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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 >> Global Asset Capital, Inc & Anor v Aabar Block S.A.R.L. & Ors [2017] EWCA Civ 37 (01 February 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2017/37.html Cite as: [2017] 4 WLR 163, [2017] EWCA Civ 37, [2017] WLR(D) 63 |
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ON APPEAL FROM QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
MR JUSTICE WALKER
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
and
LORD JUSTICE HAMBLEN
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(1) Global Asset Capital, Inc (2) Glenn Maud |
Claimants/ Respondents |
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- and - |
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(1) Aabar Block S.A.R.L. (2) Aabar Investments PJS |
Defendants/ Appellants |
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(3) Robert Tchenguiz |
Third Defendant |
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Sonia Tolaney QC and James MacDonald (instructed by Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer LLP) for the Defendants/Appellants
Hearing date : 19 January 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Hamblen :
Introduction
Factual and Procedural Background
(1) Aabar Block is a company resident in Luxembourg and an indirect subsidiary of Aabar Investments PJS;
(2) Aabar Investments PJS is a company resident in Abu Dhabi;
(3) The Third Defendant, Robert Tchenguiz ('Mr Tchenguiz') is a businessman and entrepreneur who owns and controls a company called Edgeworth Capital ('Edgeworth').
(4) Global is a company incorporated in Delaware; and
(5) The Second Respondent, Mr Glenn Maud ('Mr Maud') is a property investor who holds an interest in a group of companies, referred to as the Marme Group.
(1) A senior loan to Marme of €1.575 billion (arranged by RBS and others);
(2) A personal loan of €75 million to Mr Maud and Mr Quinlan personally; and
(3) A junior loan of €200 million to Ramblas Investments BV ('Ramblas') which was a company within the Marme Group. Mr Maud and Mr Quinlan provided a personal guarantee of this loan for up to €40 million.
(1) Further to a consent order dated 17 June 2011, Mr Maud agreed to pay Aabar and Edgeworth €52.5 million plus interest and Ramblas agreed to pay Aabar and Edgeworth €216.5 million;
(2) Pursuant to an order dated 30 January 2015 (as varied by the Court of Appeal), Ramblas was ordered to pay to Aabar and Edgeworth over €91 million due under the terms of an upside fee arrangement; and
(3) On 30 November 2015, Aabar Block and Edgeworth obtained judgment against Mr Maud in respect of the €40 million personal guarantee of Ramblas' liabilities.
"As requested please find attached binding and committed letters of finance and offer.
If possible, I look forward to receiving your confirmation of acceptance of our offer during the course of Sunday. Thereafter we can meet in either Abu Dhabi or London to suit to agree the mechanics of how to progress to completion as soon as possible".
The evidence
"The Agreement
12. In light of Mr Tchenguiz's conduct, Mr Maud together with GAC made an offer to Aabar for the acquisition of Aabar's interests alone, without Edgeworth's interests in the Junior Loan, but including Aabar's interests against Edgeworth. That offer was set out in an undated letter to Aabar, marked without prejudice and subject to contract, signed by Mr Maud and on behalf of GAC and sent to Aabar and Aabar PJS on or around 23 April 2015 (the "Offer Letter"). The Offer Letter, a copy of which is annexed hereto, contained the following material, express terms (described in the Offer Letter as "Key commercial terms"):
(1) The offer was to purchase all rights and benefits of Aabar and their affiliates ' in relation to or in connection with' Marme and its holding companies (the "Aabar Rights"), specified at Clause 1 as including: (i) all rights and benefits under the Finance Documents as defined in the Junior Facility Agreement; (ii) all rights and benefits under the Finance Documents as defined in the Personal Loan Agreement; (iii) all right and benefits under any and all arrangements with Mr Quinlan in relation to the Marme Group or otherwise; (iv) any and all rights against third parties in connection with the acquisition of the Junior Loan from RBS; (v) all rights and benefits against Edgeworth and/or any of its affiliates or related parties, including any and all rights and benefits under any loans that Aabar or their affiliates had made to Edgeworth and/or any of its affiliates or related parties; and (vi) the right to purchase the shares in the Aabar entity or entities that hold the aforesaid rights for an additional purchase price of €1.
(2) Clause 2 provided that the purchase price for the Aabar Rights would be €250 million.
13. On 5 May 2015 at or around 18:00 London time, the Chief Executive Officer of both Aabar Block and Aabar PJS, Mohamed Al-Husseiny, telephoned Mr Maud and informed him that Aabar PJS' board would be meeting the following day and would consider the Offer Letter.
14. On 6 May 2015 at or around 15:37 London time, Mr Al-Husseiny again telephoned Mr Maud. Mr Al-Husseiny stated that he was telephoning Mr Maud with some of his colleagues from Aabar PJS board, to tell him that the board had met, chaired by Suhail Al-Mazrouei, and that they had accepted Mr Maud's offer on behalf of Aabar Block and Aabar PJS. Mr Maud thanked Mr Al-Husseiny and asked, "What do we need to do now to progress it?" Mr Al-Husseiny responded that Mr Maud needed (i) to resend the Offer Letter in "open and binding form" and (ii) to provide satisfactory evidence of his ability to fund the transaction (the "Conditions"). Mr Maud said that he would do so. Mr Al-Husseiny expressed no other condition or caveat on Aabar's acceptance of the Offer Letter.
15. By the Offer Letter and these telephone communications, the Claimants and Aabar concluded a contract for the purchase by the Claimants of the Aabar Rights from Aabar, on the terms set out in the Offer Letter and subject to the satisfaction by the Claimants of the Conditions (the "Agreement" as defined above)."
The Issues
(1) Whether the judge was wrong to conclude that he should not take account of the parties' communications immediately following the 6 May 2015 telephone call when considering whether the Alleged Contract had been made on that date.
(2) Whether the judge was wrong to conclude that Global have real prospects of establishing their case that the Alleged Contract was concluded on 6 May 2015.
(3) Whether the judge was wrong to conclude that Global's case that the Conditions were satisfied had real prospects of success.
Striking out/summary judgment
(1) The court must consider whether the case of the respondent to the application has a realistic as opposed to fanciful prospect of success – in this context, a realistic claim is one that carries some degree of conviction and is more than "merely arguable".
(2) The court must not conduct a "mini-trial" and should avoid being drawn into an attempt to resolve conflicts of fact which are normally resolved by the trial process.
(3) If the application gives rise to a short point of law or construction then, if the court is satisfied that it has before it all the evidence necessary for the proper determination of the question and that the parties have had an adequate opportunity to address it in argument, it should "grasp the nettle and decide it".
See Easy Air Limited v Opal Telecom Limited [2009] EWHC 339 (Ch) at [15]: Arcadia Group Brands Ltd & Ors v Visa Inc [2014] EWHC 3561 at [19]; Tesco Stores Ltd v Mastercard Incorporated [2015] EWHC 1145 (Ch) at [9]-[10]:
Issue (1): Whether the judge was wrong to conclude that he should not take account of the parties' communications immediately following the 6 May 2015 telephone call when considering whether the Alleged Contract had been made on that date.
"…You must not at one particular time draw a line and say, "We will look at the letters up to this point and find in them a contract or not, but we will look at nothing beyond". In order fairly to estimate what was arranged and agreed, if anything was agreed between the parties, you must look at the whole of that which took place and passed between them".
"(1) In order to determine whether a contract has been concluded in the course of correspondence, one must first look to the correspondence as a whole…."
Lord Clarke then commented:
"The same principles apply where, as here, one is considering whether a contract was concluded in correspondence as well as by oral communications".
Issue (2): Whether the judge was wrong to conclude that Global have real prospects of establishing their case that the Alleged Contract was concluded on 6 May 2015.
"What is pleaded is that Mr Al-Husseiny said in the telephone conversation that the Board had accepted Mr Maud's offer. Mr Maud's offer, being subject to contract, was not, however, open for acceptance or, at best, would, if accepted, amount to no more than an agreement to agree. Acceptance of that offer would not remove the subject to contract condition".
"Documentation Upon your agreement that you are willing to proceed with the Proposed Transaction we will provide market standard documentation for the transfer of Aabar's Rights for your review.
Exclusivity Upon your agreement that you are willing to proceed with the Proposed Transaction each party agrees that it will not pursue or seek to pursue any alternative transaction with respect to Aabar's Rights for 15 days from the date of this letter." (emphasis added)
"Expiry This letter will expire at 6.00 pm London time on 11 May 2015 unless accepted by you by that time".
Issue 3: Whether the judge was wrong to conclude that Global's case that the Conditions were satisfied had real prospects of success.
(1) "Resending" a letter means sending the same letter as has already been sent. The 9 May Letter was not the same letter. It was in materially different terms.
(2) The Condition presupposed fulfilment by the sending of a letter; not a letter which called for and required agreement and acceptance.
(3) The Condition necessarily required the offer to be in the same terms since this was the offer which had been accepted. It could not be met by an offer in different terms. The 9 May Letter was in materially different terms and indeed was a new offer.
(4) The 9 May Letter continued to make the parties' agreement subject to contract since it was a condition that it be "subject to" agreement on final form documentation. It was not therefore "binding", as was required.
(1) The 9 May Funding Letter did not impose any obligation on Madison to provide funding. It expressed Madison's "intention" to fund the proposed transaction subject to a number of significant matters, such as due diligence. It expressly stated that "this letter does not, and is not intended to, create… any contractual relationship or other obligation of any kind between any of Madison, GAC, [Glenn Maud] or Aabar".
(2) The 9 May Funding Letter was accordingly a non-binding indication of support for the transaction from Madison, subject to a number of caveats. It was not evidence that Mr Maud was able to fund the proposed transaction. It was, at best, evidence of a potential ability to do so.
(3) If "satisfactory evidence" means objectively satisfactory then the 9 May Funding Letter was not such evidence. If it was not even evidence of an ability to fund the transaction then it cannot have been "satisfactory" evidence of such an ability.
(4) If "satisfactory evidence" means subjectively satisfactory (i.e. satisfactory to Aabar) then it was not so satisfactory, as Aabar made clear in its email of 10 May 2015 and its pleading, and, if necessary, it was reasonable for Aabar so to conclude.
Conclusion
Lord Justice McFarlane
THE OFFER LETTER
The Offer Letter was signed on behalf of Mr Maud and Global and provided that:
"WITHOUT PREJUDICE – SUBJECT TO CONTRACT
Dear Sirs
Offer to purchase all rights and claims of Aabar in relation to Marme and Edgeworth
This letter sets forth the key terms of an all-cash offer (the "Offer") to Aabar Investments PJS, Aabar Block S.à r.l. and any relevant affiliates of Aabar Investments PJS or Aabar Block S.à r.l. (jointly referred to as "Aabar") to purchase all of Aabar's rights and claims in relation to I) Marme Inversiones 2007 S.L. ("Marme") and its holding companies (together the "Marme Group") and II) EdgeWorth Capital (Luxembourg) S.à r.l. and Edgeworth Capital Limited and any and all of their affiliates and/or related parties (jointly "Edgeworth") (the "Proposed Transaction").
Glenn Maud together with Madison Realty International ("Madison") and Global Asset Capital ("GAC") or an entity designated by them will be jointly referred to as the "Purchaser".
1. Key commercial terms of the Offer to Aabar:
Purchased Rights | All of the rights and benefits of Aabar in relation to or in connection with the Marme Group, including |
i) all rights and benefits of Aabar under the Finance Documents as defined in the credit facility agreement (the "Junior Facility Agreement") entered into by Ramblas Investments ("Ramblas") on 12 September 2008 (the "Junior Claims"); | |
ii) all rights and benefits of Aabar under the Finance Documents as defined in the personal loan agreement entered into with Derek Quinlan and Glenn Maud on 12 September 2008 (the "Personal Claims"); | |
iii) all rights and benefits of Aabar under any and all arrangements with Derek Quinlan in relation to the Marme Group or otherwise, including any rights to acquire all or a part of the shareholder loans and shares held by Derek Quinlan in Ramblas; | |
iv) any and all rights of Aabar against (other) third parties in connection with the acquisition of the Junior Claims from the Royal Bank of Scotland PLC in 2010 and/or representations and/or warranties made in relation thereto; and | |
v) all rights and benefits that Aabar has against Edgeworth and/or any of its affiliates or related parties, including any and all rights and benefits under any loans that Aabar has made to Edgeworth and/or any of its affiliates or related parties; | |
vi) the right to purchase the shares in the Aabar entity or Aabar entities that hold the rights listed at i) — v) above for an additional purchase price of EUR 1.- | |
(all jointly referred to as "Aabar's Rights"). | |
Purchase Price | The aggregate Purchase Price for Aabar's Rights shall be EUR 250,000,000 |
2. Other conditions
Release | Upon completion of the Proposed Transaction the parties shall provide each other with appropriate waivers and releases |
Closing | The Proposed Transaction shall complete within 5 business days from acceptance of this offer |
Conditions | (i) Subject to limited legal due diligence the results of which are satisfactory to the Purchaser |
(ii) Subject to contract |
We hope that the proposed terms are acceptable to you and are available at your convenience for a meeting to further discuss the Proposed Transaction.
We look forward to hearing from you."
THE 9 MAY LETTER
The 9 May Letter was signed by Mr Maud and another and provided that:
"Date: 9 May 2015
Dear Sirs
RE: Purchase of all rights and claims of Aabar in relation to Marme and Edgeworth
We refer to our prior discussions and negotiations, and our history of seeking to work constructively together to resolve all matters that exist between us. This letter sets forth the key terms of a financed agreement (the "Agreement") with Aabar Investments PJS, Aabar Block S.à r.l. and any relevant affiliates of Aabar Investments PJS or Aabar Block S.à r.l. (jointly referred to as "Aabar") to purchase all of Aabar's rights and claims in relation to i) Marme Inversiones 2007 S.L. ("Marme") and its holding companies (together the "Marme Group") and ii) Edgeworth Capital(Luxembourg) S.à r.l. and Edgeworth Capital Limited and any and all of their affiliates and/or related parties (jointly "Edgeworth") (the "Proposed Transaction").
Madison International Realty ("Madison"), Global Asset Capital ("GAC") and Glenn Maud ("GM") or an entity designated by them will be jointly referred to as the "Purchaser".
1. Key commercial terms:
Purchased Rights | [text in materially identical terms to the text of the Offer Letter] |
Purchase Price |
[text identical to the text of the Offer Letter] |
2. Other terms
Release | Upon completion of the Proposed Transaction the parties shall provide each other with appropriate waivers and releases of all outstanding matters, litigation and disputes between them including (without limitation) appropriate releases and waivers being granted by Glenn Maud |
Expiry |
This letter will expire at 6.00 p.m. London time on 11 May 2015, unless accepted by you by that time |
Edgeworth |
It is our intention post-completion to work constructively with Edgeworth and to refinance the existing senior debt to ensure Marme's future solvency. Any amendment to the arrangements that exist between you and Edgeworth that might be necessary shall be subject to mutual discussion and agreement. |
Documentation | Upon your agreement that you are willing to proceed with the Proposed Transaction we will provide market standard documentation for the transfer of Aabar's Rights for your review. |
Closing |
The Proposed Transaction shall complete as soon as practicable upon agreement of final documentation. |
Exclusivity | Upon your agreement that you are willing to proceed with the Proposed Transaction each party agrees that it will not pursue or seek to pursue any alternative transaction with respect to Aabar's Rights for 15 days from the date of this letter. During the Exclusivity period all litigation between the parties and any of them is to be stayed. |
Expenses |
Each party shall bear its own costs. |
3. Conditions
This Agreement is subject to:
(i) agreement of final form documentation to be governed by Loan Market Association ("LMA") terms and conditions; | |
(ii) completion of limited legal due diligence the results of which are satisfactory to the Purchaser; |
4. Funding
We enclose confirmation of the funding position from our financiers. We would be happy to provide any further information at your request. Our financiers are available to meet, if required, at short notice.
We hope that the proposed terms are acceptable to you and are available at your convenience for a meeting to further discuss the Proposed Transaction.
We look forward to hearing from you."
THE 9 MAY FUNDING LETTER
The 9 May Funding Letter provided that:
"We refer to the attached letter sent by Global Asset Capital Inc. ("GAC"), Madison International Realty ("Madison"), and Mr. Glenn Maud ("GM") to Aabar Block S.à r.l. (together with any relevant affiliates, "Aabar") relating to a proposed purchase (the "Acquisition") of all of Aabar's rights and claims in relation to (i) Marme Inversiones 2007, S.L. and its holding companies (together, the "Marme Group"), and (ii) Edgeworth Capital (Luxembourg) S.à r.l. and Edgeworth Capital Limited.
Madison is currently investing on behalf of its fifth fully discretionary private equity vehicle, Madison International Real Estate Liquidity Fund V, LP, which has $825 million of aggregate commitments. Madison was founded in 2002 and manages approximately $1.8 billion of equity.
As you have requested, we are writing to confirm the intention of Madison, on behalf of certain funds managed by its affiliates, to provide the funding needed to complete the Acquisition. This funding is subject to the satisfactory completion of Madison's due diligence and to other customary conditions precedent, including the completion of all documentation to the satisfaction of Madison.
It should be understood that this letter does not, and is not intended to, create (under the laws of any jurisdiction) any contractual relationship or other obligation of any kind between any of Madison, GAC, GM and Aabar.
This letter is to be treated as strictly confidential and is delivered to you with the understanding that neither it nor its contents may be disclosed, directly or indirectly, to any other person other than:
(a) to your directors, officers, employees, agents and advisors, who are directly involved in the consideration of the Acquisition and who are made aware of these confidentiality obligations;
(b) upon the order or request of any court or administrative agency or as otherwise required by law or regulation; or
(c) with our prior written consent
This letter and any non-contractual obligations arising out of or in connection with it shall be governed by and construed in accordance with English law."