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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 >> GMAC Commercial Finance Ltd v Mint Apparel Ltd [2010] EWHC 2452 (Comm) (07 October 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2010/2452.html Cite as: [2010] EWHC 2452 (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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GMAC COMMERCIAL FINANCE LIMITED (FORMERLY GMAC COMMERCIAL FINANCE PLC) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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MINT APPAREL LTD. |
Defendant |
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Christopher Harrison and James Knott (instructed by R.R.Sanghvi and Co.) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 28 September 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr. Justice Teare:
"5. Although it has not seen the contracts between CEF and its own customers, GMAC CF understands that CEF would pay 80% of the seller's invoice, and draw a bill of exchange on behalf of the exporter on the buyer for 100% of the invoice value. This allowed the buyer time to pay, while maintaining cash flow for the seller. Once the buyer had paid 100% of the invoice (plus a fee), CEF would pass the balance of 20% (less a further fee) to the seller.
6. From early May 2008, CEF financed its service in part by means of a facility with GMAC CF. Once CEF had received accepted bills of exchange from the buyer, it would sell the debt to GMAC CF under the terms of the facility agreement between GMAC CF and CEF, and – in broad terms- GMAC CF would make available 85% of the value of the debt to CEF."
i) $143,018.19, which represented 20% of the unpaid bills (less CEF's fee);
ii) $204,346.36, which represented 20% of three previously paid bills (less CEF's fee) and which had not been paid by CEF to the exporter;
iii) $27,500, which represented a claim by the exporter against the Defendant for late payment of a bill; and
iv) $34,415, which represented a claim by the Defendant against CEF caused by the exporter's failure to make deliveries in turn caused by CEF's failure to pay the exporter.
i) In circumstances where the bills of exchange were security for finance provided to CEF and where the amount advanced by the Claimant was 85% of the amount of the bills the Claimant cannot recover more than 85% of the bills.
ii) In circumstances where the Claimant understood how the arrangement between CEF and the Defendant worked (in particular that CEF paid 80% of the invoice value to the exporter and, when the Defendant honoured the bill of exchange, paid 20% (less its fee) to the exporter) the Claimant can only recover and retain 80% of the bill of exchange debts. It must pay over the remaining 20% to the exporter. In respect of the three earlier bills of exchange which were paid to the Claimant such sums were received by the Claimant with knowledge of that arrangement and so, as to 20%, were impressed by a constructive trust in favour of the exporter.
iii) If CEF had sought payment of the bills the Defendant would have been entitled to set off an amount equal to 20% of the three earlier paid bills which had been claimed against it by the exporter. In addition the Defendant would have been entitled to set off its claims for the sums of $27,500 and $34,415 which had arisen as a result of non-payment or late payment of the 20% to the exporter. These are liquidated claims which can also be set off against the Claimant when it seeks payment of the bills of exchange.
Recovery limited to 85%
"7.1 Upon receipt by GMAC CF of a Notification relating to any Debt …….GMAC CF shall credit its Notified Value to the Client Account……….
7.2 Subject to the provisions of clauses 7.3, 7.4 and 7.5 GMAC CF shall remit to the Client or to its order on account of its obligation to pay the Purchase Price of Debts any part of the balance for the time being standing to the credit of the Client in the Client Account.
7.3 The Client shall not be entitled at any time to any payment in respect of the Purchase Price of any Debt:
…….
7.3.3 if and to the extent that such payment would result in:
(a) the aggregate of all Prepayments in respect of all Outstanding Debts in accordance with this agreement exceeding a sum produced by deducting the Reserve and the Ineligible Debts (without double counting) from the Gross Purchase Price of all Outstanding Debts and multiplying the result by the Prepayment Percentage [85%];
…..
(c) at any time the aggregate of Prepayment in respect of all Outstanding Debts exceeding the Prepayment Limit [$20m.] or such other amount as GMAC CF and the Client shall from time to time agree…."
Recovery limited to 80%
Set-off of liquidated claims which the Defendant would have had against CEF