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England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Socimer International Bank Ltd v Standard Bank London Ltd [2004] EWHC 1041 (Comm) (11 May 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2004/1041.html Cite as: [2004] EWHC 1041 (Comm) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
SOCIMER INTERNATIONAL BANK LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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STANDARD BANK LONDON LIMITED |
Defendant |
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Mr S Auld, QC (instructed by Jones Day, Solicitors, London) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 4th and 5th May 2004
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Cooke :
Introduction
The Agreement
i) The forward sale transactions entailed Standard funding the difference between the Market Value (as defined) of the relevant Designated Assets at inception of the Transaction and the Downpayment (or Additional Downpayments) during the period up to the Forward Settlement Date. Thus, in the circumstances set out in paragraph 5 of this Judgment, Socimer was effectively able to borrow the difference for its own commercial purposes and Standard received remuneration for that in the shape of the Forward Value, payable by Socimer on the Forward Settlement Date which took account of the costs of funding.ii) By monitoring the value of each Designated Asset, Standard was able to restore the ratio of the value of the Designated Asset to the amount of financing provided by it, by seeking Additional Downpayments and thus maintaining the same level of "security" in the event of Socimer's failure to pay the Forward Value.
iii) Standard carried out a valuation process, using its reasonable judgment on a daily basis. For liquid assets, the valuation would be carried out on the basis of screen prices for the assets and conversations with various market participants. For more illiquid assets where there were no readily available markets and no screen prices, Standard might have to use its own commercial judgment.
iv) In the case of such illiquid assets, the value placed upon them by Standard was not necessarily that which would be obtained on an actual sale, because of the difficulty of evaluation of such assets and the volatility of the market.
v) Smaller debts from less developed economies are highly illiquid, are traded infrequently and are known as "exotics". For debts like these, it would be difficult to find buyers, even in the specialist market for emerging market debt where those involved were almost invariably serious risk takers. Most trading in the global over-the-counter market for emerging market debt instruments has centred on or around 15 to 20 major dealers over the last 10 years and much of this trading takes place through dealers. Exotics would not however be transacted through brokers, nor would prices be available on screens.
vi) Volatility is a hallmark of the market so that market players have to have a high-risk appetite. Many will borrow funds in order to invest in the market. There are a number of ways in which leverage can be achieved by the obtaining of finance, namely:-
a) Buying an asset spot and obtaining a loan to pay for it.b) Buying an asset spot and obtaining finance via a re-purchase (or Repo) agreement.c) Purchasing an asset on a basis which allows for the purchase proceeds to be paid on a deferred basis, namely a forward purchase or looked at from the seller's perspective, a forward sale.In each of these cases, the buyers would take the financial risk and reward of the asset whilst being responsible for the payment of a financing cost inherent in the arrangement.vii) In a forward sale of the kind described above, the risk taken by the seller is essentially twofold: firstly, the counterparty risk, namely the risk of non-payment by the buyer: secondly, the assets risk, namely the risk that the instrument purchased would prove inadequate to satisfy the contractual forward price agreed with the buyer should it default (or indeed any price previously paid by the seller in order to obtain the asset in the first place).
viii) Downpayments and margin calls or demands for Additional Downpayments mitigate the risk. A typical Downpayment on a liquid asset would be 1525% whereas, in the case of an illiquid asset it could fall within the range of 30-50% of the price payable. Under the Agreement routinely the Downpayment was of the order of 30%.
ix) On highly liquid assets, such as sovereign debt, prices are freely available and monitoring for margin calls is relatively straightforward. With more illiquid assets, however, there is an absence of real prices and the mark-to-market mechanics are difficult to operate. Almost invariably in such circumstances the contractual mechanism provides for the Seller to determine the Market Value and to be able to require additional margin or Downpayments in accordance with that judgment.
x) There is a difference between the terms usually available for forward buying of liquid assets and more illiquid assets. The former terms are more balanced, as between seller and buyer whilst the latter almost invariably favour the seller whose risk is increased because of the difficulty in realising the debt in the event of default by the buyer.
xi) The expert's view was that, once a default had occurred, it was essential to the Seller that he was able to access real prices in order to assess whether he had any exposure to loss. The only definitive measure of value was, in his view, the price for which the assets could actually be sold, rather than any prices which were theoretically to be seen on screens or to be gauged by database systems (such as Bloomberg), telephone calls to market professionals, arrangers/ lead managers of the issue in question, research sheets and comparable instruments. The expert opined that if there were no real buyers for the debt in the market and there was therefore no price at which the debt could be sold, it would be necessary to value the asset at zero. With such an Instrument, the Downpayment was likely to be high.
xii) The standard form documentation for forward sales of liquid assets accorded with the PSA/ISMA terms and conditions but these were tailored to individual transactions. Nonetheless, they were more evenly balanced than the terms and conditions which would be expected for forward sale agreements for illiquid assets.
xiii) The assets actually traded under the Agreement were those to be expected for an agreement of this kind. They were what was described as a "mixed bag" containing certain assets which were liquid and some which were described as "illiquid".
xiv) Different lists were produced by the parties amounting to 35 or 47 Designated Assets traded under the Agreement, but all save about 8 of these appear to have been sovereign debt instruments which were readily tradeable. Less than 25% could be considered relatively illiquid or exotic. The evidence established that it was the corporate indebtedness which was not securitised which constituted the most illiquid assets whilst the government bonds were the subject of reasonably regular deals.
xv) Of the 8 or so "illiquid" debts referred to, it appears that at least 5 or 6 of these had been sold by the time of the events in question. As at close of business on 30th September 1998, 2 of the assets which were considered illiquid, namely Socma Americana SA 10.5% Maturing 11/2002 and Brazil TDA-ES with various maturities had not been sold and the unpaid amounts due in respect of them from Socimer totalled just over $ 10M. 4 other assets remained unsold which do not appear to have been particularly illiquid on which the Unpaid Amount (as defined) due ran to the order of US$ 4M.
xvi) Some of the Designated Assets were, in market perception, capable of being traded under PSA/ISMA terms and, on the documents, were so traded by Socimer with other counterparties.
xvii) Standard maintained that the exotics were not tradeable on these terms.
The terms of the Agreement
"" Forward Value" means, with respect to each Transaction, the value in the Payment Currency at which the Transaction is entered into on the Trade Date, inclusive of the Seller's cost of Funds, as specified in the Trade Confirmation.
.
"Mark-to-Market Loss" means, on any day and for any Transaction, either of (a) where (i) the Market Value is less than the Forward Value and (ii) the Policy Unpaid Amount is less than the Unpaid Amount, an amount determined by subtracting the Forward Value from the Market Value, or (b) where (i) the Market Value is greater than or equal to the Forward Value and (ii) the Policy Unpaid Amount is less than the Unpaid Amount, an amount determined by subtracting the Unpaid Amount from the Policy Unpaid Amount.
"Market Value" means, on any day and for each Transaction, the value in the Payment Currency determined by the Seller in its sole and absolute discretion for assets of the same description and type, denominated in the same currency and in the same principal amount as the Designated Assets.
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"Policy Unpaid Amount" means, for each Transaction, an amount determined by multiplying the Policy Unpaid Percentage by the Market Value.
"Policy Unpaid Percentage" means, for each Transaction, the maximum permissible Unpaid Amount (expressed as a percentage of the Market Value) determined by the Seller min its sole and absolute discretion,
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"Unpaid Amount" means, on any day, and for each Transaction, the total outstanding currency amount payable with respect to the relevant Transaction as determined by the Seller, being the Forward Value less the Downpayment, any Additional Downpayment and any Subsequent Additional Downpayment(s) plus any other moneys owing to the Seller.
.
2. DOWNPAYMENT
(a) A downpayment as determined by the Seller (the "Downpayment") will be required from the Payer and shall be payable to the Seller with respect to each individual Transaction. The Downpayment ..will be treated as a partial payment of the amount due to the Seller. The parties hereby agree that the Downpayment shall be non-returnable once paid.
3. CONSIDERATION FOR SALE AND PURCHASE
(a) On or prior to the Forward Settlement Date for each Transaction, the Buyer shall pay to the Seller the Unpaid Amount with respect to such Transaction in the Payment Currency.
..
(c) For the avoidance of doubt and subject to receipt of the Unpaid Amount in accordance with Section 3(a), the Buyer shall not acquire any legal or equitable interest in the Designated Assets until the Forward Settlement Date but the Seller shall consult with the Buyer (without any obligation to carry out the Buyer's wishes) in connection with the exercise of any right or discretion or performance of any obligation by the Seller under or pursuant to any of the Designated Assets.
4. FORWARD SALE
(a) On each Forward Settlement Date, subject to the prior receipt by the Seller in full of the consideration referred to in Section 3, the Seller shall sell to the Buyer, without recourse, and the Buyer shall purchase from the Seller, all of the Seller's rights, title and interest in respect of the Designated Assets (which expression shall include all interest and in the case of bonds, coupons, and other amounts due in respect thereof) for the period from (but excluding) the Effective Date to (and including) the Forward Settlement Date). ..
6. ADDITIONAL DOWNPAYMENTS, SUBSEQUENT ADDITIONAL DOWNPAYMENTS
(a) Additional Downpayments
If at any time there is:
(aa) where Buyer has elected calculation of Additional Downpayments by reference to a particular Transaction only, (i) a Mark-to-Market Loss and (ii) the Mark-to-Market Loss is greater than one half of the Remaining Equity; or
., then
the Seller may at any time while such circumstance exists request the Buyer, such request to be confirmed in writing, to make such further payment (a "Transaction Additional Payment", to the Seller as will result in the Unpaid Amount, Sub-Portfolio Unpaid Amount or Portfolio Unpaid Amount being equal to the Policy Unpaid Amount, Sub-Portfolio Policy Unpaid Amount or Portfolio Policy Unpaid Amount, as the case may be. Upon any such request by the Seller, the Buyer shall, within one (1) Business Day or two (2) Business Days if not in U.S. Dollars), make such payment to the Seller in the amount notified to the Buyer in such request"
[Similar provisions applied to the making of Subsequent Additional Downpayments for a particular transaction and for portfolio and sub-portfolio assets]
" .
(f) Any calculation made by the Seller under this Section 6 shall be conclusive and binding on the Buyer, in the absence of any manifest error.
..
14. EVENTS OF DEFAULT
In the event that:
(i) the Buyer fails to pay when due any amount payable by it under these Standard Terms or any Trade Confirmation; or
(ii) a party becomes insolvent or generally fails or becomes unable to pay its debts as they become due or commences any bankruptcy, insolvency, liquidation, administration, receivership, administrative receivership or similar proceedings or any such proceedings are commenced against it; or
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(ix) a party repudiates or does or causes or permits to be done any act or thing evidencing an intention to repudiate these Standard Terms or any Trade Confirmation; then
(a) where such party is the Buyer, the Buyer shall promptly inform the Seller of such event and the obligation of the Seller to sell the Designated Assets to the Buyer and all of the other obligations of the Seller under these Standard Terms and each Trade Confirmation shall, save as otherwise provided in these Standard terms, terminate. Upon such termination, neither party shall be required to refund, pay or otherwise account to the other in any way whatsoever for any payments paid hereunder except as follows:
the Seller shall have the right, in its sole discretion, either:
(aa) to refund to the Buyer any Additional Downpayments and any Subsequent Additional Downpayments paid to it with respect to such terminated Transactions, after deducting therefrom any amounts due and owing to it under these Standard Terms and the Trade Confirmations (including without limitation any Downpayments or the amount of any losses, costs or expenses of the Seller, arising as a result of this termination, but not the Unpaid Amounts in respect of such terminated Transactions, the Buyer's obligation to pay the same being terminated in consideration of the termination of the Seller's obligation to deliver the Designated Assets in respect of such terminated Transactions); or
(bb) to liquidate or retain sufficient Designated Assets and to apply the proceeds of their sale to satisfy to the extent possible any amounts payable to the Seller under these Standard Terms and the Trade Confirmations, particularly, and without limitation, the amount of any Unpaid Amount, Downpayment, Additional Downpayment, Supplementary Additional Downpayment payable by the Buyer and the amount of any losses, costs or expenses of the Seller arising as a result of this termination and the sale of the Designated Assets.
The Seller may in its sole and absolute discretion sell the Designated Assets at such time, in such manner and at such price as it deems reasonable and appropriate. The value of any Designated Assets liquidated or retained and any losses, expenses or costs arising as a result of the termination or sale of the Designated Assets shall be determined on the date of termination by Seller.
Any Designated Assets remaining following the satisfaction of the Seller's claims, shall be sold to the Buyer, in the same manner as is contemplated by these Standard Terms and the relevant Trade Confirmation, as soon as practicable after the date of termination. Any proceeds from the sale of the Designated Assets remaining following the satisfaction of all amounts payable to the Seller as stated above, shall be paid by the Seller to the Buyer.
In the event that any amounts payable to the Seller cannot be satisfied in full by the application of any Additional Downpayments and Subsequent Additional Downpayments, where (aa) applies, or the Designated Assets in the manner above, where (bb) applies, then the Buyer shall pay to the Seller an amount equivalent to the amount of the deficiency. The Seller shall prepare a certificate specifying the amount of the deficiency, and such certificate shall be conclusive and binding on the Buyer, in the absence of any manifest error. The Buyer shall make payment of such deficiency upon delivery of the certificate by the Seller in the currency or currencies specified in such certificate.
(b) where such party is the Seller, then
15. TERMINATION EVENTS
(a) In the event that:
"(i) due to the adoption of, or any charge in, any applicable law after the date on which any Transaction is entered into, or due to the promulgation of, or any change in, the interpretation by any court, tribunal or regulatory authority with competent jurisdiction of any applicable law after such date, it becomes unlawful, impossible or impracticable for the Seller to deliver the Designated Assets in respect of such Transaction or for either party to perform all or any of its obligations under or to comply with any other material provision of these Standard Terms or any Trade Confirmation; or
(ii) due to the adoption of, or any change in, any applicable tax law after the date on which any Transaction s entered into, or die to the promulgation of, or any change in, the interpretation by any court, tribunal or regulatory authority with competent jurisdiction of any applicable tax law after such date, either party is or will be required to pay any additional amount in respect of tax relating to any part of, or a withholding or deduction is made from any payment to be made with regard to each Transaction; or
(iii) a Non-Convertibility Event occurs;
then the Transaction or Transactions so affected shall terminate with immediate effect upon notice being given of such termination by the party affected to the other party. Upon such termination the obligations of each party with respect to that Transaction or Transactions only shall terminate, save as otherwise provided in these Standard Terms and other than obligations equivalent to those set out in Section 14(a), which shall apply to such termination.
..
16. ACKNOWLEDGEMENT BY THE BUYER
(a) The Buyer hereby acknowledges that:-
.
(ii) the Seller shall not be liable for any loss or liability involving any Designated Asset, or arising from a currency transaction or contract or any other transaction or contract entered into in relation to a Transaction, including, without limitation, where such loss or liability results, directly or indirectly, from market or price fluctuations; or nationalisation, expropriation, devaluation, revaluation, confiscation, seizure, cancellation, destruction or similar action by any governmental authority, de facto or de jure; or enactment, promulgation, imposition or enforcement by any such governmental authority or currency restrictions, exchange controls, taxes, levies or other charges affecting the Designated Assets or any Transaction, or acts of war, terrorism, insurrection or revolution, or any act or event beyond the Seller's control; and
(iii) (A) it invests in and is a sophisticated buyer of assets similar to the Designated Assets in the normal course of its business; (B) it is familiar with the type of transaction undertaken pursuant to these Standard Terms and with assets of the type and description of the Designated Assets; (C) it has made its own independent appraisal of and investigations into the financial condition, credit-worthiness, affairs, status and nature of all the Obligors and the Designated Assets and the Asset Documents, and has examined such information concerning the Designated Assets as it has deemed appropriate; (D) it understands and is able to assume the risk of loss associated with such Designated Assets and has sufficient knowledge and experience to be able it evaluate the merits and risk of entering into Transactions with the Seller pursuant to these Standard Terms and (E) it recognises the volatile nature of the emerging markets and understands and accepts that circumstances may hereby arise in which it is impracticable for the Seller to notify or consult the Buyer before liquidating a position.
. ".
Principles of Construction
i) In Rank Enterprises v Gerard [2001] AER 449 Mance LJ at p.452 identified the Court's essential task as follows:
"To construe the documents in a manner which affects the mutual intention of the parties, against the background of the transaction as a whole, looking for the meaning which the language used would convey to a reasonable person, having all the background knowledge which would reasonably have been available to the parties but excluding previous negotiations and evidence of subjective intent."
ii) Lord Hoffman, in his well known judgment in the Investors Compensation Scheme v West Bromwich Building Society [1998] 1 AER 98 described the fundamental change which has overtaken this branch of the law as intended, at pages 912-913, as follows,
"To assimilate the way in which such documents are interpreted by judges to the common sense principles by which any serious utterance would be interpreted in ordinary life. Almost all the old intellectual baggage of "legal interpretation" has been discarded."
The principles which emerged from Lord Hoffman's judgment are in summary as follows:
(1) Interpretation/construction is the ascertainment of the meaning which the document would convey to a reasonable person having all the background knowledge available to the parties at the time of the contract.
(2) The phrase famously used by Lord Wilberforce "matrix of fact" if anything understates what the background may include. Subject to the requirement that it should be reasonably available to the party (save as to specific exceptions) it includes absolutely anything which could have affected the way in which the language of the document would have been understood by a reasonable man. The exclusions concern previous negotiations and subjective intent which are admissible only in relation to rectification.
(3) The meaning which a document (or for that matter any other utterance) would convey to a reasonable man is not the same thing as the meaning of its words. The meaning of the words is a matter of dictionaries and grammar; the meaning of a document is what the parties using those words against the relevant background could reasonably have been understood to mean.
(4) The relevant background may not merely enable the reasonable man to choose between the possible meanings of words which are ambiguous but even (as occasionally happens in ordinary life) to conclude that the parties must for whatever reason have used the wrong words or syntax.
(5) The rule that words should be given their natural and ordinary meaning reflects the common sense proposition that one does not easily accept that people have made linguistic mistakes, particularly in formal documents. On the other hand, if one would nevertheless conclude from the background that something must have gone wrong with the language, the law does not require judges to attribute to the parties an intention which they plainly could not have had."
iii) In Mannai Investments v Eagle Star [1997] 3 AER 352 Lord Steyn said:-
"In determining the meaning of the language of a commercial contract and unilateral contractual notices the Court therefore generally favours a commercially sensible construction. The reason for this approach is that a commercial construction is more likely to give effect to the intention of the parties. Words are therefore interpreted in the way in which a reasonable commercial person would construe them. And the standard of a reasonable commercial person is hostile to technical interpretations and undue emphasis on the niceties of language."
iv) Lord Hoffman in Mannai specifically dealt with the question of "wrong words". He observed (at page 375):
"It is of course true that the law is not concerned with the speaker's subjective intentions. But the notion that the law's concern is therefore with the meaning of his words conceals an important ambiguity. The ambiguity lies in a failure to distinguish between the meaning of words and the question of what would be understood as the meaning of a person who uses words. The meaning of words as they would appear in a dictionary and the effect of their systematical arrangement as it would appear in a grammar is part of the material which we use to understood a speaker's utterance. But it is only a part; another part is our knowledge of the background which enables us not only to choose the intended meaning when a word has more than one dictionary meaning but also to understand the speaker's meaning often without ambiguity when he used the wrong words."
v) In Don King Promotions v Warren [1998] 2 ADR 608 at page 624 Lightman J summarised the position as follows:-
"The essential task of construction is to deduce, if this is possible, from the two agreements construed against their commercial background, the commercial purpose which the businessmen and entities who are parties to them must as a matter of business common sense have intended to achieve by entering into them; and if such intent can fairly be deduced and if this is necessary to effectuate that intent, the Court may require what may appear to be errors or inadequacies in the choice of language to yield to that intention and be understood as saying what (in light of that purpose) that language must reasonably be understood to have been intended to mean."
Construction of the Agreement
i) Market Value means "on any day and for each Transaction" the value "determined by the Seller in its sole and absolute discretion" for assets of the same description, type, currency and principal amount.ii) This Market Value, as determined by Standard is then used for calculations for the Mark-to-Market Loss, for the purpose of assessing the need for Additional Downpayments and Subsequent Additional Downpayments. Any calculation made by Standard for that purpose "shall be conclusive and binding on the buyer in the absence of any manifest error".
iii) The definition of "Unpaid Amount" means "on any day and for each Transaction" the total payable "as determined by the Seller", taking into account the agreed Forward Value, the agreed Downpayment and any Additional Downpayments and Subsequent Additional Downpayments which have been calculated by Standard and are conclusive and binding in the absence of any manifest error.
iv) Under clause 14 itself, upon which the argument centres, "the value of any Designated Assets liquidated or retained shall be determined on the date of termination by Seller".
"The value of any Designated Assets liquidated or retained and any losses, expenses or costs arising as a result of the termination or the sale of the Designated Assets shall be determined on the date of termination by Seller."
i) The first sentence which provides expressly that the obligation of Standard to sell the Designated Assets to the Buyer and all its other obligations under the Agreement and each Trade Confirmation shall terminate, save as otherwise provided.ii) Upon that termination, neither party is required to refund or repay any amount previously paid, save as expressly provided thereafter (see the second sentence of sub-clause (a)).
iii) The Seller then has the right, in its discretion to adopt either the procedure set out in sub-clause (aa) or sub-clause (bb). Sub-clause (aa) refers in terms to "such terminated transactions" in three places, in the context of Standard's election to refund Additional Downpayments and Subsequent Downpayments, after deducting sums due to it (including any losses but not the Unpaid Amount) while Socimer's obligation to pay the Unpaid Amount is terminated in consideration of the termination of the Seller's obligation to deliver the Designated Assets.
iv) If Standard should decide that the procedure set out in sub-clause (bb) should be followed, that sub-clause gives the right to Standard to liquidate or retain sufficient Designated Assets to satisfy amounts payable to it under the Agreement and Trade Confirmations and refers to "this termination" and in the two succeeding sub-paragraphs to "the date of termination" which can only mean the date of termination previously referred to, namely the termination of Standard's obligation to sell (which carries with it termination of Socimer's obligation to pay the Unpaid Amount) and thus the Transactions as a whole, which are referred to as being terminated in sub-clauses (a) and (aa).
"The Seller may in its sole and absolute discretion sell the Designated Assets at such time, in such manner and at such price as it deems reasonable and appropriate."
Standard maintained that this sentence operated to give it discretion to sell the Designated Assets and apply the proceeds of the sale which they achieved, however long after the date of termination, in satisfaction of the sums owing to it under the Agreement, regardless of the second sentence of the second paragraph requiring the value of any Designated Assets liquidated or retained to be determined on the date of termination. The central difficulty with Standard's construction of the clause is the absence of any meaning which it can properly give to the second sentence. The same problem does not exist with Socimer's construction, since the purpose of the first sentence of the second paragraph of sub-clause (bb) is to make it clear that Standard does have, as it must have as owner of the Designated Assets in any event, a complete discretion about sale, whilst the clause as a whole is designed to ensure that the calculation of the net position between Standard and Socimer takes place at or immediately following the termination of the parties' obligations, with immediate sale to third parties or retention by Standard, so that the existence of a surplus or deficiency is immediately obvious on the basis of the value of the assets as at the termination date. If there is a surplus the third paragraph of sub-clause (bb) comes into operation whereas if there is a deficiency, the last paragraph of sub-clause (a) as a whole comes into play with the preparation by the Seller of a certificate specifying the amount of the deficiency, which is again to be conclusive and binding on Socimer in the absence of any manifest error and which gives rise to the obligation on Socimer to make good that deficiency.
Conclusion