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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 >> Portobello Productions Ltd v Sunnymarch Ltd [2022] EWHC 3014 (Ch) (07 November 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2022/3014.html Cite as: [2022] EWHC 3014 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
BUSINESS LIST (ChD)
B e f o r e :
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PORTOBELLO PRODUCTIONS LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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SUNNYMARCH LIMITED |
Defendant |
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Lower Ground, 18-22 Furnival Street, London, EC4A 1JS
Tel No: 020 7404 1400
Web: www.epiqglobal.com/en-gb/ Email: [email protected]
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Gwilym Harbottle (Instructed by Simkins) appeared on behalf of the Defendant
Delivered remotely on
7 November 2022 at 2pm
(hearing 2 November 2022)
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Crown Copyright ©
DEPUTY MASTER MARSH:
Background
"Portobello [the claimant] may forthwith terminate the Agreement if BC and AA ceased to have control of SunnyMarch [the defendant] or SunnyMarch Holdings Limited or if either of their services are no longer exclusively available to either of those companies."
"The purpose of the Co-Production Agreement was to provide a contractual framework for the Claimant and the Defendant to work together to develop, produce and exploit the Film and thus to obtain mutual benefits including remuneration, copyrights which they could own in common pursuant to clause 6.1 of the Co-Production Agreement and credits in accordance with clause 10 of the Co-Production Agreement. In the premises, it was an implied term of the Co-Production Agreement that the Claimant would exercise its said discretion rationally and in a manner which was consistent with the reasonable expectations of the parties arising from their agreement."
"Having regard to the fact that at the date of the Co-Production Agreement all parties knew that Messrs Cumberbatch and Ackland had extensive other commitments, those reasonable expectations included that the Claimant would only seek to invoke clause 11.3 on the grounds that those other commitments were such as to make it impossible to complete the Film in a reasonable time."
"…the Claimant would only seek to invoke clause 11.3 on the grounds that Messrs Cumberbatch and Ackland had ceased to have control of the Defendant or its holding company in the event that such loss of control affected the Defendant's ability to complete the Film in a reasonable time."
The Agreement
Recital A:
"Portobello and SunnyMarch … have agreed to work together to develop, produce and exploit a feature film, provisionally called Danny the Champion of the World … based on a novel by Roald Dahl also entitled Danny the Champion of the World."
"Clause 1: Co-production and acting services.
1.1: Portobello and SunnyMarch shall jointly co-develop and co-produce the Film in accordance with the terms and conditions of this Co-Production Agreement and the terms of any agreements with a Financier (as defined below).
1.2: Portobello shall provide the services of Eric Abraham and Jack Sidey (the Portobello Producers) and SunnyMarch shall provide the services of Benedict Cumberbatch (BC), Leah Clarke and Adam Ackland (AA) (the SunnyMarch Producers), as individual producers for the Film, all on terms and conditions in accordance with industry standard terms and, if applicable, to be negotiated in good faith with a third party studio and/or financier and/or other source of finance for the Film (each a financier).
1.3: It is the intention of the parties that SunnyMarch shall also provide the acting services of BC in the role of "Father" in the Film, subject always to his availability and to his approval of the Screenplay. If for any reason BC does not take the role of Father, then the Co-Production Agreement shall continue notwithstanding.
1.4: Portobello and SunnyMarch shall jointly (ie either through an SPV that they mutually create or, if no SPV has been created, then one mutually agreed party shall apply on behalf of both terms, but both parties shall be fully responsible for all mutually agreed obligations) apply for development and production finance from various sources.
1.5: Subject to the agreements entered into by Portobello and SunnyMarch, and the Financier if applicable, Portobello and SunnyMarch shall mutually agree in good faith the roles that they shall respectively undertake on the Film and shall record such roles in writing which shall be deemed to be a schedule to this Co-Production Agreement.
2. Term:
Subject to the agreements entered into by Portobello and SunnyMarch and the Financier, if applicable, Portobello and SunnyMarch shall be entitled to at least one of the Portobello Producers' and the SunnyMarch Producers' non-exclusive services throughout the period from signature of this Co-Production Agreement until delivery of the Film ('Delivery'). The parties shall negotiate in good faith the scope of their respective services."
The Application
"82. The "issue" to which rule 24.2 ("the claimant has no real prospect of defending the claim or issue") and PD 24 is a part of a claim, whether a severable part of proceedings (e.g. a claim for damages caused by particular acts or infringement or non-payment of several debts), or a component of a single claim (e.g. a question of infringement, existence of a duty, breach of a duty, causation, loss). It is not any factual or legal issue that is one among many that would need to be decided at trial to resolve such a claim or part of a claim. If the determination of an issue before trial has no consequences except that there is one fewer issue for trial then the court has not given summary judgment and the application was not for summary judgment. If it were otherwise, parties would be able to pick and choose the issues on which they thought their cases were strong and seek to have them determined in isolation, in an attempt to achieve a tactical victory and cause the respondent to incur heavy costs liability at an early stage.
83. The fact that the summary judgment application raises for determination issues of law does not make a relevant difference. Legal issues are often the only relevantly disputed question in a claim or part of a claim. Where the issue of law is relatively straightforward, the court is satisfied that it has before it all the relevant material and that the trial judge would be in no better position to decide it, the court generally decides the issue of law finally on a balance of probabilities and not merely on the basis of whether the respondent has a realistically arguable case (see per Mr Justice Lewison in Easyair v Opal Telecom). That does not mean that any issue of law will properly be the subject of a summary judgment application."
The Implied Term
"Where, under the terms of the contract, a party is charged with making decisions which affect the rights of both parties to the contract, that party has a clear conflict of interest."
"… the discretion did not involve a simple decision whether or not to exercise an absolute contractual right. The discretion involved making an assessment or choosing from a range of options, taking into account the interests of both parties. In any contract under which one party is permitted to exercise such a discretion there is an implied term. The precise formulation of that term has been variously expressed in the authorities. In essence, however, it is that the relevant party will not exercise its discretion in an arbitrary, capricious or irrational manner. Such a term is extremely difficult to exclude, though I would not say it is impossible to do so."
"I can see no reason to depart from the language of entitlement in which clause 5.8 and part C were expressed. Thus in my judgment it is up to the Trust to decide whether or not to levy payment deductions; and whether or not to award SFPs."
"However, it is not every decision which a party to a contract makes which can properly be characterised as a contractual discretion and to which the principles identified in Socimer and Braganza apply. Where, for example, a commercial contract gives one party a right to terminate in certain circumstances, it will not ordinarily be appropriate to subject the exercise of that right to obligations of procedural substantive fairness akin to the public law duties which apply to the decisions of the executive. In Lomas & Ors v JFB Firth Rixson [2012] EWCA Civ 419 at [46] the Court of Appeal noted:
"the right to terminate is no more than an exercise of a discretion, which is not to be exercised in an arbitrary or capricious (or perhaps unreasonable) manner, than the right to accept repudiatory conduct as repudiation of a contract."
"… it was under o duty to attempt to balance its interests against those of PAG. It can, however, be inferred that the parties intended the power granted by clause 21.5.1 to be exercised in pursuit of legitimate commercial aims rather than, say, to vex PAG maliciously."
"(1) It is not every contractual power or discretion that will be subject to a Braganza limitation. The language of the contract will be an important factor.
(2) The types of contractual decisions that are amenable to the implication of a Braganza term are decisions which affect the rights of both parties to the contract where the decision-maker has a clear conflict of interest. In one sense all decisions made under a contract affect both parties, but it is clear that Baroness Hale had in mind the type of decision where one party is given a role in the on-going performance of the contract; such as where an assessment has to be made. This can be contrasted with a unilateral right given to one party to act in a particular way, such as right to terminate a contract without cause.
(3) The nature of the contractual relationship, including the balance of power between the parties is a factor to be taken into account: per Braganza per Baroness Hale. Thus, it is more likely for a Braganza term to be implied in, say, a contract of employment than in other less 'relational' contracts such as mortgages.
(4) The scope of the term to be implied will vary according to the circumstances and the terms of the contract."
"In my judgment these authorities speak with a single voice. Where the parties choose to include within their agreement a provision that entitles one or more of the parties to terminate the agreement between them, that clause takes effect in accordance with its terms."
Nature of the contract and relevant provisions
Implied term
Conclusion