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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 >> Carey Value Added, S.L. v Grupo Urvasco, S.A. [2010] EWHC 1905 (Comm) (23 July 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2010/1905.html Cite as: 132 Con LR 15, [2010] EWHC 1905 (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 :
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CAREY VALUE ADDED, S.L. (FORMERLY LOSAN HOTELS WORLD VALUE ADDED I, S.L.) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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GRUPO URVASCO, S.A. |
Defendant |
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Mr Mark Hapgood QC and Mr Tom Smith (instructed by Hogan Lovells International LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 2 July 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Blair:
(1) A Loan Agreement between Grupo Hotelero Urvasco and Carey (then called Losan Hotels World Value Added I, S.L.). Under the Loan Agreement, Carey agreed to advance to Grupo Hotelero Urvasco a loan to a maximum amount of the Euro equivalent of £70,000,000 in various tranches.(2) A Sale and Purchase Agreement ("SPA") between Grupo Hotelero Urvasco and Carey in respect of the shares of Urvasco. The SPA provided the sale and leaseback element of the transaction under which, at completion, Carey (through its English nominee company, London Value Added I, Ltd) was to purchase the shares in Urvasco from Grupo Hotelero Urvasco (subject to the latter's right of repurchase seven years later). Carey was entitled to apply any sums due under the Loan Agreement towards the purchase price.
(3) The Deed of Guarantee and Indemnity between Carey and Grupo Urvasco, under which the present claim is brought.
(1) Grupo Hotelero Urvasco by a letter dated 23 December 2009 in which the amount outstanding under the Loan Agreement was certified by Carey as being €55,426,655.61. This was in reliance on clause 11(a) of the Loan Agreement, which provides that Carey's certificate as to any amount payable to Carey by Grupo Hotelero Urvasco under that Agreement is conclusive save to the extent of any manifest error; and(2) Grupo Urvasco by a letter dated 24 December 2009 in which the amount outstanding under the Deed of Guarantee and Indemnity was certified by Carey as €55,435,526.07. This was in reliance on clause 20.6 of the Deed, which provides that any certification or determination by Carey of a rate or amount under the Deed is, in the absence of manifest error, conclusive evidence of the matters to which it relates. I will come back to this clause, which again has been important in the argument on this application.
The parties' contentions
"If the Purchaser [Carey] fails to advance any Tranche due to be advanced under and in accordance with the Loan and fails to remedy such breach within a period of 30 days of notice from the Seller [Grupo Hotelero Urvasco] requiring such remedy, the Seller shall be entitled to rescind this Agreement by written [notice] to the Purchaser without liability of any kind on the Seller's part under this Agreement. Upon such rescission the Seller shall not be obliged to repay the Loan. In the event of delay on the part of the Purchaser in advancing any Tranche, the Long Stop Date shall be extended by an equivalent period. For the avoidance of doubt, this Clause shall not apply in relation to the Initial Payment due on Completion in respect of which Clause 5.6 shall apply."
The nature of the Deed of Guarantee and Indemnity
"31. I turn thus to the operative language of the deeds of guarantee. By condition 2.1 the guarantor (Mr or Mrs Van Der Merwe) agreed "as principal obligor" "not merely as surety" that "if … the guaranteed moneys are not paid in full on their due date … it (the guarantor) will immediately upon demand unconditionally pay to the Lender (IIG) the Guaranteed moneys which have not been so paid". The Guaranteed moneys are defined as "all moneys and liabilities … which are now or may at any time hereafter be due, owing or payable or expressed to be due owing or payable, to the Lender from or by the borrower … ". The obligation to pay moneys "expressed to be due" "upon demand" "unconditionally" as "principal obligor" "not merely as surety" would indicate that the Van Der Merwes were taking on something more than a secondary obligation.
32. Clause 4.2 then provides that "A certificate in writing signed by a duly authorised officer … stating the amount at any particular time due and payable by the Guarantor … shall save for manifest error, be conclusive and binding on the Guarantor for the purposes hereof". I agree with the judge that that clause puts the matter beyond doubt. Any presumption has by the language used been clearly rebutted. Apart from manifest error, the Van Der Merwes have bound themselves to pay on demand as primary obligor the amount stated in a certificate pursuant to clause 4.2."
(There was held to be no manifest error in that case, and at the hearing of this application Grupo Urvasco made it clear that no such contention is advanced on its behalf in this case.)
"[Grupo Urvasco] irrevocably and unconditionally:
(a) guarantees to the Losan Entities [that is Carey] punctual and complete performance by the Obligors [that is Grupo Hotelero Urvasco] of the Guaranteed Obligations;
(b) [this has to do with the lease of the property]
(c) undertakes with the Losan Entities to be responsible as primary obligor for any failure by an Obligor to perform, discharge or fulfil for whatever reason any of the Guaranteed Obligations when due and promptly on demand by any Losan Entity:
(i) fully, punctually and specifically perform or procure to be performed the relevant Guaranteed Obligations as if it were itself a direct and primary obligor to the Losan Entities in respect of such Guaranteed Obligations and be liable as if the Transaction Documents had been entered into directly between the Guarantor and the Losan Entities;
(ii) pay the amount of any Guaranteed Obligation which has not been paid by the relevant Obligor and without any deduction or withholding; and
(d) undertakes with the Losan Entities to indemnify any of them immediately on demand against any cost, loss or liability suffered and expenses incurred by any Losan Entity:
(i) in consequence of an Obligor's failure to perform any of its obligations under the Transactions Documents;
(ii) if any obligation guaranteed by the Guarantor is or becomes unenforceable, invalid or illegal.
The amount of the cost, loss or liability shall be equal to the amount which that Losan Entity would otherwise have been entitled to recover under the Transaction Documents."
"… shall be paid in full without set-off or counterclaim of any kind and free and clear of, and without any deduction or withholding of any kind …"
The combination of these matters, it is submitted, demonstrates a clear and unanswerable case that the obligations of Grupo Urvasco under the Deed are primary, separate and independent.
Discussion and conclusion
"Any certification or determination by [Carey] of a rate or amount under any Transaction Document or this deed is, in the absence of manifest error, conclusive evidence of the matters to which it relates."
Conclusive evidence clauses will be interpreted strictly, with any ambiguity being resolved in favour of the guarantor. Thus, the clause will not readily be construed as being conclusive of the legal existence of the indebtedness or as precluding the guarantor relying on any equitable set off since this operates to reduce or extinguish the claim itself.
The fact that conclusive evidence clauses are strictly construed also means that the guarantor may raise arguments as to whether the document served upon him can properly be described as a "certificate" or "statement" and as to whether the person who has signed the certificate comes within the class of persons authorised to do so.
This passage is referred to in IIG at [13] without any suggestion that it does not accurately state the law, and in my view, the views expressed in it are correct. In so far as there is any ambiguity in clause 20.6, it should be resolved in favour of Grupo Urvasco. On that basis also, I conclude that a certificate under clause 20.6 is not conclusive evidence as to liability.