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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Kangol Ltd v Hay & Robertson Plc Rev 1 [2004] EWCA Civ 63 (22 January 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2004/63.html Cite as: [2004] EWCA Civ 63 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT
CIVIL DIVISION
Strand London, WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE WALL
MR JUSTICE HARRISON
____________________
KANGOL LIMITED | Appellant | |
-v- | ||
HAY & ROBERTSON PLC | Respondent |
____________________
Smith Bernal WordWave Limited
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel: 020 7404 1400 Fax: 020 7404 1424
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
3.1:
"The guaranteed minimum royalty should be paid in equal quarterly instalments within 30 days of each of the last day of March, June, September and December and continue yearly thereafter."
3.2:
"The running royalty mentioned in Clause 2.1 above shall be computed quarterly and be paid by the licensee within 30 days of each of the last day of March, June, September and December in each year. The licensee agrees to provide Kangol with a statement and calculation of royalties due to Kangol in respect of the statement.
"At the same time the licensee shall send a remittance to Kangol for the total amount of royalty shown by such statement to be due, save that the licensee may deduct the minimum royalty paid pursuant to Clause 2.2."
"Without prejudice to any other right to which it may be entitled, either party may give notice in writing to the other party terminating this agreement with immediate effect if the other party is in breach of any of its obligations hereunder and fails to remedy such breach within a period of 3 months; or if the other party makes any composition with its creditors, or has an administrative receiver or other like officer appointed to the whole or any part of its assets, or if an order is made or a resolution is passed for the winding up of the other party."
9.2:
"In the event that the licensee fails to pay Kangol the minimum royalty level specified in Clause 2.2 of this agreement, Kangol may terminate this agreement forthwith unless the licensee pays Kangol such sums as are required to meet such minimum royalty level at the time such payments are due."
"We are writing further to the court hearing this morning at which an administration order was granted in relation to Big Hit Limited, and pursuant to your email of yesterday to David Heys acknowledging the licensee's and Big Hit's failure to pay the royalties due for the first quarter of 2003. As a result of these matters, we are instructed by our client, Kangol Limited, that they have taken the decision to terminate the licence agreement in accordance with Clause 9 of the licence agreement. Please accept this letter therefore as notice of that termination which shall take place with immediate effect."
"The declaration that is sought is a declaration that the notice itself is invalid. In my judgement, what I have just said is enough to show that the notice itself was valid, but nevertheless in my judgement, so far as its effect is dependent upon non-payment of the minimum royalty level, it is in the events that have occurred ineffective because, as I have said, that minimum payment was made on 14th May."
"If one pauses merely as the words which constitute the first two lines of Clause 9.2, such distinction could not arise, as Mr Prescott has rightly submitted. They read: 'In the event that the licensee fails to pay Kangol the minimum royalty level specified in Clause 2.2 of this agreement, Kangol may terminate this agreement forthwith'.
"Mr Prescott expressed two contradictory views as to whether the 'forthwith' meant that it was the termination that had to be forthwith, or the service of the notice of termination. I think he was right in his second view that 'forthwith' means the date at which the termination is to take effect subject, however, to the provisions contained in the rest of the clause which, I remind myself, read: 'Unless the licensee pays Kangol such sums as are required to meet such minimum royalty level at the time such payments are due'.
"That in my judgement means that the termination is immediate unless such payment is indeed made. It is in effect a termination whose effects can be brought to an end by payment within some reasonable further time, or in a time specified by the licensor in order to bring certainty to the effect of his notice."
At paragraph 23, having dealt with various arguments on the part of Mr Prescott, the judge said this:
"I think for that reason that the termination which the licensor is entitled to exercise on non-payment is a provisional termination to operate only if the non-payment is thus continued. I think that that follows exactly the pattern contemplated in Clause 9.1 in respect of other breaches such, for example, as a failure to make due payment of the running royalty, except that under that clause a particular period for the remedying of the breach is specified."
"For those reasons I conclude that the non-payment, although entitling the licensor to serve a notice such as he did, brought the agreement to an end only provisionally and the condition to avoid the termination has been satisfied by the subsequent late payment of the minimum royalty."