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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 >> Campbell v Campbell [2017] EWHC 182 (Ch) (26 January 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2017/182.html Cite as: [2017] EWHC 182 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
B e f o r e :
____________________
RICHARD ANDREW CAMPBELL |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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ROBERT CAMPBELL |
Defendant |
____________________
Mr Andrew Twigger QC and Ms Narinder Jhittay (instructed by Taylor Wessing) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 1, 2, 3, 4, 7, 9 and 10 November 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
Introduction
(a) whether Richard's and Robert's interests in the partnership (or partnerships) between them are equal at 50/50 or are 49/51 in Robert's favour;
(b) whether the partnership business and assets extended to the companies in Bangkok, the BVI and the US and/or their shares especially those held by Robert's nominees (Robert contending for some other "co-ownership");
(c) whether Robert committed various alleged breaches of duty in relation to the companies' shares and in failing to provide information in relation to the ownership and dealings in and involving RJCL, MLL and AGL; and
(d) whether and if so how the relevant businesses and/or assets, depending on their extent and location, are to be wound up and/or the accounting between the partners (or co-owners) is to be done.
Some background
The breakdown in relations
The present proceedings
(a) RCJL – Nat 29,750 A shares; Sukrit (Robert's stepson) 300 A shares; Alyssa (Robert's daughter) 250 A shares; Andrew (Robert's son) 250 A shares; Robert 14,994 B shares and 50 A shares; Richard 14,406 B shares.
(b) MLL - Nat 5,000 shares; Sukrit 2,500 shares; Alyssa 2,500 shares.
(c) AGL - Nat 1 share.
(d) LCC - Robert 102 shares; Richard 98 shares.
Thai law
(a) a "foreigner" (which can be a Thai company if 50% or more of its issued share capital is held by non-Thai nationals) is not entitled to undertake certain business activities (including the manufacture and sale of jewellery) without permission from the Board of Investment of Thailand; and
(b) breach of these restrictions is a criminal offence and they cannot be by-passed by the use of Thai nominees to hold shares in a Thai company on behalf of a non- Thai national.
(a) to organise the share capital of a Thai company (through the use of preference shares) so that the majority of the voting rights and the economic rights reside with the non-Thai nationals;
(b) to arrange the quorum provisions of a Thai company so as to ensure that non- Thai nationals are able to call general meetings without the Thai shareholders being present; and
(c) for non-Thai shareholders to hold blank share transfer forms in respect of shares held by Thai nationals in a Thai company, so that in practice, the non-Thai shareholders have control over the company.
The partnership shares
(a) In a fax dated 11 October 2002 to his Thai lawyer Mr Crystal, Robert said that his assets at the time included "50% of the shares in my business (Lucie Campbell Partnership in London)", that Richard was entitled to 50% of Longton and that he was a joint beneficiary of The K Trust (which held the AGL share at the time). I did not believe Robert's oral evidence to the effect that the fax to Mr Crystal was drafted on Richard's instructions and contained untrue statements about the ownership of assets.
(b) In an email dated 25 January 2012 from Robert to another accountant Mr David Moore seeking advice as regards the transfer of Richard's interests in the various entities to a trust (disclosed and admitted in Jersey after the trial there), Robert referred to how "my half of the assets is inextricably linked to his half".
(c) When Richard provided to Robert a memorandum by Mr Birns which suggested a transfer of 50% of the shares in AGL, RCJL and LCC to a trust, Robert did not suggest to Richard that the memorandum was wrong regarding the extent of Richard's interest in the various companies.
The extent of the partnership(s)
"Partnership is defined by s.1 of the Partnership Act 1890 as the "relationship which subsists between persons carrying on a business in common with a view to profit". The existence of a partnership and the scope of the partnership business depend on the terms of any agreement into which the alleged partners have entered and their conduct including the scope of the activity in which they have engaged and their dealings with each other."
(a) Robert accepted in oral evidence that, prior to Richard joining, Lucie had a 50% interest in the Thai business because she was his business partner and that the 1990 discussion about Richard joining the business related to "the whole entity of the London business and the Bangkok business".
(b) Robert also eventually accepted that saw themselves as partners in relation to the whole of the business wherever it was conducted and whether through corporate entities or not and also specifically agreed with the proposition that he regarded LCC and all the "businesses" as being part of the business which he was carrying on with his brother with a view to profiit.
(c) Lucie, Robert and Richard each had a say in all aspects of the business, and Robert and Richard consulted each other in reaching management decisions on numerous occasions accordingly (points towards partner status: see Blackett-Ord & Haren, Partnership Law (5th edn) at para 2.34.
(d) When Lucie retired in 1997, the valuation of the business was undertaken (despite Robert's attempts at evasion on this subject in the Lucie Campbell proceedings and in his oral evidence) by reference to all the assets of the jewellery business, including all the assets of the Lucie Campbell Partnership in London and those of RCJL in Bangkok, no distinction being made between them and no discount being applied to the latter (on the basis, for example, that shares in RCJL were held by Thai nationals).
(e) It is common ground that Robert and Richard owed each other a duty of good faith in relation to all their jewellery business (not limited to London, that being "perhaps the most fundamental obligation which the law imposes on a partner": and highly indicative of the existence of a partnership relationship: see Lindley & Banks on Partnership (19th edn) at paras 16-01 and 2-06.
(f) Robert also accepted that, when he withdrew money from the business in the form of personal expenses, Richard was entitled to take an equivalent amount and they proceeded on the basis that when one made what was effectively a drawing from the business, the other was entitled to make a drawing of an equivalent amount.
(g) RCJL was established using monies from the London business and assets, as was the purchase of the factory buildings in Bangkok and (as Robert admitted in his oral evidence, despite his claim in a previous witness statement that the funding came from RCJL) their refurbishment.
(h) Indeed, the balance sheets of Lucie Campbell Partnership and then LCLP carried forward "investments" of £11,900 in connection with RCJL - although Mr Birns' note of the meeting on 17 July 1996 suggests that by then no-one knew (or wanted to say) exactly what that represented.
(i) Robert also made it clear in his oral evidence that the Thai nationals were never intended to have any economic interest in RCJL's business or its factory buildings (owned by MLL).
(j) As regards AGL, it was set up to make a profit offshore from the purchase of jewellery from RCJL and its sale to LCLP and was clearly a "bridge" in a single family business spanning the two. As with LCC and indeed transactions conducted by Robert and Richard in their own names (including auction sales), all jewellery business operated by the brothers or their companies was treated as within the scope of their partnership.
(a) While Richard complains about the circumstances in which the K Trust came to an end and the share in and directorship of AGL were transferred to Nat (as confirmed by Steven Parmenter's email to Robert of 12 November 2002), his case is that Nat now holds the share on trust for Robert and himself. But on that basis, says Robert, any relief must be directed at Nat: one beneficiary does not have a cause of action against another beneficiary to compel him to give joint instructions to a trustee.
(b) Moreover, given that the share in AGL was originally held by nominees for the K Trust, Robert submits that there would have to be an examination of the terms of the trust on which Nat now holds the share. Since the K Trust appears to have been a discretionary trust for a range of beneficiaries, Richard would not have any right to have the share, or any new shares, vested in him. And since Richard chose not to join Nat to these proceedings so that these matters could be resolved, the Court can do nothing more at this stage.
(c) Finally, LCC was set up as a joint enterprise between Robert and Richard for the benefit of the businesses already carried on by them. Robert has accepted in these proceedings that LCC's shares were to be held on trust for them in the same proportions in which they shared LCLP and has transferred 49% of the shares to Richard. Robert expressly accepted that the only remaining issue in relation to this part of Richard's claim is, therefore, whether he was entitled to 49% or 50% (and I find for the latter, so that Robert should immediately transfer a further 1% to Richard).
(a) that did not mean that he agreed to their being his "business partners" in an overall or additional partnership aside from the London partnership;(b) the Lucie Campbell Partnership in London was the only partnership to which Lucie, Robert and Richard referred according to the accountant Mr Birns' notes of their meeting in July 1996, despite also referring in that meeting to the business being carried on in Bangkok; and
(c) whilst the information used for Mr Wonacott to calculate how much she would be paid was not restricted to the assets and liabilities of the London partnership, the parties do not appear to have sought legal advice or focussed upon Lucie's strict legal entitlement, but aimed more at a fair, commercial deal.
(a) to treat the assets of a company or profits generated by it as somehow belonging to a partnership would be impermissibly to ignore the separate legal personality of the company;
(b) whilst a partnership might be in the business of investing in shares and sharing the profits of that enterprise (whether through dividends or selling the shares) such a business would not be carrying on the activities of the companies in which the shares were held but would be trading in shares - which was not the business of Robert and Richard in relation to Bangkok or the BVI or New York;
(c) thus, Robert and Richard must have been no more than co-owners of shares, not partners, their business relationship being governed solely by the corporate structures, including the articles of association and the applicable statutory provisions; and
(d) any remuneration paid to them by the companies was for their services as individuals, not the profits of a business carried on by the individual in common with others.
(a) I do not consider there is any legal objection in principle as to the existence and scope of a partnership the assets of which are or include the shares in a company or companies, operating a business controlled and/or conducted and/or profited from wholly or in part by the partners or some of them, such that the partners are accountable to each other.
(b) It is all a matter of agreement and unless the company involves some agreement (for example in the form of Articles of Association) binding between the parties and ousting or overriding other agreements between them, those other agreements survive and remain applicable in law.
(c) In the present case, there was no legal inconsistency between the inclusion of RCJL, MLL, AGL and LCC's shares in the assets of the partnership between Robert and Richard, which in my judgment was clearly intended and agreed between them, and the corporate personalities and structures.
(d) The preponderance of the evidence, including Robert's inconsistencies and admissions in his oral evidence, satisfy me that whatever they may have told their accountants and other professionals, Robert and Lucie (initially) and then Richard agreed throughout that the overseas companies and business would be conducted by them in, and as part of their partnership.
(e) The partnership upon which they were agreed carried with it personal obligations between Robert and Richard, including obligations to account for the value of the shares in and any drawings or profits from the companies: the legal ownership of some of the shares in Nat and other Thai nationals on behalf of Robert was not intended to reduce his control or transfer any economic value away from the partnership, and Robert remained accountable to Richard for an equal share with him in the whole.
(f) Robert's attempt to resist any relief against him in respect of the shares in RCJL, MLL and AGL held by his wife and children and other Thai nominees, is based on the arrangements made when he was trusted to have control of those arrangements on behalf of himself and Richard, probably for tax reasons, and which he now seeks to hide behind.
The alleged breaches of duty
(a) in his oral evidence Richard seemed to have forgotten a number of matters and did not confirm that he knew nothing of MLL but said only that there were no documents showing that he did and he did not recollect the matter being discussed;
(b) his written evidence in the BVI suggested that he had in fact discussed the establishment of MLL with Robert and his oral evidence did not explain why he did not then mention allegedly not being told of MLL at all;
(c) he said that he did not raise any issue with Robert when he saw his instructions to his Thai lawyer for a will in 2002, because he did not know MLL held the factory buildings, which is a different point (see below); and
(d) he instructed Thai lawyers to go to the Land Registry (not directly to the Ministry of Commerce) when making inquiries about the holding of the factory buildings - but that again does not mean that he had not previously heard of MLL.
a) Robert failed to provide Richard with basic information about (i) MLL and its acquisition of the Bangkok factory and (ii) AGL and the placing of its share in the name of Nat - information which Richard had to seek elsewhere;
b) Robert refused to provide Richard with information requested by him in relation to the affairs of RCJL, accepting in oral evidence that he wanted to be obstructive and had no intention of providing his brother with any information, and instead removed him as a director and attempted (unsuccessfully) to remove him as a shareholder in RCJL, without even informing him; and
c) Robert failed to respond to requests from Richard to clarify the nature of the interest in LCLP, RCJL, MLL, AGL and LCC claimed by him (see the correspondence in Bundle P1 including pp 55-63, 64-66, 96-102, 118-119, 121, 125-126, 128-129, 135-141, 162-177, 219, 230-232, 241-242, 245-249, 263-264 and 266-267). He would not acknowledge Richard's interest and would not provide Richard with documents and financial information even after he accepted that Richard had a 49% partnership share.
Relief
(a) The Court exercises a supervisory jurisdiction over the winding up of partnerships and has a discretionary power to fashion such order as is appropriate in all of the circumstances: Lindley & Banks, para 25-52 and Hurst v Bryk [2002] 1 AC 185, 194.(b) The Court has power to order a partition or in specie distribution of the assets, and (if necessary) to order an equalisation payment: see Blackett-Ord & Haren, paras 18.42 to 18.50 and Pick v Pick [2007] All ER (D) 318.
(c) In addition, section 14 of the Trusts of Land and Appointment of Trustees Act 1996 also gives the Court the power to order partition of co-owned land, with or without beneficiary consent, and with or without an equalisation payment: see Hopper v Hopper [2008] EWHC 228 (Ch).
(d) The Court has power to make an order that one partner buy out the interest of the other - a so-called Syers v Syers (1876) 1 App Cas 174 order (see Lindley & Banks, paras 23-183 to 23-192) – which may be permissive or compulsory: Mullins v Laughton [2003] Ch 250 and Lindley & Banks, para 23-191.
(e) Where one partner has appropriated an asset for himself, the Court can order that he account for its value: Blackett-Ord & Haren, para 18.41, Such order may relate to the whole or part of a partner's share, although there may be no practical distinction between a partial order and an in specie distribution order: see Lindley & Banks, para 23-190.
(f) The Court's powers are also wide enough to require (by mandatory injunction pursuant to section 37 of the Senior Courts Act 1981) one or more the partners to take particular steps with regard to the partnership assets, where such steps may be necessary to realise, preserve or enhance the value of the assets.
(g) When the Court orders a sale, it has a discretion as to the mode of the sale. In particular, whether there is to be public marketing or simply an auction between the partners; and, where there is public marketing, whether the partners are to have liberty to bid: see Blackett-Ord & Haren, paras 18.43 and 18.44.
(h) To the extent that one partner contends that another has acted in breach of duty, a claim can only be advanced as part of the taking of an account: the Court determines the net position having taken into account all debits and credits, including any loss caused by a breach of duty: see Hurst v Bryk and Cowan v Wakeling [2008] EWCA Civ 229.
(i) The taking of an account may lead to an order that a party pay a sum of money or transfer an asset to another, but not necessarily. A person to whom another is liable to account has a substantive entitlement to know the state of the account, whether or not that ultimately leads to an order requiring the payment of money or the transfer of assets: see Snell's Equity (33rd edn) paras 20-012 to 20-022, AG v Cocke [1988] Ch 414 and Lindley & Banks paras 23-75 to 23-81.
(j) In the case of co-ownership in an association short of a partnership, but involving duties of mutual trust and confidence, the Court has an inherent power, or a power implied from the terms of the relationship, to make orders to bring it to an end if and when it breaks down for example, by requiring a sale of the assets or steps o wind up any corporate entities: examples cited on behalf of Richard are Re Lead Co's Workmen's Fund Society (mentioned above), Re William Denby & Sons Ltd v Sick and Benevolent Fund [1971] 1 WLR 973 and Baker v West Reading Social Club [2014] EWHC 3033 (Ch).
(a) that "I kept records of any sales that I made in my own name and I alwaystreated the proceeds as business monies. … In addition, where I was paid a commission on sales, I also treated the money as business money (rather than my own money) for the purposes of the accounting between us"; and
(b) that he (Richard) had unilaterally carried out a number of transactions (including the writing-off of loans owed by LCLP) because he believed that to be "prudent" in the light of his dispute with Robert.
"(1) Where a company suffers loss caused by a breach of duty owed to it, only the company may sue in respect of that loss. No action lies at the suit of a shareholder suing in that capacity and no other to make good a diminution in the value of the shareholder's shareholding where that merely reflects the loss suffered by the company. A claim will not lie by a shareholder to make good a loss which would be made good if the company's assets were replenished through action against the party responsible for the loss, even if the company, acting through its constitutional organs, has declined or failed to make good that loss. ….
(2) Where a company suffers loss but has no cause of action to sue to recover that loss, the shareholder in the company may sue in respect of it (if the shareholder has a cause of action to do so), even though the loss is a diminution in the value of the shareholding. …
(3) Where a company suffers loss caused by a breach of duty to it, and a shareholder suffers a loss separate and distinct from that suffered by the company caused by breach of a duty independently owed to the shareholder, each may sue to recover the loss caused to it by breach of the duty owed to it but neither may recover loss caused to the other by breach of the duty owed to that other…".
(a) Sums received by Robert from RCJL were not received by him in his capacity as shareholder, but in his capacity as director having control of the company sufficient to enable him to authorise any payments to himself, whether of remuneration or otherwise.
(b) It does not follow from the fact that Robert owed fiduciary duties to Richard in relation to the shares that he is obliged to account to him for payments he has received in his capacity as director.
(c) While Richard has not alleged that any such payments were wrongful, but if Robert is obliged to account to anybody in respect of them, it is to the company; and if Richard were to allege that such payments were wrongful, he would be unable to recover them himself under "parallel duties" because of the rule against reflective loss.
(d) Being concerned with the loss relied upon by a claimant and the relation that bears to the company in question, the "no reflective loss" principle is blind as to the type of claim or cause of action being advanced by the claimant: see Joffe, Minority Shareholders (5th edn), paras 3.110 to 3.112.
(e) In relation to AGL, there is no property which Robert has received into his control in circumstances sufficient to import an equitable obligation to Richard. Only Nat owes equitable obligations to Richard (as well as Robert) as the trustee of the share. If Robert has received property from AGL, he may be accountable to the company, or possibly to the trustee, not to Richard.
(f) So far as MLL is concerned, there is no evidence that Robert has received any property into his control in circumstances sufficient to import an equitable obligation to account to Richard.
(a) Richard and Robert are entitled as between themselves personally, both as partners and pursuant to the admitted implied term of their co-ownership, to know what is the financial state of the constituent parts of their business and how much each of them has received, however a winding up might proceed.
(b) Given the failure of trust between them, it is difficult to see how, without such accounts, their business relationship can be properly brought to an end, whether by further orders or consensually.
(c) Whilst a requirement for separate legal proceedings in Thailand and the BVI, and perhaps New York, might further the animosity between the brothers, and provide for further obstruction, delay, costs and aggravation, it cannot serve justice or any objective resolution of their dispute as before this Court.
(a) It is not claimed or contended in these proceedings, nor have any grounds been evident to the effect that Robert committed a breach of duty owed to any of the companies and/or that any of the companies suffered loss or damage as a result. I repeat that Richard alleged breaches of duty owed to him personally (that is, under English law) and Robert denied that he has acted wrongfully in any way.
(b) The Court has proceeded on the basis that as far as the companies were concerned, cash and assets received by Robert from them (for which he is, as found, liable to account to Richard) were received lawfully as far as the companies are concerned - reflecting the way in which the family business was carried on.
(c) If Robert (or for example, company creditors) hereafter seeks to contend that he is liable to repay any cash or assets received from the companies, Richard would, it seems, concede that if liable Robert should do so and if Robert accounts to Richard whilst so liable to the company, acting properly as partner, Richard should indemnify him for his half.
a) costs have been incurred in foreign proceedings, even if irrecoverable under the procedural rules of the foreign Court, can be claimed as damages in separate proceedings between the same parties in England where the party seeking to recover had a separate cause of action: see Union Discount Co Ltd v Zoller [2002] All ER 693; and
b) costs incurred in proceedings between the now claimant and a third party in previous proceedings can also be claimed as damages: see Hammond v Bussey (1888) 20 QBD 79.
(a) (1) O'Neal Webster (BVI) (2) Robertsons (Hong Kong) These costs apparently relate to the Norwich Pharmacal applications brought against the BVI company which acted as AGL's registered office and agent, and two banks in Hong Kong which provided banking services to AGL. Robert submits that they cannot be attributable to his failure to disclose information, since the classes of documents sought were wider than that which he would have been able and/or obliged to provide and were not required for Richard to vindicate his rights or to protect himself against wrongdoing, especially since he pursued the present proceedings in England.(b) (3) Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher (England) (7) Dickinson Gleeson (Jersey) (8) Cooke, Young & Keidan LLP (England) Robert submits that these costs, apparently relating to steps which were preliminary to these proceedings, are if anything to be treated as costs herein subject to (detaile)d assessment rather than recoverable as damages or equitable compensation.
(c) (4) Southeast Asia Minerals Trading Limited (Hong Kong) Robert submits that these costs apparently relate to staff acting as a proxy for Richard at an EGM and obtaining information relating to RCJL and that Richard should not be able to recover the costs of proxies or agents seeking information which he should or could have had as a director of RCJL from 1991 to 2013.
(d) (5) NNP Group/Sur Novel (Thailand) These costs apparently relate to undertaking corporate searches and investigations in relation to RCJL and MLL, "corporate matters" and Robert, who submits that there are no particulars to show that any or all of these costs are attributable to any failure by him to provide information which he was obliged to disclose.
(e) (6) Blumenthal, Richter & Sumet (Thailand) These costs apparently relate to Richard's removal as a shareholder of RCJL and proceedings in Thailand in that regard. Robert submits that it is at best unclear how or why this follows from his failure to provide information or this Court should award them when this was presumably a matter for the Thai Court.
(f) (9) Various other costs and expenses Robert submits that no sufficient particulars have been provided and insofar as these alleged costs and expenses relate to a failed mediation, Richard would not be entitled to recover these as costs within this action: see Lobster Group Ltd v Heidelberg Graphic Equipment Ltd [2008] 1 BCLC 722.
(a) the matters of which Robert was under a duty to inform Richard, but deliberately concealed from him, included (i) as regards RCJL, that the share reorganisation as he arranged it in 1997 did not protect Richard and Robert did not have signed blank transfer forms from the Thai nominee shareholders; (ii) as regards MLL, that the factory was owned by a different company in respect of which Nat and the children were shareholders, he did not have signed forms and (from 2010) Nat became the sole director; and (iii) as regards AGL, that the single share and directorship had been transferred to Nat in 2002; and
(b) Richard only discovered these matters recently, between 2012 and 2016 and could not with reasonable diligence have discovered them earlier, since Robert was in control of RCJL, MLL and AGL and, until his relationship with Robert broke down, investigation was not justified; and during that time Robert knew or must have known that Richard was unlikely to discover them.
(a) as there is an applicable statutory limitation period for the taking of a partnership account (which starts to run from the date of dissolution), there is arguably no scope for the doctrine of laches: Hopper v Hopper [2008] EWHC 228 (Ch) (reversed in part on appeal, but not on this point).
(b) for the doctrine to apply, it must be unjust for the court to give a remedy: see Lindsay Petroleum Co v Hurd (1874) LR 5 PC 221 per Lord Selborne LC. Robert has not advanced any evidence sufficiently identifying real detriment from the remedies otherwise appropriate in this case.
(a) Richard's witness statement said: "… As we trusted each other completely, and whilst there are some documents in the disclosure that record (or at least purport to record) the position between us, we did not keep detailed written records of where money was paid or who had received what. Money was transferred between accounts to where it was needed and we trusted each other that a reconciliation could be agreed if and when required."; and
(b) the accounts of RCJL have been regularly audited and Richard in his then capacity as a director signed the set of RCJL's accounts dealing with the years ending 31 December 2009 and 2010.
Conclusions
(a) Robert will take Richard's interest in respect of RCJL, MLL and AGL and account to him for half the value of and his drawings from those companies and jewellery business in his own name, together with compensation for his breaches of duty owed to Richard as his partner; and
(b) Richard will take Robert's interest in respect of LCLP and LCC and account to him for half the value of LCLP and LCC and his drawings from them and jewellery business in his own name. Save as regards the mutual accounts and distribution in specie to be ordered on the claim, the Counterclaim will be dismissed.
(a) as requested by Robert, in case necessary, the time for any application for permission to appeal is extended until then and the time for any further application for permission to the Court of Appeal is extended until 21 days thereafter; and
(b) the Court will retain the power to review and vary the distribution in specie which I have indicated if and to the extent that the accounting process (including valuations) discloses significant reasons why that would be inappropriate or impractical.