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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 >> Longulf Trading (UK) Ltd v Niyazi Onen Gida SAN AS & Anor [2019] EWHC 1573 (Comm) (21 June 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2019/1573.html Cite as: [2019] EWHC 1573 (Comm) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Rolls Building Fetter Lane London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
(Sitting as a Judge of the High Court)
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LONGULF TRADING (UK) LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) NIYAZI ONEN GIDA SAN. A.S. (2) MR NIYAZI ONEN |
Defendants |
____________________
The Defendants did not appear and were not represented
Hearing dates: 8 February 2019
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Crown Copyright ©
Christopher Hancock QC :
I. Overview
II. Conduct of a one-sided trial
"14 Where the trial is not attended by one of the parties, there is still an obligation of fair presentation which is less extensive than the duty of full and frank disclosure on a without notice application. Mr Justice Cresswell in Braspetro Oil Services v FPSO Construction Inc [2007] EWHC 1359 (Comm) said as follows, that he required the claimant to draw to the attention of the court: " points, factual or legal, that might be to the benefit of [the defendant]. " He noted that claims which were considered not to be sustainable were not in fact pursued. He said that the claimant brought to the attention of the court points which the defendant had taken before it decided to play no further part. He said that the claimant brought to his attention points which had never been taken by the defendant but which might have been had it decided to defend the proceedings, and it had taken all steps to bring to the attention of the defendant what has been happening here. The court had, in that case, through the eight-day hearing, carefully examined and tested the claimant's case. I adopt those observations and I consider that the injunctions of Mr Justice Cresswell have been fully followed here. I also did not regard this trial as merely an exercise of rubber-stamping but tested and considered all aspects of the case.
15 Another feature of this case which follows on is that, in my judgment, this litigation brought by CMOC has been marked by (a) scrupulous attention to detail and to the requirements of the very many applicable procedural rules, and (b) rigorous observance of the obligations of material disclosure on the many without notice applications on the part of solicitors and counsel involved for the claimant, and the obligations of fair presentation otherwise, to which I have referred. There have been no short cuts taken and no glossing over of any problematic points. This is also the case for the trial itself."
III The Claimants' case
a. First, that there is a valid Guarantee in effect between the Claimant and the Defendants;
b. Second, that Dardanel has incurred "Obligations" to Longulf under the Procurement Agreement (as defined in clause 1.2 of the Guarantee);
c. Third, that the circumstances in which the Claimants may call on the Defendants under clause 2.1 of the Guarantee to pay the Obligations (an "Event of Default" as defined in clause 6.1 of the Procurement Agreement) have arisen;
d. Fourth, that the Claimant has duly made a written demand on the Defendants under the Guarantee, accompanied by a certificate setting forth the Obligations to be paid pursuant to the Guarantee (per clause 2.2);
e. Fifth, that the Obligations remain unpaid by either Dardanel or the Defendants; and
f. Sixth, that the Claimant is entitled to the full sum of "Obligations" now claimed, including principal, interest, and legal costs.
IV The elements of the Claimants' case.
A. Was the Guarantee valid and effective?
WHEREAS Dardanel Onentas Gida Sanayi A.S. dba as Dardanel, corporation organised under the laws of Turkey (hereinafter referred to as "Company"), the Guarantor, and Purchaser have entered into a Procurement Agreement dated November 19, 2016 providing for procurement services on the terms and conditions therein set forth (the "Procurement Agreement");
WHEREAS it is a condition precedent to the provision of any services under the Procurement Agreement that the Guarantor must enter into and execute this agreement and that a copy of same be delivered to Purchaser;
WHEREAS Guarantor has an economic interest in the Company and it is in the best interests of the Guarantor to guarantee all payment obligations of the Company to Purchaser under the Procurement Agreement, all in accordance with and subject to the terms and conditions of this Agreement;
NOW, THEREFORE, in consideration of, inter alia, Purchaser having entered into the Procurement Agreement with the Company and having agreed, subject to the terms and conditions therein provided, to provide the services under the Procurement Agreement to the Company, the parties hereto have agreed as follows:…
2.1 Guarantee
The Guarantor hereby irrevocably guarantees the payment of the Obligations, which the Guarantor expressly covenants to pay to Purchaser, as and from any written demand therefor presented by Purchaser, which demand shall only be presented to the Guarantor following the occurrence of an event of default by the Company under the terms and conditions of the Procurement Agreement ("Event of Default").
"More difficulty arises where the surety guarantees some past debt or transaction. Prima facie such a guarantee is given merely for past consideration and is void. So where a surety guaranteed payments under a hire-purchase agreement entered into four days previously, it was held that the guarantee was given for past consideration only and was void. However, if the consideration is expressed so as to be ambiguous whether it is past or not, it is open to the creditor to show that the consideration was not past. Thus where a guarantee was expressed to be given "in consideration of your having this day advanced to" the principal debtor some £750, it was held that parol evidence was admissible to prove that the money was advanced simultaneously with the giving of the guarantee, and that there was therefore good consideration. Moreover, in accordance with the position as regards contracts in general, consideration to support a promise of guarantee may be found in an act done before it is made, provided that the act is done at the guarantor's request, that the parties understood that the act was to be remunerated in some way and that the conferment of a benefit would have been legally enforceable had it been promised in advance."
"It is a well established and strictly applied principle that any variation in the terms of the agreement between the creditor and the debtor which could prejudice the surety will, unless he consents thereto, discharge him from liability, unless the contract of suretyship provides to the contrary."
a. The contract of Guarantee expressly provides that the Defendants' obligations shall continue in force even should any rights under the Procurement Agreement be amended or waived (per clause 2.9);
b. The Second Defendant in his capacity as Chairman of each of Dardanel and the First Defendant signed the Procurement Agreement, and each of the 1st to 5th Amendments thereto on behalf of each of those companies, indicating the Defendants' actual knowledge of and consent to the Procurement Agreement amendments; and, most importantly of all
c. The Defendants formally consented to the variations of the Procurement Agreement in their capacities as Guarantors. Each of the Defendants signed written amendments to the Guarantee, ratifying the amendments to the Procurement Agreement and confirming the continued obligations of the Defendants under the Guarantee: see 1st, 2nd and 3rd Amendments to the Guarantee. That consent is sufficient to continue to bind the surety to the Guarantee, even in the absence of fresh consideration.[1]
B. Has Dardanel incurred "Obligations" under the Procurement Agreement
"Obligations" means all present and future debts and liabilities of the Company to Purchaser (whether as principal debtor, guarantor, surety or otherwise), of any and every nature whatsoever (direct or indirect, absolute or contingent, matured or not, in principal, interest or otherwise) and howsoever incurred under, in connection with or with respect to the Procurement Agreement."
a. LGT was appointed by the Defendants to procure seafood for resale to the Company: see clause 1.1(a).
b. LGT was to be the Company's sole agent: see clause 1.1(b).
c. The Company could submit Company Procurement Orders to LGT which were then irrevocable: see clause 1.1(c).
d. If LGT accepted the Company Procurement Order, it would place the order: clauses 1.1(c) and 1.2(a).
e. LGT would then resell the goods to the Company: see clause 1.2(a).
f. The Company would then be obliged to take delivery of the goods and pay for them in accordance with clause 1.4(a).
1.4 Obligation to purchase.
(a) Company shall be obligated to take delivery of all Goods (or arrange for a designee to take delivery of such Goods) purchased by LGT under a LGT Purchase Order issued in response to a Company Procurement Order, and to pay for such Goods in accordance with such Company Purchase Order, the Commercial Invoice and this Agreement not later than the earliest of (i) 20% within 45 days from LGT's payment for such Goods, (ii) 30% within 90 days from LGT's payment for such Goods, (iii) 30% within 135 days from LGT's payment for such Goods, (iv) the remaining 20% within 180 days from LGT's payment for such Goods and, (v) the last day of the Term."
C. An Event of Default has taken place
6.1 Defaults. The occurrence of any of the following events shall constitute an event of default ("Event of Default" hereunder:
(a) Failure by Company to pay to LGT any amount payable to this Agreement within ten (10) Business Days after the date when such amount became due and payable;…
… (e) Company shall fail to pay any principal of any debt when due in an aggregate outstanding principal amount in excess of $100,000, or any interest on such debt when due;"
a. Pursant to clause 6.1(e), the Debt then exceeded US$100,000 and so constituted an Event of Default; and
b. Pursuant to clause 6.1(a), Dardanel failed to settle at least the vast majority of the outstanding sums within 10 business days, which also constituted an Event of Default.
D. The Claimant has made a written demand on the Defendants
The Guarantor hereby irrevocably guarantees the payment of the Obligations, which the Guarantor expressly covenants to pay to Purchaser, as and from any written demand therefor presented by Purchaser, which demand shall only be presented to the Guarantor following the occurrence of an event of default by the Company under the terms and conditions of the Procurement Agreement ("Event of Default").
Upon receipt of a written demand from Purchaser pursuant to Section 2.1, the Guarantor shall pay the Obligations and/or make payment of the amount claimed at the location as Purchaser may specify in writing from time to time, in the same currency in which the Obligations may be outstanding, in funds immediately available to Purchaser at such location. Each such demand shall be accompanied by a certificate of Purchaser setting forth the Obligations to be paid pursuant to the guarantee contemplated in this Agreement and the basis of the calculations made by Purchaser in order to arrive at such amount. All payments due under this Agreement shall be made to Purchaser.
Any statement prepared by Purchaser shall, absent manifest error, constitute prima facie evidence of the amount which, as at the date of the statement so prepared, is due by the Company to the Purchaser in respect of the Obligations and the Guarantor shall be bound by every such statement.
a. There had, as I have noted, been Events of Default.
b. This in turn entitled the Plaintiffs to serve a written demand under clause 2.1 on the Defendants, which they did.
c. As soon as that written demand was served, the Guarantors became obligated to pay the "Obligations", as defined.
d. The Demand, under clause 2.2, had to specify the obligations to be paid, together with the basis of the calculations made by the Purchaser in order to arrive at the amount to be paid.
E. The Debt, or part of it, remains outstanding
F. The procurement fee.
"3.1 Procurement Fees. Company shall pay a procurement fee… to LGT on the first Business Day of each month. The amount of the Procurement Fee payable on each Fee Payment Date shall equal 1.25% of the "Average Daily Outstanding" for the "Applicable Month". The Applicable Month means the month most recently ended before each Fee Payment Date. The Average Daily Outstanding shall be equal to (a) the sum of (i) the price of all Goods (calculated at the price of such goods as stated in the applicable Company Purchase Order) purchased by LGT, whether paid directly to the Supplier or to Company for transfer to supplier, for which LGT has not received payment from Company at the close of business on each day in the Applicable Month, (ii) all shipping, handling, transportation, taxes, warehouse, wire transfer fees, insurance premiums and other charges and reimbursable expenses that are incurred by LGT in connection with the purchase of such Goods from an Accepted Supplier to the extent not reimbursed to LGT by Company at the close of business on each day in the Applicable Month and (iii) the amount of all fees paid, cash collateral posted, and deposits made by LGT as a condition of a bank's opening and continuing any outstanding letter of credit issued or confirmed to pay the Accepted Supplier for the Goods purchased by LGT, divided by (b) the number of days in the Applicable Month."
a. First, it might be said for the Defendants that the application of the Procurement Fee amounts to a penalty clause.
b. Secondly, the claims in respect of Procurement Fees were not comprised within the formal demand served on 9 November 2017 to which I have made reference.
"[13] … There is a fundamental difference between a jurisdiction to review the fairness of a contractual obligation and a jurisdiction to regulate the remedy for its breach. … the courts do not review the fairness of men's bargains either at law or in equity. The penalty rule regulates only the remedies available for breach of a party's primary obligations, not the primary obligations themselves. [This distinction] provided the whole basis of the classic distinction made at law between a penalty and a genuine pre-estimate of loss, the former being essentially a way of punishing the contract-breaker rather than compensating the innocent party for his breach.
...
"[32] The true test is whether the impugned provision is a secondary obligation which imposes a detriment on the contract-breaker out of all proportion to any legitimate interest of the innocent party in the enforcement of the primary obligation. The innocent party can have no proper interest in simply punishing the defaulter. His interest is in performance or in some appropriate alternative to performance."
G. Interest.
"3.9 Late Payments. If any amount payable by Company hereunder (including any fee or any reimbursement amount), under any Company Purchase Order or any Commercial Invoice is not paid when due, such amount shall accrue interest, payable on demand, at the Default Rate, computed from the due date of such payment until such amount is paid in full….
…8.1 "Default Rate" means a rate of 15% per annum in addition to the Procurement Fees, but not in excess of the maximum rate permitted by applicable law."
a. Whether the Demand was sufficient to cover interest accrued as at the date of the demand;
b. Whether it covered interest accruing due thereafter up until the issuance of the Particulars of Claim;
c. Whether it covered interest accruing due prior to judgment;
d. Whether it covers interest due after judgment.
a. Expressly reserved its rights to claim the full Obligations in the letter of demand should the sum called for remain unpaid; and
b. Was entitled to decide whether or not to enforce all or part of the Obligations without affecting the liability of the Defendants under the Guarantee, pursuant to clause 2.9.3 of the Guarantee.
a. As at the date of the Demand, there were a number of amounts which were overdue, both in relation to principal and interest. Those amounts were detailed in the schedule attached to the demand. The demand required payment of the principal amounts, but did not demand payment of the interest. Instead, it offered to forego such payments if payment of the principal was made within the specified timescale, which it was not.
b. In my judgment, therefore, this demand did comply with Article 2.2, as regards the interest then due. It specified the amounts of interest; it indicated that no further demand would be made if payment of the principal amount was made in the relevant period; but it reserved the right to make claim for the other amounts if no such payment was made within 21 days. This was, as Ms Zaman put it, a demand coupled with an offer to accept less if payment was made within the specified period.
c. The same is not true in relation to future amounts of interest. No calculation was made of the amounts which would accrue due. No demand was actually made for such payment. It is true that the Claimant reserved the right to make such a demand, but no further demand was in fact made.
d. As at the date of the commencement of the action, therefore, a demand had been made for the outstanding amounts of interest as at the date of the Demand, coupled with an offer to forego the claim for such outstanding amounts if payment of the principal amount was made within a set period. No such payment was made.
e. As at the date of the commencement of the action, in my judgment, there had therefore been a demand which complied with the requirements of the contract in relation to interest due as at the date of that demand. The Guarantors were thus obliged to pay these amounts, unless they accepted the offer to accept less, which they did not.
f. The same analysis does not apply in relation to amounts becoming due after the date of the Demand. There has been no further demand in relation to these amounts. The amounts were not at this stage due. Although it may be said that they were becoming due and not yet "mature", within the meaning of the definition of obligations, they were clearly not specified in the demand which was served. I do not think that it would be right to give judgement in the absence of the Defendants in relation to these amounts.
g. As to amounts falling due after the commencement of the action, then the same analysis must apply and must indeed be a fortiori. It may well be that amounts are due at the contractual rate of interest because of late payments of principal. However, no sufficient demand has been served to trigger the obligation on the part of the Guarantors to make these payments.
H. Legal and other expenses.
I. Statutory interest.
Overall conclusion
a. I am satisfied that all of the arguments that could have been put forward on behalf of the Defendant have been put forward and I have given full consideration to all of them.
b. I have concluded that the Claimant has established its entitlement to the amounts claimed pursuant to the invoices rendered, as set out in Schedules 1 and 2. Taking account of the payments that the Defendant has made, the total amount claimable by way of principal is US$2,300,170.
c. I have also concluded that the Claimant is entitled to interest at the contractual rate from the date on which invoices should have been paid until the date of demand under the contract. The relevant amounts are set out in Schedule 4.
d. The Claimant is not entitled to claim procurement fees since no sufficient demand has been made for such. It remains open to the Claimant to make demand.
e. The Claimant is clearly therefore not entitled to interest on procurement fees.
f. The Claimant is entitled to claim the legal expenses which are identified above.
g. The Claimant is not entitled to claim interest for periods after the contractual demand, in the absence of a further demand.
h. The Claimant is however entitled to statutory interest on sums awarded from the date on which they should have been paid until the date of this judgment, at US$ LIBOR plus 1%. Alternatively, the Claimant may elect to make a further demand for contractual interest. It is up to the Claimant to decide which of these alternatives it wishes to pursue.
Schedule 1
Schedule 2
Schedule 3
Schedule 4
Note 1 Mayhew v Crickett (1918) 2 Swanst. 185 per Eldon LJ. See also Maxted v Investec Bank Plc [2017] EWHC 1997 (Ch) at [12], [20-22]. [Back] Note 2 The Procurement Agreement has now come to an end. However, under clause 7.3, the rights of the Claimant to payment of all overdue sums under the Procurement Agreement survive termination. Per clause 2.4 of the Guarantee, the obligations of the Defendants to pay the outstanding Obligations continue “until the indefeasible payment in full of the Obligations”. The Claimant claimed the full Obligations, including the Procurement Fee and interest on it, from the Defendants. [Back] Note 3 These fees were incurred prior to the point that K&L Gates LLP was instructed to commence proceedings under the Guarantee against the Defendants, which the Claimant accepted did not constitute legal costs incurred under the Procurement Agreement. [Back]