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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 >> Dodson & Anor v Shield & Ors [2022] EWHC 1751 (Ch) (11 July 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2022/1751.html Cite as: [2022] EWHC 1751 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS IN BIRMINGHAM
COMPANIES AND INSOLVENCY LIST
IN THE MATTER OF INTERNATIONAL AUTOMOTIVE ENGINEERING
PROJECTS LIMITED
AND IN THE MATTER OF THE COMPANIES ACT 2006
33 Bull St, Birmingham B4 6DS |
||
B e f o r e :
(sitting as a High Court Judge)
BETWEEN:
____________________
(1) KEVIN GEOFFREY DODSON | ||
(2) MURRY DODSON | Petitioners | |
and | ||
(1) CHRISTOPHER RICHARD SHIELD | ||
(2) CHARLES CATTANEO | ||
(3) DAVID KEITH COTTERILL | ||
(4) ALAN DAVID COTTERILL | ||
(5) NEIL JOHN COLLINS | ||
(6) NICHOLAS HARMAN COULBORN | ||
(7) JOHN WILLIAM ROCK | ||
(8) INTERNATIONAL AUTOMOTIVE ENGINEERING PROJECTS LIMITED | Respondents |
____________________
Stephen Reed and Lois Norris (instructed by Shakespeare Martineau) for the First to Seventh Respondents
The Eighth Respondent did not appear and was not represented.
Hearing dates: 9th to 13th, 16th, 17th and 24th May 2022
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Recorder Adrian Jack sitting as a Judge of the High Court
The shareholders and their shareholdings
The shareholders and their shareholdings in IAEP were and have been since 2nd October 2012 as follows:
A Shareholders
David Keith Cotterill, 3rd Respondent ("Mr Cotterill") 200
Alan David Cotterill, 4th Respondent ("Alan Cotterill") 200
Neil John Collins, 5th Respondent ("Mr Collins") 200
B Shareholders
Kevin Geoffrey Dodson, 1st Petitioner ("Mr Dodson") 300
Murry Dodson, 2nd Petitioner ("Murry Dodson") 150
John William Rock, 7th Respondent ("Mr Rock") 150
C Shareholders
Nicholas Harman Coulborn, 6th Respondent ("Mr Coulborn") 300
D Shareholders
Christopher Richard Shield, 1st Respondent ("Mr Shield") 500
Charles Cattaneo, 2nd Respondent ("Mr Cattaneo") 106
The start of the project
"I am a qualified mechanical engineer with experience in toolmaking and machine building for the automotive industry. During the period 1969 to 1993 my concentration was on design and manufacture of tooling and special purpose machines for both white goods and automotive industries. Since 1993 my concentration has been with large automotive projects in China and worldwide carrying out project management tasks at director level covering both commercial and technical requirements for complete turnkey operations."
"We are contracted to purchase the Complete Engine Manufacturing Facility for a Euro V engine, which is built at BMW Hams Hall Birmingham UK. The engine is 1.6 and 2.0 [litre] and used in BMW series 1 and series 3 and the mini vehicles. The lines are designed for a capacity of 500,000 UPA [units per annum] and is currently running at a rate that of 440,000 UPA. The complete investment by BMW between 2000 and 2006 was circa £400 million and this facility is being decommissioned early into its manufacturing life and has a further projected manufacturing life of 15/20 years.
We are purchasing in two phases these being;
1) Phase 1 comprising [lines 1 to 3]
2) Phase 2 comprising [lines 4 to 6]
We currently have the Crankshaft Line equipment in our own storage facility and as you will see from the valuation file its worse case value of £4.3m.
Unfortunately our financial partner Blue Square Commercial Ltd has not been able to fund the stage payment due this week due to lack of funds and has agreed for us to pursue further funding. We urgently require £700,000 to pay for the Crankshaft Line, we can offer security for this investment using the Crankshaft Line equipment in our warehouse.
We have major companies interested in purchasing the whole facility, they have signed [non-disclosure agreements] and are currently undertaking Due Diligence. The total project value is circa £37million. We expect to secure a sale within the next 3 months. The agreement with the original investor was to double his investment therefore for £700,000 investment we would repay £1.4m. The £1.4m would be paid from our customer deposit payment. This of course would be negotiable with any serious investor.
Obviously this matter is extremely urgent and we would be most pleased to meet and discuss at the earliest opportunity to a seriously interested investor."
"I have been running the Shield group of companies, which includes SES, since 2002. I have a background in economics but have also worked in London as an independent financial advisor where I also obtained stockbroking and investment management qualifications before I came back and bought out the Shield family business. Over the 10 year period up to when the activities with IAEP began in 2012, I had gathered a significant degree of experience in production engineering and the manufacturing sector as well as delivering small scale industrial projects involved in transferring equipment from competitors and supporting customers with engineering programs and so on."
"Q. [W]hat Mr Dodson and Mr Cotterill wanted at that stage was: not that somebody comes in and takes equity, not somebody who — what they wanted was a straightforward funding agreement whereby the security to be given to the funder would be the assets. That is the whole purpose of the valuation?
A. They were proposing that, but my view was that those values were not sustainable on an open market basis.
Q. So, you looked at them carefully?
A. Well, I knew enough about — well, I didn't look — at that time I hadn't seen any of the equipment, but I knew enough about the industry to suggest that they were much higher than I would have...
Q. They were optimistic, were they?
A. Well, if you had to sell them reasonably quickly on the open market, the difference between that and storing them, for cleaning them up and managing them and bringing customers in from all around the world and doing a proper machine tool sale business — that is very different. And I felt they would be very toppy on an open market, short-term sale basis."
The legal documentation
"2. The Business of the Company
2.1 the business of the Company shall be the design, sale and implementation of turnkey automotive engineering projects on an international basis (Business).
2.2 The first project for the Company will involve the acquisition of the Lines and subsequent design, sale and implementation of a turnkey automotive manufacturing facility to customer specification.
2.3 Each party shall use its reasonable endeavours to promote and develop the Business to the best advantage of the Company…
…
5. Directors, management and voting at shareholder level
5.2 Each of the Shareholders shall be a director of the Company.
…
7. Restrictions on the Shareholders and Shield
7.1 Subject to clause 7.2, none of the Shareholders shall (other than with the consent of the Board (such consent not to be unreasonably withheld or delayed)) for so long as they hold any Shares, carry on or be employed or engaged, concerned or interested in any business which is in competition with any part of the Business of the Company (as described in clause 2.1), including any developments in the Business after the date of this agreement.
7.2 The undertakings in clause 7.1 shall not apply:
(a) in the case of any project or opportunity duly offered to the Company which the Board has determined not to pursue or which the Board has not responded within 30 days;
(b) to prohibit either of Kevin Geoffrey Dodson or David Keith Cotterill from maintaining their respective business interests in Key… and DNA… to the nature and extend of the activities carried on by those companies prior to the date of this agreement…
…
17. Whole agreement
17.1 This agreement, and any documents referred to in it or executed contemporaneously with it, constitute the whole agreement between the Parties and supersede all previous arrangements, understandings and agreements between them, whether oral or written, relating to their subject matter.
17.2 Each Party acknowledges that in entering into this agreement, and any documents referred to in it or executed contemporaneously with it, it does not rely on, and shall have no remedy in respect of, any representation or warranty (whether made innocently or negligently) that is not set out in this agreement or those documents.
…
21. No partnership
The Parties to this agreement are not in partnership with each other and there is no relationship of principal and agent between them.
22. Good faith
22.1 All transactions entered into between any Party to this agreement or any of its subsidiaries and the Company shall be conducted in good faith and on the basis set out or referred to in this agreement or, if not provided for in this agreement, as may be agreed by the Parties and, in the absence of any such agreement on an arm's length basis.
22.2 Each Party shall at all times act in good faith towards the other and shall use all reasonable endeavours to ensure that this agreement is observed.
22.3 Each Party shall do all things necessary and desirable to give effect to the spirit and intention of this agreement."
"in the case of any Lines acquired by Shield, a sum equal to
(i) 2 x the aggregate of the actual price paid by Shield for the Line's together with any other costs incurred by Shield in connection with the dismantling, transport and storage of the Lines which have been invoiced to but not paid by IAEP, plus
(ii) an amount equal to the Loan.
Plus any applicable VAT thereon."
"Each of the parties to this agreement hereby undertakes that, in the event that IAEP is unable to purchase all of the Lines owned by [SES], then during the Option Period the parties will enter into good faith negotiations to agree an alternative mechanism or strategy for selling the remaining Lines either to IAEP or some other third party buyer."
"2 The Facility
2.1 The Lender grants to the Borrower a secured Sterling term loan facility on the terms, and subject to the conditions, of this agreement of a total principal amount of up to £1,500,000 of which:
2.1.1 £800,000 shall be available for drawdown from the date of this agreement; and
2.1.2 the remaining £700,000 shall be available for drawdown subject to
(i) the Lender acquiring the Line 3 Assets and
(ii) the Lender (acting reasonably) being satisfied that there is a viable prospect of the Option being exercised and the Company being able to repay the Loan in accordance with the terms hereof.
…
3 Purpose
3.1 The Borrower shall use all money borrowed by it under this agreement for the ongoing working capital requirements and operational costs of the Borrower."
The project commences
"2 ACQUISITION AND TURNKEY SOLUTION
2.1 The Buyer proposes to purchase from the Seller, free from all restrictions and encumbrances (specifically, requiring the Buyer to release the first fixed charge in favour of [SES] for the Consideration:—
(a) the entire plant, machinery and equipment comprised in the manufacturing facility for the BMW NG4 range of engines (2005-2011) ('the Engine Plant') owned or in the process of being acquired by the Seller and located at Hams Hall, Birmingham UK, and the BMW plant in Germany (the 'Current Locations'), including such consumable parts, spare parts and replacement parts as agreed by the parties. To the extent that the Engine Plant or any part thereof is not available for purchase, is incomplete or in need of replacement the Seller shall provide replacement equipment and/or parts to at least the same specification as included in the Engine Plant prior to its
decommissioning/disassembly at the Current Locations;
(b) all drawings, manuals, handbooks, back-up tapes and discs, documents and other information (including all electronic data files and visual recordings) relating to the design, construction, installation and operation of the Engine Plant including production records, maintenance records, technical upgrade records and any other relevant documentation (including 'soft copy' data files) (the 'Technical Information');
(c) all intellectual property rights in and necessary for the installation, operation and complete exploitation of the Engine Plant and the Technical Information required for the production and sale throughout the World by the Buyer of the engines as previously manufactured by BMW at the Engine Plant (the 'IP Rights'); and
(d) full design plan and specification for the construction of the factory facilities required for the installation and operation of the Engine Plant in a location in China to be specified by the Buyer (the 'New Location').
2.2 The Buyer and the Seller will enter into the Turnkey Agreement for the Consideration will procure:—
(a) the disassembly of the Engine Plant at the Current Locations;
(b) the storage and transportation of the Engine Plant to the New Location;
(c) the design, build, assembly and installation of the Engine Plant in the New Location;
(d) testing of the Engine Plant once installed in the New Location to ensure a fully effective operation in manufacturing engines using the Engine Plant to meet any standards that are required of such engines and to the satisfaction of the Buyer; and
(e) a guaranteed level of performance of the Engine Plant to be further detailed in the Turnkey Agreement for twelve months following completion of the installation.
3 CONSIDERATION
The aggregate Consideration for the purchase of the engine Plant, the Technical Information, the IP Rights and the Turnkey Agreement shall be not less than Fifty Five Million Pounds (£55,000,000) based on the indicative costings provided by the Seller but in any event not to exceed Sixty Million Five Hundred Thousand Pounds (£60,500,000) such price to be negotiated between the parties in good faith."
"4.5 The Seller will use reasonable endeavours to obtain an assignable licence or assignment of the NG4 IP Rights from BMW and/or assist the Buyer in negotiations for such an assignment or licence from BMW. In the event that the Seller is able to obtain an assignment or assignable licence of the NG4 IP Rights, the Seller shall licence, assign or sell the NG4 IP Rights to the Buyer at the same price as the Seller acquired the NG4 IP Rights."
"The Exclusivity Fee shall become immediately repayable to the Buyer:
(a) in the event of any breach by the Seller and/or [SES] or any of their Connected Persons of any of the [exclusivity and confidentiality] provisions… hereof during the Exclusivity Period; or
(b) if the Seller is unable to reasonably demonstrate by the date on which the Exclusivity Period expires that it has title to and is able to deliver the equipment comprised in Lines 4, 5 and 6 including the Technical Information (other than any equipment which is to be retained by BMW and for which the Seller will provide a replacement)."
The project starts to founder
"24. It was around June/July 2013 that I had reason to have some concern. I had gone into the Oldbury office and was in the makeshift changing room area collecting some tools. The area that I was in was separated from a small conference room by a glass partition. I didn't go in to eavesdrop but when I was collecting the items I needed, I overheard a conversation between Dave Cotterill, Neil Collins and another gentleman (who shortly afterwards I came to understand was Steve Murphy). I had not seen or met Steve Murphy previously. It was not a pleasant conversation to overhear. I heard Dave Cotterill call my dad a c**t. It was upsetting to hear but I stayed to listen to more of the conversation. Dave was speaking to Steve Murphy — it was a slanderous onslaught towards my dad. The basis of what they were saying was what Steve Murphy's role would be as commercial director (which was my dad's role). Dave went onto explain the details of the Project and the Turnkey in China. All I can recollect from the conversation about my dad was that Dave Cotterill was getting very nasty and heated — he called him various names — it was a character assassination as to why they wanted Steve instead. I didn't have any inclination that there was anything wrong before hearing that conversation. My dad and Dave had been close and when I saw them together, they seemed close, even days before. Dave was really nice to me and so it was a real shock. I didn't hear why they wanted my dad out. I didn't hear anything in terms of getting me out. From the time that I had started at IAEP, everything seemed perfect and everyone got on. When the funding stopped in around May, that's when things started to go wrong but I didn't know why that was."
Q. …[H]ave you had a chance to read Mr Murry Dodson's witness statement?
A. I have.
Q. And do you agree that he overheard a conversation between yourself and Stephen Murphy?
A. Categorically not, complete nonsense.
Q. Well —
A. Complete — complete and utter nonsense and Murry Dodson is not a shrinking violet.
Q. Mr —
A. Let me tell you that, but I know the conversation you are referring to and it is nonsense.
Q. Mr Cotterill —
THE RECORDER: Is that because it didn't happen, the conversation, or because he didn't overhear it?
A. The conversation didn't happen, categorically not.
MR KHANGURE: So, why was wasn't Murry Dodson challenged on that?
A. Challenged?
Q. Yes.
A. By who?
Q. By your counsel.
A. All right. You had better ask my counsel that. I'm not qualified to comment on that. I'm telling you the conversation never happened. Despicable. Complete nonsense."
"i) that IAEP/Shield Engineering had acquired legal title to the whole of the Plant, i.e. all of lines 1-6; and/or
ii) that IAEP/Shield Engineering otherwise had the ability to deal with and dispose of legal title to the whole of the Plant; and/or
iii) that IAEP/Shield Engineering had acquired, or had the ability to transfer, the IPR for the NG4 engine range; and/or
iv) that IAEP/Shield Engineering had reached an agreement with BMW for the acquisition of the IPR and (b) expected to acquire the same by July 2013."
The proposal to exclude Mr Dodson and Key
"In September 2012 we agreed a structure for IAEP and its funding by Shield [i.e. SES]. In that proposal we were talking about €2,550,000 (c£2.1m) for lines 1,2&3 plus a loan facility of up to £1.5m. Giving a total of c£3.6m of funding. IAEP has drawn down circa £1.5m of loan and Shield had funded circa c£4.1m directly. Total Shield funding being c£5.6m (c£2.0m over the original estimate);
We envisaged a project where a purchaser would have been found and a deposit been paid by December 2012. As of 1st November 2013 no successful sale completed. We need to accept there have been errors in strategy along the way and that the project needs a greater focus to achieve a successful result. It is also, however, reasonable to conclude that the primary reason for the failure to sell is largely as a result of the inability to control lines 4-6 (predominately line 6). It is clear the project is taking longer than originally envisaged and will require significantly increased funding to achieve a successful project.
Further to the above the current legal situation with [Infinity Max] is adding cost and absorbing a lot of time to deal with and there is the possibility of further disruption as a result of this situation. There is also some concern about the ability to definitely conclude a successful sale if lines 4-6 cannot be brought within the scope of the project in a reasonable period of time.
All these factors have dramatically increased the risk to [SES] and this has resulted in the requirement to alter the structure and organisation of the project."
He then outlined various cost-saving measures and continued with the following proposal:
"IAEP to be retained and have an option to sell on the asset purchase rights to a new company 'IAEP 2'. For this it would receive a £1m fee only if a profitable sale figure is achieved ie. Shield's doubled up costs and interest is repaid). This way all of the original shareholders will benefit and receive a fair reward for their involvement even if they are not directly involved going forwards.
IAEP 2 to be set up with the following arrangements:
- KEY to be removed from the ongoing costs as it would appear that KEY's specific skills are not required at this time. Accounts & financial admin to be transferred to Cattaneo who will find a cost effective day to day solution for the minimal level of admin that exists. No shareholding for KEY in IAEP 2. [Mr Dodson] to commit to supporting [Infinity Max] legal situation. On this basis the excess invoices charged are not to be repaid. IAEP 2 to cover costs of concluding Longbridge but not the business rates — this is a KEY issue and in light of the lease transfer and shared costs with KEY this is reasonable. In the event KEY introduces the final buyer to the project then agent fees to be agreed prior to any [Heads of Terms] with the buyer.
- Steve Murphy to manage sales at an agreed monthly cost of £6k. Steve also to be Managing Director of IAEP 2 and responsible for controlling the project through to a successful sale including management of subcontract work and costs. In the event that no profit is made after Shield's costs (see above) Shield to pay a fair contribution from its uplift (if applicable).
- Cattaneo to remain involved and if acceptable to remain on its current fee-free arrangements until a successful sale is concluded. In the event that no profit is made after Shield's costs (see above) Shield to pay a fair contribution from its uplift (if applicable).
- DNA team involved moving forwards to complete the Due Diligence and assist Steve Murphy and Shield/Cattaneo in managing the project. Propose agreed hourly rates of £40p/h for [Mr Cotterill], £35 p/h for [Mr Coulborn] and £30p/h for other support staff (manual workers to be paid as current). Hours to be confirmed in advance and only as required to fulfil company requirements. Outstanding invoices to be paid in full up to 1st October.
- Nic Coulborn. To remain involved at the existing £1000 per week level."
Subsequent developments
i) An assignment from the Seller or BMW (as appropriate), free from all encumbrances, of all IP Rights as are required and/or reasonably desirable to manufacture any one variant of the NG4 engine or its equivalent.
ii) Within 28 days of the Seller providing the assignment referred to in paragraph (i) above the Buyer will purchase… Lines 1, 2 and 3 together with the Technical information and any related materials relating to those lines:
iii) The Seller will deliver the three lines referred to above to the New Location;
iv) The Seller will grant an option to the Buyer to acquire those parts of the Complete Engine Plant not included in paragraph (ii) above (generically known as Lines 4, 5 and 6 and Technical Information and any related materials relating to those lines) on the basis of a Turnkey Agreement on similar terms to those set out in Offer One above for a total additional consideration of £9,000,000.
v) The consideration shall include the provision by the Seller of such parts of manufacturing Lines 1, 2 and 3 which are required to be sourced from third parties in order that Lines 1, 2 and 3 are complete and capable of full operation;
vi) The consideration is inclusive of delivery and re-assembly of manufacturing Lines 1, 2 and 3."
"currently estimated by BMW as being end March/Early April 2014. As for confirming timing for acquisition this MAY be April/May 2014 but again at this time it is still to be confirmed and without guarantee."
"you keep us up to speed with progress (or not) in China. Did you have a chance to forward documentation to the customers in particular BAIC?
I think any feedback or likely communication that may be happening in China with IM is important to understand we want to get the pressure back onto Neil [Sampson]."
"Sorry if there has been any confusion but I believe you are aware from our discussion the other day that the longstop date in the IAEP asset option is 1.1.14 (and there were other conditions) that mean the asset sale is now a Shield project, Shield owning all of the assets purchased and being owed c £1.5m by IAEP as well as having committed a significant amount of additional cost outside of IAEP since the summer. Chris [Shield] has made a proposal regarding making a payment into IAEP for the shareholders to benefit from should Shield achieve a successful sale (although this has not been formally agreed by any party) and as such Shield are now running with the sale process and have decided to appoint Steve Murphy to handle that process for them (Steve has already demonstrated considerable knowledge of the likely buyers, the technical requirements for an engine line and has been innovative in his approach to a number of the issues being faced), again apologies if that was not clear the other day when Steve joined the meeting at Shakespeares."
"Unfortunately under the terms of the [SHA] the Shareholders have the right to be appointed as directors of the company, so if we remove Kevin, Murry and John then they can request to be appointed."
"[SES] is pleased with the progress made this morning… As Mr Cattaneo explained…, please can you set out in writing the proposal mentioned by your Mr Sampson, namely that (a) your client now wishes to purse an asset deal with [SES]; and (b) any turnkey delivery of the project will be pursued by your client separately and with a third party and not through our client."
"In our project general discussions with Tim and Chunan we touched on the site survey and Civil design construction works carried out by Chunan's company China SANAN Construction Corporation on behalf of [Infinity Max].
I asked if the works carried out to date would have cost as much as £3.85 million (the amount stated within the [Neil Sampson] item of expenses breakdown).
Tim relayed this to Chunan and it was deemed laughable as Chunan confirmed his company had carried out the works, which were only preliminary, that he had received no payment from [Infinity Max] and had basically funded the works through China Sanan…
All this of course to remain strictly confidential for our internal discussions further down the line. I have not copied Kevin in for obvious reasons."
The end of IAEP's involvement in the project
"IAEP as it is still an entity at this moment in time it's not been wound up yet or whatever then it still has a potential client who wants to do a deal for a Turnkey job. The fact that the deal wasn't concluded with Shield in January shouldn't detract from the fact that we have still got a customer over here who wants to deal with us and would still allow IAEP to purchase the assets from Shield. I don't know of any resolution where we said okay, IAEP was going and telling them please Mr Shield pick up that ball and go and deal with our customer in layman's terms.
"[Th]ere was a business proposition which ultimately failed sadly. There is now a revised situation, Shield is taking control of its assets which obviously it needs to and if it can it will try and do a deal but there clearly is a point well into last year where IAEP wasn't going to be able to conclude that. I think despite all of our best efforts.
…
Let's be clear because I think it's, with due respect it is a little bit easy to say well if there is a deal it should go through IAEP or whatever. We don't know there is going to be a deal. We are not going to do a deal. We don't know if we are going to lose money on it or make money on it. We don't know if we are going to get nailed on the litigation for £5 million or £6 million plus legal fees. There are lots of things but all the liabilities sit here effectively and with due respect they don't largely sit outside of that area because of the reality of the scale of the situation so if someone says well I think it should through IAEP it should go through where it should go through that is the best situation for the project. Now if, if in theory, yes it could be IAEP… I made it quite clear I have no personal issue with anyone but we have got a job to do and so far it's not been very successful. We have got ourselves in a mess and we all take responsibility for that including me but it is very easy to say well I think this when someone hasn't put £6 million or £7 million of their money yet. In a different man's shoes it is a very, very different perspective which is we will do what is right for the project but if that means people and if that means it goes to IAEP or goes to Timbuctoo Limited that is where it will go. At this point in time we are dealing with this. Now the easy thing is Shield may say I don't want to put in £31,000, what is the point. It's £31,000, it buys a lot of stuff. So forget that and let IAEP go its way. It might say and this is the purpose for today's discussion I think largely it might say well I've got the £31,000 in but I want to own the company and be done with all this bollocks. I can't be doing with it. We might say well let's find a way between the various assets and liabilities and all the other stuff that is being around to see if we can even stevens it and then see what happens in the future but there has to be a resolution of one form or another and that is where I am coming from."
After CGI became involved
"• I did not collect documentation relating to any of the lines on behalf of IAEP.
• I used my own connections at BMW to acquire the documentation from BMW.
• I attach correspondence from BMW dated 22.10.13 setting out that Key Technical Solutions Limited was given permission to remove the obsolete documentation from their BMW Plant, Hams Hall associated to the Crankshaft, Cylinder Head and Cylinder Block obsolete machine tools…
• Title to the documentation for all lines rests with Key Technical Solutions Limited.
• Stuckenberger did not buy the documentation from BMW. Stuckenberger bought the lines as scrap from BMW. As a scrap dealer Stuckenberger would not have needed the documentation.
• The documentation was not part of the deal between Stuckenberger and PAGUS. There is no reference to the documentation in the 'Notification of Change of Ownership' dated 25.06.12 and the 'Notification of selling Rights' dated 21.01.13.
• The documentation was not part of the deal between PAGUS and Shield. I refer to the Invoice from PAGUS to Shield dated 24.08.2012 (Crankshaft), 11.09.2012 (Cylinder Head) and 28.02.13 (Cylinder Block)."
"1. You mentioned that the project is progressing with a customer contract likely signed within 3 to 4 months however you were not able to confirm if [IAEP] or another company would be the contracted suppliers and mentioned potentially DNA or CGI as examples, although I assume that proposed contract documentation will have been issued between parties at this stage. Please clarify the position.
2. You mentioned that the deal that is to be done is the same as the Full Turnkey Project, as originally proposed by IAEP Ltd in early 2013. It is to include all manufacturing lines and IPR. If the IPR is to be sold it must already have been purchased and the buyer therefore known to you. Again, please clarify the position.
3. Speaking personally, I stated that I did not object to any company progressing the project, however, I was clear that IAEP was, in my opinion and for the reasons that I have set out previously, the only company able to currently supply the project. For any other company to take over from IAEP the correct commercial and legal processes would need to be implemented. This should be a straightforward process and does not need to be contentious but at the moment this has not been agreed or documented."
The project proceeds between Infinity Max, SES and CGI
The law
"A member of a company may apply to the court by petition for an order under this Part on the ground—
(a) that the company's affairs are being or have been conducted in a manner that is unfairly prejudicial to the interests of members generally or of some part of its members (including at least himself), or
(b) that an actual or proposed act or omission of the company (including an act or omission on its behalf) is or would be so prejudicial."
"In the case of [what is now section 994], the background has the following two features. First, a company is an association of persons for an economic purpose, usually entered into with legal advice and some degree of formality. The terms of the association are contained in the articles of association and sometimes in collateral agreements between the shareholders. Thus the manner in which the affairs of the company may be conducted is closely regulated by rules to which the shareholders have agreed. Secondly, company law has developed seamlessly from the law of partnership, which was treated by equity, like the Roman societas, as a contract of good faith. One of the traditional roles of equity, as a separate jurisdiction, was to restrain the exercise of strict legal rights in certain relationships in which it considered that this would be contrary to good faith. These principles have, with appropriate modification, been carried over into company law.
The first of these two features leads to the conclusion that a member of a company will not ordinarily be entitled to complain of unfairness unless there has been some breach of the terms on which he agreed that the affairs of the company should be conducted. But the second leads to the conclusion that there will be cases in which equitable considerations make it unfair for those conducting the affairs of the company to rely upon their strict legal powers. Thus unfairness may consist in a breach of the rules or in using the rules in a manner which equity would regard as contrary to good faith…
I think that one useful cross-check in a case like this is to ask whether the exercise of the power in question would be contrary to what the parties, by words or conduct, have actually agreed. Would it conflict with the promises which they appear to have exchanged? In Blisset v Daniel (1853) 10 Hare 493 the limits were found in the 'general meaning' of the partnership articles themselves. In a quasi-partnership company, they will usually be found in the understandings between the members at the time they entered into association. But there may be later promises, by words or conduct, which it would be unfair to allow a member to ignore. Nor is it necessary that such promises should be independently enforceable as a matter of contract. A promise may be binding as a matter of justice and equity although for one reason or another (for example, because in favour of a third party) it would not be enforceable in law."
"(vi) [I]t follows that it will not ordinarily be unfair for the affairs of a company to be conducted in accordance with the provisions of its articles or any other relevant and legally enforceable agreement, unless it would be inequitable for those agreements to be enforced in the particular circumstances under consideration. Unfairness may, to use Lord Hoffmann's words, 'consist in a breach of the rules or in using rules in a manner which equity would regard as contrary to good faith'; the conduct need not therefore be unlawful, but it must be inequitable. Although it is impossible to provide an exhaustive definition of the circumstances in which the application of equitable principles would render it unjust for a party to insist on his strict legal rights, those principles are to be applied according to settled and established equitable rules, whether arising independently of the statutory remedy or borrowed from the law of partnership under the remedy in appropriate circumstances labelled 'quasi-partnerships', and not by reference to some indefinite notion of fairness;
(vii) the norm is that relations between shareholders are purely commercial and subject to no equitable restraints, whether borrowed from the law of partnership or not. It is an acutely fact-sensitive exercise to determine whether and if so what equitable constraints will apply in what are labelled quasi-partnerships, the hallmarks of which are: (i) an association formed or continued on the basis of a personal relationship, involving mutual confidence; (ii) an agreement, or understanding, that all, or some (for there may be 'sleeping' members), of the shareholders shall participate in the conduct of the business; (iii) restriction upon the transfer of the members' interest in the company—so that if confidence is lost, or one member is removed from management, he cannot take out his stake and go elsewhere."
"(1) A director of a company must avoid a situation in which he has, or can have, a direct or indirect interest that conflicts, or possibly may conflict, with the interests of the company.
(2) This applies in particular to the exploitation of any property, information or opportunity (and it is immaterial whether the company could take advantage of the property, information or opportunity).
(3) This duty does not apply to a conflict of interest arising in relation to a transaction or arrangement with the company.
(4) This duty is not infringed—
(a) if the situation cannot reasonably be regarded as likely to give rise to a conflict of interest; or
(b) if the matter has been authorised by the directors.
(5) Authorisation may be given by the directors—
(a) where the company is a private company and nothing in the company's constitution invalidates such authorisation, by the matter being proposed to and authorised by the directors; or
(b) where the company is a public company and its constitution includes provision enabling the directors to authorise the matter, by the matter being proposed to and authorised by them in accordance with the constitution.
(6) The authorisation is effective only if—
(a) any requirement as to the quorum at the meeting at which the matter is considered is met without counting the director in question or any other interested director, and
(b) the matter was agreed to without their voting or would have been agreed to if their votes had not been counted.
(7) Any reference in this section to a conflict of interest includes a conflict of interest and duty and a conflict of duties."
The parties' cases
(1) Diverting the project to a third party, CGI;
(2) Procuring that the technical library was transferred to CGI, SES and/or Infinity Max without payment to IAEP; and
(3) Failing to and/or refusing in accordance with clause 7.2 of the option agreement to enter good faith negotiations to sell the lines to IAEP or a third party buyer.
"60. The affairs of the Company were conducted in accordance with the terms upon which the parties agreed to do business together and it is not unfair for the affairs of the Company to be conducted in that way.
60.1 It was well known to all parties prior to the incorporation of the Company that, if funding were to be provided, Shield required complete ownership of any lines acquired, expected a return on the investment and that any funding would be time limited. These requirements were later embodied in the [SHA], the Facility Agreement, the Option Agreement and the Debenture and formed the basis upon which the parties agreed to do business together.
60.2 All parties accepted and agreed that in the event that the Company was unable to exercise the Option, which included paying back the sums loaned pursuant to the Facility Agreement, by 2nd January 2014, the Option would lapse. At that point, [SES], as owner, could deal with those assets as it saw fit and could engage whichever agents or sub-contractors it required to realise the assets and recoup its investment.
60.3 [B]y the end of October 2013:
60.3.1 None of the lines had been sold;
60.3.2 Lines 4, 5 and 6 had not become available as expected;
60.3.3 Ownership of intellectual property rights had not been resolved;
60.3.4 The Company was not negotiating with any potential purchasers other than Infinity Max;
60.3.5 The Company, various directors and Shield had been threatened with a £5.8m claim relating to the transaction with Infinity Max;
60.3.6 The Facility was all but used up;
60.3.7 The Option was to expire in two months, which included the intervening Christmas break; and
60.3.8 There was no further third party funding available or alternative proposal for funding being suggested.
61. The Company was not in a position to exercise the Option at any time before 2nd January 2014 and therefore the Option lapsed, the Facility loan became repayable and the Company no longer had any entitlement to any assets acquired by Shield. No complaint can be made about what happened thereafter.
62. The Company is not a quasi-partnership. But, even if it were, it would be in no way inequitable for the agreements entered into to be enforced."
"64. The Petitioners' claim that the 'Technical Library' for each of the Lines is a separate and distinct asset owned by [IAEP]. That is an untenable position on the evidence, as, inter alia:
64.1 Despite Kevin Dodson asserting that the Project would 'not have been possible' without the Technical Library, there was no consideration as to how this would be obtained before the Company was incorporated, nor did it feature in any proposal, plan or presentation.
64.2 The Heads of Agreement and draft agreements with Infinity Max did not separate the Technical Library as a separate asset. In due diligence, IAEP answered: 'Ownership of the Technical Information has been transferred to Shield as part of the purchase of Lines 1, 2 and 3'.
64.3 There is no admissible evidence as to the value of the Technical Library. In any event, if the Technical Library had a value as a separate asset, it is nonsensical that BMW would simply provide the same to Key for free.
64.4 Kevin Dodson was instructed by David Cotterill to arrange collection of the technical documentation. That physical collection of technical information from Hams Hall does not equate to a transfer of ownership of a separate and distinct asset.
64.5 Kevin Dodson has sought to use the Technical Library to his advantage depending on how it suited him at the time. Initially, Kevin Dodson claimed that he was the owner of the Technical Library and sought to use it as leverage in his favour. Latterly, he has resiled from ownership (seemingly) in order to support his unfair prejudice claim.
65. The Technical Library was not a standalone asset of the Company and there was nothing to transfer or that was transferred from the Company to a third party. Ownership of the Technical Library always formed part of the purchased Lines."
"66. The parties to the Option Agreement are the Company and Shield.
67. By clause 7.2 of the Option Agreement the Company and Shield undertook to enter into good faith negotiations during the Option Period 'to agree an alternative mechanism or strategy for selling the remaining Lines either to IAEP or some other third party buyer' in the event that the Company was unable to purchase all of the lines owned by Shield. Once the Option Period had expired i.e. from 2nd January 2014 there was no obligation to enter into any such negotiations.
68. As set out above, Shield developed a proposal, which was provided to Kevin Dodson, David Cotterill and Charles Cattaneo, and Chris Shield suggested a board meeting to consider the proposal, any other proposals and agree a way forward.
69. The proposal was discussed at a meeting between David Cotterill, Nic Coulborn, Kevin Dodson, John Rock and Murry Dodson on 28th November 2013. No alternative mechanism or strategy for selling the remaining lines either to the Company or some other third party buyer was suggested.
70. By letter dated 4th December 2013 from Kevin Dodson (but said to be on behalf of John Rock and Murry Dodson as well) to Chris Shield and the Company, Kevin Dodson asserted that the Shield proposal was not acceptable to them but proposed, in the alternative, that there be payment of outstanding invoices to Key up to 18th November 2013 and an agreement of a final payment for their shares upon successful completion of the sale of the lines and/or turnkey project. No alternative mechanism or strategy for selling the remaining lines either to the Company or some other third party buyer was suggested.
71. Even now the Petitioners are unable to advance an alternative mechanism or strategy for selling the remaining lines either to the Company or identify what different outcome would have been achieved if further negotiations had taken place.
72, In any event, in light of the above, the Petitioners clearly acquiesced in the conduct now complained of in respect of a breach of clause 7.2 and therefore the Petitioners should be denied any relief in respect of this ground of conduct complained of.
73. Further or in the alternative, any breach of clause 7.2 of the Option Agreement would be a breach of contract claim by the Company, which would be statute barred, pursuant to section 5 of the Limitation Act 1980, from 2nd January 2020 at the latest, being 6 years from the expiry of the Option Period. Whilst there is no limitation period for a section 994 claim, the courts will not allow stale claims. The Company would only have been allowed to bring proceedings against Shield for breach of clause 7.2 if issued prior to 2nd January 2020. Yet the Petition was presented on 2nd September 2020, 9 months after limitation expired for the Company's claim. The Court should, by analogy, deny any relief in respect of this ground of conduct complained of."
Demeanour
"36. …[I]t has increasingly been recognised that it is usually unreliable and often dangerous to draw a conclusion from a witness's demeanour as to the likelihood that the witness is telling the truth. The reasons for this were explained by MacKenna J in words which Lord Devlin later adopted in their entirety ("Discretion" (1973) 9 Irish Jurist (New Series) 1 at p 10) and Lord Bingham quoted with approval:
'I question whether the respect given to our findings of fact based on the demeanour of the witnesses is always deserved. I doubt my own ability, and sometimes that of other judges, to discern from a witness's demeanour, or the tone of his voice, whether he is telling the truth. He speaks hesitantly. Is that the mark of a cautious man, whose statements are for that reason to be respected, or is he taking time to fabricate? Is the emphatic witness putting on an act to deceive me, or is he speaking from the fullness of his heart, knowing that he is right? Is he likely to be more truthful if he looks me straight in the face than if he casts his eyes on the ground perhaps from shyness or a natural timidity? For my part I rely on these considerations as little as I can help.'
37. The reasons for distrusting reliance on demeanour are magnified where the witness is of a different nationality from the judge and is either speaking English as a foreign language or is giving evidence through an interpreter. Scrutton LJ once said that he had 'never yet seen a witness giving evidence through an interpreter as to whom I could decide whether he was telling the truth or not': Compania Naviera Martiartu v Royal Exchange Assurance Corp (1922) 13 Ll L Rep 83 at p 97. In his seminal essay on 'The Judge as Juror' (1985) 38 Current Legal Problems 1, Lord Bingham observed:
'If a Turk shows signs of anger when accused of lying, is that to be interpreted as the bluster of a man caught out in deceit or the reaction of an honest man to an insult? If a Greek, similarly challenged, becomes rhetorical and voluble and offers to swear the truth of what he has said on the lives of his children, what (if any) significance should be attached to that? If a Japanese witness, accused of forging a document, becomes sullen, resentful and hostile, does this suggest that he has done so or that he has not? I can only ask these questions. I cannot answer them. And if the answer is given that it all depends on the impression made by the particular witness in the particular case that is in my view no answer. The enigma usually remains. To rely on demeanour is in most cases to attach importance to deviations from a norm when there is in truth no norm.'
"[T]he best approach for a judge to adopt in the trial of a commercial case is… to place little if any reliance at all on witnesses' recollections of what was said in meetings and conversations, and to base factual findings on inferences drawn from the documentary evidence and known or probable facts. This does not mean that oral testimony serves no useful purpose — though its utility is often disproportionate to its length. But its value lies largely, as I see it, in the opportunity which cross-examination affords to subject the documentary record to critical scrutiny and to gauge the personality, motivations and working practices of a witness, rather than in testimony of what the witness recalls of particular conversations and events. Above all, it is important to avoid the fallacy of supposing that, because a witness has confidence in his or her recollection and is honest, evidence based on that recollection provides any reliable guide to the truth."
"We start by recalling that the judge read Leggatt J's statements in Gestmin v Credit Suisse and Blue v Ashley [2017] EWHC 1928 (Comm) at paras [65]-[69] as an 'admonition' against placing any reliance at all on the recollections of witnesses. We consider that to have been a serious error in the present case for a number of reasons… Gestmin is not to be taken as laying down any general principle for the assessment of evidence. It is one of a line of distinguished judicial observations that emphasise the fallibility of human memory and the need to assess witness evidence in its proper place alongside contemporaneous documentary evidence and evidence upon which undoubted or probable reliance can be placed… But a proper awareness of the fallibility of memory does not relieve judges of the task of making findings of fact based upon all of the evidence. Heuristics or mental short cuts are no substitute for this essential judicial function. In particular, where a party's sworn evidence is disbelieved, the court must say why that is; it cannot simply ignore the evidence."
"Speaking from my own experience, I have found it essential in cases of fraud, when considering the credibility of witnesses, always to test their veracity by reference to the objective facts proved independently of their testimony, in particular by reference to the documents in the case, and also to pay particular regard to their motives and to the overall probabilities. It is frequently very difficult to tell whether a witness is telling the truth or not; and where there is a conflict of evidence such as there was in the present case, reference to the objective facts and documents, to the witnesses' motives, and to the overall probabilities, can be of very great assistance to a judge in ascertaining the truth."
The witnesses
"A …Nick Coulborn, as part of the decommissioning in the construction design management, went through the machines and picked up all the manuals.
Q But they were not there in 2012.
A There were there, sir. Yes, they were there. There's pictures of them there, sir.
Q Okay.
A We've got hundreds and hundreds of thousands of pictures, sir, of BMW — taking the manuals from BMW. They're not in this bundle.
Q Well, nobody has ever seen those pictures other than the full archive —
A Sir, I've got one in my case now, sir."
"11. I refer to the ownership of the NG4 project technical documentation, which is a disputed issue in the proceedings. [Mr Dodson] has suggested this was separate to the machinery itself. This supply formed part of the sale of the equipment from Stuckenberger with eventual transfer to Shield as part of the Shield purchase. To facilitate this, I worked closely with BMW asset disposal manager Mr Joe Whitehouse to ensure the 'full' collection of technical documentation on behalf of Stuckenberger and ultimately Shield.
12. Following [Mr Dodson's] unauthorised removal of part of the technical documents and in and around late August 2014 I met on BMW Hams Hall site with BMW production process manager Conrad Billingham prior to his departure to China to work at BMW China partners China Brilliance. Conrad apologised for being duped by [Mr Dodson] into releasing the technical documents and formally handed over a complete separate hard drive electronic copy to include the information within the technical documentation [Mr Dodson] had removed. This electronic copy complemented the first copy taken at shop floor level with each assembly machine station and transferred to the IAEP technical centre at Oldbury. The copy [Mr Dodson] removed was the BMW archive copy."
Overcharging by Mr Dodson
"45.2. The First Petitioner was responsible for charging the Company for, inter alia, Key Tech project management services, KTS contractor services and general expenses ('the Key Tech services').
45.3. In or around June 2013, the Company became aware that the First Petitioner had knowingly overbilled the Company for the Key Tech services provided between October 2012 to June 2013. The amount overbilled was £110,124.00, exclusive of VAT.
45.4. In a meeting on 28th August 2013:
45.4.1. The First Petitioner accepted that he, in his capacity as a director of Key Tech and the Company, had overbilled the Company £104,124.00;
45.4.2. The First Petitioner falsely represented that the further £6,000.00 had been paid by Key Tech for services required by the Company. Key Tech had also invoiced the further £6,000.00 to SES and accordingly was not owed £6,000.00.
45.5. By a letter dated 28th August 2013:
45.5.1. The First Petitioner accepted that he, in his capacity as a director of Key Tech and the Company had overbilled the Company £104,124.00;
45.5.2. The First Petitioner proposed that the sum could be repaid by deductions from future Key Tech invoices and/or any dividends payable;
45.5.3. The First Petitioner stated that Key Tech would not raise any invoices for work completed during July and August 2013.
45.6. The First Petitioner thereafter invoiced the Company for the Key Tech services in July, August and September 2013. The First Petitioner knowingly overbilled the Company for these services. That overbilling amounted to £38,620.00 plus VAT.
…
45.8. The First Petitioner made an unauthorised withdrawal from Company
funds of £10,606.83 on 24th December 2013.
45.9. The First Petitioner and/or Key Tech was the original leaseholder of Suite 4, G Innovation Centre, Longbridge Technology Park, 1 Devon Way, B31 2TS ('the Office'). In or around September 2013, the First Petitioner, without authority of the Company, changed the leaseholder from Key Tech to the Company.
45.10. On 19th February 2014, the Company was issued with a summons for non-payment of domestic rates for the Office. These amounted to £6,967.80. The non-domestic rates were the responsibility of the original leaseholder and had only been levied on the Company as a result of the First Petitioner's conduct.
45.11. There was a lengthy notice period required for the Company to surrender the lease of the Office and further costs were incurred by the Company as a result."
45.12. The First Petitioner's conduct amounted to breaches of sections 171 to 175 and 177 to 185 of the Companies Act 2006 and to breaches under common law of the duty not to misapply the Company's property and/or money in order to attempt to make secret profit, the duty of confidentiality and fiduciary duties to act in the best interests of the Company."
"Throughout 2012 leading up to around July 2013 many questionable poor conduct matters were revealed regarding [Mr Dodson]. I became aware of this from Project and IAEP fellow directors David Cotterill and Nic Coulborn. These included 1) overpayment to KTS through inflated invoices, 2) [Mr Dodson's] unauthorised IAEP bank withdrawal, 3) IAEP Longbridge office lease anomalies, 4) Indiscretions regarding a claim against IAEP by Infinity Max… those indiscretions being [Mr Dodson] having contact with opposing [Infinity Max] lawyer against other IAEP directors wishes."
"Q. Okay. So let's just go through the numbered points, overpayment to KTS through inflated invoices, yes?
A. Mmhmm.
Q. That's what you were told?
A. I was approached and discussed about the wage I was taking.
Q. Approached by whom?
A. I was approached by Dave Cotterill and Nic Coulborn.
Q. When?
A. We were — I can't remember the actual year or the timing but we were at Oldbury and I was asked about the wage I was receiving, which I felt a bit odd. Then they reversed the question and told me the wage that was being drawn down for me, which was a lot higher than the wage I was actually getting myself.
THE RECORDER: We have heard there were two rates, £35 an hour, and £45 an hour. Which were you being charged out as?
A. £35 I think.
THE RECORDER: I see. And your hourly rate — were you paid hourly or were you paid on a monthly basis?
A. I was paid monthly.
THE RECORDER: Monthly, but how did that compare to the hourly rate?
A. It was working about £17 an hour.
THE RECORDER: I see, but that's what you were receiving in your hand or was that before tax?
A. Yeah. [Indicating the former.]
THE RECORDER: So you've got to add the tax onto the £17 and the national insurance.
A. Which obviously was dealt with with KTS.
THE RECORDER: Yes. And then why do you say Key shouldn't have been allowed to put some profit margin on top?
A. No, I understand there has to be a margin mark-up, but I thought it was considerably high…"
"The relationship with [Mr Dodson] also soured mid way through 2013. I remember that in July, [Mr Coulborn] brought to our attention that he thought [Mr Dodson] had been overcharging IAEP. [Mr Coulborn] had looked at Key's invoicing to IAEP and identified that what Ocean ([Mr Coulborn's] company) had billed Key was being marked up in Key's invoices to IAEP. [Mr Coulborn] did some work with [Mr Cotterill] and reported back a significant level of overcharging into six figures. I recall that [Mr Cotterill] and [Mr Coulborn] had met with [Mr Dodson] in August a few days before we met with Rosenblatts in London and discussed the issue. [Mr Cotterill] and [Mr Coulborn] reported to [Mr Shield] and I that [Mr Dodson] had admitted the overcharging and I recall Key issued credit notes for just over £100,000 but as Key had already been paid, a significant balance remained owing from Key to IAEP. Subsequently in December 2013 [Mr Dodson], who was still able to control the bank account, made an unauthorised payment of just over £10,000 to Key. Once this had been discovered when I was looking at the bank account [Mr Dodson] confirmed that it was in respect of VAT on a Key invoice. He claimed to have submitted a payment request for authorisation and when he didn't hear anything decided to make the payment anyway. Following on from this I along with [Mr Shield, Mr Cotterill and Mr Coulborn] lost trust in [Mr Dodson] and it was decided between us that I should take on the operation of the IAEP bank account along with [Mr Cotterill] and I should file VAT returns."
68. …I was accused of overcharging IAEP, which is a completely false allegation and my/KTS's position was well set out in writing to the Respondents. The agreement between KTS/DNA and IAEP was approved and documented between us from early 2012 and again with all documentation relating to IAEP and the project. From the outset and both KTS and DNA were paid by IAEP for the services provided to it by each of those companies. KTS was not paid for its services by IAEP from May/June onwards, despite numerous assurances and promises.
69. The hourly rate for each individual was clearly outlined and agreed within the budgets prior to and following the setup of IAEP. It comprised of KTS and DNA invoicing £45/hr for myself and Dave [Cotterill], and £35/hr for other personnel, this was the agreed standard rate. It was also agreed that chargeable hours were capped at 40hrs. This made it easier to budget and prepare cash flows from as early as 2012 onwards, and based upon this, an initial [purchase order] was issued to both KTS and DNA for up to and including June 2013, because we forecast in 2012 that we would likely have a customer signed up by June 2013 or we would continue on with the funding agreement and drawdown, which actually did not happen.
70. At a meeting at IAEP's offices, on either 4 or 5 July 2013, which was intended to be an update meeting on the project with all of the key directors in attendance, Chris [Shield] and Charles [Cattaneo] turned up late, and prior to them arriving I was accused by Dave [Cotterill] and Nic Coulborn that KTS was profiteering/overcharging the job. It was suggested that the £45 and £35 being invoiced was not paid directly to the individuals and that a level of profit was being taken by KTS, as David Cotterill claimed that DNA paid all monies received directly to the individuals.
71. It is absurd to consider that KTS did not have other overhead costs including motor vehicles, leases etc and that a 'profit' was not to be made to cover such costs.
72. In fact, both KTS and DNA received a [purchase order] from IAEP which defined work content and an overall budget of £400,000 and KTS invoiced less than the order value, whilst ironically DNA exceed their order value.
73. I disagreed with the accusation and reiterated over many weeks/months that the charges and invoicing were all agreed, in fact from the start of IAEP all monthly invoicing was itemised and approved by Chris, Charles, Dave and myself before payments were made. I obtained legal advice at the time and I was comforted that I had done nothing wrong and had done exactly as agreed. I remained focussed on the IAEP project as best as I could.
74. I had several discussions with both Dave and Nic regarding this point and they told me quite categorically that no individual or company was being paid unless this matter was resolved. Dave wrote a draft letter for me which I copied onto a KTS letterhead, which stated that I agreed I would credit some invoice payments and agreed to overcharging and this was based upon continuing on the project and invoicing going forward. This allowed for KTS/DNA and others to get paid. It was also, I have to say, based upon an agreement that all other parties e.g. DNA, Dave and Nic would look at their own invoicing and offer a cost back to IAEP, which never happened. Dave and Nic had mislead me when stating that no one had been paid and this was purely stated to get me to agree to their proposal and to move forward together, which again never happened."
The technical libraries
"THE RECORDER: Do I take from what you're saying that the archive library had some value to it but you in fact had most of the material already. Would that be a fair summary?
A. Yes, my Lord, that's correct, certainly correct."
"The machines which had been scrapped, for want of a better word, on site, before we moved in, were machines which were very important to us, and that was the normalizing, the crankshaft normalizing oven, which is a very large piece of equipment, and the induction Harn, the crankshaft induction Harn machine. Mr Coulborn went to the lines under instruction of myself, verbal instruction, because we had many conversations, and I said, 'Look, Nic, I need these manuals from the normalizing oven and from the induction Harn machine.' Nic went around and sourced manuals from the process control engineers and maintenance departments to secure as many manuals as he could, bearing in mind that Mr Coulborn is not technically minded. So, he collected under my instruction as many manuals as he could put his hands on… [T]here was hundreds of manuals, hundreds. And that took a long time to sort.
Q. But there was no guarantee that you got everything, was there?
A. However, what transpired, if I may state, I'd say 95 to 98% of the manuals collected from the technical archive at BMW, we already had. There was some holes in the library, and that's why I was pleased with Mr Dodson being able to have permission to collect the manuals on behalf of IAEP."
Was IAEP a quasi-partnership?
"By clauses 17.1 and [21] of the Shareholder Agreement, the parties have expressly agreed that there is no partnership, which would include a quasi-partnership, and that the agreement and any documents referred to in it or executed contemporaneously with it, being the Option Agreement, Facility Agreement and Debenture, constitute the entire agreement. In such circumstances, there is no scope to introduce 'equitable considerations'; the parties' 'legitimate expectations' are set out in the Shareholders Agreement and the documents referred to in it or executed contemporaneously with it.
The failure to negotiate
The use of the technical library
Diverting the project
"28. The affairs of the Company were conducted in accordance with the terms upon which the parties agreed to do business together and it is not unfair for the affairs of the Company to be conducted in that way.
28.1 It was well known to all parties prior to the incorporation of the Company that, if funding were to be provided, Shield required complete ownership of any lines acquired, expected a return on the investment and that any funding would be time-limited. These requirements were later embodied in the Shareholders' Agreement, the Facility Agreement, the Option Agreement and the Debenture and formed the basis upon which the parties agreed to do business together.
28.2 All parties accepted and agreed that in the event that the Company was unable to exercise the Option, which included paying back the sums loaned pursuant to the Facility Agreement, by 2nd January 2014, the Option would lapse. At that point, Shield, as owner, could deal with those assets as it saw fit and could engage whichever agents or sub-contractors it required to realise the assets and recoup its investment.
28.3 It is clear from the evidence that by the end of October 2013 onwards [and he set out various ways in the project as at that date was effectively dead].
28.4 The Company was not in a position to exercise the Option at any time before 2nd January 2014 and therefore the Option lapsed, the Facility loan became repayable and the Company no longer had any entitlement to any assets acquired by Shield. No complaint can be made about what happened thereafter.
29. There is an absence of reality to the Petitioners' repeated assertions that the Company could deliver the Project in any form either before or after 2nd January 2014."
Breach of fiduciary duty
Delay and acquiescence
"72. In any event, in light of the above, the Petitioners clearly acquiesced in the conduct now complained of in respect of a breach of clause 7.2 and therefore the Petitioners should be denied any relief in respect of this ground of conduct complained of.
73. Further or in the alternative, any breach of clause 7.2 of the Option Agreement would be a breach of contract claim by the Company, which would be statute barred, pursuant to section 5 of the Limitation Act 1980, from 2nd January 2020 at the latest, being 6 years from the expiry of the Option Period. Whilst there is no limitation period for a section 994 claim, the courts will not allow stale claims. The Company would only have been allowed to bring proceedings against Shield for breach of clause 7.2 if issued prior to 2nd January 2020. Yet the Petition was presented on 2nd September 2020, 9 months after limitation expired for the Company's claim. The Court should, by analogy, deny any relief in respect of this ground of conduct complained of."
"There is no limitation period under section 994 but the courts will not allow stale claims. If the Company had brought proceedings against the Booth directors to reclaim excessive remuneration, the claim would not have been allowed to go back beyond six years before proceedings were instituted. I therefore think there is force in the point that I should limit any remedy which I will afford the petitioners by analogy with that limitation period...
But in my judgment there has been no acquiescence in the no-dividend policy such as to preclude this petition from proceeding. In particular, the omission to turn up at the AGM to complain does not amount to acceptance that the dividend policy is appropriate, nor does it involve any form of indication that a complaint about it will not be pursued."
Conclusion
(a) No unfair prejudice was caused by the failure in the period leading up to 2nd February 2014 to negotiate under clause 7.2 of the option agreement or under clause 22 of the SHA.
(b) The making available of the shopfloor technical library to SES and CGI at no cost did cause unfair prejudice to the petitioners.
(c) The diversion of the turnkey agreement to CGI also caused unfair prejudice to the petitioners.
(d) These two matters were also breaches of fiduciary duty.
(e) The petitioners' claims are not barred by the Limitation Act 1980 (whether applied directly or by analogy) and are not otherwise waived.