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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 >> Karim & Anor v Wemyss [2016] EWCA Civ 27 (28 January 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2016/27.html Cite as: [2016] EWCA Civ 27 |
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ON APPEAL FROM QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
BIRMINGHAM DISTRICT REGISTRY MERCANTILE COURT
HIS HONOUR JUDGE COOKE
(Sitting as a High Court Judge)
2BM40007
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LEWISON
and
LORD JUSTICE KITCHIN
____________________
SAMEER KARIM DOUGLAS WEMYSS SOLICITORS |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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DOUGLAS MACDUFF WEMYSS |
Respondent |
____________________
MR P J DEAN (instructed by Edward Hands & Lewis Solicitors) for the Respondent
Hearing dates : 20 January 2016
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Lewison:
Introduction
"In addition to the sums due at the effective time in respect of Debtors and WIP [work in progress] set out in clauses 3.2 and 3.3."
"The Assets included in the sale pursuant to this agreement and their respective values are as follows:
ASSET | VALUE |
Goodwill | £100,000 |
Fixed Assets, Moveable Assets, Business Intellectual Property & IT System | To be apportioned from the goodwill on completion" |
"As each invoice for clients who had Work in Progress at Completion is rendered and paid then the Seller and the Buyer shall agree to deposit the agreed apportioned amount to the account of the Seller on an invoice by invoice basis as soon as cleared funds are received by the Business… Domestic conveyancing files will be valued for WIP purposes on the basis of whether the following "milestones" have been reached: New file opened and search applied for/received £100.00; Contract received or sent out £250.00; Contract Exchanged £350.00; Contract Completed £450.00. Builders Developers transactions or unusually complex matters where a quotation of over £600.00 has been given maybe assessed [separately]. In no case will WIP exceed a bill, but the seller must be consulted and agree before any bill is rendered for a sum less than WIP."
"… all other information relating to the Business given by… the Seller to the Buyer … are true accurate and complete in every respect and are not misleading."
"1.2 There is no information that might reasonably affect the willingness of the Buyer to buy the Business and the Assets on the terms of this agreement.
10.1 Neither the Seller nor any person for whose acts all defaults the Seller may be vicariously liable has committed or omitted to do any act or thing in relation to the Business which could give rise to any fine or penalty.
11.1 Neither the Seller, nor any person for whose acts or omissions it may be vicariously liable, is engaged in, subject to or threatened by any:
(a) litigation . . . in relation to the Business or the Assets or any of them . . . .
11.2 Details of all material claims [and] complaints relating to the Business that have occurred during the 12 months preceding the date of this agreement have been Disclosed."
"Without prejudice to the right of the Buyer to claim on any other basis… if any of the Warranties are breached or prove to be untrue or misleading, the Seller undertakes to pay to the Buyer on demand:
(a) The amount necessary to put the Buyer into the position it would have been in if such Warranty had not been breached or had been true and not misleading; and
(b) all costs and expenses (including without limitation, damages, claims, demands, proceedings, costs, legal and other professional fees and costs, penalties, expenses, and consequential losses) incurred by the Buyer (whether directly or indirectly) or the Business as a result of the breach or of such Warranty not being true or misleading (including a reasonable amount of management time)"
"On completion a full final completed list of WIP and debtors was supplied to me that is referred to as the WIP list of April 2008 … I recall the accountants made a couple of spot checks in respect of files that were listed in the WIP… There were no issues arising from the same at the time."
The claim
"WIP as at 31.3.08 was £1000 increased by DW to £5040 in June 2008 for no reason. SK agreed fixed costs with the client after the takeover. DW is only entitled to the WIP that he calculated as at 31.03.08 as SK had agreed an increase in fees with the client after 31.03.08."
"Firstly, I reject the submission that the effect of the contract is that Mr Wemyss can never recover more than the amount on the WIP schedule for a particular file. It would no doubt have been possible to define the amount due by reference to the schedule, but the contract did not do that. Nor did it set out that WIP was to be valued on the "instructions terminated" basis, which would be likely to produce an absolute minimum figure and so be very favourable to the buyer. The reference to an "agreed apportioned amount" means in my view that an apportionment of the eventual bill must take place, and is to be interpreted as requiring the parties to agree a reasonable apportionment in all the circumstances when the bill had been delivered, and not as referring to payment of an amount that had already been agreed. That would allow for circumstances on any individual file such as eventual negotiation of a premium or discount, and take into account the degree to which the work done before and after completion (whether or not such work was reflected in the WIP schedule) contributed to the final bill. In principle, if the parties do not agree, the court could determine what is a reasonable apportionment having regard to any relevant evidence for each file."
"to provide the evidence on which he relies if he disputes Mr Wemyss's figures. This he has not done, save that he has stated certain amounts as being the value of time charged to the files after 1 April 2008 in cases where the eventual bill was less than the amount in the WIP schedule. I accept his evidence on that point…".
The turnover/profit warranty
"On principle the distinction seems to be this: in contract, the defendant has made a promise and broken it. The object of damages is to put the plaintiff in as good a position, as far as money can do it, as if the promise had been performed. In fraud, the defendant has been guilty of a deliberate wrong by inducing the plaintiff to act to his detriment. The object of damages is to compensate the plaintiff for all the loss he has suffered, so far, again, as money can do it."
"If the plaintiff's bargain would have been a bad one, even on the assumption that the representation was true, he will do best under the tortious measure. If, on the assumption that the representation was true, his bargain would have been a good one, he will do best under the first contractual measure (under which he may recover something even if the actual value of what he has recovered is greater than the price)."
"If a party to a contract wishes to claim relief in respect of a misrepresentation as to a matter which did not constitute a term of the contract, his claim will fail unless he is able to show that he relied on this representation in entering into the contract; in general, however, if a party wishes to claim relief in respect of a breach of a term of the contract (whether it be a condition or warranty) he need prove no actual reliance." (Emphasis in original)
"Firstly, a warranty as to turnover and/or profit in a period before completion is not the same as a warranty that the LLP as a corporate entity would have any particular level of assets or capital at the date of completion such as might provide capital for future expansion. Nor is it a warranty that the firm will continue to have a particular turnover or earn a particular level of profits at any time after completion, such as might have generated capital for the new business."
"The breach of warranty established is in relation to a statement as to turnover for a period that was past at the date of the contract. A shortfall of turnover or profitability in that period was a loss to the LLP which, in the context of this sale effectively fell on the seller and not the buyer. The statement made was not a warranty that any particular level of turnover or profits would continue to be achieved in the future during the period when the buyer owned the business. Insofar as the statement was untrue and affected the net assets or future profit earning potential of the business, that loss is reflected in the difference between the price that a buyer would pay for the business if the statement were true, and that which he would pay in its actual condition. The loss is suffered at the moment of purchase, and does not, in principle, depend upon whether after purchase the financial performance of the business is the same as, or better or worse than, indicated by the statement warranted. But the defendants have failed to provide any evidence that would establish whether the value of the business was less than was paid for it. It would be wholly illegitimate to seek to make good that failure by treating the warranty as if it was a warranty as to future turnover or profitability when it plainly was not, and even more so to seek to claim a loss suffered by the seller as if it were a continuing loss suffered by the buyer for an indefinite period."
"whether the value of the business was less than was paid for it."
"The law relating to the effect of representations on a contract proceeds on the basis that a representation made in the course of pre-contractual discussions may produce a misapprehension in the mind of the other party which continues so as to have a causative effect at the time when the contract is concluded. It is on that basis that a misrepresentation may lead to the setting aside of the contract as being vitiated by error or fraud."
"When a man makes a representation with the object of inducing another to enter into a contract with him, that other will ordinarily understand the representor, by his conduct in continuing the negotiations and concluding the contract, to be asserting, throughout, that the facts remain as they were initially represented to be. And the representor will ordinarily be well aware that his representation is still operating in this way, or at least will continue to desire that it shall do so. Commonly, therefore, an inducing representation is a 'continuing' representation, in reality and not merely by construction of law."
"… all other information relating to the Business given by… the Seller to the Buyer … are true accurate and complete in every respect and are not misleading."
i) The true value of the Business at the contract date; orii) The value that the Business would have had if the warranted information had been true, complete and not misleading.
"The fact that damages are difficult to assess does not disentitle the claimant to compensation for loss resulting from the defendant's breach of contract. Where it is clear that the claimant has suffered substantial loss, but the evidence does not enable it to be precisely quantified, the court will assess damages as best it can on the available evidence. The fact that the amount of that loss cannot be precisely ascertained does not deprive the claimant of a remedy."
"As to the supposed impossibility of ascertaining the damages, I think there is no such impossibility; to some extent, no doubt, they must be matter of speculation, but that is no reason for not awarding any damages at all."
"Then, as to the difficulty of ascertaining the profits which the plaintiff can be considered to have lost, a sufficient answer is that it must be assumed that the plaintiff would make some profit. I may add that I think a larger sum might have been awarded."
"I am, however, by no means sure that the judge needed evidence, beyond what was before him, for the simple proposition that a tenanted farm in a seriously bad state — and it must be remembered that the judge rejected Mr Silk's case that the breaches were non-existent or trivial — is worth less than a tenanted farm where the tenant has complied with all his obligations. The judge said at the end of his second judgment that on the termination of the tenancy with the breaches remaining unremedied, "an intending purchaser would insist that due allowance from the purchase price be made for putting all these matters right". By parity of reasoning a purchaser would expect some allowance if he was buying the freehold subject to a tenancy where there were continuing breaches. He would not be satisfied with the bland assurance that all would be put right before the end of the tenancy.
The true position is (as Millett LJ observed in the course of argument) that general damages are at large, and the judge must do the best he can, just as the jury would have had to do when civil actions were heard by juries."
"It is apparent on any view that the buyers suffered substantial loss, though the material to enable it to be precisely quantified is lacking.
Other possible courses canvassed in the course of the argument were (a) to order a retrial of the case on the matter of damages, (b) to restore the figure of damages fixed by Briggs C.J., and (c) to fix a new figure on the basis that the market price of yarn declined steadily and constantly between September 1973 and January 1975, and that therefore the point which the decline had reached at the end of December 1973 is capable of ascertainment. Their Lordships are not disposed to order a new trial. Amendment of the pleadings would be required and the delay, trouble and expense which would be involved in further proceedings do not appear to their Lordships to be consonant with the due administration of justice. The problem about the figure of damages fixed by Briggs C.J. is that it was plainly arrived at upon a wrong basis, and that is now common ground between the parties. In the result, their Lordships have come to the conclusion that the ends of justice would best be served if they were to fix a new figure of damages as best they can upon the available evidence, such as it is."
Failure to disclose claims
"The Seller shall … indemnify the Buyer and/or the Business for any increase in professional indemnity insurance premiums arising as a result of claims made upon the professional indemnity insurance policy of the Business. (The burden of proof as to the reason for the increase in the premiums, and the element attributable to such a claim or claims shall be upon the buyer)."
"As discussed, it has been extremely difficult to obtain terms this year. The majority of the insurers have applied very strict parameters to the type of practices and the work that they undertake. As a two partner practice, Douglas Wemyss Solicitors LLP no longer fits the stated parameters of the RSA and they have not been deviating from these parameters. It was therefore necessary for us to find an alternative provider. Most firms declined to offer terms either because of the proportion of conveyancing undertaking by the practice or due to the claims record. Finally Travellers agreed to offer terms, but we regarded these as high even in the present market. It was therefore necessary for us to re-approach RSA to see if we could agree a more acceptable compromise. Finally this was achieved.
A report is attached summarising the terms offered and I confirm that cover has been placed in accordance with the stated terms. RSA require more information however before they will issue their Certificate of Qualifying insurance.
As regards the increase in terms, I confirm that on average, premiums have increased by about 20% with Royal and Sun Alliance. Conveyancing rates have on average increased by slightly more than this and a number of insurers have moved away from underwriting cover on conveyancing practices. The main impact on the premium for your practice this year, however, has been a more close focus on the claims record of practices. Whereas in the past it has been possible to apply commercial pressure or get insurers to take a more lenient approach, the market has changed fundamentally and this is not now possible. The claims record of Douglas Wemyss solicitors shows an average of over £100k per year in claims payments and reserves. Although this stems largely from one year, this has been the main cause of the dramatic premium increases this year. Please let me know if you need any further information."
"[90] In respect of this year, Mr Quirke submits that the increase attributable to those claims must be £19,760, based on allowing an increase of 20% on the premium for the previous year and attributing all the remaining increase to the effect of insurers taking a harder view of the existing reported claims. I am not however satisfied that the email referred to is a sufficient basis for making such a finding. There is the general point that it appears to be a response to a request for information from Sameer Karim which he may have had an interest in steering towards a conclusion that the claims history was to blame. Further, earlier in the email Mr Balme said that:
"As discussed, it has been extremely difficult to obtain terms this year. The majority of the insurers have applied very strict parameters to the type of practices and the work that they undertake. As a two partner practice, Douglas Wemyss Solicitors LLP no longer fits the stated parameters of the RSA and they have not been deviating from his parameters. It was therefore necessary for us to find an alternative provider. Most firms declined to offer terms either because of the proportion of conveyancing undertaking by the practice or due to the claims record. Finally Travellers agreed to offer terms, but we regarded these as high even in the present market. It was therefore necessary for us to re-approach RSA to see if we could agree a more acceptable compromise. Finally this was achieved."
[91] It is apparent therefore that RSA were initially not prepared to provide cover at all, and that this was not due to the claims record but because the firm had only two partners. Other insurers refused to offer cover, in some cases because of the nature of the work (conveyancing) and/or the claims record. A second approach had to be made to RSA, who would no doubt [be] in a position to dictate terms if they were to accept a risk they were initially unwilling to take on. It is also apparent from surrounding emails that it was at this time that Mr Wemyss was persuaded to become a member of the LLP again in order to present it to insurers as having an additional partner. Mr Quirke's calculation is based on the stated general rise for firms whose business RSA was willing to take on and takes no account of any additional amount that they may have charged by reason of the proportion of conveyancing business or because they were having to be persuaded to take on a two partner firm when they would not ordinarily have done so. They must also have known that reappointing Mr Wemyss as a member of the LLP was something of a manoeuvre for their benefit and may have been accordingly slightly sceptical as to whether the firm genuinely fitted the profile that they wished to insure.
[92] I accept from the email that the claims record was an important factor in the premium eventually quoted and that insurers were now looking at the claims record in a different light, so that increased premiums might have been charged even though there had been no further claims notified. It is not however in my view a sufficient basis on which to infer that all the premium except for an increase of 20% on the previous year was attributable to that factor. It is not in my view credible that factors which initially led the insurer to assess the risk as one it did not want to cover at all would not be reflected in the premium if the insurer was subsequently persuaded to accept the risk. In the absence of independent expert evidence which might have weighed up all the factors dispassionately, for which as I say the defendants have only themselves to blame, it is appropriate in my view to be cautious about the inferences to be drawn in their favour from this email. Doing the best that I can, in my judgment a fair inference would be that £10,000 of the increased premium related to the more strict view taken of the claims record."
"Appellate courts have been repeatedly warned, by recent cases at the highest level, not to interfere with findings of fact by trial judges, unless compelled to do so. This applies not only to findings of primary fact, but also to the evaluation of those facts and to inferences to be drawn from them."
Management time
"The hourly rate at £135 claimed in respect of Rafik Karim seems to me to be wholly excessive; it is more akin to a charge out rate to a client, but Rafik Karim is not a fee earner and that was no suggestion that the firm remunerates him at anything like that hourly rate. Furthermore, it is not appropriate in my view to allow a claim for the cost of management time in respect of Sameer Karim or other fee earners at the rates they would charge to clients. That is not the cost to the firm of employing a fee earner. In so far as part of the time may have been spent by fee earners, there is no evidence that this prevented them from doing any other work which would have been chargeable to clients. Sameer Karim is not an employee and his time does not cost the firm anything since he is remunerated from its profits. Nevertheless, in my judgment, the language of cl 5.5 entitles him to make a claim for a reasonable amount in respect of his own time. In my judgment, a reasonable amount in respect of that management time, in respect of all the individuals involved, would be at the rate of £30 per hour, £1800 in total."
Result
i) The amount awarded to Mr Wemyss on the claim will be reduced by £12,783;ii) Mr Karim is entitled to damages for breach of warranty of £15,000;
iii) Mr Karim is entitled to an additional sum of £1,800 for the amount attributable to management time.
Lord Justice Kitchin:
Lord Justice Longmore: