BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> National Westminster Bank Plc v Nederland [2006] EWCA Civ 1578 (24 October 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2006/1578.html Cite as: [2006] EWCA Civ 1578 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE COLMAN
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
THE RIGHT HONOURABLE LORD JUSTICE RIX
and
THE RIGHT HONOURABLE LORD JUSTICE MOSES
____________________
NATIONAL WESTMINSTER BANK PLC |
Respondent Claimant |
|
- and - |
||
RABOBANK NEDERLAND |
Appellant/ Defendant |
____________________
WordWave International Ltd
A Merrill Communications Company
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr Ben Valentin and Mr Jeremy Goldring (instructed by Travers Smith) for the Respondent
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Auld :
Introduction and the facts.
"Please note that by accepting this instruction you are undertaking a duty of care to both … [Yorkshire Food] and the Banks though that due to the Banks will prevail in the event of a conflict. In connection with this independent review you have our irrevocable instruction to disclose all relevant matters to the Banks".
i) Unknown to it, in the Spring of 1996 at about the time NatWest and Rabobank had committed themselves under the credit facility agreement to support Yorkshire Food, its United States subsidiaries were struggling financially and a number of its directors and of the subsidiaries had set up their own Californian almond businesses.ii) Very shortly after that, NatWest, unknown to Rabobank, had loaned US$1.2m to a Trust for the benefit of the Chairman of Yorkshire Food, the loan secured on its shares. To the knowledge of NatWest, the Trust had then loaned the borrowed funds to entities established by the Yorkshire Food directors to finance the purchase of their new Californian farms and businesses. The result of those transactions, it was alleged, was to enable the directors personally to undertake almond farming and to trade with Yorkshire Food and its competitors for their own profit.
iii) Four months later, in August 1996, just after Yorkshire Food had begun to default on the credit facility agreement, the Trust also went into default on its loan of US$1.2m from NatWest.
iv) And, at the same time and still unknown to Rabobank, the directors of Yorkshire Food had caused it to take leases of their new almond farms and to pay rent and all development costs for them.
The proposed amendments.
The ruling
"… in order to avoid prejudice to … NatWest, in order to avoid introducing at this stage a whole new area of expert evidence and also factual investigation of the working of Price Waterhouse, in order further to avoid the difficulties which may arise in obtaining additional discovery, disclosure of documents by PWC and, finally to avoid the risk of the extension of the giving of evidence in this trial beyond the end of the present term, it would be inappropriate for permission to be re-re-amend, to introduce these new causes of action to be permitted at this stage.
The position that would arise if permission were indeed given, therefore, would be that not only would there be potential prejudice to NatWest in the conduct of the trial, but there would also be the risk which would affect both parties and the court that the trial would be prolonged beyond what has now become the ordered timetable which sets out what evidence will be given and when.
I think it is important not to lose sight of the fact that here we have an extremely complex trial with many, many witnesses and what now is sought is the introduction of a whole new professional negligence claim in effect against … [Price Waterhouse], put forward as a claim against … NatWest]."
Submissions
i) the proposed amendments are based on the same or substantially the same facts as those already pleaded and in evidence as part of the basis of the claims of breach of fiduciary duty and/or fraudulent misrepresentation;ii) whether Price Waterhouse would have investigated NatWest's loans to the Yorkshire Food Chairman was already in issue on Rabobank's existing pleading, and whether it should have investigated them was already effectively in issue, as illustrated by NatWest, in its counsel's opening speech and in its proposed evidence, that those loans were outside the ambit of Price Waterhouse's retainer and would not have been considered by Price Waterhouse to be material.
iii) there has been full inter partes disclosure as to the factual basis for the new claim;
iv) Price Waterhouse, in response to an order for disclosure made by Rabobank, had stated that it had no documents material to loans to the Trust for the benefit of Yorkshire Food's Chairman or to its directors for the purpose of their Californian ventures;
v) all the potential witnesses in respect of the "secret meeting" of 29th August 1996 were scheduled to give evidence at the trial, including Mr Hamilton, the only representative of NatWest with first-hand knowledge of it, and also in respect of what Price Waterhouse did and did not do as part of its review of Yorkshire Food's affairs;
vi) even if any additional evidence, expert or otherwise, would be required as a result of permitting the new claim, it would take very little extra time, directed, as it would have to be. to the question what Price Waterhouse should have done in fulfilment of their professional duty to Rabobank in the light of their instructions in the letter of 6th September 1996 and what had been said to them at "the secret meeting" of 29th August 1996;
vii) the parties were already committed to calling witnesses to give expert accountancy evidence on other issues in the case, and such witnesses could readily be deployed within the existing programme to deal with the new issue;
viii) even if the extra time required to deal with the new claims would extend the taking of evidence into the new year, it would only be for a few days at the most, and would not prejudice justice by any undue delay of the trial, especially as a further three months had been set aside until Easter to allow for the preparation and making of closing speeches; and
ix) despite the somewhat unusual form of the new claims, NatWest did not suggest that they were unarguable, and the Judge clearly accepted that they were.
i) in his expressions of concern about the likely disruption and delay that would be engendered by the new claims, the Judge had not taken delay as his starting point, but was considering it in the context of the justness or otherwise of allowing the amendments, including the presence or absence of prejudice to each of the parties depending on his decision;ii) Rabobank's contention that all or substantially all the facts relevant to its proposed new claim are already pleaded and in evidence is incorrect in two respects, first because "the secret meeting" of 29th August 1996 had not been pleaded as an occasion on which NatWest made an actionable fraudulent misrepresentation to Rabobank, and, secondly, because the new claims had introduced for the first time an allegation of breach of professional duty by Price Waterhouse;
iii) the Judge correctly concluded that the proposed new claims would engender the calling of expert evidence, because they would raise an issue, not previously raised, as to the content of Price Waterhouse's duty of care; and NatWest would, if permitted by the Judge, adduce expert evidence as to whether a reporting accountant, instructed to carry out an "assessment of … [Yorkshire Food's] management" would ordinarily investigate the personal financial situation of its directors, and would seek expert advice on the cross-examination of any factual or expert witnesses called by Rabobank on the matter;
iv) such an issue and such evidence would call for disclosure of Price Waterhouse's internal working papers, not so far disclosed;
v) as a result of the new allegations against Price Waterhouse, the ambit of the expert evidence would be considerably wider and the further disclosure required more extensive and time-consuming, and both would, therefore, intrude more prejudicially on the trial, than suggested by Rabobank;
vi) the Judge was entitled, in the exercise of his case management powers to have the regard he did to the programme that, with the assistance of the parties, he had set for the trial; and
vii) decisions of this sort, especially in relation to late amendments, are often highly fact-sensitive; see for instances of cases going either way authorities mentioned in paragraph 17.3.7 of the current White Book; the Court of Appeal should on that account be cautious before intruding on a trial judge's exercise of discretion in dealing with them, especially of a Commercial Judge of Colman J's seniority and great experience, and with his familiarity with the issues and complexities of this litigation.
Conclusions
Note 1 See per Lord Woolf MR (as he then was) in Credit Lyonnais Bank Nederland v ECGD [2001] 1 AC, 486, 496 [Back]