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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 >> Endcape Ltd v Musgrave Generators Ltd [2022] EWHC 2972 (Ch) (30 November 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2022/2972.html Cite as: [2022] EWHC 2972 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS IN LEEDS
BUSINESS LIST (KBD)
Oxford Row Leeds LS1 3BG |
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B e f o r e :
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ENDCAPE LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and – |
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MUSGRAVE GENERATORS LIMITED |
Defendant |
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Pia Dutton (instructed by Mills & Reeve Solicitors) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 15, 16 and 17 February 2022
Date draft circulated to the Parties: 21 November 2022
Date handed down: 30 November 2022
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Crown Copyright ©
Her Honour Judge Kelly
Background
(1) The Defendant would purchase the Interpower stock from the liquidator.
(2) Thereafter, the Defendant would pay the Claimant one half of the Defendant's profit on the value of any stock which the Defendant proposed to retain and on the sale price of stock it sold.
(3) The said profit would be calculated by taking the value of the stock retained or sold and then deducting:
(a) the price for the stock which the Defendant paid to the liquidator,
(b) the Defendant's costs of putting each item into saleable condition,
(c) the cost of transporting the stock to its place of business.
Thereafter, the Defendant used or sold various items of stock to a third party but refused to pay the Claimant's invoice for half of the profit, 50% of the total profit being asserted as £800.69.
(1) the agreement is too uncertain - firstly because the agreement will be binding in perpetuity, and secondly because of difficulties in how you construe what constitutes an "introduction".
(2) the term pleaded is to introduce a "customer" and not a "broker" to the Defendant, even if the Claimant introduced Mr East and Power Continuity, that will not suffice because it was they who had introduced the customer Babcock.
(3) there was no intention to create legal relations for the Babcock contract because the Claimant did not raise an order directly with the Defendant.
(4) further and in any event, although this was not pleaded, when Mr East made his approach to Mr Roland Hudson, the approach was either to him as Interpower or to him in his personal capacity.
The Law
(1) If parties reach an agreement on essential matters of principle but leave important points unsettled so that their agreement is incomplete, it is not binding.
(2) Where parties have agreed simply to negotiate, that is not a binding contract because it is too uncertain.
(3) Where an agreement fails to satisfy the requirements of certainty, that defect cannot be cured by implying a term that the parties must continue to negotiate in good faith.
The Issues
(1) Was there was an agreement in respect of the Interpower stock?
(2) If so, what were the terms of that agreement?
(3) If there was such an agreement, is it vitiated by reason of any breach of directors' duties owed by Mr Roland Hudson to Interpower?
(4) Was there a concluded and legally binding agreement for a profit share in respect of client introductions by the Claimant to the Defendant?
(5) If so, what were the terms of that agreement?
(6) If applicable, what profit was made by the Defendant following the introduction of Babcock to it by the Claimant?
The Evidence
Mr Roland Hudson
Mrs Hudson
Mr Justin Hudson
Mr Buckman
"3.1 Whilst it is not disputed that the terms of a profit split were agreed between Interpower's Roland Hudson and our client's Graham Buckman, the terms agreed were that any profit share would only apply to contracts where Mr Hudson had introduced those orders to our client, and any split would relate to profit on those instructions (not to costs or overheads);
"Hi John, it was really good to catch up & I will make some suggestions later tonight. Can you remember did Roland introduce you to MUSGRAVE? How did you discover us for the Babcock job?".
Mr East replied:
"I came to you myself
Roland at no time ever mentioned Musgrave's.
I knew of you and came myself. Roland can throw that suggestion out (".
That text was immediately followed by a further text from Mr East which stated:
"Great chat today
Confidential and mates chatting
It was good".
"Hi Roland,
Finally Babcock came back to us.
Here is the request for a quotation so I have forwarded it direct to you my friend
You need this…….
Put a drink in it for us if you succeed".
Mr Buckman said he was not aware of this email before as he was not copied in and he accepted that there was no equivalent document in similar terms to the Defendant.
Mr Stuart Pickwick
Assessment of the witnesses
Findings
The Interpower stock claim
The Babcock claim
(1) The Babcock order was introduced by Mr Roland Hudson to the Defendant.
(2) Mr East contacted Mr Roland Hudson in July 2017. Mr Roland Hudson explained to Mr East that Interpower had gone into liquidation. Mr Roland Hudson explained to Mr East that the Defendant was being used to manufacture orders instead of Interpower. Mr East agreed that was acceptable.
(3) The Babcock order needed to be placed with a manufacturer who held the ISO 9000 certification. For that reason, as the Claimant did not hold that accreditation, the tender was produced on the letterhead of the Defendant company by Mr Roland Hudson after the letterhead was provided to him by the Defendant for that specific purpose.
(4) Mr East did not introduce himself directly to Mr Buckman. Mr Roland Hudson introduced Mr East to Mr Buckman.
(5) The profit from the Babcock contract contended for by Mr Cameron in his skeleton argument was accurately calculated by reference to the most recent figures provided by the Defendant.
Was there was an agreement in respect of the Interpower stock?
If so, what were the terms of that agreement?
If there was such an agreement, is it vitiated by reason of any breach of director's duties owed by Mr Roland Hudson to Interpower?
Was there a concluded and legally binding agreement for a profit share in respect of client introductions by the Claimant to the Defendant?
If so, what were the terms of that agreement?
If applicable, what profit was made by the Defendant following the introduction of Babcock?