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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 >> Astor Management AG v Atalaya Mining Plc & Ors [2018] EWCA Civ 2407 (01 November 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2018/2407.html Cite as: [2018] WLR(D) 674, [2018] EWCA Civ 2407 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
The Hon Mr Justice Leggatt
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
The Rt. Hon. LORD JUSTICE SIMON
and
The Rt. Hon. DAME ELIZABETH GLOSTER DBE
____________________
(1) Astor Management AG (formerly known as MRI Holdings AG) (2) Astor Resources AG (formerly known as MRI Resources AG)> |
Appellants (Claimants) |
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- and - |
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(1) Atalaya Mining Plc (formerly known as Emed Mining Public Limited) (2) Atalaya Riotinto Minera SL (formerly known as Emed Tartessus SL) (3) Emed Holdings (UK) Limited (4) Emed Marketing Limited |
Respondents (Defendants) |
____________________
Mr Stephen Moriarty QC and Mr Alexander Milner (instructed by Fieldfisher LLP) for the Defendants/Respondents
Hearing dates: 9 and 10 May 2018
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Simon and Dame Elizabeth Gloster:
Introduction
The parties
The background and terms of the Master Agreement
i) Clause 6(b):
The Deferred Consideration shall be payable by EMED Tartessus in accordance with the terms and conditions set out in Schedule 2 in consideration of [Astor] providing the acceptances set out in Clause 3, the agreements set out in Clause 4 and the indemnities and undertakings set out in Clause 11 and in consideration for the agreement of [Astor Resources AG] not to pursue any potential litigation as set out in Clause 11.(l).
ii) Schedule 2(a) provided for the Deferred Consideration to be paid in 18 instalments over 6 years, with the first instalment of 7,313,897.11 to be paid within 20 business days of the First Payment Date (see schedule 2(d). Schedule 2 also provided that the Deferred Consideration might be increased by 'Up-tick Payments' of 662,500 per instalment after the first two instalments (and up to 2,650,00 for each of the first two instalments), depending on the prevailing copper price (see schedule 2(c)). The relevant wording was:
In addition to each instalment of the Deferred Consideration, EMED TARTESSUS may also be required to pay to [Astor] an additional amount (an "Up-tick Payment') as follows:
(i) for instalments 1 and 2 of the Deferred Consideration EMED TARTESSUS shall be required to pay to [Astor] an Up-tick Payment of 662,500 for every 3-month period if the Average Copper Price per Tonne for such 3 month period is equal to or exceeds 6,613.86,
iii) Schedule 2 (b) defined the First Payment Date as:
the date on which (i) the authorisations from the Junta de Andalucia to restart mining activities in the Project are granted to EMED or any member of the EMED Group ('Permit Approval') and (ii) EMED or any other member of the EMED Group secures senior debt finance and related guarantee facilities for a sum sufficient to restart mining operations at the Project (hereinafter the 'Senior Debt Facility') and the relevant member of the EMED Group is entitled to draw down funds pursuant to the Senior Debt Facility.
iv) Clause 6(f) was in these terms:
Each of EMED, EMED Holdings and EMED Tartessus undertakes to use all reasonable endeavours to obtain the Senior Debt Facility with EMED Tartessus as borrower and to procure the restart of mining activities in the Project on or before 31 December 2010
v) Clause 6(g)(iv) provided:
Subject to Completion, EMED Tartessus undertakes:
(A) not to make, declare or pay any dividend or distribution or make any repayment of or other payment in respect of loans from members of the EMED Group ('EMED Group Loans') (other than as required for up to USD 10 million per annum in aggregate for EMED Group expenses (excluding dividends or other distributions to shareholders of EMED) related to matters other than the Project ('EMED Group Expenses')) nor borrow or agree to borrow any amount other than pursuant to the Senior Debt Facility or EMED Group Loans without the prior written consent of [Astor] (not to be unreasonably withheld or delayed), until the Consideration has been paid in full to [Astor] in accordance with the terms of the Transaction Documents; and
(B) to apply any excess cash (after payment of operating expenses and sustaining capital expenditure for the Project, debt service requirements under the Senior Debt Facility and USD 10 million per annum for EMED Group Expenses (without double counting EMED Group Expenses taken into account under paragraph (A) above)) to pay any outstanding amounts of the Consideration due to [Astor] early."
The first ground of appeal
Seeing that they had received the information from the police, it would be a futile thing to compel the [insured] to give them the self-same information. The law never compels a person to do that which is useless and unnecessary.
The second reason given by Lord Denning was that the insurers had by their subsequent conduct waived the right to rely on the assured's breach. On this point all three members of the court were in agreement. Apart from these two reasons, Lord Denning added (at p.1340A-B) that, as the condition had been inserted for the protection of insurers so that they should know in good time about the accident and any consequences, and since they had the information from another source so that they were not prejudiced by the failure of the assured to tell them, they could not rely on the condition to defeat the claim. This additional reason has been referred to as the 'prejudice point'.
I find no support in any later authority for the requirement of prejudice and, as a matter of general contractual principle, it appears to me that this cannot be required of an insured before he relies on a breach of a condition precedent in the policy.
It is clear that Bingham J was dealing with the third reason referred to in Lord Denning's judgment in the Barrett Bros case: prejudice.
In so far as these remarks express a general principle of 'futility', however, they have been interpreted in later cases as obiter dicta which ought not to be followed. Where an insurance policy stipulates that complying with a requirement to provide notice of a claim or specified information to insurers is a condition precedent to their liability, there is no principle that the condition is only breached if the insurers have been prejudiced by the failure to comply.
That principle can be articulated as follows: if, for example, a particular contractual requirement was not fulfilled by the claimant, but in circumstances where the fulfilment of that requirement would have added nothing of value to either party, then the requirement would be futile, and the claim would not be barred.
authority for the proposition that, in certain cases, compliance with a condition precedent to the exercise of rights is not required if it is futile, useless and unnecessary.
Even if notice provisions are conditions of the contract, the condition need not be complied with where it would be futile, useless and unnecessary to do so.
Whether a contractual obligation has arisen in any given case in principle depends on what the particular contract says, interpreted in accordance with the ordinary rules of contract interpretation. There is, in my opinion, no principle of law or even interpretive presumption which enables a contractual precondition to the accrual of a right or obligation to be disapplied just because complying with it is considered by the court to serve no useful purpose.
The second ground of appeal
in some cases, an event subsequently occurs which was plainly not intended or contemplated by the parties, judging from the language of their contract. In such a case, if it is clear what the parties would have intended, the court will give effect to that intention.
In Aberdeen City Council v. Stewart Milne Group Ltd 2012 SC (UKSC) 240 the internal context of the contract provided the answer. The sale contract provided for the payment to the vendor of a further sum on disposal of the land by the purchaser. Two of the methods of disposal required the parties to ascertain the market value of the property on disposal in calculating the additional payment and the other used the 'gross sales proceeds' in calculating that payment. The purchaser sold the site at an under-value to an associated company, a circumstance which on the face of the contract the parties had not contemplated. The courts at each level interpreted the provision, which used the gross sales proceeds in the calculation, as requiring a market valuation where there was a sale which was not at arm's length. They inferred the intention of the parties at the time of the agreement from the contract as a whole and in particular from the fact that the other two methods of disposal required such a valuation. While this line of reasoning was criticised by Professor Martin Hogg 'Fundamental Issues for Reform of the Law of Contractual Interpretation' (2011) 15 Edin LR 406 on the ground that it protected a party from its commercial fecklessness, it seems to me to be the correct approach in that case as the internal context of the contract pointed towards the commercially sensible interpretation.
it is commonplace that problems of construction, in relation to commercial contracts, do arise where the circumstances which actually arise are not circumstances which the parties foresaw at the time when they made the agreement. If the parties have foreseen the circumstances which actually arise, they will normally, if properly advised, have included some provision which caters for them. What that provision may be will be a matter of negotiation in the light of an appreciation of the circumstances for which provision has to be made.
It is not, to my mind, an appropriate approach to construction to hold that, where the parties contemplated event 'A', and they did not contemplate event 'B', their agreement must be taken as applying only in event 'A' and cannot apply in event 'B'. The task of the court is to decide, in the light of the agreement that the parties made, what they must have been taken to have intended in relation to the event, event 'B', which they did not contemplate. That is, of course, an artificial exercise, because it requires there to be attributed to the parties an intention which they did not have (as a matter of fact) because they did not appreciate the problem which needed to be addressed. But it is an exercise which the courts have been willing to undertake for as long as commercial contracts have come before them for construction. It is an exercise which requires the court to look at the whole agreement which the parties made, the words which they used and the circumstances in which they used them; and to ask what should reasonable parties be taken to have intended by the use of those words in that agreement, made in those circumstances, in relation to this event which they did not in fact foresee.
The third ground of appeal
The essence of a senior debt facility what makes it 'senior' is that it ranks in priority in terms of repayment over other payment obligations of the borrower in the event of insolvency. An unsecured loan from another group company does not have such priority.
EMED's and Astor's appeals
The conclusions reached by the Judge
(5) Must any excess cash be paid to Astor?
100. Astor's fall-back position is that, even if the Deferred Consideration has not become payable and the defendants are not thereby in breach of contract, the requirement to pay the Deferred Consideration has not disappeared. Astor relies, in particular, on clause 6(g)(iv) of the Master Agreement (as amended), by which EMED Tartessus has undertaken: [and here the judge quoted sub-paragraphs (A) and (B)]
101. Astor contends that the effect of these provisions is that EMED Tartessus (a) cannot make any distribution or any repayment of the money it has borrowed from EMED Holdings (except for up to US$10m a year for group expenses not related to the project) until the Deferred Consideration has been paid in full and (b) must apply any excess cash (as defined) to pay the Deferred Consideration early.
102. The defendants dispute this. They argue that the references in clause [6(g)(iv)] to the "Consideration" should be understood to mean such part of the "Consideration" referred to in the Master Agreement as is due or may fall due in future. Mr Browne-Wilkinson submitted that, now that the EMED companies have managed to restart mining operations without triggering payment of the Deferred Consideration, the Deferred Consideration will never become payable and that in these circumstances it no longer forms part of the "Consideration". There is therefore no impediment to EMED Tartessus repaying the loan made to it by EMED Holdings and distributing any excess cash generated from the mining operations.
103. I do not accept that this is a reasonable, let alone the correct, interpretation of the relevant provisions. In the first place, the definition of the "Consideration" in clause 6(a) of the Master Agreement includes the "Deferred Consideration" and does not cease to do so just because the Deferred Consideration has not become due for payment. In its original form clause 6(a) identified the amount of the Deferred Consideration as 43,883,382.70. Although this was changed when the contract was amended in March 2009 to read "up to 59,783,382.70", the introduction of the words "up to" is explained by the fact that the amendment added the possibility of additional "Up-tick Payments" which would also be payable if, when any instalment of the Deferred Consideration is due, the price of copper is above a specified level. The amendment made no provision for the Deferred Consideration to be reduced below the original amount of 43,883,382.70. I therefore think it clear that the "Consideration" will not have been paid in full until such time as the whole of the Deferred Consideration of 43,883,382.70 (together with any Up-tick Payments, if applicable) has been paid to Astor.
104. There is nothing to prevent EMED Tartessus, if it has the cash available, from paying the Deferred Consideration even though the Deferred Consideration has not become due for payment. Indeed, clause [(6)(g)(iv)] specifically requires EMED Tartessus to apply any excess cash for this purpose. Counsel for the defendants argued that there can only be an obligation to pay any amounts of the Consideration "early" if those amounts will or at least will if certain conditions are met become payable in the future. I do not think this self-evident. It seems to me that payment of an outstanding debt can without undue strain be described as "early" even if the payment date stipulated in the contract is a date which it can now be said is never going to arrive. But in any case I do not think it clear that the Deferred Consideration will never otherwise become payable. It is at least possible that mining could stop at some point in the future if the project again runs out of money and that senior debt finance could then be secured for a sum sufficient to restart mining operations at the project. It seems to me that, on the plain wording of the definition of the "First Payment Date" (quoted in paragraph 41 above), the first instalment of the Deferred Consideration would fall due in such circumstances.
105. On the natural and ordinary meaning of the language used in the Master Agreement, therefore, clause 6(g)(iv) in my view has the effect contended for by Astor.
106. That conclusion is reinforced when account is taken of the consequences of the defendants' interpretation. It is one thing to say that the EMED companies are entitled to fund the project by making a loan to EMED Tartessus without triggering payment of the Deferred Consideration where it is not possible or not reasonable to obtain a Senior Debt Facility. It is quite another to say that, when this happens, the outstanding amounts owed to Astor can be written off so that they need never be paid even when excess cash becomes available from which such payments could be made. I do not regard the latter as a reasonable intention to attribute to the parties when they agreed the terms on which Astor's interest in the project would be bought out. To the contrary, this seems to me an interpretation which should only be adopted if the language of the contract clearly compelled it which it does not.
1. On a true construction of clause 6(g)(iv)(A) of the Master Agreement, until such time as the Consideration (including the Deferred Consideration) has been paid to the Claimants in full, the Second Defendant must not make, declare or pay any dividend or distribution or make any repayment or other payment in respect of loans from members of the EMED Group ("EMED Group Loans") (other than as required for up to US$10 million per annum in aggregate for EMED Group expenses (excluding dividends or any other distributions to the shareholders of the First Defendant) related to matters other than the project ("EMED Group Expenses")), nor borrow or agree to borrow any amount other than pursuant to the Senior Debt Facility or EMED Group Loans without the prior written consent of the Claimants (not to be unreasonably withheld or delayed).
2. On a true construction of clause 6(g)(iv)(B) of the Master Agreement, the Second Defendant must apply any excess cash (after payment of operating expenses and sustaining capital expenditure for the Project, debt service requirements under the Senior Debt Facility and US$10 million per annum for EMED Group Expenses (without double counting EMED Group Expenses taken into account under clause 6(g)(iv)(A) of the Master Agreement)) to pay any outstanding amounts of the Consideration due to the Claimants (including the Deferred Consideration and amounts payable under the Loan Assignment) early."
4. Counsel for Astor submitted that the "Deferred Consideration" should be defined in the order so as to include the Up-Tick Payments totalling 15.9m as well as the basic amount of 43.8m. I do not accept this. I am recording my reasons for rejecting that submission as, although the point is not at present of practical significance, it may become so in the future.
5. As set out in Schedule 2 of the Master Agreement, the basic amount of the Deferred Consideration is payable in instalments. Schedule 2 also provides in paragraph (c) that, in addition to each instalment of the Deferred Consideration, EMED Tartessus will also be required to pay an additional amount described as an "Up-Tick Payment" if, for the period of three months commencing on the due date for the relevant instalment of the Deferred Consideration, the average copper price is equal to or exceeds $6,613.86 per tonne.
6. The wording of the contract is ambiguous as to whether the Up-Tick Payments are part of the "Deferred Consideration". The wording of clause 6 suggests that they are, but the wording of Schedule 2 treats the Up-Tick Payments as separate from and additional to the Deferred Consideration. The better view seems to me to be that the reference in clause 6 to the Deferred Consideration is to be read as a shorthand for "the Deferred Consideration and any applicable Up-Tick Payments". But whichever view is taken, the fundamental distinction between the two types of payment, as I see it, is that the basic amount of the Deferred Consideration is an outstanding amount owed to Astor, payment of which has been deferred until the dates specified in Schedule 2, whereas the Up-Tick Payments are not amounts owed to Astor. They are merely amounts which EMED Tartessus will also be required to pay to Astor if (and only if), when the dates specified in Schedule 2 arrive, the condition stipulated in paragraph (c) is met.
7. The underlying difference is that the Deferred Consideration is delayed payment for benefits which the defendants have already received under the Master Agreement, whereas the Up-Tick Payments are an additional profit-share arrangement which is only applicable if the defendants derive a benefit from the price of copper reaching a particular level at a particular time.
8. Clause 6(g)(iv)(B), reflected in the second declaration set out above, requires EMED Tartessus to apply any excess cash "to pay any outstanding amounts of the Consideration due to [Astor] early". If the phrase "due to" Astor were interpreted as meaning "presently payable", the clause would be nonsensical. That is because, if the obligation to pay any outstanding amount pursuant to this clause only arose when an amount is presently payable, there could be no obligation to pay the amount early. I therefore consider that, to make sense of the clause, the words "due to" must be read simply as designating the party to whom the outstanding amount of the Deferred Consideration is owed and not as requiring that the payment date specified in Schedule 2 has arrived.
9. There is a further question whether the clause still operates if it can be said with confidence that the first payment date is never going to arrive.
10. At paragraph 104 of the judgment I expressed the view that the clause does operate in those circumstances. Counsel for Astor have sought to rely on that conclusion to argue that the clause applies as much to the Up-Tick Payments as to the basic Deferred Consideration. They point out that the Up-Tick Payments are triggered on the same timetable as the instalments of the Deferred Consideration. They submit that, by parity of reasoning, even if the stipulated date for payment of any of the Up-Tick Payments is a date which is never going to arrive, payment of the relevant amount can still be made early.
11. The flaw in that submission, in my view, is that the question whether the Up-Tick Payments are required to be made is not simply a matter of timing. They are in a different category from the outstanding amounts of Deferred Consideration which are undoubtedly owed and in relation to which the only question is when the payment obligation accrues. As I have indicated, the Up-Tick Payments are conditional in a different and more fundamental way in that they are not outstanding amounts payment of which has been deferred: they are amounts which are not owed and never will be owed unless the price of copper is at or above the specified level at the specified time. Thus, unless and until the specified time arrives, no Up-Tick Payment is applicable and there is therefore no possibility of making any such payment early.
12. I also agree with counsel for the defendants that Astor's argument can be tested by considering the hypothetical situation where the Deferred Consideration was payable in accordance with Schedule 2 and the copper price was below the level required to trigger Up-Tick Payments. If Astor's interpretation were correct, the requirements of clause 6(g)(iv) would nevertheless continue to apply until EMED Tartessus had made the Up-Tick Payments. That makes no sense and is obviously not what the parties intended.
13. I therefore consider that the reference in the declarations to the Deferred Consideration should not be defined as including the "Up-Tick Payments". For the avoidance of doubt I would add that, as matters now stand, the only situation, in my view, in which the Up-Tick Payments could ever become payable is in the unlikely scenario referred to at paragraph 104 of the judgment in which mining stops at some point in the future and a Senior Debt Facility is then secured for a sum sufficient to restart mining operations.
The issues which arise on the appeals on this point
(1) Whether clause 6(g)(iv)(B) has the effect of requiring EMED Tartessus to apply any excess cash to pay the Deferred Consideration, in circumstances where payment of the Deferred Consideration has not been triggered in accordance with Schedule 2? (EMED's first ground of appeal).
(2) Whether clause 6(g)(iv)(A) precludes EMED Tartessus from making any distribution or repaying any of the money lent to it by EMED Holdings (other than US$10m a year for EMED group expenses not related to the Project) until the Deferred Consideration has been paid in full, in circumstances where payment of the Deferred Consideration has not been triggered in accordance with Schedule 2? (EMED's second ground of appeal).
(3) Whether the declaration in relation to clause 6(g)(iv)(A) should have defined the Deferred Consideration as including the Up-tick Payments? (Astor's cross-appeal).
EMED's submissions
(i) On the plain terms of the clause, excess cash had to be applied in payment of outstanding consideration due to Astor. That included Deferred Consideration but that was defined as 'payable in accordance with Schedule 2' which required satisfaction of the condition precedent of raising money by senior debt, which had not occurred. Therefore, the sum was not consideration.
(ii) The Deferred Consideration could not be due to Astor if it was never payable.
(iii) The excess cash had to be paid early and, if it were not payable, how could it be paid early?
(iv) Support for that construction could be derived from the fact that paragraph (b) of Schedule 2 envisaged the Senior Debt Facility being able to be financed. It would be strange if the cash sweep had the effect of requiring money to be paid to Astor without any allowance being made for the fact that that there was no Senior Debt Facility that required to be serviced.
(v) The Master Agreement was a carefully drafted contract which was extensively negotiated between experienced lawyers. It is therefore an example of a contract where the words used by the parties should carry particular weight. The fact that applying that wording leads to a result which is unfavourable to Astor was not a reason for departing from it: Lord Hodge (with whom Lords Neuberger, Mance, Clarke and Sumption agreed) in Wood v. Capita Insurance Services [2017] AC 1173 at [11]; Lord Neuberger in Arnold v. Britton (above) at [20].
(vi) This was not a case where the Court could legitimately or safely depart from the plain and natural meaning of the Master Agreement in the name of broad considerations of 'commercial reasonableness'.
(vii) On the Judge's interpretation, the Master Agreement had become more favourable for Astor than it would have been if EMED had been able to obtain a Senior Debt Facility, in that Astor now stands to receive the Deferred Consideration without having to wait in line behind the provider of the Senior Debt Facility.
Astor's submissions
Discussion and determination on the issue
are not outstanding amounts payment of which has been deferred: they are amounts which are not owed and never will be owed unless the price of copper is at or above the specified level at the specified time. Thus, unless and until the specified time arrives, no Up-Tick Payment is applicable and there is therefore no possibility of making any such payment early.
Disposition of appeals
Lady Justice Macur: