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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 >> Jordan & Anor v Roberts & Ors [2009] EWHC 2313 (Ch) (21 September 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2009/2313.html Cite as: [2009] EWHC 2313 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
COMPANIES COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
sitting as a Deputy Judge of the High Court
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CYNTHIA JORDAN KIM FAZZANI |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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SHEILA ROBERTS SUZANNE BINNS HOME ASSISTANCE SERVICES LTD |
Defendants |
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Geoffrey Goldkorn (of Goldkorn Mathias Gentle Page) for the First & Second Defendants
Hearing dates : 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 16, 17, 21 & 23 July 2009
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Crown Copyright ©
The Deputy Judge:
Introduction
Conclusion
Background
i) Article 4 contains provisions of a familiar type dealing with share issues. The unissued shares are to be under the control of the Directors (sub-clause (1)). The directors are expressed to be given authority for the purposes of section 80 of the Companies Act 1985 ("the 1985 Act") to allot relevant securities (sub-clause (2)). This authority is expressed to have been given in respect of the authorised capital at the date of incorporation (that is £100, that still being the amount of the authorised capital), and to have lasted only until the fifth anniversary of the Company's incorporation in the absence of any renewal (sub-clause (3)).ii) Regulation 81 in Table A applies, providing for directors to vacate office by, among other matters, resigning by notice to the Company.
i) The parties are to have "all rights under the Articles of Association", including those in relation to the issue and transfer of shares.ii) "Shareholder A and Shareholder B singularly or severally may exercise all the powers and authorities vested in the Directors by the Company's Articles of Association Any other Shareholders will be appointed as subordinate directors and will have no rights to exercise any powers and authorities vested in the Directors by the Company's Articles of Association "
iii) "Shareholder A and Shareholder B have the right to terminate or appoint directors as they see fit with the exception of removing Shareholder A or Shareholder B from the list of Directors unless either Shareholder A or Shareholder B resigns from the Company".
iv) There is provision for shares of any shareholder to be transferred to Shareholders A and B or the Company, as Shareholders A and B should agree, "in the event of the death or incapacity due to ill health or resignation or termination of employment of a Shareholder..." The shares of Mrs Roberts or Ms Binns are to pass to the other.
v) "In the event of Shareholder A or Shareholder B resigning from the Company there will be a 'cooling off' period of up to 12 weeks during which period they may be automatically reinstated to their respective positions within the Company and their entitlement to shares reinstated. In the event of either Shareholder returning to the Company after a period of incapacity or reinstatement following resignation. A meeting will be held between Shareholder A and Shareholder B to determine arrangements for the transfer back of all or such proportion of shareholder as agreed between Shareholder A and B."
vi) Provision is made for Shareholders A and B to have an emergency meeting, if they see that any other shareholders "are conducting themselves in such manner as would reasonably be assumed to be detrimental to the interest of the Company and/or the interests in the Company of Shareholder A or B". This meeting is to decide what should be done, with possible courses including the buying out of the shares of the other shareholders.
"In order to supply working Capital for the Company we would offer shareholding on the following basis
The authorised capital of the Company is 100 shares at a nominal value of £1 each. Each share will attract equal distribution of net profits after tax.
10% Company shareholding would require an investment of 10,000 GBP. It is intended that the issued and paid up Capital of the Company will be 50 shares of £1.00 each.
It is envisaged that there will be 5 directors who initially provide 10,000 GPB each and in return are allocated a 10% shareholding. Shares to be allotted as and when the 10,000GBP and the nominal value of the shares are also paid up ie. 10 times £1.00.
It is envisaged that 50 shares (50% of Company shares) will be retained within the Company at this stage to ensure that the Company retains sufficient share of profits to enable increased working capital for growth. This means that no more than 50% of net profits after tax will be distributed amongst the 5 shareholders.
The 10,000GBP will be credited to the individual director's loan account and will be non-interest bearing. The working capital loan accounts will be repayable at a later date from the retained earnings of the Company at such time as is agreed by all shareholders.
However, the authorised share capital of £100 or any paid up capital, or portion, or amount will not be repayable unless the shareholding is surrendered to or purchased back by the Company."
"Following on from discussions in September/November 2007 and our meeting on the 08th January 2008, for which we met to discuss your further interest in becoming Directors and shareholders of [the Company].
It was explained to you and for your interest the terms in which Shareholder A and Shareholder B would offer employment as a Director and Shareholder with the company. We write in confirmation of this"
i) "Your employment will begin on 4th February 2008"ii) "You agree to a 12 month probationary period"
iii) "Your wage will be £500 per month for the first year of employment and your first pay date shall be end March 2008"
iv) "Dividend Payments will be paid yearly"
v) "Dividend Payments will be in line with your 10% shareholding"
vi) "As wanted by yourselves the share certificates will be issued in February, I am unsure why you requested them to be dated November 2007, however please note that the certificate will hold no authority until it is stamped with the company seal this will be carried out at the end of your probationary period"
vii) "If for any reasons the Company Home Assistance Services, Shareholder A and Shareholder B agree to end your employment within the 12 month probationary period, all rights of shares will revert back to the company".
i) the entry for Ms Binns showed her as holding ten shares, including "one share transferred from Company after returned by V Barker. Investment £4,000 loan"; andii) the Register of Applications and Allotments shows (a) each of the Claimants as having applied for ten shares on 26 November 2007 and as having been allotted that number on 17 January 2008 with a deposit of £10 being paid and nothing further payable, and (b) each of Ms Binns, Mr Yeo and Mrs Roberts as having applied for shares on 23 October 2007. As to these, Mrs Roberts is recorded as having at some unspecified time deposited £10 and been allotted ten shares, and Ms Binns as having been allotted nine shares (ie including Ms Barker's share but excluding her original share) on 17 January 2008 and having made a deposit totalling £8 in respect of the eight new shares.
"The shareholding was discussed. Sheila stated that she was unhappy about the discussion regarding possible 25% shareholding and that she was not in agreement. Suzanne stated that she was not happy either with the 25% shareholding and was feeling under some duress to register the shares as Kim had continued to pressure her to re-issue all the Company shares with equal distribution. Suzanne also made some suggestion that she had been approached by Kim and Cynthia of (sic) attempted collusion between Directors. The meeting concluded with the agreement of 10% shareholding issued to Cynthia and Kim as per the original agreement. Because of the pressure Suzanne informed the meeting that she had pencilled in the allotment of shares in the register as she had been led to believe by Kim and Cynthia that Sheila was in agreement with the 25% shareholding, so the company register would have to be amended. It was agreed that this would be done."
"Since it had been agreed to issue 25% shares each, I had ensured that all directors information was completed on the form by each director in turn and when I went to complete the rest I discovered that SR/CJ/KF had removed the documentation from the registered office along with the company register. I had immediately telephoned [Mrs Roberts] to be told she would give it back the next day. It still had not been returned. [Mrs Fazzani] said that this should not prevent [Ms Binns] from filling out another. [Ms Binns] reiterated it was still her intention to register the allotment of shares but would need their address information again. [Mrs Fazzani] wanted to know why the word of a single director took precedence over the decision of the board. [Ms Binns] said it was because [Mrs Roberts] had given her reasons that the decision to award the shares should not have been done until the shareholding agreements were agreed and that I had acted outside the board agreement to issue the share certificates".
i) One is headed "Re Transfer of my shareholding under the Protective Shareholding (sic) Agreement" and says simply "Further to my resignation today I am writing to confirm that I will be transferring my Shareholding in full to yourself as per our Protective Shareholding Agreement".
ii) The second is a long document which has been described as her "Grievance Letter". This contained numerous allegations of bullying and harassment of Ms Binns by the Claimants, but with no criticism being made of Mrs Roberts' conduct. The last two paragraphs contained the following:
"The actions and conduct of Kim and Cynthia I believe have been detrimental to the company in terms of their ability to run a registered service effectively as we are continually being sidetracked to discuss either your or my commitment to the Company or in my case having my work performance questioned. It appears to me that we have both been manipulated. I suspect this is being done in order to take control of the Company given their continued insistence on equal shareholding status despite both you and I having informed them that there is no intention to distribute to them any more than 10% as per the original agreement. I would ask you to be vigilant to ensure that the future of the company is secure.
I tendered my resignation on a number of occasions due to the bullying and continued harassment and on this occasion I am not able to rally my resources immediately to ask that I be considered to return immediately to work. As per our protective shareholders agreement I will reserve my right to be contacted in 12 weeks to identify if I am at that stage wishing to return to the company. At this time I need to recover from the stress that the whole process has caused me to endure."
The Witnesses
i) As I have pointed out, it was Mrs Roberts' written evidence that the Claimants agreed to the SPA and the Terms of Employment on 10 January 2008, when the Claimants' appointment as directors was voted upon at a board meeting.ii) However, this evidence faced the difficulty that Ms Binns' minutes of that meeting made it clear that a critical part of the package dealt with by the SPA and the Terms of Employment, namely the position of the Claimants as shareholders, was in terms not agreed. This matter had been item 3 on the agenda for that meeting. Further, the probability is that the issue of shares (item 4 on the agenda for the meeting of 17 January 2008) was only agreed at the 17 January 2008 meeting, as reflected in Ms Binns' minutes and consistent with the Challenged 17 January Minutes, as it was on that day that the relevant share certificates were processed.
iii) Accordingly it was Mrs Roberts' oral evidence that at the 17 January 2008 meeting "everything" was agreed . This "everything" included the Claimants' agreement of the Terms of Employment and acceptance of the SPA.
iv) This, however, does not sit comfortably with the fact that at the meeting in mid-February 2008 the parties had a discussion about the template shareholders' agreement, a discussion which could have been expected to be irrelevant if the parties had just agreed to the SPA and the Terms of Employment.
v) In her written evidence Mrs Roberts had dealt with this by suggesting, irrelevantly and mistakenly, that that template shareholders' agreement discussed in February had made reference to her having a 51% shareholding, and by saying that in any case the discussion had been directed simply at getting an agreement signed by with the Claimants "setting out their roles and responsibilities".
vi) However the minutes of the meeting of 14 February 2008, minutes which Ms Binns made only a couple of weeks after the meeting, and the form of the template agreements in fact referred to in those minutes, make it perfectly obvious that there was a discussion at that time about the terms of a shareholders' agreement contemplated between the parties, and that that discussion was a central discussion during the meeting.
vii) Mrs Roberts' oral evidence on the point, in contrast with her written evidence, was that there was discussion about the making of a shareholders' agreement, but that this was with a view to making an agreement which would cover the time after the "probationary" period contemplated by the Terms of Employment had come to an end.
viii) That suggestion in my judgment makes no sense, as any such period in the Terms of Employment was immaterial to the SPA, which purported to be permanent and to provide indefinitely, "until superseded by agreement between Shareholder A and Shareholder B", for the regulation of the Company. In other words, if the SPA had been "agreed" with the Claimants on 17 January, by its own terms it would continue to apply even after the 12 months' probationary period referred to in the Terms of Employment.
The issues of law
The issues of fact
i) The Terms of Employment, supposedly created on about 9 January 2008, mysteriously refer to a meeting on 8 January 2008, when no meeting had taken place on that day. Such a mistake would have been surprising in a document made so soon after 8 January, the date of the supposed meeting at which the principles reflected in the Terms of Employment had been discussed.ii) The Terms of Employment stipulated for a wage of £500 per month for the first year of employment, when the agreement recorded by Ms Binns in her minutes as being reached on the very same day as the terms of Employment was for the Claimants to have £35,000 per annum without any reference to an initial £500 per month.
iii) The Terms of Employment provided for the Claimants' share certificates to be issued only in February 2008, yet only a few days later this provision was disregarded and the share certificates were issued on 17 January 2008. Further, the certificates bore that date, not a date of November 2007, as referred to in the Terms of Employment. What was backdated to November 2007 was the appointment of the Claimants as directors.
iv) The Terms of Employment, reflecting the SPA, stated that the Claimants were to be appointed as "subordinate Directors and have limited input on the running of the company"; yet no reference was made to their directorships being "subordinate" when Ms Binns' minutes recorded that on 10 January 2008 the Claimants' appointments were ratified by the Board, and at no time thereafter in any of the contemporaneous documents was there any reference to the Claimants' directorships being subordinate and to their occupying the position of, in effect, mere employees.
i) This particular point appears to have been dropped by the concessions made by the Defendants shortly before the trial.ii) In my judgment the point was rightly dropped. If the absence of sealing had had the significance which was sought to be suggested, there is still no worthwhile explanation for:
a) the failure of the Defendants to make any return of allotments in respect of the issue of their shares, dealt with on 17 January 2008, until the end of February 2008 (when, in the event, returns were also made in respect of the Claimants' shares);b) the absence of any reference to the provisional nature of any allotments of shares and issue of unsealed share certificates in the minutes made by Ms Binns of the meetings of 14 and 27 February 2008, when the failure to make appropriate returns of allotments was being discussed; orc) the statements made by the Defendants to the Bank at the end of February 2008 to the effect that each of the Claimants was beneficial owner of 25% of the Company's issued shares (as would be the case if each Claimant held beneficially 10 shares out of a total issued share capital of 40 shares).
i) This had the result that she resumed her office as director: the remaining three directors accepted that she should continue as a director of the Company. Therefore she was a director until her undoubted and accepted resignation on 19 May 2008.ii) The reinstatement was not so straightforward as regards her shareholding. Rather, as it seems to me, from the perspective of the Claimants no return of allotments had been made and Ms Binns had given up her right to the new shares allotted to her on 17 January 2008. In their eyes, therefore, Ms Binns had at most her original share and that of Ms Barker. This is the explanation for the suggestion made in early May 2008 to Mr Mitchell, that Ms Binns held 2% or 2 shares, and for Ms Fazanni's sending of the Forms 169 in July 2008 purporting to show the purchase of those shares (and no other shares) in March 2008. Her shareholding was dependent, in the view of the Claimants, upon her reinstatement becoming permanent (which, in the event, did not happen once Ms Binns again resigned in May 2008).
iii) While I therefore accept the Claimants' evidence, that in the disputes with Mrs Roberts which developed in July and August 2008 they believed that together they held two thirds of the Company's issued capital against Mrs Roberts' one third, Ms Binns having given up her shareholding rights, I also conclude that they were mistaken.
Postscript