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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 >> Bal v Attri [2023] EWHC 3103 (Ch) (04 December 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2023/3103.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 3103 (Ch) |
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Date: 4th December 2023 |
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS IN BIRMINGHAM
CHANCERY APPEALS (ChD)
On appeal from the County Court at Birmingham
Order of His Honour Judge Williams dated 25 January 2023
Case No: CH-2022-BHM-000009
B e f o r e :
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Davinder Bal |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Parveen Attri |
Respondent |
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Omar Ensaff for the Respondent
Hearing date: 21 November 2023
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Rajah:
Introduction
The Facts
The Option agreement
"In consideration of the sum of £1.00 being paid by the Buyer to the Seller (receipt of which is acknowledged by the Seller, the Seller grants to the Buyer an option, exercisable by the Buyer under this clause 2, to acquire all (not only some) of the Option Shares from the Seller on the terms of this agreement."
"The Buyer shall serve notice in writing on the Seller that the Option has been exercised and the Seller shall become bound to buy, and the Seller shall become bound to sell, all of the Option Shares".
i) by clause 6.1 she undertook not to deal with the Option shares in any way during that period without Mr Bal's consent;
ii) by clause 6.2 she undertook (in summary) to maintain the status quo in respect of the constitution, shareholding and business of PKA during that period; and
iii) by clause 6.3 she agreed during that period to vote the Option Shares as directed by Mr Bal, or execute a proxy to enable him to attend and vote the Option Shares at any meeting or on any written resolution of PKA.
"The Seller and the Buyer agree to enter into a shareholders agreement and new articles of association in relation to their shareholding in the Company prior to the date of the exercise of the Option and such shareholders agreement or articles will include a provision that any new issue of shares in the Company will be offered to all the shareholders on a pro rata basis so that the Buyer and the Seller has the opportunity to prevent a dilution of their shareholding on a new issue of shares in the Company."
"If any part of this agreement is or becomes invalid, illegal or unenforceable it shall be deemed modified to the minimum extent necessary to make it valid, legal and enforceable. If such modification is not possible, the relevant part shall be deemed deleted. Any modification to or deletion of a part of this agreement under this clause shall not affect the validity and enforceability of the rest of this agreement."
The Judgment
"a. Firstly, the language used by the parties in the SO agreement is clear and unambiguous in that the parties were required to agree a shareholders' agreement prior to the exercise of the option;b. Secondly, the SO agreement is a detailed and professionally drafted contract;
c. Thirdly, the parties to the SO agreement were commercially sophisticated and legally qualified;
d. Fourthly, in all those circumstances, significant weight must be attached to the language that the parties have chosen to express their agreement; and
e. Fifthly, I am not persuaded that there are any contra-indications arising from the wider context, which would justify departing from the textual analysis. In particular, there is absolutely no reason why any shareholders' agreement or resolution adopting new articles, could not have been expressed to take effect on and from completion, even if agreed in advance of the option being exercised. If the claimant was right as to his interpretation, then surely those requirements would have been better expressed under clause 4, which lists all those matters which must be done before completion takes place."
"iii. As submitted on behalf of the defendant, the importance of clause 7.5 is entirely understandable. If the claimant exercised the option and completed without any such protections in place, then that could mean that the defendant (now upon completion, a minority shareholder at 20%, with the claimant being the majority shareholder at 80%) would be entirely at the mercy of the claimant, notwithstanding the fact that it would have been the defendant, through her own endeavours, who had built up PKA prior to completion. Indeed, I note that there is no time limit by which the claimant was required to exercise the option; and
d. Fourthly, the parties have not, in my view, left some essential matter to be agreed between them in the future. The wording of clause 7.5 is clear and unambiguous, in that the parties have agreed that following completion, the defendant will be protected against dilution and given the right to maintain her 20% ownership of PKA, in the event that new shares were issued. In my judgment, the shareholders' agreement and the new articles referred to in clause 7.5 relate to the subsidiary question of how the agreed contractual right to dilution protection is to be given effect to. They are merely agreed machinery to give effect to that primary contractual right. Indeed, the claimant said in his submissions, that the draft shareholders' agreement that he had send to the claimant was simply a standard form he had printed off the Internet.
"Having concluded that the option was not validly exercised, then the claim must fail and it is neither necessary nor proportionate to determine the remaining issues"
Appeal
i) Ground 1 is that the judge was wrong to construe clause 7.5 as a condition precedent.
ii) Ground 3 and 12(f) are that the judge was wrong to reject the argument that clause 7.5 was an unenforceable agreement to agree and severable from the rest of the option agreement because of clause 12.6.
Analysis
Conclusion