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M Rosen QC and J Giret (instructed by Berg & Co for the Respondents)
C Freedman QC and R Snowden (instructed by Eversheds for the Appellants)
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Chadwick LJ:
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| 1. | Bodycare
(Health & Beauty) Limited, to which I will refer as "the Company", is a
company incorporated under the Companies Act 1985Acts. The holders of the
shares in the Company are (i) as to 24%, Arrow Nominees Inc, a company
incorporated in the British Virgin Islands, (ii) as to a further 24%,
Lorraine Blackledge, and (iii) as to the remaining 52%, GR & MM
Blackledge plc ("Blackledge plc"). The holders of all the shares in
Blackledge plc are Graham Blackledge and his wife, Margaret Blackledge.
Lorraine Blackledge is their niece. Arrow Nominees Inc is controlled by
Nigel Tobias, who, at the material times, was the partner and cohabitee of
Lorraine Blackledge. Nigel Tobias, Lorraine Blackledge, Graham Blackledge
and Margaret Blackledge were, at the material times, the directors of the
Company.
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| 2. | On 6
November 1998, in circumstances to which it will be necessary to refer in
more detail, Arrow Nominees Inc and Lorraine Blackledge presented a petition
for relief under section 459 of the Companies Act 1985Acts, alleging unfair
conduct by Blackledge plc, Graham Blackledge and Margaret Blackledge in
relation to the affairs of the Company. Graham and Margaret Blackledge,
Blackledge plc and the Company itself were the respondents to that petition.
The hearing of that petition was fixed for a trial beginning on 9 November
1999.
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| 3. | On 3
September 1999 Graham Blackledge, Margaret Blackledge and Blackledge plc
("the Blackledge respondents") applied to strike out the petition on the
grounds that, by reason of an attempt by Nigel Tobias to pervert the course
of justice by the production, in the course of standard discovery, of
documents which he knew to be forged, a fair trial of the petition was
impossible. That application was heard by Mr Justice Evans-Lombe over three
days at the end of October 1999. By an order made on 2 November 1999 the
judge dismissed that application. He was not satisfied, on the material
before him, that a fair trial was impossible. But, in the concluding
paragraph of his judgment, the judge said this:
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| |
"I must emphasise, however, that I have dealt with this application on the
evidence before me at the moment. That is not the end of the matter. If in
the course of the trial further evidence emerges that there have been
breaches of the disclosure obligations by the petitioners and, in
particular, that other documents have been suppressed or fraudulently
altered, the application to strike out can then be renewed and is highly
likely to be successful because it will lead the Court to take the view that
contrary to Nigel's denials he has not made a clean breast of his fraudulent
activities."
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|
| 4. | The trial
commenced on 10 November 1999 before the same judge. The petitioners' case
was opened, their evidence was led and they and their witnesses were
cross-examined extensively. At the conclusion of the petitioners' case, and
at the invitation of the judge, the Blackledge respondents led the evidence
on which they wished to rely in connection with the falsification and
destruction of documents. Counsel for the parties then addressed the judge
on four questions: (i) whether the petitioners had shown a prima facie case
for relief under sections 459 and 461 of the Act of 1985, (ii) if so,
whether, in the light of the further evidence, the judge ought to hold that
that there was a substantial risk that there could not be a fair trial of
the issues raised by the petition, (iii) whether the petitioners had shown a
prima facie case for the form of relief which they claimed - namely, an
order that they buy out the majority shareholding of Blackledge plc in the
Company and (iv) whether the Blackledge respondents' cross-petition -
seeking a buy-out order of the minority shareholdings - was demurrable.
Argument on those questions concluded on the last day of the Michaelmas
term.
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| 5. | The
judge, for reasons which he was to give after the Christmas vacation,
answered the first of those questions in the affirmative and the second and
third questions in the negative. He gave his reasons in a judgment handed
down on 24 January 2000. At the same time he decided the fourth question
against the Blackledge respondents, as cross-petitioners. He made orders
accordingly.
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| 6. | The
judge's decision on the third question - that there was no case for a buy-
out order of the majority shareholding - led Graham and Margaret Blackledge
to convene a meeting of the directors of the Company for the purpose of
considering the dismissal of Nigel Tobias and Lorraine Blackledge as
employees of the Company, and led Blackledge plc to give notice
requisitioning a general meeting of the Company to consider resolutions for
their removal from the board. Nigel Tobias and Lorraine Blackledge applied
for injunctions to restrain the Blackledge respondents from voting on
resolutions at a board or general meeting of the Company which would have
the effect of dismissing them or removing them from office. On 26 January
2000 the judge dismissed that application; although he gave limited relief
to enable the matter to be brought before this Court.
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| 7. | There are
now before this Court (i) appeals (0065) by the Blackledge respondents
against the orders of 2 November 1999 and 24 January 2000 refusing to strike
out the petition on the grounds that a fair trial was impossible, (5) a
cross appeal (0093) by Arrow Nominees Inc and Lorraine Blackledge against
the order of 24 January 2000 striking out their claim for an order that they
buy out the majority shareholding, (Iii) an appeal (0081) by Nigel Tobias
and Lorraine Blackledge against the judge's refusal, on 26 January 2000, to
grant injunctions to restrain Graham and Margaret Blackledge and Blackledge
plc from taking steps to dismiss them as employees of the Company or to
remove them from its board of directors and (iv) an application (5207) for
an order restraining the holding of meetings pending the determination of
appeal 0081. There is no appeal by the Blackledge respondents against the
order striking out the cross-petition.
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| 8. | At the
conclusion of the arguments in this Court we had reached the conclusion that
the petition should be struck out. In the circumstances that the further
hearing of the petition was awaiting our decision, we informed the parties
that the appeal against the judge's refusal to strike out the petition would
be allowed. In the circumstances that the petition was to be struck out it
followed that the cross-appeal must fail. We reached the conclusion, also,
that the appeal against the refusal of injunctions restraining the
Blackledge respondents from dismissing Nigel Tobias and Lorraine Blackledge,
or removing them for office, should be dismissed. We indicated that we
would give our reasons in written judgments.
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| 9. | This
judgment contains the reasons which led me to the conclusions that the
petition should be struck out and that no injunctions should be granted.
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| | The
underlying facts
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| 10. | The
underlying facts, in so far as they are not in dispute, can be stated
shortly. I take the following account from the judgment of 2 November 1999,
with some additional input from the judgment handed down on 24 January 2000:
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| |
| (1) |
Blackledge plc has a long established and very successful wholesale and
retail business in the sale of toiletries. In the early 1990's it opened a
small number of stores under the name "Bodycare" in the north west of
England through which it sold a range of its own brand products under the
Bodycare name.
| | (2) |
In or about 1993 Graham Blackledge, on behalf of Blackledge plc, was
considering proposals for a chain of franchised retail outlets, selling
toiletries under the Bodycare name and in accordance with what was to be
described at the trial as "the Bodycare concept". The shops were to have a
common, minimalist, decor and fittings and were to sell only toiletries,
perfumes and associated goods. Most of the stock was to be "branded" goods,
which were to be sold at a discount on the prices at which those goods were
for sale by the major retailers.
| | (3) |
In 1994 the proposals for a chain of franchised retail outlets were
abandoned in favour of the exploitation of the Bodycare concept through a
chain owned by a single company. The Company, which had been formed by
Graham Blackledge (or Blackledge plc) in 1990 but which was then dormant,
was chosen for this purpose.
| | (4) |
Lorraine Blackledge had been employed by Blackledge plc since leaving
school in 1985. She had attained a position of considerable responsibility.
Nigel Tobias was described by the judge as a family friend of the Blackledge
family. Until 1993 he had been engaged in the Tobias family wholesale food
business. He first became interested in the Bodycare concept through the
interest of his brother, Peter, in becoming a retail franchises.
| | (5) |
In the latter months of 1993, or in early 1994, Graham and Margaret
Blackledge agreed that Nigel Tobias and Lorraine Blackledge should become
involved in the exploitation of the Bodycare concept through the Company.
They were to manage its affairs on a day to day basis, with support and
funding from Blackledge plc. Save that they were to be directors and
shareholders [(in]the case of Nigel Tobias through Arrow Nominees Inc) the arrangements for
their participation are in dispute. It is, however, common ground that
those arrangements were not set out in any formal documentation.
| | (6) |
In practice Nigel Tobias and Lorraine Blackledge acted as joint managing
directors of the Company. It is common ground that Graham and Margaret
Blackledge, although themselves directors of the Company, took no active
part in its affairs. There appear to have been no formal board meetings.
| | (7) |
In or about 1997 there was a proposal for a public flotation of
Blackledge plc. The proposal did not proceed; but thereafter the
relationship between Graham and Margaret Blackledge on the one hand and
Nigel Tobias and Lorraine Blackledge on the other hand deteriorated
progressively. As the judge put it, in his judgment of 2 November 1999:
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"There has developed between them a fundamental dispute as to the basis on
which Bodycare was established and as to what Nigel and Lorraine's
expectations in respect of Bodycare were. Nigel and Lorraine claim that
they are, as its managing directors, free to make decisions as to its
affairs without reference to Graham and Margaret, whom they say have a
conflict of interest as directors of both PLC and Bodycare. Graham and
Margaret for their part accept that the day to day operation of Bodycare's
business has been, and is, under Nigel's and Lorraine's control, but they
claim that PLC has always been entitled to a high degree of control over the
sales and supply side of Bodycare's business. There is, in particular,
dispute as to the terms on which PLC ought to be supplying Bodycare, the
particular issue being as to the profit margin which Bodycare should be able
to enjoy. "
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|
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The allegations in the petition as presented
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| 11. | The
primary relief sought in the petition, as presented on 6 November 1999, was
an order that Blackledge plc sell its shares to the petitioners at a fair
value to be determined by the court. It is necessary to set out in some
detail (as the judge did) the allegations upon which that claim to relief
was founded.
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| 12. |
Paragraph 5 of the petition, as originally presented, contained the
allegation that the petitioners and the respondents had become involved in
the business of the Company in or about 1994 "as a quasi-partnership on the
basis that their relationship would proceed as follows: . . . ". There
followed eight numbered sub-paragraphs, of which the following are material:
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| |
| "(iii) |
that the First Respondent [Graham Blackledge] (acting on behalf of
the Third Respondent [Blackledge plc]) would transfer six of his existing
stores which used the Bodycare name into the company to give it a start but
there would be an agreed formula for the company to pay for these stores in
relation to stock at cost, fixtures and fittings reduced by 25% pa up to 3
years.
| | (iv) |
that the Petitioners would draw through the Third Respondent a loan for
the company of 1 million which would be interest free for 3 years which
would enable the company not only to purchase the 6 stores but also then to
go on and set up more stores.
| | (v) |
that the supply of toiletries from the Third Respondent to the company
would be at a starting margin/discount of 15% (on the method of calculation
used by the Respondents) which would rise at 6 monthly intervals at 1/2% to
a total of 17.5%.
| | (vii) |
that the company should pursue a policy of expansion and after a
period of 3 years consideration should be given to how and when repayment to
the Third Respondent of the 1 million would be made. At that stage the
parties would also discuss the margin to be applied on sales thereafter. It
was never envisaged that the margin would be reduced however it was
envisaged that the company might be floated or offered to investors in this
timescale or that it might acquire the Third Respondent.
| | (viii) |
that the company would pursue its expansion on the basis that it
would thereby gain considerable trade and goodwill in its operations and in
the Bodycare name and trading style and that ultimately the continuing use
of such name and trading style would be that of the company.
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|
| 13. | In
paragraph 7 of the petition, as originally presented, there were set out,
again under numbered sub-paragraphs, what were alleged to be "the reasonable
and legitimate expectations of the parties and/or are to be treated as such
having regard to the nature of the quasi partnership". Those included:
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| |
| (i) |
that the expansion of the business of the company would be with a view
to the trading as Bodycare being through it and acquiring the benefit of
such trading name or style and expansion would be pursued with regard to the
interests of the company (rather than with regard to any conflicting or
potentially conflicting interests of the Third Respondent)
| | (ii) |
that the monies loaned to the company would be repaid as and when the
company was in a position to obtain bank finance to replace the same,
alternatively upon the company being given a reasonable opportunity to
obtain such finance (for which purpose sufficient time was required to allow
a written supply agreement to be entered into and bank finance be sought
thereafter). . . .
| | (iii) |
that the supply of toiletries from the Third Respondent to the company
would after the expiry of the three year period be at a market rate margin
which would be greater and not less than 17.5%
| | (iv) |
that the expansion of the Bodycare business would continue and would be
pursued through the company
| | (v) |
that the company would be not less favourably treated by the Third
Respondent than other companies to which it supplied such goods at arm's
length
| | (vi) |
that the finance provided would be on terms not less favourable than
those a bank would provide
| | (vii) |
that the parties, including the Respondents
and each of them, would act bona fide in the interests of the company and
would in consequence cause or procure that the company assumed those matters
and opportunities best in its commercial interests"
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|
| 14. |
Paragraph 8 of the petition, as originally presented, contained the
allegation that "the Respondents had acted contrary to the legitimate
expectations of the parties aforesaid in causing or procuring matters
hereunder complained of. . . " The matters of which complaint was made
included:
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| "(i) |
they have prevented the proper expansion of the business of the company
with a view to the trading as Bodycare being through it and it acquiring the
benefit of such trading name or style. In or about March 1998 the
Respondents approval for following the said programme [of expansion by the
acquisition of further retail outlets] was withdrawn . . . The
Respondents furthermore alleged. . . by letter dated 11 March 1998 that
the company was unable to open any more stores without the express
permission of the Third Respondent. . . .
| | (ii) |
they have purported to increase the interest rate payable by the
company [on inter-company borrowing] unilaterally to 10.5% and have given no
reasonable or proper opportunity to the company to obtain finance from
elsewhere. . .
| | (iii) |
they have purported to reduce the profit margin to 35% when the same
should be a margin which would be not less than 17.5% (and indeed after the
expiry of the three year period was initially continued at a rate of 17.5%)
and in so doing have treated the company less favourably than other parties
with whom the Respondents trade. . . . "
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The allegations of unfair conduct relied upon are summarised in a passage at
paragraph 8(v):
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"The Respondents are unwilling to allow the company to take any steps in its
best interests and wish to prevent it obtaining supplies from elsewhere,
obtaining supplies at a proper price, or obtaining long term written supply
agreement (whether from the Third Respondent or elsewhere) and opening
further stores so as to avoid the company being able to put its operation on
a stable footing and obtaining finance from elsewhere. The aim of the
Respondents in their said acts and omissions is to render the trade and
profitability of the company precarious so that the Third Respondent can
appropriate to themselves the entire benefit therefrom."
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|
| | Section
459 of the Companies Act 1985Acts
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| 15. | Section
459(1) of the Companies Act 1985Acts (as amended by the Companies Act 1989) is
in these terms:
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| |
"A member of a company may apply to the court by petition for an order under
this Part on the ground that the company's affairs are being or have been
conducted in a manner which is unfairly prejudicial to the interests of its
members generally or of some part of its members (including at least
himself) or that any actual or proposed act or omission of the company
(including an act or omission on its behalf) is or would be so prejudicial."
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| 16. | The
scope of the phrase "unfairly prejudicial" was considered by the House of
Lords in the recent appeal in In re a Co (No 00709 of 1992), O'Neill v Phillips[ [1999] 1 WLR 1092]. Lord Hoffmann, with whom the other
members of the House agreed, said this, [at pages 1098G--1099B]:
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"In the case of section 459, the background [against which the concept of
'fairness' has to be applied] has the following two features. First, a
company is an association of persons for an economic purpose, usually
entered into with legal advice and some degree of formality. The terms of
the association are contained in the articles of association and sometimes
in collateral agreements between the shareholders. Thus the manner in which
the affairs of the company may be conducted is closely regulated by rules to
which the shareholders have agreed. Secondly, company law has developed
seamlessly from the law of partnership, which was treated by equity, like
the Roman societas, as a contract of good faith. One of the traditional
roles of equity, as a separate jurisdiction, was to restrain the exercise of
strict legal rights in certain relationships in which it considered that
this would be contrary to good faith. These principles have, with
appropriate modification, been carried over into company law.
| | |
The first of these two features leads to the conclusion that a member of a
company will not ordinarily be entitled to complain of unfairness unless
there has been some breach of the terms on which he agreed that the affairs
of the company should be conducted. But the second leads to the conclusion
that there will be cases in which equitable considerations make it unfair
for those conducting the affairs of the company to rely on their strict
legal powers. Thus unfairness may consist in a breach of the rules or in
using the rules in a manner which equity would regard as contrary to good
faith."
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| 17. | Lord
Hoffmann went on to point out, [at page 1102B-F],
that an appeal to the "legitimate expectations" of a party - a phrase which he had used in
In re Saul D Harrison & Sons Plc[ [1995] 1 BCLC 14, at page 19], as a
label for the "correlative right" to which a relationship between company
members may give rise when, on equitable principles, it would be regarded as
unfair for a majority to exercise a power conferred upon them by the
articles to the prejudice of another member - must not be allowed to enlarge
the concept of "unfairness" beyond that justified by the application of
traditional equitable principles. He said this,
[at page 1102E-F]:
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"In saying that it was "correlative" to the equitable restraint, I meant
that it could exist only when equitable principles of the kind I have been
describing would make it unfair for a party to exercise rights under the
articles. It is a consequence, not a cause, of the equitable restraint.
The concept of legitimate expectation should not be allowed to lead a life
of its own, capable of giving rise to equitable restraints in circumstances
to which traditional equitable principles have no application. This is what
seems to have happened in this case."
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| 18. | In
O'Neill v Phillips the petitioner failed in the House of Lords
because it had not been established that the respondent had agreed to the
allotment of additional shares when certain targets were met. It was not
enough that the petitioner had a legitimate expectation that additional
shares would be allotted to him. The respondent was not acting unfairly in
declining to give effect to a proposal to which he had never agreed. The
same reasoning applied to the petitioner's expectation that he would
continue to share equally in the profits of the business. The respondent
had never agreed to an equal sharing of profits in circumstances in which
the petitioner was no longer managing the business; and had never agreed to
surrender his right, as controlling shareholder, to decide who should manage
the business.
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| 19. | The
speeches in the House of Lords in O'Neill v Phillips were delivered
on 20 May 1999. It seems likely that that led to a re-consideration of the
allegations which needed to be made in the petition in the present case.
The petition was amended in the following respects:
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| (1) |
The allegation, in paragraph 5, that "The Petitioners and the
Respondents became involved in the business of the company . . . as a
quasi-partnership . . ." was reinforced by a new allegation, at the end of
that paragraph, that:
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"The above terms were agreed orally between Mr Tobias and the Second
Petitioner [Lorraine Blackledge] and the First Respondent [Graham
Blackledge] in or about April/May 1994 expressly save for the first sentence
of sub-paragraph (viii) which was a natural consequence of the agreed terms
and/or implied as necessary to give efficacy to the agreed purpose of and
participation by the parties in the company."
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It is important to appreciate that that amendment (read in conjunction with
paragraphs 5(v) and (vii)) introduces an allegation that it was agreed, in
1994, that the margin or discount at which toiletries would be supplied by
Blackledge plc to the Company would not, at the end of the initial three
year period, be reduced below 17.5%.
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| (2) |
The allegation, in paragraph 7, as to what were the "reasonable and
legitimate expectations of the parties" or were to be treated as such
"having regard to the nature of the quasi-partnership" was reinforced by the
allegation that regard was also to be had to "the said basis for the
parties' participation in the company and what was in any event fair as
between them". The obvious purpose of that amendment is to link "reasonable
and legitimate expectations" to the agreement alleged by the amendment to
paragraph 5.
| | (3) |
Two new sub-paragraphs were added to the allegations under paragraph 7:
| | |
| "(vii) |
that after the initial period of 3 years the company would (a)
continue to trade with the benefit of the supply of goods at a margin of at
least 17.5% and to pursue its policy of expansion or (b) would be sold or
the subject of a flotation or would take over the Third Respondent: . . .
subject to any sale or flotation, the company would continue to be managed
by Mr Tobias and the Second Petitioner without unfair or unreasonable
restrictions on its profits or growth through the actions of the Respondents
| | (ix) |
that the Respondents would not use their position in the company or
interfere with its management so as to prevent or obstruct it in seeking to
obtain working capital or outside finance by way of flotation or otherwise
in order to continue its profitability and growth"
|
| | (4) |
The allegation, in paragraph 8, that the respondents had acted contrary
to the legitimate expectations of the parties was amended to read:
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| |
"The Respondents have acted contrary to the agreement between and/or
legitimate expectations of the parties aforesaid and in any event unfairly
in the conduct of the company's affairs so as to prejudice the Petitioners .
. . "
|
| | (5) |
Three further allegations of unfair conduct in relation to the Company's
affairs were introduced under paragraph 8:
| | |
| (x) |
by the said actions including (a) the unilateral reduction of the
company's gross profit margin to 15% from February 1998 (b) the increase in
its interest rate (c) the prevention of further expansion by the company and
(d) their diversion of the company's opportunities by opening their own
competing Bodycare shops, the Respondents attempted, through their control
of the company and contrary to the legitimate expectations of the parties
and the company's interests, to impose unfair and unreasonable restrictions
on it and extract unfair and unreasonable profits, assets and opportunities
from it so as to prejudice the Petitioners as shareholders
| | (xi) |
in particular a reduction of the company's gross profit on toiletries
to 15% meant that it would be paying and the Third Respondent would be
receiving far more than would obtain otherwise in the market (especially
since the company was providing by 1998 about half of the Third Respondent's
turnover): . .
| | (xii) |
Contrary to paragraph 7(ix) above, the Respondents used their position
in the company to obstruct it seeking outside finance. In addition to the
said matters (see in particular paragraph 8 (ii) above), on or about 22
December 1997 the Respondents refused to accept proposals (including an
offer of Natwest Equity Partners to purchase a 30% stake) in respect of
"Newco" (a proposed vehicle merging the company and the Third Respondent)
unless (i) the proposed shareholdings of the Petitioners were reduced from
7.5% to 5% and (ii) in the event that Mr Tobias or Second Petitioner were to
leave Newco for any reason, their respective shares would be relinquished.
Those were unreasonable and unfair requirements . . . and prevented
funding by way of a capital injection by Natwest, with a view to the
continuing success and growth of the company.
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|
|
| 20. | I have
set out the amendments to the petition at some length because they indicate:
(i) how far the allegations of "unfair prejudice" are founded on the terms
said to have been agreed orally between Nigel Tobias and Lorraine
Blackledge, on the one hand, and Graham Blackledge, on the other hand, in
April or May 1994; and (ii) the extent to which those allegations are
founded on decisions by Blackledge plc which (if taken at all) were, on
their face, referable to its own interest as supplier or lender.
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| 21. | It is
important to keep in mind that the basis upon which the court grants relief
on a petition under section 459 of the Companies Act 1985Acts is that "the
company's affairs" are being or have been conducted in a manner which is
unfairly prejudicial to its members or to some part of its members. The
fact (if it be established) that the affairs of some other company (say,
company B) which is a member of the company (company A) in respect of which
the petition is presented and which is, for example, a supplier or a lender
to company A are being conducted in a way which is prejudicial to company A
is, of itself, no basis for relief. It is necessary to show that company B
is using its position as a member of company A to obtain some advantage for
itself, and that, in doing so, it is acting contrary to the articles of
association or to some collateral agreement on the basis of which it (or
others) became a member (or members) of company A, or is using its powers as
a member of company A in a way which equity would regard as contrary to good
faith.
|
| 22. | The
point can be illustrated by reference to two of the principal grounds of
complaint in the present case. First, it is alleged in paragraph 8(ii) that
Blackledge plc purported to increase the interest rate payable by the
Company on the initial interest free loan of 1 million, and on a further
loan of 2 million (referred to in paragraph 6 Of the petition), to 10.5%.
But, in the absence of some commitment to lend at a lesser rate, it was for
the lender to determine the rate of interest at which it was willing to
lend; and for the Company, as borrower, to decide whether to continue to
borrow at that rate. It is not alleged that Blackledge plc had agreed to
lend at a lesser rate after the end of the first three year period. The
decision to lend (if at all) at a rate of 10.5% cannot, of itself, be unfair
conduct "of the Company's affairs". What would be unfair conduct of the
Company's affairs would be the use by Blackledge plc of its position as
majority shareholder, or the use by Graham and Margaret Blackledge of their
powers as directors, to compel the Company to accept funding from Blackledge
plc at the rate of 10.5% by preventing it from seeking other, more
favourable, sources of finance.
|
| 23. | Second,
it is alleged in paragraph 8(iii) of the petition that Blackledge plc
purported to reduce the margin or discount at which goods were supplied from
17.5% to 15%. But, again in the absence of some commitment to supply goods
at a minimum margin or discount, it was for the supplier to determine the
terms at which it was willing to supply; and for the Company, as purchaser,
to decide whether or not to purchase the goods on those terms or to seek its
supplies elsewhere. The decision to offer to supply goods at a margin or
discount of 15% cannot, of itself, be unfair conduct of the Company's
affairs. What would be unfair conduct of the Company's affairs would be the
use by Blackledge plc, or by Graham and Margaret Blackledge, of their powers
of control either (i) to prevent the Company enforcing an agreement (if
there were an agreement) for the supply of goods at a discount or margin of
not less than 17.5% or (ii) to compel the Company to accept the supply of
goods at a discount or margin of 15% from Blackledge plc by preventing it
from seeking other, more favourable, sources of supply. In the present case
it was, of course, alleged by amendment that there was an agreement, made in
1994, that Blackledge plc would continue to supply goods at a discount or
margin of not less than 17.5% after the end of the initial three year
period. As alleged, the obligation to supply at that minimum margin or
discount was to continue indefinitely.
|
| | The
falsification of documents
|
| 24. |
Directions were given for the proceedings on the petition and cross-petition
to continue with pleadings. Pleadings were delivered. The existence of the
oral agreement alleged to have been made in April or May 1994 was put in
issue. Discovery by list took place in June and July 1999. The documents
disclosed by the petitioners included six letters purportedly written by
Nigel Tobias on dates between 29 September 1993 and 30 May 1994 and what
purported to be extracts from his diaries for 1995 to 1998. By a letter
dated 3 August 1999 the solicitors instructed by the Blackledge respondents,
Messrs Eversheds, expressed their concern as to the authenticity of those
letters. The letters were written on the headed paper of Tobias Wholesale
Food Distributors Ltd - a company in which Nigel Tobias had been involved in
1993 and early 199 but the printed heading to that paper showed an "0161"
telephone area code. Eversheds pointed out, as was the case, that the area
code for Manchester did not change from "061" to "0161' until some time
after the end of 1994; so that, on their face, the letters could not have
been written on the dates which they purported to bear.
|
| 25. | The
solicitors then acting for the petitioners, Messrs Linder Myers, drew the
allegation of forgery to the attention of Nigel Tobias. His response
appears from two file notes disclosed by Linder Myers in the course of the
trial. The first is dated 3 August 1999:
"Telephone call to Nigel Tobias via my mobile phone. I said to him I was
still thinking about the facts [quaere fax] from Eversheds claiming that the
letters on the Lambert Smith Hampton and Gruber Levinson file were forged.
He reassured me that this was not the case and that they were genuine and I
did [quaere need] not worry. He said he did not have an explanation for why
there was a 1 in the 0161 but believed that there would be and he would
consider it."
The second is of a meeting on 4 August 1999:
"I went through again the letter of Eversheds of 3.8.99 and asked [Nigel
Tobias] to reconsider whether there were any problems with the letters to
which they were referring on the files of Lambert Smith Hampton and Gruber
Levinson Franks. He told me that he had considered the matter last night
and he wanted to tell me that the letters were not authentic and were
forgeries. He went on to explain that Lorraine was not aware and he told
her for the first time last night. That David Royle at Lambert Smith
Hampton was not aware. That he had borrowed the file from Lambert Smith
Hampton in order to check matters and then had inserted on to these files
letters in place of other letters that were already there in order to
strengthen up small parts of the letters.
Within respect of (sic) Gruber Levinson Franks file he had borrowed that
from Edward Cobb to read. There were two letters on this file and he had
extracted them and put in their place two other letters. The main one being
the first one in May which he amended by changing two or three words to say
that the margin would go on from 17.5%."
|
| 26. | Mr
Edward Cobb, of Gruber Levinson Franks (or "GLF"), was an accountant who had
advised Nigel Tobias. The letter described in the Linder Myers file note
which I have just set out as "the main one" is dated 3 May 199 that is to
say, at or about the time when, by amendment, it was alleged that there had
been an oral agreement with Graham Blackledge. It is in these terms, so far
as material:
"The Bodycare option originally came about when Dad and I were looking for a
business for Peter and at that stage Graham tried to convince us of the
merits of some kind of Franchise, but upon inspection this was clearly not
going to work as from the information provided to me it was not likely to be
viable.
Following on from recent discussions with Graham, and his niece, Lorraine,
we are looking to progress in a different way.
This Bodycare option could offer great potential and whilst the initial
salary package, to be set by ourselves, will be low, this is offset by the
investment required for the purchase of some 24% of the shares. Graham
needs Bodycare to replace the loss in turnover, c£25m, of Wilkinsons
who have given notice that they are leaving and he needs to replace them
quickly. From our discussions it is anticipated that we have the potential
to open at least 150 stores, certainly 40 or more over the first three years
of our agreement. It is envisaged by Graham that we will produce profits of
c£1m p.a. within 3 years, as he will supply at a profit margin of 15%
from inception, rising every 6 months by 0.5% to 17.5% and we will move
forward from there.
We discussed the possibility of a Floatation or even taking over Graham's,
but either way from here on in we would be the retail arm establishing the
value and Graham gets to replace Wilkinsons which he desperately needs to."
|
| 27. | On 18
August 1999 Nigel Tobias and Lorraine Blackledge swore affidavits verifying
a revised list of documents. The revised list of documents confirmed that
the six documents had been falsified by Mr Tobias in May or June 1999.
Notwithstanding the reference in the Linder Myers file note of 4 August 1999
to Nigel Tobias "changing two or three words" in the letter dated 3 May
1994, the extent of the falsification of that letter was described in the
revised list of documents in these terms:
"Section 54 item 1 letter Nigel Tobias to Edward Cobb 3/5/94-this letter was
not written and despatched by Nigel Tobias to Mr Cobb on 3/5/94. Rather it
was created by Mr Tobias in or around May/June 1999."
That was confirmed in paragraph 4(3) of a further affidavit sworn by Nigel
Tobias on the same day, 18 August 1999: 1n relation to the two letters
appearing to be from myself to Gruber Levinson Franks dated 3 May and 18 May
1994 these letters were never sent from me to Gruber Levinson Franks on or
about the dates which appear on the face of the letters or at all. I
created the letters and placed them in Gruber Levinson Franks' file."
|
| 28. | The
revised list of documents disclosed, also, that Mr Tobias had falsified some
of the entries in the diaries which had been disclosed. In relation to his
diaries, Nigel Tobias said this, at paragraph 4(4) of that further
affidavit: I have given disclosure of my 1995, 1996 and 1997 diaries. At
the same time as I added to/created the letters referred to above I added to
these diaries by locating some of the dates of my meetings with Graham
Blackledge and adding in from memory notes of what took place. Regrettably
I cannot now distinguish between my genuine contemporaneous notes and the
ones I have added in. . . . This represents the sum total of the
evidence I have created."
|
| 29. | The
further affidavit of 18 August 1999 contains expressions of remorse. At
paragraph 4(5) Nigel Tobias states:
"First and foremost I wish to sincerely and profusely apologise to all those
affected including but not limited to the Court, Graham and Margaret
Blackledge, Eversheds, Lorraine Blackledge and my former advisors Linder
Myers, Lambert Smith Hampton and Gruber Levinson Franks (now Baker Tilly).
I realise only too well that what I did was not only utterly wrong but also
stupid. Indeed I realised that soon after I had done it but unfortunately
it was too late. I literally feel sick with contrition. I still do not
understand why I did it. It all happened over a two day period in or around
May or June of this year. I do not know whether or not I had a mental block
but I would say it was a mental and moral aberration."
A less self serving explanation of why Nigel Tobias falsified documents
appears in the following sub-paragraph of that affidavit:
". . . the written evidence was not as helpful as I had expected . . "
|
| | The first
application to strike out
|
| 30. | The
revelation that disclosed documents had been falsified led the Blackledge
respondents to apply to strike out the petition. The hearing of that
application before Mr Justice Evans-Lombe extended over three days,
concluding on 25 October 1999. In the judgment which he handed down on 2
November 1999, the judge referred to Nigel Tobias' actions as "conduct of
the most profound dishonesty, involving what was obviously a careful and
deliberate strategy on his part to perpetrate a fraud on the court . . .
. . ". But the judge was not satisfied that what was presented to him as
the past conduct of Nigel Tobias justified the Draconian course which he was
being invited to take; namely, to strike out the petition.
|
| 31. | The
judge directed himself that the first question which he had to decide was
whether it was a proper exercise of the court's power to strike out
proceedings before it on the grounds of breach of the rules or, generally,
of abuse of its process in circumstances:
"....where the Court could be satisfied that the abuse had as far as
possible been remedied and there was no significant risk that a fair trial
of the issues between the parties could not thereafter take place. In short
whether the word "contumelious" when used by Lord Diplock [in Allen v Sir Alfred MacAlpine & Sons Ltd[ [1968] 2 QB 229, 259] and in Birkett v James[ [1978] AC 297, 318]] meant "deliberate and continuing" or simply
"deliberate"."
|
| 32. | After
considering the judgments of Mr Justice Millett in Logicrose Ltd v Southend United Football Club Ltd[ (reported in the Times of 5 March
1988)], Lord Justice Lloyd in Landauer Ltd v Comins & Co (a firm)[
(unreported, 14 May 1991)], Mr Justice Lindsay in the Employment Appeal
Tribunal in London Borough of Lambeth v Blandford [(unreported, 20 May
1997)] and Mr Justice Laddie in In re Swaptronics Ltd[ (unreported, 24
July 1998)], the judge concluded, at page 23 of his first written judgment:
|
| |
| |
". . . it is not a proper exercise of the Court's power under the rules
or its inherent power to strike out a claimant's case where the claimant has
been found to be in contumacious breach of the rules or an order of the
Court or even is guilty of conduct amounting to a fraud on the Court and to
a gross contempt, if it can be shown that notwithstanding the claimant's
conduct there is no substantial risk that a fair trial of his claim cannot
follow."
|
|
| 33. | In
reaching that conclusion the judge followed the observations of Mr Justice
Millett in the Logicrose case:
|
| |
| |
"The object of order 24 rule 16 [of the Rules of the Supreme Court 1965] is
not to punish the offender for his conduct but to secure the fair trial of
the action in accordance with the due process of the Court (see Husband's of Marchwood Ltd v Drummond Walker Developments Ltd[ [1975] 1 WLR 603]).
The deliberate and successful suppression of a material document is a
serious abuse of the process of the Court and may well merit the exclusion
of the offender from all other participation in the trial. The reason is
that it makes the fair trial of the action impossible to achieve and any
judgment in favour of the offender unsafe. But if the threat of such
exclusion produces the missing document, then the object of order 24 rule 16
is achieved. In my judgment an action ought to be dismissed or the defence
struck out (as the case may be) only in the most exceptional circumstances
once the missing document has been produced and then only if, despite its
production, there remains a real risk that justice cannot be done.
| | |
That might well be the case, for example, if it were no longer possible to
remedy the consequences of the document's suppression despite its
production, perhaps because a material witness who could have dealt with the
document had died in the meantime, or where, despite the production of the
document, there was reason to believe that other documents had been
destroyed or remained concealed. But I do not think that it would be right
to drive a litigant from the judgment seat without a determination of the
issues as a punishment for his conduct, however deplorable, unless there was
a real risk that that conduct would render the further conduct of
proceedings unsatisfactory. The Court must always guard itself against the
temptation of allowing its indignation to lead to a miscarriage of justice."
|
|
| 34. | On the
basis of the conclusion which he had reached on the first question the judge
went on to consider whether he could be satisfied on the evidence before him
at that stage that there was a significant risk that a fair trial could not
take place. Notwithstanding what he described as the formidable points made
to him on behalf of the Blackledge respondents - which included submissions
that there was a significant risk both that there were other material
documents which had been destroyed and that there were other documents still
put forward as authentic which Nigel Tobias had forged - the judge answered
that second question in the negative. But he went on to emphasise, in the
passage to which I have referred at the beginning of this judgment, that he
was dealing with the application on the evidence then before him. If
further evidence emerged to show that other documents had been suppressed or
altered, the application could be renewed. The renewed application would be
likely to succeed if the court were led to the view that "contrary to
Nigel's denials, he has not made a clean breast of his fraudulent
activities".
|
| | The
second application to strike out
|
| 35. | The
trial commenced on 10 November 1999. The second application, which the
judge had envisaged, was made just before the end of the Michaelmas term.
There had been, as I have said, extensive cross-examination of Nigel Tobias,
David Royle (the regional director of Lambert Smith Hampton, to whom four of
the admittedly falsified letters had been addressed) and Edward Cobb (the
accountant at Gruber Levinson Franks, who appeared on subpoena and who
declined to answer a number of questions about the letters on his file on
the ground of potential self-incrimination). Much of that cross-examination
was directed towards establishing that Nigel Tobias "had not been truthful
in his account of the events surrounding his forgeries, that he had not made
a clean breast of those forgeries but rather had continued and was
continuing to present an untruthful account of them". In the light of the
judge's observations in the concluding paragraph of his judgment of 2
November 1999-to which I have referred - that line of cross-examination was
inevitable.
|
| 36. | After
reviewing the evidence the judge reached the conclusions expressed in
paragraphs 43 to 48 of the written judgment handed down on 24 January 2000.
It is, I think, appropriate to set out those conclusions in the judge's own
words:
|
| |
| "43 |
I am not satisfied that I have received from Nigel a truthful picture
of the circumstances of the forgeries which he admits . . . I accept that
contrary to Nigel's evidence the respondents have established that in
respect of the four letters that Nigel admits he forged to LSH in late 1993
and early 1994, contrary to Nigel's evidence, there were either no original
letters and in consequence the forged letters were entirely new creations
or, alternatively, the letters which were originally sent were in a
substantially different form from the forged letters. I do not find it
established that there were replies from LSH to these letters which have
been destroyed as submitted.
| | 44 |
This memorandum [the Linder Myers' file note of 4 August 1999]
contradicts Nigel's evidence that the two GLF letters were entirely new
creations and their forgery did not involve the destruction of existing
letters from him to GLF.
| | 45 |
I am satisfied that an entirely false picture has been presented by
Nigel and his brother Joel of the forged additions to the 1995, 1996 and
1997 diaries. . . . I find that Nigel only confessed to the forged
entries in the diaries after it was apparent to him from Messrs Eversheds
letter of the 6th August that they had their suspicions as to certain
entries in those diaries.
| | 46 |
. . .
| | 47 |
In my judgment, therefore, it must be accepted that there is a
significant risk that the originals of Nigel's letters to LSH which he
admits to having tampered with contained information damaging to the
petitioners' case which is now not available because those letters have been
destroyed. There must also be a significant risk that there were original
letters by Nigel to GLF which his forged letters replaced which contain
similar damaging information. In the light of Nigel's untruthful account of
the forgeries of these letters the disappearance of the 1993 and 1994
diaries becomes more suspicious as does the removal of pages from the
diaries which were produced. None of the entries recording events in the
produced diaries can now be trusted unless confirmed from reliable sources
and this doubt must infect evidence contained in affidavits and witness
statements which may have been prepared in reliance on those diary entries.
| | 48 |
The respondents submit that because Nigel has been shown to have lied in
his account of the forgeries it follows that his denial that any other
relevant documents have been tampered with or suppressed cannot be accepted
and there must be a serious risk that other relevant documents now in
evidence have been forged or have been destroyed containing relevant
information damaging to the petitioners' case. Subject to what I shall say
about the apparent purpose of this campaign of forgery I accept that
submission.
|
|
| 37. | The
judge's findings as to the purpose of what he there described as "this
campaign of forgery" are set out in paragraphs 51 and 52 of his judgment:
|
| |
| "51 |
In his evidence Nigel sought to give the impression that his forgeries
came about as a result of an impulsive moment of madness flowing from his
disappointment that his case was not adequately supported by the documents.
In my judgment, so far from that being the case, it is apparent that the
process of forgery, which Nigel admitted to, was sophisticated and must have
taken time to complete including the special manufacture of headed notepaper
of the defunct Tobias family companies. But for the slip up with relation
to the telephone numbers shown on the headings it would, in all probability,
not have been discovered.
| | 52. |
In the course of his cross examination Nigel was pressed as to the
purpose behind the forgeries. He would not admit that there was any
specific purpose. It seems to me to be quite plain that the purpose of the
forgeries was to manufacture written support for Nigel's case as to what was
agreed between himself and Graham in late 1993 and early 1994 as to the
terms upon which Bodycare would deal with PLC in the supply of toiletries
for the first three years of its trading and thereafter. In particular he
wished to create written evidence which supported his case that he never at
any time accepted that a 15% margin over the retail price fixed for
toiletries by PLC would afford Bodycare an acceptable level of profit...."
|
|
| 38. | It is
relevant to have in mind the passage in the concluding paragraph of the
judge's earlier judgment, handed down on 2 November 1999 when he dismissed
the first application to strike out, to which I have already referred:
|
| |
| |
"If in the course of the trial further evidence emerges that there have been
breaches of the disclosure obligations by the petitioners and, in
particular, that other documents have been suppressed or fraudulently
altered, the application to strike out can then be renewed and is highly
likely to be successful because it will lead the Court to take the view that
contrary to Nigel's denials he has not made a clean breast of his fraudulent
activities."
|
|
| |
After some 29 days of evidence and submissions the judge was satisfied that
Nigel Tobias had "not made a clean breast of his fraudulent activities";
that there was a serious risk that documents (other than those which were
admitted forgeries) had been forged and that other documents containing
relevant information damaging to the petitioners case had been destroyed.
The conditions identified by the judge on 2 November 1999 as "highly likely"
to lead to success in a second application to strike out had been satisfied.
Nevertheless, the judge reached the conclusion, expressed at paragraph 62 of
his second judgment, that the petitioners were able to present a case for
relief under their petition in respect of which there was no substantial
risk that a fair trial could not be held.
|
| 39. | It is
necessary to examine the reasons which led the judge to that conclusion. He
accepted, at paragraph 54 of his second judgment, that any case which
depended on breach of the "reasonable expectations" of the petitioners
derived from the 1994 agreements pursuant to which Nigel Tobias and Lorraine
Blackledge joined the Company could not receive a fair trial - or that there
was, at the least, a substantial risk that it could not receive a fair trial
- because Nigel Tobias' forgeries had placed in question the documentary
evidence on which the court would expect to be able to rely. But he went
on:
|
| |
| |
"I accept that submission subject to the qualification that there would be
no substantial risk to a fair trial of a case which was not based on the
1994 agreements, or, to the extent that it depended on the terms of those
agreements, the relevant terms were not in issue between the parties."
|
|
| |
The judge identified two matters agreed in 1994 as to which there was no
issue: (i) that the petitioners should each be able to subscribe at par for
24% of the issued shares in the Company; and (ii) that the Company was to
pursue a policy of expansion through the acquisition of retail outlets both
during the initial three year period and thereafter. But he identified,
also, two matters which were the subject of dispute: (iii) whether the
expansion of the Bodycare chain of retail shops was intended to be conducted
through the Company alone, to the exclusion of Blackledge plc or any other
subsidiary of Blackledge plc; and (iv) whether the terms upon which
Blackledge plc was to supply toiletries to the Company were to be
renegotiated at the end of the initial three year period. The case advanced
by the Blackledge respondents was that there was no agreement, in 1994 or
thereafter, as to the terms on which toiletries would be supplied after the
end of the initial three year period, Thereafter the Company was not bound
to accept toiletries from Blackledge plc on terms which it regarded as
unfavourable; equally, Blackledge plc was not bound to supply toiletries to
the Company at any particular margin or discount. Each could have regard to
its own commercial interest.
|
| 40. | The
judge explained his view of the position at paragraphs 56 and 57 of his
second judgment:
|
| |
| "56 |
It seems to me that the petitioners are able to pursue a simple case
for relief under sections 459 and 461 on the basis that at the time that the
parties fell out in December 1997 they held 48% of Bodycare's issued shares.
Since that time the respondents by reason of the fact that they are majority
shareholders and directors, with at least equal representation on the
board, have been able to prevent any further expansion by Bodycare of its
retail outlets [see paragraph 8(1) of the petition] . . . It seems to me
also that such a claim could be based on the allegation that it was
reasonable to expect that the respondents would not use their control of
Bodycare to require it to purchase from PLC toiletries on terms less
favourable than those available to other customers of PLC or from third
party suppliers in the open market thereby, at least, restricting Bodycare's
profits and so the value of the shares of the petitioners. [See paragraph
7(5) and 8(3) of the petition]. If it can be shown that the respondents
have used their control of Bodycare to restrict its ability to borrow money
to finance its trading and expansion to borrowing from PLC, which has
charged interest on borrowings at a rate higher than that obtainable by
Bodycare in the open market, that might also be a ground for seeking relief
[see paragraphs 7(6) and (9) and 8(2) of the petition]. [emphasis added]
| | 57 |
These claims of the petitioners do not depend on any term of the 1994
agreements which is in issue between the parties. If fought out, whether
the petitioners establish a right to relief will depend on events which have
occurred between December 1997 when the parties fell out and today. It will
depend on whether the petitioners can establish that the respondents have
used their control of the company to restrict its ability to expand and/or
have diverted opportunities for expansion to PLC. It will depend on a
comparison between the terms offered to comparable customers of PLC and
those given to Bodycare during that period and whether Bodycare could have
obtained supplies of toiletries from third party suppliers at appreciably
less cost than it was incurring in taking supplies from PLC to which
supplies it was restricted by reason of the respondents' control of
Bodycare." [emphasis added]
|
|
| 41. | It is
clear, from the passages which I have emphasised, that the judge accepted
that the unfair conduct in relation to the affairs of the Company which
would found a claim to relief on a petition under section 459 of the Companies Act 1985Acts was conduct which could be regarded as an abuse by the
Blackledge respondents of their powers as directors and shareholder. It was
on that ground that he distinguished the decision of the House of Lords in
O'Neill v Phillips[ [1999] 1 WLR 1092]. After referring to the passage
in the speech of Lord Hoffmann at [ pages 1101D-1102B] the judge said this, at
paragraph 60 in his second judgment:
|
| |
| "60 |
From this passage in the speech of Lord Hoffmann it is plain that he
was not restricting the right to relief under section 459 and 461 to
circumstances where it could be shown that the respondent was exercising his
control of the company to the disadvantage of the petitioner in breach of
some contract or understanding between them which the Court would regard as
either contractually binding or sufficiently binding in conscience so that
the Court could treat its breach as unfair. Lord Hoffmann plainly
acknowledges the right, long established by authority under section 210 of
the Companies Act 1948 and section 459, for a minority shareholder to
petition where a majority exercised its majority power to the disadvantage
of the minority in their capacity as shareholders. Such conduct can be
rationalised as a breach of the express or implied terms of the articles of
association binding on the shareholders." [emphasis added]
|
|
| | The
appeal against the judge's refusal to strike out on the second
application
|
| 42. | The acts
or omissions on the part of the Blackledge respondents on which the
petitioners rely as conduct of the Company's affairs in a manner which is
unfairly prejudicial to their interests are to be found in the amended
paragraph 8 of the petition. The paragraph is introduced by an allegation
in three parts: that, "in causing or procuring matters hereunder complained
of' the respondents have acted (i) contrary to the 1994 agreement, (ii)
contrary to the legitimate expectations of the parties, and (iii) "in any
event" unfairly in the conduct of the Company's affairs so as to prejudice
the petitioners. It is alleged, further, that Graham and Margaret
Blackledge are "in breach of the fiduciary duty of directors".
|
| 43. | The
judge held that there was a substantial risk that there could not be a fair
trial in so far as the complaints of unfair conduct were based on (i) or
(ii) - acting contrary to the 1994 agreement or to the petitioners'
legitimate expectations. He did so on the basis that the admitted
forgeries, coupled with his finding that Nigel Tobias had continued to lie
on oath as to the extent of his fraudulent activity in relation to
documents, made it impossible to have confidence in any documents produced
by the petitioners unless those documents were corroborated by some other
evidence. Further - and this is an important element in his approach - that
the existence of the forged documents and the diaries was likely to have
infected evidence contained in affidavits and witness statements prepared in
reliance on those documents and diaries.
|
| 44. | The
judge's conclusion as to the extent and effect of Nigel Tobias' fraudulent
conduct is challenged by a respondents' notice served by the petitioners.
But, to my mind, that challenge must fail. There was ample material before
the judge to justify his conclusion that Nigel Tobias had continued to lie
on oath as to the extent of his fraudulent activity in relation to
documents. The judge had the advantage, which this Court did not have, of
hearing and seeing Nigel Tobias give oral evidence at the trial under
cross-examination. There is no basis on which this Court could interfere
with the judge's finding of fact. Nor can it be said that the judge was
wrong to take the view that the existence of forged documentary material is
likely to infect the oral evidence. In a case of this nature it is
inevitable that documents will provide the basis for recollection. It is
likely to be very difficult for a witness - even for a witness doing his or
her best to tell the truth under oath - to accept that what the witness now
thinks that he or she recalls from memory may, in truth, be based on a
document which has been shown to be false, or in relation to which there is
suspicion. The effect of forged documentary material on a trial is
pernicious, because witnesses who have, at one stage in the process of
preparing for trial, believed that documentary evidence to be genuine are
unlikely to be able to evaluate, objectively, the effect which it has had on
their recall of the events to which it relates.
|
| 45. | The
question for the judge, therefore, was whether - on a proper analysis of the
allegations - the remaining complaints were that the powers of control over
the Company (which were undoubtedly exercisable by Blackledge plc, as
majority shareholder, and by Graham and Margaret Blackledge, as directors with a
casting vote), had been exercised in fact - or, perhaps, had been threatened
with exercise - in a way which was to the benefit of Blackledge plc at the
expense of the Company and of the petitioners as shareholders. Once the
judge had held (in my view rightly) that the petitioners could place no
reliance on those terms of the 1994 agreement which were in dispute, or on
any expectations said to arise out of those terms, it followed that it was
only on the basis of abuse by the respondents of their powers of control
that the petitioners could found their complaints. It was on that basis -
but only on that basis - that the complaints could be brought within (iii):
acting "in any event" unfairly in the conduct of the Company's affairs so as
to prejudice the petitioners.
|
| 46. | The
question whether the Blackledge respondents had exercised, or threatened to
exercise, any powers of control as directors or shareholder was addressed in
paragraph 17 of the amended points of defence served in November 1999
(during the course of the trial). It is there pleaded:
|
| |
| |
". . . None of the matters referred to in paragraph 8 [of the petition]
amount to acts by the Third Respondent relate (sic) to the exercise or
proposed exercise by the Third Respondent of its majority voting power at
general meetings of the Company, but relate solely to the Third Respondent's
acts on its own behalf and in the conduct of its own affairs in its
commercial relationship with the company. Further the First and Second
Respondents have at no time had day- to-day conduct of the affairs of the
Company nor have they exercised a majority vote at board meetings. . . .
"
|
|
| |
In relation to the allegation in paragraph 8(i) of the petition - withdrawal
of consent for the opening of new stores - the Blackledge respondents denied
that the Company ever had any definite programme of opening new stores,
rather than a general intention to open new stores; and denied that their
approval for the opening of new stores in the locations specified (Bootle,
Edinburgh, Liverpool, Birmingham and Ashton-under- Lyme) had ever been given
- so that there was no question of that consent having been withdrawn. As
to paragraph 8(ii) - the increase in the interest rate charged by Blackledge
plc on inter-company borrowing - it was accepted that, in February 1998, the
rate was increased to 3% over base rate; but it was denied that the
Blackledge respondents had sought to prevent the Company from obtaining
suitable finance from sources other than Blackledge plc. It was pleaded, at
paragraph 17.2.2, that the respondents:
|
| |
| |
".... have sought to ensure that the company enters into a new credit
facility only if the terms and conditions of the facility are appropriate,
and only if the company's financial and trading position is such that it can
meet its obligations under it."
|
|
| |
and, at paragraph 17.2.5, that:
|
| |
| |
"The company is a subsidiary of the Third Respondent and its debtor. The
company is not being prevented from paying off its debts, or wrongfully
prevented from opening new shops. The First to Third Respondents simply
seek to ensure that the company is managed prudently and does not become
financially over-extended."
|
|
| |
It is pertinent to note that, in the points of reply served in response to
paragraphs 17.2.2 and 17.2.5 of the points of defence, it is not alleged
that the Blackledge respondents had exercised powers of control as directors
or shareholders,
|
| 47. | In the
course of the hearing of this appeal we enquired whether there had been any
board meetings of the Company since the end of 1997, and if so when. We
were told that there had been one board meeting, on 22 April 1998. There do
not appear to have been any meetings of shareholders. In those
circumstances it is difficult to see how this Company can have complied
properly with its statutory obligations as to the approval and filing of
accounts; but that is not a matter with which we are concerned. The board
meeting of 22 April 1998 was convened following a suggestion to that effect
in a letter dated 11 March 1998 from Eversheds to Linder Myers. In relation
to the three principal matters of complaint - the refusal to agree to the
opening of new stores, the interest rate in respect of inter-company
indebtedness and the margin or discount at which goods were to be supplied -
Eversheds set out the position of their clients in these terms:
|
| |
| |
"Plainly decisions as to whether to seek to open or to reverse decisions to
open stores are for the board of [the Company] to take and it is not for
your clients to seek to do so in isolation. It is for Blackledge, as owners
of the IP rights, to determine whether or not [the Company] can open further
stores.
| | |
In the event that:
| | |
| (1) |
a business plan and cash flow forecast can be produced in relation to
the five stores referred to in your clients' letter and
| | (2) |
your clients acknowledge (as they seem to be willing to do) in clear
terms that it is for Blackledge, as owners of the Bodycare IP rights, to
determine whether [the Company] can open future stores and
| | (3) |
the issue of margin is resolved (as to which see below)
|
| | |
then we recommend that a board meeting of [the Company] is convened for the
purpose of considering the position. Both Blackledge and Mr and Mrs
Blackledge, in their capacity as directors of [the Company], would be
willing to consider fairly and positively the position in relation to the
proposed stores referred to by your clients.
| | |
Our clients will agree to the indebtedness being repaid at the rate of
700,000 per annum, to be repaid by two equal portions on 30th June and 31st
December each year. Interest is to accrue at 3% above base rate on the
liability. If your clients wish to consider replacing the Blackledge loan
with facilities from another source then, subject to checking the terms of
any proposed facility our clients will be amenable to this in principle. .
. .
| | |
. . . your clients themselves have acknowledged that following the
expiration of the three year term the terms of business between the parties
were to be renegotiated. Because of the terms of trading between Blackledge
and [the Company] the discounts extended by Blackledge give [the Company] a
guaranteed margin, that is a profit which is risk free regardless of any
fluctuations in market prices or sources of supply. Whilst our clients will
listen carefully to your clients observations on this point, they are firmly
of the view that the discount should be 15%.
| | |
These proposals are not put forward on a "take it or leave it" basis. They
represent our clients' view as to a fair and proper way forward. They seek
to temper your clients' enthusiasm for a rapid and ambitious programme of
expansion with our clients' genuine and serious concerns over the current
level of indebtedness within [the Company] and the fact that future
expansion will increase the company's gearing still further. We would
encourage your clients to discuss these proposals..."
|
|
| 48. | It can
be seen from that letter that Eversheds were asserting, on behalf of their
clients, that Blackledge plc was the owner of intellectual property rights
in the Bodycare name and concept. Whether or not that claim can be made
good is the subject of proceedings (HC 1999 No 00882) brought by Blackledge
plc against Nigel Tobias and Lorraine Blackledge. That action was itself
the subject of an application to strike out which was before Mr Justice
Evans-Lombe at the same time as the petition. He dismissed the application.
The action remains to be determined - although whether it will proceed in
the light of our decision to strike out the petition may be open to
question. What is not in doubt - given the judge's decision that the
application to strike out the action failed - is that the claim is not
obviously ill-founded. If it can be made good, then there is force in
Eversheds' contention that the opening of new shops making use of the
Bodycare name and concept required the consent of Blackledge plc.
|
| 49. | As might
be expected in circumstances where a letter is written by experienced
solicitors, there is nothing in Evershed's letter of 11 March 1998 which
gives support to the allegation that the Blackledge respondents were
exercising, or threatening to exercise, their powers of control over the
Company in a manner which subordinated the interests of the Company to those
of Blackledge plc. Nor do the informal minutes of the board meeting which
took place on 22 April 1998-prepared by Nigel Tobias and Lorraine Blackledge
but not agreed by Graham or Margaret Blackledge - provide any support for
that allegation. Those minutes show that the parties were unable to agree
what the obligations of the Company to Blackledge plc, as lender and
supplier, were as a matter of contract. The minutes do not evidence
oppressive conduct on the part of Graham or Margaret Blackledge. There was
no occasion for them to use their powers of voting.
|
| 50. | By
letter dated 6 November 1998 (the day on which the petition was presented),
signed on behalf of the Company by Nigel Tobias and Lorraine Blackledge as
joint managing directors, the Company gave notice to the Blackledge
respondents that it would not be obtaining supplies from Blackledge plc
after 7 May 1999. The letter contained the following paragraph:
|
| |
| |
"Bodycare will be entering into a supply agreement with another supplier
which will be operative after that and which will at that stage enable bank
loans to be entered into which will in fact enable repayment of all monies
owing from Bodycare to the PLC."
|
|
| |
That proposal did not proceed. On 12 November 1998 (the day on which the
cross- petition was presented) the court granted injunctions restraining the
Company from obtaining supplies from sources other than Blackledge plc, and
restraining Blackledge plc from taking steps to enforce payment of the
monies owed to it.
|
| 51. | I can
find nothing in the material which was before the judge at the close of the
petitioners' case which supports a contention that the Blackledge
respondents had exercised, or threatened to exercise, their powers as
directors and shareholder in a manner intended to benefit Blackledge plc at
the expense of the Company. The judge does not identify any material which
supports that contention. I share the judge's concern that this was a case
pregnant with potential for an abuse of powers. But it must be borne in
mind that, from an early stage in the dispute, the Blackledge respondents
had the benefit of advice from experienced solicitors; who might be expected
to recognise the danger and counsel their clients how to avoid it. The fact
that there was potential for an abuse of powers does not lead to the
conclusion that there was such abuse.
|
| 52. | The true
position, as it seems to me, is that matters never reached the stage at
which the Blackledge respondents needed to exercise their powers of control
as directors and shareholder. They had effective control over the Company's
affairs because Blackledge plc was a creditor in the sum of £4 million
or thereabouts (£2 million in respect of monies advanced for the
purchase of retail shops, and a further £2 million on trading
account); and because the Company had found no alternative source of finance
or supply. It was for Blackledge plc to decide, in its own interests,
whether it was willing to enter into a medium to long term supply agreement,
and (if so) on what terms. Without a supply agreement the Company could
not, in practice, arrange alternative bank finance. The solution, of
course, was for the Company to find another source of supply, enter into a
supply agreement with that supplier, and raise bank finance on the basis of
that supply agreement. If that had been done, the Blackledge respondents
might have been put in the position in which they had to decide how they
would vote at a board meeting to approve those proposals. But, as I have
said, matters never reached that stage. The petition was presented, and
cross-injunctions granted by the court, before those proposals were
formulated; let alone put before the board of directors.
|
| 53. | In those
circumstances I take the view that it was wrong for the judge to allow the
petition to proceed once he had reached the conclusion that there was a
substantial risk that the allegations in relation to the disputed terms of
the 1994 agreement were incapable of a fair trial. He recognised,
correctly, that a claim to relief based on allegations of abuse by the
Blackledge respondents of their powers as directors and shareholder after
1997 would not require an investigation into what had or had not been agreed
in 1994. But, as it seems to me, he failed to appreciate that, on a true
analysis, the allegations made in the petition were allegations of
oppressive conduct by Blackledge plc as supplier or as lender; and were not
allegations of oppressive conduct by Blackledge plc as majority shareholder.
In so far as there were general allegations of breach of duty by Graham and
Margaret Blackledge as directors, those allegations were not supported by
any evidence which the judge identified; and are contradicted by the
material which was put before this Court. In my view the judge ought to
have reached the conclusion that, once the allegations in respect of which
there was a substantial risk that Nigel Tobias' fraudulent conduct had made
a fair trial impossible were put on one side and left out of account, there
was no case for relief which remained to be tried.
|
| 54. | It would
be open to this Court to allow the appeal against the judge's refusal to
strike out the petition on that ground alone. But, for my part, I would
allow that appeal on a second, and additional, ground. I adopt, as a
general principle, the observations of Mr Justice Millett in Logicrose Ltd v Southend United Football Club Ltd[ (The Times, 5 March 1988)]
that the object of the rules as to discovery is to secure the fair trial of
the action in accordance with the due process of the Court; and that,
accordingly, a party is not to be deprived of his right to a proper trial as
a penalty for disobedience of those rules - even if such disobedience
amounts to contempt for or defiance of the court - if that object is
ultimately secured, by (for example) the late production of a document which
has been withheld. But where a litigant's conduct puts the fairness of the
trial in jeopardy, where it is such that any judgment in favour of the
litigant would have to be regarded as unsafe, or where it amounts to such an
abuse of the process of the court as to render further proceedings
unsatisfactory and to prevent the court from doing justice, the court is
entitled - indeed, I would hold bound - to refuse to allow that litigant to
take further part in the proceedings and (where appropriate) to determine
the proceedings against him. The reason, as it seems to me, is that it is
no part of the court's function to proceed to trial if to do so would give
rise to a substantial risk of injustice. The function of the court is to do
justice between the parties; not to allow its process to be used as a means
of achieving injustice. A litigant who has demonstrated that he is
determined to pursue proceedings with the object of preventing a fair trial
has forfeited his right to take part in a trial. His object is inimical to
the process which he purports to invoke.
|
| 55. | Further,
in this context, a fair trial is a trial which is conducted without an undue
expenditure of time and money; and with a proper regard to the demands of
other litigants upon the finite resources of the court. The court does not
do justice to the other parties to the proceedings in question if it allows
its process to be abused so that the real point in issue becomes
subordinated to an investigation into the effect which the admittedly
fraudulent conduct of one party in connection with the process of litigation
has had on the fairness of the trial itself. That, as it seems to me, is
what happened in the present case. The trial was "hijacked" by the need to
investigate what documents were false and what documents had been destroyed.
The need to do that arose from the facts (i) that the petitioners had sought
to rely on documents which Nigel Tobias had forged with the object of
frustrating a fair trial and (ii) that, as the judge found, Nigel Tobias was
unwilling to make a frank disclosure of the extent of his fraudulent
conduct, but persisted in his attempts to deceive. The result was that the
petitioners' case occupied far more of the court's time than was necessary
for the purpose of deciding the real points in issue on the petition. That
was unfair to the Blackledge respondents; and it was unfair to other
litigants who needed to have their disputes tried by the court.
|
| 56. | In my
view, having heard and disbelieved the evidence of Nigel Tobias as to the
extent of his fraudulent conduct, and having reached the conclusion (as he
did) that Nigel Tobias was persisting in his object of frustrating a fair
trial, the judge ought to have considered whether it was fair to the
respondents - and in the interests of the administration of justice
generally - to allow the trial to continue. If he had considered that
question, then - as it seems to me - he should have come to the conclusion
that it must be answered in the negative. A decision to stop the trial in
those circumstances is not based on the court's desire (or any perceived
need) to punish the party concerned; rather, it is a proper and necessary
response where a party has shown that his object is not to have the fair
trial which it is the court's function to conduct, but to have a trial the
fairness of which he has attempted (and continues to attempt) to compromise.
|
| | The
position of Lorraine Blackledge
|
| 57. | We were
urged, at a late stage in the argument, to consider allowing the petition to
proceed as if it were the petition of Lorraine Blackledge alone. Although
there was no suggestion in the respondents' notice (served by the
petitioners) that that would be an appropriate course, it is a reflection of
a point taken in the petitioners' cross appeal - namely that the judge
should have allowed the petitioners' principal claim for relief (that
Blackledge plc be ordered to sell its shares to them) to stand in the
alternative form of a claim that Blackledge plc be ordered to sell its
shares to Lorraine Blackledge alone. In that context it was said that the
conduct of Nigel Tobias in relation to the petition is no more than a
discretionary factor as regards himself or Arrow Nominees Inc.
|
| 58. | To
suggest that the basis on which the court acts, when deciding to strike out
a petition on the ground that there is a substantial risk that a fair trial
has become impossible as the result of a petitioner's conduct, is founded
upon the court's determination that a petitioner of whose conduct it
disapproves should be denied discretionary relief is to misunderstand the
position in a fundamental respect. The court does not strike out the
petition because it disapproves of the petitioner's conduct; it strikes out
the petition because it is satisfied that the petitioner's conduct has led
to an unacceptable risk that any judgment in his favour will be unsafe. It
is, I think, possible to envisage circumstances in which the court might
reach the conclusion that there was an unacceptable risk that a judgment in
favour of one of two co-petitioners would be unsafe, but that a judgment in
favour of the other would not be subject to that risk. But, in such a case,
the claims of the two petitioners would, in effect, be severable. The court
would, in effect, be dealing with two distinct claims for relief each
founded on its own facts. That is not this case. In this case the relief
claimed is founded on facts which are, in all respects, common to both
petitioners. If there is a risk that a judgment in favour of Arrow Nominees
Inc would be unsafe, there is an identical risk that a judgment in favour of
Lorraine Blackledge would also be unsafe. Having determined that there is
an unacceptable risk of an unsafe judgment it is not open to the court to
allow the petition to proceed in respect of the relief claimed by either
petitioner.
|
| 59. | There is
no injustice in this result in the present case. It is clear from the file
notes disclosed by Linder Myers in the course of the trial that, following
Nigel Tobias' admission of forgery on 4 August 1999, Lorraine Blackledge was
advised (quite properly in the circumstances) that there was a potential
conflict of interest between herself and her co-petitioner. She was advised
to seek advice as to her own position from a solicitor who could act without
regard to the interests of Nigel Tobias or Arrow Nominees Inc. She decided
not to take that advice. She took the view that her interests were best
served by continuing to make common cause with her partner and cohabitee.
That was a view which she was entitled to take; but she cannot now be heard
to complain that it is unjust to treat her as she has, hitherto, wished to
be treated - as a joint petitioner.
|
| | The
appeal against the refusal to strike out on the first application
|
| 60. | The
conclusion which I have reached in relation to the second application to
strike out makes it unnecessary to decide whether the judge was correct in
refusing to strike out the petition on the application made to him in
October 1999. Further, for understandable reasons, the point was not
developed before us at any length in argument.
|
| 61. | But I
should not leave the matter without this comment. The judge's observation,
in the final paragraph of his first judgment, that . . . "if in the
course of the trial further evidence emerges that . . . other documents
have been suppressed or fraudulently altered, the application to strike out
can then be renewed and is highly likely to be successful" . . . must be
taken to have led, in some measure, to the trial thereafter taking the
course that it did. It seems to me that it may well be more satisfactory,
in a case where there has been admitted forgery or destruction of relevant
documents, to decide - on the application to strike out - whether the full
extent of the fraudulent conduct has been revealed, even if that requires
oral evidence at that stage. The judge recognised that cross-examination
could have been sought on the application in October 1999. It is, of
course, a matter of case management for the judge in each case whether to
invite cross-examination on an interlocutory application, or to leave the
point until trial. But I venture to suggest that a judge faced with an
application to strike out in circumstances such as those in the present case
ought to address the question whether the better course would not be to
resolve the issue, before the trial begins (or, perhaps, as a preliminary
issue at the start of the trial), whether full disclosure of the fraudulent
conduct has been made. If, in the absence of cross-examination, the judge
cannot resolve that issue at the interlocutory stage, then he is left in the
position that he cannot be confident that there is no substantial risk that
the trial (if it proceeds) will be a fair trial. Indeed, he can be
reasonably confident that it will be unfair - in the sense that it will give
rise to a detailed examination of issues which ought not, properly, to be
occupying the time of the court at the trial. If, on the other hand, he is
able to resolve that issue before trial (after cross-examination if
necessary) then it will not require further investigation at the trial. If
the judge is satisfied, in the light of what he accepts is full disclosure,
that there is no substantial risk that the admitted forgery or destruction
of documents will lead to a result which is unsafe then he will allow the
trial to proceed. But, if he is not satisfied that there has been full and
frank disclosure of the fraudulent conduct, then, for the reasons which I
have already given, it seems to me that the correct response is to refuse to
allow the party in default from taking any further part in the proceedings -
with whatever consequences follow from that.
|
| | The
petitioners' cross- appeal
|
| 62. | If the
petition is struck out, there is no longer any foundation for the cross-
appeal. The petitioners' claim to an order that Blackledge plc be ordered
to sell its shares to them (or to Lorraine Blackledge alone) is struck out
together with the other claims in the petition.
|
| | The
appeal against she refusal of injunctions
|
| 63. | The
judge refused the injunctions sought because he had decided to strike out
the claim in the petition that Blackledge plc be ordered to sell its shares
to the petitioners (or to Lorraine Blackledge alone). The effect of that
decision was that control of the Company would remain with the Blackledge
respondents. The only question (as it would have appeared to the judge) was
whether the petitioners should remain locked in to the Company or whether
Blackledge plc should be ordered to buy out their shares. On neither basis
could the petitioners expect to continue to manage the affairs of the
Company as joint managing directors. There was no reason to restrain
Blackledge plc from exercising the powers to control the composition of the
board of directors given to it by the articles; or to restrain Graham and
Margaret Blackledge from exercising their powers, as directors, to determine
who should be employed to manage the Company's affairs on a day to day
basis.
|
| 64. | The
judge's refusal of the injunctions sought was an exercise of his discretion.
It would have been wrong for this Court to interfere - even if it would, if
faced with the need to exercise its own discretion, have reached a different
conclusion - unless satisfied that the judge erred in principle. There is
no basis for a submission that the judge erred in principle. He was plainly
entitled to reach the conclusion which he did. In so far as it is material,
it seems to me that the judge was plainly correct to refuse the injunctions
sought on the basis of the position as it was when the application was
before him.
|
| 65. | But the
position has changed, in that there is now no petition pending in which an
order is sought that Blackledge plc buy out the minority's shares.
Ironically, that is (in part, at least) the consequence of the petitioners'
success in having the Blackledge respondents' cross-petition struck out on
the ground that it was demurrable - a result with which the Blackledge
respondents are content. The position, now, is that (subject to any
agreements reached between them and the Blackledge respondents since the
bearing of the appeal) the petitioners are minority shareholders in the
Company. As such they have the rights given to shareholders by the articles
of association. They have failed to establish that they have any further
rights under any agreement reached in 1994. They have failed to establish
that Blackledge plc is under any fetter in respect of the powers attached to
its shares other than those imposed by equity on majority shareholders; that
is to say, the obligation not to use those powers to obtain a benefit at the
expense of the Company or the minority. There is no basis upon which
Blackledge plc can be restrained from exercising its power to control the
composition of the board; or upon which Graham and Margaret Blackledge, as
directors, can be restrained from determining who should manage the affairs
of the Company on a day to day basis. In my view there is no more reason,
now, to grant the injunctions sought than there was when the matter was
before the judge.
|
| | Ward
LJ:
|
| 66. | In many
ways this is an anxious case. We have here a young couple who in a
comparatively short time built up a very successful business indeed. The
turnover is in the region of 50 million per annum. The staff are loyal and
full of praise for Nigel Tobias and Lorraine Blackledge. Such
entrepreneurial skill commands universal praise. Ordinarily it should
command reward, in the form, at least, of fair recompense for their
shareholding. Now they face the strike out of their present claim to that
entitlement. It is a Draconian step for the court to take.
|
| 67. | In his
first judgment handed down on 2 November 1999, Evans-Lombe J. analysed the
authorities on striking out for an abuse of the process of the court
beginning with Allen v Sir Alfred MacAlpine & Sons Ltd [[1968] 2QB
229] and Birkett v James[ [1978] AC 297] through to an unreported
decision of Laddie J on 24 September 1998 in the case of Re Swaptronics Ltd. He held at p. 23 that:-
|
| |
| |
"The applicable rule is to be found in the judgment of Mr Justice Millett in
The Logicrose case."
|
In Logicrose Ltd v Southend United Football Club Ltd[,
unreported save in the Times of 5 March 1998], Millett J (as he then was)
held. --
|
| |
| |
"In my view a litigant is not to be deprived of his right to proper trial as
a penalty for his contempt or defiance of the court, but only if his conduct
has amounted to an abuse of the process of the court which would render any
further proceedings unsatisfactory or prevent the court from doing justice.
Before the court takes that serious step it needs to be satisfied that there
is a real risk of this happening" (i.e. the risk that it is impossible to
conduct a fair trial).
| | |
"The deliberate and successful suppression of a material document is a
serious abuse of the process of the court and may well merit the exclusion
of the offender from all other participation in the trial. The reason is
that it makes the fair trial of the action impossible to achieve and any
judgment in favour of the offender unsafe. But if the threat of such
exclusion produces the missing document, then the object of Order 24 rule 16
is achieved. In my judgment an action ought to be dismissed or the defence
struck out (as the case may be) only in the most exceptional circumstances
once the missing document has been produced and then only if despite its
production there remains a real risk that justice cannot be done."
|
|
| |
At that stage and applying that test, Evans-Lombe J concluded that the
petition should not be struck out though he did not preclude further
consideration of the matter.
|
| 68. | In his
second judgment handed down on 21 January 2000, the judge defined his task
in these terms. --
|
| |
| |
"I would decide the following questions under C.P.R. Rules 3.4 and 24.2:-
| | |
| 1. | Whether
the petitioners had shown a prima facie case against the respondents under
section 459 for relief under section 461, failing which the petition would
be dismissed.
| | 2. | In the
event that the petitioners had demonstrated such a prima facie case whether
I was still of the view that there was no substantial risk that a fair trial
of that case could not take place. If I had changed my view the result
would be the dismissal of the petitions. "
| |
|
| |
He then made his findings of fact and in paragraph 53 of his judgment turned
"to consider whether these findings require me to strike out the petition."
|
| |
He held in paragraph 54:-
|
| |
| |
"It was the respondent's submission that any case which depended on breach
of 'reasonable expectations' of the petitioners derived from the 1994
agreements pursuant to which Nigel and Lorraine joined Bodycare cannot
receive a fair trial or, at least, there is a substantial risk that it
cannot receive a fair trial, because Nigel's forgeries had placed in
question the documentary evidence on which the court could base its
conclusions. I accept that submission subject to the qualification that
there would be no substantial risk to a fair trial of a case which was not
based on the 1994 agreements or, to the extent that it depended on the terms
of those agreements, the relevant terms were not in issue between the
parties."
|
|
| |
Having analysed the impact of the 1994 agreement he concluded in paragraph
62:-
|
| |
| |
"For these reasons it seems to me that notwithstanding what I said in my
first judgment and my findings the petitioners are able to present a case
for relief under their petition in respect of which there is no substantial
risk that a fair trial cannot be held."
|
|
| 69. | As I
analyse the judgment it seems to me plain that although the judge made
reference to C.P.R. 3.4, he concentrated on whether there was a substantial
risk that a fair trial could not be held on at least some part of the
petitioners' case. That seems to be the only test he applied. The judge
drew on the old authorities seemingly unaffected by the impact of the Civil
Procedure Rules, notwithstanding that in Biguzzi v Rank Leisure Plc
[[1999] l WLR 1926, 1934 Paragraph 63], Lord Woolf MR held:-
|
| |
| |
"Earlier authorities are no longer generally of any relevance once the
C.P.R. applies."
|
|
| |
"Generally" does not, of course, mean "never". This court has recognised
that in a number of decisions, for example UCB Corporate Services Ltd v Halifax (SW) Ltd [dated 6 December 1999], and Purdy v Cambran[
dated 17 December 1999]. The old authorities are of interest only as the
straws in the gale force winds of change which blew in Lord Woolfs reforms.
One can easily chart the progression. Birkett v James laid down that
the power to strike out should be exercised on two grounds:-
|
| |
| |
"(1) that the default has been intentional and contumelious, e.g.,
disobedience to a peremptory order of the court or conduct amounting to an
abuse of the process of the court; or (2) (a) . . . inordinate and
inexcusable delay . . . , and (b) . . . a substantial risk that it is
not possible to have a fair trial of the issues . . . or . . . serious
prejudice . . ."
|
|
| |
The first ground lay largely fallow but recent years has seen an expansion
of its use. This may be for reasons explained by Lord Woolf MR in
Biguzzi[ at p.1932Paragraph 42]:-
|
| |
| |
"The courts have learnt, in consequence of the periods of excessive delay
which took place before April 1999, that the ability of the courts to
control delay was unduly restricted by such decisions as Birkett v James
[[1978] AC 297]. In more recent decisions the courts have sought to
introduce a degree of flexibility into the situation because otherwise the
approach which was being adopted by litigants generally of disregarding time
limits for taking certain actions under the Rules would continue."
|
|
| |
What was troubling the courts was delay in the process. The more robust
approach can be traced through the authorities such as Arbuthnot Latham Bank Ltd v Trafalgar Holdings Ltd [[1998] 1 WLR 1426], ("From now
on (the consequence to the other litigants and to the court of inordinate
delay) is going to be a consideration of increasing significance," per Lord
Woolf M.R.); Choraria v Sethia [ Court of Appeal, 15 January 1998]
("complete, total or wholesale disregard, put it how you will, of the Rules
of Court . . . is capable of amounting to . . . an abuse", per Nourse
LJ); Miles v McGregor[, Court of Appeal, 23 January 1998] ("The abuse
of process route is for cases . . . when the conduct amounts to an
affront to the court and its Rules", per Auld LJ); and Lace Co-ordinates Ltd v NEM Insurance Co Ltd[ 19 November 1998] where Hirst LJ
held:-
|
| |
| |
"These guidelines . . . create an entirely new climate in which the court
is required to examine the plaintiffs conduct by reference to the overall
interests of justice and fairness (including considerations of public
importance reflecting the interests of other litigants, and the interests of
the court, to ensure the prompt despatch of court business in accordance
with efficient case management), and not exclusively the impact (as in
Birkett v James [[1978] AC 297]) of the delay on the conduct of the
defendant's case, having regard to any prejudice the defendant may suffer."
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| 70. | The
trend of the authorities before CPR was increasingly to support the notion
that as the court became more pro-active, so greater importance was given to
the need to emphasise and to protect the court's own interest in
administering justice fairly not only as between the parties before the
court but to all others using the court service. Access to the courts was
open to all but the time of the courts was a precious resource which needed
to be managed rigorously in order to be fair to all. The CPR is the
apotheosis of those ideals.
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| 71. | Under
the CPR, the court's general powers of case management give the court the
discretion to "take any other step or make any other order for the purpose
of managing the case and furthering the overriding objective," see Rule
3.1(2)(M). Under Rule 3.4(2):-
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"The court may strike out a statement of case if it appears to the court -
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(c) that there has been a failure to comply with a rule, practice direction
or court order."
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| 72. | When
exercising any power under the Rules, the court must, by virtue of Rule 1.2,
seek to give effect to the overriding objective. The overriding objective
in its rightful place at the forefront of the Rules is in these terms:-
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| |
| (1) |
These Rules are a new procedural code with the overriding objective of
enabling the courts to deal with cases justly.
| | (2) |
Dealing with a case justly includes, so far as is practicable -
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| (a) |
ensuring that the parties are on an equal footing;
| | (b) |
saving expense;
| | (c) |
dealing with the case in ways which are proportionate
| | |
| (i) |
to the amount of money involved;
| | (ii) |
to the importance of the case;
| | (iii) |
to the complexity of the issue;
| | (iv) |
to the financial position of each party;
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| | (d) |
ensuring that it is dealt with expeditiously and fairly; and
| | (e) |
allotting to it an appropriate share of the court's resources while
taking into account the need to allot resources to other cases."
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It is not at all clear to me to what extent, if at all, the judge had the
overriding objective in mind as setting out the parameters for the exercise
of his discretion. He correctly saw at the beginning of his judgment that
the source of his power to strike out lay in Rule 3.4 but he did not trace
back through the case management rules to Rule 1.1. Even though this was a
reserved judgment it may still be unfair to the judge to engage in too close
a textual analysis of his judgment and infer from the omission of express
reference to the overriding objective that he did not direct himself to it.
Consequently I prefer to assume he had it in mind. Nevertheless, there is
still every indication that he regarded the risk of a fair trial not being
possible as the factor of crucial, even overriding, weight. It undoubtedly
is a factor of very considerable weight. It may often be determinative. If
the court is satisfied that the failure to disclose a document or the effect
of a tampered document can no longer corrupt the course of the trial, then
it would be a factor of much less and perhaps even little weight in
considering a strike out. Where, in my judgment, Evans-Lombe J erred, was
to treat the question of a fair trial as the only material factor. It was
not: other matters have now to be put in the scales and weighed.
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| 73. | The
attempted perversion of justice is the very antithesis of parties coming
before the court on an equal footing. The matter has become hugely more
expensive (to an extent we did not appreciate until we were told when
application was made for a freezing order that the amount of the appellant's
costs overall and on a solicitor and own client basis may be in the region
of 1.5 million.) The judge commented at the beginning of his judgment that
"the hearing has run for twenty nine days greatly exceeding the parties'
estimate." The original estimate was three weeks and we were told another
week to ten days would be required to conclude the matter even on the
limited basis that the judge would still permit. The judge did not,
however, treat cost and time as elements of the overriding objective. He
did not appear to allot to the case an appropriate share of the court's
resources while taking into account the need to allot resources to other
cases. In this day and age they are elements of case management which must
not only be seen to have been placed in the scales but also given due and
proper weight when assessing how justice is to be done to the parties and to
other litigants. The balance must be struck so that the case is dealt with
in a way which is proportionate to the amount of money involved in the case,
its importance and complexity and the financial position of the parties. Mr
Tobias stood |