BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Ashdown & Ors v Griffin & Ors [2017] EWHC 2601 (Ch) (19 October 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2017/2601.html Cite as: [2017] EWHC 2601 (Ch) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
CHANCERY DIVISION
Rolls Building, Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
||
B e f o r e :
(sitting as a Judge of the High Court)
____________________
David Ashdown James Pugh Alex Furness-Smith |
Petitioners |
|
- and - |
||
John Patrick Griffin Daryl Forster Peter Christopher Ingram Kieran Griffin Addbins Limited Liam Griffin |
Respondents |
____________________
Paul Sinclair (instructed by Joelson JD LLP) for the Respondents
Hearing dates: 16-18 October 2017
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
HHJ Paul Matthews :
Introduction
Concern about additional costs
Events leading up to the re-trial
Representation at the re-trial
Background
Judgment on liability
6. The first four of the respondents each invested £25,000 in the company to fund its business, by way of loan, which loan remains due from the company to these four respondents.10. On the basis of the expert evidence at the liability trial, it was "crystal clear that, however attractive the business model may have looked initially, it was virtually doomed to failure". As a matter of fact, almost no third party advertising was ever obtained for any of the bins, and in default they were used throughout London to carry adverts for ADL.
40. By May 2011 at the latest, the first respondent appreciated that the company's business was a "dead duck" so far as third party advertisers were concerned.
45. On 12 February 2015 ADL's company secretary wrote to the company requiring the company to remove all the advertisements referring to ADL from all the bins within 28 days. The judge therefore held that this was the date on which ADL stopped voluntarily using the bins for its advertisement.
46. The company had no advertisements thereafter, and would be unable to obtain any. Effectively, therefore, the company's business was at an end with no hope of resurrection.
57. National advertising was never realistically available to the company from the beginning. The only sources of advertisements were either local advertisements or sponsorship.
60. Both expert witnesses called thought that the only hope for the company's business model was to obtain a sponsor, someone who would take all the bins for a lengthy period of time. In fact, ADL was that sponsor.
61. But a sponsor would require a considerable discount to reflect the benefits to the company in guaranteed future income, and lower costs both of sales and of changing the sites.
83. The business of the company ceased to be a viable going concern on 12 February 2015, when ADL notified it that it no longer wished to advertise on the bins.
84. The appropriate valuation date was 12 February 2015.86. At that date the company may have had contingent liabilities relating to the removal of the bins which would need to be taken into account in the valuation. That would be a matter for the court in dealing with the share valuation.
91. There should be no minority discount in the valuation of the petitioners' shares.
94. The valuation should be on the basis of the actual value of the petitioners' shares as at 12 February 2015 "with adjustments to be made to compensate the petitioners for the unfairly prejudicial conduct".
96. The judge left open to the court conducting the share valuation "any issue as to whether there should be an adjustment of the accounts to reflect costs charged to the company (or any fine paid by the company) in respect of the initial prosecution [brought by the City of Westminster] and the appeal".
98. However, there could be no question of a rewriting of the accounts in respect of costs or fines incurred by the company as a result of the first respondent's actions.
99. On the other hand, the accounts of the company as at 12 February 2015 had to be adjusted to reflect the income which it should have received from ADL for ADL's use of the bins. But the issue is whether it should have received more than it actually did, and not whether the amount actually received should be reduced.
100. It would be quite wrong to work out the amount that should have been received by reference to a simplistic equation of £X per bin per week multiplied by the number of bins in use from time to time. ADL was the sponsor and would have paid the rate appropriate for a sponsor. That rate would not have equated to a rate that a third party advertiser would pay. The sponsor would have expected a substantial discount on that.
101. What in an objective commercial negotiation ADL would have paid as a sponsor was left by the judge to the court dealing with the share valuation.
103. The upper ceiling for the price of such sponsorship could not exceed £0.50 per bin per week.
105. As to the number of bins used by ADL for advertising, by July 20,098 bins had been purchased, and 95% of the available bins were so used. But it might be that a sponsor would pay the same for an estate of 20,000 as for an estate of 30,000 bins.
The parties' cases
Hypothetical negotiations
"what, in an objective commercial negotiation, ADL (perceiving advertising on the bins to be of commercial value to it) would have paid as a sponsor from time to time and at any time…"
"[49] It is a negotiation between a willing buyer (the contract breaker) and a willing seller (the party claiming damages) in which the subject matter of the negotiation is the release of the relevant contractual obligation stop both parties are to be assumed to act reasonably stop the fact that one or both parties would in practice have refused to make a deal is therefore to be ignored…"
The expert evidence
"42. All depends upon the circumstances of the particular case. For example, the joint expert may be the only witness on a particular topic, as for instance where the facts on which he expresses an opinion are agreed. In such circumstances, it is difficult to envisage a case in which it would be appropriate to decide this case on the basis that the expert's opinion was wrong. More often, however, the expert's opinion will be only part of the evidence in the case. For example, the assumptions upon which the expert gave his opinion may prove to be incorrect by the time the judge has heard all the evidence of fact. In that event the opinion of the expert may no longer be relevant, although it is to be hoped that all relevant assumptions of fact will be put to the expert because the court will or may otherwise be left without expert evidence on what may be a significant question in the case. However, at the end of the trial the duty of the court is to apply the burden of proof and to find the facts having regard to all the evidence in the case, which will or may include both evidence of fact and evidence of opinion which may interrelate."
"67. Where a single expert gives evidence on an issue of fact on which no direct evidence is called, for example as to valuation, then subject to the need to evaluate his evidence in the light of his answers in cross examination his evidence is likely to prove compelling. Only in exceptional circumstances may the judge depart from it and then for a good reason which he must fully explain. But if his evidence is on an issue of fact on which direct evidence is given, for example the speed at which a vehicle was travelling at a particular time, the situation is somewhat different. If the evidence of a witness fact on the issue is credible, the judge may be faced with what, if they stood alone, may be the compelling evidence of two witnesses in favour of two opposing and conflicting conclusions. There is no rule of law or practice in such a situation requiring the judge to favour or accept the evidence of the expert or the evidence of a witness of fact. The judge must consider whether he can reconcile the evidence of the expert witness with that of the witness of fact. If you cannot do so you must consider whether there may be an explanation for the conflict of evidence or for a possible error by either witness, and in light of all the circumstances make a considered choice which evidence to accept. The circumstances may be such as to require the judge to reach only one conclusion.
68. In my judgment in the circumstances of this case and on the evidence before her, the judge could only properly have chosen to accept the evidence of the expert there was by the close of the trial known surviving alternative explanation for the trailer toppling over other than it was travelling at an excessive speed. No other explanation was put forward by the defendant's counsel in his closing submission and the judge held that none was shown. … In the circumstances there was no basis on which the evidence of the expert could be disregarded…"
The witnesses
The issues between the parties
Revenues
Operational costs
"I have not included further installation, repair or administrative costs, in accordance with the directions provided in the November judgment."
She also said, at paragraph 3.4.21,
"I have not included any provision for storage costs as my understanding is that the company was running low on bin stocks by 12 February 2015 which suggests any storage costs would have been insignificant. In any event, these costs were not included in the company's statutory accounts."
Directors' loan
Winding-up costs
Overall
Conclusion