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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 >> Failbetter Games Ltd v Kennedy [2022] EWHC 3483 (Ch) (16 December 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2022/3483.html Cite as: [2022] EWHC 3483 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
CHANCERY DIVISION
Rolls Building, Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
(sitting as a Deputy Judge of the High Court)
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FAILBETTER GAMES LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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MR ALEXIS KENNEDY |
Defendant |
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Caley Wright (instructed by Patron Law Solicitors) for the Defendants
Hearing date: 30 November 2022
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Crown Copyright ©
Charles Morrison:
Introduction
"The Defendant shall not exercise, or purport to exercise, any rights or purported rights as a member, director, officer, representative, employee or agent of the Claimant until final disposal of the Part 7 Claim or other further Order of the Court."
The Applications
The Pleading
"26. Further or alternatively, if (i) there was a concluded agreement between Mr Kennedy and the Company and (ii) Mr Kennedy is in reach of any such agreement, it is denied that the Company is entitled to specific performance of the same:
…
26.2 It would be unfair to Mr Kennedy to grant specific performance of the agreement. Any agreement on Mr Kennedy's part to sell his shares to the Company at an undervalue was motivated by the goodwill felt by Mr Kennedy towards the Company which he had founded and grown, and which had had sustained success thanks to the hard work of Mr Kennedy. In circumstances set out below at paragraph 27, that goodwill has substantially dissipated thanks to the actions of the Company."
27. As set out above, Mr Kennedy left his role as CEO of the Company on good terms. Thereafter, Mr Kennedy set up a business known as Weather Factory, through which he continued his work writing and creating games. Thereafter, from around late 2017, the relationship between Mr Kennedy and the Company soured:
27.1. In December 2017, Mr Kennedy was approached for comment by the trade press on the Company having made a number of members of staff redundant, as set out at paragraph 26.1 above. Mr Kennedy stated that he was disappointed and thought the redundancies unnecessary. Mr Kennedy were contrary to assurances he had been given in May/June 2016. These comments were published and, it is to be inferred, caused the Company (or to the extent different its officers) to seek to damage Mr Kennedy's reputation;
27.2. The professional rivalry between the Company and Weather Factory grew, in particular when in 2019 Weather Factory was nominated for two BAFTA awards and won a number of Develop Star Awards. As to the latter, while the Company was nominated in four categories but failed to win any of them;
27.3. In 2019, an anonymous tweet included Mr Kennedy's name in a list of industry figures who mistreated women, and two individuals associated with the Company (one an employee and the other a contractor) made allegations that – in broad terms – Mr Kennedy had abused his position of authority while at the Company. Without contacting Mr Kennedy, the Company posted on social media that it believed and stood by the accusations against Mr Kennedy, leading to further baseless allegations against Mr Kennedy and substantial online abuse;
27.4. Mr Kennedy responded with a lengthy post on social media setting out his position on 16 September 2019. This had the effect of reducing the abuse received by Mr Kennedy online;
27.5. However on 13 September 2019, Mr Myers, a director of the Company, posted a blog entitled "About Alexis Kennedy". The blog-post was a personal attack on Mr Kennedy, drawing on information which can only have been obtained through the Company, albeit containing a number of baseless and inaccurate accusations and statements;
27.6. The Company accordingly propagated and encouraged an online hate campaign against Mr Kennedy, seemingly for reasons of personal or professional rivalry;
27.7. More recently, the Company has contained to encourage or facilitate online abuse of Mr Kennedy. To Mr Kennedy's knowledge:
27.7.1. On 15 October 2021, two of the Company's directors re-tweeted and endorsed a post containing baseless allegations of sexual harassment and grooming against Mr Kennedy; and
27.7.2. Also in or around October 2021, the Company allowed a discussion, hosted on one of its moderated online social spaces, identifying Mr Kennedy by name and speculating as to the extent to which the participants might be willing to defecate on Mr Kennedy's corpse. Complaints to the Company about this conduct went unanswered, and the posts remained available online for a period of weeks.
"In the premises, the circumstances of any sale of shares by Mr Kennedy at an undervalue to the Company are entirely different from those that pertained as of the date of any agreement (which is in any event denied) in 2016. It would in the current circumstances be unfair to compel by way of an order for specific performance Mr Kennedy to sell his shares to the Company at an undervalue now."
The Law relating to the Applications
"It is not uncommon for an application under Pt 24 to give rise to a short point of law or construction and, if the court is satisfied that it has before it all evidence necessary for the proper determination of the question and that the parties have had an adequate opportunity to address it in argument, it should grasp the nettle and decide it. The reason is quite simple: if the respondent's case is bad in law, he will in truth have no real prospect of…successfully defending the claim against him."
C's case
D's case
"The court's discretion to grant specific performance is, it is said, not exercised if the contract is not 'equal and fair'. Even though no fraud, duress or undue influence such as to justify rescission is shown, the court may still not enforce the contract if it would not be consistent with equity and good conscience to do so."
"I do however consider that both parties were, on the evidence I have heard, acting under a serious misapprehension as at 8th August 1997. The 1st Defendant was clearly motivated by her belief that Martin was the beneficiary of the deceased's estate. She had that belief because that is what the deceased told her and caused to be put into the agreement. In entering into the relatively informal agreement she reached, she took comfort from the fact that her children would benefit, the expectation being that Martin would receive everything, and act fairly towards his brother and sister. The deceased must have shared this belief at the time, as he prepared the draft so describing Martin, which was typed up by Martin's wife. I also accept the 1st Defendant's evidence to the effect that the deceased told her that their children would eventually benefit on his death. If he did not also believe at the time that Martin was the beneficiary of his estate, he was being disingenuous by putting forward an agreement so describing him. Some corroboration for the fact that he did harbour this belief came from Martin's evidence. He said that his father told him that he was leaving it to his (Martin's) discretion how to divide the estate.
[26]. Considerations of this kind may justify the court in refusing the remedy of specific performance. Mistake as a vitiating element has been eliminated as a separate equitable doctrine by Great Peace Shipping Ltd v Tsavliris Salvage (International) Ltd [2003] QB 679. Nevertheless, specific performance is a discretionary remedy and mistake may in my judgment still be a relevant factor in refusing equitable relief, at all events where the mistake has been induced by the words or conduct of the person seeking specific performance. In such a case, of which I consider the present to be one, the mistake may also amount to, or be practically indistinguishable from, a misrepresentation. Here, the statement of the deceased that Martin was the beneficiary of his estate may well have accorded with what the deceased thought to be true, but it was wrong. That statement was a significant inducement in persuading the 1st Defendant to make the agreement of 8th August 1997. It would not be right or fair, in those circumstances, for the agreement now to be specifically enforced."
Discussion