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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 >> Wann & Ors v Birkinshaw & Ors [2017] EWCA Civ 84 (21 February 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2017/84.html Cite as: [2017] EWCA Civ 84 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
LEEDS DISTRICT REGISTRY, CHANCERY DIVISION
HHJ Kaye QC (sitting as a Deputy Judge of the High Court)
2LS60661
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE DAVID RICHARDS
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(1) Dean Anthony Wann (2) Leigh Morris Hall (3) Ian Millican |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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(1) Martin Gerald Birkinshaw (2) Quarry Walk Park Limited |
Respondents |
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Stephen Beresford (instructed by Bradley & Jefferies) for the 1st Respondent
Hearing dates : 25 October 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
DAVID RICHARDS LJ :
"2. The First, Second and Third Respondents ("the Respondents") shall purchase the Petitioner's shares in the Company between them at a fair value, being a rateable proportion of the total value of the Company as at 10 April 2013, on the following assumptions;
(1) That the Company is a going concern, and,
(2) That they are respectively a willing vendor and willing purchasers operating at arms' length, and,
(3) Without any discount to the value of those shares because they are a minority shareholding, and,
(4) Without any discount to the value of those shares resulting from the terms of either clause 8, or 9, of the 1 March 2006 agreement referred to in the judgment herein, and,
(5) Without any discount arising from the fact that the Petitioner's loan account is to be repaid, and that he is to be released from his personal guarantees he has provided the [sic] Barclays Bank plc ("the Bank") in respect of the Company, and,
(6) That payments of bonuses and management fees to the Respondents and companies controlled by them after 31 October 2008 had not occurred."
"Please produce a valuation based on the assumptions set out above on each of the following criteria:
1. Multiple of earnings
2. Discounted cash flow
3. Net asset value
4. Comparables
5. Entry cost
As part of your report you are also required to ascertain the price which a buyer with knowledge of all material facts would pay to the existing shareholders for 100% of the issued share capital."
"Owner-occupied operational entities such as this are normally bought and sold on the basis of their trading potential. This type of property has been designed or adapted for a specific use, and the resulting lack of flexibility usually means that the value of the property interest is intrinsically linked to the returns that an owner can generate from that use. The value therefore reflects the trading potential of the property. This type of property is usually sold as a fully operational business including trading potential and all trade furniture, fixtures, fittings, plant and equipment, but excluding trading stock and it is on that basis that we have valued the property."
"To assess the market value of the property the FMOP is capitalised at an appropriate yield reflecting the risk and rewards of the property and its trading potential. Evidence of relevant comparable market transactions should be analysed and applied."
"In our opinion, the value of the freehold interest in Quarry Walk Park as at 10 April 2013 on a "Multiple of Earnings" approach is £2,850,000."
"However, if a buyer were looking to buy 100% of the issued share capital of QWP, it would not be unusual for the buyer to look to reduce the price he would be willing to pay (i.e. the original valuation figure) by the amount of any borrowings, excluding director/shareholder loan accounts which would remain payable regardless of ownership. Conversely, QWP would also be looking to increase the price for any non-trading assets that were to be acquired, e.g stock, debtors, prepayments, etc.
This arrangement is often known as a "cash free, debt free" sale and the specific details of such an arrangement would be finalised by negotiation between the buyer and seller(s)."
"Furthermore, in my opinion, a buyer with knowledge of all material facts wishing to purchase 100% of the issued share capital from the existing shareholders would potentially look to reduce the valuation of QWP by £1,400,000 to £1,450,000, but any "realisation price" would obviously be negotiated between buyer and seller(s)."
£1.4 million, being debts that were not integral to its trading activities. A purchaser of the company's share capital would be buying not simply the benefit of the property and business but also the burden of its net borrowings. In these circumstances, the appellants submitted that the appropriate approach was to deduct the net borrowings from the valuation based on maintainable profits. These points were put to Mr Handley in cross-examination and I refer to his evidence when dealing with the merits of this appeal.
"Mr Handley has reduced his task to two essential valuation exercises. If one wanted to be a pedant one might say, in fact, he had three: the first was to value the company, then ascertain a rateable portion of the total value of the company being the price for the petitioner's shares in accordance with paragraph 2; and, secondly, ascertain the price at which a buyer with knowledge of all material facts would pay to the existing shareholders for 100% of the issued share capital."
"I come back to the point that I made at the outset of my judgment, Mr Recorder Holmes did not specify that what was to be valued was the 100% of the issued share capital. What was to be valued was the total value of the company and then Mr Birkinshaw's shareholding was to be arrived at as a 25% rateable portion of that on certain assumptions and ignoring certain factors, such as a discount for a minority shareholding."
"Mr Shaw [counsel for appellants] submits that Mr Handley accepted that reaching a fair value of the shares one would deduct the liabilities. He therefore submits it would be in those circumstances fair to deduct the liabilities in arriving at the value of the shares. In my judgment, in fairness to Mr Shaw, that was more focussed at the second task that Mr Handley was being asked to do, rather than the first."
"Mr Handley, with all his experience, clearly, as he said, reached the view that the earnings potential is the important position here and that is why he has taken a multiple of earnings approach. He agreed that the level of borrowing in this case does not threaten the future potential income stream. A purchaser would not have to pay off the debt, as far as he can see from the figures, but the income stream provided by this business was going to be good enough. Accordingly, the multiple of earnings approach is concerned with the future, as I understand it, long-term business potential and profitability of the company and on that basis capital borrowings were to be ignored; bearing in mind the factors that I have mentioned."
LORD JUSTICE PATTEN: