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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 >> Finch & Anor v Lloyds TSB Bank Plc & Ors [2016] EWHC 1236 (QB) (08 June 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2016/1236.html Cite as: [2016] EWHC 1236 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
MANCHESTER DISTRICT REGISTRY
MERCANTILE COURT
Manchester M60 9DJ |
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B e f o r e :
SITTING AS A JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
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STEPHEN FREDERICK FINCH OMNIA-CHEM LIMITED |
Bank Claim Claimants |
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- and - |
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LLOYDS TSB BANK PLC -and- PROMONTORIA HOLDING 87 BV -and- (1) STEPHEN FREDERICK FINCH (2) PAUL KENNETH ABBOTT (3) ANDREW RUNNACLES CHADWICK (4) DAVID JOHN SCHOFIELD (5) SCOTT GRAEME CAIRNS |
Bank Claim Defendant Guarantee Claim Claimant Guarantee Claim Defendants |
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Mr Ian Wilson (instructed by TLT LLP) for the Bank Claim Defendant
Mr Michael Watkins (instructed by Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan UK LLP) for the Guarantee Claim Claimant
Mr Richard Slade QC and Mr Andrew Thomas (instructed by Berg LLP) for the Guarantee Claim Defendants
The Third Guarantee Claim Defendant did not appear and was not represented
Hearing dates: 26-29 April; 3-4 and 6 May 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
HH Judge Pelling QC:
Introduction
The Bank Claim in Overview
The Fraud Allegation against the Bank and Mr David Bowen
"MR SLADE: I think it is appropriate at this juncture, my Lord, that I mention that in the light of Mr Bowen's answers we are not going to pursue the allegation that in the email of 9 January he said things that he knew to be untrue. I just want to make that clear.
JUDGE PELLING: Does that mean the fraud allegation is withdrawn?
MR SLADE: The fraud/misrepresentation allegation is withdrawn, yes.
JUDGE PELLING: We will say no more about that now, I note what you say."
At the end of Mr Bowen's evidence, the following exchange took place:
"JUDGE PELLING: I have no questions.
Mr Slade, I wondered whether, in the light of the withdrawal of the allegation of fraud you made, there is anything else you would want to say in the presence of this witness in case he will not be here for the rest of the trial?
MR SLADE: All I would say, my Lord, is that we have withdrawn it unreservedly, we made it, but we can see in the light of Mr Bowen's witness evidence that he gave before your Lordship that we cannot maintain that he deliberately misled us in any way in the 9 January email. We unreservedly withdraw the allegation that he deliberately misled us in that email.
JUDGE PELLING: Very well.
You will understand that an allegation of dishonesty was made against you by the claimants.
A. Yes, my Lord.
JUDGE PELLING: That they have withdrawn it, and it is as if it was never made.
A. Thank you, my Lord.
JUDGE PELLING: Thank you. "
The Guarantee Claim in Overview
The Trial
The Facts
"Andrew [Horner] had a very open and honest conversation with the advisor late last night at which she stated that if we could get to £11.7M then they can make up the rest Andrew pointed out that £11.7M would not work being in excess of 75% MV. At this stage going back with less than £11.6M would mean that the other 4 banks who are pitching would be re-engaged. "
The "advisor" referred to was Ms Ashton. This email is a significant one in relation to the Banking Claim Claimants' assertion that there was a close relationship between the investors, BHL and the Bank in which the Bank by Mr Bowen and Mr Horner had assumed an advisor role and that the role of FC had reduced. This email shows very clearly that as at the date of this email (4 December 2007) (a) the negotiations concerning what sum the Bank was prepared to lend and on what terms were being carried on by the Bank with FC; (b) no form of agreement had been reached between the Bank and BHL and (c) if a loan of at least £11.6M could not be offered then negotiations with the other banks would be re-activated.
"As this is a reflection of the value of the asset not the quality of the management team we will be happy to discharge the guarantee as soon as the loan to value ratio decreases below 70% of market value regardless of whatever the closed value is at this point."
The reference to "closed value" is a reference to the value of the Hotel as a property rather than as a trading business.
"6.1 The Borrower shall repay the Loan in 108 monthly repayments
6.2 The Borrower may not prepay all or any part of the Loan except as expressly permitted by this Agreement
6.5 The Borrower may at any time after giving at least 5 business days notice to the Bank make early repayment of all the Loan together with interest accrued to the date of payment and any amount that may be payable pursuant to clause 6.10
6.10 If the Borrower for any reason repays the Loan or any part other than in accordance with clause 6.1 above, the Borrower shall, in addition to any fee that may be specified in this Agreement, pay to the Bank immediately on demand any cost or loss to the Bank which in the Bank's reasonable opinion results from such action. Such cost or loss will include, but will not be limited to:
(a) any loss or expense sustained or incurred by the Bank in repaying or redeploying deposits acquired by the Bank at a fixed rate of interest in order to make or maintain the Loan; and
(b) any loss or expense sustained or incurred by the Bank in respect of any agreement it has entered into to compensate for the potential cost to the Bank on-lending at a fixed rate of interest deposits acquired by the Bank at a variable rate of interesting order to make or maintain the Loan, including any loss or expense sustained or incurred by the Bank:
(i) in fulfilling or terminating any obligation it may have under any such agreement; and
(ii) in entering into and fulfilling any obligation it may have under any other agreement it may enter into to offset the cost of continuing such first agreement."
The Loan Agreement was signed on 31 January 2008. The terms of the Agreement as signed did not differ materially from the terms set out in Draft 3.
"IMPORTANT NOTICE
YOU SHOULD CONSULT A SOLICITOR BEFORE SIGNING THIS DOCUMENT. BY SIGNING THIS GUARANTEE YOU MAY BECOME LIABLE INSTEAD OF OR AS WELL AS THE BANK'S CUSTOMER. THIS GUARANTEE WILL BE LIMITED TO THE AMOUNT (IF ANY) SPECIFIED IN CLAUSE 2.1. IF NO AMOUNT IS SPECIFIED THIS GUARANTEE WILL BE UNLIMITED"
but SF's signature of the First Guarantee was witnessed by Mr Scott (his solicitor), who affirmed by his signature that SF had executed the First Guarantee:
"In my presence and after the contents had been explained to him "
Mr Scott prepared an attendance note of the meeting at which he advised SF in relation to the First Guarantee. Materially, the Attendance Note records Mr Scott as having given SF " comprehensive advice with regard to the guarantee which he then signed".
"26. No reliance by me/us on the Bank
26.1 (a) I/we acknowledge to and agree with the Bank that in entering into this Guarantee:
(i) I/we have not relied on any oral or written statement, representation, advice, opinion or information made or given to me/us in good faith by the Bank and the Bank shall have no liability to me/us if I/we have not done so
(ii)
(iii) There are no arrangements, collateral or relating to this Guarantee, which have not been recorded in writing and signed by me/us and on behalf of the Bank
(iv) I/we have made, without reliance on the Bank, my/our own independent investigation of the customer and its affairs and financial condition and of any other relevant person and assessment of the creditworthiness of the Customer or any other relevant person and the Bank shall have no liability to me/us if in fact I/we have no done so.
(d) I/we agree with the Bank for itself and as trustee for its officials, employees and agents that neither the Bank nor its officials, employees and agents shall have any liability to me/us in respect of any act or omission by the Bank, its officials, employees and agents done or made in good faith."
The Second Guarantee was substantively in exactly the same form as the First Guarantee. As with the First Guarantee, the Second Guarantee had a box at the head of the signatures page containing a statement in similar terms to that set out in the box at the head of the signature page of the First Guarantee. Each of the Guarantee Claim Defendants were advised in relation to the Second Guarantee by Mr Mellor of LHS, who witnessed the signatures of each of the guarantors, in each case affirming by his signature that they had executed the Second Guarantee:
"In my presence and after the contents had been explained to him "
The Bank Claim
The Issues
i) Did the Bank owe BHL an advisory obligation either in contract or tortiously? I refer to this issue below as the "Advisory Duty Issue";ii) If the Bank did owe BHL such a duty, did the Bank breach that duty by failing to explain to BHL the potential magnitude of the losses that might come within its scope? I refer to this issue below as the "Breach Issue";
iii) In putting forward the proposed terms, did the Bank thereby impliedly represent that what was offered had been tailored to meet the needs of BHL and/or the investors and if such was the case was that representation false and made negligently? I refer to these issues below as the "Misrepresentation Issues";
iv) Did the Bank enter into a collateral or other agreement with BHL at or before the date when the Loan Agreement was entered into by which the Bank was obliged to advance further funding to enable BHL to meet deferred payments due in respect of its acquisition of the shares in First House Leisure Group Limited? I refer to this issue below as the "Additional Loan Issue";
v) Had BHL been aware of the potential magnitude of the losses that might come within the scope of clause 6.10, would it have entered into the Loan Agreement or would it have entered into a floating rate loan with a capped rate product covering a maximum of 50% of the sum loaned? I refer to this issue below as the "Causation Issue".
The Advisory Duty Issue
Although the claimants refer in their written closing submissions to the existence of "advisory obligations" that description avoids a critical question that arises at the outset concerning the source of the duty. The obligation can arise only either contractually or in tort.
The only pleaded allegation that refers to a contractual duty is that contained in Paragraph 21 of the Amended Particulars of Claim. In that paragraph it is alleged that the Bank " had a contractual duty of care arising by implication under section 13 of the Supply of Goods and Services Act 1982, or by necessity, that the Bank would act with reasonable care and skill in the advice that it provided " to BHL. The reference to "the Claimant" is an error since both claimants are assignees of a cause of action that had vested in BHL, which was in any event the borrower under the Loan Agreement. This is not an allegation that the Bank was under a duty to provide advice. It is an allegation that it would exercise reasonable care and skill in and about the advice that it gave.
"In a relevant contract for the supply of a service where the supplier is acting in the course of a business, there is an implied term that the supplier will carry out the service with reasonable care and skill."
S.13 has effect therefore only to imply a term by operation of law into a " relevant contract for the supply of a service ". What constitutes such a contract is defined by s.12 of the 1982 Act as being:
" a contract under which a person ("the supplier") agrees to carry out a service "
If reliance is to be placed on s.13 in the context of this case, it follows that it is necessary for the claimants to plead and prove a contract under which the Defendant has agreed to provide a service that included the provision of advice. It has not done so. To the extent that the Bank Claim Claimants seek to rely on s.13 of the 1982 Act, their claim fails at that point.
I start with a summary of the applicable legal principles. In summary:
i) In general a bank is not under a legal obligation to provide advice but if it gives advice then it must do so using reasonable care and skill see Woods v. Martins Bank Limited [1958] 1 QB 55 per Salmon J at 71: "I find that it was and is within the scope of the defendant bank's business to advise on all financial matters and that, as they did advise him, they owed a duty to the plaintiff to advise him with reasonable care and skill in each of the transactions to which I have referred."; Bankers Trust International Plc v. PT Dharmala Sakti Sejahtera (No.2) [1996] CLC 518 per Mance J as he then was at 533: " a bank negotiating and contracting with another party owes in the first instance no duty to explain the nature or effect of the proposed arrangement to that other party. However, if the bank does give an explanation or tender advice, then it owes a duty to give that explanation or tender that advice fully, accurately and properly."; National Commercial Bank (Jamaica) Limited v. Hew [2003] UKPC 51 per Lord Millett at [22]; and Paget, Law of Banking, 14th Ed., Para 29.7ii) Whether a duty of care in tort is owed in any particular case will depend upon the application of one or more of the usual three tests that is the assumption of responsibility coupled with reliance test, the three-fold-test (reasonable foreseeability of loss, sufficient proximity between the parties and whether it is in all the circumstances fair just and reasonable to impose a duty) and the incremental test having regard to the exchanges which cross the line between, and the dealings of, the parties considered in their context see JP Morgan Chase Bank v. Springwell Navigation Corp [2008] EWHC 1186 (Comm) per Gloster J as she then was at [48]-[52] and Standard Chartered Bank v. Ceylon Petroleum Corporation [2011] EWHC 1785 (Comm); and
iii) In approaching the question using the methodology referred to in (ii) above, there is a distinction to be drawn between the provision of advice in the context of a commercial relationship and assuming responsibility for that advice see JP Morgan Chase Bank v. Springwell Navigation Corp (ante) at [374].
The Misrepresentation Issues
The Additional Loan Issue
The Causation Issue
The Guarantee Claim
Conclusion