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Kathleen Fitzgerald and Stephen Hubner consider a recent
Court of Appeal case that has highlighted the distinction
between guarantees and indemnities, and the importance of
ensuring that they are documented in writing
The case of Pitts & ors v Jones [2007]
concerned the shareholders of a
company, HM Shopfitting Ltd. The
appellants were employees and minority
shareholders in the company, while
Andrew Jones, the respondent, was the
managing director and majority shareholder. The Court of Appeal had to
decide on two facts:
(1) whether an undertaking that was
given by Mr Jones to the employees
amounted to a contract supported by
consideration; and
(2) if any such contract had been made
between the parties, whether it was
one of guarantee or indemnity.
Background
Mr Jones reached agreement in principle
to sell his 700 shares in the company to a
third party. A price was agreed but the
agreement was subject to the fact that
three employees (holding 50, 50 and 25
shares respectively) had rights of preemption
in terms of the articles of
association of the company, which entitled
them to buy out shares being sold. He informed the employees of his intention
to sell his shares and of their right to
buy the shares themselves at the price
agreed with a third party. He also
advised them that the third party had
offered to buy the employees’ shares at
the price to be paid for the majority shareholding. The employees agreed to sign
waivers of their right of pre-emption and
to sell their shares to the third party.
Subsequently, Mr Jones agreed with
the third party that the purchase would
be in the name of a company called WG
Birch Ltd (Birch). The price was to be paid
in instalments and Birch was to borrow
the purchase price from the company. Such an arrangement is contrary to s151
of the Companies Act 1985 and so a resolution
needed to be passed at a company
extraordinary general meeting (EGM). The meeting was called at short notice.
During the meeting Mr Jones’s solicitor
told the employees that their shares
were to be paid for in later instalments
than those being paid to Mr Jones for his
shares. In addition, he advised them that
there was no security available to cover
the payment due to the employees. This
meant that the employees had no protection
in the event of Birch failing to
pay or becoming insolvent before their
shares had been paid for. On the basis of
this information, the employees were
unwilling to sign the option agreements
for the purchase of their shares by Birch. Mr Jones then gave the employees an
undertaking that if Birch did not pay
them for their shares, he would make
the payment. The employees requested
a written undertaking to this effect. However, this was not granted, based on
advice Mr Jones received from his solicitor. On the basis of trust, the employees
accepted Mr Jones’s verbal promise.
Mr Jones subsequently received the
money for his shares from Birch, less a
deduction to take account of bad debts
of the company. Before the employees
received payment for their shares, Birch
became insolvent and so the employees
never received payment for their shares. They requested the money from Mr
Jones, who refused to pay the price that
the shares were originally to be sold for. He offered them a reduced sum being a
share of the money he had received from
Birch, divided on a pro rata basis. The
employees did not accept this offer and
sued for the original value of their
shares.
Initial decision
In the initial decision the recorder held
that Mr Jones’s undertaking was not a
contractual promise because it was
unsupported by consideration and
therefore of no legal effect. The recorder
also held that even if that conclusion
were wrong, the claim by the employees
would still fail. If there was a contract
between the employees and Mr Jones it
was a contract of guarantee and unenforceable
because it was not evidenced
in writing and signed by or on behalf of
the guarantor.
In the Court of Appeal
The employees appealed the decision to
the Court of Appeal. The Court concerned
itself with two questions:
(1) Was Mr Jones’s promise supported
by consideration?
(2) Was his undertaking enforceable?
The Court was of the view that in
order to succeed in their appeal, the
employees needed an affirmative answer
to both these questions.
The consideration point
The Court held that the employees did
give consideration to Mr Jones. The
option agreements had been arranged as
an inducement to the employees to dissuade
them from exercising their rights
of pre-emption. In addition, there was a
clear link between Mr Jones’s offer of the
undertaking and the employees’ willingness
to sign the share agreement
documentation and to agree to the shortnotice
EGM. According to the Court that
amounted to good consideration, even
though there may not have been conscious
thought to give consideration. The undertaking was therefore said to
be a contractual agreement between the
parties.
The enforceability point
The Court agreed that the contractual
agreement appeared to be a guarantee. Therefore, in order to be enforceable
in accordance with s4 of the Statute
of Frauds 1677, the guarantee had to
be in writing and be signed by the
guarantor or a person authorised by the
guarantor.
In reaching this decision the Court
reviewed a number of authorities. In the
case of Sutton and Co v Grey [1894] the
interest of the person making the promise
was key to determining whether the
contract was one of guarantee or indemnity. If there was only a promise to pay, it
was regarded as a contract of guarantee. However, if the promisor was to derive
some benefit, it was regarded as a contract
of indemnity. The distinction is
important because the formalities set
out in the 1677 Statute do not apply to
contracts of indemnity.
Another case considered by the
Court was Harburg India Rubber Comb
Company v Martin [1902]. Here an
indemnity was described as creating ‘a
new liability which is undertaken by the
promisor’ – quite different from a guarantee
which bears reference to the debt
of another party.
The Court looked at Mr Jones’s interest
in relation to both aspects of the transaction,
namely his share sale to Birch and
the signing of the share option agreements
by the employees. It did not
conclude that these were parts of the same
single transaction, rather they were separate. It held that the promise given by Mr
Jones was in relation to the share option
agreements and since there was no potential
of either liability or benefit in relation
to those agreements to him, the promise
was a guarantee; as it did not comply
with the strict formalities of the 1677
Statute, the guarantee was unenforceable.
Comment
Extending what amounts to consideration
It is a basic rule in English contract law
that a contractual promise with no consideration
in return is not recognised as
enforceable, unless it is contained in a
deed (see box opposite for the principles
relating to a deed). The principles relating
to deeds are not affected by this
decision, but given that contracts can be
verbal and also written ‘under hand’,
these simple forms of contract may
be affected by the way the Court
determined that there was good consideration. Whereas the general rule was
that actual consideration was required
in exchange for a promise, what can
amount to consideration appears to
have been extended. In this case, even
though there appears to have been no
conscious intention to give consideration
in exchange for Mr Jones’s promise,
the employees were regarded as having
given good consideration by their
actions.
Guarantees and indemnities:
distinguished and extinguished
The clear distinction between a guarantee
and an indemnity is straightforward
enough. A guarantee is required to have
been in writing and to be signed by or
on behalf of the party giving the guarantee
to be effective. In addition, any
variations of the guarantee are also
required to be in writing. There are no
statutory formalities required for a contract
of indemnity.
The difficulty lies in the fine distinction
between whether the obligation
promised is a guarantee or an indemnity
in the first place, so as to determine how
it should be documented in order to be
enforceable. A guarantee is used where
it is the intention that the guarantor
stands in for another’s failure to perform,
whereas an indemnity is used
where the person making the promise is
primarily liable.
In this case, the Court looked at the
level of interest the promisor had in the
transaction and distinguished between
having a motive to give a promise and
having a real interest. The Court drew the
conclusion that there was a promise to
satisfy the liability of another. To ascertain
fully that the contract was therefore
one of guarantee, the Court asked the
question: ‘What was the subject matter of
the transaction or contract in which the…
promise was made?’ First of all the Court
agreed with the view that although the
two aspects of the transaction, namely
the share purchase options and the sale of
Mr Jones’s shares, were linked, they did
not merge so as to be the same subject
matter. The Court only saw the promise
being made in respect of the share
purchase options. The decision was made
that to have a real interest, there needed
to be some benefit to the party in
response to honouring the promise. It
was concluded that there was no such
benefit to the promisor in this regard and
therefore it could not be the case that the
promise extended so as to be a contract of
indemnity.
Limitations of guarantees
Guarantees and indemnities are often
used together in property transactions. The obligations of a guarantor are no
greater than those of the party whose
obligations are being guaranteed. This is
known as the co-extensive principle. This principle also operates at the time
of the extinction of obligations under the
main contract whereby the obligations
of the guarantor will extinguish at the
same time as those under the main contract. Another example of the discharge
of a guarantee could be in the event of
partial satisfaction of a contract extinguishing
the guarantee because the
guarantee is not expressed to be a continuing
obligation. In such a case even if
the indemnity is part of the same clause,
the indemnity could remain in force. In
addition, any variation to the main
contract (without the consent of the
guarantor) usually has the effect of
discharging the guarantee entirely.
A recent case where this was not the
outcome was Wittman (UK) Ltd v Willdav
Engineering SA [2007]. In that case the
parent company that had given the
guarantee and indemnity was aware of
the alterations to the original contract
with the inclusion of financing arrangements. This knowledge was sufficient to
keep the guarantor responsible for the
obligations under the original contract
not affected by the alterations. The alterations
were not regarded as a complete
discharge of the original obligations and
the grant of new contracts. The Court of
Appeal did make the point, however,
that contrary to the decision of the judge
at first instance, the guarantee would
not have extended to new contracts in
the event of the original contract having
been discharged.
It is as a result of the various rules
relating to guarantees that many contracts
of guarantee are contracts that
include indemnities against potential
losses also. Indemnities are stand-alone
obligations and are not affected by the
rules for guarantees. They do, however,
need to be in exchange for consideration. All that said, there should also be a
word of caution that those granting
guarantees and who are also required to
give indemnities should be careful not to
extend their obligations, by virtue of the
terms of the indemnity, beyond that
originally envisaged by the guarantee.
Consider your options carefully
No doubt the outcome of this case
will focus attention on the level of
undertaking that the parties intend to
grant generally. In lease transactions,
authorised guarantee agreements are
frequently requested from outgoing tenants
in order to protect the landlord’s
investment. Giving such guarantees is
regarded as an improvement on leases
granted before 1996 where there is ongoing
liability under the privacy of contract
rules. However, there is still great risk to
the outgoing tenant by granting the
guarantee, as the outgoing tenant has
little or no control over the actions of the
incoming tenant. The outgoing tenant
may of course obtain an indemnity from
the incoming tenant in order to protect
against losses under the guarantee. This
will go some way to protect the outgoing
tenant’s position although a note of caution
is that protection is not absolute, for
example in the case of the incoming
tenant becoming insolvent.
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