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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 >> Harris v Microfusion 2003-2 LLP & Ors [2016] EWCA Civ 1212 (06 December 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2016/1212.html Cite as: [2017] 1 BCLC 305, [2016] EWCA Civ 1212 |
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A3/2015/1227 |
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE,
CHANCERY DIVISION,
MANCHESTER DISTRICT REGISTRY,
HIS HONOUR JUDGE PELLING QC
(SITTING AS A DEPUTY JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT)
A31MA061
Royal Courts of Justice Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE McCOMBE
and
LORD JUSTICE CHRISTOPHER CLARKE
____________________
BRIAN JOHN HARRIS |
Appellant in A3/2015/1253 Respondent in A3/2015/1227 |
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- and - |
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(1) MICROFUSION 2003-2 LLP & ORS (2) FUTURE FILMS (MANAGEMENT SERVICES) LIMITED (3) FUTURE FILMS (PARTNERSHIP SERVICES) LIMITED |
Respondents in A3/2015/1253 Appellants in A3/2015/1227 |
____________________
Lesley Anderson QC (instructed by DLA Piper UK LLP) for the Second and Third Respondents/Appellants
Hearing date: 2 November 2016
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice McCombe:
"All matters relating to the management and conduct of the affairs of the Partnership and any agreement or approvals required by this Deed to be made or given by the Members shall be decided by a Member Majority save that, notwithstanding the foregoing, the Designated Members shall have sole authority to determine those matters which are stated in this Deed as requiring only their approval, consent or determination (as the case may be). In addition to the foregoing, the Designated Members shall have full power and authority to carry out the duties referred to in clause 9.5 and (on their own behalf and so as to bind the Partnership thereby) execute any deed or document or do any other act or thing which the Members may direct the Partnership to execute or do under the provisions of this clause 3 or any other provision of this Deed".
(Clause 9.5 concerns duties of registration with the Registrar of Companies and does not concern us.) Clause (A)(1) of the introductory provisions contains definitions. It defines "Member Majority" as,
"the prior written consent of the Designated Members and those Investors who hold more than 75% of Total Investments".
Any decision to bring or conduct litigation on behalf of the LLP, therefore, is subject to the veto of Future Films as the Designated Members. Mr Harris says in evidence that he has the support of 25 individual members for the claims that he now wishes to make. Naturally enough, he does not have the support of Future Films. Hence the application for permission to bring a derivative action.
"The Ds and each of them owed the following fiduciary/statutory duties to the claimant namely to:
(i) act within the powers delegated to them;
(ii) promote the success and/or to act in the best interests of the C;
(iii) exercise reasonable care, skill and diligence;
(iv) avoid a situation in which it has or could have a direct/indirect interest that conflicts with or possibly may conflict with the interests of the C;
(v) declare an interest in any proposed transaction involving the C;
(vi) disclose to the claimant any wrongdoing on its part or the part of others in the course of its (their) performance of its (their) role on behalf of the claimant."
"LMI, in its capacity as Film Consultant, will charge the Partnership fees of approximately 8% of the Capital Contributions to the Partnership…The precise sums charged will depend on the specifics of each Film and will be advised to prospective members by LMI… ".
In contrast, it is alleged that the fees actually paid represented 15% of the contributions rather than 8%. This gives rise to the following allegation in the draft pleading:
"3(a) The Ds have not either at the time or subsequently provided any explanation as to why it was in the interests of the C to agree to, and/or pay the LMI fee, and/or a fee in excess of that referred to in para.7(2) above.
(b) The Ds did not disclose to the C that they were in a position or actual or perceived conflict in view of the 'connection' between the Ds and LMI …
(c) The Ds proceeded to agree and/or pay the LMI fee despite having failed to make the disclosure referred to in (b) above.
(d) The Ds did not seek or obtain the consent, informed or otherwise, of the members of the C paying the LMI fee and/or a fee in excess of that referred to in para.7.2 above.
(e) The Ds subsequently failed to disclose their conduct in relation to the agreement and/or payment of the LMI fee."
Consequently, the following is alleged in paragraph 8 of the draft:
"In these circumstances the Ds, and each of them, have breached the duties pleaded in para.4 above and/or clause 3.1 of the deed of partnership.
As a result of the matters aforesaid the claimant has suffered loss and damage in the sum of £1.582.073.72, being the difference between the LMI fee and the fee referred to para.7.2 above ..."
"15. Further, in view of the facts and matters pleaded in paragraph 12 above, the C cannot see on what basis the Ds (or either of them) can have honestly believed that Alcon was entitled to the Alcon Fee pursuant to the Marketing Services Letter."
"21. Further, in view of the facts and matters pleaded in paragraph 17 above, the C cannot see on what basis the Ds (or either of them) can have honestly believed that there was any benefit (commensurate or otherwise) to the C arising out of the payment of the Total Surplus to DPL."
"The exceptions are four in number, and only one of which is of possible application in the present case. The first exception is that a shareholder can sue in respect of some attack on his individual rights as a shareholder; secondly, he can sue if the company, for example, is purporting to do by ordinary resolution that which its own constitution requires to be done by special resolution; thirdly, if the company has done or proposes to do something which is ultra vires; and fourthly, if there is fraud and there is no other remedy. There must be a minority who are prevented from remedying the fraud or taking any proceedings because of the protection given to the fraudulent shareholders or directors by virtue of their majority."
"18. The scope of "fraud" for the purposes of this exception has been considered in many cases. In Daniels v Daniels [1978] Ch 406, Templeman J reviewed the authorities to date on this subject. The nineteenth century authorities proceeded largely on the basis that the exception applied only to cases of what might be called actual fraud, that is to say deliberate and dishonest breaches of duty. The same is true of the celebrated passage in the advice of the Privy Council given by Lord Davey in Burland v Earle [1902] AC 83 at 93. However, derivative actions were permitted in Alexander v Automatic Telephone Co [1900] 2 Ch 56 and Cook v Deeks [1916] 1 AC 554, where allegations of fraud were rejected but the directors exercised their powers in a manner which conferred personal benefits on themselves at the expense of the company and the other shareholders. "
He concluded on that aspect of the case before him (at paragraph 24) as follows:
"24. It is therefore the case that all the authorities on direct derivative actions have taken as a requirement that the alleged wrongdoing should result in a loss to the company and, hence, an indirect or reflective loss to the shareholders and also that the alleged wrongdoers should have personally gained from their breaches of duty. "
I should also quote the subsequent passage at paragraph 25 to this effect:
"25. It follows, on the authorities as they stand, that financial or other loss to the shareholders, albeit normally of a reflective character, is essential to give a claimant shareholder sufficient interest in the proceedings to make the shareholder an appropriate claimant on behalf of the company, whether he is a member of that company or of its holding company. Equally, the authorities require that, in the absence of actual fraud or an ultra vires act, the wrongdoers should themselves have benefitted from the wrongdoing. The significance of this requirement is that their breach of duty cannot be ratified by a majority vote which depends on the votes of the wrongdoers. It is essential to the exception to the rule in Foss v Harbottle that the alleged wrongdoing is incapable of lawful ratification: see Smith v Croft (No 2) [1988] Ch 114."
"23. It follows from David Richards J's analysis of the exception that for it to apply the following conditions must be satisfied: (a) the alleged wrongdoing should result in a loss to the company; (b) that the alleged wrongdoers must have personally gained from the breaches of duty, unless what is alleged is fraud, as he defined it to be – that is "deliberate and dishonest breaches of duty"."
"26. I agree with Miss Anderson that there is no allegation of fraud made in relation to the LMI fee issue, nor is there either an allegation of a deliberate and dishonest breach of duty, or an allegation that the respondents exercised their powers, whether fraudulently or otherwise, for the purpose of benefiting themselves. Whilst I accept that it might have been alleged that the power was exercised for the purpose of benefiting either the group of which the respondents formed part, or its ultimate beneficial owner, Mr. Levy, that is not pleaded either. If such an allegation is to be made then it must be clearly and distinctly pleaded. In those circumstances, I am not satisfied that the LMI fee allegation is one that comes within the fraud on minority exception to the rule in Foss v Harbottle. In those circumstances, permission must be refused in relation to that element of the claim."
"30. Whilst I accept that para.15 of the particulars of claim is expressed tentatively, I am satisfied for the purposes of an application such as that which I am now considering, that it has not been expressed too tentatively. I am satisfied that when para.15 is read together with paras.10.1 and 12.3 of the particulars of claim, what is alleged is a deliberate and dishonest breach of duty by the respondents by which they entered into the agreement with Alcon on behalf of the LLP, and thus caused or permitted payments to be made pursuant to it without any belief in Alcon's entitlement to the fees paid."
"33. Although I accept that the language used in para.21 of the particulars of claim is tentative as I have said already in relation to para.15, I am satisfied that para.21 in combination with para.17.5, para.18.1 to 18.3 and para.18.6 amounts to allegations that the respondents deliberately and dishonestly breached their duties to the LLP by entering into the rebate agreement and thereafter sanctioning payments pursuant to it."
"The authorities which deal with simple fraud on the one hand and gross negligence on the other do not cover the situation which arises where, without fraud, the directors and majority shareholders are guilty of a breach of duty which they owe to the company, and that breach of duty not only harms the company but benefits the directors. In that case it seems to me that different considerations apply. If minority shareholders can sue if there is fraud, I see no reason why they cannot sue where the action of the majority and the directors, though without fraud, confers some benefit on those directors and majority shareholders themselves. It would seem to me quite monstrous – particularly as fraud is so hard to plead and difficult to prove – if the confines of the exception to Foss v. Harbottle, 2 Hare 461, were drawn so narrowly that directors could make a profit out of their negligence. Lord Hatherley L.C. in Turquand v. Marshall, L.R. 4 Ch.App. 376, 386, opined that shareholders must put up with foolish or unwise directors. Danckwerts J. in Pavlides v. Jensen [1956] 1 Ch. 565 accepted that the forbearance of shareholders extends to directors who are "an amiable set of lunatics." Examples, ancient and modern, abound. To put up with foolish directors is one thing; to put up with directors who are so foolish that they make a profit of £115,000 odd at the expense of the company is something entirely different. The principle which may be gleaned from Alexander v. Automatic Telephone Co. [1900] 2 Ch 56 (directors benefiting themselves), from Cook v. Deeks [1916] 1 AC 554 (directors diverting business in their own favour) and from dicta in Pavlides v. Jensen [1956] 2 Ch. 565 (directors appropriating assets of the company) is that a minority shareholder who has no other remedy may sue where directors use their powers, intentionally or unintentionally, fraudulently or negligently, in a manner which benefits themselves at the expense of the company. This principle is not contrary to Turquand v. Marshall, L.R. 4 Ch.App. 376, because in that case the powers of the directors were effectively wielded not by the director who benefited but by the majority of independent directors who were acting bona fide and did not benefit. I need not consider the wider proposition for which Mr. Blackburne against some formidable opposition from the authorities contends that any breach of duty may be made the subject of a minority shareholder's action."
"It was on the firmly established exception of "fraud on a minority" that Mr. Steinfeld mainly relied. It does not seem to have yet become very clear exactly what the word "fraud" means in this context; but I think it is plainly wider than fraud at common law, in the sense of Derry v. Peek (1889) 14 AppCas 337. In a valuable survey of the authorities, Templeman J. recently came to the conclusion that this head permitted the minority to sue even though there had not been even an allegation of fraud: Daniels v. Daniels [1978] Ch. 406. That was a case in which a husband and wife were the two directors of a company and also the majority shareholders. They caused the company to sell to the wife land owned by the company; and four years later she sold the land for over 28 times what she had paid for it. The judge refused to strike out the statement of claim of minority shareholders in Foss v. Harbottle proceedings against the two directors and the company. The principle which he derived from the cases was that
". . . a minority shareholder who has no other remedy may sue where directors use their powers, intentionally or unintentionally, fraudulently or negligently, in a manner which benefits themselves at the expense of the company: " see p.414.
Apart from the benefit to themselves at the company's expense, the essence of the matter seems to be an abuse or misuse of power. "Fraud" in the phrase "fraud on a minority" seems to be being used as comprising not only fraud at common law but also fraud in the wider equitable sense of that term, as in the equitable concept of a fraud on a power."
His conclusion in favour of the application by the individual purchaser/shareholder to be substituted as plaintiff was as follows (at p.15G-16A/B):
"As I have indicated, I do not consider that this is a suitable occasion on which to probe the intricacies of the rule in Foss v. Harbottle and its exceptions, or to attempt to discover and expound the principles to be found in the exceptions. All that I need say is that in my judgment the exception usually known as "fraud on a minority" is wide enough to cover the present case, and that if it is not, it should now be made wide enough. There can be no doubt about the 12 voteless purchasers being a minority; there can be no doubt about the advantage to the council of having the action discontinued; there can be no doubt about the injury to the applicant and the rest of the minority, both as shareholders and as purchasers, of that discontinuance; and I feel little doubt that the council has used its voting power not in order to promote the best interests of the company but in order to bring advantage to itself and disadvantage to the minority. Furthermore, that disadvantage is no trivial matter, but represents a radical alteration in the basis on which the council sold the flats to the minority. It seems to me that the sum total represents a fraud on the minority in the sense in which "fraud" is used in that phrase, or alternatively represents such an abuse of power as to have the same effect."
"Although the concept of injustice is not the test, I think that it is nevertheless a reason, and an important reason, for making exceptions to the rule; yet the reasons for an exception must not be confused with the exception itself. If the test were simply justice or injustice, this would mean different things to different men; and the courts have in fact proceeded by way of formulating, not always with great clarity, a number of individual exceptions."
"19. The rationale for the derivative action, namely to enable justice to be done where the wrongdoer is in control of the entity in which the cause of action is vested, is to be found stated in numerous authorities on the derivative action. In Russell v Wakefield Waterworks Co (1875) LR 20 Eq 474, 480, Jessel MR said, of all the exceptions to the rule in Foss v Harbottle that: "The exceptions depend very much on the necessity of the case; that is, the necessity for the court doing justice." In Wallersteiner v Moir (No 2) [1975] QB 373 Lord Denning MR, describing the derivative action generally, said, at p 390: "In one way or another some means must be found for the company to sue. Otherwise the law would fail in its purpose. Injustice would be done without redress."
The statement was made in considering whether Parliament could have been thought to have done away with the wider procedural device by legislating specifically for one area of derivative proceedings. He found that the common law procedures, dealing with instances beyond the specifics of the statute, had not been abolished. I do not consider that he was seeking to do more than describe the rationale behind the derivative action not the extent of its availability to members of a company.
Lord Justice Christopher Clarke:
Lord Justice Jackson: