tooling to convince Rover that they have full right and title to the property.
Phillip London will assist in clarifying what is required."
"….
- Costdown agreement 2.77% on A.V.
- Advance Payment Assumed £400k.
- Tooling payment in June – Dec. 1997 period allocated against £400k advance payment by TransTec Bourne.
- Agreement to select certain tooling (June – Dec 97) as part of economics agreement. Capitalise in Bourne Balance Sheet.
- Tooling remains property of Rover Group".
However, it would appear that this issue was not raised at the meeting. In any event, Rover did not agree to any treatment of the payment as being for tooling.
"97 ECONOMICS LUMP SUM
In line with the transtec automotive group deal for 1997 economic reductions a lump sum of £400000 would be paid on nomination of the n.g. sump."
"97 ECONOMICS LUMP
ADVANCED PAYMENT FOR TOOLING"
Disqualification