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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 >> Geys v Societe Generale, London Branch [2010] EWHC 648 (Ch) (25 March 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2010/648.html Cite as: [2010] IRLR 950, [2010] EWHC 648 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
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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RAPHAEL GEYS |
Claimant |
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– and – |
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SOCIÉTÉ GÉNÉRALE, LONDON BRANCH |
Defendant |
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Ian Gatt Q.C. and Rachel Bennett (of Herbert Smith LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 16 – 19 March 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr G. Leggatt Q.C.:
Introduction
The Contract
(1) A letter dated 28 January 2005 containing the Bank's offer of employment to the claimant;(2) A document entitled "Contract of Employment" (which I shall refer to as "the Contract");
(3) The Bank's UK Staff Handbook, which contains in Section I standard terms and conditions of employment ("the Handbook"); and
(4) The Bank's UK Compliance Manual.
"Your employment can be terminated on the expiry of 3 months' written notice of termination given by you to the Company or by the Company to you."
The Issues
(1) When did the claimant's contract of employment terminate?(2) In calculating amounts payable under the FISS, was the Bank entitled to deduct from "Gross Revenue" certain "negative sales credits"?
(3) What was the extent of the obligation undertaken by the Bank to use all reasonable endeavours to ensure that any award made to the claimant under the FISS was made in as tax efficient a manner as possible?
(4) Has the claimant forfeited his entitlement to payments on termination of the contract by pursuing some of the claims which he has made in these proceedings?
Witnesses
The Court's Task
(1) The Date of Termination
Relevant Events
(1) On 29 November 2007 the claimant was called to a meeting at which he was told, and handed a letter which stated, that the Bank "has decided to terminate your employment with immediate effect". He was then escorted from the building after being permitted to clear his desk. He did not subsequently attend the Bank's premises.(2) On 7 December 2007 the claimant's solicitors wrote to the Bank's solicitors chasing "further information in connection with the sums [the Bank] is offering to pay Mr Geys following the summary termination of his employment" and "delivery of termination documentation pursuant to Mr Geys' contract of employment." The letter ended by stating that "[i]n the meantime, [the claimant] reserves all his rights".
(3) On 10 December 2007 the Bank sent to the claimant and copied to his solicitors a draft "Severance Agreement" in the form of the termination agreement at Schedule 1 to his Contract and a summary of the payments that were proposed to be made to the claimant in consideration for his entering into this agreement. The covering letter stated that "HR will contact you separately regarding your leaver details (notice pay, holiday pay etc)".
(4) On 18 December 2007 the Bank made a payment of £31,899.29 directly into the claimant's bank account. He was out of the country over Christmas and did not return until the New Year. The claimant said in evidence that he could not recall when he became aware of the payment; but he accepted – and I find – that it was probably before the end of December 2007. The claimant also accepted in cross-examination that, although he could not be sure what the payment related to, the "best guess I could have" was that it was intended to be a payment in lieu of notice.
(5) On 21 December 2007 the claimant's solicitors responded to the Bank's letter of 10 December 2007 and asked for further information, in particular as to how the proposed payments had been calculated, while continuing to reserve "all our client's rights in relation to his employment/contract of employment".
(6) On 2 January 2008 the claimant's solicitors wrote to the Bank's solicitors stating that the claimant "has decided to affirm his contract of employment". The letter also referred to the payment which had been made into the claimant's bank account and reserved the claimant's position "in relation to the acceptance of these monies once we understand what they constitute".
(7) On 4 January 2008 the Bank sent to the claimant what Mr Clark, Head of Compensation and Benefits, Human Resources for the Bank, described in evidence as "a standard Human Resources letter confirming the details of the termination of his employment". Under the heading "Notice Entitlement" the letter stated:
"Under your terms and conditions of employment, you are entitled to 3 months' notice of termination of your employment. Société Générale gave you notice to terminate your employment with immediate effect on 29 November 2007 (your Termination Date) and will pay you in lieu of your notice period. This payment will be calculated in accordance with Section 1/8.3 of the Société Générale CIB Staff Handbook".
The letter went on to say that the claimant's notice payment had been credited to his account on 18 December 2007.
The Parties' Contentions
(1) What was the legal effect of the Bank's purported termination on 29 November 2007 and of the claimant's response to it; and(2) Whether the Bank had a right to terminate the contract by making a payment in lieu of notice and, if so, when (if at all) the Bank exercised that right.
The Purported Termination on 29 November 2007
No Automatic Termination
Did the Claimant treat the Contract as terminated?
"It all depends on the particular contractual relationship and the particular circumstances of the case. But ... I am satisfied that a failure to perform may sometimes signify to a repudiating party an election by the aggrieved party to treat the contract as at an end. Postulate the case where an employer at the end of a day tells a contractor that he, the employer, is repudiating the contract and that the contractor need not return the next day. The contractor does not return the next day or at all. It seems to me that the contractor's failure to return may, in the absence of any other explanation, convey a decision to treat the contract as at an end."
Payment in Lieu of Notice
"[The Bank] reserves the right to terminate your employment at any time with immediate effect by making a payment to you in lieu of notice (or, if notice has already been given, the balance of your notice period) based on the value of your:
- Basic annual salary; and
- Flexible benefits allowance
for your notice period (or, if notice has already been given, the balance of your notice period)."
Is there a conflict between the Contract and the Handbook?
"This contract is in conjunction with the offer letter, the Staff Handbook of the SGUK Group (as amended from time to time) and the SGUK Compliance Manual which, together with this letter, form the written particulars of employment as required by law. However, in the event of any conflict of any terms set out in this Contract and those contained in the Handbook the terms of this contract will prevail."
Mr Cavender submitted that the right reserved by the Bank in paragraph 8.3 of the Handbook is inconsistent with the right given to the claimant by clause 13 of the Contract to 3 months' notice of termination because the latter requires that the contract shall remain in existence for 3 months following notice of termination being given, whereas the former allows the contract to be brought to an end immediately. Furthermore, the claimant's contractual entitlements under paragraph 8.3 of the Handbook are considerably less valuable than under clause 13. Accordingly, there is a "conflict" between the terms of the Contract and the Handbook within the meaning of clause 17 of the Contract, with the result that the terms of the Contract prevail.
"You are asked to read the Contract of Employment, Staff Handbook and Compliance Manual in conjunction with each other."
"It is a commonplace of documentary construction that an apparently wide and absolute provision is subject to limitation, modification or qualification by other provisions. It does not make the later provisions inconsistent or repugnant.
… It is not enough if one term qualifies or modifies the effect of another; to be inconsistent a term must contradict another term or be in conflict with it, such that effect cannot fairly be given to both clauses."
Pagnan further illustrates that this approach is applicable in a case where one provision was contained in the special conditions and the other in the printed clauses of the contract and the contract also included an "inconsistency clause" which provided that the special conditions "shall prevail in so far as they may be inconsistent with the printed clauses".
"... If the Division does not achieve a Gross Revenue of at least Euros 330 million for the year ending 31 December 2006, the Company shall, during the period from 1 January 2007 to 16 February 2007, be entitled to terminate your employment with immediate effect by giving you written notice that it is exercising its entitlement to do so pursuant to this paragraph 5.8."
Given that – as in my view is clearly the case – clause 13 is impliedly subject to other contractual rights which expressly permit termination with immediate effect, there is no reason why those rights should not include the right expressly reserved by paragraph 8.3 of the Handbook. Furthermore, as Mr Gatt Q.C. submitted, the words "in lieu of notice" expressly indicate that the Handbook right is intended to provide an alternative option to continuing to employ the claimant for the notice period. There is therefore no conflict between the two provisions.
When was the right to terminate by making a payment in lieu of notice exercised?
Conclusion
"Notice given by [the Bank] in writing shall be deemed to have been given by [the Bank] upon either being handed to you or sent to your home address (as last notified by you to HR). If such notice is sent by post, it shall be deemed to have been received by you on the second day after posting."
Treating it as most probable that the letter dated 4 January 2008 was posted to the claimant's address on the date it bears, I accordingly find that the claimant's contract of employment was terminated by the Bank on 6 January 2008.
(2) Negative Sales Credits
"(e) Gross Revenue shall mean the sales credit as calculated by the Company's management accountants using calculation methods and assumptions equivalent to those used to calculate the sales credit of the Division in respect of the year ending 31 December 2004. …
(g) Net Revenue shall mean the Gross Revenue of the Division less the aggregate of (a) its Employment Costs; (b) its Bonus Pool Costs; and (c) operational losses attributable to a member of the Division provided that such operational losses have been notified to you in writing within 10 working days after the date on which the transaction to which the loss relates was completed."
Sales Credits
Negative Sales Credits
The Client A and B transactions
(1) In August 2006 a member of the Division sold four credit derivatives products to Client A.(2) In about July 2007 Client A made allegations of "misselling (lack of advice) and misrepresentation" in relation to this sale.
(3) This led to a dispute and (in November 2007) a settlement whereby, without any admission of liability, the Bank agreed to unwind the transactions in return for €46m from Client A.
(4) The Bank's loss on the transaction when it was unwound (after taking account of the settlement with Client A) was €74.6m. However, a hedge had been put in place prior to the settlement in order to freeze the extent of the Bank's loss and this produced a gain of €21.3m.
(5) A negative adjustment of €74.6m was applied to the sales credits for the claimant's Division on 27 November 2007.
(1) In June 2007 the Bank purchased certain senior capital notes issued by a special investment vehicle set up by Client B (the "Notes") for their par value of c.€20m. At the same time the Bank entered into a "gentleman's agreement" with Client B under which, after six months, any Notes which the Bank had not been able to sell could be sold back to Client B at par.(2) Client B subsequently suffered financial difficulties and refused to take the Notes back; their value was written down by the Bank to nil.
(3) On 17 October 2007 a negative sales credit of €21.42m was applied in relation to this transaction to the sales credits for the claimant's Division.
The Issues
Approach to the Issues
Meaning of "Gross Revenue"
The Claimant's Evidence
The Bank's Evidence
Discussion
TDA Deals
(3) Tax Efficiency Issues
(1) any payment made under the replacement arrangement in relation to the FISS set out in clause 5.24(a); or(2) the Termination Payment specified in clause 5.15 of the Contract.
KPMG Report
Arrangements on Termination
"your eligibility to participate in the Scheme and/or the FISS and/or any scheme which replaces the FISS in respect of the year ended 31 December in which such termination of employment occurs will be replaced by the arrangements set out in paragraph 5.24 which will not be subject to the Deferral under paragraph 5.7"
Clause 5.24(a) then sets out this "replacement bonus arrangement ... in relation to the FISS". The essential purpose of the arrangement is to calculate an amount, payable at the same time as the Termination Payment, which represents an appropriate proportion of the FISS for the year in which termination of the Contract takes place up to the date of termination.
"the Company will, within 28 days after such termination of your employment, make a payment to you (the "Termination Payment") as specified in clause 5.15."
Clause 5.15 states:
"The Termination Payment shall be equal to the aggregate of:
(a) the value (calculated at the date of termination of your employment in accordance with the rules of Deferral) of the proportion of any award or awards that has or have been made to you but retained by the Company under paragraph 5.7 and not yet released; and
(b) the Compensation Payment … which shall be calculated as follows:
…
(iv) if your employment terminates after 31 December 2007 but before 1 January 2009, the Compensation Payment shall be 0.65 x (T divided by 2) where T is the aggregate of any award or awards that has or have been made to you under the FISS and the Scheme (whether or not subject to the Deferral under paragraph 5.7) in respect of the calendar years ending 31 December 2006 [and] 31 December 2007;"
Interpretation
"The calculation of any bonus payments and/or awards (including, without limitation, under the Scheme, the FISS and any successor to the FISS and any replacement arrangements shall be subject to pro-rata deductions in accordance with the provisions of paragraph 5.27 and 14(b)." [emphasis added]
In these circumstances and where, in contrast, clause 5.5 refers only to awards under the FISS and not to payments under "any replacement arrangements", I do not think that clause 5.5 can properly be construed as covering such payments.
Grossing-Up
"…any award made under the FISS will be subject to such Income Tax and National Insurance Contributions (or other similar deductions) as the Company may be required to deduct and the Company will not be required to gross-up any award to take account of any Income Tax and National Insurance Contributions (or other similar deductions) in any circumstances ..."
Accordingly, even if it were in principle correct that the Compensation Payment should be calculated by reference to the amounts which would have been paid under the FISS if the Bank had performed its tax efficiency obligation, this could make no difference to the amount of the Compensation Payment.
Timing and Content of the Tax Efficiency Obligation
(1) when did the obligation arise; and(2) what is the content of the Bank's obligation?
(4) The Condition Precedent Issue
The Relevant Provisions
"In consideration for the Company making the Termination Payment … you will enter into a termination agreement with the Company (in the form of the draft termination agreement in Schedule 1 of this letter but amended to take account of any payments due to you under this letter and to take account of relevant legislative developments) under which you will waive all contractual and statutory claims against the Company … arising out of your employment with the Company and its termination … If the Company and you wish to amend the form of the draft termination agreement further than as set out above, such amendments must be agreed within 28 days after the date on which your employment terminates (or such longer period as you and the Company agree), failing which you and the Company will enter into the termination agreement in the form of the draft termination agreement in Schedule 1 of this letter only amended to take account of any payments due to you under this agreement and to take account of relevant legislative developments."
It should be noted that references in this clause (as also in clauses 5.20 and 17) to "this letter" are clearly intended to mean "this Contract".
"It is a fundamental term of this letter that:
(i) the payments to be given to you under paragraph 2 will at all times be conditional on you refraining from issuing or pursuing any type of employment related proceedings in respect of the Alleged Claims, any other Statutory Claim or any contractual or common law claim (howsoever arising), (with the exception of any claim for accrued pension rights, pension benefits or personal injury …) against the Company or any Group Company, (whether in an Employment Tribunal, the High Court, a County Court or otherwise); and
(ii) if you subsequently issue or pursue such employment related proceedings in breach of this letter then the payments paid to you under this letter … will be repayable to the Company forthwith on demand; and
(iii) the total sum will be recoverable as a debt, together with all costs (including legal costs) reasonably incurred by the Company in recovering the sum and/or in relation to any proceedings so brought by you.
The repayment provisions of this paragraph 7(e) will be without prejudice to [the Bank's] right to seek further damages from you in respect of the breach referred to in this paragraph and any other breach of this letter."
The Bank's Argument
Discussion
"a termination agreement with the Company in the form of the draft termination agreement in Schedule 1 of this letter but amended to take account of any payments due to you under this letter" [emphasis added]
Reading "this letter", as I have pointed out that it must be read, as meaning "this Contract", this expressly envisages that the claimant is entitled to claim and receive any payments due to him under his contract of employment. Such payments must in my view include not only any agreed sum which is outstanding but also any damages which are payable as a result of any breach of contract by the Bank. The expression "under" the contract is capable as a matter of language of including a liability to pay damages as well as a debt, and if a payment of damages were not included it would have the unreasonable consequences that I have referred to above.
Failure of Consideration
Outstanding Matters