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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 >> Simantob v Shavleyan [2019] EWCA Civ 1105 (28 June 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2019/1105.html Cite as: [2019] EWCA Civ 1105 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
The Hon Mr Justice Kerr
B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE SIMON
and
LORD JUSTICE HENDERSON
____________________
DAN SIMANTOB |
Appellant |
|
and |
||
YACOB SHAVLEYAN |
Respondent |
____________________
Keith Knight (instructed by Greenwood & Co) for the respondent, Mr Shavleyan
Hearing date: 23 May 2019
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Simon:
Introduction
… the effect of the clause is that the 'rate' of 'interest' - if that is the right phrase - increases in inverse ratio to the amount of principal remaining outstanding. Thus, if $100,000 remains outstanding, the $1,000 a day clause represents a rate of 1 per cent per day or 365 per cent per annum. And if only $1 of the principal remains outstanding, 'interest' remains payable at $1,000 a day, a 'rate' which is one thousand times the principal amount due.
78. The use of post-dated cheques as a form of currency combined with an element of security and comfort became an agreed method of doing business between these two men. The increases by way of 'interest' rewarded the creditor's forbearance and reduced the threat that he would deposit cheques and trigger dishonour of a cheque. That could mean court proceedings, which neither party wanted, and which are regarded with disfavour by the Persian art dealing community in London. It prefers its disputes to be settled in-house.
79. A rupture in their business relations would deprive Mr Simantob of access to Mr Shavleyan's expertise, which he valued as shown by his willingness to deal in the woods and, subsequently, the Judeo Persian documents even though Mr Shavleyan owed him a lot of money. On the latter's side, access to Mr Simantob's funds and the antiques he owned was a useful source of business to Mr Shavleyan.
1. There be summary judgment for the claimant on the issues of the enforceability of the Settlement Agreement and the validity of the term requiring payment of $1,000 per day.
2. Judgment for the Claimant in the sum of $600,000 together with interest in the sum of $171,999 …
The Judge's decision
103. I accept the convincing and unchallenged evidence of Mr Abayahoudayan and Mr Nili that Mr Simantob and Mr Shavleyan kissed and shook hands on a deal at the meeting in the spring of 2014. I do not think it would make commercial sense for the parties' business community to broker a deal with no legal effect. It is true that, unlike the [S]ettlement [A]greement, it was not put in writing and signed. But it did become evidenced in writing, albeit as part of a different contract dealing with specific antiquities, namely the woods.
…
107. In my judgment, Mr Simantob was plainly, and realistically, willing to accept a reasonable accommodation with Mr Shavleyan instead of standing on his rights under the settlement agreement. The $1,000 a day clause had the potential to drive Mr Shavleyan towards ever increasing indebtedness which he could never satisfy. For that reason, its rigorous enforcement would endanger Mr Simantob's standing in his business community and among his compatriots.
108. The objective intention that Mr Shavleyan's liability should be capped at $800,000 is also supported by the thrice recurring amount of $800,000, representing an excess of $400,000 over the principal payable under the settlement agreement ($1.1 million of the $1.5 million having been paid under it at the relevant times), which did not come close to correlating with the amount that would be due applying the $1,000 a day clause.
…
116. … I find that Mr Shavleyan has proved on the balance of probabilities that the settlement agreement was orally varied and that the variation was intended (in the objective sense) to be legally binding. The principal balance outstanding of $400,000 remained due but became payable in four monthly instalments of $100,000 each. The $1,000 a day clause was replaced by an obligation to pay a further $400,000 in four further and subsequent monthly instalments of $100,000 each.
'payment of a less sum on the day in satisfaction of a greater, cannot be any satis-faction for the whole'; though '[t]he gift of a horse, hawk, robe, &c. in satisfaction, is good'; and that 'payment of part at a different place' may be 'in satisfaction of the whole.'
I therefore conclude that this was not a case of a promise to pay part only of a pre-existing debt. There was a 'a horse, hawk, robe, &c' given in return, in the form of forbearance to run the defences that were subsequently unsuccessfully run in the summary judgment proceedings. The case is one of valid compromise involving consideration on both sides. Put another way, there was an accord and satisfaction in respect of the mutual claims and cross-claims under and arising from the settlement agreement.
The argument on the appeal
Decision
A compromise of a claim which is legally invalid and which is either known by the party asserting it to be invalid or not believed by that party to be valid is not contractually binding. This rule can be explained either on the ground that merely making or performing a promise to give up a worthless claim cannot constitute consideration for the counter-promise, or (preferably) on grounds of public policy. As Tindal C.J. said in Wade v. Simeon [(1846) 2 C.B. 548, 564]: 'It is almost contra bonos mores and certainly contrary to all the principles of natural justice that a man should institute proceedings against another when he is conscious that he has no good cause of action'.
The compromise of a claim which is doubtful in law is binding as a contract. Making or performing a promise to give up a doubtful claim can constitute consideration for a counter-promise since it involves the possibility of detriment to the person to whom the latter promise is made and that of benefit to the person making it [see Haigh v. Brooks (1839) 10 A.& E. 309, 334] …
The rule stated in para. 4-052 above applies also if the forbearing party's claim is clearly invalid in law, so long as it was a 'reasonable claim' [see Cook v. Wright supra] (i.e. one made on reasonable grounds) which was in good faith believed by the party forbearing to have at any rate a fair chance of success …
In the modern law, the consideration in [cases where the promise is not to pursue a claim or defence] is said to be the surrender, not of a legal right, which may or may not exist and whose existence, at the time of the compromise remains untested, but of the claim to such a right.
This attitude is sensible. It is true that if the claim is baseless, the claimant may appear to have got something for nothing, or that contrariwise, if a claimant settles a good claim for less than its true value, he may appear to have given up something for nothing but this is to ignore the cost, both monetary and psychic, of litigation. It is in the public interest to encourage reasonable settlements.