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Ross River Ltd and another v Waveley commercial Ltd and others

Joint venture – Commercial development – Fiduciary duty – Appellants contributing finance to acquire land for commercial development by respondent’s company pursuant to joint venture agreement providing for share of profit – Whether respondent owing fiduciary duties to appellants – Whether breaching duty by causing company to make payments out of joint venture revenues otherwise than as proper expense of development – Respondent held not to be liable – Appeal allowed


In 2004, the appellants agreed to participate in a project for a commercial development on land in Ampthill, Bedfordshire, pursuant to a joint venture agreement (JVA) with a company incorporated for that purpose by the respondent and another. Pursuant to the JVA, the appellants were to finance the acquisition of a site needed for the project on agreed terms.
The company was to be responsible for the conduct of the development and the payment of all related fees and expenses. The objectives of the joint venture included maximising the profits arising from the development and sharing in those profits in the manner provided by the agreement at the earliest practicable time. There was a proviso that no party should receive development profits in advance of the other and that such profits should be distributed as soon as practicable following receipt. A later side agreement made further provision for the claimants’ entitlement to part of the net profits of the project.
The development was completed in 2007 but its realisation took some time and its last elements were not sold until 2011. Meanwhile, in 2008, the appellants became dissatisfied with the conduct of the project. They brought proceedings against the respondents in which they sought a determination of the amount of the net profit and alleged a breach of fiduciary duties by the making of improper payments. By then, the first respondent was insolvent and was being supported financially by the second respondent, such that a judgment against it was unlikely to be of any real value. The appellants’ primary case was that the second respondent was in breach of fiduciary duties that he owed to them in his personal capacity.
In the court below, the judge found that: (i) the net profits were more than £1.2m and that the appellants’ share was nearly £1.044m; (ii) the first and second respondents each owed fiduciary duties to the appellants to act in good faith and not to do anything in relation to the handling of the joint venture revenues that favoured the first respondent to the disadvantage of the appellants; but (iii) the making of substantial payments to parties connected with the respondents, even if not made for joint venture purposes, gave rise to no entitlement to equitable compensation since there was no evidence that the respondents could reasonably have foreseen at the time that the making of those payments would jeopardise the first respondent’s ability to pay the claimants’ net profit entitlement. He rejected the appellants’ submission that it was a breach of duty for the first respondent to incur costs in defending the proceedings, further dissipating the funds available to satisfy its liabilities to the appellants, in circumstances where the primary claim was against the second respondent; he held that the first respondent was entitled to defend the proceedings brought against it. The appellants appealed. The second respondent cross-appealed, challenging the finding that he owed fiduciary duties.

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