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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 >> Arrowhead Capital Finance Ltd v KPMG LLP [2012] EWHC 1801 (Comm) (02 July 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2012/1801.html Cite as: [2012] EWHC 1801 (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 :
(sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge)
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Arrowhead Capital Finance Limited (in Liquidation) | Claimant | |
and | ||
KPMG LLP | Defendant |
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(instructed by Thomas Cooper) for the Claimant
Alex Hall Taylor
(instructed by Stephenson Harwood LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 20 June 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
Stephen Males QC:
Introduction
Background
"Subject to the following provisions of this section, 'input tax', in relation to a taxable person, means the following tax, that is to say–
(a) VAT on the supply to him of any goods or services;
(b) VAT on the acquisition by him from another member State of any goods; and
(c) VAT paid or payable by him on the importation of any goods from a place outside the member States,
being (in each case) goods or services used or to be used for the purpose of any business carried on or to be carried on by him."
"... where it is ascertained, having regard to objective factors, that the supply is to a taxable person who knew or should have known that, by his purchase, he was participating in a transaction connected with fraudulent evasion of VAT, it is for the national court to refuse that taxable person entitlement to the right to deduct."
"We will deliver services to you in connection with the implementation of a due diligence strategy to address the threat posed by HM Customs & Excise ('HMCE') and its approach to companies dealing in the mobile telephone industry.
Scope of services
KPMG will provide the following services:
- Review the existing business records to identify areas for attention.
- Analyse the current measures Dragon Futures takes to protect itself from fraudulent traders.
- Update the existing procedures to take into account the recent Budget measures.
- Provide a regular review of systems and documentation, dates to be agreed with yourself.
We will agree with you, in advance, the scope of any further work that you require us to do over and above that detailed."
"From the outset, Dragon has been designed to be acceptable to institutional investors. Our systems, risk controls, transparency, personnel, legal structure and selection of advisers have all been driven by this standard."
"Given the high risk nature of the business, joint and several liability issues, bondhouse etc it would be unusual for a bank would treat VAT repayments as an asset for the purpose of lending, especially as any repayments made to mobile phone dealers are generally on a without prejudice basis.
Although Customs have repaid Dragon's most recent VAT return without a verification visit this is unusual in this type of business and substantial delays in repayments are common place, whilst Customs make enquiries up and down the supply chain. As Dragon's trading volume increases I would expect to see Customs verifying returns before repayment is made, which will of course slow down the whole repayment process.
With regard to banks which are comfortable dealing with mobile phone dealers, I think the general rule is they are not very comfortable. It is often a question of how good a relationship the trader has with their bank manager and how long they have been a customer of the bank."
Loan date | Loan amount |
27 January 2004 | US $3,500,000 |
9 February 2004 | US $3,500,000 |
13 February 2004 | US $4,000,000 |
23 February 2004 | US $4,000,000 |
1 March 2004 | US $6,000,000 |
4 March 2004 | US $7,000,000 |
13 April 2004 | UK £3,000,000 |
19 April 2004 | UK £2,000,000 |
"Steve -- As part of our continued efforts to make Dragon's main investor happy, we would like to coord. a call with you, me and their analyst Alan Zenk to discuss the VAT return scenario. We have explained our position and strategy focused on negating capital risk to the extent possible and minimizing time risk through proactive strategies (such as your checking supply chains proactively). I think Alan would just like to hear your perspective."
Arrowhead's case
a. the relationship between Dragon and its investors, including Metro and Arrowhead;
b. that the business success of Dragon, and its ability to repay its loans, was wholly dependent on the success of its VAT repayment claims;
c. that the success of these repayment claims was in turn wholly dependent on Dragon being able to satisfy HMCE that the transactions upon which the claims were based served a genuine economic purpose and that appropriate measures had been taken to ensure the integrity of the supply chain; and
d. that investors in Dragon, including Metro and Arrowhead, would not invest (including by making loan finance available) unless KPMG's services were being provided to a reasonable standard so that they were reliably assured that the VAT repayment claims would be successful.
"As a result of KPMG knowing the purpose to which [Dragon] intended to use [KPMG's services], in particular that [Dragon] would relay to investors such as Arrowhead and Metro the advice and assurances which KPMG gave [Dragon], KPMG also owed each of Arrowhead and Metro a duty to take reasonable care when providing the services."
"It was the Services that KPMG provided pursuant to its letter of engagement that animated the funding arrangements without which [Dragon] could not have carried out its business. KPMG knew that the Services were relied upon by [Arrowhead] to give it the necessary assurance that Dragon's business was not connected to fraudulent traders and that Dragon had in place procedures, systems and documentation that were sufficiently robust to meet a HMCE investigation of the sort which had been foreshadowed in the Budget. The 'threat' as KPMG termed it. This 'fraud prevention' function supplied the security that the investors in [Dragon's] business model demanded. Without that security, there was no other sufficient security for the loans. This is because [Dragon's] working capital and profit were tied up in its VAT returns. This was self-evident from [Dragon's] business model and would have been apparent to KPMG who were specialists in this area."
Duty of care
"The conceptual basis on which courts decide whether a duty of care exists in particular circumstances has been repeatedly examined. Three broad approaches have been suggested, involving consideration (a) whether there has been an assumption of responsibility, (b) whether a threefold test of foreseeability, proximity and 'fairness, justice and reasonableness' has been satisfied or (c) whether the alleged duty would be 'incremental' to previous cases."
"whether the defendant assumed responsibility for what he said and did vis-à-vis the claimant, or is to be treated by the law as having done so."
"There is a tendency, which has been remarked upon by many judges, for phrases like 'proximate', 'fair, just and reasonable' and 'assumption of responsibility' to be used as slogans rather than practical guides to whether a duty should exist or not. These phrases are often illuminating but discrimination is needed to identify the factual situations in which they provide useful guidance. For example, in a case in which A provides information to C which he knows will be relied upon by D, it is useful to ask whether A assumed responsibility to D: Hedley Byrne & Co Ltd v. Heller & Partners Ltd [1964] AC 465; Smith v. Eric S Bush [1990] 1 AC 831. Likewise, in a case in which A provides information on behalf of B to C for the purpose of being relied upon by C, it is useful to ask whether A assumed responsibility to C for the information or was only discharging his duty to B: Williams v. Natural Life Health Foods Ltd [1998] AC 830. Or in a case in which A provided information to B for the purpose of enabling him to make one kind of decision, it may be useful to ask whether he assumed responsibility for its use for a different kind of decision: Caparo Industries plc v. Dickman [1990] 2 AC 605. In these cases in which the loss has been caused by the claimant's reliance on information provided by the defendant, it is critical to decide whether the defendant (rather than someone else) assumed responsibility for the accuracy of the information to the claimant (rather than to someone else) or for its use by the claimant for one purpose (rather than another). The answer does not depend upon what the defendant intended but, as in the case of contractual liability, upon what would reasonably be inferred from his conduct against the background of all the circumstances of the case."
"The touchstone of liability is not the state of mind of the defendant. An objective test means that the primary focus must be on things said or done by the defendant or on his behalf in dealings with the plaintiff. Obviously, the impact of what a defendant says or does must be judged in the light of the relevant contextual scene. Subject to this qualification, the primary focus must be on exchanges (in which term I include statements and conduct) which cross the line between the defendant and the plaintiff."
"whether loss to the claimant was a reasonably foreseeable consequence of what the defendant did or failed to do; whether the relationship between the parties was one of sufficient proximity; and whether in all the circumstances it is fair, just and reasonable to impose a duty of care on the defendant towards the claimant."
"The salient feature of all these cases is that the defendant giving advice or information was fully aware of the nature of the transaction which the plaintiff had in contemplation, knew that the advice or information would be communicated to him directly or indirectly and knew that it was very likely that the plaintiff would rely on the advice or information in deciding whether or not to engage in the transaction in contemplation. In these circumstances the defendant could clearly be expected, subject always to the effect of any disclaimer of responsibility, specifically to anticipate that the plaintiff would rely on the advice or information given by the defendant for the very purpose for which he did in the event rely on it. So also the plaintiff, subject again to the effect of any disclaimer, would in that situation reasonably suppose that he was entitled to rely on the advice or information communicated to him for the very purpose for which he required it."
Limitation
"An action founded on tort shall not be brought after the expiration of six years from the date on which the cause of action accrued."
"When this is so, a professional negligence claim calls for a comparison between the plaintiff's position had he not entered into the transaction in question and his position under the transaction. That is the basic comparison. Thus, typically in the case of a negative valuation of an intended loan security, the basic comparison called for is between (a) the amount of money lent by the plaintiff, which he would still have had in the absence of the loan transaction, plus interest at a proper rate, and (b) the value of the rights acquired, namely the borrower's covenant and the true value of the overvalued property."
"The basic comparison gives rise to issues of fact. The moment at which the comparison first reveals a loss will depend on the facts of each case. Such difficulties as there may be are evidential and practical difficulties, not difficulties in principle.
Ascribing a value to the borrower's covenant should not be unduly troublesome. A comparable exercise regarding lessees' covenants is a routine matter when valuing property. Sometimes the comparison will reveal a loss from the inception of the loan transaction. The borrower may be a company with no other assets, its sole business may comprise redeveloping and reselling the property, and for repayment the lender may be looking solely to his security. In such a case, if the property is worth less than the amount of the loan, relevant and measurable loss will be sustained at once. In other cases the borrower's covenant may have value, and until there is default the lender may presently sustain no loss even though the security is worth less than the amount of the loan. Conversely, in some cases there may be no loss even when the borrower defaults. A borrower may default after a while but when he does so, despite the overvaluation, the security may still be adequate.
It should be acknowledged at once that, to greater or lesser extent, quantification of the lender's loss is bound to be less certain, and therefore less satisfactory, if the quantification exercise is carried out before, rather than after, the security is ultimately sold. This consideration weighed heavily with the High Court of Australia in Wardley Australia Ltd. v. Western Australia (1992) 175 C.L.R. 514. But the difficulties of assessment at the earlier stage do not seem to me to lead to the conclusion that at the earlier stage the lender has suffered no measurable loss and has no cause of action, and that it is only when the assessment becomes more straightforward or final that loss first arises and with it the cause of action. ...
... As Mr. Briggs Q.C. submitted, no accountant or prospective buyer, viewing the loan book of a commercial lender, would say that the shortfall in security against outstanding loans to defaulting borrowers did not represent a loss to the lender merely because the securities had yet to be sold. Realisation of the security does not create the lender's loss, nor does it convert a potential loss into an actual loss. Rather, it crystallises the amount of a present loss, which hitherto had been open to be aggravated or diminished by movements in the property market."
"There may be cases in which it is possible to demonstrate that such a loss is suffered immediately upon the loan being made. The lender may be able to show that the rights which he has acquired as lender are worth less in the open market than they would have been if the security had not been overvalued. But I think that this would be difficult to prove in a case in which the lender's [sc. borrower's] personal covenant still appears good and interest payments are being duly made. On the other hand, loss will easily be demonstrable if the borrower has defaulted, so that the lender's recovery has become dependent upon the realisation of his security and that security is inadequate."
"Nykredit therefore decides that in a transaction in which there are benefits (covenant for repayment and security) as well as burdens (payment of the loan) and the measure of damages is the extent to which the lender is worse off than he would have been if he had not entered into the transaction, the lender suffers loss and damage only when it is possible to say that he is on balance worse off. It does not discuss the question of a purely contingent liability."
"In my opinion, therefore, the question must be decided on principle. A contingent liability is not as such damage until the contingency occurs. The existence of a contingent liability may depress the value of other property, as in Forster v. Outred & Co [1982] 1 WLR 86, or it may mean that a party to a bilateral transaction has received less than he should have done, or is worse off than if he had not entered into the transaction (according to which is the appropriate measure of damages in the circumstances). But, standing alone as in this case, the contingency is not damage."
Conclusion