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 £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 >> Schweppe v Harper [2008] EWCA Civ 442 (22 May 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2008/442.html Cite as: [2008] EWCA Civ 442 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM Wandsworth County Court
His Honour Judge Winstanley
5WT01008
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
Vice-President of the Court of Appeal, Civil Division
LORD JUSTICE DYSON
and
SIR ROBIN AULD
____________________
Schweppe |
Appellant |
|
- and - |
||
Harper |
Respondent |
____________________
James Holmes Milner (instructed by Messrs Slater Bradley) for the Respondent
Hearing date : 17th March 2008
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Waller :
The facts
"39. There is no doubt that the terms were discussed between Mr Schweppe and Mr MacClancy, and I shall turn to part of Mr MacClancy's statement for that. In paragraph 21 it says:
"We", that is I and Mr Schweppe, Mr Harper is not present
at this discussion - "agreed I would be paid an arrangement fee of 1% on the sum actually advanced and an interest rate of between 2% and 3% over the London Interbank Rate would be paid, the actual interest rate would depend on the amount of monies actually required to be advanced – a smaller amount would attract a higher rate, a larger amount would attract the lower rate. It was also agreed that I should agree, in lieu of repayment of the loan, that the defendant could transfer one of the defendant's properties to me, (to be subsequently identified) and I should take the transfer at a discount to its par value (to be subsequently negotiated), and that would be accepted as amounting to repayment of the loan."
"40. They had this meeting in September when they met at the pub, the only meeting when all three of them were present and, most importantly, Mr Harper was present. Mr McClancy says at paragraph 25:
"At this meeting, the proposed transaction was fully discussed. All the terms previously discussed with Mr Schweppe" – and I have just recited those – "set out above were discussed between the defendant and myself in the meeting, which lasted for an hour and a half. The defendant and I agreed all the financial terms, although I understood that the precise amount of finance which would be required would depend on the outcome of further work remaining to be undertaken by Mr Schweppe."
41. As I say, I found Mr MacClancy to be a witness of truth but at its highest his statement means that interest will be 2% or 3% above London Interbank Rate. The amount to be borrowed has to be settled, there is no discussion of an upper limit and presumably there must have been some upper limit. Mr MacClancy will have a property transferred to him but that is to be identified and, fourthly, it is to be transferred at a discount to its par value to be subsequently negotiated. So there is a great deal yet to be settled."
"14. Pausing there, and I am now in about October 2003, all matters I have mentioned so far are to be taken as findings of fact, they are not really in dispute. The one thing in my judgement that emerges is that the claimant had been doing a great deal of work for the defendant. He had started making arrangements for this third party finance through Mr MacClancy, he had had a lot of meetings with him and they had all met together in London. He had corresponded extensively with the trustee in bankruptcy and had attended a number of meetings, which you can see referred to in the correspondence. He had collated details of creditors, interest and costs with a view to assessing the sum outstanding which would be required to annul the bankruptcy, and he corresponded to an extent with creditors.
15. It is plain that, by this stage, it had gone way beyond what it might have started as: one friend helping out another. This was a business transaction now in which the claimant was aiding the defendant and had been, I find, since those letters written in April 2003. I accept the evidence that Mr Schweppe gives that, after the letters came from Isadore Goldman, he said he could not do this for nothing and, when asked about his fees, he said £5,000 or £10,000 or it might be more.
16. I reject for two reasons the defendant's assertion that the claimant was doing all this as a pal for nothing: first, the nature, extent and complexity of the work that was being done and, secondly, my general reservation, to which I shall come in greater detail, about Mr Harper as a witness on whom I can rely. He is not a witness on whom I can rely, but I shall give some detailed reasons for that."
"23. This meeting of 26th is important because it is where it is asserted by Mr Schweppe that the agreement was made over his fees. What is Mr Schweppe's evidence about that? In fact it is very brief in his statement, where he says:
"I began by saying I wanted to discuss and agree my fee. Should be £50,000. Mr Harper immediately agreed, indicating that I had done a marvellous job."
24. Mr Schweppe added in oral evidence when he was referred to Mr Harper's note "£50,000 fee agreed to end" that it was all or nothing: it was £50,000 if I completed the job. I find that what is meant by that is that completing the job was arranging the third party finance that was integral to what he was going to do. There was no question of the bankruptcy being annulled independently of the arranging of third party finance. It was a package that was being presented and his good friend, Mr MacClancy, who had lots of money, was looking around for investments in England, so the completion of the job was getting the third party finance, using it to get the bankruptcy annulled on the basis that Mr Harper still owned the properties.
25. Other things were mentioned in the defence for which Mr Schweppe may have undertaken some responsibility, but the £50,000 fee was not contingent upon them. For example, sorting things out with Wandsworth, or getting new tenants: that was a problem that needed to be sorted out along the way and with which he was helping, but it was not part of the fee work, because, if I look later at other people to whom he went for money, it was plain that the service for which he was prepared to pay a substantial fee was to get third party finance to get this bankruptcy annulled. Neither is the fee contingent upon any promise, or failure to carry out a promise, for example to pay any shortfall or mortgage on Balmuir Gardens. It is all to do with getting his bankruptcy annulled and getting the third party finance. I reject the evidence of Mr Harper for the reasons I have given that these other issues were somehow contingent upon him, being responsible for Schweppe's fees.
26. So there is the contract at its highest as put by Mr Schweppe. I accept that that degree of agreement was reached at the meeting and I accept the evidence of Mr Schweppe. If I need to give my reasons for that separately, I have already indicated that Mr Harper is an unreliable witness, he is unreliable in money matters. He was still interested in Mr MacClancy's money becoming available and prepared very readily, in my judgment, to agree to make a payment at a future time. That cost Mr Harper nothing because he knew in his own mind that, when the future date came, whether he had paid or not would be up to him.
27. The explanation that he gave about this note of a £50,000 fee agreed, in his statement at page 49 he says it was a loan from Mr MacClancy to do building work required by the London Borough of Wandsworth to Balmuir Gardens. In my judgment, you cannot apply the word "fees" to that kind of work, fees are fees. Fees are the sort of thing that Mr Schweppe would receive if he brought this job off. In any event, I did not understand why he was saying that in his statement, because in his amended defence he admits it was agreed that, if the defendant carried out works and fulfilled the agreement, including raising the money to discharge the bankruptcy, he would be paid £50,000.
28. One could go all round the houses and look at this evidence, and there you have it at the end of paragraph 2 of the defence, flatly contradicting what he says in his statement about that £50,000, it is at page 49 or paragraph 49, it is admitted in the defence. That is where we have come to as at 26 November. I accept the claimant's case about the contractual arrangements that he made with the defendant over annulling his bankruptcy. Nothing is in writing, it is all oral and I have recorded what it is: it is getting the third party finance, annulling the bankruptcy and Mr Harper retaining control of his properties."
"Statutory interest was not a bankruptcy debt within the meaning of s.382 of the 1986 Act. For the purposes of an application for an annulment under s.282(1)(b) of the 1986 Act, it was not necessary to show payment of statutory interest in addition to the principal debts. Re a Debtor (no 37 of 1976) ex parte Taylor v The Debtor considered."
"15. In those circumstances, I am concerned that, although the bankrupt would appear to be in a position to repay some of the funds, there is going to be a substantial shortfall and, of course, his proposal completely ignores statutory interest. In fact, he is not going to be helped by pursuing an annulment using funds from these sources and could place himself in a worse position.
16. In conclusion, taking account of the general principles set out by Deputy Registrar Barnett, in my judgment this is a case where it is entirely proper and appropriate for statutory interest to be paid to the creditors before an annulment will be granted. I take account of the following: (i) the creditors have had to wait a substantial period of time – some 10 years – to receive payment. (ii) This is now a solvent estate and there are more than sufficient assets available to pay all debts, costs and statutory interest. Happily for the bankrupt, during the period of time that has elapsed since the bankruptcy order, the value of the properties which form the subject matter of the estate has increased significantly. In my judgment it would be quite wrong if he alone were to benefit from that windfall. (iii) The bankrupt's conduct is open to criticism, he has failed to co-operate fully with his trustee and has failed to deal with his tax returns. (iv) The introduction of third-party funds would seem inappropriate when the assets, if realised, would be sufficient to pay all debts, costs and statutory interest.
17. I am not prepared to exercise my discretion in the bankrupt's favour to grant an annulment. In my judgment any compromise must take account of statutory interest, which shall be paid from the date of the bankruptcy order. This application for an annulment is dismissed."
The judge's analysis
. . .
35. The claimant and defendant, as I have said, entered into a contract for services that had existed since April. Its terms in themselves firmed up as they went along and by 26 November those terms had become that the defendant would pay the claimant £50,000 on completion of the task: third party finance, annulling the bankruptcy and Mr Harper retaining the properties.
. . .
43. Mr Schweppe, by leaving matters on that oral basis from the meeting, left himself open to the contractual possibility that Mr Harper would change horses at any time before the deal was concluded. Everyone was aware there was pressure from the trustee in bankruptcy to conclude the deal, and there was nothing to prevent Mr Harper from doing this.
44. The only piece of law to which I have been referred that, in my judgment, bears on this in any particular way is in implied terms Mr Blakey has argued for and expressed the parties would co-operate towards obtaining the annulment, and neither party would prevent the other from performing the agreement. If it is left open, if you are not tied by a term of the contract to remain, one could see, for example, to suggest a term that Mr Harper was irrevocably tied to the contract in some way is a term of the contract one would not begin to imply. These are circumstances in which, in ending his arrangement with Mr Harper, he was doing no more than he was entitled to do under the contract and that is exactly what he did.
45. We can see from the facts that he went to Mr Krikorian, whom I have already mentioned, to try to realise a loan from another source to pay off his creditors. That did not work and he went to someone else. Any talk of reasonableness of notice, in my judgment, just does not enter the situation here, because what Mr Schweppe had prepared and put forward never amounted to any definite proposal for the defendant to accept. I have said that third party finance was an integral part of the package for which he was being paid the fee of £50,000. If it was not, he might just as well have used some solicitors but, back to the money situation, there was no binding contract for a loan from Mr MacClancy and no final agreement. It was just a proposal.
46. I shall add here that I reject Mr Harper's evidence when he says that he knew in February that Mr MacClancy would not lend, he had heard from someone that he was interested in a property. Mr MacClancy wrote a letter much later, I believe on 23 September 2004. To a certain extent, it is self-serving, he admitted that he wrote it at the request of Mr Schweppe, but that letter was written to bring matters to an end. That was its purpose at that time, and I reject Mr Harper's evidence that somehow in general terms the money was not available in February. It was available, I have found already, but there was no legally binding agreement to provide it, no terms agreed. In those circumstances, Mr Schweppe left himself open to Mr Harper withdrawing at any time. He could have protected himself by a contractual arrangement but did not. My finding is that he did not even think about it at the time, he did not consider those circumstances, and he has to bear the consequences of that.
47. Therefore, I reject any suggestion that there are terms to be implied in this contract. It has a way of working without the necessity of implying terms. It is just that Mr Schweppe put himself under the burden of bringing off a deal that was acceptable to Mr Harper before anyone else, and he simply was not able to do that. In the terms of this particular contract, therefore, he is not entitled to his money."
Appellant's submissions
"32. At the hearing the claimant's case was that:
a) At the April 2003 meeting, it was agreed that the claimant would deal with the trustee in bankruptcy, and work towards obtaining an annulment of the defendant's bankruptcy, for a reasonable fee.
b) At the 26 November 2003 meeting it was agreed that the claimant's fee would be £50,000 up to the end of the annulment
c) It was always understood that the claimant's fee would be an all or nothing fee – it would only be payable if the annulment was achieved.
d) It was an express, alternatively an implied term of the agreement that:
(i) The parties would co-operate towards obtaining the annulment; and
(ii) Neither party would prevent the other from performing the agreement.
e) In breach of the terms set out above, the defendant dismissed the claimant in mid February 2004, thus preventing him from securing the annulment on the defendant's behalf. Therefore the fee of £50,000 was payable.
f) If the claimant had not been dismissed, the annulment would have been secured, and the claimant would have earned his £50,000 fee."
Respondent's submissions
Discussion
"2-076 Introduction An offer of a unilateral contract is made when one party promises to pay the other a sum of money (or to do some other act, or to forbear from doing something) if the other will do (or forbear from doing) something without making any promise to that effect: for example where A promises to pay B £100 if B will walk from London to York or find and return A's lost dog or give up smoking for a year. The contract in these cases is called "unilateral" because it arises without B's having made any counter-promise to perform the stipulated act or forbearance; it is contrasted with a bilateral contract under which each party undertakes an obligation. The distinction between the two types of contract is not always clear-cut.; but once a promise is classified as an offer of a unilateral contract, a number of rules apply to the acceptance of such an offer. First, the offer can be accepted by fully performing the required act or forbearance. Secondly, there is no need to give advance notice of such acceptance to the offeror. Thirdly, it is probable that the offer can be accepted only by some performance and not by a counter-promise, since such a counter-promise would not be what the promisor had bargained for. And fourthly, the offer can, like all offers, be withdrawn before it is accepted. It is the application of this fourth rule which gives rise to the greatest difficulty, for it raises the question of exactly when acceptance of such an offer can be said to have occurred.
2-077 Acceptance by part performance. It is disputed whether an offer of a unilateral contract can be withdrawn after the offeree has partly performed the stipulated act or forbearance. The first question (to be discussed here) is whether at this stage the offeree has accepted the offer; the second (to be discussed in Chapter 3) is whether he has provided any consideration for the offeror's promise. With regard to the first question, one possible view is that there is no acceptance until the stipulated act or forbearance has been completely performed. This may, indeed, be the position where it is the intention of both parties that, until then, the offeror should have a locus poenitentiae. But in most cases the offeree will not intend to expose himself to the risk of withdrawal when he has partly performed and intends to complete performance. It is now generally accepted that a distinction, originally put forward by Sir Frederick Pollock, is to be drawn between the acceptance of an offer and the conditions which have to be satisfied before the offeree can enforce the promise contained in the offer. In a unilateral contract the offeree is not entitled to enforce the promise until the performance is complete. But the acceptance generally takes effect as soon as the offeree has made an unequivocal beginning of the requested performance, so that thereafter the offeror cannot revoke. Of course it may be difficult in fact to tall when performance has begun, particularly where the offer amounts to a promise in return for an abstention. But if the conduct of the offeree goes beyond mere preparation to perform, and amounts to actual part performance, then the offeror cannot, as a general rule, withdraw."
"Unilateral contracts. In the case of a unilateral contract, the promise clearly provides consideration if he completes the stipulated act or forbearance (such as walking to York, or not smoking for a year). This amounts in law to a detriment to the promisee; and the promisor may also obtain a benefit: e.g. where he promises a reward for the return of lost property and it is actually returned to him. It was suggested in Chapter 2 that commencement of performance can amount to acceptance of an offer of a unilateral contract, and it is submitted that such commencement can also amount to consideration; for it may in law be a detriment to the promise to walk only part of the way to York or to refrain from smoking for part of the year. Difficult questions of fact may, indeed, arise in determining whether performance has actually begun and whether such a beginning was made "on the strength of" a promise. This is particularly true where the stipulated performance was a forbearance; but if an actual forbearance to sue can constitute good consideration, it must in principle be possible to tell when a forbearance has begun. Thus commencement of performance (whether of an act or of a forbearance) may provide both an acceptance and consideration and may accordingly deprive the promisor of his right to withdraw the promise. Of course, the promisor's liability to pay the amount promised (e.g. the £100 for walking to York) does not accrue before the promise has fully performed the required act or forbearance. The present point is merely that, after part performance by the promise, the promisor cannot withdraw with impunity."
Damages
"Extent of liability. It is generally assumed that, where a unilateral contract takes the form of a promise to pay money, an offeror who purports to withdraw after part performance by the offeree must either be liable in full or not be liable at all. There is, however, also an intermediate possibility. If, for example, the offer is withdrawn after the offeree has walked half-way to York, it is arguable that, on being notified of the withdrawal, he should desist and recover damages amounting to his expenses, or to the value of the chance of completing the walk, less the expenses which he would incur in that process."
Lord Justice Dyson:
Sir Robin Auld :
"25 ... it was plain that the service for which ... [Mr Harper] was prepared to pay a substantial fee was to get third party finance to get this bankruptcy annulled. ... It is all to do with getting his bankruptcy annulled and getting the third party finance.
26. So there is the contract at its highest as put by Mr Schweppe. I accept that that degree of agreement was reached at the meeting and I accept the evidence of Mr Schweppe."
The first ground
The second ground
The third ground
The fourth ground
The fifth ground
Costs