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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 >> Autocal Holdings Ltd v Jeffery [2017] EWHC 907 (Ch) (25 April 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2017/907.html Cite as: [2017] EWHC 907 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
BIRMINGHAM DISTRICT REGISTRY
Bull Street, Birmingham B4 6DS |
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B e f o r e :
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Autocal Holdings Ltd |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Neil Barry Jeffery |
Defendant |
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Timothy Leader (instructed by Spearing Waite) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 14-17 February 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
HHJ David Cooke:
Introduction and factual background
i) Repayment of a loan of £131,000 made by it to the defendant Mr Jeffery in 2009 to fund the purchase of shares in itself. The claimant's case is that the loan is repayable on demand, which has been made and not complied with. Mr Jeffery's position is that the loan was only repayable on the occurrence of a "trigger event" which has not occurred.ii) Repayment of sums totalling £14,156 debited to Mr Jeffery's director's loan account and also said to be payable on demand. Mr Jeffery contends these sums were paid in advance of declaration of dividends and expressly or impliedly on terms that they would not be repayable save out of dividends subsequently declared.
iii) Repayment of sums totalling £37,500.80 drawn by Mr Jeffery from its bank account for his own purposes and in breach of duty to the company.
i) Modena, a Guernsey company controlled by Mr Bird and his wife, would subscribe for 234,000 £1 shares in Holdings for cash at par, so paying £234,000.ii) Modena would also lend Holdings £131,000 ("the Modena Loan").
iii) Holdings would lend the £131,000 to Mr Jeffery, who would use it together with £85,000 of his own funds to subscribe for a total of 216,000 shares in Holdings at par.
iv) Holdings would thus have £450,000 of cash (£234,000 + £131,000 + £85,000) which it would use to buy Mr Dimavicius's shares in Autocal.
v) Mr Jeffery would simultaneously exchange his 50% holding in Autocal for a further 450,000 shares in Holdings.
i) A personal guarantee and indemnity by Mr Jeffery, supported by a charge over all his 666,000 shares in Holdings (2/H/18). This guarantee and the charge over the shares in Holdings were however released on 11 November 2009 (2/H/66).ii) A guarantee by Autocal (2/H/27) supported by a legal charge over its factory premises at Enderby (2/H/35).
i) Minutes of a directors meeting held between Mr Bird and Mr Jeffery as directors of Holdings (3/I/3) which approved the various documents to be entered into, including those setting out the terms of the Modena loan and security for it. At para 7.2 the minutes state "It was noted that £131,000 was being loaned to Neil Barry Jeffery by the company for the purpose of subscribing for 131,000 ordinary shares in the company." There is no other reference to the terms of the loan. The minutes go on to approve the sending of a written resolution to members by which they would approve and authorise the loan to Mr Jeffery.ii) A written resolution of the shareholders of Holdings, circulated and signed at the meeting and providing "That the proposed loan in the sum of £131,000 to be made by the company to Neil Barry Jeffery to enable him to subscribe for shares in the company is hereby approved" (3/I/1).
i) A new company, Topco, was introduced. Mr Jeffery transferred his 666,000 shares in Holdings to Topco and received in return the same number of shares in Topco. The agreement for this (2/H/88) is labelled on its cover "Share Exchange Agreement" but its operative provisions are expressed as a sale; Mr Jeffery is defined as "the Seller" and Topco as "the Buyer" and clauses 1 to 3 provide for a sale with full title guarantee and a purchase for a consideration by way of issue of fully paid shares in Topco.ii) Topco borrowed £234,000 from Modena ("the Modena Topco loan") and used that amount to buy Modena's shares in Holdings for cash. The terms of this loan were set out in a written agreement (2/H/107) and included:
a) repayment in two instalments; £84,000 on 30 September 2011 and £150,000 on 10 June 2014,b) guarantees of Topco's obligations by Holdings and Autocal,c) security given by Autocal by way of second charge over some additional premises that it had acquired since 2009 at Melton Mowbrayiii) The loan of £131,000 made by Modena to Holdings remained in place, but the original loan agreement was replaced by a new one providing for repayment by monthly instalments over 3 years (2/H/69). Mr Jeffery's guarantee was reinstated, now supported by a charge over his shares in Topco (2/H/124). As before, he provided a blank stock transfer form which Modena was authorised to complete in order to transfer the shares if the charge was enforced. The new loan agreement provided that any default by Topco in relation to the Modena Topco loan would also amount to a default as between Modena and Holdings, with the consequence that Mr Jeffery's liability under his guarantee of Holdings' obligations could be triggered (see cl 14.3.19 at p 82).
iv) Mr Bird ceased to be a director of Holdings. Mr Clive Maudsley, who gave evidence, was appointed in his place and thereafter represented Mr Bird's interests.
Terms of the £131,000 loan from Holdings to Mr Jeffery
"My accountants too busy covering their arses. Can you clear it as described with your guys please, I do not know when PKF will come back to me. My lawyers say financial assistance [by a company for purchase of its own shares] no longer an issue in law, only limit is size of loan to a director which they are checking.
Subject to that the deal is:
TB [ie Mr Bird] lends 131k to Holdings subject to 2nd charge on property payment schedule per model but to be agreed as to principal repayment timing. I understand this is delayed due to Barclays so something in the interim will have to do. Lawyers sorting this…
NJ [ie Mr Jeffery] borrows 131k from Holdings, this is interest free and no repayment until trigger event like sale of NJ/TB shares. TB needs tag along rights if NJ sells . Likewise NJ would want drag along rights …
This is per the model I sent you.
If we can agree this then we can get cracking! By now the funds should be in Leicester."
"… an unconnected outside investor Modena International Limited will subscribe for 26% of the company [ie Holdings] … together with a loan on normal commercial terms to the company of £131,000 [which] will be lent to Mr Jeffery by the company and he will use the loan proceeds to subscribe for 131,000 ordinary £1 shares in the company at par. This loan will be interest-free and non-repayable until a future sale of the shares. "
This letter was not sent to or seen by Mr Bird or his advisers (except possibly at the completion meeting, as to which see below) nor were its terms agreed to or approved by any of them. Thus the change of language from "trigger event like sale of NJ/TB shares" to "sale of the shares" (which drops any reference to events "like" a sale and seems to refer only to Mr Jeffery's shares) originated from Mr Harrison and was not, expressly at least, put to or adopted by Mr Bird.
"7 There was (sic) produced at the meeting the following draft documents ...
(a) The Share for Share Exchange Agreement between [Mr Jeffery] and the Company…
(b) Copies of two letters to the Inland Revenue from Messrs Mark J Rees in respect of capital gains and income tax clearances together with reply dated 26 March 2009 from the Inland Revenue …
8.4 It was noted that the Inland Revenue had given clearance under s138 of the Taxation of Chargeable Gains Act 1992 and clearance under s701 of the Income Tax Act 2007 in advance of the proposed transaction."
"In advance of completion, I have briefly set out the key areas where you do not have protection in this transaction. We have discussed all of these previously but if you need any further detail, do call me.
1. Tony Dimivicius has not given any warranties…
2. We have not carried out any legal due diligence on either [Holdings] or [Autocal]…
3. Other than very basic representations in the Loan Agreement … you have no warranty protection in relation to your investment…
4. Neil is neither providing warranties to [Holdings] in connection with the sale of his shares in [Autocal] to [Holdings] nor to you in connection with your investment…
5. Neil is not entering into a service agreement …
6. The loan being made to Neil by [Holdings] is not currently being documented. It would be advisable that the terms of this are agreed between you and documented so as to ensure certainty.
7. No new articles of association or a shareholders agreement are being adopted/entered into at completion. As such you are not receiving any of the following protections
a. rights of pre-emption on a transfer of shares – Neil is free to transfer his shares to whosoever he may wish without offering them to you first;
b. no "tag" or "drag" provisions …
c. There is no entrenchment of your position as a director …
d. You have no minority protection …
8. …"
i) In an email to Mr Harrison 9 November 2009 (5/P/49, copied to Mr Jeffery) Mr Bird commented on the draft accounts he had received and said "There should be a long-term liabilities line in Autocal Holdings for the loan from Modena instead of including it all as current. Do you think there should be a long-term asset for the loan to Neil[?]". Mr Harrison responded (also copied to Mr Jeffery) "Whether the asset should be shown as a current or long-term asset is debatable I agree – personally I would show as current so forms part of the current ratio which many credit rating agencies will use – if you/Neil prefer long-term then I can adjust."ii) There is no evidence of any further consideration or discussion of the point, but the accounts as adopted (4/K/1) show the debt payable by Mr Jeffery as a current asset being a debt "falling due within one year" (see note 6). This would be consistent with repayment being due on demand not with repayment being contingent on a trigger event that was not expected to occur within a year. These accounts are stated to have been approved by the board and are signed both by Mr Jeffery and Mr Bird as the two directors at the time.
iii) This treatment was maintained the following year, both in the accounts prepared for the company's own use and in the abbreviated accounts filed at Companies House. Both of these sets of accounts (4/K/22 and 32) included an additional note, which had not been in the September 2009 accounts, stating that "The loan is repayable on demand and is interest-free."
iv) The same treatment, and the same note, were adopted in both sets of accounts for the period ended 30 September 2011, which was after the reconstruction in which Topco was inserted as the holding company. Mr Jeffery was the sole director at the time these accounts were approved, and signed them (or at least the accounts filed at Companies House) on behalf of Holdings.
The claim for £14,156
The payments of £37,500.80
Claim for the value of Mr Jeffery's shares in Topco
i) A multiple of 4 times assessed future maintainable earnings of £92,303 pa (£372,812) less net debt of £365,950, giving an equity value of £6,862, orii) Net assets at the last balance sheet date (30 September 2011) adjusted for subsequent losses and to write off the value of capitalised research and development that she considered a purchaser would not pay for, resulting in a figure of £102,524
and adopted the higher figure.
i) Mr Bowes had not identified what intellectual property or other rights Autocal Ltd owned that could be sold so as to give a purchaser the clear and exclusive right to earn the income streams he set out to value. In fact, Autocal was not the only entity carrying out calibration of the machines it made; a substantial part of that work had always been done by a separate partnership of which Mr Jeffery was a member, according to him by undocumented agreement made with Mr Dimivicius when they established the limited company. Any purchaser from Autocal (other than Mr Jeffery himself) would be likely to find itself in competition with Mr Jeffery or in dispute with Mr Jeffery as to the extent of the rights acquired. It would be unlikely to pay for the right to that income without a discount to reflect the risks resulting. Mr Jeffery points to an expression of interest made to him subsequently by Tecalemit as supporting Mr Bowes' opinion, but crucially that was on the basis of acquiring the combined business of Autocal and the partnership, which had by then been transferred to his new company ATE. Its weight in terms of valuation is further doubtful because that transaction in the event did not proceed, for reasons that are not in evidence.ii) The revenue estimated from this income stream was based on a wholly untested and unverified apportionment of Autocal's sales income allocating 50% of revenue to after-sales work and 50% to new equipment sales. There were other equally unverified assumptions, a key one being that in future the DoT would issue recalibration requirements every two years. This could not have been safely assumed at the time; the previous practice of annual variations had been halted, apparently in response to complaints about the cost to industry of frequent changes, and no decision announced about when the next one would be made or the frequency after that.
iii) The costs associated with that income, which were assumed to be borne by the purchaser from Autocal, were based on a wholly arbitrary division between Autocal's operations of manufacturing machines (70%) and servicing/ calibrating machines after sale (30%).
iv) If the assumptions about revenue and costs of the after-sales work were accurate, it necessarily implied that the manufacturing side of the business was running at a large loss. Mr Bowes' assumptions about future revenue depended on manufacturing and sales of new machines continuing at similar levels indefinitely (see his list of assumptions at 1/D/66) and yet he could not explain how this would happen if Autocal were to sell its after sales business. In that event, if it attempted to continue manufacturing itself, it would be immediately plunged into large losses and likely to have to cease trading. Mr Bowes suggested in cross examination that a purchaser already in the industry would buy Autocal Ltd as a whole and merge the manufacturing with its own so saving cost and not incurring these losses, but he had no identifiable basis for assuming that this would be possible or, even if it was, why a such a purchaser would pay the seller for all the identified revenue benefits of the after sales business without any allowance for its own contribution by way of cost reduction for the essential manufacturing.
v) If Autocal had sold its after-sales operation and then closed down its manufacturing business, it would no doubt have incurred costs in doing so, yet Mr Bowes seemed to assume that a purchaser would buy the shares in Autocal for the same price as Autocal could sell the after sales business, as if that price could be paid straight out to the shareholder free of tax and ignoring the steps and costs required to deal with the rest of the business.
vi) No reasons were given why a purchaser would be likely to pay for an income stream on the basis of the present value of ten years' revenue, rather than a more conventional multiple of future maintainable earnings.