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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 >> Agbaje v Robert Frew Medical Company Ltd [2023] EWCA Civ 702 (23 June 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2023/702.html Cite as: [2023] EWCA Civ 702 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE,
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES, BUSINESS LIST (ChD)
Insolvency and Companies Court Judge Jones sitting as a Judge of the High Court
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE ARNOLD
and
SIR LAUNCELOT HENDERSON
____________________
OLUREMI AKIM AGBAJE |
Claimant/ Respondent |
|
- and - |
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THE ROBERT FREW MEDICAL COMPANY LIMITED |
Defendant/ Appellant |
____________________
Amardeep Dhillon (instructed by Ardens) for the Respondent
Hearing date : 14 June 2023
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Arnold:
Introduction
The relevant provisions of the Agreement
"10.1 The following events shall be deemed to constitute the service of a Transfer Notice in respect of all the shares held by the shareholder suffering or instigating the event in question:
10.1.1 a Shareholder ceasing to be a partner in the general medical practice carried on by the Shareholders and whose principal place of business is at the Company registered office.
…"
"11.1 A Transfer Notice shall:
11.1.l offer all the shares registered in the name of the Shareholder who wishes to transfer such Shares ('the Vendor') for transfer; and
11.1.2 constitute the Company the agent of the Vendor for the sale of the shares specified therein (the 'Sale Shares') at the Transfer Date.
11.2 Where any Transfer Notice is deemed to have been given in accordance with this Agreement, the deemed Transfer Notice shall be treated as having contained each of the matters required under clause 11.1
…
11.4 The following procedure shall apply on the receipt or deemed receipt by the Company of a Transfer Notice:
11.4.1 The Company shall within 28 days of the receipt of a Transfer Notice determine the Transfer Price and give notice in writing to the persons in the order referred to in clause 11.4.2 informing them that the Sale Shares are available and of the Transfer Price and shall invite such persons to state in writing within twenty eight days from the date of the said Transfer Notice (which date shall be specified therein) whether he is willing to purchase any and, if so, how many of the Sale Shares.
11.4.2 The Sale Shares shall be offered in the following order and pro rata to their existing shareholdings (where applicable)
11.4.2.1 As [sic] the other of the Shareholders direct either to themselves or to a third party; and then to
11.4.2.2 the Company; and then to [sic]
11.4.3 After the expiry of the offers to be made pursuant to clause 11.4.2 above or sooner if all the Sale Shares offered shall have been accepted, the Board shall within seven days thereafter allocate the Sale Shares in accordance with the applications and the Company shall forthwith give notice of each such allocation (an 'Allocation Notice') to the Vendor and each of the persons to whom Sale Shares have been allocated (a 'Member Applicant') and shall specify in the Allocation Notice the place and time (being not later than fourteen days after the date of the Allocation Notice) at which the sale of the Sale Shares shall be completed.
11.4.4 Upon such allocations being made as aforesaid, the Vendor shall be bound, on payment of the Transfer Price, to transfer the Sale Shares comprised in the Allocation Notice to the Member Applicants named therein at the time and place therein specified. If he makes default in so doing the chairman for the time being of the Company or failing him one of the Directors or some other person duly nominated by a resolution of the Board for that purpose, shall forthwith be deemed to be the duly appointed attorney of the Vendor with full power to execute complete and deliver in the name and on behalf of the Vendor a transfer of the relevant Sale Shares to the Member Applicant and the Chairman or the relevant Director may receive and give a good discharge for the purchase money on behalf of the Vendor and subject to the transfer being duly stamped and where applicable enter the name of the Member Applicant in the register of members as the holder or holders by transfer of the shares so purchased by him or them. The Board shall forthwith pay the purchase money into a separate bank account in the Company's name and shall hold such money on trust (but without interest) for the Vendor until he shall deliver up his certificate or certificates for the relevant shares to the Company when he shall thereupon be paid the purchase money.
…"
"such price as shall be agreed between the Vendor (as defined in Clause 11) and the other of the Shareholders; or in the event that no agreement can be reached then such price as shall be determined by the Auditors of the Company from time to time who shall act as experts and not as arbitrators and which the Auditors shall certify to be in their opinion the fair market value of such Shares as between a willing buyer and a willing seller taking into account any restrictions on such sale or the size of the holding being sold and contracting on arm's length terms having regard to the fair value of the Business as a going concern as at the date of the Transfer Notice referred to in clause 11 but subject to a 10% discount".
"Unless otherwise agreed unanimously between the Shareholders in writing:
…
4.3 The Auditors of the Company shall be Kingston Smith or such other firm of chartered accountants as the Shareholders shall determine from time to time
…"
Section 35A(1) of the Senior Courts Act 1981
"Subject to rules of court, in proceedings (whenever instituted) before the High Court for the recovery of a debt or damages there may be included in any sum for which judgment is given simple interest, at such rate as the court thinks fit or as rules of court may provide, on all or any part of the debt or damages in respect of which judgment is given, or payment is made before judgment, for all or any part of the period between the date when the cause of action arose and -
(a) in the case of any sum paid before judgment, the date of the payment; and
(b) in the case of the sum for which judgment is given, the date of the judgment."
The valuation dispute
"We are also instructed to inform you that our client will also now proceed to dispose of your shares in [RFMCL] pursuant to clause 11 of [the Agreement].
The Directors of the Company have determined the value of each share is £20. We understand that you have 1600 shares. The proceeds of the sale which we estimate will amount to £32,000 shall be kept in a dedicated bank account until such time as you can produce your share certificate."
"The current directors of the company are happy to pay this amount to you if you accept the share valuation to be valid. Please let me know if you would like them to proceed."
"We have said all along that the proceeds of the sale of the shares of your client amounting to £24,000 will be paid to him on production of his share certificate, and the return of the cheque sent to him in 2011. We refer to the email to your client by Andrew Burwood …"
"You say that you have said all along that £24,000 would be paid to Dr Agbaje. The point is, that so-called 'valuation' by Bruce Sutherland is no such thing, as we have been saying all along. It is an Informal Note, which actually contains two possible approaches to a share valuation, neither of which is accepted by Dr Agbaje. That is why we are where we are."
"We are once again instructed to send you a cheque for £24,000 being the payment for your client's shares transferred. The cheque is enclosed with this letter. We request that you ask your client to cash the cheque immediately and this is not dependent on whether or not he accepts the transfer value of the shares.
… if the court determines that the shares are worth more than £15, he will be entitled to recover the difference."
"Your client … to accept the value of the share at £15/ per share … and in response, our clients … will not seek to enforce the 10% discount as provided for in the definition of transfer price in the Shareholders' Agreement.
This offer is open for acceptance within 21 days of receipt of this letter and for the avoidance of doubt, if the offer is accepted within this period, the Claimant will be liable for the Defendants' costs of the proceedings to date which will be capped at 50%."
"The First Defendant will pay your client £30,000 in full and final settlement of his claim for the proceeds of his 1600 shares in the first Defendant. This offer is made on condition that it is open for acceptance within 14 days of the date of this letter and in any event by 4pm on 12 November 2021.
If accepted by this date, the First Defendant will not seek its costs of and occasioned by the share claim from your client. In effect, both parties will bear their costs of the share claim. After this date, the offer will no longer be open for acceptance and is automatically withdrawn.
We would add that the global offer of £30,000 represents a share value of £18.75 per share which we are confident that your client will not achieve at any valuation or at trial. Furthermore, it should be evident to your client now that he would not be able to recover any interest in the shares having failed to cash all the cheques sent to him to date."
The trial
The Valuation Judgment
"In effect, therefore, the parties agreed a variation of the 2006 Shareholders' Agreement for the purposes of this valuation and sale. It is to be implied that the parties wish the Court to determine the value based upon the expert opinion directed rather than for this expert to provide a certificate of value. That is agreed."
"I accept the expert evidence of Ms Hart and her valuation of the Shares at £21,188 as at 18 April 2009."
The Interest Judgment
"As explained in the judgment handed down, this case proceeded before me on the basis, as accepted by the Defendant, that the Claimant was entitled to be paid for the shares which he was required to sell under the terms of a shareholders' agreement made in 2006. It is accepted that the terms of the shareholders' agreement were not complied with: not only was the Claimant not paid for the shares but they were converted by the Defendant by the removal of his name from the share register and by their transfer to others. As a result the circumstances of the breach of the agreement concerning the requisite valuation and payment and of the conversion were not the subject of investigation at trial."
"The claim was issued on 30 October 2019 with accompanying Particulars of Claim pleading (amongst other claims) conversion of the shares. It was subsequently amended but no-one has suggested anything turns upon that. There was no or no sufficient argument before me analysing whether this is a claim in debt or damages for the purposes of section 35A of the Senior Courts Act 1981. That was because from the parties' perspective there did not need to be. This is not a case where payment is dependent upon a transfer of the shares still retained by the vendor. This is a case where the Defendant has accepted that the price has to be paid without the need for share transfers because of the conversion of the shares by the Defendant treating the Claimant's obligation of transfer under the shareholders' agreement as fulfilled."
"… As already stated, this is not a case of the purchase price being delayed because the Claimant has not signed a share certificate. It is clear the Court has a discretion to award interest under section 35A of the Senior Courts Act 1981 in those circumstances of non-payment of a contractual liability and of conversion of the shares and when the claim proceeded at trial in the manner of accepted fact as previously summarised."
"8. … Mr Ojo's … submission [is] that there was a valuation. He accepts it was not a valuation in compliance with the terms of the shareholders' agreement because it was by the company's accountant rather than by an auditor. However, he submits that because there was no auditor, the accountant's valuation should be treated as a valuation in accordance with the shareholders' agreement. The valuation can be identified, he submits, within a letter of 24 September 2010, which refers to a sum of £32,000. Mr Ojo also refers to the fact that it was notified to the Claimant within the letter that this sum was available for the payment and would be paid into a bank account to be held there until he accepted it.
9. Mr Ojo relies upon this letter to support the submission that there should not be interest in circumstances where the shareholders' agreement expressly provides that the sum due for the shares to be transferred, equal to the valuation conducted in accordance with the shareholders' agreement, should be paid into a bank account and held without interest."
The Costs Judgment
i) RFMCL should pay Dr Agbaje's costs up to 1 March 2022, and Dr Agbaje should pay RFMCL's costs thereafter.
ii) RFMCL should pay Dr Agbaje's costs of one half-day of the trial and 50% of Dr Agbaje's costs of the hearing on 12 August 2022.
"The Claimant was the successful party to the extent that he obtained an order for payment of sums due for the transfer of his shares resulting from his deemed transfer notice of 18th April 2009. Although the dispute in statements of case and evidence addressed matters of compliance with the requirements of the shareholders' agreement, the fundamental factual position was that the Defendant unilaterally transferred the Claimant's shares and removed him as a member without his consent. Having done that, the obvious question, and indeed that is how the matter came to trial, was, 'How much should we pay for those shares?'."
"… a critical matter which I also consider to be relevant in the exercise of my discretion and which must be borne in mind, namely that there was a unilateral conversion of the shares. This was certainly unacceptable conduct. I have taken this into consideration in the decisions already made but it is also a matter to be weighed in the balance (as a further and alternative ground) when deciding that this letter should not affect the orders for costs."
"14. … that offer was made on the bases that there would be no order as to costs and that the offer had to be accepted within the next 14 days. At that stage, there was no cause for reaching any other conclusion than that the Claimant should be entitled to their costs. The stage of the expert report being produced and its consequences being considered had not been reached.
15. In those circumstances, I consider those terms of the offer to be important features in the exercise of my discretion when deciding that the refusal of that offer was a reasonable one. Further or alternatively the problems of unilateral conversion of the shares and/or of the Claimant not being in a position to value the shares himself would also shift the balance in favour of the Claimant and lead to the same conclusion in respect of that letter."
The interest appeal
"… it is to be observed that the words used are 'any debt,' indicating that the net is being spread as widely as possible. Those words are, as it seems to me, apt to cover sums, whether liquidated or unliquidated, which a person is obliged to pay either under a contract, express or implied, or under a statute."
"In my opinion the words 'any debt or damages,' in the context in which they occur, are very wide, so that they cover any sum of money which is recoverable by one party from another, either at common law or in equity or under a statute of the kind here concerned."
The other members of the House of Lords agreed with Lord Brandon.
"The court has jurisdiction to award simple interest under section 35A of the Supreme Court Act 1981, because 'debt or damages' in section 35A includes any sum of money recoverable by one party from another: see BP Exploration Co (Libya) Ltd v Hunt (No 2) [1983] 2 AC 352."
"16. Odyssey's claim for a declaration that it is entitled to be paid the Deposit held by the Escrow Agent is not a claim in respect of which the Court has the statutory power to award interest. This is because Odyssey's claim is not a claim for the recovery of debt or damages from GFG. I reach this decision, even though the direct effect of the making of the declaration claimed by Odyssey is its recovery of a money sum from the Escrow Agent and even though GFG could have facilitated the release of the Deposit before the determination of this dispute.
17. Section 35A of the 1981 Act empowers the Court to award simple interest 'in proceedings …for the recovery of a debt or damages', such interest to be included 'in any sum for which judgment is given … on all or any part of the debt or damages in respect of which judgment is given'. This provision contemplates that the relief which the claimant seeks is the recovery of a debt or damages from the defendant. It is possible that section 35A could be read as encompassing any claim whose ultimate purpose is the recovery of money from a third party, but in that event it is difficult to understand why section 35A would be expressed to be applicable to proceedings for the recovery of 'debt or damages', which contemplates that the defendant is liable to the claimant in debt or for damages and that such liability is to be the subject matter of a claim in the relevant proceedings. This interpretation is reinforced by sub-sections (3) and (7) of section 35A, which refer to the defendant's liability to the claimant in respect of debt or damages."
The costs appeal
Sir Launcelot Henderson:
Lord Justice Singh: