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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 >> Royal & Sun Alliance Insurance Ltd & Ors v Tughans [2022] EWHC 2589 (Comm) (14 October 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2022/2589.html Cite as: [2022] WLR(D) 417, [2022] EWHC 2589 (Comm) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
KING'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
IN THE MATTER OF THE ARBITRATION ACT 1996
AND IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION CLAIM
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
ROYAL & SUN ALLIANCE INSURANCE LIMITED & OTHERS |
Claimant / Arbitration Respondent |
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- and - |
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TUGHANS (a firm) |
Defendants / Arbitration Claimants |
____________________
Richard Coleman KC and Nathalie Koh (instructed by Fenchurch Law Limited) for the Defendant (and Arbitration Claimant)
Hearing dates: 27 and 28 July 2022
Further Submissions: 22 August, 2 and 7 September 2022
Draft judgment to parties: 13 September 2022
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
This judgment was handed down by the judge remotely by circulation to the parties' representatives by email and release to The National Archives. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be Friday 14 October 2022 at 10:00am.
Mr Justice Foxton :
i) the Arbitrator acted in excess of jurisdiction for the purposes of s.67 of the 1996 Act;
ii) the Arbitrator's decision to grant the declaration in issue involved a serious irregularity under ss.68(2)(a), (b) and/or (c) of the 1996 Act which has caused RSA substantial injustice; and
iii) the Arbitrator's decision involved an error of law (which is challenged under s.69 of the 1996 Act, permission to bring such a challenge having been granted by Henshaw J).
THE BACKGROUND
"As you are aware, under the terms of the Engagement it is proposed that we will pay you a success fee of up to €16m … in connection with the introductory services associated with the transaction. The success fee will only be payable upon our successful completion of the Transaction".
The engagement letter indicated that the success fee would be split three ways, between BRUK, Tughans and Mr Cushnahan.
"In the event that Newco consummates the Transaction, Brown Rudnick will be entitled to a success fee of £15,000,000 … ('the Success Fee') … Brown Rudnick agrees that you shall only be obligated to pay the Success Fee to Brown Rudnick upon successful completion of the Transaction and not under any other circumstances (including any default by you hereunder).
It is acknowledged and agreed that upon receipt of the Success Fee, if any, Brown Rudnick shall pay fifty percent (50%) of the Success Fee to Tughans, a Northern Ireland law firm (subject to Brown Rudnick and Tughans bearing their proportionate share of any taxes) in respect of services rendered by Tughans in connection with the consummation of the Transaction by Newco. Brown Rudnick acknowledges and agrees that (1) prior to the payment of the Success Fee, if any, Brown Rudnick shall obtain and provide to Cerberus a written certification from Tughans containing the same representations and warranties set forth in this letter under the section entitled 'Representations and Warranties' in form and substance reasonably acceptable to Cerberus (the 'Tughans Letter') and (2) Brown Rudnick may not make any payment of the Success Fee, if any, to Tughans prior to confirmation by Cerberus in writing that the Tughans letter is acceptable".
"Brown Rudnick represents and warrants the following:
1. Brown Rudnick is aware of and familiar with the provisions of the U.S. Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, as amended, and its purposes, and any other anti-corruption law applicable in a jurisdiction in which it or any party hereto may have conducted, or will conduct business, including but not limited to the UK Bribery Act of 2010, as amended and the Uniting and Strengthening America by Providing Appropriate Tools Required to Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism Act of 2001, as amended (hereinafter "Applicable Anti-Corruption Laws") and have not, directly or indirectly, violated any Applicable Anti-Corruption Law. Without limitation of the generality of the foregoing, none of Brown Rudnick or any of its partners, directors, officers, employees or agents has made or will make, directly or indirectly, any payment, loan or gift (or any offer, promise or authorisation of any such payment, loan or gift), of any money or anything of value to or for the use of any Government Official under circumstances in which any of them knows or has reason to know that all or any portion of such money or thing of value has been or will be offered, given or promised, directly or indirectly, to any Government Official, for the purpose of inducing the Government Official to do any act or make any decision in its official capacity (including a decision to fail to perform his or its official function) or use its influence with a government or instrumentality thereof in order to affect any act or decisions of such government or instrumentality or to assist Cerberus and/or its affiliates in obtaining or retaining any business;
2 Neither Brown Rudnick nor any of its partners, directors, officers, employees or agents providing services pursuant to this letter is a Government Official or has a family relationship with any Government Official in the jurisdictions in which it will conduct business pursuant to this engagement, except as disclosed to, and agreed to in writing by, Cerberus. Brown Rudnick will advise Cerberus promptly to the extent any such family relationship arises during the term of the engagement, and Brown Rudnick and each of our partners, directors, officers, employees or agents will provide adequate assurances, whether in the form of a certification, a formal recusal by the relevant family member or otherwise, to satisfy Cerberus that no violation of Applicable Anti-Corruption Laws will arise as a result of such family relationship. Should in any instance Cerberus determine, reasonably and in good faith, that Brown Rudnick or any of our partners, directors, officers, employees or agents have failed to provide adequate assurances that a particular family relationship with a Government Official will not violate the applicable Anti-Corruption Laws, Cerberus reserves the right to terminate the engagement immediately and refuse to pay the Success Fee, if any; and
3 For all purposes and at all times, Brown Rudnick is not and will not be in violation of any applicable conflict of interest law by acting for, and accepting the Success Fee, if any, from Cerberus.
Brown Rudnick agrees that it will, at the request of Cerberus, certify the continuing accuracy of the representations and warranties set forth in this section. Brown Rudnick further agrees that should it learn of information regarding any possible violation of Applicable Anti-Corruption Laws in connection with services provided for in this letter, Brown Rudnick will immediately advise Cerberus of such knowledge or suspicion."
"We have agreed to provide strategic advice to you on an exclusive basis in connection with the Transaction (as defined in [the BRUK Letter of Engagement]).
…
Success Fee
The firm's fees on this engagement shall, unless otherwise agreed with you, be as specified within [the BRUK Letter of Engagement] under the heading 'Success Fee' and be subject to the same conditions as set out under such heading, mutatis mutandis.
….
We hereby acknowledge that you shall not be obligated to pay the Tughans' Fee [50% of the Success Fee provided for in the BRUK Letter of Engagement] unless (1) the Transaction has successfully completed and (2) you have received the Success Fee from Your Client in cleared funds. You shall not be obligated to pay the Tughans' fee in any other circumstances.
We further acknowledge and agree that payment of the Tughans' fee is also dependent on (1) us providing the representations and warranties set forth in this letter …. and (2) prior receipt by you from Your Client in writing that this letter is acceptable to them acting reasonably."
i) The statements made by Mr Coulter on 24 March 2014 (see [10] above), 3 April 2014 (see [11] above) and orally to similar effect on a number of occasions were false and fraudulent, because Mr Coulter intended to transfer part of the Tughans Fee to Mr Cushnahan.
ii) BRUK had entered into the Tughans Letter of Engagement, and paid Tughans the Tughans Fee, in reliance on those representations.
iii) As a result, BRUK had suffered substantial losses, including losses incurred in dealing with investigations into the matter by various authorities.
iv) BRUK had claims against Tughans of various kinds, including for damages and/or rescission of the Tughans Letter of Engagement for fraudulent misrepresentation; for breach of fiduciary duty; for liability to account for the Tughans Fee as a constructive trustee; and in unjust enrichment arising from receipt of the Tughans Fee in breach of fiduciary duty.
v) It was noted that the Tughans Fee remained identifiable in the relevant Tughans' bank account.
vi) It was stated that BRUK intended to claim damages for all the loss it had suffered, which included the amount of the Tughans Fee and the costs incurred by BRUK in dealing with the various investigations.
vii) By way of "next steps" it was stated that "[BRUK] requires Tughans to compensate it for its losses. As a preliminary step [viz to such compensation] Tughans should repay to [BRUK] the Tughans Fee with further losses and costs to be agreed".
"Further and in any event, the simple reality here is that Tughans (who retained the Success Fee) have not and could not suffer a loss such as would give rise to a right of indemnity from Insurers. It is axiomatic that a contract of insurance is a contract of indemnity and indemnity only. Here, Tughans cannot be said to have suffered a loss and so it is not entitled to an indemnity … In reaching that view, Insurers have regard to the following factors:
8.1. First, the Success Fee of £7.5m + VAT was only obtained (assuming the claim to be true) consequent upon Mr Coulter's fraudulent representation; it is money that the Firm should never have received had Mr Coulter acted honestly;
8.2. Second, the Success Fee is out of all proportion to the time value of any work actually done;
8.3. Third, Tughans itself was completely unaware of the Success Fee until after it was received by (and/or returned to) the Firm;
8.4. Fourth, Tughans had reason at the time it became aware of the Success Fee to be concerned that Mr Coulter was acting dishonestly in respect of it and/or in respect of its dissemination;
8.5. Fifth, it was in such circumstances that Tughans elected to retain the Success Fee rather than to return the fee."
i) fraudulent and/or negligent misrepresentation, misstatement or deceit, or under the Northern Ireland equivalent of the Misrepresentation Act 1967;
ii) breach of fiduciary or contractual duties owed to BRUK; and/or
iii) negligence;
alternatively a contribution under the Civil Liability (Contribution) Act 1978. Those proceedings were later discontinued.
"You will be in receipt of a letter from [BRUK] as to the extent of their losses but we understand that these will include:
- the [Tughans' Fee], being £7.5m;
- [BRUK]'s costs incurred in relation to the civil and criminal investigations;
- [BRUK]'s costs incurred in relation to Cerberus's complaints;
- Lost profits, as a result of the diversion of BR's fee earners from other clients' work.
For its part, [ERSIC] is not seeking recovery of the relevant part of the success fee from Tughans but it is seeking full compensation in respect of the amounts that it has paid out as set out above – for all intents and purposes, this equates to the $10m sum insured (which will undoubtedly be exhausted)".
"5.1 In summary, Brown Rudnick seeks damages for losses suffered by reason of the matters set out above.
5.2 The entirety of these losses are not yet quantifiable, particularly in light of the ongoing investigations. However, these losses will include but are not limited to:-
5.2.1 The Tughans' Fee;
5.2.2 Brown Rudnick's legal costs in relation to all criminal and civil investigations in relation to Project Eagle;
5.2.3 Brown Rudnick's legal costs and/or damages in relation to any civil action brought by Cerberus and/or any other party arising out of Tughans' misconduct;
5.2.4 Brown Rudnick's loss of revenue as a consequence of both time spent on the investigations and actions;
5.2.5 Damages and/or rescission of the Tughans Letter arising from the fraudulent misrepresentations that induced Brown Rudnick to enter into the transaction; and
5.2.6 Tughans owed Brown Rudnick a fiduciary duty and acted in breach of that duty by receiving the Tughans' Fee having fraudulently misrepresented the position to Brown Rudnick. Consequently, a declaration that Tughans now holds the funds on constructive trust for Brown Rudnick, having been
unjustly enriched by receiving them in breach of fiduciary duty.
5.3 Cerberus also requires compensation for losses suffered as a result of the matters set out above. In reliance upon the representations and warranties detailed in this letter, Cerberus authorised Brown Rudnick to make payment to Tughans, and thereby suffered the following loss and damage:-
5.3.1 Payment of the Success Fee;
5.3.2 Substantial costs in dealing with the various criminal and civil investigations; and
5.3.3 Loss of revenue or the lost chance of revenue to include that consequent upon the fact that Cerberus has had to divert its employees from remunerative work and/or the opportunity of such work.
For all of the reasons above, we require Tughans to compensate Brown Rudnick for its losses, and as assignee of Cerberus for the losses suffered by Cerberus."
"32. The BR Claim is for damages. This is illustrated not least by the fact that its own insurers are pursuing a subrogated claim.
33. We note that the letter of Declinature observes that Tughans cannot seek an indemnity in respect of the so called "success fee". That is not in dispute. Tughans recognises that, if a Court were to conclude that it received a payment of a fee because of a misrepresentation, it could not seek an indemnity to cover a loss of a fee to which Tughans was never entitled. The indemnity which Tughans does seek, however, is for the remaining partners
who are now facing a claim for loss and damage sustained by BR as a result of that alleged misrepresentation of IC.
…
53 We consider Tughans is entitled to an indemnity under the Policy to cover:
a) Legal costs in defending the claims against it; and
b) Any loss and damage established by BR or ERSIC.
54. Tughans does not seek an indemnity for the fee paid by BR. It is recognised that, if the Court concludes that Tughans was never entitled to a fee because of IC's misrepresentation, then the fee will be recovered by BR. Tughans does not ask its insurers to insure Tughan's own professional fee."
"As you are aware, the insured is seeking an indemnity from Insurers for any alleged loss and damage suffered by [BRUK] (and ERSIC) as a result of the alleged actions of Ian Coulter, including legal costs for defending the claims against the Insured, this included the Success Fee in the sum of £7.5m.
However, the Insured has confirmed that it will no longer be seeking an indemnity from Insurers for the Success Fee paid by [BRUK] for the work undertaken by Ian Coulter, as explained at paragraph 54 of Fenchurch Law letter to DAC Beachcroft dated 30 July 2020.
We have sought clarity from the Insured on this point, and whilst the Insured reasonably believes it is entitled to the Success Fee paid by [BRUK], it accepts that the Insurers are not expected to cover that element of the claim in the event it is found that the Insured should not have received the Success Fee. Therefore the Insured does not expect Insurers to reimburse them for the costs of the Success Fees if they have to return it to Brown Rudnick (less the VAT element already paid to HMRC).
The insured accepts that they will have to cover that element of the claim themselves, subject to the approval of the NCA and the Law Society to which the monies are being held to order (and the VAT obligations). The Insured is only asking Insurers to cover the costs and damages being sought by [BRUK]. We hope that this change in position will offer Insurers some element of comfort and be reconsidered before Arbitration Proceedings are commenced".
"The Success Fee
As set out in my email dated 8 October 2020 the Insured is seeking an indemnity from Insurers for any alleged loss and damage suffered by [BRUK] (and ERSIC) as a result of the alleged actions of Ian Coulter. As explained, the Insured has confirmed that it will no longer be seeking an indemnity from Insurers for the Success Fee paid by [BRUK] for the work undertaken by Ian Coulter, as explained at paragraph 54 of the Fenchurch Law Letter to DAC Beachcroft dated 30 July 2020. The Insured is only requesting that Insurers cover the costs and damages being sought by [BRUK].
We had hoped that this change in position would offer the Insurers some element of comfort and could be reconsidered before Arbitration Proceedings are commenced".
"6 The Claimant is facing two sets of proceedings in the High Court of Northern Ireland brought by (i) Brown Rudnick LLP ('BR') via Writ 2020 No. 31285 and (ii) Executive Risk Speciality Insurance Company via Writ 2020 No. 28264 (collectively, 'the Proceedings').
7. The Claimant contends that, save for any liability on its part to return any fees which it has received from BR, the Respondents are obliged to indemnify it for (a) any liability arising from the claims made in the Proceedings, (b) its costs of defending the Proceedings, and (c) its costs of bringing any third party proceedings.
8. The Respondents dispute that contention, on the grounds that any liability which the Claimant may incur by virtue of the Proceedings was not incurred in connection with the business of practising as solicitors. (The Respondents have also reserved the right to decline indemnity on other, as yet unspecified, grounds.)"
i) Article 4.1 of the ARIAS Rules provides for arbitration under the Rules to be commenced by the service of a written Notice of Arbitration specifying "a brief outline of the nature of the dispute referred to arbitration and specifying the type of relief sought." It is to be noted that the ARIAS Rules envisage that the Notice of Arbitration will be brief and general in terms, and that it draws a distinction between the dispute referred and the relief sought.
ii) Article 14.1.1 includes as one of the arbitral tribunal's "additional powers" the power to determine "whether any, and if so what, form of written statements setting out the issues in dispute and the position of the Parties in respect of those issues are to be supplied, and the extent to which such statements can be later amended."
i) That pleading, perhaps with an eye to the issues which might arise if it became necessary to look to Tughans' professional indemnity insurance for recovery, adopted a much more compensation-focussed approach to the claims advanced and relief sought.
ii) Damages were claimed in fraudulent and negligent misrepresentation and deceit, for breach of contract and negligence, and equitable compensation for breach of fiduciary duty.
iii) The Success Fee and the Tughans Fee were claimed as heads of loss suffered by Cerberus and BRUK respectively, but there was no reference to any liability on Tughans' part as constructive trustees or in unjust enrichment, nor to rescission.
iv) The causation issues raised by the claims relating to the Success Fee and the Tughans Fee were not expanded on at any length.
a) So far as the claims assigned by Cerberus are concerned, it is not clear whether damages are being claimed on a "no transaction" basis, and, if so, whether there were any benefits which needed to be brought into account (e.g. arising from the conclusion of the Cerberus Transaction).
b) So far as BRUK's own claims are concerned, it is not clear what the counterfactual basis for the damages claim is, and whether BRUK would have been entitled to retain its share of the Success Fee in that counterfactual scenario.
c) In respect of both sets of claims, it is not clear what BRUK's position is as to whether the Success Fee and the Tughans Fee were legally payable absent any rescission of the relevant Letter of Engagement.
i) He was not sure that the issue of whether Mr Coulter had intended to share the Tughans Fee with Mr Cushnahan "adds much to [RSA's] case. Either way this was a fee due and payable to Tughans for work done" ([19]).
ii) "Strategic advice, facilitation of necessary political contacts, intelligence gathering and oversight thereof, and deal structuring are all sufficiently solicitorial, and were all carried out here by [Mr Coulter]" ([29]).
iii) "Services were to be provided and were provided by those two law firms" – BRUK and Tughans – "to clients" ([31]).
iv) He found it "difficult to understand [RSA's] argument that the success fee did not [i]nure to the benefit of Tughans" – an argument advanced by RSA as one reason why Mr Coulter's involvement in Project Eagle was not solicitorial in nature – because "it plainly did" ([33]).
"Accordingly, I decide the main issue in this arbitration in favour of the Claimants, Tughans. But I dismiss the estoppel argument. I will receive written submissions from both parties as to the form of the relief to be granted in the final award. I will also receive submissions, hopefully brief, as to costs. In providing details as to the quantum of costs, I would invite both parties to separate the costs relating to the main issue from those relating to the estoppel plea".
"As for the Success Fee, the parties' positions are starkly different. The Respondents argue that my award should strip out any mention of any form of liability relating to the Success Fee. The Claimant seeks a specific declaration that there should be indemnity 'in respect of any claim for the repayment of the Success fee'. I do not agree with either of these positions.
There is, firstly, no basis for stripping out the Success Fee from the general declaration. BR claims loss from the payment of the Fee and if that is part of their loss, so be it. There is no legal basis for removing that element of loss, because the Claimant has made a 'gain' by receipt of the Fee. Support for the Claimant's position is afforded by the decision of Vinelott J in The Mortgage Corporation v Solicitors' Indemnity Fund [1998] PNLR 73. Indemnity is due to the Claimant from the claims for damages or equitable compensation which BR, ERSIC or Cerberus may allege. I see no reason to qualify that indemnity.
But I see no basis for the positive declaration which the Claimant seeks, for the reasons fully set out by the Respondents in their Reply Submissions. Whether or not the Fee 'inures' for the benefit of the Claimant is irrelevant. That was part of the argument as to why the activity of earning the fee came within the scope of Tughans' work as solicitors. The Claimant has set its face against a claim for a general declaration as to recovery of the Success Fee, and it would be quite wrong to allow a change of course now. I should add that there is no claim for restitution by BR, nor any likelihood of one. If such a claim were to be added for tactical reasons it would plainly be a subsidiary claim, and would fall to be treated for the purposes of the insurance in accordance with the principal, compensatory claim. See Mustill J in Rigby v Sun Alliance and London Insurers Ltd 1980] 1 Ll Rep 359 at 364.
I therefore make no specific order in relation to the Success Fee. In so far as this is part of the BR claim , as an element of loss which BR proves that it has suffered, that will be covered by the indemnity in respect of the BR and other claims. If not, then there is no principle by which I am satisfied that a purely restitutionary claim, were it to be made and pursued, would come within the indemnity".
"(1) All claims for loss and damage brought by [BRUK], Cerberus and/or ERSIC against the Claimants in respect of the matters set out in paragraphs 16-17 of the Partial Final Award arise 'in connection with the Practice carried on by or on behalf of the Solicitor'".
(2) "[RSA and the other insurers] are, subject to the application of any other terms and conditions of both the Primary and Excess Layer Policy Wording, liable to indemnify the Claimant in respect of:
(a) All claims brought by [BRUK], Cerberus, and/or ERSIC as referred to in paragraph (1) above.
(b) All costs incurred by the Claimant in defence of the proceedings commenced by [BRUK] on 20th March 2020.
(c) All costs incurred by [Tughans] in defence of the proceedings commenced by ERSIC on 13th March 2020".
THE ISSUES IN OVERVIEW
i) The issue of whether RSA was obliged to indemnify Tughans in respect of damages in the amount of the Tughans Fee was never referred to the Arbitrator, who, accordingly, did not have jurisdiction to determine it.
ii) Even if the matters submitted to the Arbitrator were capable of extending to a claim for an indemnity in respect of any liability on Tughans' part to pay damages in the amount of the Tughans Fee, Tughans never brought such a claim in the Arbitration, such that it was not necessary for RSA to advance arguments in response to it, and it was therefore a serious irregularity for the Arbitrator to grant Tughans relief in the form in which he did.
iii) In any event, the Arbitrator's conclusion that the Policy was capable of providing an indemnity in respect of Tughans' liability in damages in the amount of the Tughans Fee was wrong in law.
THE JURISDICTION CHALLENGE
Introduction
"what matters have been submitted to arbitration in accordance with the arbitration agreement".
i) liability to BRUK in the amount of the Tughans Fee, whether advanced by way of a damages claim, in restitution or otherwise (as RSA contends) – which I shall refer to as a Tughans Fee Damages Claim; or only
ii) liability in restitution to restore the Tughans Fee to BRUK (as Tughans contend) which I shall refer to as a Tughans Fee Restitution Claim.
If that argument is resolved in Tughans' favour, that is the end of RSA's s.67 challenge.
i) First, whether the effect of the NOA Proviso was to deprive the Arbitrator of jurisdiction in respect of the Tughans Fee Damages Claim, or whether it simply had the effect that Tughans were not, at that point, advancing such a claim (so as to require them to obtain whatever procedural permissions were necessary should they later wish to do so).
ii) Second, even if the Arbitrator did not have jurisdiction over the Tughans Fee Damages Claim when the Arbitration was commenced, did the parties expand the scope of the reference to arbitration through the pleadings and submissions exchanged in the period up to the delivery of the Partial Final Award.
The meaning of the NOA Proviso
i) This was the case in BRUK's letter of 3 November 2017 ([20]), and it is noteworthy that, having stated that Tughans were required to compensate BRUK for its losses, BRUK stated that Tughans should as a preliminary step repay the Tughans Fee. The reference to "repay" was not intended to connote some form of unjust enrichment claim, but was a practical way of referring to the fact that BRUK were claiming compensation including the amount of the Tughans Fee, the Tughans Fee was (or was thought to be) sitting in Tughans' bank account, and the obvious thing for Tughans to do was to reduce BRUK's loss by paying it back.
ii) This was also the case in the proceedings commenced by ERSIC and BRUK in the High Court of Northern Ireland ([27] and [28]), neither of which included a claim for a remedy other than damages or contribution.
iii) The Pre-Action Protocol letter sent by ERSIC after those proceedings had been issued described the Tughans Fee as part of BRUK's "loss", under the heading "Quantum" ([29]).
iv) The Pre-Action Protocol Letter sent by BRUK ([30]) went wider than that (referring to a claim for rescission of the Tughans Letter of Engagement, pursuant to a constructive trust and to Tughans having been unjustly enriched). However, not only did it clearly refer to claims to recover the amount of the Tughans Fee as damages, but it concluded by stating "for all of the reasons above, we require Tughans to compensate Brown Rudnick for its losses, and as assignee of Cerberus for the losses suffered by Cerberus."
i) It described the BRUK claim as one "for damages" (at [32] of the Letter) and the passages which follow must be read in the light of that characterisation.
ii) The statement "we note that the letter of Declinature observes that Tughans cannot seek an indemnity in respect of the so called 'success fee'. That is not in dispute" was wholly general, and there is nothing to suggest that it was limited to a restitutionary claim (nor would a paragraph couched in those terms have offered any prospect of assuaging the concern RSA has expressed on this topic). Further, the statement "Tughans recognises that, if a Court were to conclude that it received a payment of a fee because of a misrepresentation, it could not seek an indemnity to cover a loss of a fee to which Tughans was never entitled" makes more sense if the statement embraces recovery of the Tughans Fee as damages, because a misrepresentation would not be an element of a restitutionary claim.
iii) Read in context, the statement that "We consider Tughans is entitled to an indemnity under the Policy to cover: … any loss and damage established by BR[UK] or ERSIC" is clearly a reference to those elements of the damages claim (which were very significant) which relates to matters other than the loss represented by the payment of the Tughans Fee then (largely at least) sitting in Tughans' bank account.
i) It referred to BRUK's claim to the Tughans Fee as one for damages ("As you are aware, the insured is seeking an indemnity from Insurers for any alleged loss and damage suffered by [BRUK] (and ERSIC) … as a result of the alleged actions of Ian Coulter, including … the Success Fee in the sum of £7.5m").
ii) The statement that "the Insured has confirmed that it will no longer be seeking an indemnity from Insurers for the Success Fee paid by [BRUK] for the work undertaken by Ian Coulter" can only have been understood as including the recovery of that amount as damages, as referred to in the preceding sentence.
iii) The statement that Tughans accepted that "the Insurers are not expected to cover that element of the claim in the event it is found that the Insured should not have received the Success Fee" allows for the fact that Tughans' position was that no misrepresentation had been made, and is not to be interpreted as what would have been a very coded attempt to confine the scope of Tughans' concession to a restitutionary claim.
iv) The statement "the insured accepts that they will have to cover that element of the claim themselves …" and "is only asking Insurers to cover the costs and damages being sought by [BRUK]" was clearly communicating that, to the extent that the amount received remained available to Tughans to meet that part of BRUK's claims, no indemnity would be sought from RSA.
v) Finally, it is important to note that the statement as to Tughans' position on the Tughans Fee was intended to avoid the need for an arbitration to be commenced. Had the statement not taken the Tughans Fee off the table, but simply removed the speculative possibility of Tughans seeking an indemnity for a restitutionary claim to the Tughans Fee off the table, while leaving the much more prominent and likely claim for damages in the same amount "in play", it could not have been presented in these terms.
vi) Those points are also true of the Second Email ([33]).
Did the NOA Proviso limit the Arbitrator's substantive jurisdiction?
"As discussed above, the issue as to whether a claim falls within the ambit of the arbitration agreement is a jurisdictional issue. But is an issue as to whether a claim (usually a later claim) falls within the scope of the existing arbitration also not a jurisdictional dispute? It is thought that there is indeed another jurisdictional category, which concerns not so much whether a matter that has been submitted falls within the scope of the reference. It may be that a new claim, introduced late on in the reference, falls fairly and squarely within the scope of the arbitration clause but outside the scope of the reference. Does the party facing the claim have a right to ask the tribunal to debar the claim, and a further right to challenge the decision before the court, if the tribunal disagrees? On a strict wording of the provision, it would seem not, but in practice such a mater is treated as giving rise to a jurisdictional issue.
In any arbitration, the claims before the tribunal (and therefore the scope of the reference) ought to be (but perhaps not always are) ascertainable early on: either in the notice of arbitration; or (for most institutional arbitrations) in the Request, when read together with the Answer (ICC) or Response (LCIA) or (for ad hoc arbitrations especially) in the pleadings, or first exchange of written submissions or memorials.
…
Claimants would therefore be well advised to ensure that the notice of arbitration (or request, if institutional) is drafted in the widest possible terms and contains an express reservation of rights in respect of other relief, in order to maximise the chances of not having to commence a fresh arbitration for a new claim, which would be the obvious consequence of being shut out in the existing reference (assuming there would be no limitation issues). In other words, the less detail, the better, because an unsuspecting claimant may find that it has been fettered by its own document, should it ever want to enlarge the scope of the arbitration …
In most cases, modern commercial tribunals are more likely to take a purposive approach (which we encourage)."
"47 Section 49 of the 1996 Act provides that the parties are free to agree on the powers of the tribunal as regards the award of interest and that, unless otherwise agreed, the provisions of that section are to apply …
48 The jurisdiction of an arbitrator in relation to any particular claim for a money award, whether in debt or damages, depends upon whether such claim falls within the jurisdictional scope of the agreement to arbitrate and, where an arbitration has already been commenced, whether the claim in question falls within the scope of the reference. Once the jurisdiction of the arbitrator has been engaged by the reference to him of a particular dispute or group or class of disputes, which fall within his jurisdiction as pre-defined by the agreement to arbitrate, his jurisdiction is further confined by the scope of the reference and he cannot make an award in relation to a claim which is not within that scope unless all parties agreed that the scope should be widened sufficiently to include it.
49 When on the opening day of the hearing before Sir Michael Kerr counsel for the Respondent informed the arbitrator that the Respondent made no claim for interest, the effect was to curtail the scope of the reference to exclude a claim for interest and to do so on whatever basis the claim was put, whether in contract for a success fee or on a quantum meruit. The reference of a dispute involving a claim for a monetary award would ordinarily include a claim for interest on the amount of any award. That claim would be part of the dispute which had been referred. Its withdrawal would thus confine the reference to a resolution of the dispute as to the capital amount of the debt or damages claimed. It follows that thereafter the jurisdiction of the arbitrator to award interest could arise in that arbitration only if the scope of the reference in that arbitration were widened to include a claim for interest. If a claimant having once abandoned one part of his claim subsequently sought to reinstate it, he could do so only by consent of the opposing party or, without such consent, by permission from the arbitrator. In the latter case, considerations of justice and fairness to the opposite party might well arise."
(emphasis added).
i) The ambit of the NOA Proviso was very narrow. It concerned a matter arising from the same factual background as the relief which was sought, and related to the same cause of action (an indemnity under the Policy in respect of liability to BRUK and ERSIC). Given that extensive overlap, it is more natural to treat the NOA Proviso as disclaiming a claim for relief to a particular extent, rather than confining the "dispute" referred to arbitration. If, for example, a Notice of Arbitration referred a breach of contract claim to arbitration, and disclaimed relief by way of specific performance, that restriction is unlikely to have the effect that a claim for such relief could not thereafter be asserted in the arbitration with the arbitral tribunal's permission.
ii) That conclusion is reinforced by the fact that the Arbitrator was appointed on the basis of the ARIAS Rules, which envisage that the Notice of Arbitration will only describe the dispute referred to in arbitration in brief and "outline" terms, and give the Arbitrator permission to permit amendment of the statements of case.
iii) The conclusion is also consistent with the purposive approach for which Merkin and Flannery contends, and with decisions which suggest that the identification of the "dispute" for the purposes of determining what has been referred to arbitration should be approached "in broad terms" by looking at "the essential claim" (Cantillon Limited v Urvasco Limited [2008] EWHC 282 (TCC), [55](b)] and [55]) and by adopting a "broad and flexible approach" (Sonact Group Limited v Premuda SpA (The Four Island) [2018] EWHC 3820 (Comm), [23]).
Alternatively, did the parties subsequently include a claim for indemnity in respect of the Tughans Fee Damages Claim within the scope of the reference to the Arbitrator?
"109. Further and in the alternative, if it is established that IC was engaged in any dishonest, fraudulent, criminal or malicious act or omission, then this was neither condoned nor accepted or within the knowledge of the Claimants. The Claimants are therefore entitled to be indemnified in respect of the acts and omissions of IC even if they were otherwise unlawful.
110 The Claimants are entitled to an indemnity in respect of civil liability incurred in connection with the Practice. The claims intimated against the Claimants are:
a) a claim for damages in respect of loss and damage incurred by Cerberus, now assigned to BR;
b) a subrogated claim by ERSIC for loss and damage incurred by BR;
c) a claim by BR for return of the Success Fee.
111 The Respondents have wrongfully refused to indemnify the Claimants in respect of the said claims. The Claimants are entitled to an indemnity in respect of the claims set out at sub-paragraphs (a) and (b) immediately above, on the grounds that:
a) Any liability, arising from a claim for damages for loss and damage sustained by BR and/or Cerberus, is a liability which occurred as a result of the acts or omissions of IC while engaged in connection with the business of and/or as a solicitor.
b) Pursuant to the terms of the Policies, then, if and insofar as IC was acting as a solicitor, the Claimants are entitled to an indemnity in respect of his actions.
112 The Claimants make no claim for an indemnity in respect of the Success Fee in so far as this can be recovered by the Claimants and lawfully paid or repaid in light of the BR or ERSIC claims, noting that:
a) The Success Fee was paid to IC to the account of Tughans in the total sum of £7.5m plus VAT.
b) The VAT element has been paid to HMRC in accordance with Tughans' obligations to account for VAT received.
c) The fee was paid and received as a fee for services rendered by Tughans. The Claimants each have satisfied such income tax as falls due on the Success Fee.
d) The balance of the Success Fee amounting (as at January 2021) to £4.088m is held by Tughans in a nominated account.
e) The NCA has required Tughans to give an undertaking that that sum will not be released pending the conclusion of its criminal investigation.
113 Insofar as the Claimants are unable to repay the Success Fee (should they be so required) from the money held, either because it is retained pursuant to the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002 or otherwise is unavailable either in whole or in part, then the Claimants are entitled to an indemnity in respect of the civil liability incurred because:
a) The liability accrues to the Claimants as a result of the acts or omissions of IC while acting as a solicitor.
b) The Claimants cannot recover the VAT or Income Tax liabilities in respect of the Success Fee.
c) The Claimants have incurred that liability to make a payment to BR or ERSIC as a result of the claim or alleged claims made by them against IC being a civil liability within the terms of the Policies."
i) No such claim was being advanced against Tughans.
ii) The qualification now introduced to Tughans' position – that its agreement not to seek an indemnity in respect of the Tughans Fee did not apply to the extent that the Tughans Fee was either no longer available to Tughans as a means of meeting their liabilities (because tax and VAT had been paid) or ceased to be so available in the future (by reason of the undertaking to the NCA) (the Qualified Claim) – is one which is not obviously limited in its application to a restitutionary claim (or, indeed, apposite to such a claim).
iii) The terms in which the Qualified Claim is advanced in paragraph 113 are wholly general, relating to "an indemnity in respect of the civil liability incurred" being a liability incurred to BRUK or ERSIC "as a result of the claim or alleged claims made by them" (which, as noted above, were at that stage confined to claims in damages).
"The Claimants seek the following relief:
(i) A determination and declaration that the Respondents are liable to indemnify the Claimants in respect of the claims by BR and ERSIC in accordance with the Policies to include:
a) All claims for loss and damage asserted by BR, Cerberus and ERSIC to include the costs of any claims pursued against the Claimants".
"A determination and declaration that the Claimants' civil liability to BR, Cerberus and/or ERSIC includes such portion (or all) of the Success Fee received by the Claimants which cannot be repaid from the monies held by the Claimants, on the basis that:
a) The Claimants do not retain control over the balance of the Success Fee and are not permitted to refund all or any of the monies by the NCA or the Law Society of Northern Ireland or any other lawful authority.
b) Insofar as the Claimants are in a position to refund the balance of the Success Fee, the Claimants are entitled to an indemnity in respect of any portion of the Success Fee which cannot be repaid on the grounds it has been discharged to pay VAT or tax liabilities which cannot now be recovered."
i) Paragraph 97(c), pleading back to paragraph 109 of the Particulars of Claim, stated:
"In the event that the Claimants attempt to seek any indemnity in respect of the Success Fee itself or damages reflecting it, the Respondents reserve the right to contend that the later retention of the Success Fee by Tughans amounted to condoning dishonesty by IC for the purposes of the Policy; the Respondents do not advance such a case now as, so it understands, the Claimants do not seek indemnity in respect of the Success Fee or damages reflecting it".
This was a reference to Insurance Clause 1 of the Policy which provided that:
"no indemnity will be given … a) to any individual committing or condoning any dishonest fraudulent criminal or malicious act or
omission; b) to any partnership or incorporated practice or limited liability partnership in respect of any dishonest fraudulent criminal or malicious act or omission committed or condoned by all of its Partners directors officers or members".
ii) Had it been Tughans' position at that time that they were seeking an indemnity in respect of damages reflecting the Tughans Fee, then in the face of paragraph 97(c), Tughans could not but have asserted the contrary in clear and unequivocal terms in response. As will be seen shortly, it did not do so.
iii) Paragraphs 100 (responding to paragraph 112) and 101 (responding to paragraph 113) pleaded to the new Qualified Claim.
iv) Paragraph 100(a) pleaded "it is noted that the Claimants make no claim to indemnity in respect of the Success Fee". As with paragraph 97(c), this was a paragraph with which Tughans needed to take issue in clear terms if it was their position that they were entitled to an indemnity in respect of the Tughans Fee Damages Claim going beyond the Qualified Claim.
v) Paragraphs 100(c) to (f) required Tughans to prove the factual basis for the Qualified Claim, and pleaded that the cause of any loss occasioned by the payments of VAT and tax was Tughans' decision to retain the Tughans Fee.
vi) Paragraph 101 pleaded that the basis of the Qualified Claim was hypothetical because Tughans did retain the Tughans Fee (something inconsistent with any understanding that a non-contingent indemnity claim in respect of the Tughans Fee was also being pursued) with the result that Tughans "have suffered no relevant insurable loss". In addition, it advanced various reasons why the Qualified Claim could not succeed in any event (including the Solicitors' Practice Issue and a suggestion that the Tughans Fee was "tainted by illegality").
"The Respondents seek a declaration and determination that the Claimants are not entitled to indemnity from the Respondents in respect of or referrable to:
a. Any civil liability or defence costs arising from the claims brought by BR and ERSIC;
b. Any costs and expenses (own or adverse) incurred by the Claimants in the claim against IC and VD; and/or
c. The Success Fee."
i) In response to paragraph 97 (and therefore paragraph 97(c)), they pleaded:
"As to Paragraph 97, the Respondents cannot properly assert that any retention of the Success Fee by Tughans was 'condoning dishonesty' by IC. The dishonesty by IC was seeking to put the Success Fee beyond the reach of the Claimants. The Success Fee inured to the benefit of Tughans and was paid to Tughans. IC acted dishonestly vis-à-vis the Claimants by seeking to remove the Success Fee to the Morley account. The recovery and the
retention of the Success Fee by the Claimants do not condone any act of dishonesty: it does no more than restore the fee to its rightful place. In respect of the claims by BR and ERSIC, those remain as claims based on breaches set out in the pleaded cases. The remedies which the Claimant seeks against the Respondents are set out clearly in the Particulars of Claim."
ii) It will be apparent that there was no attempt to challenge RSA's understanding that Tughans were not seeking any indemnity in respect of the Tughans Fee or damages reflecting it beyond the Qualified Claim advanced in the Particulars of Claim.
iii) Tughans did not plead at all to paragraph 100(a) (which had noted "the Claimants make no claim to indemnity in respect of the Success Fee").
iv) In responding to paragraph 101, Tughans pleaded at paragraph 48(c) as follows:
"The claims made by BR and ERSIC and the costs of defending them all fall within the Policy. Such claims are clearly distinct from a claim to the return of the Success Fee."
While that paragraph is not as clear as it might be, in context it is best understood as referring to the claims by BRUK and ERSIC other than in relation to the Tughans Fee, and the costs of defending those proceedings, and making the point that those were recoverable whatever the position might be in relation to the Tughans Fee.
"203. The Claimants' decision to pay VAT and income tax on the Success Fee in order to secure a profit cost to which they were never entitled does not change the position; rather, it makes it worse for the Claimants: those VAT and income tax costs are costs that the Claimants willingly opted to incur in order to secure the unjustified windfall. Those payments to the Revenue
therefore cannot, if the same is sought to be alleged, constitute any separate heads of insured loss to which they are entitled to an indemnity.
204. The Claimants appear to accept the above analysis: see paragraph 112 of the Particulars of Claim where they disclaim an indemnity in respect of the Success Fee. However, the Claimants add the qualification "in so far as this can be recovered by the Claimants and lawfully paid or repaid in the light of the BR and ERSIC claims" and then seek an indemnity, at paragraph 113 of the Particulars of Claim, if the Claimants are unable to repay the Success Fee because it is retained pursuant to the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002. Such qualification makes no sense. First, the reasoning in the paragraphs above would still equally apply: the Claimants have suffered no insured loss. Second, any inability to return the Success Fee only arises because of Tughans' own decision to retain the Success Fee (i.e. to make a profit from it). Third, the only other parties that could theoretically be entitled to the Success Fee are BR and Cerberus and they (via the alleged assignment from Cerberus to BR) are parties to the claim against Tughans; so no such qualification would ever arise as any restriction on Tughans' ability to release the Success Fee can only exist for the benefit of Cerberus and/or BR."
"170 As regard the proposition that there was no "insured loss" as alleged in the Respondents' skeleton from §192, this is a novel argument to advance to justify a complete declinature of liability in which the BR Statement of Claim actually pleads a loss of well over £30million.
171 One might understand the Respondents' argument, if the only issue at stake [was] the success fee. The argument now developed, is that the BR loss flows from the decision of IC to divert the success fee to Morley (Respondents' skeleton §197) or the Respondents' failure to return the success fee.
172 This is an argument which completely ignores the 'civil liability' as pleaded in the Statement of Claim. It is not asserted by BR that the loss was caused because IC tried to steal a portion of a professional fee from his partners. The claim advanced is that
in the course of his role as a solicitor instructed to act (and acting upon) the Project Eagle loan sale, IC was asked to confirm that the fee would not be shared with a current or former member of NAMA.
173 It was this alleged misrepresentation which forms the basis of the liability. The diversion of part of the professional fee to Morley did not offend the assurance given. The liability arises because BR alleges (and will have to prove) that the representations given by IC on Tughans's behalf were either false or were given in breach of duty or, indeed, may even have been fraudulent.
174 The Claimants are the innocent partners and if IC was guilty of fraud which caused loss to a client of the firm and/or others, then the Master Policy extends to indemnify the "innocent partners".
175 The further feature of this case, however, is that the success fee has, by reason of the actions of IC, been placed beyond the control of Tughans. If BR obtains a judgment against Tughans, then this will be for loss and damage (ie civil liability) arising from
the actions of IC for which Tughans is responsible.
176 The Respondents are not claiming a right to a success fee to which they are not otherwise entitled. They are claiming an indemnity for loss flowing from the civil liability created by the actions of IC. If BR established that the fee should never have been paid because of the fraud of IC, then the fee is 'lost' to the Respondents to meet
the liability which arises. The indemnity principle does not provide any defence to the Respondents insofar as the Claimants would then suffer a loss, and it is to be noted that the losses/damages claimed at para 61 of the BR statement of claim extend far
beyond the fee."
"MR HUBBLE: In correspondence prior to the Particulars of Claim, the position of the claimants had been that they were not seeking claims with indemnity in respect of the success fee because it's not an insured loss. There is a qualification to that in the Particulars of Claim, and there is just a hint of it still in my learned friend's written closing submissions, which is the idea that even if there is an order that they should be told to return the success fee, if they can't do that because of the undertakings so they have to give some other money or pay some other damages instead, that other payment or damages does fall within the terms of the policy. It's worth being very clear, we say that simply makes no sense at all. You can't convert the claim for the success fee, which is not an insured loss, into an insured loss by saying because it's subject to undertakings to benefit presumably the very person who's bringing the claim, because that's why the undertakings exist presumably is to protect the money which is otherwise due to Brown Rudnick or Cerberus, but Brown Rudnick as Cerberus' assignee. The whole thing is circular.
THE ARBITRATOR: There is a circularity, I understand that".
THE CHALLENGE UNDER S.68 OF THE 1996 ACT
"(1) A party to arbitral proceedings may (upon notice to the other parties and to the tribunal) apply to the court challenging an award in the proceedings on the ground of serious irregularity affecting the tribunal, the proceedings or the award …
(2) Serious irregularity means an irregularity of one or more of the following kinds which the court considers has caused or will cause substantial injustice to the applicant-
(a) failure by the tribunal to comply with section 33 (general duty of tribunal);
(b) the tribunal exceeding its powers (otherwise than by exceeding its substantive jurisdiction: see section 67);
(c) failure by the tribunal to conduct the proceedings in accordance with the procedure agreed by the parties ...
(f) uncertainty or ambiguity as to the effect of the award."
i) Tughans had expressly disclaimed any application for relief in respect of the Tughans Fee Damages Claim save on the basis of the Qualified Claim;
ii) the merits hearing had been conducted by both parties on that basis; and
iii) RSA had made it clear in its Defence and Counterclaim that there were alternative arguments it reserved the right to put forward had the point been advanced;
involved a serious irregularity. The decision involved a failure to allow RSA a reasonable opportunity to present its case and/or deal with Tughans' case as newly formulated for the purposes of s.33(1)(a) and s.68(2)(a) of the 1996 Act and a failure to conduct the proceedings in accordance with the procedure agreed by the parties (namely by reference to the matters in issue as defined in the statements of case and submissions served before the merits hearing).
"170 At paragraph 362 of the Award, the Arbitrator held that he was granting the extension of time under Clause 31.7 and not Clause 31.6 of the Connect Contract. As dealt with in argument, the effect of the Award being an interim extension of time under Clause 31.7 is that the extent of the extension of time can be reviewed and revised in a further arbitration when the relevant extension of time is determined, not on an interim, but on a final basis. Thus whilst arguments may be made as to the effect of other findings by the Arbitrator, the question of the length of the extension of time which is "fair and reasonable in the circumstances" is not something which has finally been determined by this Arbitration.
171. If I had come to the conclusion that there was an irregularity in this case, I consider that any injustice arising from the length of the extension of time could be cured by the process which is laid down under the Connect Contract and I would not have been minded to find that there was substantial injustice. There will, of course, be the need for a financial adjustment but this has to be viewed in the context of necessary accounting forming part of the long running relationship between the parties. In the circumstances, I do not consider that an irregularity in the determination of an extension of time by this arbitrator would give rise to substantial injustice."
"Although the Respondents' position is that the Claimants have no entitlement in law to an indemnity for the Success Fee, the Respondents would (in the manner described at paragraph 46 of Mr Miller's witness statement) have necessarily changed and/or considered changing their approach to these proceedings to meet that case in the event that they were wrong. The Respondents have been deprived of the opportunity to take any of those steps and affording the Respondents a short period of time merely to make representations on that non-pleaded entitlement is no cure for the substantial unfairness to which the Arbitrator's approach gave rise".
"Had the Claimants pleaded and sought to prove a case to the effect that they could keep a Success Fee …. and the Insurers should provide an indemnity in order that they might retain that Fee, the Respondents would have done (at least) some of the following:
(a) Considered seeking to have that point struck out, or dealt with as a preliminary point of law;
(b) Considered seeking to resist any attempt to introduce the issue into the scope of the arbitration on the basis that it was too late and/or that the Claimants were estopped from pursuing such a claim and/or that it would be abusive to seek to pursue that claim on a preliminary basis even if the application to amend the scope of the
arbitration/pleadings, had been permitted;
(c) Had the matter been introduced as - and remained - a pleaded issue in the case, the Respondents would likely have taken some or all of the following steps:
i. Pleaded a case resisting the same;
ii. Explored the likely implications were the Success Fee found to have been procured through criminal means, including the consequential impact that the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002 would have on the Claimants, the status of the Success Fee and the undertakings in relation to the same, while the monies remained in the Claimants' hands;
iii. Cross-examined the Claimants' Mr Brown about the POCA implications for the Claimants (as equity partners in a law firm) in seeking an indemnity from Insurers whilst also intending to retain the Success Fee if and to the extent it was found to be the proceeds of crime;
iv. Considered whether to lead evidence as to previous insurer practice and treatment of policy claims seeking indemnification of fees to which an insured was never entitled, as distinct from fees which insureds were in principle entitled to but were required to pay damages to third parties reflecting the same.
But the Respondents were not able to take any of those steps since the issue was not one in the case and not one that they were ever required to meet until after the final trial of the dispute."
i) Mr Hubble KC accepted that the full hearing of the legal arguments before the court on the s.69 application was sufficient to cure any substantial injustice which would otherwise have followed from (i).
ii) With some encouragement from the court, Mr Coleman KC accepted that the effect of the words "subject to the application of any other terms and conditions of both the Primary and Excess Layer Policy Wording" in the Disputed Declarations ([45]) left the condonation argument open to RSA in the event that Tughans were found liable to BRUK. Mr Hubble KC accepted that, on that basis, there would be no substantial injustice in relation to (ii) either.
i) The legal argument which would have been raised by RSA in response had in any event been raised in response to the Qualified Claim.
ii) The Qualified Claim would have to be determined in any event, but the factual premise of that claim had yet to be established, because the extent to which the benefit of the Tughans Fee would be available to the insured partners, and the reasons for any shortfall, would not be known for some time.
iii) RSA does not appear to be alleging that there was a serious irregularity because the factual arguments raised by RSA in response to the Qualified Claim – as to the effect of Tughans' conduct in accounting to HMRC in respect of the Tughans Fee or giving undertakings in relation to the Tughans Fee – were not determined by the Arbitrator in the Award. It was expressly confirmed before me that those points, to the extent they arise, would fall to be determined at a subsequent arbitral hearing.
iv) On what is now the agreed effect of the Disputed Declarations, it would have remained open to RSA to raise the condonation argument at a future hearing which, to the extent it followed the resolution of the proceedings brought by BRUK against Tughans, might well take place when the underlying events are clearer and when the current uncertainties in relation to the damages claimed by BRUK and the basis for those claims (see [36](iv]) above) are likely to have been clarified.
i) determining whether, and if so on what terms, it should be open to Tughans to pursue their indemnity claim in relation to the Tughans Fee on an unqualified basis; and
ii) (to the extent this remains a live issue in the light of the Arbitrator's decision in (i) above and the court's conclusion on the s.69 application below) to decide what relief to grant in respect of the Qualified Claim, including whether there should be further argument on that issue.
THE APPEAL UNDER S.69 OF THE 1996 ACT
The point of law in outline
"The Arbitrator's decision declaring that the Respondents were entitled to a full indemnity in relation to the Success Fee (including in relation to not only those sums retained as profit costs but those elements of the Fee paid by the Respondents as income tax and VAT thereon) is obviously wrong in law and raises a point of general public importance as to the limits of indemnities that may be claimed under a policy of professional indemnity insurance. That is a question of law in that the Claimants contend that policies of professional indemnity are not intended to, and do not in fact, provide cover that would entitle an insured to be indemnified for the loss of a sum to which they were never entitled, there being no 'loss' and thus no 'insured loss' at all."
i) If BRUK establishes liability against Tughans, it will follow that Tughans never became entitled to the Tughans Fee and so can suffer no loss in having to return it.
ii) It is not the purpose of a professional indemnity insurance policy to pay solicitors a sum representing profit costs to which they were never entitled.
iii) Granting Tughans an indemnity in respect of the Tughans Fee would violate the principle of indemnity.
"Insurance Clauses
1. Civil Liability
The Insurers will indemnify the Insured in respect of claims or alleged claims made against the Insured and notified to the Brokers (subject to Special Condition 4) during the Period of Insurance specified in the Schedule in respect of any civil liability (including liability for claimant's costs and expenses) incurred in connection with the Practice carried on by or on behalf of the Solicitor or any Predecessor provided that no indemnity will be given
a) to any individual committing or condoning any dishonest fraudulent criminal or malicious act or omission
b) to any partnership or incorporated practice or limited liability partnership in respect of any dishonest fraudulent criminal or malicious act or omission committed or condoned by all of its Partners directors officers or members."
Discussion
The Indemnity Principle
"the assured cannot recover anything under the main indemnity clause or make any claim against the underwriters until they have been found liable and so sustained a loss. If judgment were given against them for the sum claimed, they would have undoubtedly have sustained a loss".
i) In Axa Insurance UK plc v Thermonex Ltd [2012] EWHC B10 (Merc), in a policy covering "liability for injury or damage", claims had been brought against the insured for damages and restitution. The nature of the restitutionary claim – which appears to have been brought under Irish law – is unclear, but may have been a claim for benefits derived by the insured from breach of contract (it being alleged that the insured had "made an unjustified gain … in that they have not provided the design and system which they were obliged to provide or failed to carry out their obligations under the warranties"). At [66], HHJ Simon Brown QC held:
"Restitutionary claims cannot be within the scope of the cover provided by the PL [public liability] section. Restitution is concerned with the reversal of a gain not with compensating a claimant for its loss. In my judgment, even if Thermonex did have any liability to Gem to make restitution, it would not be legally liable to pay damage".
ii) The editors of Colinvaux's Law of Insurance (13th), [21-030] observe:
"A liability policy will not cover restitutionary claims. The essence of such a claim is that the insured is in possession of money which does not belong to him. Accordingly a restitutionary claim is inconsistent with the notion that the assured has suffered any loss. On this basis, it might be thought that a claim by the assured for loss of professional fees is not one covered by a liability policy".
That passage relies on a statement made outside the insurance context by Lord Phillips in Stone & Rolls Ltd (in liquidation) v Moore Stephens (a firm) [2009] 1 AC 1391, [5]:
"True it is that S & R are now subject to a paper liability to the Komercni Banka of over $94m, but common sense would suggest that this is not really a loss that they have suffered. They started with nothing and their alleged losses are sums that they acquired by fraud and then paid away as part of the same fraudulent transaction. If a person starts with nothing and never legitimately acquires anything he cannot realistically be said to have suffered any loss."
Claims Against Solicitors to Recover Fees Charged
"extends to any loss incurred arising directly from any claim against the firm founded on negligence attributable to the firm. The language [of the policy] points to the amount of a claim for damages established against the firm, not to the ultimate consequences to the firm of its liability under the judgment after taking into account other transactions entered into by the firm."
i) "in the case of almost any transaction giving rise to a liability in negligence, a claim by the client against the Fund would be reduced by the benefit to the solicitor of any related fees he would be entitled to charge and retain"; and
ii) "it would severely limit the protection afforded by the [Solicitors' Indemnity Fund] to members of the public who resort to solicitors for advice" (relying in that context on the important public policy underlying the compulsory insurance regime for solicitors of protecting solicitors' clients as well as solicitors themselves, as set out by Lord Brightman in Swain v Law Society [1983] 1 AC 598, 618).
Claims Against A Solicitor to Recover Amounts Paid Which Never Became Due
"An insured incurs no loss within the meaning of the insurance contract by being compelled to return property that it had stolen, even if a more polite word than 'stolen' is used to characterize the claim for the property's return".
However, that conclusion has been criticised, and the law in many US states would appear to have moved more recently in the other direction (see, for example, Christopher French, "The Insurability of Claims for Restitution" 18:3 University of Pennsylvania Journal of Business Law 599).
"Aggrieved persons may have claims of various kinds – for example, in restitution, or debt, or damages – or some combination of these (the terms 'damages' and 'compensation' are synonymous). But a claim for damages requires a breach of a duty or obligation and would therefore exclude claims for restitution or debt. Thus, in the present case the available evidence suggests that, if any claims were to be made by aggrieved investors, they would likely be for the return of borrowed funds, or to enforce contractual rights – in other words, for restitution of money had and received, or for a debt due or payable under contract – neither of which would constitute payment of compensation or damages. Such claims fall outside the insuring clause (clause 1.1) of the professional indemnity policy with which these proceedings are concerned."
"The common law doctrine was that nothing less than payment would suffice as proof of loss. Equity, however, accepted that a loss was suffered once the fact and extent of the liability of the party seeking to enforce the indemnity has been ascertained in proceedings or otherwise".
Was the Tughans Fee Due as a Matter of Contract?
i) The Transaction had to be successfully completed.
ii) BRUK had to receive the Success Fee from Cerberus in cleared funds.
iii) Tughans had to "provid[e] the representations and warranties set forth in this letter".
iv) Cerberus had to confirm to BRUK that the terms of the Tughans Letter of Engagement were acceptable to it.
Is it Open to RSA to Assert that the Tughans Fee Was Not Due as a Matter of Contract?
The position in the Arbitration
"If [BRUK's] pleaded allegations are correct, and the Success Fee was only obtained consequent upon IC's fraudulent representation that he would not disburse the monies contrary to his assurance, then neither IC nor Tughans ever had an entitlement to the Success Fee in the first place, compliance with that assurance being a pre-condition to IC becoming entitled to the fee, and retain the fee (and where that failure to comply with a condition entitling a person to remuneration is not an insured peril, in contrast to a breach of duty owed to the client thereby causing the client loss: the failure to comply with the condition simply meant that IC never accrued an entitlement to obtain and keep any gain(s))".
(emphasis added).
The scope of the grant of permission to appeal
"The payment was conditional on representations and warranties being provided (see the contract terms ….) It was not conditional on those representations and warranties being true. The success fee was the price paid for services rendered, not for warranties and representations. If the warranties and representations were untrue, then contractual remedies were available subject to the usual limitations".
Conclusion
i) In the arbitration, RSA squarely took the point that (on BRUK's allegations) a pre-condition to the payment of the Tughans Fee had not been satisfied.
ii) Implicit in the issue of law for which RSA sought and obtained permission to appeal was the question of whether Tughans ever did become entitled, as a matter of debt, to the Tughans Fee. The argument on the appeal would have been wholly artificial if that issue (which, for understandable reasons, BRUK has not raised in the Northern Ireland proceedings) was not determined.
iii) I am satisfied that the issue of Tughans' contractual entitlement to the Tughans Success Fee is one which Tughans anticipated and were ready to meet at the hearing, and which it itself advanced as part of its case.
iv) The issue raises a short question of construction of a document, albeit that exercise of construction is being undertaken for the first time in the context of the appeal hearing.
v) In these circumstances, I am willing to grant RSA permission to advance this argument (following the course adopted by Eder J in Parbulk II A/S v Heritage Maritime Ltd SA [2011] EWHC 2917, [15]-[16], and endorsed by Hamblen J in Cottonex Anstalt v Patriot Spinning Mills Ltd [2014] EWHC 236 (Comm), [20]-[22]).
The Position on the Merits
i) The combined effect of the words "subject to and conditional upon the terms set out below", and the provision that the warranties were "a strict condition of this agreement" made it clear that the obligation to pay was subject to the truth of the warranted state of affairs ([10]).
ii) That conclusion was put beyond doubt by the context of the agreement. The company had been investigating matters which would have permitted it to dismiss Mr Collidge without any significant payment, and the effect of the condition was effectively to preserve that entitlement while the investigation continued ([11]).
i) It is not the natural meaning of the words "providing the representations and warranties set for in [the Tughans Letter of Engagement]". Those words are more naturally understood as imposing a condition precedent that Tughans would provide BRUK with the legal protections which warranties and representations in the requested terms would bring.
ii) While the Tughans Letter of Engagement was signed after the relevant work had been done, it was written in forward-looking terms, and matched the terms of the BRUK Letter of Engagement which was entered into on a forward-looking basis. Given that Mr Coulter had already provided his confirmation to BRUK approving the representations and warranties before BRUK entered into the BRUK Letter of Engagement (with the Tughans Letter of Engagement formalising the position) and with the BRUK and Tughans Letters of Engagement being "back-to-back", I am satisfied that the documents are intended to have the same meaning in this context.
iii) On RSA's construction, both BRUK and Tughans would have been deprived of any right to remuneration, no matter what work had been done, if either BRUK or Tughans (in the case of BRUK Letter of Engagement) or Tughans (in the case of the Tughans Letter of Engagement):
a) were not familiar with the provisions of the relevant anti-corruption legislation;
b) had unwittingly "directly or indirectly" violated some element of that legislation, notwithstanding the potentially broad reach of legislation of that kind;
c) had allocated a member of staff to the engagement who (unbeknown to the principals) had a family relationship with a Northern Ireland government official;
d) were in a position of conflict of interest (such that BRUK would lose its entitlement to remuneration because of a conflict of interest on Tughans' part);
even if the statements in question had not induced Cerberus/BRUK to enter into the relevant Letter of Engagement and the breach of the representations and/or warranties had not caused Cerberus/BRUK any loss.
iv) There is other language which is inconsistent with the truth of each of the matters contained in the representations and warranties being a pre-condition to any right of payment. Thus:
a) If BRUK/Tughans became aware of a member of staff having a family relationship with a government official, there was an obligation to notify Cerberus and to comply with Cerberus' reasonable requirements. However, on RSA's construction, that relationship would itself be sufficient to deprive BRUK and/or Tughans of their right to payment, whether reported to Ceberus and/or BRUK or not and even if the measures then requested by Cerberus and/or BRUK were subsequently complied with.
b) The remedy provided to Cerberus / BRUK if it determined reasonably and in good faith that the assurances offered were not sufficient is an option (or right) to terminate the relevant Letter of Engagement and (then) to refuse payment. That appears to pre-suppose that Cerberus could chose not to do so, and that absent such a termination, the relevant Letter of Engagement (with the payment right it created) would stand. Neither state of affairs is consistent with the effect of such a family relationship being that BRUK/Tughans would without more have no right to payment.
v) The commercial context is clearly very different to Collidge, in which a significant payment was being made to terminate Mr Collidge's employment on a consensual basis, when if the representations and warranties were untrue, the company was entitled to dismiss him on a summary basis and without the payment of substantial compensation.
"A contract obtained by a fraudulent misrepresentation is voidable, not void, even in equity. The representee may elect to avoid it, but until he does so the representor is not a constructive trustee of the property transferred and no fiduciary relationship exists between him and representee".
While Mr Hubble KC argued that, for the purposes of determining whether or not Tughans were entitled to an indemnity in respect of BRUK's claims under a professional indemnity policy, it should not matter whether or not BRUK chose to rescind the Tughans Letter of Engagement (assuming such a course was open) or affirmed it and claimed damages, the legal consequences of those two inconsistent courses of action are very different. That is the case not only with regard to the impact on Tughans' contractual right to the Tughans Fee, but in other respects as well. If it had been open to BRUK to rescind the Tughans Letter of Engagement and they had done so, the issue would have arisen as to whether Tughans were entitled to an allowance for the services performed (Chitty on Contracts (34th) [9-136]-[9-137]). Having affirmed the Tughans Letter of Engagement, BRUK's claim for damages raises the issues of counterfactual analysis briefly referred to at [35(iv]). The differences between the two courses are far from the technicality which Mr Hubble KC's submissions assumed.
CONCLUSION
i) RSA's application under s.67 of the 1996 Act fails.
ii) RSA's application under s.68 of the 1996 Act succeeds, and I will remit the Award to the Arbitrator on the basis set out in [96] above.
iii) RSA's appeal under s.69 of the 1996 Act fails.