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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 >> Vivendi SA Centenary Holdings Iii Ltd v Richards & Ors [2013] EWHC 3006 (Ch) (09 October 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2013/3006.html Cite as: [2013] Bus LR D63, [2013] EWHC 3006 (Ch), [2013] BUS LR D63 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
7 Rolls Buildings, Fetter Lane London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
VIVENDI SA CENTENARY HOLDINGS III LIMITED |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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MURRAY RICHARDS STEPHEN BLOCH |
Defendants |
____________________
The Defendants appeared in person.
Hearing dates: 12-14, 17-21, 26 and 27 June 2013
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Newey :
The parties
"wanted to use professionally qualified people so that no more mistakes would be made".
"separate Groups of Jersey Registered Companies, namely:
A. 4Group Funding Limited
B. I4Investments Limited
C. 4G Communications Jersey Limited
D. P4property Investments Limited
E. P4property Consulting Limited".
All of these, Mr Richards explained, "are managed by, and have Professional Directors who are Directors or Employees of … Investec Trust Limited". Mr Richards went on to say that he estimated his aggregate net worth as in excess of US$100 million.
Factual history
Background
"Other provisions represent the anticipated costs associated with onerous property lease commitments of vacant London offices. Market rentals are currently less than the annual commitment payable by the company and its subsidiary undertakings under its leases and the provision represents the future net present value of the likely amount of rental shortfall over the remaining periods of the leases."
£35.4 million of the £41.8 million figure was accounted for by the Ark, where CH3 had no right to terminate its leases until the end of 2010 or early 2011. The rent for the property amounted to some £4.5 million per annum. With insurance and other charges, the annual bill was of the order of £6.5 million.
The transfer of CH3
"I had asked [Mr Harrod] to look out for projects for me. He said, well, there's one that's empty that's in the company I work for, but because I work for them I've got to be very careful."
i) CH3's shares were first transferred from CHL to Centenary 4 Limited ("C4"), another company in the Vivendi group;ii) Most of CH3's assets were distributed in specie by way of dividend;
iii) C4 sold CH3 to Centenary 6 Limited ("C6"), a subsidiary of C4, for £77.7 million;
iv) CH3 lent £77.7 million to C6;
v) C6 used the £77.7 million to discharge its debt to C4;
vi) Centenary 7 Limited ("C7"), a company owned by P4 Property Investments Limited ("P4 Investments"), bought C6 from C4 for £1.
i) To use all reasonable endeavours to ensure that no monies were taken out of CH3 by dividend, loan, reduction of capital or otherwise unless sufficient monies were retained within CH3 to allow the company to pay its debts as they fell due for the next 12 months; andii) That, should CH3 be unable to pay its debts as they fell due during the 12-month period as a result of monies being taken out of the company, C7 would make money available to CH3 to meet the shortfall.
The latter obligation was guaranteed by Mr Richards personally.
"At the date the financial assistance is given, CH3 will have free cash of £15.1m. The projected cash flows show that there will be net cash outflows for the period to 31 March 2005 of £4.8m resulting in a free cash balance at 31 March 2005 of £10.3m. During the period cash falls to £4.3m during December 2004, January 2005 and February 2005 before increasing to £10.3m in March 2005."
"On completion, the buyer anticipates making an offer to the owners of the Ark (Deka) to purchase the property. Management believes that Deka may be willing to sell the Ark if the right offer was received. This is supported by activity in the market place with Deka discussing potential sales with interested parties e.g. an approach from FCUK was made to Vivendi Universal ('VU') requesting a £20m contribution to a proposed FCUK buy-out of the Ark for £45m.
VU rejected FCUK's approach and the purchase did not go ahead. However it is believed by both Murray Richards and VU that Deka might accept an offer in the range of £40m-£45m. The purchaser has indicated that this would potentially be an acceptable price range for their acquisition of the Ark.
The ability of the purchaser to acquire the Ark may be assisted by a reduction in Deka's valuation of the Ark following a change in the ultimate ownership of the lease. To some extent Deka's valuation of the Ark is underpinned by the covenant of the lessee, being previously a large multinational operation of VU. On the change of ownership there will be a significant dilution of the lessor's covenant with the new lessee being a relatively small privately owned business. It is believed by both VU and Murray Richards that Deka will need to reassess its valuation downward and therefore may be more amenable to agree a sale at a lower price.
The buyer intends to convert the Ark into multi-letting on short-term leases at a price of approximately £25 per square foot. Currently we understand that the lease permits sub-letting to up to 5 separate tenants. Approval by the owner for the subdivision of the Ark into sub-leasable units (by floor) will need to be requested. The purchaser may also discuss restructuring the lease with Deka but this has not been assumed in the cash flow projections….
The buyer confirmed in his meeting with PwC that he intends to route other property projects through CH3 and C6 and use these projects as a source of cash for CH3. As there is no contractual obligation to do this this assumption has been reversed through the sensitivity analysis."
"The upstream loan from CH3 to C6 arises from the fair value purchase consideration payable by C6 for CH3 from CH4. We note there is a risk that the whole transaction could be deemed unlawful (and therefore capable of being set aside) if the valuation of CH3 is not supportable"
"Net income is received in March 2005 of £7.8m (gross income £25.7m less interest costs £17.9m) in respect of a potential hotel development being considered by the third party purchaser (Project H)"
and
"The Ark is assumed to be let on a multi-tenant short let basis receiving rental income during the period of £854,000. No acquisition of the Ark is assumed within the cash flow projections"
With regard to the last of these, PwC said:
"Currently the Ark is vacant. The projected Ark rental income represents the purchaser's plans for multi-tenant short lets at £25 per square foot commencing in May 2004 at an initial occupancy of 3% rising to 50% by March 2005"
and
"Rental income for the Ark is based on estimates made by the purchaser. It is intended that the Ark will be used for multi-tenant short lets at approximately £25 per square foot. It is assumed that 3% occupancy will be achieved by May 2004 with a gradual increase in occupancy to 50% by March 2005, 80% by March 2006 and 87.5% during the year ended March 2007."
When dealing with risk factors, PwC said:
"the buyer's plan to purchase the Ark and success of a multi-tenant short let business plan is important to the viability of CH3. Based on the sensitivities this is not key to CH3's ability to meet its debts as they fall due over the next 12 months, however, subletting at reasonable occupancy levels combined with the purchase or renegotiation of the lease will be critical to the ongoing viability of the Company."
The cash flow projections assumed capital expenditure of £2.5 million "to upgrade the property to enable multi-tenant letting". This was in respect of "the partitioning and fit out of the Ark based on the purchaser's business plan".
"fairly sets out the basis on which I have reached my opinion and does not contain any error of fact and fairly sets out the state of affairs of the Company and the financial projections and their underlying assumptions".
Mr Bloch also said:
"The cash flow projections of the Company for the period ending 31 March 2005 are based on assumptions which we consider are realistic, take account of committed expenditure and reflect the likely outcome of the Company's business in the period."
Mr Bloch and Mr Harrod
"there were a number of liabilities and various deals had to be brought into the company to make it work. I believed that that could happen but being reasonably cautious I wanted to protect my own financial interest of my salary."
Consultancy agreement with Mr Richards
"The Company [i.e. P4 Consulting] shall engage the Consultant [i.e. Mr Richards] and the Company shall make the services of the Consultant available (or in the event the Consultant is unavailable such other person reasonably capable of performing the role of the Consultant) to CH3 in the capacity of corporate & property investment and development consultant to CH3 at such times and on such terms as are agreed from time to time between the Company and CH3 and the Consultant shall perform the duties and exercise the powers and functions which from time to time may reasonably and consistently be required by CH3."
"The Consultant shall be responsible to and shall in all respects conform to and comply with the directions and requirements of CH3 and its directors and shall during the continuance of this agreement hereunder well and faithfully serve CH3 and use his best endeavours to promote the interests of CH3 and in particular the Consultant shall introduce first to CH3 any potential investment or development project which will or may be of benefit to CH3 and shall not disclose any details of any such project to any third party without the prior written consent of CH3, but if CH3 shall decide not to proceed with any such project the Consultant and the Company shall not disclose details to any third party without the prior written consent of CH3 which consent shall not be unreasonably withheld by CH3."
"CH3 shall pay to the Company at the inception of this agreement the amount of:
(i) Two Hundred and Forty Thousand Pounds Sterling (£240,000) for the Company to retain the services of the Consultant on a first priority basis, and
(ii) an amount of Three Hundred and Sixty Thousand Pounds Sterling (£360,000) representing the minimum 12 months term of this Agreement."
Project H
Rental income
Dealings with Deka
"the people who are now controlling [CH3] are very busy with various projects at the moment but want to be able to talk to DEKA in the very near future and certainly during the month of April."
On 5 May, DTZ wrote:
"I am assuming that nobody has heard from the new owners of our tenant. On speaking to Peter Harrod we are informed this is still due in the very near future but they have not managed to achieve their proposed date of making contact by the end of April!"
"[I]f it is assumed [CH3] parent company continues to provide financial support we believe the value of the building is in the range of £41-£45m.
But as the parent company is reviewing the situation there is now a real risk for Deka that it will have to deal with all the property market and specific risk attached to the building.
If the parent company withdrew its support Deka would be left with an empty building and no immediate income for a considerable period of time."
After listing a number of points, the presentation concluded that the risks reduced the capital value of the building to "circa £24-31m". The presentation concluded:
"So, unless Deka are fully prepared to deal with all the risks identified in this study they should explore the potential of selling its freehold interest to a willing purchaser for a realistic price."
"Continue trading:
- not an option – predicted insolvency due to rent shortfall on the leases
- director's duties – to act in best interests of all creditors
Default on payment of rent and other lease obligations:
- forfeiture
- compulsory winding up
- disclaimer of lease by appointed liquidator
Negotiated outcome:
- director's view in best interests of creditors".
The document went on to propose that all CH3's landlords should agree to accept surrenders on the basis that each landlord would receive "equal amount of CH3's remaining assets (pro rata)". The document concluded:
"If negotiations fail, liquidation of CH3 will be initiated on 22 March 2005."
"in an effort to attract the attention of the landlords and to bring them to the negotiating table, it is proposed that CH3 will pay an amount equivalent to 1 month of the rent due under the leases of each of the properties on the forthcoming December quarter day."
"Accordingly, it is proposed that CH3 will pay to you a sum equal to 1 month's rent in full and final settlement of all sums that are or may become or owing now or at any time in the future from CH3 to Deka under or in respect of the Leases and/or the Property or otherwise (the 'Offer').
You should be aware that each landlord has been made a 'without prejudice' offer on the same basis in order to ensure that each landlord is treated equally. The Offer is subject to each landlord accepting the proposal put to them by no later than close of business on Friday 14 January 2005 and upon the execution of appropriate documentation releasing CH3 from all of its obligations, liabilities and covenants to Deka under or in respect of the Leases and/or the Property."
"At present, there is an 'offer' from [CH3] to pay each of its landlords one month's rent in full and final settlement of all lease obligations, this would leave the Ark empty and without a tenant to pay rent or other outgoings. We consider this proposal to be derisory and insulting and barely capable of being described as a compromise. It would appear that at least one of the other landlords will refuse this offer, thereby probably forcing [CH3] into some form of insolvency process. The only alternative to accepting this 'offer' is to aggressively pursue a course of litigation through the courts against the former corporate officers of [CH3] and C6 and ultimately Vivendi. Based upon the documents and information available and as previously indicated to you in our various advices, we believe that the creditors of [CH3] have a very strong case to successfully challenge the transactions that took place in January 2004 by which some £77 million in cash was removed from [CH3] using various insolvency processes."
The dividend
"Under UK law, UK companies can only pay dividends or make other distributions out of distributable reserves (defined as realised profits less realised losses). In addition, directors are subject to fiduciary duties in the exercise of the powers conferred on them. Directors must therefore specifically consider, inter alia, whether CH3 will still be solvent following a proposed distribution i.e. the directors should consider both the immediate cash flow implications of a distribution and the continuing ability of the company to pay its debts as they fall due. There is no time limit on this solvency assessment unlike the statutory declaration made on 22 January 2003.
The distribution of pre-acquisition reserves by a company will prima facie result in an offsetting impairment charge in the immediate parent. Therefore while on acquisition CH3 may have distributable reserves any distribution out of these reserves that is not supported by underlying value generation will result in an offsetting impairment in the accounts of C6 and therefore prevent any onward distribution.
Based on our calculations the onerous lease provision would need to be reduced to at least £15.8m before there would be adequate headroom in the carrying value of investments to enable any distribution to be made up from CH3 to C6 equal to that headroom without an offsetting impairment charge occurring.
Therefore if you were to make a dividend of say £5m there would be a requirement that the onerous lease provision be reduced to at least £10.3m in order to have sufficient distributable reserves in CH3 and provide sufficient headroom in the carrying value of investment in C6 and C7. The directors would still need to be satisfied from a fiduciary duties perspective that CH3 was still able to meet its debts as they fall due following any distribution.
A re-assessment of the FRS12 provision can and should be performed to reflect new management's intentions for the leasehold properties. However, while not prejudging any reassessment to be performed by yourself as a director, based on the 'best scenario' under the Jonathan Edwards report dated 21 December 2003 and taking into account the Ark's shortfall of sub-rental income over rental costs under Murray Richard's initial forecasts under the multi-sublet model an onerous lease provision greater than £20m would still appear to be required. This would make any distributions from CH3 to C6 and beyond not possible at this time."
"The point PwC were making is that the Board of CH3 may not be able to claim that the company was solvent (able to pay its debts as & when they fall due) at the time of the dividend. The company has no income cash flow to meet lease commitments which run for many years. That is, without future income the Board would know that the company has a finite life, and it is not a case of a change of circumstances after the dividend….
The Board would therefore need to consider (at the time of declaring the dividend) the CH3 (not just the Group) business plan showing future income."
Mr Richards replied:
"PwC accepted the fact that as a group we had the capacity to 'provide deals to CH3' which were capable of demonstrating capacity to meet commitments as they fall due – such a project[s] will be offered to CH3 prior to payment of any dividend. It is also reasonable for the board to make an assumption that subletting will substantially cover future costs."
"Following the release of the property provision to the level suggested by Jonathan Edwards it would have the effect of creating distributable reserves as outlined. There is nothing that I believe has been missed off your profit reconciliation … although it would be preferable not to utilise the entire distributable reserves position and leave a buffer as a contingency. Prior to the release of the property provision the director should be satisfied that the assumptions used in the assessment by Jonathan Edwards are appropriate e.g. capital expenditure assumptions, discount rate."
i) "Given the uncertainties about the ability of P4 and / or Mr Richards to execute the plans as set out in the [Basis of Statement Report], the reduction in the Onerous Lease Provision to the [Jonathan Edwards] Report value of £28.93m does not appear to me to be a reasonable or prudent conclusion. Therefore I conclude that this is not in a reasonable range of estimation";ii) "I have seen no evidence that considers in any practical terms whether, or how, the [£77 million] loan [from CH3 to C6] could, and would, have been repaid by C6 to CH3. Further, as I have not seen any evidence of any source of profitable income or any reasonable prospect of income from any profitable contracts or projects, CH3 would not have future income streams to pay a dividend to C6, to allow C6, in turn, to repay the loan to CH3. I therefore consider that a full provision was required against the loan to C6 in the accounting records of CH3 at the date of restructuring. Accordingly, CH3's net assets at 22 January 2004 and thereafter would have been reduced by more than its distributable reserves as a result of making the loan."
Herongate
"My view is that where any lending is being made in a distressed situation (which I understand this is) that security should be taken prior to any draw down of funds."
Cloverleaf/Nerdlihc
"Mr Michael Fitzgerald used to represent my interests during the period 1992 to 1997. Cloverleaf was the vehicle through which my business affairs were transacted. Mr Fitzgerald has never informed me that this is not the case nor has he informed me that the address and phone number for the company has been changed. At the time that the transaction was entered into, I believed the former to be the case."
"Cloverleaf is owned by and acts exclusively on behalf of my family."
Mr Fitzgerald also pointed out that Cloverleaf had not used the address given on the 2 December letter since about 1993 or 1994 and that the telephone number prefix shown on the letter had also been out of use for some years.
"I have been asked by Mr Knowlton to correspond with you regarding the status of the investment in Nerdlihc made through Cloverleaf earlier this year. As I understand it the investment was along the lines of a convertible unsecured loan pending certain refinancing activities then being undertaken by Nerdlihc, with the option to convert into equity, or be repaid. Repayment was originally scheduled for on or before 30 June 2005 which, I understand, has been subsequently extended, as required by Mr Knowlton….
Nerdlihc holds extensive interests in the Canning Basin in Western Australia as well as in Northern Montana, USA. The sole director and shareholder of Nerdlihc is Mr Tom E Knowlton. Nerdlihc is a Californian corporation, … which was formed in January 1990.
Nerdlihc believes that it has made a discovery of oil with world class potential in its Patience 2 well drilled in late 2000 / early 2001. Nerdlihc wishes to further explore and develop its acreage in Western Australia and, to that end, has been seeking to raise a substantial sum in order to do this. I understand that arrangements are currently being finalised in this regard.
The company of which I am chairman and chief executive, AJ Lucas Group Limited, is an Australian infrastructure services provider specialising in the oil and gas and water/waste water sectors. We have undertaken substantial amounts of work for Mr Knowlton in connection with the possible development of his interests in the Canning Basin and, in particular, the engineering and design of pipelines, gathering systems, storage facilities and associated infrastructure….
I have been authorised to confirm that the investment by Centenary Holdings has been used for Nerdlihc's purposes under the management and control of Mr Knowlton. For the record, I can also confirm that Mr Knowlton has informed me that no amounts have been in any way directed towards the Directors of Centenary Holdings, its employees or associates; the total investment has been utilized for the purposes of Nerdlihc, the specific nature of which I am not fully aware, but directed by Mr Knowlton.
Mr Knowlton has asked me to inform you that the investment will be repaid together with interest within the next few weeks."
Phonevision
"[CH3] will today be making an investment by way of acquisition of shares in subsidiary companies of [PVUK], namely [PVA] and [BWBA], to the value of £2.75M. It has probably not escaped your attention that [CH3] does not currently have £2.75M in cash to make this acquisition; however on the repayment by [C7] of loans & interested owed, it will do.
To facilitate the above we propose the following three transactions:
1) [CH3] … would like to transfer to [PVUK] … the amount of £2,750,000 …. This is payment for the procurement of shares in subsidiaries of [PVUK].
2) [PVUK] … would like to transfer to [C7] … the amount of £2,750,000 …. This consideration for the purchase of [C7's] loan portfolio.
3) [C7] … would like to transfer to [CH3] … the amount of £2,723,134.33 …. This is repayment of various on call loans (& accrued interest)."
"the business of [PVA] in supplying, installing and operating wireless telecommunications services and hardware, and (except where the context requires otherwise) also means the Assets".
"Assets" referred to "each asset, current or non-current, tangible or intangible forming part of the Business or used in connection with the Business", subject to very limited exceptions.
"They had … no evidence whatsoever to suggest that the shares from or the shares in [PVA] were worth anything other than nil or negligible value. They were shares in a company which they had had control of for a period of time as administrators. They knew what was in that company. They had sold the assets of that company for $100,000. If there was 2.75 million or 3 million of value in that company, they would not have sold it for $100,000."
"PVA's Administration was very short term, it emerged from Administration to participate with its rights in the Australian Telecom project where 41 'Wimax Spectrum Licences' had been issued, with a massive potential value, which was destroyed by the interference of Mr Caven, the Liquidator of CH3, which in turn denied PVUK substantial value – in fact sufficient funds to be able to support its proposed Parent Company, CH3, pay out all its Creditors."
Mr Bloch said:
"Mr Caven …, having previously been informed by me that there were good prospects for the Australian project, sabotaged negotiations by making unfounded claims of criminal activity to key figures in the venture."
Mr Bloch also said:
"All that was done was we set up a new structure where I think it's BWBA would be the retail side holding the Spectrum licences and PVA would be dealing with that sort of technical back end."
"I do remember that Caven was a determined sort of bloke and was very insistent and manipulating in trying to get me to commit to blackening Murray's name. I remember he asked me if I knew there were warrants out for the arrest of Murray in the UK on criminal charges for fraud. He also said he was a bankrupt many times over and a conman and that if I could help with digging up more dirt on Murray he could 'nail him'."
"I had no knowledge of Mr Richards having been made bankrupt and would not make a statement that I could not support. I was also very cautious in my conversation with Mr Pratt. I did not know his background nor his relationship with Mr Richards or Mr Bloch."
Mr Caven was also adamant that he had not told Mr Pratt that he was out to "nail" Mr Richards. Mr Caven said that he would "not use that type of language in a phone call".
"You need several million dollars to do what I was planning to do and that wasn't available. Plus the fact is that the trial that we were basing the new business model on going to be with Countrytel was not necessarily that successful. We finally got it working but it didn't work out to be, from what I can understand from them, profitable. In fact, I think as a not-for-profit organisation, they intended giving it away for free. I didn't like that model, being a businessman."
There can, in the circumstances, be no question of Mr Caven's dealings with Mr Pratt having "destroyed" or "sabotaged" a promising project.
Baktofactory
"The tenant who was going to move in was raising some finance and we would have sold them back the building at a profit to CH3 …. As the director of Baktofactory, I would have wanted [to have the profit] streamed back to CH3 so CH3 can meet its commitments."
As Mr Bloch accepted, the "tenant" would have been Baktochem Kft, another company ultimately owned by Mr Richards.
Twisted Pair
"In 2004 – Twisted Pair's first year of sales – the company generated just under $2M in revenue and completed with its partners over 55 customer installations of products that were 'Powered by WAVE'. Through the establishment of operational excellence and an expanded list of over 40 partners, Twisted Pair is projecting profitable operations in 2005 with $6M in revenue and significant, consistent growth over the next 5 years presented in this business plan."
B-Quad
"David Boon & I seem to be very close to negotiating Terms for the Purchase of Corban Networks Inc. We are proposing to use a Delaware Newco to be formed for the purposes of acquiring Corban Networks Inc.
My previous Email indicates a requirement for an Earnest Deposit in the sum of $US250k to be sent to Cairncross Hemplemann Client Account … together with instructions for the funds to be loaned to the Newco, secured by a Convertible Loan Note at an Interest Rate of Prime plus 1% for a Term of 6 months, and for the Newco to use the funds as an Earnest Deposit in its transaction to purchase Corban Networks Inc.
CH3 are to be offered Rights of Conversion to Common Stock in the Newco, prorata in percentage of Newco's Common Stock of the Purchase Cost price paid by Newco for Corban, and included as Conversion terms in the Loan Note. [eg, if Newco pays $20m for Corban, CH3 has rights to convert its Loan Note into Common Stock of Newco in the percentage of 250,000/20,000,000 = 1.25% of the Issued Common Stock of Newco at the time of Purchase."
HomeNet
"We put the Promissory Note in Murray's name. There was time pressure to get the funds to HomeNet, and Murray was in town and available to sign the note, which we needed the original of. However, the money came from CH3 …, and Murray and Stephen agreed to assign the note from Murray to CH3 at that time because the actual investment came from CH3. We did not document the assignment at that time, but both Murray and Ch3 were in agreement that the note was assigned.
In October, 2005, I realized that we did not have the assignment documented in our files, and confirmed that Murray and CH3 did not sign one without involving me. Therefore I put one together then, and made it effective as of the date of the Promissory Note, since that was the date that the assignment actually took place (and the date the CH3 wired the money)."
"agreed to provide or procure funding for HomeNet … in the Sum of up to $12,000,000 … for general corporate purposes and specifically, to enable HomeNet to execute a proposed telecommunications contract with the United States Air Force at Kunsan Air Base, Republic of Korea".
"Homenet is a start up company that is experiencing growth pains, is yet to achieve a year to date profit and requires significant investment of capital, human and financial resources."
It was noted that Homenet was "[t]echnically insolvent". The attorney involved told CH3's liquidators:
"when the loan was made, it was understood by all that it was an extremely high risk investment. Homenet's filing with the SEC confirms that at the time the loan was made they did not have the money to repay it."
Problems in Scotland
Liquidation
Mr Bloch's role in other companies associated with Mr Richards
"Later I was asked by Murray Richards and Mr Pirie whether I would consent to be Director for a number of UK companies which they were investing in or had already invested in. These were property companies in England and Scotland. When Murray Richards's Scottish Director Mr Harrow was dismissed for 'financial irregularities' I also joined the boards of the two larger developments in Scotland."
Thus, Mr Bloch became a director of, for example, various special purpose vehicles with names beginning "P4Property" (e.g. P4Property (Streatley) Limited) as well as Firbrae Limited (a Scottish property company) and Heath House Owners Limited. While some of the companies of which Mr Bloch was a director were property companies, others were not: for instance, 4G Services Limited and Centenary Consulting Services Limited (of each of which Mr Bloch was appointed as a director in 2006) were not, as I understand it, engaged in property development.
Litigation
Witnesses
Vivendi's case
The structure of remainder of this judgment
i) The standard of proof (paragraphs 120-123 below);ii) Mr Richards as a shadow director (paragraphs 124-132 below);
iii) Mr Richards' duties as a shadow director (paragraphs 133-145 below);
iv) The duty of good faith (paragraphs 146-178 below);
v) Dishonest assistance: legal principles (paragraphs 179-184 below);
vi) Limitation: legal principles (paragraphs 185-190 below);
vii) Dishonesty (paragraphs 191-193 below);
viii) Specific defences (paragraphs 194-201 below).
The standard of proof
"The civil standard of proof always means more likely than not. The only higher degree of probability required by the law is the criminal standard. But ... some things are inherently more likely than others. It would need more cogent evidence to satisfy one that the creature seen walking in Regent's Park was more likely than not to have been a lioness than to be satisfied to the same standard of probability that it was an Alsatian. On this basis, cogent evidence is generally required to satisfy a civil tribunal that a person has been fraudulent or behaved in some other reprehensible manner. But the question is always whether the tribunal thinks it more probable than not."
"… there is no logical or necessary connection between seriousness and probability. Some seriously harmful behaviour, such as murder, is sufficiently rare to be inherently improbable in most circumstances. Even then there are circumstances, such as a body with its throat cut and no weapon to hand, where it is not at all improbable. Other seriously harmful behaviour, such as alcohol or drug abuse, is regrettably all too common and not at all improbable. Nor are serious allegations made in a vacuum. Consider the famous example of the animal seen in Regent's Park. If it is seen outside the zoo on a stretch of greensward regularly used for walking dogs, then of course it is more likely to be a dog than a lion. If it is seen in the zoo next to the lions' enclosure when the door is open, then it may well be more likely to be a lion than a dog."
Mr Richards as a shadow director
Legal principles
"a person in accordance with whose directions or instructions the directors of the company are accustomed to act".
However, a person is not to be considered a shadow director:
"by reason only that the directors act on advice given by him in a professional capacity".
See section 741(2) of the Companies Act 1985, section 251 of the Companies Act 2006, section 22(5) of the Company Directors Disqualification Act 1986 and section 251 of the Insolvency Act 1986.
"(1) The definition of a shadow director is to be construed in the normal way to give effect to the parliamentary intention ascertainable from the mischief to be dealt with and the words used. In particular, as the purpose of the Act is the protection of the public and as the definition is used in other legislative contexts, it should not be strictly construed because it also has quasi-penal consequences in the context of the Company Directors Disqualification Act 1986…. (2) The purpose of the legislation is to identify those, other than professional advisers, with real influence in the corporate affairs of the company. But it is not necessary that such influence should be exercised over the whole field of its corporate activities…. (3) Whether any particular communication from the alleged shadow director, whether by words or conduct, is to be classified as a direction or instruction must be objectively ascertained by the court in the light of all the evidence. In that connection I do not accept that it is necessary to prove the understanding or expectation of either giver or receiver. In many, if not most, cases it will suffice to prove the communication and its consequence. Evidence of such understanding or expectation may be relevant but it cannot be conclusive. Certainly the label attached by either or both parties then or thereafter cannot be more than a factor in considering whether the communication came within the statutory description of direction or instruction. (4) Non-professional advice may come within that statutory description. The proviso excepting advice given in a professional capacity appears to assume that advice generally is or may be included. Moreover the concepts of 'direction' and 'instruction' do not exclude the concept of 'advice' for all three share the common feature of 'guidance'. (5) It will, no doubt, be sufficient to show that in the face of 'directions or instructions' from the alleged shadow director the properly appointed directors or some of them cast themselves in a subservient role or surrendered their respective discretions. But I do not consider that it is necessary to do so in all cases. Such a requirement would be to put a gloss on the statutory requirement that the board are 'accustomed to act' 'in accordance with' such directions or instructions."
"They may be very effective in graphically conveying the effect of the definition in the light of the facts of that case, as shown by their frequent use in the reported cases to which I have referred. But, it seems to me, they may be misleading when transposed to the facts of other cases. Thus to describe the board as the cat's paw, puppet or dancer to the tune of the shadow director implies a degree of control both of quality and extent over the corporate field in excess of what the statutory definition requires. What is needed is that the board is accustomed to act on the directions or instructions of the shadow director. As I have already indicated such directions and instructions do not have to extend over all or most of the corporate activities of the company; nor is it necessary to demonstrate a degree of compulsion in excess of that implicit in the fact that the board are accustomed to act in accordance with them. Further, in my view, it is not necessary to the recognition of a shadow director that he should lurk in the shadows, though frequently he may, for example, in the case of a person resident abroad who owns all the shares in a company but chooses to operate it through a local board of directors. From time to time the owner, to the knowledge of all to whom it may be of concern, gives directions to the local board what to do but takes no part in the management of the company himself. In my view such an owner may be a shadow director notwithstanding that he takes no steps to hide the part he plays in the affairs of the company. Lurking in the shadows may occur but is not an essential ingredient to the recognition of the shadow director."
The present case
i) By the time CH3 was transferred out of the Vivendi group, it was no longer an ordinary trading company. With the exception of the Ark, the properties of which it held leases were sub-let, but agents were employed to collect the rents and otherwise manage the properties. The main matters that fell to be decided related to what should be done as regards (a) the Ark and (b) the money that had been left in CH3;ii) Mr Richards' involvement with these matters is apparent from even the rather limited documentary evidence that is available. The Basis of Statement Report reflected a business plan that had been prepared by Mr Richards. Once CH3 had changed hands, Mr Richards discussed his plans and "objectives of moving surplus cash up to C7" at a meeting with PwC. On 12 February 2004, Mr Bloch asked Harper Macleod to "discuss with Murray [Richards]" some advice that had been received from PwC, and on the next day Harper Macleod mentioned that they had "explained to Murray" that the reduction of capital process was "fairly complicated". A 24 March email from Jonathan Edwards refers to a forthcoming meeting with, among other, Mr Richards. In the April, Mr Richards entered into correspondence with both Mr Harrod and Harper Macleod about the terms on which CH3 had been acquired and what, if any, dividend should be paid. In December 2004, SJ Berwin noted in a letter to Mr Bloch that it was "your/Murray's strategy to seek to acquire the freehold interest of each of the properties that is currently leased by CH3" (emphasis added);
iii) The bundles undoubtedly contain emails and letters from professional advisers that are addressed to Mr Bloch. For example, PwC wrote to Mr Bloch by email and letter after meeting Mr Richards in early February 2004. On that occasion, however, PwC sent a letter to Mr Bloch attached to an email "[a]s requested by Murray [Richards]". Sometimes emails and letters can be seen to have been addressed or copied to Mr Richards as well as Mr Bloch. Of particular significance, perhaps, is the fact that the bundles do not contain any responses of real substance from Mr Bloch. Mr Richards can be seen engaging in meaningful dialogue with advisers. The same cannot be said of Mr Bloch;
iv) By his own account, Mr Richards found the projects in which CH3 invested. He maintained that he sent a feasibility study in respect of each project to Mr Bloch, but this seems unlikely. No such feasibility study has been found in CH3's records or been disclosed by Mr Richards or Mr Bloch;
v) Mr Bloch's background in technology meant that he was better equipped to play a significant role in some of the other companies of which he became a director (e.g. PVA) than was the case with CH3. Mr Bloch lacked property experience. Mr Richards, in contrast, had been involved in the industry for decades;
vi) At 12.49 pm on the day the Consultancy Agreement was entered into, Mr Pirie sent Mr Bloch an email in which he said that "we" believed that "the notice period should be 12 months, not one month" and that the "appropriate fee for first priority is £240,000 and the monthly fee £30,000 with 12 months being paid in advance". There is no compelling evidence of Mr Bloch seeking to negotiate;
vii) With the US$250,000 payment to B-Quad, Mr Richards explained that he seemed to be "very close to negotiating Terms for the Purchase of Corban Networks Inc" and that an earnest deposit of US$250,000 was required, and he concluded by saying:
"Should CH3 wish to undertake this offer, please accept by sending the sum of $US250,000 to Cairncross Hempleman's Client Account, with Instructions for them to apply the funds as above."Mr Bloch replied simply, "The investment and terms are attractive and I will advise acceptance", and he did as he was asked;viii) On 4 February 2005, Mr Richards told Mr Bloch that he had "a deal to buy into Homenet". Mr Bloch responded, "Sounds great – look forward to the 'debrief'". There is no evidence of him querying the proposed transaction;
ix) I indicated earlier that I do not believe that representatives of Investec Trust Jersey will have been much involved in commercial decision-making notwithstanding Mr Richards' evidence that such people "actually managed the business for [him]". I find the picture Mr Richards and Mr Bloch seek to paint of the latter's role no more credible;
x) During cross-examination, Mr Richards said:
"Stephen [Bloch] usually sought ultimate shareholder support from me on just about – well, probably everything he did."
That comes close to an admission that Mr Bloch was accustomed to act on directions from Mr Richards.
"I knew that Murray [Richards] was a 'non-dom'. He is an Australian passport holder but a New Zealander by origin. He seemed to be living all over the place. He was certainly not permanently resident in the UK but he had the use of a property here. I knew that his personal affairs were managed by Investec Trust in Jersey so that if he was involved in any property or other development work involving UK companies he would need nominees or representatives on his behalf and he had in mind that I would be his 'legman' for what I later learned was [CH3]."
"All the witnesses including Mr Bloch accepted that he was in sole charge of CH3."
That observation was, however, made on the basis of different evidence in proceedings between different parties in which it was not even alleged that Mr Richards was a shadow director.
Mr Richards' duties as a shadow director
"Mr Yamvrias undoubtedly owed a fiduciary duty to Rendsburg. Although he was not formally a director, he was a 'shadow director' and controlled the company's activities. To remove the funds in Rendsburg's bank account when it had a probable liability to Yukong far in excess of its assets involved a clear breach of that fiduciary duty: West Mercia Safetywear Ltd (in liq) v Dodd [1988] BCLC 250."
Ferris J adopted a similar approach in John v Price Waterhouse (unreported, 11 April 2001), and the Law Commission endorsed Toulson J's views in its 1998 consultation paper "Company Directors: Regulating Conflicts of Interests and Formulating a Statement of Duties". Having noted (in paragraph 17.14) that "[t]he view has been expressed that because the concept of shadow director is a statutory creation it only applies where statutory provisions specify it", the Commission continued (in paragraph 17.15):
"However the better view is that the shadow director is to be regarded as akin to a de facto director and that he can incur the liability of a de jure director under the general law where he effectively acts as a director through the people whom he can influence."
"The instructions that a shadow director gives (and which the de jure directors act upon) may be quite inimical to the company's interests. It would be odd if, in those circumstances, a person who has no direct relationship with the company and who consistently gives instructions inimical to its interests were nevertheless held to have undertaken a duty of loyalty to the company; and to have agreed to subordinate his own interest to those of the company. Moreover the wider the interpretation of the statutory definition, the less easy it becomes to impose upon one who falls within the definition the full range of fiduciary duties imposed upon a de jure or de facto director. I am not persuaded that the mere fact that a person falls within the statutory definition of 'shadow director' is enough to impose upon him the same fiduciary duties to the relevant company as are owed by a de jure or de facto director."
Lewison J's conclusions can be seen from these paragraphs:
"1289 The indirect influence exerted by a paradigm shadow director who does not directly deal with or claim the right to deal directly with the company's assets will not usually, in my judgment, be enough to impose fiduciary duties upon him; although he will, of course be subject to those statutory duties and disabilities that the Companies Act creates. The case is the stronger where the shadow director has been acting throughout in furtherance of his own, rather than the company's, interests. However, on the facts of a particular case, the activities of a shadow director may go beyond the mere exertion of indirect influence.
1290 For example, in the present case it is common ground that Mr Fielding became the sole signatory on Seaquest's bank account. It is, in my judgment, indisputable that as sole signatory on that account he was not entitled to draw on the account for his personal benefit. By voluntarily becoming the sole signatory on that account, he took it upon himself to assume control of an asset belonging to another. That voluntary assumption must, in my judgment, carry with it a duty to use the asset for the benefit of the person to whom it belongs. That duty is properly called a fiduciary duty. However, it is important to recognise that this fact alone does not mean that wider fiduciary duties are imposed upon him. In the case of Northstar, for example, Ms Patey was a signatory on the bank account. She was only a book-keeper. It is plain that she could not have applied Northstar's money for her own benefit, and hence had fiduciary duties as regards the money under her control; but that does not mean that she owed the full range of directors' fiduciary duties to Northstar."
"it would be odd if shadow directors were not subject to the full panoply of fiduciary duties in the same way as de facto directors. It is submitted that Ultraframe is not the last word on the question of whether fiduciary duties are owed by a shadow director, for the simple reason that Lewison J. approached this question, wrongly it is submitted, on the basis that such duties are assumed rather than being imposed."
Kershaw, "Company Law in Context", 2nd. ed. (at 330), endorses these criticisms. Gower & Davies, "Principles of Modern Company Law", 9th ed., comments (at paragraph 16-15):
"[Ultraframe] shows the continuing influence of the trustee analogy in the development of directors' duties, but it is submitted that in this case it is an unfortunate one. The judge's approach provides a relatively easy route for the true mover behind the company's strategy to distance him- or herself from liability for the decisions taken, by appointing a compliant board and giving it instructions at crucial points. More important, if the purpose of the law of directors' duties is to constrain the exercise of the discretion vested in the board, it would be unfortunate if those rules did not reach all those involved in that exercise."
"The critical feature of these relationships is that the fiduciary undertakes or agrees to act for or on behalf of or in the interests of another person in the exercise of a power or discretion which will affect the interests of that other person in a legal or practical sense."
Professor Edelman (now a judge of the Supreme Court of Western Australia) argued in a 2010 article (126 LQR 302, at 317) that the essential question is:
"did the party, by his words or conduct, give rise to an understanding or expectation in a reasonable person that he would behave in a particular way (for example, not put himself in a position of conflict, not make an unauthorised profit, and act in good faith and in the best interests of the beneficiary)."
That article was cited in F & C Alternative Investments (Holdings) Ltd v Barthelemy (No 2) [2011] EWHC 1731 (Ch), [2012] Ch 613, where Sales J said (at paragraph 225):
"Fiduciary duties are obligations imposed by law as a reaction to particular circumstances of responsibility assumed by one person in respect of the conduct or the affairs of another."
In another recent case, Ross River Ltd v Waveley Commercial Ltd [2012] EWHC 81 (Ch) (reversed on other grounds: [2013] EWCA Civ 910), Morgan J, when considering whether a defendant had owed fiduciary obligations, said (at paragraph 256):
"the underlying question is whether on the specific facts of this case, WCL undertook expressly or by implication a fiduciary obligation to Ross River".
"the following description suffices for present purposes: a person will be in a fiduciary relationship with another when and insofar as that person has undertaken to perform such a function for, or has assumed such a responsibility to, another as would thereby reasonably entitle that other to expect that he or she will act in that other's interest to the exclusion of his or her own or a third party's interest."
Rather earlier in his career, Finn J (as Professor Finn) had said in "The Fiduciary Principle" (in Youdan (ed.), "Equity, Fiduciaries and Trusts"):
"The factual setting for the fiduciary question is the relationship one party voluntarily or consensually enters into with another or which he should be taken as having entered into in the circumstances. This suggests that there may be profit in seeking to structure a definition around the responsibility that party has actually, or should be taken to have, assumed or 'undertaken' in the relationship. Professor Austin Scott's definition, a version of which the writer has previously advocated, is the exemplar of this view: 'A fiduciary is a person who undertakes to act in the interests of another person.' But this is in the end unhelpful. A fiduciary responsibility, ultimately, is an imposed not an accepted one. If one needs an analogy here, one is closer to tort law than to contract; one is concerned with an imposed standard of behaviour. The factors which lead to that imposition doubtless involve recognition of what the alleged fiduciary has agreed to do. But equally public policy considerations can ordain what he must do, whether this be agreed to or not. This emerges most clearly in those cases where the fiduciary principle is used to protect property and near property interests, and in the de facto fiduciary relationship cases. At best, all one can ask for is a description of a fiduciary – a description which suggests the essence of the fiduciary idea but which in the end is no more precise than is a description of the tort of negligence. All that the writer would venture is this: a person will be a fiduciary in his relationship with another when and insofar as that other is entitled to expect that he will act in that other's interest to the exclusion of his own several interest."
"Throughout the Companies Act, 1862 (25 & 26 Vict. c. 89), the word 'promoters' is not anywhere used. It is, however, a short and convenient way of designating those who set in motion the machinery by which the Act enables them to create an incorporated company.
Neither does this Act in terms impose any duty on those promoters to have regard to the interests of the company which they are thus empowered to create. But it gives them an almost unlimited power to make the corporation subject to such regulations as they please, and for such purposes as they please, and to create it with a managing body whom they select, having powers such as they choose to give to those managers, so that the promoters can create such a corporation that the corporation, as soon as it comes into being, may be bound by anything, not in itself illegal, which those promoters have chosen. And I think those who accept and use such extensive powers, which so greatly affect the interests of the corporation when it comes into being, are not entitled to disregard the interests of that corporation altogether. They must make a reasonable use of the powers which they accept from the Legislature with regard to the formation of the corporation, and that requires them to pay some regard to its interests. And consequently they do stand with regard to that corporation when formed, in what is commonly called a fiduciary relation to some extent."
If, therefore, an undertaking/assumption is crucial to the existence of fiduciary duties, a promoter's acceptance and use of powers "which so greatly affect the interests of the corporation" must imply an undertaking/assumption of responsibility.
"The paradigm of the circumstances in which equity will find a fiduciary relationship is where one party, A, has assumed to act in relation to the property or affairs of another, B. A, having assumed responsibility, pro tanto, for B's affairs, is taken to have assumed certain duties in relation to the conduct of those affairs, including normally a duty of care. Thus, a trustee assumes responsibility for the management of the property of the beneficiary, a company director for the affairs of the company and an agent for those of his principal. By so assuming to act in B's affairs, A comes under fiduciary duties to B."
Assuming to act in relation to the property or affairs of another can thus attract fiduciary duties.
i) A shadow director will have assumed to act in relation to the company's affairs (to adapt Lord Browne-Wilkinson's words in White v Jones) and to ask the de jure directors to exercise powers that exist exclusively for the benefit of the company;ii) A person who gives directions or instructions to a company's de jure directors in the belief that they will be acted on can fairly be described as assuming responsibility for the company's affairs, at least as regards the directions or instructions he gives;
iii) Although Parliament has not designated shadow directors as directors for all purposes in the Companies Acts[1], it has provided for important consequences to flow from the status. For example, a shadow director is treated as a director in the context of chapter 4 of part 10 of the Companies Act 2006 (transactions with directors requiring approval of members) and can be the subject of proceedings under the Company Directors Disqualification Act 1986 (see sections 6(3C) and 8(1)) and held liable for wrongful trading (see section 214(7) of the Insolvency Act 1986). Such provisions presumably reflect a perception that a shadow director can bear responsibility for a company's affairs;
iv) There is a compelling analogy with the position of promoters. Promoters owe fiduciary duties as a result of their acceptance and use of powers "which so greatly affect the interests of the corporation". A shadow director, too, can be said to choose to make use of powers which "greatly affect the interests of the corporation";
v) A shadow director's role in a company's affairs may be every bit as important as that of a de facto director, and de facto directors are considered to owe fiduciary duties;
vi) That a shadow director may not subjectively wish to assume fiduciary duties cannot matter as such;
vii) Public policy, so far as it may matter, points towards fiduciary duties being imposed on shadow directors.
The duty of good faith
The basic rule
"The duty imposed on directors to act bona fide in the interests of the company is a subjective one …. The question is not whether, viewed objectively by the court, the particular act or omission which is challenged was in fact in the interests of the company; still less is the question whether the court, had it been in the position of the director at the relevant time, might have acted differently. Rather, the question is whether the director honestly believed that his act or omission was in the interests of the company. The issue is as to the director's state of mind. No doubt, where it is clear that the act or omission under challenge resulted in substantial detriment to the company, the director will have a harder task persuading the court that he honestly believed it to be in the company's interest; but that does not detract from the subjective nature of the test."
The significance of the interests of creditors: law
"In a solvent company the proprietary interests of the shareholders entitle them as a general body to be regarded as the company when questions of the duty of directors arise. If, as a general body, they authorise or ratify a particular action of the directors, there can be no challenge to the validity of what the directors have done. But where a company is insolvent the interests of the creditors intrude. They become prospectively entitled, through the mechanism of liquidation, to displace the power of the shareholders and directors to deal with the company's assets. It is in a practical sense their assets and not the shareholders' assets that, through the medium of the company, are under the management of the directors pending either liquidation, return to solvency, or the imposition of some alternative administration."
"Where a company is insolvent or of doubtful solvency or on the verge of insolvency and it is the creditors' money which is at risk the directors, when carrying out their duty to the company, must consider the interests of the creditors as paramount and take those into account when exercising their discretion."
(The emphasis has been added.)
"It is sufficient for present purposes that, in accord with the reason for regard to the interests of creditors, the company need not be insolvent at the time and the directors must consider their interests if there is a real and not remote risk that they will be prejudiced by the dealing in question."
This passage was quoted with apparent approval in Bell Group Ltd v Westpac Banking Corporation [2008] WASC 239 and, on appeal, Westpac Banking Corporation v Bell Group [2012] WASCA 157. At first instance, Owen J, having quoted from Kalls, said (at 4445):
"The basic principle is that a decision that has adverse consequences for creditors might also be adverse to the interests of the company. Adversity might strike short of actual insolvency and might propel the company towards an insolvency administration. And that is where the interests of creditors come to the fore."
The significance of the interests of creditors: the present case
Were the payments at issue made in the interests of CH3 and its creditors?
The later payments
Herongate
The dividend
i) The dividend served to remove from CH3 more than a third of the money that Vivendi had left in the company even though (a) Project H was known to have failed, (b) no steps were being taken to generate a rental income from the Ark and (c) Deka had not yet even been asked whether it would sell the freehold. As things stood, CH3 was obviously going to find itself unable to meet its obligations to its landlords relatively soon;ii) Mr Harrod highlighted this point in an email to Mr Richards. As Mr Harrod said, CH3 had "no income cash flow to meet lease commitments which run for many years" and, "without future income", had a "finite life";
iii) PwC drew attention to the need to consider the continuing ability of CH3 to pay its debts as they fell due and to be satisfied that the assumptions used by Jonathan Edwards in their report were appropriate (see paragraphs 44 and 49 above);
iv) It must have been apparent to Mr Richards and Mr Bloch that those assumptions were not in fact appropriate, for the reasons given in paragraph 50 above;
v) While Mr Richards and Mr Bloch claimed that the dividend was to be used to generate money which would be passed down to CH3, the claim is unsupported by either contemporary documents or subsequent events.
The Consultancy Agreement
"the Consultancy Fees were based upon realistic cost to replace me at p4property group, and to have first call on my time, and to have first right on any projects or deals I may source for the relevant period."
"Richard Pirie said to me he was going to have to take on a lot of extra cost … because of the CH3 acquisition. So there wasn't just a question of paying Murray [Richards] for his time. It was also the amount of extra work that was envisaged replacing Murray by P4 Property Consulting because … so much of Murray's time would be taken up with CH3 business or Centenary business."
i) I was not convinced by the reasons that were given for thinking that the P4 Property group would have to incur substantial extra costs as a result of Mr Richards becoming involved in CH3. Mr Richards was the group's rainmaker before CH3 was transferred, but he remained so afterwards; Mr Richards himself spoke of being "too busy working on projects in [his] group" to do anything directly for CH3. Further, I cannot see that Mr Richards would have taken on much, if any, of the work done by Mr Pirie or even Rydens had he not been spending time on CH3 matters;ii) In any case, I cannot see how any additional costs that the P4 Property group might have had to incur can adequately explain the £240,000 retention fee or the total upfront payment of £600,000. Any additional services the P4 Property group might have needed to obtain would presumably have been paid for on an ongoing basis. There is no reason to suppose that, say, Mr Pirie or Rydens would have required an upfront payment;
iii) The evidence indicates, on balance, that other group companies were not required to make similar payments for what Mr Richards did for them;
iv) As I have explained, I consider that CH3 made other payments otherwise than in the interests of CH3.
Overall conclusion
Dishonest assistance: legal principles
"Whatever may be the position in some criminal or other contexts …, in the context of the accessory liability principle acting dishonestly, or with a lack of probity, which is synonymous, means simply not acting as an honest person would in the circumstances. This is an objective standard. At first sight this may seem surprising. Honesty has a connotation of subjectivity, as distinct from the objectivity of negligence. Honesty, indeed, does have a strong subjective element in that it is a description of a type of conduct assessed in the light of what a person actually knew at the time, as distinct from what a reasonable person would have known or appreciated. Further, honesty and its counterpart dishonesty are mostly concerned with advertent conduct, not inadvertent conduct. Carelessness is not dishonesty. Thus for the most part dishonesty is to be equated with conscious impropriety. However, these subjective characteristics of honesty do not mean that individuals are free to set their own standards of honesty in particular circumstances. The standard of what constitutes honest conduct is not subjective. Honesty is not an optional scale, with higher or lower values according to the moral standards of each individual. If a person knowingly appropriates another's property, he will not escape a finding of dishonesty simply because he sees nothing wrong in such behaviour."
"requires knowledge by the defendant that what he was doing would be regarded as dishonest by honest people, although he should not escape a finding of dishonesty because he sets his own standards of honesty and does not regard as dishonest what he knows would offend the normally accepted standards of honest conduct."
"The reference to 'what he knows would offend normally accepted standards of honest conduct' meant only that his knowledge of the transaction had to be such as to render his participation contrary to normally acceptable standards of honest conduct. It did not require that he should have had reflections about what those normally acceptable standards were."
"[T]he question was whether the relevant conduct of [the defendant director] in seeking to frustrate [a creditor of the defendant's company], given that he knew that [the defendant's company] was insolvent but otherwise had sufficient assets to pay a dividend to its creditors, was dishonest …. The deliberate removal of the assets of an insolvent company so as entirely to defeat the just claim of a creditor is, in my view, not in accordance with the ordinary standards of honest commercial behaviour, however much it may occur."
Limitation: legal principles
"(1) No period of limitation prescribed by this Act shall apply to an action by a beneficiary under a trust, being an action—
(a) in respect of any fraud or fraudulent breach of trust to which the trustee was a party or privy; or
(b) to recover from the trustee trust property or the proceeds of trust property in the possession of the trustee, or previously received by the trustee and converted to his use….
(3) Subject to the preceding provisions of this section, an action by a beneficiary to recover trust property or in respect of any breach of trust, not being an action for which a period of limitation is prescribed by any other provision of this Act, shall not be brought after the expiration of six years from the date on which the right of action accrued."
"an action by a beneficiary under a trust may be brought in respect of any fraud or fraudulent breach of trust to which the trustee was party or privy against both that trustee and any other person who dishonestly assisted him in such fraud or fraudulent breach of trust, in either case, after the expiration of the period for which section 21(3) provides."
"In my judgment, as a matter of basic principle, where a fiduciary uses his beneficiary's money to confer a benefit on a company he controls he is denying the beneficiary's title to the money for his own purposes and this amounts to a conversion for his own use. The same is true where a fiduciary causes his beneficiary to incur a liability for the benefit of a company which the fiduciary controls. Since this is what the applicant is in substance alleging under the MOVP claim, I hold that this claim is within s 21(1)(b) of the Limitation Act and is therefore not statute-barred."
Dishonesty
i) The claims against Mr Richards and Mr Bloch for breach of fiduciary duty will be statute-barred unless section 21(1) of the Limitation Act 1980 applies. Section 21(1)(a) will be applicable if Mr Richards and Mr Bloch acted dishonestly;ii) It follows from what I have said earlier in this judgment that, in my view, Mr Richards procured the breaches of duty that I consider Mr Bloch to have committed. Mr Richards will nonetheless be liable for dishonest assistance only if (a) he was dishonest himself (that being an essential ingredient of dishonest assistance) and (b) Mr Bloch was too (so that section 21(1)(a) of the 1980 Act is in point on the basis explained in Williams v Central Bank of Nigeria).
Specific defences
Advice in January 2004
"However, as we have already pointed out to you, you should recognise that there remains some risk that in the event of a future default by CH3 on the onerous lease(s), that the lessor(s) would seek redress from Vivendi by challenging the validity of the restructuring and the cash payment out of CH3, for example by asserting that the sale price of CH3 to C6 was overvalued and the subsequent return of cash was an unlawful distribution or that the upstream loan by CH3 was not recoverable and hence CH3 did not have net assets at the point of giving of financial assistance."
Unlawful dividend
The settlement negotiations
"[Vivendi] assured me by telephone and in emails to elicit a Settlement with me (the dropping of my Part 20 Claims against them and PwC) that order sought 'disposes of all claims in the litigation', in what I and my then Solicitor were told by [Vivendi] was a 'drop hands' settlement and an end to the matter;
[Vivendi] acted dishonestly in this regards. It follows that [Vivendi] had intended to raise these proceedings once they had elicited settlement by me, in particular through my dropping of my Part 20 against PwC…. They also disguised documents to mislead me (and my Solicitors Edwin Coe LLP) into settling with them."
"In summary, I did not knowingly mislead Mr Bloch in any way regarding the effect of the Consent Order or the settlement of the Financial Assistance Proceedings generally (in respect of which he was advised by Edwin Coe up until at least (and including) 23 December 2010, and subsequently he said that he took his own legal advice on the effect of the Consent Order in any event). Further, … during my exchanges with Mr Bloch in late December 2010, I believed that Mr Bloch was actually seeking to preserve his rights to make claims against Vivendi and PwC, rather than seeking an assurance that no further claims would be brought against him by Vivendi or CH3. I therefore do not see any basis for the allegations which he has made against me and Vivendi in his Defence and evidence."
Assignment
Relief from liability
Conclusion
Note 1 The British position seems to differ in this respect from that in Australia: see section 60 of Australia’s Corporations Act 1989, section 9 of the Corporations Act 2001 and Australian Securities Commission v AS Nominees Ltd (1995) 18 ACSR 459. [Back] Note 2 For the avoidance of doubt, I regard the duty of good faith as a fiduciary duty. [Back] Note 3 The events at issue in this case pre-date the Companies Act 2006. [Back]