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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Samuel (Professionally Known As Seal) v Wadlow [2007] EWCA Civ 155 (28 February 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2007/155.html Cite as: [2007] EWCA Civ 155 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM HIGH COURT QUEENS BENCH DIVISION
GRAY J
HQ05X01564
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE WILSON
and
LORD JUSTICE TOULSON
____________________
SAMUEL (PROFESSIONALLY KNOWN AS SEAL) |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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WADLOW |
Respondent |
____________________
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 Ian Mill QC and Mr Mark Vinall (instructed by Messrs Clintons) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 7 February 2007
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Toulson :
Introduction
The History in Brief
1. the respondent was not entitled to continuing commission on the proper construction of either the management agreement or the settlement agreement;
2. but if he was prima facie entitled to commission under either agreement, his claim was under the management agreement;
3. the management agreement was unenforceable as an unreasonable restraint of trade;
4. the management agreement and the settlement agreement were voidable for undue influence, and the appellant was entitled to rescind them.
The Judgment under appeal
1. as a matter of construction, the respondent was entitled under the management agreement to commission in respect of the first and second albums both during its term and after its termination;
2. the management agreement was superseded, and not merely varied, by the settlement agreement;
3. under the settlement agreement the respondent was entitled to continuing commission in respect of the first and second albums;
4. the circumstances in which the parties entered into the management agreement gave rise to a presumption of undue influence, which the respondent had not rebutted;
5. the settlement agreement was not procured by undue influence;
6. the undue influence which affected the management agreement did not make the settlement agreement voidable;
7. the respondent was also entitled to rely on laches and acquiescence to defeat the appellant's defence of undue influence;
8. neither the management agreement nor the settlement agreement was unenforceable on restraint of trade grounds.
The Grounds of Appeal
1. on its proper construction, the management agreement did not entitle the respondent to commission in respect of the first and second albums after the termination of the agreement;
2. similarly, on its proper construction the settlement agreement did not entitle the respondent to commission in respect of the first and second albums;
3. the management agreement was varied but not superseded by the settlement agreement, and the appellant was therefore prima facie entitled to rescind it for undue influence;
4. if the settlement agreement superseded the management agreement, the appellant was entitled to rescind it on grounds of the undue influence which affected the preceding agreement;
5. the judge was wrong to find laches and acquiescence.
The Management Agreement
"The Artist [the appellant] hereby appoints the Manager [the respondent] and the Manager agrees to act as the sole and exclusive Manager of the Artist throughout the world in respect of all the musical activities of the Artist in all branches of the entertainment industry and in particular Artists' [sic.] activities as a recording artist composer or writer in connection with the record industry…"
"(a) By way of remuneration for his services hereunder the Manager shall be entitled to commission as hereinafter specified based on the gross total earnings of the Artist from the activities including without prejudice to the foregoing all royalties of whatsoever kind and all pecuniary considerations of any nature whatsoever paid or payable (provided always that commission will not be deducted until payment is received) to the Artist or to anyone on his behalf during the Term hereof or to which the artist or any party on her [sic.] behalf may become entitled as a result of agreements engagements performances or bookings entered into negotiated or procured during the currency of this Agreement or any modifications of or substitutions for such agreements performances or bookings including any products of the Artist's services (no matter where the same may have been rendered)…
(b) The remuneration shall be a sum equal to 20% (twenty per cent) of the relevant earnings referred to in this Clause.
(c) After the expiration of the term hereof the Manager's commission shall be limited to monies arising and [which is agreed should read "from"] recordings made and compositions written and residual fees arising from performances given or negotiated during the period hereof."
"By way of remuneration for his services hereunder the Manager shall be entitled to commission as hereinafter specified based on the gross total earnings of the Artist from the activities
[including without prejudice to the foregoing all royalties of whatsoever kind and all pecuniary considerations of any nature whatsoever paid or payable (provided always that commission will not be deducted until payment is received) to the Artist or to anyone on his behalf]
during the Term hereof
or to which the Artist… may become entitled as a result of agreements engagements performances or bookings entered into negotiated or procured during the currency of this Agreement…"
The Settlement Agreement
"1. In consideration of the mutual promises herein contained and other good and valuable consideration it is agreed that with effect from the 28th day of February 1995 the Management Agreement is terminated. Subject as hereinafter appearing [the appellant] and [the respondent] agree to release each other from their respective obligations under and the further performance of the terms of the Management Agreement.
2.(a) Notwithstanding the termination of the Management Agreement [the respondent] shall be entitled to his commission entitlement as defined in clause 7 of the Management Agreement … ["the Commission Entitlement"]…on recordings made compositions written and performances rendered during the term of the Management Agreement. For the avoidance of doubt [the respondent's] ongoing Commission Entitlement shall be limited to income arising on all those recordings and compositions appearing on [the appellant's] first and second albums recorded and released by ZTT ("the First Album" and the "Second Album" respectively) …Furthermore notwithstanding that [the respondent] is a fifty per cent share holder of BSM [the respondent] shall be entitled to retain the full amount of his commission entitlement on publishing income arising from the exploitation of the First Album and subject as hereinafter provided to the full amount of his Commission Entitlement on publishing income arising from the exploitation of the Second Album.
(b) [The appellant] agrees pursuant to clause 5(c) of the Management Agreement that he will use his reasonable endeavours to ensure that [the respondent] is directly accounted to by:
(i) ZTT for his Commission Entitlement on recording income arising from the Commissionable Material on the same dates as [the appellant] is accounted to by ZTT;
(ii) [Perfect Songs] for his Commission Entitlement on publishing income arising from the Commissionable Material on the same dates as [the appellant] is accounted to by [Perfect Songs]."
1. the words "[the respondent] shall be entitled to his Commission Entitlement as defined in clause 7 of the Management Agreement" and "For the avoidance of doubt [the respondent's] ongoing Commission Entitlement shall be limited to…" meant that the respondent could not be entitled to commission in respect of the first and second albums unless clause 7 of the management agreement entitled him to such commission after its termination;
2. clause 7 of the management agreement did not entitle the respondent to such commission;
3. by further restricting any continuing commission so as to exclude all but the first and second albums, the true effect of clause 2(a) of the settlement agreement was to preclude the respondent from having any continuing commission.
Did the Settlement Agreement Vary or Supersede the Management Agreement?
"…the difficulty about enforcing the original mortgage in this case is that, although itself untouched by the statute, it is no longer the real contract between the parties. In reality, although the statute prevents reality from being proved, there is no longer a mortgage at 9% but one at 11%. Since, however, the real contract is not evidenced in the way required by the moneylending law, it cannot be enforced. This is the approach made by Douglas J in the Supreme Court and by Lewis J, who gave the leading judgment for the majority in the Court of Appeal.
Another way of arriving at the same result is to treat a variation of contract as something that necessarily requires the rescission of the old contract and the substitution of a new one. On this view the old contract cannot be enforced because it has been rescinded and the new contract cannot be enforced because it is not properly evidenced. This was the conclusion reached by the Divisional Court in Williams v Moss' Empires [1915] 3 KB 242 and adopted by the Court of Appeal in Morris v Baron [1918] AC 1. As Sankey J put it in the former case: "The result of varying the terms of an existing contract is to produce, not the original contract with a variation, but a new and different contract."
The disadvantage of this view is that a minor variation may destroy the effect of the whole of the transaction between the parties. The alternative view, adopted by the House of Lords in Morris v Baron and again in British and Benningtons Limited v NW Cachar Tea Company Limited [1923] AC 48 (where Lord Sumner referred to the former view as possibly correct "as a matter of formal logic"), is based on the intention of the parties. They cannot have that which presumably they wanted, that is, the old agreement as amended; so the court has to make up its mind which comes nearer to their intention – to leave them with an unamended agreement or without any agreement at all. The House answered this question by rejecting the strict view propounded by Sankey J and distinguishing between rescission and variation. If the new agreement reveals an intention to rescind the old, the old goes; and if it does not, the old remains in force and unamended.
If the principle in Morris v Baron applies to this case, the mortgage of April 22 remains in force. The contrary has not been and could not be argued. It would be impossible to contend that a temporary variation in the rate of interest reveals any intention to extinguish the debt and the mortgage…
The choice before the board lies between solving the problem by means of what Lord Sumner called formal logic or solving it by giving effect as far as possible to the intention of the parties as was done in Morris v Baron."
Undue Influence
"The law will investigate the manner in which the intention to enter into the transaction was secured: "how the intention was produced", in the oft repeated words of Lord Eldon LC, from as long ago as 1807 (Huguenin v Baseley 14 Ves 273, 300). If the intention was produced by an unacceptable means, the law will not permit the transaction to stand. The means used is regarded as an exercise of improper or "undue" influence, and hence unacceptable, whenever the consent thus procured ought not fairly to be treated as the expression of a person's free will. It is impossible to be more precise or definitive. The circumstances in which one person acquires influence over another, and the manner in which influence may be exercised, vary too widely to permit of any more specific criterion." (Emphasis added)
"A substitute contract will often come into existence in a different factual context from an earlier contract, and that factual context may show that the second contract is not a true substitute for the first. But if the factual situations are materially similar, and if it is a condition of the rescission or release of the original void or voidable bargain that the parties enter into a new bargain, that new bargain must be as open to attack as the old one."
"If a mortgage or guarantee is voidable for undue influence as against a husband and against a bank, a replacement mortgage, even if undue influence is not operative at the time of such replacement, will itself be voidable, at any rate if the replacement mortgage is taken out as a condition of discharging an earlier voidable mortgage. This should be the case even if there is a new contract rather than a mere variation of an old contract."
"Why should the bank's conscience not continue to be affected when it had made its consent to the exchange transaction conditional on Mrs Tinsley giving the bank a mortgage of 113 London Road in substitution for the voidable mortgages? The bank insisted on the substitution and thereby it connected inseparably the new mortgage to the earlier mortgages."
Laches and Acquiescence
Lord Justice Wilson:
Lord Justice Ward: