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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 >> MacLeod v Mears Ltd [2014] EWHC 3140 (QB) (07 October 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2014/3140.html Cite as: [2014] EWHC 3140 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Rolls Building, Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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Duncan Macleod |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Mears Ltd |
Defendant |
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Richard Leiper (instructed by Eversheds LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 26 September 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Hamblen :
Introduction
(1) "The T/A and accompanying documents involve a contractually binding bonus agreement.
(2) The bonus agreed was for Mr Webb's and Mr Macleod's teams rather than for them individually.
(3) The allocation of 75p in the pound only applied until April 2008.
(4) The agreed terms were only applicable until December 2008.
(5) The agreement did not include a bonus cap.
(6) The agreement was not subsequently varied or superseded."
"52. For all these reasons, and those given by Mears, I conclude and find that the bonus agreed in the T/A was a pooled bonus for the benefit of Mr Webb and Mr Macleod's teams, and not an individual bonus.
53. Mears submitted that this shows that T/A was not meant to be contractual. It did not confer a personal entitlement; it simply set out the arrangements for the calculation of pool bonuses. However, in my judgment the approval of the T/A was intended to have and did have contractual effect. That is clearly the case in relation to Mr Webb and Mr Macleod being Grade 8 employees, the benefits conferred thereby and their salary. An entitlement to claim a share of a specified bonus pool is a recognised right, even if distribution is discretionary. Further, Mr Miles accepted in evidence that Mears was bound by the agreement he had made and would keep its promises.
54. Mears further submitted that this is not how the claim has been advanced and that the sole claim made is for a specified sum due personally. There is some force in this but that does not mean that, subject to permission being granted, a claim to a share in a bonus pool could not be made. For the avoidance of doubt, I have not made any final findings as to the basis upon which any discretionary distribution was to be made - this was not a matter in issue."
The Issues
1. Does the claim as currently pleaded include a claim for a share in a bonus pool?
2. If not should the claimant be granted permission to amend his claim to include such a claim?
3. If a claim for a share in a bonus pool is permitted to proceed what directions should be given the outstanding issues to be resolved?
4. What order should be made in relation to costs?
(1) Does the claim as currently pleaded include a claim for a share in a bonus pool?
Particulars of Claim
"7. The principle effect of the Agreement was that a percentage of net profit generated by the managed projects would form the Claimant's (and Mr Webb's) bonus payments.
8. By clause 10, it was a further express term of the Agreement that from April 2008, the first £100,000 of profit would form the Claimant's (and Mr Webb's) bonus payment and the remainder would be split on a 50/50 basis between the Claimant and Mr Webb and the Defendant.
.
13. Accordingly, the Claimant is entitled under the Agreement to:
13.1 75% of the net profit generated by St Georges Estate between 01 November 2007 and 31 March 2008 ;
13.2 The first £100,000 of the net profit generated by St Georges Estate from 01 April 2008 to completion plus 75% of the remainder ;
13.3 75% of the net profit generated by Phipps House between 01 April and 31 December 2008 ;
13.4 50% of the net profit generated by Welwyn & Hatfield between 01 April 2008 and 31 December 2008 ."
.
23. In breach of the Agreement the Defendant has failed and refused to pay the sums due to the Claimant and has thereby caused the Claimant to suffer loss and damage as aforesaid.
.
And the Claimant claims:
(1) £2,318,723.06 in respect of his contractual entitlement to an incentive payment bonus .
Reply
"The specific nature of the claim
3. For the avoidance of doubt, the Claimant's claim arises solely from his entitlement to bonuses based on a percentage share of net profit in respect of the 3 specific projects identified and referred to in the Particulars of Claim.
.
9.1.1 Clause (5) sets out the general percentage principle of the profit sharing and expressly provides for a greater profit share for the Claimant and Mr Webb in respect of the Keller liability projects "
Defence 7(b)
"By clause (5) of the Terms of Agreement, the incentive payments produced (if any) were to be identified by team and to be distributed amongst the team working on the applicable projects. The Claimant specifically acknowledged this in an email dated 18 August 2008, writing 'Distribution of the bonus within the business units is at the discretion of the Project Directors as agreed with the MD.'"
Reply 8.1 & 8.2
" There was never any intention, which is why there is no express term to that effect, that the bonuses which were the subject of the Agreement should be pooled or further distributed;"
"The allegation that the Claimant 'acknowledged this is an email dated 18 August 2008 ' is wholly misconceived and does not bear scrutiny."
(2) Should the claimant be granted permission to amend his claim to include such a claim?
"Accordingly to the extent to which it is found the claimant's pleaded entitlement to "a percentage of net profit generated by the managed projects" is not to the percentages contended for and/or subject to any implied further distribution, the nature and the extent of that distribution was and is it is at the claimant's sole discretion".
"As the authorities make clear, it is a question of striking a fair balance. The factors relevant to doing so cannot be exhaustively listed since much will depend on the facts of each case. However, they are likely to include:
(1) the history as regards the amendment and the explanation as to why it is being made late;
(2) the prejudice which will be caused to the applicant if the amendment is refused;
(3) the prejudice which will be caused to the resisting party if the amendment is allowed;
(4) whether the text of the amendment is satisfactory in terms of clarity and particularity."
(1) The history as regards to the amendment and the explanations to why it is being made late.
(2) Prejudice to the applicant if the amendment is refused.
(3) The prejudice to the defendant if the amendment is allowed.
(4) The text of the amendment and whether it is satisfactory in terms of clarity and particularity.
"The plaintiff issued proceedings in negligence and breach of contract against the liquidator of a management consultancy company and the liquidator's firm. The claim related to copies of documents belonging to the plaintiff which had been taken from the company's premises by a competitor to whom the liquidator had sold other materials. On the defendant's application for summary judgment under C.P.R., Part 24 , the judge asked whether the plaintiff's legal advisers had considered a claim in conversion. Counsel expressed the view that such a claim would face difficulties. The judge's draft judgment, which was circulated to the parties, concluded that the plaintiff's claims based on breach of contract and negligence could not succeed, but left open whether she might succeed in avoiding summary judgment by applying to amend her claim to include a claim in conversion. On the day judgment was handed down the plaintiff's counsel informed the judge that she was not pursuing a claim in conversion. The judge thereupon directed that the action be dismissed as against both defendants and subsequently added a sentence to the final version of the judgment stating that he had been told after delivery of the judgment that the plaintiff did not wish to pursue a claim in conversion. On the advice of leading counsel obtained after she had received the final version of the judgment, the plaintiff applied for permission to amend her statement of claim to plead a claim for conversion in substitution for the claims in negligence and breach of contract. The judge granted the application but ordered the plaintiff to pay the costs and gave the defendants permission to appeal."
"(2) Allowing the appeal (Clarke L.J. dissenting), that, although a judge hearing an application for summary judgment or to strike out a pleading had a wide discretion to permit amendments in the interests of justice, once judgment had been given on such an application the jurisdiction to reopen it was to be sparingly exercised and only where there were exceptional circumstances or strong reasons for doing so, since finality and the doing of justice required justice to all parties in the litigation; that in exercising his discretion the judge had failed to take into account the plaintiff's refusal to avail herself of his invitation to amend her statement of claim by including a claim in conversion, and had misdirected himself in not considering whether there was a satisfactory reason for the plaintiff's failure to apply for the amendment at the proper time which would make it appropriate to reopen the order for dismissal he had made; that the fact that the plaintiff had changed her mind on the basis of fresh legal advice was not an exceptional circumstance or a strong reason sufficient to justify the judge in reopening his order; and that, accordingly, the court would exercise the discretion so as to refuse the amendment (post, pp. 2276H2277G , 2294CD )." (emphasis added)
" . I respectfully differ from the suggestion that this court is bound by In re Barrell Enterprises [1973] 1 W.L.R. 19 to hold that permission to amend should only be granted in exceptional circumstances where the application is made after the order is announced orally but has not been drawn up and sealed. In deciding how to apply the overriding objective that factor is simply one consideration to be taken into account, albeit an important one. I am therefore unable to agree that we have to look to see whether in November 1999 there existed exceptional circumstances sufficient to justify the judge in exercising "the Barrell jurisdiction"".
(3) Consequential directions
(4) What order should be made in relation to costs?