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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 >> Venture Finance Plc v Mead & Anor [2005] EWCA Civ 325 (22 March 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2005/325.html Cite as: [2005] EWCA Civ 325, [2006] 3 Costs LR 389 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
(MR JUSTICE BEATSON)
HQ03X03271
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE CHADWICK
and
LADY JUSTICE ARDEN
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VENTURE FINANCE PLC |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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MEAD and another |
Respondent |
____________________
Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr Edward Cohen (instructed by Ross & Craig, 12A Upper Berkeley Street, London W1H 7PE) for the Second Respondent
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Chadwick :
(1) The business of the claimant was to provide sales ledger finance to customers. In September 2002 the claimant agreed to provide finance to Scandinavian Lighting Company (UK) Limited ("SLC") through an invoice discounting facility. The terms of that facility are contained in an agreement – described as "an agreement for the purchase of debts" - made between the claimant and SLC. Mr Mead and Mrs McCarrick were directors and shareholders of SLC. They executed the agreement on behalf of SLC on 17 September 2002. It was executed on behalf of the claimant on 20 September 2002.(2) Clause 18 of the agreement contained special conditions. Special condition 3 required that the agreement be supported by personal guarantees, limited to £125,000 each, and indemnities of the shareholding directors (identified there as Mr Mead and Mrs McCarrick). The limit of £125,000 was to reduce to £100,000 on the reduction of an overpayment facility (described in special condition 8) from £350,000 to £300,000.
(3) On 17 September 2002 Mr Mead and Mrs McCarrick each executed a deed of guarantee and indemnity ("the guarantees"). The two deeds were addressed to the claimant and were in the same form. In particular, clauses 2 and 3 in each deed were in these terms:
"2. I the Guarantor and Indemnifier whose name appears in section 2 of the Schedule hereby guarantee:(i) the due performance of all the obligations to you of the Principal under the Agreement and any other agreement and(ii) upon your demand in writing the due payment of all amounts payable or which may at any time hereafter become payable to you by the Principal whether arising under the Agreement or otherwiseprovided always that the total amount recoverable hereunder shall not exceed the limit set out in section 3 of the Schedule and in addition interest on such limit at the rate and from the date referred to in paragraph 6 hereof. The limit shall likewise not apply to sums recoverable by you under paragraph 9 hereof.3. Without prejudice to the provisions of paragraph 2 hereof I hereby agree to indemnify you and hold you harmless against all losses you may suffer or incur by reason of any failure of the Principal to comply with any term of the Agreement or of any other agreement between the Principal and you."In that context "the Principal" means SLC, "the Agreement" means or includes the debt purchase agreement to which I have already referred and the limit set out in section 3 of the schedule is £125,000. Paragraph 6 provided for payment of interest at 4% over the HSBC Bank plc daily base rate compounded monthly. Paragraph 9 was in these terms:"9. I agree to pay you all costs and expenses (on a full indemnity basis) arising out of or in connection with the recovery of the monies due to you hereunder."(4) It is common ground that, following the execution of the debt purchase agreement and the guarantees, the overpayment facility described in special condition 8 of the agreement was reduced from £350,000 to £300,000; and that accordingly the limit set out in schedule 3 to each guarantee (£125,000) was reduced to £100,000.
(5) Clause 19(2) of the debt purchase agreement provided that, if any of the events set out in that clause should happen, the claimant should have the right to terminate the agreement forthwith by notice to SLC. Those events included the presentation of a petition for an administration order in respect of SLC. Clause 19(3) provided that, upon the happening of an event described in clause 19(2), the claimant should be entitled to demand immediate repayment of all Funds in Use. "Funds in Use" was an expression defined in appendix A to the debt purchase agreement. Put shortly it meant the balance in favour of the claimant on a current account maintained by the claimant in the name of SLC.
(6) On 8 September 2003, on the petition of its directors, SLC entered administration. On 19 September 2003 the claimant made demand against SLC for all Funds in Use – then stated to be £681,478. By letters of the same date SLC made demand on each of Mr Mead and Mrs McCarrick for payment of the same sum in discharge of the Funds in Use. Further demands were made by letters dated 17 October 2003; by which date the amount of Funds in Use was stated to have reduced to £530,804.
"21. In the premises pursuant to [clause 2] . . . of the Deeds of Guarantee and Indemnity there is now due and owing to the Claimant from each of the First Defendant and the Second Defendant the sum of £100,000, alternatively damages in such sum.
23 Further or alternatively, pursuant to the indemnity contained in clause 3 of the Deeds of Guarantee and Indemnity there is now due and owing from each of the First Defendant and the Second Defendant the amount of the loss suffered by the Claimant by reason of SLC's failure in breach of the Debt Purchase Agreement to pay to the Claimant the Funds in Use, currently £530,804."
The claimant sought judgment in those sums, with interest.
"By reason of the matters set out in Paragraphs 5, 6 and 8 above, Paragraph 21 of the Particulars of Claim is not admitted."
Paragraph 21 of the particulars of claim – to which I have already referred – contained the allegation that each of the defendants owed £100,000 under clause 2 of his or her guarantee. Paragraphs 5, 6 and 8 of the defence put in issue the amount of the Funds in Use.
"That is not an abdication of the court's function in relation to costs. It is a proper recognition that the course which the parties have adopted in the litigation has led to the position in which the right way in which to discharge that function is to decide not to make an order about costs"
"25. It does not, of course, follow that there will be no cases in which (absent a judgment after trial) the judge will be in a position to make an order about costs. There will be cases (perhaps many cases) in which it will be clear that there was only one issue, that one party has been successful on that issue, and that conduct is not a factor which could displace the general rule. But, in such cases, the answer to the question which party should bear the costs of the litigation is likely to be so obvious that, as Mummery LJ has pointed out, the judge will not be asked to decide that question. It will be agreed as one of the terms of compromise.
26. The cases in which the judge will be asked to decide questions of costs – following a compromise of the substantive issues – are likely to be those in which the answer is not obvious. And it may well be that, in many such cases, the answer is not obvious because it turns on facts which are not agreed between the parties and which have not been determined. The judge should be slow to embark on the determination of disputed facts solely in order to put himself in a position to make a decision about costs. As Mummery LJ has put it, the better course may be to require the parties to confront the realities of their litigation situation; to point out to them that, if they have not reached an agreement on costs, they have not settled their dispute and the action must proceed to judgment."
"14. Therefore, in the exercise of my discretion under CPR 48.3 I make an order in the terms sought by the defendants, that the first defendant do pay 50 per cent of the claimant's costs on an indemnity basis to be subject to a detailed assessment, if not agreed, and that the second defendant will pay 50 per cent of the claimant's costs on an indemnity basis to be subject to a detailed assessment, if not agreed."
And, on the basis that the hearing of 26 July 2004 had been made necessary only because of the dispute as to costs – on which the defendants had won – the judge awarded the costs of that hearing to the defendants.
"COUNSEL: My Lord, very briefly if I may, I ask for permission to appeal. I regret to say I did not make my submissions clear enough. I think perhaps when my learned friend stood up and said that I had submitted that the guarantee liability is joint and several that rather swayed you. My submission was that the liability under the guarantees were several but that in relation to the costs each of the defendants were liable for all of the costs because none of them had been incurred only against one of the defendants.
THE JUDGE: I had understood that. It may be that my oral judgment did not make that clear. I had understood that submission.
COUNSEL: I am much obliged. Your Lordship had stated that my submission was that the liability under the guarantee was joint and several.
THE JUDGE: That was a slip."
"The issue before me is whether the liability under the guarantees is a joint and several one or several. Mr Mills submits that the liability is joint and several . . . and the relevant terms of the guarantee show, in context, that the liability is indeed joint and several."
And, as I have said, the issue which the judge actually addressed was the issue which he had identified: whether the liability under the guarantees was joint and several or merely several. It seems to me that there was some force in counsel's observation, when asking for permission to appeal, that his submissions had been mis-understood.
"Where the court assesses (whether by the summary or detailed procedure) costs which are payable by the paying party to the receiving party under the terms of a contract, the costs payable under those terms are, unless the contract expressly provides otherwise, to be presumed to be costs which –
(a) have been reasonably incurred; and
(b) are reasonable in amount; and the court will assess them accordingly."
The rule applies at the stage when the Court is assessing costs; not at the stage when the Court is deciding by whom costs should be paid. When deciding by whom costs should be paid – the Court is exercising a discretion under CPR 44.3 and section 51 (3) of the Supreme Court Act 1981.
"As both parties agreed that he should undertake the task, it is reasonable to expect them to accept his decision, unless it can be shown that the result is, in all the circumstances, manifestly unjust. I would certainly not be inclined to interfere with the judge's decision simply because it is possible to detect imperfections in his approach or in his reasoning"
That approach, as it seems to me, recognises the hurdle which ought to confront an appellant who complains of the result reached by a judge who (at the parties' invitation) has set out to do something which – as should have been appreciated on a more careful analysis of the principles underlying CPR 44.3 – he was never in a position to do properly and should not have done at all. But I do not think that that approach should prevent the Court from setting aside the judge's order in the present case.
Lady Justice Arden:
Lord Justice Auld: