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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 >> Barclays Bank Plc v Price & Ors [2018] EWHC 2719 (Comm) (18 October 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2018/2719.html Cite as: [2018] EWHC 2719 (Comm) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
LONDON CIRCUIT COMMERCIAL COURT (QBD)
B e f o r e :
(SITTING AS A DEPUTY HIGH COURT JUDGE)
____________________
BARCLAYS BANK PLC | Claimant | |
and | ||
MR FRANKLIN RICHARD PRICE | ||
MR SIMON CHRISTOPHER REES-HOWELL | ||
MR JULIAN MORGAN SKEENS | ||
MR PHILIP GRAHAM COHEN | ||
MR CHARLES ERIC GERADA AZZOPARDI | Defendants |
____________________
Robert Scrivener (instructed by Dentons UK and Middle East LLP) for the Respondent/Claimant
Hearing date: 12th October 2018
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Background
a. Clause 1.1 – that Mr Cohen would unconditionally guarantee that all Customer Liabilities [any money and liabilities which JGR now owes or may owe in the future in any way] will be paid or be satisfied. Mr Cohen would immediately pay the amount guaranteed when Barclays made demand.
b. Clause 2.1 – that the Guarantee was for the full amount of all Customer Liabilities. However, the total amount that Mr Cohen had to pay under the Guarantee would not be more than the Specified Amount, plus interest and certain other amounts.
c. Clause 6 – that Mr Cohen was liable to Barclays as principal debtor for any Customer Liabilities that cannot be recovered from him as guarantor. This was a separate commitment, extra to the guarantee in clause 1.1. The amounts for which Mr Cohen was liable under this clause had to be paid for as soon as Barclays demanded payment. The total amount Mr Cohen would have to pay would be no more than that mentioned in clause 2.
d. Clause 11 – this concerned serving demands and notices. It provided in clause 11.1 that a demand or notice "may" be made or given by a letter addressed to an Authorised Address. Clause 11.2 provided that a demand or notice would be treated as properly served when it is left at an Authorised Address (if delivered by hand) or at noon on the day after it was posted if it was sent by post to an Authorised Address, even if it is not delivered or returned undelivered.
e. The Specified Amount calculated in a Schedule to the Guarantee was an amount equal to the Customer Liabilities at the relevant time in respect of the aggregate of the following – (a) one ninth of the balance outstanding on the 2012 Term Loan plus (b) a maximum of £55,000 of the balance outstanding on the 2012 Overdraft Facility or any other account which may be substituted for it.
a. First, Barclays seeks to rely on a letter dated 24 May 2018, which was served on or around 25 May 2018. This demand was correctly addressed and only demanded payment of £55,000.
b. Secondly, Barclays seeks to rely on the service of the Claim Form and Particulars of Claim as a further, valid demand with the Date of Deemed Service being 23 February 2018.
a. Is Barclays required to issue a demand in order to claim under the Guarantee or can it rely on the principal debtor clause i.e. clause 6?
b. If Barclays is required to issue a demand under the Guarantee, is the First Demand invalid by reason of having demanded an excessive amount?
c. If Barclays is required to issue a demand under the Guarantee, is Barclays able to rely on the Second Demand even though it was sent under cover of the Letter Before Action which contained an error in Mr Cohen's address?
Is Barclays required to issue a demand in order to claim under the Guarantee?
Is the First Demand invalid by reason of having demanded an excessive amount?
a. The demand referred expressly to the Guarantee dated 20 August 2012.
b. The demand required payment of Mr Cohen's liability pursuant to that Guarantee of the liabilities of JGR.
c. The reasonable recipient would have known of the terms of the Guarantee including that they contained a clearly expressed specified maximum.
d. The reasonable recipient would have known that the additional £500 was above the maximum, and it would have been open to the reasonable recipient therefore to have paid the maximum amount and disputed the balance.
e. I accept that the sum demanded was the same as the sum referred to in the 2012 and 2013 documentation between the Bank and JGR but I do not accept that this alone would have left the reasonable recipient confused as to whether the Bank was purporting to make a demand under the Guarantee subject to the terms of that Guarantee including as to amount.
f. I do not accept Mr Warwick QC's submission that the reasonable recipient might well have thought that the Bank had deliberately demanded the wrong sum. No basis for this submission was suggested and no evidence was prayed in aid, beyond the point about the 2012 and 2013 documentation between the Bank and JGR which I have addressed immediately above.
Is Barclays able to rely on the Second Demand even though it was sent under cover of the Letter Before Action which contained an error in Mr Cohen's address?
Application to amend
Conclusion