BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Wells v Hornshaw & Ors [2024] EWHC 2019 (Ch) (31 July 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2024/2019.html Cite as: [2024] EWHC 2019 (Ch) |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURT IN LEEDS
INSOLVENCY AND COMPANIES LIST (ChD)
IN THE MATTER OF TRANSWASTE RECYCLING AND AGGREGATES LIMITED
AND IN THE MATTER OF THE COMPANIES ACT 2006
1 Oxford Row, Leeds, LS1 3BG |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
STUART WELLS |
Petitioner |
|
- and – |
||
(1) PAUL HORNSHAW (2) MARK HORNSHAW (3) TRANSWASTE RECYCLING AND AGGREGATES LIMITED |
Respondents |
____________________
Gabriella McNicholas (instructed by Milners Solicitors) for the Respondents
Hearing date: 30 July 2024
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Adam Johnson:
The Issue and My Conclusion
The Petition and Counterclaim
" … so far as relevant, and depending on the outcome of the first trial ordered above, there will thereafter be a further trial to ascertain the price to be paid for the Petitioner's shareholding and the other terms of that purchase, in accordance with the decisions of the court in the first trial."
The Part 36 Offer
"Our client is willing to settle the Proceedings (under reference CR-2019-LDS- 000783) on a full and final basis and on the basis that each party releases and forever discharges all and any actions, claims, rights, demands and set offs, whether in this jurisdiction or any other, whether or not presently known to the parties or to the law, and whether in law or equity, that is any of them ever had, or may have or hereby can, shall or may have against the other party arising out of or connected with the Proceedings, to include any actual or proposed counterclaims, on the following terms:
1. Our clients to pay to your client in return for the transfer of his entire shareholding in TRAL, within 14 days of accepting this Offer, the sum of [REDACTED] ('the Settlement Sum')
2. In addition, our clients will be liable to pay your client's costs (save for those ordered to be paid by your client to our clients pursuant to the order of Judge Jackson dated 11 November 2020) on the standard basis, to be assessed if not agreed, up to the date of service of the notice of acceptance, if this offer is accepted by your client within the Relevant Period.
3. The Settlement Sum is inclusive of interest until the expiry of the Relevant Period."
The Judgment, Order and Other Consequential Matters
"The Respondents shall pay the price determined in the expert valuation report and the Petitioner shall provide a duly executed share transfer form and the relevant share certificates within 42 days of the date on which the valuation report is provided to the parties."
The Present Dispute
Mr Wells' Arguments
Discussion
"Acceptance of a Part 36 offer in a split-trial case
36.12
(1) This rule applies in any case where there has been a trial but the case has not been decided within the meaning of rule 36.3.
(2) Any Part 36 offer which relates only to parts of the claim or issues that have already been decided can no longer be accepted.
(3) Subject to paragraph (2) and unless the parties agree, any other Part 36 offer cannot be accepted earlier than 7 clear days after judgment is given or handed down in such trial."
i) CPR, rule 36.3 contains some important definitions, which help inform the meaning of CPR, rule 36.12. Remembering that under rule 36.12(2), the trigger event which renders an offer no longer capable of acceptance is whether it relates to a claims or issues which have already been "decided", rule 36.3(e) helps us understand what it means for a case to be "decided" – it says "… a case is 'decided' when all issues in the case have been decided, whether at one or more trials." Under rule 36.3(c), "trial" is defined to mean, "any trial in a case whether it is a trial of all the issues or a trial of liability, quantum or some other issue in the case."
ii) In her submissions, Ms McNicholas in dealing with rule 36.3(e) emphasised the words, "whether at one or more trials." I think she was correct to do so. What they signal is that a case will be regarded as having been "decided" under the rules when it can be resolved without the need for a further trial.
iii) In my opinion, that is the case here. There will not need to be a further trial. Moreover, it is entirely possible – perhaps even likely – that matters between the parties can finally be resolved without any further intervention from the Court at all. As Ms McNicholas also pointed out, the Order made following the consequentials hearing on 15 April 2024 reflects the final form of relief due to the Petitioner: he is to sell his shares for the price to be determined by the valuer, and the obligations on him to transfer his holding, and on the Respondents to pay the purchase price, are triggered by delivery of the valuer's report (para. 10 of the Order, at [11] above). No further intervention from the Court is necessary in order for any of that to happen. It is therefore appropriate to say that as far as the Court is concerned, final relief on the Petition and Counterclaim has already been obtained, and the case has already been "decided". I do not think it can make a difference that the original Order made by DJ Jackson (at [4] above) contemplated that there might need to be a second trial, because equally the Order contemplated that there might not – it would all depend on the outcome of the first trial. In any event, it seems to me one must approach the present analysis in light of what has actually happened, not in light of what might have happened in other circumstances.
iv) In response, as I have mentioned, Mr Budworth pointed essentially to two factors. One is the fact that the price payable by Mr Wells has still to be determined by the valuer. In this regard, Mr Budworth submitted that Part 36 should operate predictably and thus should be construed in a manner understandable by the layman not only the specialist lawyer. Mr Budworth submitted that a layman would say that the issues in the case have not all been determined, while the matter of the price to be paid remains outstanding. As to this point, I agree that predictability is desirable, but that is why the definitions in rule 36.3 are so important, and looking at the circumstances of this case, it seems to me that even the layman would be forced to concede that there is no obvious need for a further trial (see rule 36.3(e)), and would accept the proposition that the question of price can now plainly be resolved without any further intervention from the Court, because the Court by way of final relief has put in place machinery which will enable it to be identified.
v) Mr Budworth's further point concerned the possibility of the parties applying for further directions under the liberty to apply provision in the 15 April Order (noted above at [12]), and relatedly the fact that the Court retains a limited form of supervisory jurisdiction over expert determinations, and can set them aside in certain circumstances (Mr Budworth referred to Hollington on Shareholders' Rights, 10th Edn., at 8.25, 8.29, 8.63 and 8.66-7). None of that, however, persuades me that the issues generated by the Petition, and by the Respondents' Counterclaim, have not been "decided" in the relevant sense. They have been, and appropriate relief flowing from the decisions made has already been granted. It does not alter the substance of the position to say that implementation of that relief may possibly involve further directions being given, if there are procedural matters the parties cannot agree on. Even if that were so, it would not involve the Court at a further trial deciding any of the issues in the original Petition or Counterclaim, only policing the relief already granted following final determination of those issues. Likewise, the possibility of some challenge in due course to the determination made by the expert is pure speculation at this stage; and even if it were to materialise, such a challenge would in my opinion plainly involve the bringing of a new claim, not the resolution of issues still outstanding from the Petition or the Counterclaim.
vi) Finally, Mr Budworth had a policy point. He said there was a basic unfairness in the Hornshaws continuing to have the benefit of the Part 36 Offer after Judgment was handed down in February 2024, while on the Respondents' analysis Mr Wells was effectively disabled from accepting it. The gist of the point seemed to be that if the Hornshaws wanted the ongoing benefit of the Part 36 Offer, they had to live with the fact that it continued to be open for acceptance. Building on this, Mr Budworth said it was thus fairer to regard the present case as a split-trial case falling within rule 36.12, because then (under rule 36.12(3)) the Hornshaws would be regarded as having had a 7 day window within which to decide whether to leave their Part 36 Offer on the table or not. That gave then the chance to decide what to do; but having plainly decided to leave the Offer open – in order to bank the ongoing benefits – they could not sensibly complain about Mr Wells having accepted it.
vii) I am not persuaded by this argument. It has some superficial attraction, but rather begs the question whether the case is properly speaking a split-trial case or not, within the meaning of the rules. I think not, for the reasons already given; and in a case which is not a split-trial case, the policy underpinning the rules is to my mind clear. A party who has been given the opportunity of avoiding judicial determination of a claim by accepting an offer but who has refused to do so, must accept the consequences of the claim then being determined against him. Such consequences may (in an appropriate case) involve the effects contemplated by CPR, rule 36.17, if the outcome of the judicial decision is less favourable than that represented by the offer. There is nothing unfair in such a case in the offeree being disabled from accepting the offer, once the determination it was designed to avoid has been made; and likewise nothing unfair in the offeror then being entitled to derive such benefits as may accrue to him from having chosen to make it, and thus having taken the risk that it might be accepted before the outcome of the claim was known.
Conclusion and Disposition