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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 >> Carr & Ors v Formation Group Plc & Ors [2018] EWHC 3575 (Ch) (20 December 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2018/3575.html Cite as: [2018] EWHC 3575 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
BUSINESS LIST (Ch)
Rolls Building, Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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(1) DAVID HUGH CARR (2) ANDREW ALEXANDER COLE (3) JOHN CHARLES KEYWORTH CURTIS (4) SEAN DAVIS (5) ROBERT JAMES ELLIOTT (6) NEIL SHAKA HISLOP (7) JOHN STEPHEN HUGHES (8) DENIS JOSEPH IRWIN (9) THOMAS JOHNSON (10) ZATYIAH KNIGHT (11) DANIEL BEN MURPHY (12) IAN ANTHONY PEARCE (13) ROBERT WILLIAM SAVAGE (14) JONATHAN CRAIG SHORT (15) JAMES ANTHONY SMITH (16) GARY TEALE (17) ANTONY VIDMAR |
Claimants |
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- and – |
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(1) FORMATION GROUP PLC (2) IAN BATTERSBY (3) FORMATION ASSET MANAGEMENT LIMITED (in Liquidation) (4) DAVID MCKEE (5) KEVIN PATRICK MCMENAMIN (7) GEORGE STUART URQUHART |
Defendants |
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James Hall (instructed by Moore Blatch LLP) for the First Defendant
Hearing date: 17th December 2018
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE MORGAN:
(1) the First Defendant is liable for unconscionable receipt by it (by way of dividends from ProActive) of monies which had been paid by Kingsbridge and Formation AM in breach of fiduciary duty and received by ProActive in breach of fiduciary duty;
(2) the First Defendant dishonestly assisted Kingsbridge, Formation AM and ProActive to commit a breach of their respective fiduciary duties;
(3) the First Defendant is jointly liable with Kingsbridge and Formation AM for the tort involved in paying an undisclosed commission to Mr Short's agent;
(4) the First Defendant is jointly liable with ProActive for the tort involved in its receiving an undisclosed commission;
(5) the First Defendant is liable for conspiracy to injure Mr Short by unlawful means causing damage to Mr Short equal to the amount of the undisclosed commission.
"Typically, the Agents introduced the Claimants to the IFAs. The IFAs and, where applicable the Agents and/or the Accountants, in breach of their contractual duty and/or duty of case and/or fiduciary duty and/or regulatory or statutory duties owed to each of the Claimants that they each advised, mis-sold inappropriate, unsuitable and/or unviable products to certain of the Claimants and/or caused or allowed the Claimants to invest in and/or enter inappropriate, unsuitable and/or unviable investment schemes and products without sufficiently exploring the details or advising on the risks. Some or all of the IFAs then paid undisclosed commissions to the Agents upon the making of investments. The Agents failed to disclose these commissions to the Claimants." [My emphasis]
"Each and all of the Defendants thereby combined or agreed to harm the Claimants' economic interests through unlawful means."
"28. Formation Group received the dividends from ProActive SM set out at paragraph 13 above knowing (through Mr Stretford, McKee and /or Mr Battersby) that they represented, in part, the proceeds of secret commissions paid by Kingsbridge/Formation AM. Formation Group is thus liable in equity for knowing receipt.
29. Further or alternatively, by assisting or encouraging the payment and receipt of secret commissions pursuant to a common design that they should be paid, Formation Group is liable as a joint tortfeasor; and/or for unlawful means conspiracy; and/or for dishonest assistance in a breach of fiduciary duty."
"[t]he claim form must –
(a) contain a concise statement of the nature of the claim;
(b) specify the remedy which the claimant seeks;
… "
" … a concise statement of the nature of the claim made or the relief or remedy required in the action begun thereby".
" 38. The concept, as exemplified by this line of authority, is further reinforced by the terms of CPR r 16.2(1) which provides that "the claim form must—(a) contain a concise statement of the nature of the claim". CPR r 22.1(4) provides that the claim form must be verified by a statement of truth being "a statement that—(a) the party putting forward the document … believes the facts stated in the document are true".
39. Because of the similarity of the terms of the rule and because the policy underlying it must be the same as for the equivalent rule in the CPR, there is room for reference to authority relating to RSC Ord 6, r 2 . This rule required a writ to be endorsed either with a statement of claim or with "a concise statement of the nature of the claim made or the relief or remedy required in the action begun thereby". Court of Appeal authority (Lord Denning MR in Sterman v E W & W J Moore [1970] 1 QB 596, 603) held that the word "or" in that rule was conjunctive so that it was necessary to state both the nature of the claim and the relief or remedy required. The relevant commentary in the RSC, which was the result of an earlier Court of Appeal decision in Marshall v London Passenger Transport Board [1936] 3 All ER 83, provided "a concise statement of the nature of the claim" meant that, where the claim arose out of a contract, the endorsement should give details of the relevant contract and where the claim arose out of a tort it should give the date and place of the occurrence and the nature of the tort alleged. It is necessary to at least give some idea or indication of the duty which it is alleged the defendant has failed to perform.
40. …
41. In my judgment, therefore, if Nomura, at the time of issuing its claim form, was not in a position to do the minimum necessary to set out the nature of the claim it was making, it would be seeking an illegitimate benefit, namely the prevention of further time running under the Limitation Acts for a claim which it could not properly identify or plead. That would be an abuse of the process of the court. In so far as it sought to make any claim in contract, it would be necessary for it to be able to identify the particular contract and the alleged breach. In the case of any breach of tortious duty, it would be necessary for it to be in a position to identify the essential acts or omissions which constituted the breach of duty, negligence or negligent misstatement. For the purposes of negligent misstatement, Nomura would have to be able to identify what advice or information was inaccurate and what was given negligently, at least in essence. If Nomura was not in a position to do this, it was not in a position properly to issue a claim, since it could not have proceeded properly to plead particulars of claim without the off-chance occurring that something would turn up. In such circumstances it could have no present intention to pursue a claim since it had no sufficient idea of the claim it wished to pursue." [My emphasis]
"Reading these rules, and reading the forms set out in the appendix, it is apparent to my mind, although it is not requisite to state the precise nature of the claim made by the plaintiff, that the plaintiff must by the indorsement of his writ of summons give to the defendants some general idea of the nature of his claim. It is not sufficient for the plaintiff to indorse his writ merely with a claim for damages. Plainly, that would be insufficient. Nor, in my opinion, is it sufficient for a plaintiff to indorse his writ with a claim for damages for breach of contract or damages for negligence without giving the defendants some indication of the contract which he, the plaintiff, alleges has been broken, or some idea of the duty which he says the defendants have failed to perform." [My emphasis]
"The plaintiffs, owners and occupiers of land and houses, issued a writ against the defendants, a sewerage board assumed to be acting under statutory authority, and a firm of contractors who carried out work on the board's instructions. The writ bore a general indorsement in regular form claiming damages for wrongfully taking away the support of the plaintiffs' land and houses. Later the statement of claim was delivered, but more than one year after the cause of action had accrued. By it the plaintiffs claimed damages for trespass, and alternatively, by paragraph 5, damages for negligence in failing to take proper precautions to prevent support being, withdrawn from the land and buildings. The defendants issued a summons asking that the paragraph alleging negligence be struck out on the ground that it set up a new cause of action not indorsed on the writ, and that such new cause of action was barred, at the time when the statement of claim was delivered, by section 21 of the Limitation Act, 1939 :-
Held, that the general indorsement properly stated the nature of the plaintiffs' claim and was wide enough to cover not only the alternative claim in negligence but also trespass, nuisance, or withdrawal of support simpliciter; that, accordingly, the claim in negligence did not constitute a new cause of action, and that the pleadings as delivered could stand." [My emphasis]
i) The First Defendant should pay 1/3 of the Claimants' costs plus 2/3 of 1/3 of the Claimants' costs; and
ii) Mr Short should pay to the First Defendant 80% of 1/3 of the First Defendant's costs.