Recent Court Of Appeal Guidance On Damages For Breach Of Warranty And Deceit
Published date | 18 October 2022 |
Subject Matter | Environment, Litigation, Mediation & Arbitration, Environmental Law, Trials & Appeals & Compensation, Waste Management |
Law Firm | Norton Rose Fulbright |
Author | Mr Aditya Badami |
In the context of a share sale, the Court of Appeal in MDW Holdings Ltd v Norvill & Ors [2022] EWCA Civ 883 confirmed that a defendant cannot usually reduce its liability for breach of warranty by showing that contingencies or risks at the time of the transaction did not in fact occur.
Background
MDW Holdings Limited (MDW) entered into a share purchase agreement (SPA) with the Norvills to purchase G.D. Environmental Services Limited (GDE), a waste management company. GDE's business was dependent on certain consents and permits from environmental regulators. The SPA included warranties given by the sellers at completion that they had complied with all of the relevant environmental laws and permits. It later emerged they had failed to do so.
The High Court found the Norvills had acted in breach of warranty, made actionable misrepresentations in response to due diligence requests and were guilty of deceit. Liability was accepted, but the Norvills appealed against the judge's assessment of damages.
The judge applied the general approach that damages for breach of warranty should be assessed by reference to the difference between (a) the value of the company on the basis that the warranties were true ('Warranty True') and (b) the actual value of the company given that the warranties were false ('Warranty False'). He reduced the 'Warranty False' value to reflect the reputational damage that the breaches, if known, would have caused to GDE's business and the risks of such conduct. This reduction had the result of increasing the damages payable by the Norvills.
By the time of the trial, the reputational damage to GDE had not materialised. The sellers argued that by failing to take into account what had actually happened, the judge gave MDW an unjustified windfall.
Decision
The Court of Appeal agreed with the judge's approach, finding that he was correct to disregard that no reputational damage actually occurred. The fact there was ultimately no damage to GDE's reputation did not mean that the value of the company was not reduced at the time of the transaction, as a purchaser with knowledge of the breaches would have expected to pay less for the company.
The Court of Appeal held that, in general, when assessing damages, events subsequent to the purchase cannot affect the value of the shares at the time of the transaction. In reaching its decision, the court drew a distinction between cases of actual breach and anticipatory breach. In cases of anticipatory breach...
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