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England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Investec Bank (UK) Ltd v Zulman & Anor [2009] EWHC 1590 (Comm) (15 July 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2009/1590.html Cite as: [2009] EWHC 1590 (Comm) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
INVESTEC BANK (UK) LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) ARNOLD ZULMAN (2) DAVID ZULMAN |
Defendant |
____________________
Stuart Adair (instructed by Radcliffes Le Brasseur) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 11 - 21 May 2009
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice David Steel :
Introduction
"3 Limitation
The Guarantor's liability shall be limited as follows:
3.1 the Guarantor shall only be liable under this Guarantee to the extent that the Debtor's liability to the Bank at the time of the making of demand by the Bank under this Guarantee exceeds £2,000,000, all of which is secured by a debenture in favour of the Bank and of which £1,000,000 is further secured by a deposit; and
3.2 the maximum amount of the Guarantor's liability shall not exceed a principal amount of £500,000 plus interest,
and any costs and expenses relating to enforcement of the Bank's rights under this Guarantee."
"GUARANTEE AMENDMENT
The maximum amount of the Guarantor's liability shall not exceed a principal amount of £500,000 plus interest regardless of the principal amount outstanding for both loans. This amendment renders clause 3.1 of the side letter dated 4 May 2005 null and void. For the avoidance of doubt the guarantee relates only to the loan of £534,300 repayable on 31st December 2008"
The issues
"(1) Whether, on its true construction, the effect of clause 3.1 is to preclude any liability on the part of the Defendants if the indebtedness of Ashbury is less than £2,000,000;
(2) Whether the Claimant is entitled to rectification of clause 3.1 of the Guarantee;
(3) Whether, in or around January 2007, the parties concluded an oral agreement that the Guarantee would be varied to disapply clause 3.1;
(4) Whether David Zulman's initialling of the 31st January Letter was effective to vary the Guarantee;
(5) Whether David Zulman had authority to vary the Guarantee on behalf of David Zulman; and
(6) Whether Arnold and/or David Zulman are estopped from relying on the limitation of their liability contained in clause 3.1 of the Guarantee."
Witnesses
i) Leon Blitz. He was joint head of the Private Client banking team from 2004 to mid 2006.ii) David Renwick. He had been a member of the Private Client Investment banking team from late 2003 to September 2005. He reported initially to Leon Blitz and thereafter to Avron Epstein.
iii) Joanne Canning. She was an associate solicitor with Eversheds who acted as solicitors for the bank.
iv) Avron Epstein. He took over from Leon Blitz in August 2006.
v) Adam Querido. He became the bank's account manager for Ashbury in August 2006 reporting to Avron Epstein.
The background
i) £2 million initial facility with a further £500,00 subject to performance and further approvalii) £1 million cash deposit in place of any personal guarantee
iii) Option to purchase 20% of Ashbury's share capital.
"3 Limitation
3.1 The total amount recoverable by the Bank from the Guarantor under clause 2 shall not exceed the sum of £500,000 plus interest, costs and expenses."
"3. Limitation
3.1 The total amount recoverable by the Bank from the Guarantor under Clause 2 shall not exceed the sum of £500,000 plus interest and any costs and expenses relating to enforcement of the Bank's rights under this Guarantee."
"MR SIMON: And David, I've got one slight problem with this document.
MR RENWICK: Sure.
MR SIMON: I mean I've sort of picked up one or two small things, but the essence of it is this. As I understand it at the moment, at the moment the total borrowings from the bank by the company are 2 million.
MR RENWICK: Yeah.
MR SIMON: Of which 1 million is secured by a bank deposit.
MR RENWICK: Yeah.
MR SIMON: The other million is unsecured and if this further loan is made it will be secured by guarantee.
MR RENWICK: Correct.
MR SIMON: The point is this. Let us take say - so when I talk about the unsecured money I'm talking about a million and a half, okay. It's only secured by the guarantee.
MR RENWICK: Yeah.
MR SIMON: So if you take that million and a half, then I suppose that the company's indebtedness to the bank was reduced down to say a million.
MR RENWICK: Yeah.
MR SIMON: Then there should - then the guarantee should lapse.
MR RENWICK: Well you see, what we would do in this instance, there will almost be a separate loan, so in other words - and this - which is this loan, this £500,000. And that would be the loan which is repaid first. And when that gets down to zero, the guarantee falls away.
MR SIMON: That's right. But I don't think we've done that, that's the problem."
"I refer to the draft Guarantee dated 26 April and our telephone conversation today.
We are all agreed that the Guarantee applies only to the advance now to be made by the Bank to Ashbury in the sum of £500,000 and not to any other sums which are outstanding. In order to achieve this I suggest as follows:
1. That a Recital be added to the draft Guarantee as follows:
"Whereas the debtor's liability to the Bank may from time to time exceed the sum of £1 million and the Bank has agreed to advance to the Debtor a further sum of £500,000…"
Clause 3.1 would then read as follows:
The Guarantor's liability hereunder is limited as follows:
3.1.1 The sum of £500,000
3.1.2 To the extent to which the Debtor's liability exceeds £1 million at the time this Guarantee is called
I believe that if we amend the document in this way there should be no room for confusion in the future.
I await to hear from you with an amended draft."
"3.1 the Guarantor shall only be liable under this Guarantee to the extent that the Debtor's liability to the Bank at the time of the making of demand by the Bank under this Guarantee exceeds £2,000,000, all of which is secured by a debenture in favour of the Bank and of which £1,000,000 is further secured by a deposit".
"MR RENWICK: Have you - have we agreed on form?
JOANNA: We've agreed it, we've got it agreed now, he's just sent it through now, and it looks fine. Basically he wants to make some reference in the guarantee to the fact that of the 2 million pounds -
MR RENWICK: Yeah.
JOANNA: - all of that 2 million pounds debt owed to Investec is secured by a debenture, and of which a million pounds is further secured by a deposit. Well I've got no problem referring to the security that we've got because we've got that security. Whether he somehow thinks that it gives the client further comfort that they have got other security for this and that, you know -
MR RENWICK: But the client knows that.
JOANNA: It doesn't change the position at all, because yes, we have got that security, and we've made it very clear that this guarantee only relates to the £500K anyway."
i) Reduce loan by £1 million using cash deposit;ii) Reduce warrant to 11%;
iii) Maintain repayment date of July 09;
iv) Covenant regarding performance failing which option to call in loan.
"3.1 The total amount recoverable by the Bank from the Guarantor under Clause 2 shall not exceed the sum of £500,000 plus interest, costs and expenses"
(i.e. reverting to the first draft produced in April 2005).
"Facility Letter dated 21 July 2004 and side letter dated 4 May 2005 made between Investec Bank (UK) Limited ("the Bank") and Ashbury Confectionery Limited ("the Borrower") hereafter referred to as the "Facility Letter".
We refer to the Facility Letter and hereby record variation of the terms and conditions of the Facility Letter which have been agreed between us.
Save for the variation set out in this letter, the Facility Letter will remain in full force and effect and each party will be entitled to rely on the terms and conditions of it.
This offer will lapse if this letter is not accepted within 14 days of its date.
AMOUNT AND TYPE OF FACILITIES
Loans: £2,703,472 (Two million seven hundred and three thousand, four hundred and seventy two pounds sterling) reducing to £1,703,472 (One million seven hundred and three thousand, four hundred and seventy two pounds sterling.)
Loan 1 of £534,300 is repayable on 31 December 2009, with the balance remaining due in 21 July 2009.
In the Facility Letter the principal amount(s) for the time being outstanding under the facility is referred to as "the Loan".
ADDITIONAL FINANCIAL COVENANTS
The Borrower is to achieve EBITDA for 2007 of a minimum of £2,000,000.
The Borrower is to achieve EBITDA for the six months to 30 June 2007 of £380,000.
GUARANTEE AMENDMENT
The maximum amount of the Guarantors' Liability shall not exceed a principal amount of £500,000 plus interest regardless of the principal amount outstanding for both loans. This amendment renders clause 3.1 of the side letter dated 4 May 2005 null and void. For the avoidance of doubt the guarantee relates only to the loan of £534,300 repayable on 31 December 2008.
CONDITIONS PRECEDENT
The Borrower is to reduce the current exposure by the sum of £1,000,000 by the 31 January 2007.
For the avoidance of doubt, the Warrants on this facility have reduced from 20% to 11%.
Please confirm your acceptance of the variations set out above to the terms and conditions of the Facility Letter by signing and returning to the Bank the enclosed copy of this letter."
The revised guarantee was never executed.
Meaning of clause 3.1
i) on its proper construction, clause 3.1 entitled the Bank to recover £500,000 together with interest, despite the transfer of the deposit; orii) that the Defendants are estopped from contending otherwise; or
iii) the Guarantee should be rectified to achieve this result.
i) The pleaded case on the date and content of the agreement was remarkably uncertain;ii) The contemporary notes of the meeting on 8 December (and the recollection of those attending) did not suggest that there had been any discussion whatsoever about clause 3.1 of the Guarantee;
iii) In any event, it is clear that the earlier negotiations for the two loans were "subject to contract": prima facie any negotiations for amendment of the terms of the loan and/or Guarantee were on the same basis: indeed the Bank's witnesses accepted that this was the case;
iv) The correctness of that view was confirmed by the Variation Letter itself which stated in terms that "this offer will lapse if this letter is not accepted within 14 days of its date".
It follows that I reject the contention.
i) Given the documentary structure of the loan, the existence and presentation of a revised form of Guarantee is inconsistent with any intention that the amendments to the guarantee would be effected by the Variation Letter itself;ii) The Variation Letter was addressed to Ashbury and expressly stated that it recorded the "variations of the terms and conditions of the Facility Letter": in turn the Facility Letter was defined as being the original Facility Letter and the subsequent Side Letter;
iii) As required, it was signed by two authorised signatories of Ashbury being DZ and Mr Gee: they did so by way of acceptance on the part of Ashbury of the amendments of the Facility Letter and Side Letter without reference to the Guarantee;
iv) This acceptance was accomplished pursuant to the authority granted to DZ and Mr Gee, by the minutes of a meeting of the board of Ashbury dated 22 February 2007, in a form presented by the Bank again without reference to the Guarantee;
v) The letter of authorisation of the transfer was drafted by the bank for AZ and was duly signed by him;
vi) The terms of both the existing Guarantee and the draft amended Guarantee required the signatures of both DZ and AZ following explanation of the documents by a solicitor.
Construction
i) The communications between the parties following the stage at which the parties were ad idem (and were merely left engaged in a joint enterprise to record the agreement in writing) are admissible and that such material demonstrates that the Guarantee was to cover any part of the loan which was otherwise unsecured.ii) The communications between the parties throughout the negotiations were admissible given the ambiguity in clause 3.1 and reveal that the parties were using the words in an agreed manner.
Estoppel
"In the course of the discussions in December 2006 and January 2007 the Claimant made plain to the Defendants that it would not countenance any change in the facilities offered to Ashbury which would have the effect of increasing the Claimant's exposure. The Defendants accepted this condition and all parties proceeded on the assumption that the application of the £1m deposit to reduce the £2m borrowing would not affect the Defendants' personal liability in respect of the additional £500,000 and that clause 3.1 of the Deed of Guarantee would cease to have any legal effect. The Claimant acted upon this shared and common assumption in agreeing to the application of the £1m deposit to reduce the borrowings of Ashbury.
The Claimant further acted to its detriment in reliance upon the assumption in executing a deed of release in relation to a debenture over Ashbury's assets and sending it to solicitors acting for Ashbury (at the Defendants' request) on 4th January 2008. The said assumption continued until 6th February 2008 when Mr Lyddon Simon, solicitor for the Defendants, first challenged the subsisting liability of the Defendants under the guarantee in a letter to the Claimant's solicitors sent on that date.
It is now unconscionable for the Defendants to deny this assumption and in the premises the Defendants are estopped from relying on clause 3.1 of the Deed of Guarantee as a defence to the Claimant's claim in relation to the Defendants' agreement to guarantee and indemnify the Claimant in respect of the £500,000 additional advance and interest."
Rectification
i) It is a form of relief for the purpose of correcting a written agreement because it does not reflect the terms of the true agreement at the time it was made.ii) The true agreement need not have been a concluded and enforceable contract but there must have been a continuing common intention in regard to relevant provision reflected in an outward expression of accord down to the execution of the written contract.
iii) The failure to record the agreement must be as a consequence of a mistake: either
i. a mistake common to both parties whereby the written agreement does not record the terms as both intended; orii. a unilateral mistake in the sense that one party is mistaken as to the failure to incorporate the agreement in the documents and the other party aware of the mistake fails to draw attention to it.iv) It must be established that the agreement, if corrected as claimed, would accurately represent the true agreement of the parties at the time of execution.
v) In that regard convincing proof is required to counteract the cogent evidence of the parties' intention as displayed by the contact itself: see The Nai Genova [1984] 1 Lloyd's Rep 353; Burroughs v. Abbott [1922] 1 Ch 86;.Joscelyne v. Nissen [1970] 2 QB 86; Thomas Bates v. Wyndham's Ltd [1981] 1 WLR 505.
"7(4) The assertion that Clause 3.1 of the Guarantee should be rectified is inadequately pleaded and embarrassing and the Defendants reserve the right to plead further to this assertion if and when it is adequately pleaded and particulars are provided."
i. The genesis of the Agreed Wording was put forward by the Defendants by way of the First Wording. The proximate cause of the Agreed Wording being present in the Deed of Guarantee was thus the Defendants' suggested First Wording.
ii. The First Wording was put forward by the Defendants for their benefit in order to achieve the Agreed Objective.
iii. The parties agreed to the Agreed Wording on terms that it was to achieve the Agreed Objective.
iv. In the email of 27th April 2005 the Defendants justified the introduction of the First Wording (which became the Agreed Wording) on the basis that it was to achieve the Agreed Objective.
v. The Defendants knew and intended that the Claimant's legal advisors would accept the justification in the email dated 27th April 2005 for the First Wording and therefore accepted the Agreed Wording on the basis that it achieved the Agreed Objective.
vi. At all material times up to and including the execution of the Deed of Guarantee the parties were proceeding on the basis that a loan of £2m secured by a legal charge over a cash deposit of £1m was equivalent to a loan of £1m (i.e. a net advance of £1m) and that the Agreed Wording was to exclude the guarantee from being enforceable save in relation to sums in excess of the net advance of £1m. Thus since the cash deposit of £1m has now been applied to the loan of £2m, leaving a net sum outstanding of £1m; it is unconscionable for the Defendants to assert that the guarantee is not still enforceable as against the further advance of £500,000.
i) The true agreement between the parties was said to be to the effect that the Guarantee was enforceable for sums in excess of £1 million.ii) The Defendants had furnished the first drafts which referred to £1 million as being the loan.
iii) It was thus unconscionable for the Defendants to rely on the actual wording which referred to a loan of £2 million (despite that change having been suggested by the Bank).
i) That the Guarantee would apply only to the further advance of £500,000 and not the original advance of £2 million; orii) That the Guarantee would only be enforceable for sums in excess of the net advance of £1 million.
"Rectification
1. Delete existing 3.1.2 and replace with: "For the avoidance of doubt the Guarantee applies only to the advance now to be made by the Bank to Ashbury in the sum of £500,000 and not to any other sums which are outstanding."
2. Recital change to: "Whereas the Debtor's liability to the Bank may from time to time exceed the net sum of £1 million and the Bank has agreed to advance to the Debtor a further sum of £500,000."
Clause 3.1 change to: "The Guarantor's liability hereunder is limited as follows:
3.1.1 To the sum of £500,000
3.1.2 To the extent to which the Debtor's liability exceeds the net advance of £1 million at the time this Guarantee is called."
i) Although a cash deposit had originally been required, it is clear that it was being treated as evidence of commitment on the part of the Defendants which might be released in the event of satisfactory performance;ii) Neither party had viewed the original loan as being for only £1 million: indeed the Bank would not make a loan at that level and the Defendants had no cause to structure a loan which was in effect to borrow £1 million but treat it as a loan for £2 million;
iii) Neither party was contemplating at that stage that the deposit would be transferred to the loan account;
iv) When that proposal was later made and accepted, it is clear that the Bank were not proceeding under some mistaken understanding as to the wording or effect of the Guarantee but were insisting on an amendment to it;
v) The Guarantee associated with the supplementary loan was carefully negotiated with the assistance of lawyers and went through four drafts.
Conclusion
Note 1 i.e. subordinate to Venture Finance [Back] Note 2 Indeed the proposition did not form part of the Bank’s opening skeleton. [Back] Note 3 Indeed just as in the revised form of guarantee prepared in January 2007 but unexecuted. [Back] Note 4 As confirmed inChartbrook Ltd v. Persimmon Homes Ltd [2009] UKHL 38. [Back] Note 5 There was certainly no clear pleading on the topic [Back]