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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Killen v Horseworld Ltd & Ors [2011] EWHC 1600 (QB) (24 June 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2011/1600.html Cite as: [2011] EWHC 1600 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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HEATHER KILLEN |
Claimant/ Respondent |
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- and - |
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HORSEWORLD LIMITED - and - HORSEWORLD (UK) LIMITED - and - TOBY VINTCENT - and - RICHARD WORRALL |
First Defendant Second Defendant Third Defendant/ First Appellant Fourth Defendant/ Second Appellant |
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Mr Richard Hill (instructed by Davenport Lyons, Solicitors) for the Defendants/Appellants
RICHARD WORRALL IN PERSON
Hearing dates: 19th May 2011
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Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Cox :
The Relevant Background
"…the potential of working with you to drive the Horseworld business is very exciting…We are very keen to progress our discussions and negotiations with the view of reaching a positive outcome and getting our collective sleeves rolled up!...I would expect that we are looking to reach a point to start discussions shortly after Easter…We very much look forward to moving our discussions on and to reaching agreement in the next few weeks."
"…in a contract for work to be done, if no scale of remuneration is fixed, the law imposes an obligation to pay a reasonable sum (quantum meruit). The circumstances must clearly show that the work is not being done gratuitously before the court will, in the absence of an express contract, infer that there was a valid contract with an implied term that a reasonable remuneration would be paid; this principle may extend to services performed in anticipation that negotiations will lead to the conclusion of a contract, provided that the services were requested or acquiesced in by the recipient…"
"…in deciding whether to impose an obligation and if so its extent, the court will take into account and give appropriate weight to a number of considerations which can be identified in the authorities. The first is whether the services were of a kind which would normally be given free of charge. Secondly, the terms in which the request to perform the service was made may be important in establishing the extent of the risk (if any) which the plaintiffs may fairly be said to have taken that such services would in the end be unrecompensed. What may be important here is whether the parties are simply negotiating, expressly or impliedly 'subject to contract', or whether one party has given some kind of assurance or indication that he will not withdraw, or that he will not withdraw except in certain circumstances. Thirdly, the nature of the benefit which has resulted to the defendants is important, and in particular whether such benefit is real (either 'realised' or 'realisable') or a fiction….Plainly, a court will at least be more inclined to impose an obligation to pay for a real benefit, since otherwise the abortive negotiations will leave the defendant with a windfall and the plaintiff out of pocket. However…..the performance of services requested may of itself suffice to amount to a benefit or enrichment. Fourthly what may often be decisive are the circumstances in which the anticipated contract does not materialise and in particular whether they can be said to involve 'fault' on the part of the defendant, or (perhaps of more relevance) to be outside the scope of the risk undertaken by the plaintiff at the outset….the law should be flexible in this area, and the weight to be given to each of these factors may vary from case to case."
The Master's Judgment
"16….The services rendered on that basis were clearly requested by the third and fourth defendants. The question is whether such request leads to a fair imputation of personal liability on a quantum meruit against them. Mr Matthias submitted that the claimant's position would drive a coach and horses through the law laid down in Salomon v. Salomon [1897] AC p22."
"19. The question, in my judgment, is one of fact. Here the claimant seeks to make the imputation of liability from the facts pleaded in the particulars of claim, the reply and defence to counterclaim and her witness statement, which is before me on this application. A director may in contract commit himself to personal liability to a third party upon a contract made by the company. If this were a case of a claim in contract it would be necessary to consider the intention of the parties. I refer in particular to Bowstead and Reynolds on Agency, 16th Edition at paragraph 9-005, and I read the first paragraph under that enumeration, under the rubric: "Agent may be liable or entitled": The learned authors say:
"As has been stated in the Comment to the previous Article, there is no reason why an agent should not be entitled and/or liable on the contract which he has made for his principal, or upon a separate but related contract: 'In all cases the parties can by the express contract provide that the agent shall be the person liable either concurrently with or to the exclusion of the principal'. The question whether an agent who has made a contract on behalf of his principal is to be deemed to have contracted personally and, if so the extent of his liability, depends on the intention of the parties, to be deduced from the nature and terms of the particular contract and the surrounding circumstances, including any binding custom. As in all matters of formation of contract, the test is objective. The rules can be most easily articulated in relation to written contracts where the use of a particular form of words may constitute an agent a contracting party though it is on the underlying facts doubtful whether he intended to become such."
20. Mr Matthias submitted that the claimant here cannot be in a better position in her claim under quantum meruit than she would be if the claim were in contract. In my judgment, on this application to strike out the claim in quantum meruit, the issue of the intention of the parties is relevant. If that view is right it must be arguable, and I say no more than arguable in my judgment, at this stage, that the claimant in this case in quantum meruit may rely on the requests by the third and fourth defendants to advise in raising funds for companies in which they themselves were investing to show that those defendants are personally liable.
21. Mr Matthias submitted further that a conflict of interest might arise as between the third and fourth defendants (on the one hand) and the companies in those circumstances, but that is not a necessary conclusion – that is to say that a conflict of interest would arise or did arise on the facts of this case before me. It is a matter which would require to be considered on all the evidence at trial.
22. Mr Matthias also submitted that the claimant's demands by way of an invoice and a statutory demand demonstrated that she perceived her claim to be only against the first defendant. That is precisely a point which should be categorised as one to be investigated at trial and upon cross-examination of the claimant.
23. Let the case be tried to ascertain the truth of the matter and the intention of the parties at the time when the discussions to raise funds were taking place…."
The Appeal of Mr Vintcent
"You would join the team as a Board member and managing principal, specifically tasked with:
a. Supervision of investor Relations
b. Supervision of Mergers and Acquisitions
Should you wish to invest in Horseworld as per the previous design, we would suggest the title of "Managing Principal" be applied to yourself, myself and Bernie until such time as the final executive team is determined……We are also prepared to offer you a plan for remuneration of your investment (time and expenses) in Horseworld to date……I am representing this opportunity to you on behalf of Horseworld and with the full endorsement of Bernie Uechtritz……he has remained steadfast in his support of you both personally and professionally and within the vision we all share. This is appropriate given your previous association with Horseworld was via Richard Worrall and myself."
"In your email…you appear to suggest that you will only compensate me for the time and financial outlays I have already given you if I become a "Managing Principal" in your new endeavour, but not if I decline. This cannot be correct. We had an agreement between ourselves, which would lead to my receiving a share of the business and financial reward for my ongoing work as CEO. I must insist on the terms of this agreement being met."
Conclusions
"The court is likely to impose such an obligation where the defendant has received an incontrovertible benefit (e.g. an immediate financial gain or saving of expense) as a result of the claimant's services; or where the defendant has requested the claimant to provide services or accepted them (having the ability to refuse them) when offered, in the knowledge that the services were not intended to be given freely;"
"Clearly there is a basis in law for the Claimant to argue she should receive some remuneration for acting for the First and Second Defendants either as Chief Executive Officer of the First Defendants or as a director of both Defendants or as a consultant to both Defendants. She was providing services to those companies in order to further their business. Similarly one can see that the Claimant has a potential claim against the corporate Defendants in relation to expenses which she says she incurred on their behalf…."
"….there is a basis in law for the Claimant to at least argue that she should receive some remuneration for acting for the corporate Defendants."
"…I have no doubt that at this initial meeting in August 2006, Mr Vintcent and Mr Worrall asked me to advise them as individual entrepreneurs as to the viability of their business plan and their prospects of raising the required capital in their personal capacities as promoters of the Horseworld theme park concept – and not as directors of the fledgling Horseworld Ltd or the still non-existent Horseworld UK Limited."