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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> WG Mitchell (Gleneagles) Ltd & Anor v Jemstock One Ltd [2006] EWHC 3644 (Ch) (10 October 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2006/3644.html Cite as: [2006] EWHC 3644 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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W G MITCHELL (GLENEAGLES) LTD & ANOR | Claimant | |
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JEMSTOCK ONE LTD | Defendant |
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183 Clarence Street Kingston-Upon-Thames Surrey KT1 1QT
Tel No: 020 8974 7300 Fax No: 020 8974 7301
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR COLE (instructed by Olswang) appeared on behalf of the Defendant
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Crown Copyright ©
"Minimum guarantee £3.25 million subject to 2.5 per cent increases throughout. Top up rent calculated as 30 per cent of turnover. It was done this way (as opposed to relating to profit) because they would be far cuter in reducing the actual profit. Turnover is far easier to monitor. The actual guarantee starts at a lower figure for the first two years and is topped up by a priority payment."
And then this follows, which are the important words:
"If necessary, we can top up the guarantee for the first two years which is only drawable if the priority payment does not cover."
"The rental under the lease agreement for the first two years is £2.75 million per annum and £3 million per annum but we understand that the vendor will top this up to £3.25 million per annum for the first two years and thereafter the rent will increase on an annual basis by 2.5 per cent."
Later on, he stated:
"… I can advise that our client is considering this opportunity at a level that reflects a price of about £56.5 million which shows a net interest yield of about 5.65 per cent based on nil stamp duty cost as the property appears to have assisted area status. This level of bid would be on the basis that my client would receive the benefit of all capital allowances relating to the project."
There the matter rested for the moment because there was another bidder with whom the negotiations were then continued but that came to nothing.
"On or around 26 March 2004, Steven telephoned me and asked whether the claimants would still be interested in the acquisition as the negotiations with the third party had gone off. Steven discussed with me the terms of the deal that the vendor was prepared to offer. Basically, the vendor was proposing to proceed by way of a sale of the base rent only with the vendor retaining the froth rent at a purchase price of £60.5 million. Like before, the Agreed Guarantee was offered by the vendor as a term of the deal. Simply put, there was absolutely no way that the vendor could have expected a deal to have been agreed at this price (or anywhere close to it) if the Agreed Guarantee was not on offer."
"… a 35-year full repairing and insuring lease with tenant breaks at years 20 and 30, with the initial rent for the first two years being £2.75 million and £3 million per annum. In addition there will be a priority payment of half a million in year 1 and £250,000 in year 2. The rent is then increased annually in line with RPI subject to a cap of 5 per cent with a starting base of £3.25 million year 1."
"Further to our telephone conversation our clients have just asked us to confirm that the purchasers will receive a guaranteed income of £3.25 million for the first two years in respect of the above and the Heads of Terms set out in our email today."
To which the answer sent by Mr Chatteron at 5.40pm was:
"See below, this confirms £3.25 million day one."
"The purpose of this letter is to record that it is, and was at the time the Agreement for Underlease was entered into, the mutual intention of the parties to give to WGMG the right to receive and retain, in each of the first and second years of the term of the draft Underlease (which was annexed to the Agreement for Underlease), a minimum sum of £3.25 million (increased by indexation in the second year in accordance with the Stakis lease), by way of payment of rent to WGMG by the tenant under the Stakis lease ("the Stakis Tenant") and that, in the event of any shortfall between the minimum sum and the rent payable by the Stakis Tenant to WGMG as Basic Rent and Further Rent, the shortfall would be made good by JOL, with the intention that WGMG should be guaranteed to be entitled to receive and retain in each of those two years of the term the minimum sum referred to."
Then later they added:
"It is acknowledged by all parties to the Agreement for Underlease that by mutual mistake, the Agreement for Underlease does not give effect to the mutual intention of the parties."
"I am now aware that the Agreed Guarantee was not incorporated into the draft documentation. I believe this was by mistake. I was not aware that the Agreed Guarantee had not been incorporated into the documentation when the Agreement for Lease was entered into on 19 May 2004.
It was always my intention, as a director of C & P and as acting agent on behalf of the Defendant, and the Defendant's intention down to the time of entering into the Agreement, that the Defendant would pay the Agreed Guarantee to the Second Claimant. I believe that the Agreement failed to give effect to this intention by mistake."
"When the Agreement for Underlease was entered into on 19 May 2004, I believed that it did include a provision which gave effect to the Agreed Guarantee. As I have said, it was an essential term of any deal which my company was to enter into with Jemstock, I had not been informed by anyone that it would not be included in the relevant contract, and I assumed that the lawyers had provided for it."
"38. During the negotiations leading up to the correspondence on 22 and 23 April 2004, and during the negotiations that continued after 23 April 2004 up to the transaction completing on 19 May 2004, nothing was ever said and/or written to suggest that the Defendant's agreement to pay the Agreed Guarantee was withdrawn and/or no longer subsisted.
39. The negotiations, and the further terms agreed, were always based on the fact that the fundamental premise upon which the purchase price was agreed at £60.5 million, and subsequently chipped to £60 million, was that the Defendant would provide the Agreed Guarantee.
40. For the reasons set out in this Statement and in Bruce's Statement, the Agreed Guarantee was a critical term of the deal because of the impact that it had on the purchase price achievable for the investment. As Bruce has explained, if the Agreed Guarantee had been withdrawn, the purchase price achievable would have been around some £9 million less than the price at which the investment was sold to the Claimants. Accordingly, if the Defendant wished to achieve the purchase price of £60 million (or £60.5 million as it was originally), the Agreed Guarantee had to be provided by the Defendant.
41. In the light of the above, it is simply inconceivable that the Defendant would have withdrawn its offer to provide the Agreed Guarantee because it would not have been able to attain the purchase price it did."
"During the negotiations in April/May 2004, nothing was ever said and/or written by the Defendant, the Defendant's agent and/or any of the Defendant's other representatives to suggest that the Defendant's agreement to pay the Agreed Guarantee was withdrawn and/or no longer subsisted.
32. The negotiations and the further terms agreed were always based on the fundamental premise, upon which the purchase price was agreed at £60.5 million and subsequently reduced to £60 million, that the Defendant would provide the Agreed Guarantee. If the Defendant had withdrawn this then the deal would have collapsed. This is because, without the Agreed Guarantee, the deal was not commercially viable at a purchase price of £60 million or £60.5 million and would only have been commercially viable for the Claimants (and probably any debt backed investor) at a purchase price of around £51.5 million, some £9 million less.
33. It is inconceivable that the Defendant would have withdrawn its offer to provide the Agreed Guarantee because of the significant detrimental impact that this would have had on the purchase price that the Defendant could have secured from the Claimants (and indeed, probably any investor). This is particularly so given that the financial cost to the Defendant of providing the Agreed Guarantee was almost certainly likely to be minimal given the priority rent provision in the Hilton Lease.
34. The claimants instructed Dickson Minto Solicitors to act for them in this transaction. Their point of contact was Ewan Sherriff who was then a partner with Shepherd & Wedderburn but due to become a partner in Dickson Minto. I spoke to Ewan on the telephone on or around 26 March 2004 and explained to him the terms of the deal including the Agreed Guarantee. I do not know why the Agreed Guarantee did not appear as a provision anywhere in the documents as finally drafted and executed on 19 May 2004. As I have explained, there was never any mention so far as I am aware of the Agreed Guarantee not being a term of the deal and it was a fundamental term without which there would have been no deal."
"33. The party seeking rectification must show that:
(1)the parties had a common continuing intention, whether or not amounting to an agreement, in respect of a particular matter in the instrument to be rectified;
(2)there was an outward expression of accord;
(3) the intention continued at the time of the execution of the instrument sought to be rectified;
(4) by mistake the instrument did not reflect that common intention.
34. I would add the following points derived from the authorities:
(1)The standard of proof required if the court is to order rectification is the ordinary standard of the balance of probabilities.
"But as the alleged common intention ex hypothesi contradicts the written instrument, convincing proof is required in order to counteract the cogent evidence of the parties' intention displayed by the instrument itself": Thomas Bates and Sons Ltd v Wyndham's (Lingerie) Ltd [1981] 1 WLR 505 at page 521 per Brightman LJ.
(2)Whilst it must be shown what was the common intention, the exact form of words in which the common intention is to be expressed is immaterial if in substance and in detail the common intention can be ascertained: Cooperative Insurance Society Ltd v Centremoor Ltd [1983] 2 EGLR 52 at page 54, per Dillon LJ, with whom Kerr and Eveleigh LJJ agreed.
(3)The fact that a party intends a particular form of words in the mistaken belief that it is achieving his intention does not prevent the court giving effect to the true common intention: see Centremoor at page 55 A-B and Re Butlin's Settlement Trusts [1976] Ch 251 at page 260 per Brightman J."
"In my judgment, the principle established by these cases is that the court will make an order for the rectification of a document if satisfied that it does not give effect to the true agreement or arrangement between the parties, or to the true intention of a grantor or covenantor and if satisfied that there is an issue, capable of being contested, between the parties or between a covenantor or a grantor and the person he intended to benefit, it being irrelevant first that the rectification of the document is sought or consented to by them all, and second that rectification is desired because it has beneficial fiscal consequences. On the other hand, the court will not order rectification of a document as between the parties or as between a grantor or covenantor and an intended beneficiary, if their rights will be unaffected and if the only effect of the order will be to secure a fiscal benefit."
"Although an order for rectification should not be made for the purpose of conferring on the claimants or their beneficiaries a fiscal advantage which the negligence of their solicitors had denied them, although that would be its effect, but should be made so as to confer on the beneficiaries the full interest to which it was evidently intended that they should be initially and immediately entitled. This case falls within the second category."
"I have carefully considered counsel's opinion but am not fully persuaded by his reasoning.
I am pleased to say, however, that on reconsideration I can accept that a rectification of documents pursuant to a court order in circumstances such that section 2(4) of the Law of Property (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1989 applies is not the variation of a contract.
The reason is that, as section 2(4) makes clear, a contract does not come into being until the rectification takes place, because the court order proves that the original writing did not, as required by section 2(1), incorporate all the expressly agreed terms and so did not amount to a contract. Thus there is no contract to vary. It follows that, provided the time mentioned in section 2(4) is on or before 16 March 2005, the contract as rectified is within the scope of the transitional provisions.
The SGLT Manual will be amended in due course to reflect this."