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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 >> Demco Investment & Commercial SA v Interamerican Life Assurance (International) Ltd & Ors [2012] EWHC 2053 (Comm) (20 July 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2012/2053.html Cite as: [2012] EWHC 2053 (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 :
____________________
DEMCO INVESTMENT AND COMMERCIAL S.A. |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) INTERAMERICAN LIFE ASSURANCE (INTERNATIONAL) LIMITED (2) EUROPOLITAN INVESTMENT CORPORATION (3) GENERALI DEUTSCHLAND HOLDING AG (4) BORIS SACKVILLE (5) SIDNEY PAINE (6) STEWART COHEN (7) TRYGG-HANSA ÖMSESIDIG LIVFÖRSÄKRING AKTIEBOLAG (8) GAMLA LIVFÖRSÄKRINGAKTIEBOLAGET SEB TRYGG LIV |
Defendants |
____________________
Ian Gatt QC (instructed by Herbert Smith) for the 3rd Defendant
Mr Boris Sackville representing himself (4th Defendant)
Mr Sidney Paine representing himself (5th Defendant)
Paul Fallon (instructed by City Law) for the (6th Defendant)
David Edwards QC (instructed by Norton Rose) for the 7th and 8th Defendants
Hearing dates: 24th and 25th April 2012
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE CHRISTOPHER CLARKE:
The sale
Name | Shares | Percentage (to 2 decimal places) |
Demco | 250,741 | 9.62% |
Interamerican | 799,475 | 30.68% |
Europolitan | 653,105 | 25.07% |
Old Aachener Re | 329,719 | 12.65% |
Mr Sackville | 97,816 | 3.75% |
Mr Paine | 77,114 | 2.96% |
Mr Cohen | 9,511 | 0.37% |
Trygg-Hansa | 388,062 | 14.89% |
TOTAL | 2.605,543 | 100% |
a) various representations and warranties were given by the Sellers (as defined in the Purchase Agreement) in Article 7;
b) Article 10.03(b) contained the following limitation of liability provision:
"The liability of each Seller shall be limited to the higher of an amount equal to (A) one-third (1/3) of the Purchase Price and (B) the product of the Purchase Price multiplied by a fraction, the numerator of which shall be the number of Shares sold by the Seller and the denominator shall be the total number of all Shares sold hereunder; provided, however, that with respect to each Seller who is not a corporate entity, the liability shall be limited as provided in paragraph (B) hereof.
For the purposes of this paragraph 10.03(b), the Purchase Price shall include the Additional Price I and the Additional Price II to the extent any amount with respect thereto shall have been paid, become payable or been deposited to the First Account at the time of the discharge by the Seller of any claim hereunder."
c) Article 10.04 narrowed the scope of the limitation provision as follows:
"The provisions of Section 10.03 hereof shall not apply and the breaching party shall be fully liable with regard to any Claim arising from fraud, wilful misconduct or gross negligence by the breaching party, or by the Company as regards the Sellers' liability".
d) Article 10.05 stated that:
"The Sellers shall, subject to the limitation provided for in Section 10.03(b) hereof, have joint and several liability with regard to any
Claim by the Buyer under this Agreement …"
a) Article 2.01:
"From and after the Closing, the Sellers shall fully indemnify, defend and hold the Buyer harmless against any demands, claims, actions, liabilities, assessments, losses, damages, fines, penalties, costs and expenses … (hereinafter referred to as "Losses") that the Buyer or the Company … may incur or suffer at any time resulting from or otherwise related to" a variety of matters.
b) Articles 3.03(b), 3.04 and 3.05 were materially identical to Articles 10.03(b), 10.04 and 10.05 of the Purchase Agreement.
Name | Liability Cap (£) | Comment |
Demco | 1,256,773 | One-third of Purchase Price |
Interamerican | 1,256,773 | One-third of Purchase Price |
Europolitan | 1,256,773 | One-third of Purchase Price |
Old Aachener Re | 1,256,773 | One-third of Purchase Price |
Mr Sackville | 141,543 | 3.75% of Purchase Price |
Mr Paine | 111,586 | 2.96% of Purchase Price |
Mr Cohen | 13,762 | 0.37% of Purchase Price |
Trygg-Hansa | 1,256,773 | One-third of Purchase Price |
6,550,756 |
The Arbitration
2006
a) the total compensation paid by Interlife to a total of 2,888 investors was £ 29,898,350.32; and
b) of sales of policies by Interlife to compensated investors, 43.115% arose from gross negligence, 15.84% arose from other mis-sales (which would be subject to the liability caps), and the remaining 41.045% were not mis-sales at all.
The extent of the liability for which the Sellers might be responsible had therefore been ascertained, and the only issues remaining in the arbitration related to causation and quantum.
2007
2008
a) Trygg-Hansa and Gamla would not participate – either a 14.89% discount could be given to reflect their liability, or no discount would be given and the parties would be free to pursue them for a contribution; and
b) SEB was not prepared to accept a bilateral settlement in which GDH only paid its 12.65% share. SEB insisted that GDH should pay its maximum liability.
On 21 July 2008 Herbert Smith chased City Law for, but did not receive, a response.
The GDH Settlement
a) a total liability figure (including interest to 14 December 2007) of £ 21 million;
b) further interest to 18 November 2010; and
c) a costs figure of £ 8 million.
a) The agreed £ 21 million figure as of 14 December 2007 was to be broken down into (i) liability for gross negligence and (ii) liability for other mis-sales in accordance with the Agreement in Principle, i.e. in the ratio 43.115 : 15.84. That ratio means that the percentage of total liability attributable to gross negligence sales was 73.13% and to other sales was 26.87%;
b) The gross negligence liability (which was uncapped) was therefore
£ 15,357,730, and the liability for other mis-sales (which was subject to the liability caps) was £ 5,642,270;
c) The above figures were deemed to be inclusive of 40% interest up to 14 December 2007, such that the principal amounts in each case were
£ 10,969,809 (gross negligence sales) and £ 4,030,193 (other mis-sales);
d) In respect of the latter figure, GDH's principal liability was capped at
£ 1,256,773 (one-third of the Purchase Price). Adding 40% interest to bring this figure up to December 2007 values gave a figure of
£ 1,759,482;
e) Taking the above figure together with the gross negligence liability gave a total sum payable by GDH (as of 14 December 2007) of
£ 17,117,212 (being £ 15,357,730 plus £ 1,759,482);
f) It was agreed that interest from 14 December 2007 to 19 November 2010 would be calculated at 1% over the Bank of England Base rate, and this amounted to £ 1,515,348. The total settlement sum paid by GDH excluding costs was therefore £ 18,632,560 (being £ 17,117,212 plus £ 1,515,348);
g) GDH's joint and several liability in respect of SEB's legal and other costs (including Arbitration costs) was agreed at £ 8 million; and
h) In total, therefore, GDH paid a sum of £ 26,632,560 to SEB on 19 November 2010.
The current action
Subsequent developments in the Arbitration
a) the further liability to SEB in respect of gross negligence, after giving credit for the GDH Settlement, would be £ 2,807,233.26 plus interest of £ 2,340,701 (Joint Submission ¶7(a));
b) the further potential liability to SEB in respect of other mis-sales after taking into account the payment by GDH was £ 3,805,296.25 (that sum being the potential total liability of the claimants in the arbitration subject to a cap for each individual claimant) plus interest of
£ 1,996,345.77 (Joint Submission ¶7(b)); and
c) the further liability to SEB in respect of costs was to be assessed by the Tribunal if not agreed (Joint Submission ¶¶16-17).
The Award
Gross negligence sales | £ 12,068,377.66 | 73.13% |
Ordinary mis-selling | £ 4,433,795.71 | 26.87% |
Total | £ 16,502,173.37 | 100.00% |
Total recoverable loss Principal amounts
Gross negligence liability
Non gross negligence liability
Interest
The Consent Order
The issues
i) In what proportions should the Sellers contribute to the GDH settlement?ii) Should GDH, having entered into the GDH Settlement, now be liable to any of the other parties in respect of any liability they have to SEB?
iii) Which interpretation of the liability cap provisions in the Deeds in respect of the non gross negligence liabilities is correct: the one contended for by GDH (i.e. the liability cap is to be calculated by reference to the entire Purchase Price, not merely the element actually paid) or that contended for by Messrs Sackville and Paine (the liability cap applicable to each of them is 3.75% and 2.96% respectively of £ 700,000, being the part of the Purchase Price actually paid to the Sellers by SEB)?
iv) Should there be any reduction in the contributions to be made by Messrs Sackville and Paine on account of their apparently limited means, and if so, should that be determined by the Court at this stage, or held over to the enforcement stage?
v) Did Mr Sackville have actual or apparent authority to sign the Purchase Agreement and the Deed on Mr Cohen's behalf?
vi) If not, does Mr Sackville's conduct amount to a forgery within the meaning of section 1 of the Forgery and Counterfeiting Act 1981? If so, does that render the Purchase Agreement and the Deed incapable of ratification and preclude any estoppel? Have those agreements been ratified and is there any estoppel?
Amounts sought from Messrs Sackville, Paine and Cohen
Demco | 25.889035% | £ 7,042,822.83 |
GDH | 34.043520% | £ 9,261,159.40 |
Gamla | 40.067433% | £ 10,899,897.65 |
(Rounding) | 0.000012% | $ 3.26 |
Totals | 100.000000% | £ 27,203,883.14 |
GDH submissions
Demco: 25.637274. GDH : 33.712461. Cohen : 0.972462: Gamla: 39.677802.
Contribution - The Law
"1(1) "Subject to the following provisions of this section, any person
liable in respect of any damage suffered by another person may recover contribution from any other person liable in respect of the same damage (whether jointly with him or otherwise)
…
1 (3) A person shall be liable to make contribution by virtue of subsection (1) above notwithstanding that he has ceased to be liable in respect of the damage in question since the time when the damage occurred, unless he ceased to be liable by virtue of the expiry of a period of limitation or prescription which extinguished the right on which the claim against him in respect of the damage was based.
1(4) A person who has made or agreed to make any payment in
bona fide settlement or compromise of any claim made against him in respect of any damage … shall be entitled to recover a contribution in accordance with this section …
2(1) …the amount of the contribution [under section 1] recoverable from any person shall be such as may be found by the court to be just and equitable having regard to that person's responsibility for the damage in question
2 (3) Where the amount of the damages which have or might have been awarded in respect of the damage in question in any action brought in England and Wales by or on behalf of the person who suffered it against the person from whom the contribution is sought was or would have been subject to—
(a) any limit imposed …… by any agreement made before the damage occurred;
…
the person from whom the contribution is sought shall not by virtue of any contribution awarded under section 1 above be required to pay in respect of the damage a greater amount than the amount of those damages as so limited or reduced."
"if and to the extent that an unreasonable settlement was entered into, the loss has been caused not by the breach but by the plaintiff's voluntary assumption of liability under the settlement … It would also be consistent with the duty to mitigate a loss to hold that if and to the extent that a plaintiff is unable to establish that the settlement on which he founds his claim has been reasonably entered into, he has to that extent failed to mitigate his loss".
Issue (i) In what proportions should the Sellers contribute to the GDH settlement?
Gross negligence liabilities
Non gross negligence liabilities
Inability to pay
"A defendant who is insolvent or has no money simply passes out of the picture. The plaintiff may well not proceed against him at all, but whether he does or not the whole of the liability of meeting the judgment falls to be apportioned between the other defendants, as otherwise the deficiency arising from the insolvency is borne by whatever defendant happens to satisfy the judgment, a result which it is the purpose of the 1998 Act to avoid: see Fisher v CHT Ltd [1966] 2 QB 475. If the impact of a known insolvency can be taken into account in the assessment of contributions, it is difficult to see why the prospect of a future insolvency should not be reflected in the order…"
The Consent Order gives effect to this principle by apportioning the GDH Settlement amongst the Core Parties in proportion to their shareholdings and providing for recoveries from the parties who are likely to be unable to pay to be shared in those proportions.
Issue (ii) Is GDH liable to make a contribution to any amounts paid by the other parties?
a) the excess sum is not "damage" for which GDH is responsible pursuant to sections 1 (1) and 2 (1) of the 1978 Act. The liability to pay the excess sum is not a sum for which GDH bears any responsibility and arises because of the unwillingness of the other defendants to settle;
b) it would not be just or equitable for GDH to have to contribute. It sought to achieve a multilateral settlement. When that proved impossible it settled with SEB by paying the other parties' share of the gross negligence liability and the maximum amount of its capped non gross negligence liability. It has been out of pocket for over £ 26 million for over 18 months and should not have to contribute any more;
c) GDH negotiated the earlier settlement on terms that the other parties were free to join. They declined. As a result they have reached a settlement which is based on a higher figure for gross negligence and other liabilities. GDH had no causative role in that further liability; and
d) The excess sum cannot in any way be regarded as the result of reasonable mitigation. Reasonable mitigation would have involved a constructive response to GDH's attempt at a multilateral settlement. No evidence has been put forward which would indicate that there was any good reason not to join the earlier settlement. Failure to settle has just increased principal, interest and costs, both those payable and those incurred.
Issue (iii) What is the proper interpretation of the liability cap provisions in respect of non gross negligence liabilities?
"For the purposes of this paragraph 10.3 (b) the Purchase Price shall include the Additional Price I and the Additional Price II to the extent any amount with respect thereto shall have been paid, become payable or been deposited to the First Account at the time of the discharge by the Seller of any Claim hereunder".
Issue (iv) Should there be any reduction in the contributions to be made by Messrs Sackville and Paine on account of their apparently limited means and, if so, should that be determined by the Court at this stage or held over to the enforcement stage?
Issue (v) Did Mr Sackville have actual or apparent authority to sign the Deeds on Mr Cohen's behalf?
Mr Sackville's evidence
a) relinquished his shares (which had been with the Bank of Scotland) and received a part of the Purchase Price;
b) claimed in his income tax return in respect of his loss on the sale of his shares;
c) cannot have received any documentation indicating that he was subject to any form of compulsory purchase of his shares on a restructuring or the like;
d) at Mr Sackville's request advanced a claim in the Arbitration for a part of the unpaid Purchase Price, which claim was (as he knew) based upon the Purchase Agreement, although he did not see that agreement until 2011;
e) relied upon an indemnity from Demco, which presumes a liability against which to be indemnified; and
f) participated in the Arbitration (resisting SEB's counterclaim) and in the current action with no mention of the forgery allegation or that the Purchase Agreement and Deed had been entered into without his authority until very recently.
Mr Cohen's evidence
"PF (Mr Fallon) explained that because of the joint and several liability and the cap in the non-gross negligence mis-sale cases, the maximum liability was approximately £ 6 million. He also explained that, under the earlier proposal, Demco would pay his share. SC understood the situation and was very relaxed. He said he was not worried about the liability in the arbitration and said, cordially that he had no choice but to agree to follow Demco's course".
What exactly is being referred to as "the earlier proposal" is not clear. But this note, with its record of Mr Cohen's relaxed attitude, is consistent with his having entered into the Purchase Agreement against a Demco indemnity. If Demco did not give an indemnity when the Agreement was entered into it is difficult to see why they should give one subsequently.
Ratification, estoppel and forgery
Ratification
"This Award takes no account of the reservations which Mr Cohen has now
raised in correspondence concerning his status as a party to the Agreement and Deed of Indemnity and the Arbitration. City Law has indicated that Mr Cohen is not proposing at least not at this stage to make any formal application to the Tribunal on this matter. The matter is not before the Tribunal. The Award has been drafted on the basis of the materials which were before us." (footnote 1)
Estoppel
Forgery
"A person is guilty of forgery if he makes a false instrument, with the intention that he or another shall use it to induce somebody to accept it as genuine, and by reason of so accepting it to do or not to do some act to his own or any other person's prejudice."
An instrument is by section 2 (1) (a) defined so as to include "any document, whether of a formal or informal character".
"(1) An instrument is false for the purposes of this Part of this Act—
(a) …
(b) if it purports to have been made in the form in which it is made on the authority of a person who did not in fact authorise its making in that form; or
(c) ….
(d) if it purports to have been made in the terms in which it is made on the authority of a person who did not in fact authorise its making in those terms
Conclusion on forgery
Ratification, if forgery?
Brook v Hook
"In all cases cited for the plaintiff the act ratified was an act pretended to have been done for or under the authority of the party sought to be charged; and such would have been the case here, if Jones had pretended to have had the authority of the defendant to put his name to the note, and that he had signed the note for the defendant accordingly, and had thus induced the plaintiff to take it. In that case, although there had been no previous authority, it would have been competent to the defendant to ratify the act, and the maxim before mentioned would have applied"
M'Kenzie v British Linen Company
"But even though it was not made out that the signatures were authorized originally, it still would be enough to make M'Kenzie liable, if knowing that his name had been signed without his authority, he ratified the unauthorized act. Then the maxim "Omnis ratihabitio retrotrahitur et mandato priori equiparatur," would apply. I wish to guard against being supposed to say that if a document with an unauthorized signature was uttered under such circumstances of intent to defraud that it amounted to the crime of forgery, it is in the power of the person whose name was forged to ratify it so as to make a defence for the forger against a criminal charge. I do not think he could. But if the person whose name was without authority used chooses to ratify the act, even though known to be a crime, he makes himself civilly responsible just as if he had originally authorized it. It is quite immaterial whether this ratification was made to the person who seeks to avail himself of it or to another."
Greenwood v Martins Bank
Estoppel, if forgery
The effect of the cap in relation to non-gross-negligence liabilities
Party | Amount paid to SEB | Shares in Interlife | Allocation by shareholding only | Allocation by shareholding and cap |
GDH | £1,256,773.00 | 329,719 | £852,017.74 | £855,699.59 |
Demco | £1,256,773.00 | 250,741 | £647,932.88 | £650,732.80 |
Mr Cohen | £13,762.00 | 9,511 | £24,577.11 | £13,762.00 |
Gamla | Nil | 388,062 | £1,002,780.27 | £1,007,113.61 |
TOTAL | £2,527,308.00 | 978,033 | £2,527,308.00 | £2,527,308.00 |
Declaratory relief
Conclusion
i) that it is not just and equitable that GDH should make any further contribution to any other party in respect of any liability of such party to SEB in respect of gross negligence liabilities;ii) that the liability cap in respect of non-gross-negligence liabilities is to be calculated by reference to the entire Purchase Price of £ 1,000,000 +
£ 2,270,321 + £ 500,000, making £ 3,770,321; andiii) that Mr Sackville had actual authority to sign the Purchase Agreement and the Deed on behalf of Mr Cohen.
i) the total value of the GDH Settlement together with interest up to the date referred to in (ii) below ("the total GDH Settlement amount") shall be re-allocated as between Demco, GDH, Gamla and Mr Cohen in proportion to their respective shareholdings, such that Mr Cohen shall contribute 0.972462 % of the total GDH settlement amount ("Mr Cohen's proportion");
ii) Mr Cohen's proportion of the total settlement amount shall be paid by him to GDH, Demco and Gamla ("the Core Parties") on or by a date that I shall appoint ("the payment date"); and
iii) Any sum paid by Mr Cohen to the Core Parties pursuant to (ii) shall be divided between the Core Parties in proportion to their respective shareholdings, i.e. in the agreed ratio.
Demco | 25.637274% |
GDH | 33.712461% |
Mr Cohen | 0.972462% |
Gamla | 39.677802% |
Note 1 In 1995 Aachener Ruckversicherungs-Gesellschaft Aktiengesellschaft - “Old Aachener Re” - transferred certain assets and liabilities to a subsidiary – Laurensberg Beteilgungs-Aktiengesellschaft, which changed its name to Aachener Ruckversicherungs-Gesellschaft. Old Aachener Re changed its name to AM Konzernruckverischerung Aktiengesellschaft and was liquidated in 1997 by merger with its parent AMB Aachener und Munchener Betelungs-Aktiengesellschaft, which in June 2001 changed its name to AMB Generali Holding AG - “AMB” - which in 2009 changed its name to Generali Deutschland Holding AG –“GDH”. [Back] Note 2 SEB Trygg Holding AB v Manches & Ors [2005] EWHC 5 (Comm). [Back] Note 3 After the trial, on 8 May 2012, Gamla paid GDH a sum representing a 40.067433% contribution, as per a Consent Order – see paras 44 – 48 below. [Back] Note 4 There appears to be a misprint in para 279 ix of the Award where the joint and several liability for gross negligence cases of £ 2,551,278.25 is expressed as “(£ 5,062,069.25, being 26.87% of £ 18,489,111.51)” less £ 10,969.809. The calculation should be “(£ 13,521,087.25, being 73.13% of £ 18,489,111.51)” less £ 10,969,809, which does make £ 2,551,278.25. [Back] Note 5 At an earlier stage in his evidence (1/p 64) he said that he had discovered that Mr Sackville had signed the documents without his authority as soon as he found himself a party to the arbitration. [Back]