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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 >> Barley v Muir [2018] EWHC 619 (QB) (26 March 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2018/619.html Cite as: [2018] EWHC 619 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
JILL JEHAN BARLEY |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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GRAEME WILLIAM MUIR |
Defendant |
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Mr Daniel Saoul (instructed by Charles Fussell & Co LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 11-14 and 18 December 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Soole :
Narrative
Lloyds
Quest
'Trevor, I trust you and the team are well and that trading is going strong? Product has now left our facility and will be in Dubai on Thursday value £3.4 million, congratulations to all! Both Neil and myself would like to extend an offer to co-present the model to your senior team/Government in Oman if you so wish.Pete Shergill & Neil Stafford'
Involvement of the Barleys
The 21 September e-mail
'Hi Paul, Here are the latest financials, July and August are actuals – there was no income in August (as planned) due to Ramadan. As you can see, we started trading in July and the Sept shipment is being loaded next week. The diagnostics side of the business comes on stream as soon as we have signed the JV agreement with Quest (which we plan to do as soon as possible after completing this finance round). Regards Graeme.'
'(a) retained profits of £5 million for the year ended 31 December 2011 and £18 million for the year ended 31 December 2012;(b) a consolidated profit and loss account showing profit from joint ventures of £382,000 in July 2011 arising from revenue of £3.4 million;
(c) income from the Lloyds joint venture of £538,000 for September 2011 from revenue of £4.6 million. This represented a 35% increase in revenue from July 2011. Revenue for December 2011 was projected to be £8.6 million (revenue almost doubling over 3 months);
(d) an anticipated profit stream from Lloyds of £2.9 million in 2011 and £11 million in 2012;
(e) revenue in October 2011 of £6.4 million and associated profit of £1.3 million from the diagnostic business increasing to revenue of £7.3 million and associated profit of £4.3 million in December 2011, respectively; and
(f) revenue of £88 million and associated profit of £17 million for the diagnostic business in 2012.'
(Witness statement para. 29).
He concluded that 'not only was the business profitable, but it was on an upward trajectory, even before the expected joint venture with Quest'. As a qualified accountant he read the 'actuals' as 'booked revenue'.
Shareholders' Agreement
Warranties
'1. The GroupThe information set out in the Recitals to this Agreement and Clause 2 is true, complete and accurate in all respects.
…3. Activities
The Company has not been since its date of incorporation a party to, or liable in respect of, and none of the assets owned or used by the Company are affected by, any agreement, arrangement or obligation which was made otherwise than in the ordinary and usual course of business of the Company as carried on at the date of this Agreement and on arms length terms.
4. SubsidiariesThe Company does not have nor has it ever had any subsidiary nor does it have any beneficial interest in the shares or stock of any other company.
…7. Shareholders' arrangements
...7.2 There are outstanding :…7.2.2 save in respect of the Convertible Loan Notes no debts owing by the Company to any Shareholder…'
8. Contracts
There are no joint ventures, partnerships or joint venture operations or consortium arrangements in force to which the Company is a party
…11. Borrowings
Save in respect of the Convertible Loan Notes, the Company has no outstanding borrowings, debentures, overdrafts or loans nor does it have any financial facilities outstanding or available to it.
12. Liabilities since incorporation
Since Incorporation, and save in respect of the Convertible Loan Notes, the Company has not assumed or incurred any material liability (including any contingent liability), which is not provided for in the Management Accounts otherwise than in the ordinary and normal course of business.
…14. Breach of contract
The Company is not in material breach of any agreement to which it is a party and, so far as the Warrantors are aware, there are no facts, matters or circumstances which are likely to give rise to any material breach.
15. Litigation
The Company is not involved, and has not since its incorporation been involved, in any legal or administrative proceedings and no such proceedings are (so far as the Shareholders are aware) pending or threatened and so far as the Shareholders are aware there are no facts, matters or circumstances which are likely to give rise to any such proceedings.
16. Compliance with Laws
...16.1 The Company has conducted and is conducting its business in accordance with all applicable laws and obligations relating to the Company in the United Kingdom, and in all other countries in which it operates, in all material respects.
20.1 As a condition of the Subscribers subscribing for Shares in the Company and acknowledging that the Subscribers are entering into this Agreement and subscribing for the Shares in reliance thereon, and that JB is entering into the Option Agreement, in reliance thereon, and may exercise her Option under the Option Agreement in reliance thereon, the Warrantors hereby jointly and severally warrant and undertake to the Subscribers in the terms set out in Schedule 6[2] (Warranties)…20.3 Each of the warranties shall remain in full force and effect notwithstanding Subscription
20.4 The Warranties shall be given as at the date of this Agreement and are deemed to be repeated to JB on any date on which JB shall exercise her Option under the Option Agreement provided that JB shall have first given not less than 28 days' notice that she is seriously considering exercising such Option.
20.5 Each of the Warrantors hereby undertakes with the Subscribers that, after Completion, he will, upon becoming aware of any fact, matter or circumstance which he knows comprises or may comprise a breach of the Warranties, notify the subscribers hereof as soon as reasonably practicable.
Payment to Mr Muir
Joint ventures
Lloyds
Quest
Other business opportunities
Saudi Arabia
SITCO/Fannin
VacuTrust
Blood tests
Riyadh facility
Libya
Updates
20.1 : Mr Muir's text of 10 October 2011 relating to a meeting with Quest : 'just had a meeting with them. All went well, although their CEO had to fly to California yesterday unexpectedly and he wants to be there when we signed the JV – very frustrating. Ironically, he's coming to London next week, so we can do it then!'From this 'It is reasonably to be inferred that Mr Muir thereby intended Mr Barley to understand, as he indeed understood, that the joint venture would be executed immediately' and that he subsequently said nothing to contradict this.
20.2 : Mr Muir's text of 14 October 2011 as to activity in Saudi Arabia : 'I'm meeting Saudi Ambassador next week. Just Neil meeting guys from King Faisal Hospital group today…'
20.3 : Mr Muir's texts of 25 October 2011 as to a meeting and other activity relating to Libya : 'Just got out of meeting with guy from Shell…really wants to get involved…'; 'Not offering anything concrete yet, but want to keep talking and keen to come to Tripoli with us as part of the quasi-governmental delegation we are putting together'; 'We'll be going with Daniel Kawcynski – Conservative MP and Chairman of All Parties Parliamentary Group for Libya. He'll be championing our cause'.
20.4 : Mr Muir's text of 21 November 2011 that Mr Stafford was in Saudi Arabia ('Neil already in Saudi anyway') which was 'inferring and intending that Mr Barley infer as he in fact did, on the business of OHS';
20.5 : 'in the first half of 2012 Mr Muir informed Mr Barley that OHS was preparing a bid for government contracts for the supply of medicines in Saudi Arabia, and/or an opportunity to purchase blood draw tubes in Saudi Arabia for onward sale to the Health Service Executive of the Republic of Ireland;'
20.6 'in or about May 2012 Mr Muir informed Mr Barley that certain blood draw tubes had been shipped to the Republic of Ireland but were ultimately rejected because they were out of date, which issue OHS was discussing with its supplier.'
Mrs Barley's second investment
The end
Police involvement
'…it's a punt, it's a risk there are no revenues the company has nothing coming in the reason we are coming to you for money is because we need money for day to day living…when we first brought on money from Paul [Barley] and others we were certainly hoping within the next eight months or so we would be brining (sic) in revenues but for various reasons we didn't and they didn't materialise the way we wanted them'.
Credibility
Deceit : the law
'Initial Misrepresentations'
Representation 1 : that 'OHS had commenced trading in July 2011 and was a revenue-generating company; thus the financial data supplied was "actuals" and "we started trading in July and the Sept shipment is being loaded next week…" (para.11.1).
Representation 2 : that 'OHS had entered into a joint venture agreement with Lloyds which was operative and from which OHS had received profit of £382,000 in July 2011' (para. 11.2)
Representation 3 : that 'OHS understood that it would receive (inter alia) profit of £2,998,623 in 2011 and £11,435,956 in 2012 from the Lloyds joint venture, and profit of £4,307,989 for the 3 months to 31 December 2011 and of £17,026,621 from the Quest Joint Venture
The 'Implied Representation'
First, there is no suggestion nor any basis to conclude that any of the statements referred to was untrue. On the contrary, as the evidence shows and I accept, they were honest and truthful accounts of the business opportunities which OHS was exploring.
Secondly, the matters to which they related were each no more and no less than 'business opportunities' which OHS was duly pursuing. Such opportunities would only have 'value' in the event that they developed into a commercial relationship.
Thirdly, and in consequence, there is nothing in the identified texts and information to give rise to the alleged implication that OHS was 'an active company engaged in revenue generating and/or valuable business' (POC para.22). On the contrary, the only implication was that OHS was actively pursuing a range of business opportunities in the hope that one or more of these might result in valuable business and the generation of revenue. This includes the Quest e-mail of 10 October 2011 which contained no misleading inference.
Fourthly, Mr/Mrs Barley knew long before October 2012 that the Lloyds and Quest joint ventures had failed.
Fifthly, and in consequence, I do not accept that Mrs Barley's further investment was induced by any representation from Mr Muir. In this respect I also do not accept Ms den Besten's further or alternative argument that the second investment was induced by the matters relied on as Initial Misrepresentations. This follows from my earlier findings. The statements made by Mr Muir in September 2011 did not influence her decision to exercise the option to make a further investment.
Liability to account and/or compensate
First, in the light of my finding that the repayment of Mr Muir's loan and the payment of salary arrears and outstanding expenses were legitimate payments. The only potential revision would be as to the precise calculation of the net arrears after the statutory deductions.
Secondly, and in any event, any such claim would lie with OHS or its liquidators, not Mrs Barley.
Breach of Shareholders' Agreement
Breach of warranties
First, that clause 20.4 did not require notice in writing; clause 25 did not extend to clause 20.4; the parties generally communicated orally; and that oral notice was in fact given.
Secondly, that OHS waived any requirement of written notice by accepting the second investment.
Thirdly, that in any event the original warranties were 'continuing and effective', whether or not repeated pursuant to clause 20.4. In support she cites clauses 20.3 ('Each of the warranties shall remain in full force and effect notwithstanding Subscription') and 20.5 ('Each of the Warrantors hereby undertakes with the Subscribers that, after Completion, he will, upon becoming aware of any fact, matter or circumstance which he knows comprises or may comprise a breach of the Warranties, notify the Subscribers thereof as soon as reasonably practicable'). She submits that, had the original warranties not been breached at the moment of entry into the Shareholders Agreement, Mrs Barley would not have made her first, nor therefore her second, investment.
First, that clause 25 (headed 'Notices') does govern clause 20.4. Accordingly written 28-day notice was a condition of repetition of the Warranties.
Secondly, that OHS' acceptance of the second investment did not constitute an unequivocal act amounting to a waiver of the condition for the repetition of the Warranties.
Thirdly, that the original Warranties were 'continuing and effective' only in the sense that any breach continued to be actionable (subject to any limitation defence); but not in the sense of the Warranties being freshly renewed from day to day. The Warranties were given as at the date of the Shareholders' Agreement and hence a breach could only arise on that date.
In breach of Warranty (1), at no material time were the Subsidiaries of OHS in fact engaged in business…Indeed, the subsidiaries identified…above filed only dormant accounts
In breach of warranties (3) and/or (16), the payments to Mr Muir and Mr Stafford…were paid out wrongfully and otherwise in the ordinary course of business
and 'The Company has conducted and is conducting its business in accordance with all applicable laws and obligations relating to the Company in the United Kingdom, and in all other countries in which it operates, in all material respects.'
This Warranty provides : 'Since incorporation, and save in respect of the Convertible Loan Notes the Company has not assumed or incurred any material liability (including any contingent liability), which is not provided for in the Management Accounts otherwise than in the ordinary and normal course of business.'
and
'The Company is not involved, and has not since its incorporation been involved, in any legal or administrative proceedings and no such proceedings are (so far as the Shareholders are aware) pending or threatened and so far as the Shareholders are aware there are no facts, matters or circumstances which are likely to give rise to any such proceedings'.
Breach of other obligations
Conclusions