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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 >> Pegasus v Ernst & Young [2012] EWHC 738 (Ch) (23 March 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2012/738.html Cite as: [2012] EWHC 738 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Rolls Building, Fetter Lane, London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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Pegasus |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Ernst & Young |
Defendant |
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Simon Salzedo QC and Jonathan Dawid (instructed by Ernst & Young) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 28th& 29th February 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Mann :
Introduction
Issues
The arguments on the appeal
(a) Any claim by IHUK must be for Pegasus's loss, not its own.(b) There is a crucial distinction to be drawn between losses which accrued directly as a result of the wrong, and future or consequential losses - see Burdis v Livesey [2003] QB 36. In respect of the latter (but not the former) the court will take into account events subsequent to the date of the breach in assessing the loss, and indeed whether any loss has been caused. If necessary the court, at the trial, will assess the likelihood of anything which remains uncertain and determine the loss accordingly, but in the light of known events. If the loss has been made good by a third party then the loss cannot be recovered (subject to some exceptions, such as insurance). If for any other reason it has become apparent that those losses have not been or will not be suffered, then no damages are recoverable.
(c) The claim based on the impact of capital gains falls into the latter category. Accordingly, loss will be determined at the trial in the light of the events which have happened by then.
(d) The assignment of the companies by Pegasus will mean that, come what may, any loss arising out of any excessive charges to tax on capital gains, or loss of tax losses (or other tax-related losses flowing from the Adverse Consequence) will not be suffered by Pegasus. They will be suffered by IHUK as its own loss.
(e) Accordingly Pegasus's losses will be nil, and an action to claim those losses is unsustainable.
(f) Accordingly permission to substitute IHUK for Pegasus should be refused because its claim would be hopeless; and indeed (I think it is argued) the claim ought to be struck out.
(a) He accepted that this action was about Pegasus's loss, not IHUK's.(b) Burdis v Livesey was about a different question and, while the apparent principle there was not disputed in its context, it did not automatically translate into the present context.
(c) He did not dispute that losses had to be assessed as at the date of the trial, taking into account known facts and making appropriate assessments of the likelihood and effect of still unknown facts.
(d) He relied on authority as demonstrating that a person with a cause of action based on damage to property did not lose that cause of action, or deprive himself of the right to argue that he had still suffered loss, by giving away the property. To conclude otherwise would be to allow a perfectly good damages claim to fall unjustifiably into a "black hole" which authority demonstrated did not exist.
(e) The tax-related losses were not contingent in any event. They were actual. There were losses arising out of two particular asset sales, and the reason that the apparent loss was not immediately claimed or necessarily ultimately claimable was because steps were taken to mitigate that loss, which for the time being means that the loss cannot be absolutely finalised. But if there had been a trial at a date before the assignment Pegasus would have had a claim for substantial damages. That loss was as much of a loss as the professional fees-related loss (£390,000), which was equally unaffected.
(f) Accordingly, Pegasus could have maintained its cause of action if it had not assigned it to IHUK, and IHUK could maintain it after the assignment.
The logic of the defendants
"where any injury is to be compensated by damages, in settling the sum of money to be given for reparation of damages you should as nearly as possible get at that sum of money which will put the party who has been injured, or who has suffered, in the same position as he would have been in if he had not sustained the wrong for which he is now getting his compensation or reparation."
Over the decades since then the courts have not slavishly applied that as if it answered every question. It has been applied with an appropriate degree of realism and fairness, to the real world. As Lord Haldane LC said in British Westinghouse v Underground Electric Railways [1912] AC 673:
"The quantum of damages is a question of fact, and the only guidance the law can give is to lay down general principles which afford at times but scanty assistance."
It is only on a slavish application of remorseless logic combined with a certain degree of metaphysics that Mr Salzedo can get home on the first of his prongs. That is not an appropriate approach. The second applies remorseless logic alone, which again is not appropriate. It also appears contrary to a reasonable perception of justice. If one assumes for the moment that loss was caused to Pegasus, its disposal of its assets did not avoid that loss; nor did it make it good. It suffered a loss because its assets were less than they ought to have been. Why does that loss not still exist after it has disposed of the assets that were not worth as much as they ought to have been? I accept that that way of looking at the matter means that the focus has switched from the test to the concept of loss, but loss lies at the heart of a damages claim.
An analysis of the authorities
"Where specific property has been damaged by delict, it is a general rule that the owner of the property does not, by parting with it to another, lose his title and interest to pursue a claim for damages against the wrongdoer: Gordon v Davidson [1864] 2M 758…Where the property is disposed of in an arm's length transaction for the price which it is fairly worth in its damaged condition, the difference between that price and the price which it would have fetched in an undamaged condition is likely to be the best measure of the loss and damage suffered. But it may happen that the owner of the property disposes of it otherwise than by such a transaction. He may, for example, alienate it gratuitously…It is absurd to suggest that in such circumstances the claim to damages would disappear, as the Lord Ordinary put it, into some legal black hole, so that the wrongdoer escaped scot-free. There would be no agreed market price available to form an element in the computation of the loss, and so some other means of measuring it would have to be applied, such as an estimate of the depreciation in value or of the cost of repair.
…
I would therefore hold that [the assignor's] transfer to the pursuers of the [relevant property] did not destroy the former's right of action against the defenders…The pursuers, as [the assignor's] assignees are suing to recover, not their loss, but the loss suffered by [the assignor]…There is no doubt that the pursuer's pleadings are not drawn with that degree of accuracy which counsel might normally hope to achieve. The draftsman does not appear to have had in the forefront of his mind a sound grasp of the true legal position, namely that the pursuers are not suing for their own loss, but for that suffered by [the assignor]."
"any general principle which determines when a plaintiff can recover substantial damages although his loss has been made good by somebody else, and secondly whether in the particular case of damage to a building which is later sold for its sound market value the original owner's claim is confined to nominal damages.
As to the first question I find it difficult to suggest a comprehensive definition of the circumstances in which compensation derived from some third party is irrelevant. Besides the proceeds of insurance, or of Government grants, or benevolence, there have been cases of good fortune, res inter alios acta, circumstances peculiar to the plaintiff. Plainly there are categories where such compensation is disregarded. It may be that one has to fall back on what Viscount Haldane LC said in the British Westinghouse case…
In the particular case of damage to a building which is later sold, in my judgement there is no rule of law that the damages must necessarily be nominal."
He concluded at page 92:
"In my opinion [the assignor] acquired a right to substantial damages for those breaches of contract, and did not lose it when they disposed of the rest of their interest in the building for its sound market value, on 12 December 1986. After the assignment on 14 January 1987 Linden Gardens Trust as assignees became entitled to enforce [the assignor's] claim. It is immaterial that Linden Gardens Trust subsequently incurred the expense of remedial work and suffered loss of rent while it was carried out, although the cost and loss may assist them in establishing the damages which would, but for the assignment and the transfer of property, have been recoverable by [the assignor]."
"The next point is then that an assignee can recover damages from the debtor to the same extent as his assignor could have done, but he cannot enforce any claims, let alone under new heads of damage, which would not have been available to the assignor…
There is therefore no problem about Linden Gardens' right to recover the £22,205.02 which [the assignor] had spent in remedying the original breach…But in my view Linden Gardens are also prima facie entitled to recover the £236,000-odd which they themselves expended in remedying the other breaches by these contractors and the further breaches by Ashwell, all of which had also been committed prior to [the assignor's] assignment to Linden Gardens. Both are claims for damages which had vested in Stock Conversion and which were validly assigned to Linden Gardens. The fact that, at the time of the assignment [the assignor was] aware of the full extent of the breaches, and therefore of the extent of their claims for damages, does not appear to me to make any difference to the validity and effect of the assignment to Linden Gardens. The only limitation upon Linden Gardens' right of recovery is the extent to which the defendants may be able to show that Linden Gardens' claims exceed what would have been recoverable by [the assignor] if there had been an assignment. But that is merely a question which goes to quantum, like the discussion in the speech of Lord Keith in GUS as to what would be the appropriate measure of damages in the circumstances."
"41. As I see it, that is not the true legal position. What was assigned by Starglade to Larkstore was a cause of action for breach of contract against Technotrade and legal remedies for it. It was not an assignment of "a loss" as Mr Freedman described it in his attempt to persuade the court that the amount of loss recoverable by Larkstore was limited to what loss had been suffered by Starglade, in this case nil. The assignment included the remedy in damages for the cause of action. The remedy in damages for breach of contract is not, in principle, limited to the loss suffered as at the date of the accrual of the cause of action or as at any particular point of time thereafter.
The principle invoked by Technotrade that the assignee cannot recover more than the assignor does not assist it on the facts of this case. The purpose of the principle is to protect the contract-breaker/debtor from being prejudiced by the assignment in having, for example, to pay damages to the assignee which he would not have had to pay to the assignor, had the assignment never taken place. The principle is not intended to enable the contract-breaker/debtor to rely on the fact of the assignment in order to escape all legal liability for breach of contract.
44…[if the defendant were right] by a legal conjuring trick worthy of Houdini the assignment would free Technotrade from the fetters of contractual liability. The position would be that the contract-breaker would be liable to no-one for the substantial loss suffered in consequence of the breach. As a matter of legal principle and good sense, this cannot possibly be the law, and fortunately the authorities cited in argument and discussed below do not compel the court to reach such a result.
…
46. In my judgement, these arguments amount to no more than an ingenious attempt to deny what has been correctly conceded, namely that the report and the causes of action in respect of it were assignable by Starglade."
"54…It completely disposes of the argument raised in the defence of Technotrade that Larkstore is not entitled to claim substantial damages from Technotrade, because its assignor, Starglade, had suffered no loss, having parted with the site before the landslip occurred and before the assignment of its cause of action to Larkstore."
"67. The authorities in this area demonstrate the courts' striving to ensure that wrongdoers do not escape from their liabilities, by reference to the general principle that a person can only recover for his own loss, because of the happenstance that a cause of action lies in the hands of someone other than the person who has suffered the loss. The courts are concerned to see that justice is done between the parties. The general problem has arisen in a number of different ways."
He then referred to GUS and observed:
"70. That was a comparatively simple case because, upon proper analysis, cause of action and loss had both been suffered by the assignor, prior to the assignment. It demonstrates, however, the defendant's intent to manipulate legal principles to split cause of action and loss between assignor and assignee. The House of Lords would have none of it."
"77. … in those cases the damage caused by the breaches of contract or negligence had already occurred by the time of the assignments, albeit it had not been experienced as a financial loss until quantified by remedial works instituted by the assignees, and the assignees' loss of rent, in the present case, although the breach of contract had already occurred before the assignment, the loss arising from the breach had not been caused until the development work was actually undertaken, by which time the development had been sold to Larkstore and the loss had not been experienced, even in an unquantified form, by the assignor Starglade. However, for the reasons given by Mummery LJ, I agree that this difference is not crucial. Damage arising from a breach of contract is often slow in materialising. The delay in this case may give rise hereafter to arguments about causation or remoteness: I say nothing about those problems. However, it was Starglade who had experienced the breach of contract and owned the cause of action, and, subject to issues of causation and remoteness, it would have been Starglade who, subject to such issues, would have been entitled to have recovered for the financial consequences of that breach if it had not sold the development to Larkstore.
78. Thus the fact that the damages had only been nominal at the time of the sale of the property, or that the substantial loss only occurred after the sale, or that Larkstore suffered that loss before it had acquired, under the assignment, the right of action to go along with the loss, do not in my judgment prevent recovery by Larkstore … However, to hold that Larkstore's claim as assignee of Starglade's cause of action for breach of contract against Technotrade simply failed in limine would be to consign it to that black hole about which Lord Keith was concerned in the GUS Property Management Ltd case and which has been repeatedly alluded to in successive cases which have raised analogous problems.
….
84 While McAlpine [2001] 1 AC 518 and the cases which have followed do not directly apply to the present case, as was common ground before the judge, since here there is no question of Starglade claiming in respect of Larkstore's loss, nevertheless they illustrate the possibilities that, in order to prevent the loss caused by a defendant's breach disappearing into the proverbial black hole, the courts are nowadays willing to go far to create a working, and developing, analysis which will accommodate a claim for substantial damages. Those cases also demonstrate, in my judgment, that if substantial damages may be claimed by the assignor in such circumstances, then there can be no objection to a claim brought by an assignee of a valid assignment, in whom both cause of action and loss unite in the same party.
85 Underlying all these cases can be heard the drumbeat of a constant theme, which could possibly be described as ubi ius ibi remedium, the maxim that where there is a right there is a remedy; but it could also be said that the courts are anxious to see, if possible, that where a real loss has been caused by a real breach of contract, then there should if at all possible be a real remedy which directs recovery from the defendant towards the party which has suffered the loss. In the case of property development, where it is readily contemplated that a party which prepares the development will transfer the fruits of his work to one or more partners or successors, there is a particular need for some such solution."
(a) The courts have not applied the sort of remorseless logic, or appeal to metaphysics, that I have referred to above.(b) On the contrary, the courts have sought to apply the law as to causation of loss in a manner which reflects justice and reality, in particular where the application of pure logic would, unfairly, lead to the "disappearance" of a loss which would, absent an assignment, have been plainly recoverable.
(c) Where a wrong has been committed in relation to property, and loss is capable of arising as a result, the fact of an assignment whether gratuitous (GUS), for part value (GUS again) or for full value (Linden Gardens and Offer-Hoar) does not mean that it thenceforth has to be acknowledged that the assignor no longer can be said to have suffered loss. Whatever the metaphysician may say, the law says that the loss flowing can and should still be treated as a loss of the assignor which the assignee can recover. Black holes are to be (as all black holes should be) avoided where possible.
"The overriding rule governing the awards of damages is that the party who has been injured should be awarded by the court a sum of money which, insofar as money can do this, will, when it is paid, fairly compensate him for the wrong which the defendant has inflicted upon him. That will often involve looking at what happened or might have happened shortly after the defendant's breach of duty, what has happened between breach and trial, and what is likely to happen in the future…The court, when making its award, will look at all factors known to it at the time of the judgment.
In the present cases all the relevant facts were known by the date of the trial. By contrast, in many cases judgment will be before the wrongful act ceases to have a deleterious effect on the plaintiff. In those cases, the court has to look into the future and award a figure which includes the value as at the time of judgment of best estimates of future loss or damage…Even in such cases, no-one suggests that the court should add to the uncertainties by putting itself notionally into the position it would have been in had it tried the case the day after the wrongful act started to inflict damage.
"…
In the circumstances of the present cases, the task of the judge on the date of judgment was to award to each plaintiff the sum of money which would on that date put him as near as a money award could do so into the position he would have been in on that date had there been no negligence on the part of the solicitor." (page 28-9).
"87. The distinction between an immediate and direct loss on the one hand and a potential future loss on the other is of importance for present purposes because it leads to different treatment of benefits derived from a third party after the commission of the tort. In every case a claimant's recoverable loss is limited to the loss which he has actually suffered – damages in the tort of negligence are, after all, 'purely compensatory'… - but the process of determining, in the light of subsequent events, what loss the claimant has actually suffered differs according to whether the loss was suffered when the tort was committed (direct loss) or whether it was suffered subsequently (consequential loss)…
In the case of potential future losses, on the other hand, the general rule is that to the extent that such a loss is in fact avoided, for whatever reason, it is a loss which is never suffered and which is accordingly irrecoverable for that reason." (per Aldous LJ)
" … there is no question of Starglade [the assignor] claiming in respect of Larkstore's [the assignee's] loss …"
Offer-Hoar indicates that the courts will not allow technical arguments to the effect that losses disappear on assignments to triumph, because it would be unjust and contrary to common sense to all them to do so. That applies in the present case.
Conclusion