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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Lictor Anstalt (A Company) v MIR Steel UK Ltd & Ors [2011] EWHC 3310 (Ch) (13 December 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2011/3310.html Cite as: [2012] Bus LR D84, [2011] EWHC 3310 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Royal Courts of Justice Fetter Lane, London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
LICTOR ANSTALT (a company registered in Liechtenstein) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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MIR STEEL UK LIMITED |
Proposed Part 20 Claimant/First Defendant |
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LIBALA LIMITED (a company registered in Cyprus) |
Second Defendant |
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-and- |
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(1) CHRISTOPHER MORRIS (2) MARK FRY (3) DAVID HUDSON |
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-and- |
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(4) ALPHASTEEL LIMITED (in liquidation) |
Proposed Part 20 Defendants |
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Mr Alan Boyle QC & Mr Thomas Braithwaite (instructed by Fox Williams LLP, 10 Dominion Street, London EC2M 2EE)
for the Claimant
Mr Paul Downes QC & Mr Stewart Chirnside (instructed by Clyde & Co LLP, 51 Eastcheap, London EC3M 1JP)
for the 1st Defendant
Mr Lloyd Tamlyn (instructed by Withers LLP, 16 Old Bailey, London EC4M 7EG)
for the proposed Part 20 Defendants
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice David Richards:
Introduction
Facts
"We or a nominee ("Buyer") will acquire the entire business and assets of Alphasteel, including those assets referred to in paragraph 1 of Appendix 1 (the "Assets"), but excluding finished stock and book debts, either directly or by way of the purchase of wholly owned subsidiary of Alphasteel ("SPV") to which Alphasteel's entire business and assets (other than semi-finished and finished stock and book debts) would be hived down, the choice of acquisition structure being at our election after reasonable consultation with you. Any presale hive down will be structured so as to minimise stamp duty that may be payable on the sale of shares in SPV to the Buyer."
"Subject to the release of Security Interests referred to above, we will acquire only such rights and title to assets as Alphasteel actually has. We acknowledge the existence of: a title dispute relating to claim by Lictor Anstalt to ownership of Alphasteel's hot strip mill and that the definitive agreements between us will provide that we shall be responsible for settling any claims made against us, the SPV or the assets following completion in relation thereto."
"Subject to the provisions of this agreement, the Vendor shall sell and the Purchaser shall purchase, with effect from the Transfer Date, the business by way of the purchase by the Purchaser of such right, title and interest as the Vendor may have in the following assets free of any claims by the Charge Holder under the Charge Holder's security."
"Such right, title and interest as the Vendor may have, and the risk, in all the Assets shall pass and the Vendor shall be deemed to have delivered the assets into the possession of the Purchaser on the Transfer Date."
"9.1 If any of the Assets are or shall be found to be subject to a lien, hire purchase, hire, loan, leasing or rental agreement or other encumbrance, the Purchaser shall take subject to it.
9.3 The Purchaser acknowledges that it has had the opportunity to inspect the records of the Vendor to satisfy itself as to the position regarding matters referred to in clause 9.1.
9.4 The Vendor and the Administrators warrant that they have not wilfully withheld any materials in their possession nor wilfully failed to supply any details held by them in relation to the interests of Lictor Anstalt in the hot strip mill situated at the Property.
9.5 The purchaser agrees that it shall be responsible for settling any claim made against it by Lictor Anstalt in respect of the hot strip mill situated at the property."
"16. Administrators
16.1 Except as expressly agreed including without limitation as agreed in clauses 9.2, 9.4, 11.2, 15, 22.1 and paragraph 11 of schedule 3, the Administrators shall incur no personal liability in any form. In particular, the Administrators shall incur no personal liability whatsoever under this Agreement or under any deed, instrument or document entered into under or in connection with it.
16.2 This exclusion of the Administrators' personal liability shall be in addition to and not in substitution for any right of indemnity or relief or remedy otherwise available to the Administrators and shall continue notwithstanding completion of this Agreement (in whole or in part).
16.3 The Administrators are parties to this Agreement in their personal capacities only for the purpose of receiving the benefit of the exclusions, limitations, undertakings, covenants and indemnities in their favour contained in this Agreement and for the limited purposes of providing specified undertakings and warranties."
"The Purchaser acknowledges that it has entered into this Agreement without reliance on any warranties or representations made by the Vendor or the Administrators or by any of their employees, advisers or agents save as set out in this Agreement."
Clause 17.5 contained a limitation on the making of claims against Alphasteel or the administrators under the agreement so that any such claim had to be made in writing and served on the administrators within twelve months after the date of completion.
The claims in the action
The applications
"11. The first of these arguments raises a short point of construction which on the face of it the court could conveniently decide on an application of this kind. Indeed the judge invited the parties to agree that he should decide it as a preliminary issue, but they were unwilling for him to take that course. Counsel for TTE apparently was unable to obtain instructions to enable him to agree to it and counsel for C&P was reluctant to do so because of the potential relevance, so it was said, of extrinsic evidence not then before the court. The judge therefore proceeded on the footing that it was necessary for him to decide only whether C&P had a real prospect of succeeding in its claim notwithstanding the terms of the agreement of 10 June 2002.
….
14. Sometimes it is possible to show by evidence that although material in the form of documents or oral evidence that would put the documents in another light is not currently before the court, such material is likely to exist and can be expected to be available at trial. In such a case it would be wrong to give summary judgment because there would be a real, as opposed to a fanciful, prospect of success. However, it is not enough simply to argue that the case should be allowed to go to trial because something may turn up which would have a bearing on the question of construction."
Inducing breach of contract
"40. In the premises:
40.1. Libala knowingly and intentionally induced and caused Alphasteel to commit a breach of the April Agreement:
(a) by encouraging Alphasteel and the administrators to sell the Equipment and/or Site to Mir;
(b) by negotiating and concluding the terms for such sale and implementing the terms as pleaded above;
(c) by consciously deciding not to treat with Lictor prior to such sale as to terms upon which Lictor would consensually give up its rights under the April agreement.
40.2 Mir also knowingly and intentionally induced Alphasteel to breach the April Agreement:
(a) by entering into the HDA with Alphasteel and subsequently accepting the transfer of the Site and equipment by the Transfer from Alphasteel;
(b) by consciously deciding not to treat with Lictor as to terms upon which Lictor would consensually give up its rights under the April Agreement."
"191. I turn next to the mental ingredient of the Lumley v Gye tort. The mental ingredient is an intention by the defendant to procure or persuade ("induce") the third party to break his contract with the claimant. The defendant is made responsible for the third party's breach because of his intentional causative participation in that breach. Causative participation is not enough. A stranger to a contract may know nothing of the contract. Quite unknowingly and unintentionally he may procure a breach of the contract by offering an inconsistent deal to a contracting party which persuades the latter to default on his contractual obligations. The stranger is not liable in such a case. Nor is he liable if he acts carelessly. He owes no duty of care to the victim of the breach of contract. Negligent interference is not actionable.
192. The additional, necessary factor is the defendant's intent. He is liable if he intended to persuade the contracting party to breach the contract. Intentional interference presupposes knowledge of the contract. With that knowledge the defendant proceeded to induce the other contracting party to act in a way the defendant knew was a breach of that party's obligations under the contract. If the defendant deliberately turned a blind eye and proceeded regardless he may be treated as having intended the consequence he brought about. A desire to injure the claimant is not an essential ingredient of this tort.
193. For completeness I mention, but without elaboration, that a defence of justification may be available to a defendant in inducement tort cases. A defendant may, for instance, interfere with another's contract in order to protect an equal or superior right of his own, as in Edwin Hill & Partners v First National Finance Corpn plc [1989] 1 WLR 225."
"… to be liable for inducing breach of contract, you must know that you are inducing a breach of contract. It is not enough that you know that you are procuring an act which, as a matter of law or construction of the contract, is a breach. You must actually realise that it will have this effect."
"42. The next question is what counts as an intention to procure a breach of contract. It is necessary for this purpose to distinguish between ends, means and consequences. If someone knowingly causes a breach of contract, it does not normally matter that it is the means by which he intends to achieve some further end or even that he would rather have been able to achieve that end without causing a breach. Mr Gye would very likely have preferred to be able to obtain Miss Wagner's services without her having to break her contract. But that did not matter. Again, people seldom knowingly cause loss by unlawful means out of simple disinterested malice. It is usually to achieve the further end of securing an economic advantage to themselves. As I said earlier, the Dunlop employees who took off the tyres in GWK Ltd v Dunlop Rubber Co Ltd 42 TLR 376 intended to advance the interests of the Dunlop company.
43. On the other hand, if the breach of contract is neither an end in itself nor a means to an end, but merely a foreseeable consequence, then in my opinion it cannot for this purpose be said to have been intended. That, I think, is what judges and writers mean when they say that the claimant must have been "targeted" or "aimed at". In my opinion the majority of the Court of Appeal was wrong to have allowed the action in Millar v Bassey [1994] EMLR 44 to proceed. Miss Bassey had broken her contract to perform for the recording company and it was a foreseeable consequence that the recording company would have to break its contracts with the accompanying musicians, but those breaches of contract were neither an end desired by Miss Bassey nor a means of achieving that end."
"The breach of contract complained of must be brought about by some act of a third party (whether alone or in concert with the contract breaker), [which is in itself unlawful,] but that act need not necessarily take the form of persuasion or procurement or inducement of the contract breaker, in the sense above indicated.
Direct persuasion or procurement or inducement applied by the third party to the contract breaker, with knowledge of the contract and the intention of bringing about its breach, is clearly to be regarded as a wrongful act in itself, and where this is shown a case of actionable interference in its primary form is made out: Lumley v. Gye.
But the contract breaker may himself be a willing party to the breach, without any persuasion by the third party, and there seems to be no doubt that if a third party, with knowledge of a contract between the contract breaker and another, has dealings with the contract breaker which the third party knows to be inconsistent with the contract, he has committed an actionable interference: see, for example British Industrial Plastics Ltd. v. Ferguson, where the necessary knowledge was held not to have been brought home to the third party; and British Motor Trade Association v. Salvadori. The inconsistent dealing between the third party and the contract breaker may, indeed, be commenced without knowledge by the third party of the contract thus broken; but, if it is continued after the third party has notice of the contract, an actionable interference has been committed by him: see, for example, De Francesco v. Barnum."
There is considerable discussion in OBG Ltd v. Allan of the judgment of Jenkins LJ in this case and by no means all of it remains good law. However, there is, as I read the speeches in OBG v. Allan, nothing which casts doubt on the correctness of the passage which I have cited.
"This case necessitates a close investigation of the law relating to procurement of breaches of contract. I can start from a classic citation extracted from Lord Macnaghten's speech in Quinn v. Leathem: "Speaking for myself, I have no hesitation in saying that I think the decision – that is the decision in Lumley v. Gye was right, not on the ground of malicious intention – that was not, I think, the gist of the action – but on the ground that a violation of legal right committed knowingly is a cause of action, and that it is a violation of legal right to interfere with contractual relations recognised by law if there be no sufficient justification for the interference".
I have already said enough about the defendants and their activities to show that if they interfere knowingly with contractual relations they have no justification for doing so, but Mr Shelley contends that it is no tort merely to make a price with a man who is offering a car for sale in breach of covenant because a willing seller needs no inducement. The importance of the point is obvious, because if it is well founded the question whether a tort has been committed will depend on whether the buyer or the seller speaks the first word, and as the buyer and the seller may both be hostile to the plaintiffs for obvious reasons, the plaintiffs are likely to be met with unchallengeable evidence that the seller took the initiative.
It is true that the tort is often spoken of as inducing or procuring breach of contract, but I shall adhere to Lord Macnaghten's word "interfere," and I shall endeavour to interpret that word in the knowledge that Lord Macnaghten in using it had Lumley v. Gye in his mind."
He said at page 565:
"I cannot doubt that Lord Macnaghten, in using the word "interference" had such cases in mind. Indeed, it is possible that in choosing that word for his statement of general principle he intended to make some reduction in their ambit, for those cases seem to treat something akin to mere passivity as a tort and to require active dissociation from the breach of contract, and they are still of unimpaired authority in the circumstances to which they apply and have since been followed by Joyce J. in Wilkins Ltd. v. Weaver. But, Lord Macnaghten preferred the word "interference" for his statement of the doctrine, and this seems to me to predicate active association of some kind with the breach. But, in my judgment, any active step taken by a defendant having knowledge of the covenant by which he facilitates a breach of that covenant is enough. If this be so, a defendant by agreeing to buy, paying for and taking delivery of a motor-car known by him to be on offer in breach of covenant, takes active steps by which he facilitates a breach of covenant and it is not seriously contended that in any of the cases with which I am concerned the defendant did not know of the existence of the covenant or thought that the covenantor had obtained a release."
"First of all it was said that the sons, by accepting their father's bounty amounting to something over £7,000, did procure him to break his covenant-that is assuming, of course, that the finding of the money by the father was a breach of covenant. Assuming that, it was said that that was a procuring of a breach of contract. In my opinion, that argument is completely misconceived. The tort of procuring a breach of contract requires something much more than that. Mere acceptance of a proffered bounty given in breach of covenant cannot, it seems to me, be said to be in any sense a procuring of a breach of contract."
"Moreover, I think it would be undesirable if the law were to insist that a mortgagee in such a position should exercise his strict legal rights if he to be justified in interference with contracts between the mortgagor and third parties; and could not be justified if he reached some sensible and reasonable accommodation which may be to the benefit of both himself and the mortgagor, but which has the same effect on the third parties' contract."
Conspiracy
"Further or alternatively, in the premises:
41.1. Alphasteel, Mir and Libala agreed to proceed with the sale of the equipment and Site in accordance with the terms of the HDA, SSA and Transfer knowing and intending thereby to defeat Lictor's rights under the April Agreement and knowing and intending that Alphasteel would thereby commit a breach of the April Agreement;
41.2. Alphasteel, Mir and Libala conspired together in order to cause injury to Lictor (namely the loss of its rights under the April Agreement) by the use of unlawful means (namely the breach of the April Agreement by Alphasteel).
41.3. The sale of the Equipment pursuant to the HDA and Transfer was a deliberate act which caused loss to Lictor, and which was carried out by Alphasteel, Mir and Libala with the intention of causing such loss."
Application under CPR Part 20
"The Vendor and the Administrators warrant that they have not wilfully withheld any materials in their possession nor wilfully failed to supply any details held by them in relation to the interests of Lictor Anstalt in the hot strip mill situated at the Property."