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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 >> Tosi Ltd v 99 Hippos Ltd & Anor [2023] EWHC 852 (Ch) (19 April 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2023/852.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 852 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS IN BRISTOL
INSOLVENCY AND COMPANIES LIST (ChD)
B e f o r e :
____________________
First Petition
|
TOSI LIMITED |
Petitioner |
|
- and - |
|
|
(1) 99 HIPPOS LIMITED (2) EMMA LOUISE FAIRCLOUGH |
Respondents |
Second Petition
|
EMMA LOUISE FAIRCLOUGH |
Petitioner |
|
- and - |
|
|
(1) TOSI LIMITED (2) 99 HIPPOS LIMITED |
Respondents |
Third Petition
|
EMMA LOUISE FAIRCLOUGH |
Petitioner |
|
- and - |
|
|
(1) ROBERT EDWARD TILLETT (2) FINSBURY CO LIMITED (3) JUSHO LIMITED |
Respondents |
____________________
James Wibberley (instructed by JMW Solicitors LLP) for the Second Respondent in the First Petition and the Petitioner in the Second and Third Petitions
Hearing dates: 7, 8, 9 and 10 March 2023
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Zacaroli:
Introduction
(1) 99 Hippos Limited ("99H"), 50% of the shares in which are owned by Ms Fairclough and the other 50% are owned by Tosi Limited ("Tosi"), a company that is wholly owned by Mr Tillett;
(2) Jambo Limited ("Jambo"), which is solely owned (according to his witness statement) by Mr Tillett;
(3) Jusho Limited ("Jusho"), which is owned 50/50 by Ms Fairclough and Mr Tillett; and
(4) Finsbury Co Limited ("Finsbury"), which is also owned 50/50 by Ms Fairclough and Mr Tillett.
Background
"For me, I don't care about any of the brand names, the buildings or the "stuff".
For me it's the people. I want to be honest I want them, and they want me. We are prepared if it comes to it to resign. I know that I personally would still have liability with the above companies. We are also aware that each "employee" will have a 6 month none [sic] compete clause to honour.
Ultimately for myself and the people, we see our futures together in whatever form that may look like, I do not wish to therefore sign anything to say I cannot work with XY or Z because they categorically do not want to be here without me and they are people at the end of the day, no one "owns" them."
"I have not promised them or offered anything to them in order for them to leave. They have expressed that without me here they would not want to stay so then our only option would be to essentially start again in 6 months."
"- Emma Fairclough will become the main contact and ultimate line manager for all staff that are agreed to transfer to 99 Hippos Limited. Robert Tillett, and his representatives, will not communicate [with] them except for administrative/practical purposes.
- Robert Tillett will become the main contact and ultimate line manager for all staff that are agreed to transfer to the Jambo Group. Emma Fairclough, and her representatives, will not communicate with them except for administrative/practical purposes.
- Emma Fairclough will not be replaced in her role as Managing Director of the Jambo Group. An 'Interim' Managing Director may be appointed, but it will be made clear that Emma will be reinstated to her role if the deal falls through. Emma will continue to accrue any bonus and other renumeration owed to her until completion."
The witnesses
The Issues
The first petition (Tosi's petition in relation to the affairs of 99H)
(1) Whether Mr Tillett was excluded from 99H (principally from about September 2020 onwards).
(2) Whether Ms Fairclough acted in breach of duty by causing 99H to enter into a coronavirus business interruption loan scheme loan with Iwoca (the "CBILS Loan") in September 2020, without Mr Tillett's knowledge.
(3) Whether Ms Fairclough misappropriated the proceeds of the CBILS Loan.
(4) Whether Ms Fairclough traded her new company, Group Eleven from about November 2020 without making it clear that it was not 99H.
(5) Whether Ms Fairclough failed to enforce restrictive covenants of employees who left 99H.
(6) Whether Ms Fairclough diverted income from 99H to Group Eleven.
(7) Whether Ms Fairclough used company money to fund litigation.
(8) Whether Ms Fairclough was in breach of duty by conspiring to operate a new business.
The second petition (Ms Fairclough's petition in relation to the affairs of 99H)
(1) Whether profits were wrongly diverted to Jambo through the system of inter-company charges.
(2) Whether Mr Tillett caused funds to be misappropriated by 99H in favour of Jambo.
(3) Whether Mr Tillett sought to sabotage 99H's financial interests, by attempting to get Iwoca to call in the CBILS Loan.
(4) Whether Mr Tillett sought to prevent 99H trading by interrupting support services and supplier sabotage.
(5) Whether Mr Tillett wrongly refused to sign 99H's accounts.
(6) Whether it was Mr Tillett's behaviour that caused the breakdown in trust and confidence between him and Ms Fairclough, thus leading to deadlock.
The third petition (Ms Fairclough's petition in relation to the affairs of Finsbury and Jusho)
(1) Whether profits were wrongly diverted to Jambo through the system of inter-company charges.
(2) Whether Mr Tillett caused funds to be misappropriated from Jusho and/or Finsbury in favour of Jambo.
(3) Whether Mr Tillett deliberately caused Finsbury to cease trading, thereby damaging the value of Ms Fairclough's shares.
The law
"(1) The concept of unfairness, although objective in its focus, is not to be considered in a vacuum. An assessment that conduct is unfair has to be made against the legal background of the corporate structure under consideration. This will usually take the form of the articles of association and any collateral agreements between shareholders which identify their rights and obligations as members of the company. Both are subject to established equitable principles which may moderate the exercise of strict legal rights when insistence on the enforcement of such rights would be unconscionable;
(2) It follows that it will not ordinarily be unfair for the affairs of a company to be conducted in accordance with the provisions of its articles or any other relevant and legally enforceable agreement, unless it would be inequitable for those agreements to be enforced in the particular circumstances under consideration. Unfairness may, to use Lord Hoffmann's words, 'consist in a breach of the rules or in using the rules in a manner which equity would regard as contrary to good faith' (see [1999] 2 BCLC 1 at 8, [1999] 1 WLR 1092 at 1099); the conduct need not therefore be unlawful, but it must be inequitable;
(3) Although it is impossible to provide an exhaustive definition of the circumstances in which the application of equitable principles would render it unjust for a party to insist on his strict legal rights, those principles are to be applied according to settled and established equitable rules and not by reference to some indefinite notion of fairness;
(4) To be unfair, the conduct complained of need not be such as would have justified the making of a winding-up order on just and equitable grounds as formerly required under s 210 of the Companies Act 1948;
(5) A useful test is always to ask whether the exercise of the power or rights in question would involve a breach of an agreement or understanding between the parties which it would be unfair to allow a member to ignore. Such agreements do not have to be contractually binding in order to found the equity;
(6) It is not enough merely to show that the relationship between the parties has irretrievably broken down. There is no right of unilateral withdrawal for a shareholder when trust and confidence between shareholders no longer exist. It is, however, different if that breakdown in relations then causes the majority to exclude the petitioner from the management of the company or otherwise to cause him prejudice in his capacity as a shareholder."
The first petition
Exclusion of Mr Tillett from the business
The CBILS Loan
Misappropriation of the proceeds of the CBILS Loan
Trading Group Eleven without making it clear that it was not 99H
Failure to enforce restrictive covenants of employees who left 99H.
Diversion of income from 99H to 99G and conspiring to operate a new business
Use of company money to fund litigation
Conclusions on the first petition
The second petition
Whether profits were wrongly diverted to Jambo through the system of inter-company charges
Whether Mr Tillett caused funds to be misappropriated by 99H in favour of Jambo.
"With that being said, I no longer authorise any transfers of cash from Finsbury, Jusho or Hippos to each other, if one needs money, please let me know why and I will liaise with Tom [Kirk] where best this to come from. To be clear no money is to be transferred from any of the 3 above companies to each other or anywhere else" (emphasis added).
"With Brolly, we pay them via an account transfer from each company, whereas the other umbrella companies we pay by a file. Are you happy for us to authorise these account transfers? We only ask as it will show as an account transfer on the bank and you have asked us not to do account transfers from the companies below. But this is not just to transferring cash to Brolly, it is for payroll."
"Future happy to pay Brolly when cash is available with invoice so yes you don't need to check again for Brolly. It's basically paying an invoice, so a supplier, not a bank transfer of cash for no reason."
"You'll note before this I also required the intercompany balances to be paid, as I do with all companies where they owe Jambo monies for services given at cost. With 99 Hippos Limited specifically, £183,000 was already owed and there was more to be invoiced up to 30 June 2020, albeit there were amounts still to be invoiced by 99 Hippos to Jambo too (known as the "profit share"). On the basis 99 Hippos Limited paid £60,000 to Jambo, the matter is at a satisfactory close for me, but does not impact the value I have put on the business above. The valuation is in respect of the expenses you owe, my Directors Loan Account and the goodwill you'd be acquiring it is not my intention to sell you my shares and you take surplus Net Assets with you, else you'll need to add 50% of that as well. Without this we would not have accelerated toward a deal in principle, as the parties were too far apart, and I'd have instead issued a Statutory Demand and I'm no longer prepared for you, on behalf of 99 Hippos Limited, to demand services and goodwill from Jambo and not pay the associated costs."
"I haven't randomly taken £60k. The previous cash transfers were only to part-cover incurred costs on behalf of those businesses. The £60k is against a cost owing of £180k yet we're not talking about the remaining £120k. I don't think it's fair and reasonable to bury heads in the and pretend that Jambo doesn't pay for the 95% of services received by Hippos."
Whether Mr Tillett sought to sabotage 99H's financial interests, by attempting to get Iwoca to call in the CBILS Loan.
Whether Mr Tillett sought to prevent 99H trading by interrupting support services and supplier sabotage.
Whether Mr Tillett wrongly refused to sign 99H's accounts.
Whether it was Mr Tillett's behaviour that caused the breakdown in trust and confidence between him and Ms Fairclough, thus leading to deadlock.
Conclusion on the second petition
The third petition
Relief under the third petition
Postscript: what should happen to 99H?