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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 >> Trilogy Management Ltd v Harcus Sinclair (a firm) [2016] EWHC 170 (Ch) (02 February 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2016/170.html Cite as: [2016] EWHC 170 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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TRILOGY MANAGEMENT LIMITED (A Company incorporated in the Bailiwick of Jersey) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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HARCUS SINCLAIR (A FIRM) |
Defendant |
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Christopher Butcher QC (instructed by Reynolds Porter Chamberlain) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 20th January 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
The Chancellor of The High Court (Sir Terence Etherton) :
Factual Background
(1) A new purpose trust was to be established, with the four children executors as its enforcers.(2) The purpose trust was to hold 96% of the share capital of the trustee company YT, 1% was to be held by Mrs C, and the remaining 3% by another discretionary trust (which it is unnecessary to describe in this judgment). The four children executors were to be the directors of YT, together with Alan Binnington, a partner in the Jersey firm of advocates Mourant du Feu & Jeune ("Mourants").
(3) 99% of the A shares in JY were to be transferred to YT, which would continue to hold the B shares. The remaining 1% of the A shares were to be transferred to Mrs C. The four children executors and Mr Binnington were also to be directors of JY.
(4) Eight new charitable sub-trusts were to be established, each with one of OM's children as its guardian;
(5) An instrument of appointment was to be made by YT, as trustee of the Foundation, to ensure that all the income and any capital distributions from JY would be paid to the trustees of the eight sub-trusts in equal shares.
(6) The Articles of Association of JY were to be amended, in particular by including a new Article 96, which was to provide for a minimum distribution of profits.
It is that last matter which lies at the heart of these proceedings.
"Notwithstanding any other provision of these articles, the Directors shall, in any financial year in which profits are available for dividend, recommend to the Company a dividend of not less than 75% of such profits (or such greater amount as a majority of the Directors shall agree, notwithstanding the terms of Article 76). …"
"Notwithstanding any other provision of these articles, the Directors shall, in any financial year in which profits of that year are available for dividend, recommend to the Company a dividend of not less than 75% of such profits…"
"I spoke to Keith Bruce-Smith yesterday … He said that he recalled the words "of that year" being added to the amendment to the articles in connection with the JY dividends as it was effectively at his insistence. The thinking was that the sub-trusts and their guardians were at that time totally untried and untested and he did not think that, apart from the initial funding, they should receive further significant funds immediately. He pointed out that it is always possible for more than 75% of the profits to be paid out if the trustees feel that the sub-trusts are being operated effectively. He believes that BNP were aware of the change at the time. He also agreed with my view that we should try to ensure that further communication on the subject is channelled through BNP and not the guardians as, like me, he does not feel that they have any standing in the matter."
"It is true that the original pre-Court hearing version of the amended article did not make it completely clear that only profits of the current year were to be treated in this way; hence there may have been an argument that accumulated profits of prior years would need to be distributed. However, Keith [Bruce-Smith] remembers that he himself was amongst those who wanted it made clear that only future profits would count. Given the rushing about that went on at the time that everything was finalized for the Court though, there is not clarity about how the newer version of the article was circulated; but it was incorporated in the final Court order."
"73. In attempting to disentangle these facts, the Court has difficulty in reaching decisive conclusions on all points. The reason is that many of the relevant persons have not given evidence before us, either in writing or under cross-examination. This applies to Mr Taube, Miss Meek, Mr Moyse, Mr Kenyon and Miss Saker (though the latter contributed in the form of a letter supporting MC's latest position). We are also aware that Trilogy has already launched proceedings in England claiming that Harcus Sinclair added the words "of that year" without instructions, and it would be wrong for this Court on the evidence before us to make findings on that question ourselves.
74. Even so, acknowledging that weakness, we reach the following conclusions relevant to the present case. First, Mr Gowar and the Trilogy sisters were in our view entitled to understand and expect that article 96 was to apply to distributable profits in the full sense of the term. That was what the memorandum of understanding had provided, or at least, once Mr Gowar's e-mail exchange with Mr Moyse [solicitor advising AC and PC in their capacity as executors] had clarified certain ambiguities, it appears that that was what the compromise was understood by both of them to provide. The addition of "of that year" defeated that understanding and expectation.
75. Second, that understanding and that expectation are consistent with everything that we have heard and read, from all relevant parties, about what Miss Meek and Mr Taube [acting for AC and PC] told Mr Gowar and the Trilogy sisters on the evening of 10th June, 2004. Mr Taube's analysis that the proposed terms of article 96, even when referring to 50 per cent distributions, would in practice lead to a total distribution of the assets of JY within 10 or 15 years, can in our view be explained only on the basis of two assumptions. The first is that future capital disposals would occur over the 15-year period, and that those profits would be distributable. But that alone would not be enough. The second assumption must have been that previous years' accrued profits were also in principle distributable. At the same time they may not have appreciated the full extent of the distributable profits of JY.
76. Next, the proviso to article 96 makes little sense, or at least that it is unlikely ever to apply in practice, once the earlier part of the article had been amended by adding the words "of that year". Without those added words, the proviso does appear to us to have been a valid addition to the article.
77. On the other hand the understanding of Mr Taube and Mr Moyse does not appear to have been shared by all of the executors themselves, perhaps not fully by any of them. LC and MC claim never to have thought that article 96 would apply to previously accrued profits. And in our view this conclusion is to an extent justified also by PC's evidence, including the confused nature of that evidence. If we have correctly understood this evidence, it means that PC did contemplate distributions as including undistributed profits brought forward from previous years, but that he had not in fact contemplated a substantial dividend in the first year. But we question PC's reasoning given at the end of his 2008 e-mail, to the effect that the PTP payment would have made no sense if the words 'of that year' had never been added. The PTP payment was agreed as an immediate payment, no doubt using part of accrued profits. The first mandatory payment of 75 per cent, without the words 'of that year', would doubtless have been more substantial, subject to the operation of the proviso, but it would have taken some time before that first distribution could be made, and the PTP provision cannot be said to have made no sense.
78. As for MC's contribution, the choice before this Court on the evidence is this. Her original affirmation of 15th November, 2011, stated that she had deliberately had the words "of that year" added by Miss Saker, and went to far as explain at some length, and with some cogency, her reason for doing so. In our judgment that is the kind of evidence which cannot have been a mere mistake or trick of memory. It was either true or a lie. If it was a lie, then it remains a mystery why Harcus Sinclair altered the text of the draft article 96, unless they had the understanding that the added words reflected that of the executors and the proposed boards of YT and JY as to the intended meaning of the article. If it was true, that may to some extent explain Harcus Sinclair's action, in which case MC's subsequent denials of her involvement in the point should be disregarded as self-serving untruths. One of the reasons why it is difficult for us to reach a conclusion on this point is that Miss Saker, now Mrs Murphy, who was advising MC in 2004 and attended the signing meeting on 21st June, did not give evidence before us, either in writing or orally, though (as we have mentioned) she has written a letter which MC has prayed in aid apparently to weaken the force of her own original evidence. Despite that difficulty we have come to the conclusion, after having seen and heard MC in the witness box, that on the balance of probabilities, and on the basis of the evidence which we have seen and heard, her original evidence was true and that her later evidence on the point was not."
The present proceedings
"(g) in each accounting year of JY 75% of the distributable profits of JY would be paid by way of mandatory dividend to YT as Trustee for the Foundation, and thence to the Eight Charitable Sub-trusts in equal shares. This would ensure a rapid flow of the wealth locked up within JY (which is not a charitable company) to the Eight Charitable Sub-trusts which would then become self-funding."
"16. To give effect to the part of the Compromise which made provision for the annual mandatory dividend of 75% of the distributable profits of JY, it was necessary to draft a proposed amendment to the Articles of Association of JY. The relevant Article was Article 96. The drafting of the whole Compromise involved the creation and/or amendment of copious documentation. The Second Defendant participated in this exercise and the Claimant will contend that by virtue of the fact that he acted for YT he had a particular responsibility for the drafting of the amendments to the Articles of Association of JY. In the work which he undertook in relation to the drafting and approval of the constitutional documents of JY, he and therefore the First Defendant, owed a duty of care:
(a) To the Foundation, which was, by the Compromise, to be the owner of 99% of the A shares in JY;
(b) To the Charitable Sub-trusts, which were to receive the benefit of, inter alia, the mandatory dividends which were an integral part of the Compromise.
17. The scope of the duty was to:
(a) Ensure that the drafting accurately reflected the terms of the Compromise;
(b) Protect his client, the Foundation and the Charitable Sub-trusts from any attempts which MC or any other person might make unilaterally to alter its terms in a manner which would block or reduce distributions from JY;
(c) Advise his client, the Foundation and the Charitable Sub-trusts of any such attempts, especially successful ones, and to return to the Jersey Court in the event that any party attempted to alter the material terms of the Compromise during the drafting process.
18. Neither the Foundation nor the Eight Charitable Sub-trusts were separately represented in the drafting process.
19. The draft resolution of JY which was to amend the Articles of Association and which emerged from the drafting process did not reflect the terms of the Compromise. Instead it reduced the scope of the mandatory dividend to 75% of the profits of the year in question. It is to be inferred that the Second Defendant was responsible, alone or with others, for this change and that he was fully aware of its import and in particular of the reduction in dividend flow to the Charitable Sub-trusts which would follow were it to be passed in that altered form.
20. Wrongfully and in breach of the duty of care owed to the Trilogy Sub-trusts the Defendants (acting by the Second Defendant) failed to:
(a) Produce for execution a final draft resolution of YT to alter Article 96 of the Articles of Association of JY in a manner which accurately reflected the Compromise;
(b) Protect the interests of the Trilogy Sub-trusts which were adversely affected by the reduction in the mandatory dividend;
(c) Oppose the creation of a different structure which, with the reduced mandatory dividend, gave MC effective control over a level of distribution from JY which had been agreed should be encompassed in a mandatory scheme. MC instead had an effective veto over dividends over and above the reduced mandatory dividend;
(d) Clearly and fairly draw the successful attempt to alter the mandatory dividend which had been agreed to the specific attention of the Trilogy sub-trusts and the Three Sisters before the execution of the draft resolution in its altered form;
(e) Advise his client to bring the matter back before the Jersey Court before the resolution was passed so that any opposing views could be heard. Had he advised PC and/or AC (from whom he was taking his instructions) and/or Helen Chui to bring the matter back before the Jersey Court the Claimant contends they would have done so and the Three Sisters and the Trilogy Sub-trusts would have been notified and heard. The Claimant will content that the Jersey Court would take a dim view of one or more parties to the Compromise unilaterally altering its terms without bringing the matter back to the court which had approved the compromise."
"46.2 While it is admitted that the Defendants caused the words 'of that year' to be added to the draft resolution to amend Article 96 of JY's Articles of Association, the addition of those words was not to alter (and did not alter) the terms that had previously been agreed in principle for the compromise of the Jersey probate proceedings. Rather the addition of those words to the draft resolution to amend Article 96 of JY's Articles of Association.
46.2.1 Was to ensure that the wishes and intentions of YT, and the terms on which YT intended to compromise the Jersey probate proceedings, were reflected in the documents to be executed to effect that compromise, and
46.2.2 Was to ensure that the draft resolution did in fact give effect to the terms that had previously been agreed in principle by the parties to the Jersey probate proceedings for the compromise of the Jersey probate proceedings;
46.3 The addition of the words 'of that year' to the draft resolution to amend Article 96 of JY's Articles of Association was discussed by the legal representatives of the parties to the Jersey probate proceedings at the meeting that took place on 21 June 2004. All agreed to the addition of the words 'of that year' to ensure that the draft resolution to amend Article 96 of JY's Articles of Association reflected and gave effect to the terms that had previously been agreed in principle for the Compromise of the Jersey probate proceedings;
46.4 The draft resolution to amend Article 96 of JY's Articles of Association (with the words 'of that year' added) was sent to Mr Gowar and Ms Ruffel of Lawrence Graham (as well as Crill Canavan) on 21 June 2004. None suggested that the addition of the words 'of that year' in the draft resolution
46.4.1 Altered the terms of the in principle agreement that had been discussed on 11 June 2004, or
46.4.2 Meant that the draft resolution to amend Article 96 of JY's Articles of Association no longer reflected the terms that had previously been agreed in principle for the compromise of the Jersey probate proceedings
and none suggested that, contrary to the wording of the 'new' Article 96 of JY's Articles of Association, they had previously understood the in principle agreement reached on 11 June 2004 to have been to the effect that JY would distribute annually not less than 75% of its distributable profits, regardless of the year or years in which such profits had become available for dividend;"
"26. As to the defence of limitation raised at paragraph 64, the fact that the Second Defendant altered the wording of Article 96 at a meeting at which the Three Sisters were not present or represented, being a fact relevant to the Claimant's cause of action was not discovered until the provision of documents in the Claimant's Jersey Representation by way of affidavit of Alan Binnington dated 24th March 2011 and could not have been discovered before that date by the exercise of reasonable diligence.
27. Alternatively, the Defendants acting by the Second Defendant deliberately altered the words of Article 96 in a manner which was a breach of the duty of care which they owed to the Claimant and to the Foundation as pleaded at paragraphs 16 and 17 of the POC, and which was unlikely to be discovered for some time.
28. In the further alternative, the Defendants acting by the Second Defendant deliberately altered the words of Article 96 without ensuring that they had instructions from AC and PC, in a manner which was a breach of duty of care which they admit they owed to YT and which was unlikely to be discovered for some time."
"3. Response
The Claimant relies on section 14A(5) of the Limitation Act 1980. Although the Claimant does not accept that the affidavit of Alan Binnington dated 24th March 2011 gave the Claimant "the knowledge required for bringing an action for damages in respect of the relevant damage" within the meaning of section 14A(6) of the Limitation Act 1980 as the claim was commenced within three years of 24th March 2011 the point does not arise. For the avoidance of doubt the Claimant avers that prior to 24th March 2011 the Claimant did not have the knowledge required for bringing an action for damages against the Defendants or either one of them."
"4. Response
The Claimant relies on section 32(1)(b) Limitation Act 1980 in circumstances where (a) the Defendants acting by the Second Defendant deliberately inserted the words "of that year" into the resolution amending Article 96; and (b) did not at that time or any time thereafter inform the Three Sisters or the trustee of the Trilogy Sub-trusts that it had done so."
"6. Response
In order to bring the claim, it was necessary for the Claimant to be aware of each of the following:
"(a) That the words "of that year" had been inserted into the draft resolution amending Article 96 of the Articles of Association of JY prior to the execution of the special resolution;
(b) That the resolution as executed had the effect of amending Article 96 to include the words "of that year";
(c) That the insertion of the words "of that year" were an unapproved departure from the Compromise;
(d) That the insertion of the words "of that year" into the draft resolution was not drawn to the attention of or approved by either the Three Sisters or the Royal Court;
(e) The identity of the person who inserted the words "of that year" into the draft resolution.
The Claimant first acquired knowledge which led it to believe that the Second Defendant inserted the words "of that year" into the draft resolution amending Article 96 of the Articles of Association of JY upon receipt of the documents of which YT provided discovery in the proceedings in the Royal Court of Jersey on 27 June 2013.
In light of the foregoing, until 27 June 2013 the Claimant did not have knowledge of each of the facts and matters particularised at (a) to (e) above. As such, in accordance with s.14A(4)-(5) Limitation Act 1980, the limitation period for the purposes of the claim is three years from 27 June 2013. That period will not expire until 27 June 2016."
"7. Response
The Claimant avers that the Second Defendant (a) deliberately inserted the words "of that year" into the draft resolution amending Article 96 of the Articles of Association of JY; and (b) deliberately made no attempt to draw this insertion to the attention of the Three Sisters, Mr Gowar or the Royal Court, either before or after the insertion and the execution of the resolution amending Article 96."
Discussion