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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 >> ABM Amro Commercial Finance Plc v McGinn & Ors [2014] EWHC 1674 (Comm) (23 May 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2014/1674.html Cite as: [2014] EWHC 1674 (Comm), [2014] 2 Lloyd's Rep 33 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
ABM AMRO COMMERCIAL FINANCE PLC |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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AMBROSE McGINN ROSS LAWRANCE BEATTIE MARCUS LEEK |
Defendants |
____________________
Kavan Gunaratna (instructed by Coyle White Devine) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 16 May 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
The Honourable Mr Justice Flaux:
Introduction
The terms of the Agreement and the deeds of indemnity
"4 TRANSFER OF OWNERSHIP OP DEBTS
(1) This Agreement is for the Sale by the Client and the Purchase by Venture of all Debts which are in existence at the Commencement Date or which afterwards arise during the currency of this Agreement. On the Commencement Date the Client shall deliver an Offer in respect of each such Debt unpaid at that date. Venture shall only accept such Offer by crediting the value of the Debt, as shown in the Offer, to the Debts Purchased Account, where upon Venture's ownership of such Debt shall be complete.
7 CREDIT OF THE PURCHASE PRICE AND PAYMENT BY VENTURE
(1) Following receipt of a Notification, Venture shall on the next Working Day credit the Purchase Price to the Debts Purchased Account. For administrative convenience Venture may make such credit before the deduction of any of the items which, in accordance with clause 6(1), are to be deducted in computing the Purchase Price. Venture may consequently, if it so wishes, aggregate and debit all such items at any time thereafter to either the Debts Purchased Account or the Current Account.
(4) Venture shall be entitled to debit the Current Account and/or or the Debts Purchased Account with:
(i) all bank charges incurred by Venture in respect of an instrument of payment not cleared for fate as described in Clause 7(4) for a Debt which is not a Credit Approved Debt;
(ii) if so provided in paragraph 15 of the Schedule, all banking charges and other costs and expenses it may incur in relation to any account to which it directs that any payments by Debtors shall be credited;
(iii) such other charges or fees as are referred to in the Schedule or any rider to the Schedule and all bank charges incurred in collecting Export Debts and converting the proceeds of a Foreign Currency Debt into Sterling;
(iv) any amount due to Venture in relation to the matters referred to in clauses 14 and 18(2)(v);
(v) any other amounts due to Venture.
10 DISPUTES AND CREDIT NOTES
(1) If a Debtor disputes its liability to pay the full Notified amount of any Debt (less any discount or allowance approved by Venture) the Client shall forthwith notify Venture of such dispute (if the same has not already been advised to the Client by Venture) and undertakes:
(i) to use its best endeavours promptly to settle every such dispute, subject to the right of Venture itself to settle or compromise any such dispute or to require that the Client should settle or compromise it on such terms as Venture may in its absolute discretion think fit;
(ii) to perform promptly all further and continuing obligations of the Client to the Debtor under any Sale Contract and to give evidence to Venture of such performance and to agree that in the event of the failure of such performance Venture may itself perform such obligations at the expense of the Client;
(iii) to issue promptly all credit notes due in respect of Debts and to Notify same within three Working Days of issue subject to the right of Venture to require that no credit note shall be authorised or issued without Venture's consent and that the originals of such credit notes shall be sent to Venture;
and the Client shall be bound by anything done by or at the direction of Venture in accordance with this sub-clause (1), including any corresponding reduction in the Purchase Price.
12 NOTICES TO AND COLLECTIONS FROM DEBTORS
(1) Whilst the ownership of any Debt remains vested in Venture or any Debt is held in trust for Venture pursuant to Clause 5, Venture shall have the sole right to enforce payment of and determine whether such Debt shall be collected by Venture or by the Client (as the agent of Venture) and to institute, carry on, defend or compromise proceedings in its own name or the name of the Client in such manner and upon such terms as it may in its absolute discretion think fit. The Client shall co-operate in such enforcement, collection or proceedings and in the recovery of any Transferred Goods.
(5) The Client shall at its own cost forthwith deliver to Venture or, if so required by Venture, directly to a bank account designated by Venture the actual cash, cheque, instrument or payment received by the Client in or on account of the discharge of each Debt. Until so delivered, the Client shall meanwhile hold such cash, cheque, instrument or payment in trust for Venture. The Client shall not deal with, negotiate or pay the same into any bank account unless so directed by Venture. If it be necessary for any instrument to be endorsed to enable Venture to receive payment then the Client shall endorse the same prior to its delivery to Venture. If so required, the Client shall give an indemnity to Venture's bankers in respect of 'account payee" cheques made payable to the Client and so endorsed.
16 CLIENT'S ACCOUNTS AND RECORDS
(3) The Client shall promptly provide Venture (at the Client's expense) with such of the Financial Records included in the Related Rights or copies of them and of any other records or documents of the Client as Venture may at any time require or any other evidence of the performance of Contracts of Sale.
18 WARRANTIES AND UNDERTAKINGS OF THE CLIENT
(3) The inclusion of any Debt in a Notification (other than a Notification pursuant to clause 6(3)) or in any report made to Venture pursuant to clause 12(4)(i)(d) shall be treated as a warranty by the Client that:
(i) the Sale Contract does not include any prohibition against the assignment of the Debt;
(ii) the Goods have been Delivered and the Debt is a legally binding obligation of the Debtor for the Notified amount and has arisen from a Sale Contract made in the ordinary course of the Client's business…
(iv) the Client is not in breach of any of its obligations under the relevant Sale Contract and the Debtor will accept the Goods and the invoice therefor without any dispute or claim, including claims for release of liability (or inability to pay) because of force majeure or because of the requirements of any law wherever applying or of rules orders or regulations having the force of law in any jurisdiction;
19 COMMENCEMENT AND TERMINATION
(2) If any of the following events happen, Venture shall have the right by notice to the Client to terminate this Agreement forthwith or at any time thereafter:
(i) the Client's Insolvency or its calling any meeting of its creditors; or any petitions or applications being issued before a Court with a view to the Client's Insolvency;
(ii) a petition for an administration order pursuant to the Insolvency Act 1986 in relation to the Client (being a body corporate) or a resolution of its members for its winding up;
…
(3) Upon or at any time following an event referred to in clause 19(2), Venture shall have:
(i) immediate Recourse in respect of all Outstanding Debts but so that the ownership of none of such Debts shall vest in the Client until the Repurchase Price of all such Debts has been received by Venture; and
(ii) the right to do any or all of the following:
(a) reduce the Prepayment Percentage to zero;
(b) demand immediate payment of all Funds in Use;
(c) treat all Credit Approved Debts as Disapproved Debts;
(d) increase the Discount Charge by 2% (which the Client and Venture agree is an acceptable increase to compensate Venture for its increased risk in such circumstances)
(e) treat Debts which are afterwards Notified as Disapproved Debts.
APPENDIX A DEFINITIONS
"Current Account"
Any account maintained by Venture in the name of the Client for the recording of transactions between Venture and the Client.
"Financial Records"
The ledgers, computer data, records, documents, disks, machine readable material on or by which the financial or other information pertaining to a Debt is recorded or evidenced and any equipment necessary for reading or amending the same.
"Funds in Use"
The debit balance, if any, on the Current Account arrived at by aggregating all Prepayments made by Venture to the Client which have been debited to a Current Account (together with all sums treated as Prepayments by virtue of clause 9(5)) and deducting therefrom the aggregate of Debts transferred to the Current Account in accordance with clause 7(2).
"Recourse"
The right of Venture to require the Client to repurchase a Debt (together with its Related Rights) at its Repurchase Price or such lesser amount as Venture may require.
THE SCHEDULE
(forming part of an agreement for the purchase of Debts between Venture Finance PLC and the Client named in section 1(a) hereof)
18 Special Conditions
12. Venture requires that the Client obtain signed proofs of delivery in respect of each Debt and that these be retained for inspection by Venture from time to time."
"1 In consideration of your entering into or continuing any Agreement for the sale and purchase or factoring or discounting of debts and for providing any further financial facilities with the above-named company ("the Company") I [the relevant director's name and address] hereby agree to indemnify you against all loss you may suffer in consequence of
(i) any breach by the Company of any one or more of clauses 10(1)(iii), 12(5), 16(3), 18(1)(i)or 18(3) of the Agreement:
(ii) any act or omission of a wilful, reckless or deceitful nature perpetrated by me (solely or jointly);
(iii) any breach of the warranty given by me in clause 2 of this letter.
3 For the purpose of determining my liability under this Indemnity I shall be bound by any acknowledgement or admission by the Company and by any judgment in your favour against the Company. For such purpose and for determining either the amount payable to you by the Company or the amount of any losses, costs, damages claims (whether prospective or actual and whether as claimant or defendant) interest and expenses ("Losses") I shall accept and be bound by a certificate signed by any of your directors. In any proceedings such certificate shall be treated as conclusive evidence (except for manifest error) of the amounts so payable or of any Losses. In arriving at the amount payable to you by the Company you shall be entitled to take into account all liabilities (whether actual or contingent) and to make a reasonable estimate of any contingent liability.
5 This agreement to indemnify you shall be additional to and not in substitution for any other security taken or to be taken for the performance of the Company's obligations under any such Agreement.
Declaration on behalf of the Indemnifier
I confirm that before I signed this Indemnity and in relation to its nature, meaning, effect and risks
(1) you have recommended to me that I take independent legal advice; and
(2) I have taken or have had the .opportunity to take independent legal advice.
I declare that in deciding to sign this Indemnity I have not placed any reliance upon any advice opinion or representation of
(i) any person having any interest in the Company whether by reason of directorship, shareholding or employment or any other agent or representative of the Company; or
(ii) you or any representative or agent of yours.
IN WITNESS whereof the above named Indemnifier has executed this instrument as his/her deed in the presence of the person mentioned below-"
Factual background
"We anticipated Largo would face some difficulty in performing the debt collection. We provided them with six boxes of credit notes which the financial director [the third defendant] had held pending final sign-off – all of which needed adding to the ledgers."
The issues for determination on this application
(1) Whether upon their true construction, the deeds of indemnity are contracts of indemnity or performance bonds, such that the liability of the defendants is primary rather than secondary so as to prevent them from relying on defences available to the company;
(2) Whether the deeds of indemnity were discharged by subsequent material variations of the Agreement.
(3) Whether the parties agreed on or around 8 December 2008 that the Agreement would be supported by new personal guarantees executed on or around the same date, in substitution for the first and second defendants' deeds of indemnity.
(4) Whether proofs of delivery constitute "Financial records" within the meaning of the Agreement.
(5) Whether the claimant has failed to collect the debts of the company and/or taken proper steps to enforce the same.
Issues 1 and 2: Primary or secondary liability and the effect of material variations
"The essential characteristic of the contract of indemnity, unlike the contract of guarantee, a primary liability falls upon the surety, and that liability is wholly independent of any liability that may arise as between the principal and creditor…
The fact that the obligation to indemnify is primary and independent has the effect that the principle of co-extensiveness and the requirements of s.4 of the Statute of Frauds 1677 do not apply to contracts of indemnity."
"A certificate in writing signed by a duly authorised officer or officers of the Lender stating the amount at any particular time due and payable by the Guarantor under this Guarantee shall, save for manifest error, be conclusive and binding on the Guarantor for the purposes hereof."
"…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."
Issue 3: The effect of the personal guarantees
Issue 4: The status of proofs of delivery
Issue 5: The conclusive evidence clause and the validity of defences as to quantum
"51 The third step is to consider whether there is, as counsel for the Guarantors contends, a manifest error. A 'manifest error' was defined by Lewison J in IIG Capital llc v Van der Merwe [2007] EWHC 435 para 52 as one which is "obvious or easily demonstrable without extensive investigation". His definition was approved by the Court of Appeal in the same case at paragraph 35 and applied by the judge in this case. An issue arose as to whether the manifest error might appear from the calculation enclosed with the demand letter dated 30th May 2008 or whether it must appear on the face of the certificate. In paragraph 190 of his judgment the judge concluded that:
"Absent, perhaps, an arithmetical error, North Shore would not have arrived at a figure as large as that certified without (a) including interest on the frozen money or (b) compounding with monthly rests and using the stated default rate. It would thus have been possible to infer without reference to the schedule that the figure given in the certificate must be incorrect if Anstead was not liable to North Shore for interest on the frozen money or calculated using monthly rests with a 20% default rate."
That statement was made in the context of his earlier conclusion that there had been no variation of the Loan Agreement. But I read it as clear justification for a conclusion that if there had been a variation then there was a manifest error. Given that I would hold that there was a variation enforceable in law, then it follows, as I would hold, that there is a manifest error on the face of the certificate. In those circumstances there is no need to consider whether it is permissible to look at the calculation enclosed with the certificate and letter of demand.
52 The judge went on to observe in paragraph 192 of his judgment:
"Provisions such as clause 3.4 may be open to criticism (see e.g. O'Donovan and Phillips, "The Modern Contract of Guarantee", English edition, at paragraph 5-107), but their validity has been accepted by the Courts. It would, as it seems to me, run counter to the evident intention of such clauses for it to be open to a guarantor, faced with (say) an application for summary judgment founded on a certificate, to argue that it would be seen at the conclusion of a lengthy trial that the certificate was wrong on the basis of arguments like those which Mr Fomichev and Mr Peganov have advanced in the present case in relation to the Loan Agreement. In the circumstances, the certificate was not "manifestly incorrect" when it was issued and so provided conclusive evidence of the amount due to North Shore under the Guarantee."
53 This conclusion imports a condition that there must be a manifest error at the time the certificate is given. That is said to arise from the fact that the certificate is to be conclusive evidence of the amount owing for the time being. In my view that does not follow. It is quite possible for one person to certify the existence of some fact at a particular moment in time which the other person, the recipient of the certificate, cannot verify save after the occurrence of a subsequent event. I can see no reason why the error must be manifest at the time of the certificate. Subsequent investigation shows in this case that the amount certified was that due under the unvaried Loan Agreement when in fact it should have been limited to the amount due under the Loan Agreement as varied; there was a mismatch between the relevant agreement and the certificate."
"60 I confess that I found this issue difficult because it appeared to me, at first sight, as I think it did to Newey J, that a manifest error is one which is capable of being demonstrated by reference to the certificate itself and possibly the accompanying calculation. Certainly Newey J was of the view that the demonstration of a manifest error did not permit the kind of extensive investigation which had taken place in the course of the trial before him on the issue of whether the original loan agreement had been varied as to the interest terms. He had relied on Lewison J's definition of a manifest error as one that is "obviously or easily demonstrable without extensive investigation".
61 On reflection I have come to the conclusion that for a party to rely on a manifest error in a certificate does not depend upon his ability to demonstrate the error immediately and conclusively. In the present case, the appellant guarantors were able to recognise immediately that the certificate was based upon the interest rates as set out in the original loan agreement and not as varied in November 2004. They could see that it was manifestly incorrect. They could not immediately demonstrate that conclusively; they could not do so until the court had determined the issue of variation. But they were right, as this court has now held. I would hold that the certificate was manifestly incorrect and was of no effect."
"As the Chancellor has set out at paragraph 51 above, the judge made what appears to be a clear finding that, on the assumption that there had been a variation of the Loan Agreement in the manner contended for by the Guarantors, the certificate contained an error manifest on its face. There had been such a variation. That is sufficient to dispose of the final issue on this appeal. The certificate was manifestly incorrect and did not preclude the Guarantors from demonstrating that the amount of the Indebtedness for the time being was less than that which North Shore certified it to be."
"In my judgment, this is not a case of set off at all, for there are no mutual but independent obligations capable of being quantified and set off against each other. There are reciprocal obligations giving rise to credits and debits in a single running account, a single liability to pay the ultimate balance found due on taking the account and provisions for retention and provisional payment in the meantime."
"The law, so far as I am concerned, is therefore that questions of mitigation do not arise under contracts of indemnity so as to give the indemnifier a defence to any part of a claim for which he would otherwise be liable under his indemnity. The line of authority considered is concerned with contractual indemnities. This should not be confused with a case where a claimant seeks to recover, as damages for breach of contract or in tort, his liability to a third party (whether as the result of a case taken to trial and judgment or as a result of a reasonable settlement). I see no reason why, in such a case, a defendant should not say that the liability (whether under the judgment or the settlement) should never have arisen but should have been reduced by reasonable steps in mitigation."
Conclusion