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England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions >> AC v DC & Ors (No 2) [2012] EWHC 2420 (Fam) (29 August 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2012/2420.html Cite as: [2012] EWHC 2420 (Fam) |
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FAMILY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
sitting as a High Court Judge
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AC |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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DC and others |
Respondent |
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(instructed by Levison Meltzer Pigott, Solicitors) for the Applicant
Mr Valentine Le Grice QC, Mr Giles Goodfellow QC, and Ms Pegah Sharghy
(instructed by Brachers LLP, Solicitors) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 6,7,8,9 and 10 August 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
Sir Hugh Bennett :
"On the evidence before me I was wholly satisfied on 2 July 2012 when I made my ruling that:
i) The transaction in December 2010 manifestly had the effect of defeating W's claims for a financial remedy in that they either prevent relief from being granted or had the result that lesser relief would be granted.
ii) H has not demonstrated that he effected the transaction without the intention to defeat W's claims.
iii) It has not been shown that R9 received the shares in good faith and for valuable consideration and without actual or constructive notice of W's potential claims.
iv) Therefore all the factual criteria are satisfied.
v) It would be a fair and just exercise of my discretion to set aside the transaction for were I not to do the very vice that s37 is directed towards would be given full rein.
vi) There would be consequential order under s37(3) to reverse certain subsequent dealings, which are compendiously described in the skeleton argument of Mr Goodfellow QC at paras 2.1-2.4."
"Such was a rare legal error on the part of the district judge. Miss Ward tells us that it was curious that he should refer to an absence of legal principles in that she and counsel for the husband had referred him to a recent example of such reattribution, namely Norris v Norris [2002] EWHC 2996 (Fam), [2003] 1 FLR 1142. Although such was a decision at first instance, it is the last in a line of authority which stretches back to the decision of this court in Martin v Martin [1976] Fam 335 that, in the words of Cairns L.J. at 342H:
"a spouse cannot be allowed to fritter away the assets by extravagant living or reckless speculation and then to claim as great a share of what was left as he would have been entitled to if he had behaved reasonably."
The only obvious caveats are that a notional reattribution has to be conducted very cautiously, by reference only to clear evidence of dissipation (in which there is a wanton element) and that the fiction does not extend to treatment of the sums reattributed to a spouse as cash which he can deploy in meeting his needs, for example in the purchase of accommodation. At all events the district judge's failure to despatch the issue by reference to the relevant legal principle, in my view, conferred upon the circuit judge an entitlement, at any rate in principle, to despatch it differently."
"The payments to the 6 IOM companies are to be calculated in accordance with a formula, set out in the Put and Call Option Agreement, which provides for payments to be made, dependent on the fair market value and profit of DH on sale. The 6 IOM companies are entitled to £3.9 million (£650,000 each) if the fair value of DH is £100m. The entitlement will be less if the fair value proves to be between £50m and £60m."
"The directors of our subsidiary businesses, D Ltd and L Ltd had at that time been granted enterprise management incentive options in DH which the First Respondent had assured them that on a sale of DH for £100 million would be worth £650,000. The valuation of £100 million was the First Respondent's aspirational target value and was not arrived at by any scientific, mathematical or accounting process.
The discussions with XAT took some time and it was not until December 2010 that the First Respondent and I settled our shares into an offshore trust. The First Respondent wished to incentivise the directors of D Ltd to try to achieve his aspirational target value. His shares, which were held in the trust were then sold in six equal tranches to Isle of Man companies owned by Efurbs set up to benefit the individual directors (the Third to Eighth Respondents).
The First Respondent's shares were transferred at an aggregate value of £15 million, based on a valuation prepared by DH's accountants, SH. The directors insisted on having a proprietary interest in the shares so that the terms of their incentivisation would be honoured. In my opinion, they were concerned that the First Respondent might renege on the deal once the value had been achieved and this afforded them some security. The First Respondent had a reputation as a hard negotiator and was also known to have reneged on deals in the past.
It was envisaged that when the aspirational target value, which the First Respondent believed would take 3 years, was achieved and a sale concluded the shares would be able to be called back by the trust and the directors' Efurbs would receive payment of £650,000. The arrangements became known as Project P and the Applicant has a copy of the transaction documentation.
At or around the same time all of the directors of D Ltd and L Ltd negotiated two year notice periods with the respective companies again to ensure they would do their best to achieve the growth required to achieve the aspirational value. This was to also lock them into the company.
About a year after the scheme was set up it became clear about the extent of the First Respondent's illness. Once this became better understood, he requested that a sale of the business be brought forward so that he could enjoy the proceeds of sale sooner than he had anticipated. Although we were all aware the aspirational value had not been achieved, I agreed with the sale going ahead.
The First Respondent and I knew that the directors' involvement would be crucial to enable a best possible price to be achieved. The directors were aware of this, as well as the fact that their cooperation and consent would be required for an early sale as the Project P documentation did not allow the First Respondent's trust to regain the shares until a period of three years had elapsed or the aspirational target had been achieved.
The directors of D Ltd were particularly concerned that they may lose their jobs if the company was taken over by a competitor (which was thought likely) and would also therefore lose their benefits, pension contributions and bonuses if the purchaser found them surplus to requirements. The First Respondent in conversation with me accepted that the directors should receive the value for their shares as if the aspirational target had been achieved. After some negotiation with the D Ltd directors the First Respondent agreed that the D Ltd directors would be reimbursed for the potential loss of two years' salary, bonus, benefits and pension contributions and receive the target value for their EMI shares if they agreed to an early sale and it was concluded within 18 months.
The trustees of the First Respondent's trust were requested to give effect to this negotiation and the Side Letters were prepared and entered into.
As part of the sales process the D Ltd directors have reduced their notice periods from two years to six months.
I have heard that it is the opinion of the Applicant's counsel expressed in court on the 20th June, 2012, that the directors have been "lining their pockets" at the Applicant's expense. I think this is a disgraceful statement to make and totally lacking in understanding of the commercial realities facing DH. Whilst it is true that the directors stand to be enriched by their agreed incentivisation packages they have been fundamental in raising the value of the business from approximately £18 million under the SH valuation to the £63.5 million that has been currently offered for the business.
I believe that the agreement reached with the directors was a sensible commercial agreement. Although the funds payable to the directors has increased so has the net sum payable to the Applicant and the First Respondent as we are now talking about a sale value considerably in excess of the company value at the time the scheme was set up."
"on or after the third anniversary of the completion date".
However, by a Deed dated 26 May 2011, the IOM companies, i.e. the directors, granted a charge to D Foundation over the "Charged Investments", i.e. all shares and any future shares in DH. Clause 9.1 provided D Foundation, the charge, with rights in respect of the shares which, I am satisfied, gave D Foundation a power to sell the shares at any time and that had D Foundation exercised those rights there is nothing that the IOM companies/directors could have done to prevent it and the directors' security of employment might well have been at risk from the new owner of DH. Thus, it would seem that D Foundation – effectively the husband – had no commercial need to incentivise the directors to a sale prior to 3 years from the PCOA completion date. He had the power to bring about an early sale with no concomitant obligation to compensate the directors for any loss of earnings etc. during the remaining two years.
"No doubt there are cases in which the mental incapacity of the dissipating spouse is such as to render reattribution unfair .... "
However, in the instant case, the reattribution, if reattribution there is to be, comes about either by reason of Mr R's evidence that the husband did have capacity to enter into the Side Letters or if he lacked capacity by reason of the actions of his attorneys, Mr R and E. In my judgment, mens rea, which in any event is an inapposite concept in this area of the law, is irrelevant. In my judgment, the excess of £4.55m is to be "added back" on the basis set out in Vaughan for the reasons set out above. I accept Ms Bangay's submissions and reject those of Mr Le Grice.
Cavendish £637,750
Brachers LLP £300,000
Thus the husband's share, so far, is as I have said in para 65 above, is £53,135,568.
If the correct rate is 10% on the first ten million by reason of entrepreneurs' relief, then the likely CGT payable is £1m plus 28% of the balance (i.e. after the first ten million) which Ms Bangay in her final submission puts at £12,389,000 and Mr Le Grice at £13,408,860 if a gross of £62m is taken. Thus at this point the husband's net proceeds will amount to roughly £40m if a higher figure of £13m is taken for CGT. From that must be deducted £3.25 in payments to the directors and a figure of c. £1.275m which Mr Bangay accepted during Mr Le Grice's closing submissions as a proper deduction representing the likely premium payable by the husband as a warranty insurance premium.
"I adhere to my view that the two-step approach is the right one, generally speaking. It is precisely what Wilson LJ did in Jones v Jones. It seems to me that the process should be as follows:
(i) Whether the existence of pre-marital property should be reflected at all. This
depends on questions of duration and mingling.
(ii) If it does decide that reflection is fair and just, the court should then decide how much of the pre-marital property should be excluded. Should it be the actual historic sum? Or less, if there has been much mingling? Or more, to reflect a springboard and passive growth, as happened in Jones.
(iii) The remaining matrimonial property should then normally be divided equally.
(iv) The fairness of the award should then be tested by the overall percentage technique."
"I conclude that it would be wrong and unfair for none of H's pre-marital wealth to be excluded from the sharing principle. It was the bedrock on which this marriage was founded. As against that are the undoubted facts that the marriage was long and the monies were well and truly mingled with marital funds, signifying an acceptance by H that to a great extent the monies, or at least their growth or earnings, would be shared with (or to use the words of the marriage service 'endowed on) W. I have concluded that £1,000,000 should be excluded. This satisfies the justice of the sharing principle, and as I will show below, the residual sum will meet W's needs. Any greater excluded sum would not permit W's needs to be reasonably met. But for this factor I would have excluded more. If W's needs suddenly had come to be met or had disappeared by virtue of an unexpected event, such as a windfall, remarriage to a rich man, or death (as happened in Re Smith (decd), Smith v Smith [1991] FCR 791, [1991] 2 All ER 306 then I would have excluded £2.116m being the actual value of H's pre-marital wealth, for the same reasons as I stated in FZ v SZ (Ancillary relief: Conduct: Valuations) [2011] 1 FLR 64."