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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 >> Fearns (t/a "Autopaint International") v Anglo-Dutch Paint & Chemical Company Ltd & Ors [2010] EWHC 2366 (Ch) (23 September 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2010/2366.html Cite as: [2011] WLR 366, [2011] Bus LR 579, [2011] 1 WLR 366, [2010] EWHC 2366 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
(INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
Sitting as a Deputy Judge of the Chancery Division
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GARY FEARNS (trading as "AUTOPAINT INTERNATIONAL") |
Claimant |
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and |
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(1) ANGLO-DUTCH PAINT & CHEMICAL COMPANY LIMITED (2) DE BEER LAKFABRIEKEN BV (3) CHRISTOPHER WELCH (4) RICHARD JONGSMA (5) MARCO VAN DER WOUDE (6) THEO WEMMERS |
Defendants |
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Thomas Moody-Stuart (instructed by Faegre & Benson) for the Defendants
Hearing date: 28 July 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr G. Leggatt Q.C.:
Amounts of Claim and Counterclaim
The Date of Set-Off Issue
Types of Set-off
Legal Set-off
"Legal set-off does not affect the substantive rights of the parties against each other, at any rate until both causes of action have been merged in a judgment of the court. It addresses questions of procedure and cash-flow. As a matter of procedure, it enables a defendant to require his cross-claim (even if based upon a wholly different subject matter) to be tried together with the plaintiff's claim instead of having to be the subject of a separate action. In this way it ensures that judgment will be given simultaneously on claim and cross-claim and thereby relieves the defendant from having to find the cash to satisfy a judgment in favour of the plaintiff (or, in the 18th century, go to a debtor's prison) before his cross-claim has been determined."
Equitable Set-off
Is Equitable Set-off Procedural or Substantive?
Does Equitable Set-off Extinguish Liabilities?
"If the charterer quantifies his loss by a reasonable assessment made in good faith - and deducts the sum quantified - then he is not in default. The shipowner cannot withdraw his vessel on account of non-payment of hire nor hold him guilty at that point of any breach of contract. If it subsequently turns out that he has deducted too much, the shipowner can of course recover the balance. But that is all."
[my emphasis]
By contrast, Goff LJ said (at 982A-B):
" this defence [of equitable set-off] by its nature is such that it must be open to the charterer to set it up before ascertainment, not merely as a means of preventing the owner obtaining judgment or, at any rate, execution, but also as an immediate answer to his liability to pay hire otherwise due. Of course he acts at his peril and, if he is wrong, he will enable the owner to determine the charterparty if he is willing for his part to act at his peril the other way." [my emphasis]
" although a right of set-off is a defence, with all the legal consequences which follow from it, in practice the exercise of a right of deduction or set-off is essentially a provisional act. It decides nothing finally. Its exercise simply operates as a temporary retention of an economic asset by the party exercising the right, and the temporary deprivation of the other party of that asset. For the exercise of the right does not prevent either party from subsequently proving his claim or cross-claim, and so does not affect the final resolution of the fundamental dispute. Even so bearing in mind the characteristics of the right, it is in my judgment implicit in its very nature that it should only be exercised in good faith on reasonable grounds,"
"The deduction of $30,000, unaccepted by the [owners], conferred no legal rights, and could not alter the legal position. After it, as before, the [charterers] had a disputed and unquantified claim against the [owners]: after it, as before, if they wished to pursue and to quantify this claim, they had to bring a suit for damages, or to refer the matter to arbitration. By failing to commence a suit before May 1974, a necessary condition to the survival of their claim, they contractually agreed to discharge it."
Set-off by Judgment
The Admiralty Cases
"If one of the two liabilities is in one currency and the other is in another currency (whether both foreign or one foreign and the other sterling) two questions will arise. First, to what common currency should the amounts of the two liabilities be reduced in order to effect set-off? Secondly, at what date should such reduction to a common currency, and the set-off which follows it, take place? My provisional view on these questions, without having had the benefit of argument upon them, is that the currency of the lesser liability should be converted into the currency of the greater liability, and the set-off then effected at the date on which the amounts of the two liabilities are established by agreement or decision. Judgment should then be given for the amount by which the greater liability exceeds the lesser liability in the currency of the greater liability or its sterling equivalent at the date of payment."
"Those are at first sight powerful arguments, but I do not think that they ought to prevail. In the absence of authority - and Counsel have been unable to find any directly in point - the question must be decided on principle and, to my mind, the relevant principle is that people's rights are not in general changed by litigation about them; the effect of such litigation is only to ascertain and enforce those rights. Accordingly, if but for the interpleader proceedings, the right of Selco or its assigns to receive Selco's share of each payment of Class B remuneration would have arisen when that payment was received by Lloyd's on behalf of Smit, so that Smit would have become entitled to give effect to its right of set-off at the same time, and that is not challenged, Smit's right to calculate the set-off on that basis cannot, in my view, be altered by the existence of those proceedings. The true view is, in my opinion, that Smit's debt to Selco, and Smit's right of set-off, arose when the relevant moneys were received by Lloyd's, and that the interpleader proceedings merely delayed the parties' ability effectively to enforce those rights."
Conclusions on Date of Set-off
(1) Where one party has a claim against another party who has a cross-claim, the two claims cannot be netted off so as to extinguish each liability to the extent of the other except by agreement or a judgment of the court and once both liabilities have been established by agreement or judgment.(2) Where, however, the two claims are for sums of money which are due and certain in amount, each party may raise a defence to the extent of its own claim in proceedings brought by the other (legal set-off).
(3) In addition, where the two claims are (i) made reasonably and in good faith and (ii) so closely connected that it would be manifestly unjust to allow one party to enforce payment without taking into account the cross-claim, neither party may exercise any rights contingent on the validity of its claim except in so far as it exceeds the other party's claim (equitable set-off).
(4) Under CPR r.40.13 and the court's inherent jurisdiction, the court has a discretion to order any judgment sum to be set off (in the sense of netted off) against any other such sum. The date at which such a set-off should be effected is the date on which the existence and amount of the two liabilities is or was established.
(5) The approach which the court should adopt when ordering such a set-off between amounts payable in different currencies is: (i) to assess and add to each principal amount any interest accruing up to the date of the set-off; (ii) to convert the smaller amount into the currency of the larger amount at the exchange rate prevailing at that date; and (iii) to order payment of the balance.
Damages for Currency Loss?
The Claimant's Alternative Case
The Order Made
Costs
Set-off of Costs against Damages?
"(3) The broad criterion for the application of set-off is that the plaintiff's claim and the defendant's claim are so closely connected that it would be inequitable to allow the plaintiff's claim without taking into account the defendant's claim. As it has sometimes been put, the defendant's claim must, in equity, impeach the plaintiff's claim.
(4) Set-off of costs or damages to which one party is entitled against costs or damages to which another party is entitled depends upon the application of the equitable criterion I have endeavoured to express. It was treated by May J. in Currie & Co v The Law Society [1977] QB 990, 1000, as a 'question for the court's discretion.' It is possible to regard all questions regarding costs as being subject to the statutory discretion conferred on the court by section 51 of the Supreme Court Act 1981. But I would not have thought that a set-off of damages against damages could properly be described as a discretionary matter, nor that a set-off of costs against damages could be so described."