BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just Β£1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Bhullar & Ors v Bhullar & Anor [2003] EWCA Civ 424 (31 March 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2003/424.html Cite as: [2003] 2 BCLC 241, [2003] EWCA Civ 424, [2003] WTLR 1397, [2003] BCC 711 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE CHANCERY
DIVISION, LEEDS DISTRICT REGISTRY
(HHJ BEHRENS)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL | ||
B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE BROOKE
and
LORD JUSTICE JONATHAN PARKER
In the matter of BHULLAR BROS LTD
and
In the matter of the Companies Act 1985
____________________
MOHAN SINGH BHULLAR & ORS | Petitioners/ Respondents | |
- and - | ||
INDERJIT SINGH BHULLAR & ANOR | Respondents/ Appellants |
____________________
Rosalind Nicholson (instructed by Hammond Suddards Edge) for the Respondents
Hearing date : 5th March 2003
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Jonathan Parker :
INTRODUCTION
THE FACTUAL BACKGROUND
"71. .... During a visit by my uncle from the USA [a Mr Dhesi] and whilst going bowling at UK Bowling on Leeds Road, I noticed a 'Sold' sign on Whitehall Mill. On calling the agents .... I was informed that the building was under offer and no further offers would be considered. I insisted on being given a chance to look at the building and my offer being forwarded to the owners. I called Matthew Scoley of Eddisons Commercial to view the building the following day.
72. My and [Jatinderjit]'s first offer was rejected but my second, increased offer, was accepted. Both offers were through Eddisons Commercial and from the [outset] I informed them that this was my brother's and my private acquisition. In the meantime I informed Mr Reddington of Barclays Bank plc of our private venture and he gave us his backing. The intention was to place this building in a self-administered pension fund but we were advised there was insufficient time to carry out the necessary paperwork for a pension fund to acquire the property (the seller insisted on a quick sale) and we had no alternative but to place it in the name of [Silvercrest]."
"Q. There was no doubt in your mind, was there, that it would have been a worthwhile acquisition for the company, is that right?
A. No, because Tim and his dad [Mohan] had already ruled out any acquisitions of any further ....
.....
Q. It may be that the company did not want it, but would it not have been worthwhile the company having it?
A. Yes.
....
Q. What made you think it was necessary to go and get legal advice before acquiring the property?
A. I did not go to get the legal advice, I simply went to tell John that this is the case, my subject to contract has been accepted, you know: "Can you do the legalities on it, and do you see any problems with it?". You know any conflict of interest in any shape or form. ....
.....
Q. ..... Did you go to get advice or not?
A. I went to give John Norcliffe the document for the offers etc. That's when I got the advice, and the completion took place several weeks afterwards. So yes, I did get the advice before, but I did not go specifically to get the advice.
....
Q. What was it you wanted legal advice about?
A. I just wanted to make sure there was no conflict of interest.
Q. What made you think there might be a conflict of interest?
A. Because the property was adjacent to our property.
Q. It was obvious to you, was it not, that there might be a conflict of interest about you acquiring that property instead of the company. Yes?
A. I believe there was no conflict of interest because I found the property in my private time. I had taken two or three days off, and therefore I didn't owe the company anything during my time off. And on top of which, Tim and Mohan had specifically said that they didn't really want anything to do with us after that. They wanted to split completely, separate the businesses, and not buy anything new or any other new business ventures or anything like that, they just wanted to separate.
Q. Did you regard yourself as not being a director during your time off?
A. No, I did not.
Q. You regarded yourself as being a director all of the time?
A. I am on call all the time in case there's staff problems or anything, yes I did. All the time ....
Q. And you saw this property and thought about buying it for yourself, is that right?
A. Yes, I did. .... Because I did not find out [about] it while I was at work, or any information whatsoever. No information whatsoever came to me because of my position within the company.
Q. You did not mention to Mohan or Tim that you were thinking about buying the property did you?
A. No I did not.
Q. Why not?
A. Because at that time I did not feel that I needed to, once the company solicitor had told me that I could go ahead and that there was no conflict of interest, and that I thought I would tell them later on, in my good time.
Q. But they did not even have to be asked about whether this property next door to company property should be bought by the company?
A. Not in my view, because they had specifically said they didn't want anything to do with us. They didn't want to buy anything new, they didn't want to start any new business, nothing whatsoever. So I automatically took it that they're only going to say "We're not interested".
....
Q. The reason why you did not tell them deliberately about your proposed purchase of that property was that you knew that there was a risk that they might say that the company should buy it. That is right, is it not?
A. Not at all, my Lord. I regarded this as my private affair, and therefore I did not need I did not feel that I needed to disclose my private ongoings to anybody. I believed that at that time, Tim had his houses etc., I had not asked him, he had not told me, so therefore likewise I did not need to disclose what I was doing to anybody.
Q. Did you even think about whether you owed some duty to the company to act in its interests and not just in your own?
A. I believed there was absolutely no conflict of interest at that time....
Q. That is not an answer to my question. Did you even think about whether you owed a duty to the company before you owed a duty to your own interests?
A. Yes, I did think, and I thought I didn't owe the company that duty, regarding that building.
....
Q. Everybody still had an interest in what property the company had. That is right, is it not?
A. Yes, that is correct.
Q. And if that property next door to the company's property had been bought by the company, it was not a foregone conclusion as to who would have had it on an asset split, was it?
A. If it had been bought by the company, then no, there wouldn't have been. But the matter didn't arise, because Tim and Mohan had already said that they weren't prepared to entertain any such acquisitions or business acquisitions .... We simply assumed that because they said "We don't want to do anything new with you jointly in the future, and we want to split whatever is here", I assumed that that ruled out [business] opportunities altogether."
THE JUDGE'S JUDGMENT IN RELATION TO THE PURCHASE OF THE PROPERTY
"6.7 Diversion of business opportunity
264. Mr Berragan submits that Inderjit and Jatinderjit were not in breach of fiduciary duty in acquiring Whitehall Mill for their pension. He has referred me [to] part of the speech of Lord Macmillan in Regal Hastings v Gulliver [1967] 2 AC 134n,153 where he said directors are liable to account if:
"(i) what the directors did was so related to the affairs of the company that it can properly be said to have been done in the course of their management and in utilisation of their opportunities and special knowledge as directors and (ii) what they did resulted in profit for themselves."
265. He referred me to the decision of Hutchison J in Island Export v Umunna [1986] BCLC 460. That was a case where a claim for exploitation of a business opportunity failed. The learned judge cited extensively from a Canadian case (Canadian Aero Services v. O'Malley (1973) 40 DLR (3d)371 (Can SC), 382
"Descending from the generality, the fiduciary relationship goes at least this far: a director or a senior officer like [the defendants] is precluded from obtaining for himself, either secretly or without the approval of the company (which would have to be properly manifested on full disclosure of the facts), any property or business advantage either belonging to the company or for which it has been negotiating; and especially is this so when the director or officer is a participant in the negotiations on behalf of the company."
Pausing there, this formulation of the fiduciary duty of a director would appear to be absolutely in accord with the line of authority exemplified by Regal (Hastings) Ltd v Gulliver. Laskin J then continues as follows (at 382):
"An examination of the case law in this Court and in the Courts of other like jurisdictions on the fiduciary duties of directors and senior officers shows the pervasiveness of a strict ethic in this area of the law. In my opinion, this ethic disqualifies a director or senior officer from usurping for himself or diverting to another person or company with whom or with which he is associated a maturing business opportunity which his company is actively pursuing; he is also precluded from so acting even after his resignation where the resignation may fairly be said to have been prompted or influenced by a wish to acquire for himself the opportunity sought by the company, or where it was his position with the company rather than a fresh initiative that led him to the opportunity which he later acquired."
266. Mr Berragan submitted that the acquisition of Whitehall Mill was not the exploitation of a maturing business opportunity; the acquisition was not related to the affairs of the company. Inderjit and Jatinderjit did not acquire Whitehall Mill in the course of their management of the business or by using any opportunity or information which came to them as directors of BBL. They did not misuse their position as directors in any way when they acquired Whitehall Mill. Accordingly the acquisition of Whitehall Mill was not unfairly prejudicial to the Group B shareholders.
267. Mr Corbett QC submitted that this was an obvious business opportunity which would have been advantageous for BBL to acquire. Properties in Leeds Road are hard to find. This site was next door to a site already owned by the Company. Part of it was being occupied by one of its tenants as a car park. Whitehall Mill would have been a valuable addition to BBL's portfolio. He made the point that the evidence did not justify the inference that the Group B shareholders had no interest in exploiting other opportunities. He also invited me to reject the suggestion that Mohan and Tim would have rejected the proposed acquisition in any event.
268. Mr Corbett QC drew to my attention to passages from the speech of Lord Upjohn in Phipps v Boardman [1966] 3 AER 721 including the following:
"Rules of equity have to be applied to such a great diversity of circumstances that they can be stated only in the most general terms and applied with particular attention to the exact circumstances of each case. The relevant rule for the decision of this case is the fundamental rule of equity that a person in a fiduciary capacity must not make a profit out of his trust, which is part of the wider rule that a trustee must not place himself in a position where his duty and his interest may conflict. I believe that the rule is best stated in Bray v Ford by Lord Herschell, who plainly recognised its limitations ([189599] All ER Rep at p 1011;[1896] AC at p 51):
"It is an inflexible rule of the court of equity that a person in a fiduciary position, such as the plaintiff's, is not, unless otherwise expressly provided, entitled to make a profit; he is not allowed to put himself in a position where his interest and duty conflict. It does not appear to me that this rule is, as has been said, founded upon principles of morality. I regard it rather as based on the consideration that, human nature being what it is, there is danger, in such circumstances, of the person holding a fiduciary position being swayed by interest rather than by duty, and thus prejudicing those whom he was bound to protect. It has, therefore, been deemed expedient to lay down this positive rule. But I am satisfied that it might be departed from in many cases, without any breach of morality, without any wrong being inflicted, and without any consciousness of wrong-doing. Indeed, it is obvious that it might sometimes be to the advantage of the beneficiaries that their trustee should act for them professionally rather than a stranger, even though the trustee were paid for his services."
It is perhaps stated most highly against trustees or directors in the celebrated speech of Lord Cranworth LC, in Aberdeen Ry Co v Blaikie Brothers ([184360] All ER Rep at p 252) where he said:
" and it is a rule of universal application that no one having such duties to discharge shall be allowed to enter into engagements in which he has or can have a personal interest conflicting or which possibly may conflict with the interests of those whom he is bound to protect."
The phrase "possibly may conflict" requires consideration. In my view it means that the reasonable man looking at the relevant facts and circumstances of the particular case would think that there was a real sensible possibility of conflict; not that you could imagine some situation arising which might, in some conceivable possibility in events not contemplated as real sensible possibilities by any reasonable person, result in a conflict.
269. Mr Corbett QC accordingly submits that when one looks at the undisputed facts surrounding the acquisition of Whitehall Mill there was a clear conflict of interest between the interests of Inderjit and Jatinderjit, and the interests of BBL. Accordingly he submits that there was a breach of fiduciary duty by Inderjit and Jatinderjit in making the acquisition without making full disclosure to BBL.
270. I have to confess that I have not found the resolution of this part of the case easy. Indeed it was for that reason that I invited the parties to make detailed oral submissions on the point notwithstanding the very full final submission I had received.
271. I agree with Mr Berragan that it cannot be said that the acquisition of Whitehall Mill was a "maturing business opportunity" within the meaning ascribed to it in the authorities to which I have referred. BBL were not in any sense negotiating for Whitehall Mill at the time of its acquisition. On the other hand I agree with Mr Corbett QC the question of whether this was a maturing business opportunity is not conclusive. The question I have to ask is the wider question posed in the passages in Lord Upjohn's speech to which I have referred.
272. In my view when one considers the undisputed facts of the case, in particular the facts relied on by Mr Corbett QC set out above, this was a case where the interests of BBL and those of Inderjit and Jatinderjit conflicted in the sense explained by Lord Upjohn. That is to say reasonable men looking at the facts would think there was a real sensible possibility of conflict.
273. It follows that there was a breach of fiduciary duty by Inderjit and Jatinderjit in acquiring Whitehall Mill for themselves. I do not think this is affected by the fact that Tim saw the letter from Eddisons dated 11th June 1999. This did not amount to disclosure by Inderjit or Jatinderjit; nor did it amount to acquiescence by Tim let alone the other Group B shareholders. As the authorities show whether or not BBL would have taken up the opportunity is irrelevant. It is certainly not clear to me that it would not have done so. I agree that there is at the moment no evidence before me as to the profit that may have been made by Inderjit or Jatinderjit. That can only be determined on the taking of an account."
THE ISSUES ON THE APPEAL
"(1) a director may not, without the consent of the company, during the currency of his directorship exploit for himself a commercial opportunity which is within the company's line of business;
(2) in acquiring [the Property] for themselves (via Silvercrest), [the appellants] placed themselves in a position where their self interest conflicted (or where there was a real, sensible possibility that their self interest did or would conflict) with the duties owed by them to the company as fiduciaries;
(3) the acquisition of [the Property] was an opportunity so closely associated with the existing activities of the company that [the appellants] as directors:
(A) were under a duty to make the opportunity available to the company, and/or
(B) in acquiring it without first making it available to the company were under a duty to acquire it only for or on behalf of the company; and/or
(C) in acquiring it are
to be taken to have acquired it as fiduciaries for the company and to hold it on trust on its behalf."
THE ARGUMENTS ON THE APPEAL
CONCLUSIONS
"Rules of equity have to be applied to such a great diversity of circumstances that they can be stated only in the most general terms and applied with particular attention to the exact circumstances of each case."
Later in his speech (at p.125) Lord Upjohn gave this warning against attempting to reformulate the rule by reference to the facts of particular cases:
"The whole of the law is laid down in the fundamental principle exemplified in Lord Cranworth's statement [in Aberdeen Railway Co v. Blaikie]. But it is applicable, like so many equitable principles which may affect a conscience, however innocent, to such a diversity of different cases that the observations of judges and even in your Lordships' House in cases where this great principle is being applied must be regarded as applicable only to the particular facts of the particular case in question and not regarded as a new and slightly different formulation of the legal principle so well settled."
"The phrase 'possibly may conflict' requires consideration. In my view it means that the reasonable man looking at the relevant facts and circumstances of the particular case would think that there was a real sensible possibility of conflict; not that you could imagine some situation arising which might, in some conceivable possibility in events not contemplated as real sensible possibilities by any reasonable person, result in conflict."
"The obligation not to profit from a position of trust, or, as it sometimes relevant to put it, not to allow a conflict to arise between interest and duty, is one of strictness. The strength, and indeed the severity, of the rule has recently been emphasised by the House of Lords in Phipps v. Boardman . It retains its vigour in all jurisdictions where the principles of equity are applied. Naturally it has different applications in different contexts. It applies, in principle, whether the case is one of a trust, express or implied, of partnership, of directorship of a limited company, of principal and agent, or master and servant, but the precise scope of it must be moulded according to the nature of the relationship."
"Lord Russell of Killowen in the Regal case held that the directors had acquired the shares 'by reason, and only by reason of the fact that they were directors of Regal, and in the course of their execution of that office'. Lord Macmillan said that the directors were accountable for any profit which they made if it was by reason and in virtue of their office. Lord Wright said that an agent must account for profits secretly acquired 'in the course of his agency', and Lord Porter said that 'one occupying a position of trust must not make a profit which he can acquire only by use of his fiduciary position, or, if he does, he must account for the profit so made'.
If the profits made by the appellants [in Phipps v. Boardman] had been made as a result of the acquisition of the shares by them in 1957, it could not, in my view, be said that the shares were acquired 'only by use of' their 'fiduciary position', or 'in the course of' their 'agency' or by reason and only by reason of the fact that they were agents of the trust for certain limited purposes."
"In this case, as Lord Macmillan said in the Regal case, the result depends on issues of fact. Liability to account must depend on their being some breach of duty, some impropriety of conduct on the part of those in a fiduciary position. On the facts of this case I do not consider that there was any breach of duty or impropriety of conduct on the part of the appellants."
" . indeed could not do so for the law was already so well settled."
For the same reason, I cannot regard Viscount Dilhorne (or for that matter any others of their Lordships in Phipps v. Boardman) as laying down any new formulation of the rule. The observations on which Mr Berragan relies were made by Viscount Dilhorne in course of applying the rule to the particular facts of Phipps v. Boardman.
"The first matter that has to be considered is whether or not the defendant was in a fiduciary relationship with his principals, the plaintiffs. [Counsel for the defendant] argued that he was not because he received this information which was communicated to him privately. With respect, I think that argument is wrong. The defendant had one capacity and one capacity only in which he was carrying on business at that time. That capacity was as managing director of the plaintiffs. Information which came to him while he was managing director and which was of concern to the plaintiffs and was relevant for the plaintiffs to know, was information which it was his duty to pass on to the plaintiffs because between himself and the plaintiffs a fiduciary relationship existed .."
" .embarked upon a deliberate policy and course of conduct which put his personal interest . in direct conflict with his pre-existing and continuing duty as managing director of [the company]."
He continued, referring to Keech v. Sandford (1726) Sel. Cas, t. King 61:
"That is something which for over 200 years the courts have forbidden."
"I do not think it is necessary, but it appears to me very important, that we should concur in laying down again and again the general principle that in this court no agent in the course of his agency, in the matter of his agency, can be allowed to make any profit without the knowledge and consent of his principal; that that rule is an inflexible rule, and must be applied inexorably by this court, which is not entitled, in my judgment, to receive evidence, or suggestion, or argument as to whether the principal did or did not suffer any injury in fact by reason of the dealing of the agent; for the safety of mankind requires that no agent shall be able to put his principal in the danger of such an inquiry as that."
RESULT
Lord Justice Brooke:
Lord Justice Schiemann: