The applications for leave to amend
9Before I deal with those issues, I will deal with two applications for leave to amend that were made, indicating why I rejected one and why the other should succeed.
Application by Mr Tomkins
10Up until about the morning of the hearing, it was common ground, on the "pleadings", that the contract had been brought to an end. On Mr Bone's case, it had come to an end because he terminated it by reason of Wallalong's failure to settle on the date appointed, being an essential date. On the case for each of Mr Moylan and Mr Tomkins, the contract was terminated because, in giving the notice of termination, Mr Bone had repudiated the contract and his obligations under it, and Wallalong had accepted that repudiation.
11At the hearing, Mr Ogborne of counsel, who appeared for Mr Tomkins, applied to withdraw the assertion that the contract had been terminated by accepted repudiation, and to allege, in its place, that the contract had been abandoned. Mr Ogborne submitted that this was so because Wallalong, being on any view in breach of its obligations under the contract as at whatever was the date it purported to accept what it said was Mr Bone's repudiation, was not in a position to do so. The consequences, Mr Ogborne said, were that there could be no claim for damages; and, further, that all amounts paid under the contract should be refunded.
12Ms Cheeseman opposed the application.
13Mr Ogborne submitted that this amendment, if permitted, would not raise any fresh factual issues. That was so, he submitted, because all that Mr Tomkins sought to do was to argue that the facts that would be in evidence in any event should be given a different characterisation in law.
14I rejected the application for leave to withdraw the pleading and to amend, and said that I would give reasons for doing so in my judgment.
15Abandonment of a contract is not just a question of law. As Stephen, Mason and Jacobs JJ said in DTR Nominees Pty Ltd v Mona Homes Pty Ltd (1978) 138 CLR 423 at 434, the question is whether, on all the facts, "the parties must be regarded as having so conducted themselves as to abandon or abrogate the contract".
16It may well have been the case that Mr Ogborne wished to rely on no evidence other than that which, he was reasonably entitled to expect, would be adduced on the basis of the affidavits that were to be read, and the court book that had been prepared. But it does not follow that Ms Cheeseman would have been obliged to limit her answer to the case of abandonment in the same fashion. Had the pleading been withdrawn, and the amendment made, at an appropriate time before the hearing, it would have been open to those acting for Mr Bone to undertake further examination of the available evidentiary material, to see what there was that might be relevant to the question of abandonment. But, having regard to the time at which and way in which the question arose, they were denied the opportunity to do so.
17This is not a case where it is self-evidently clear that the case for Mr Bone must have been prepared and conducted in exactly the same way had the amendment been made. On the contrary, when one pays attention to what is involved in the concept of abandonment of a contract, it is clearly likely that further investigations would have been performed. Whether those investigations would have unturned any relevant material is a matter of speculation. But the point is that Mr Bone was denied the opportunity to undertake those investigations.
Mr Bone's application for leave to amend
18The case put by Mr Bone against the directors on their guarantees was (see the amended commercial list statement filed on 30 May 2011, para 48) that they gave their guarantees as a term of the contract but "by virtue of the deed". I set out para 48:
48By virtue of the Deed, it was a term of the Contract that:
(a)each of Moylan, Tompkins and Wilkes jointly and severally guaranteed to Bone the payment of moneys and performance of obligations by River Island pursuant to the Contract;
(b)the giving of time or other indulgence or concession to River Island, Moylan, Tompkins and Wilkes or the failure to require or enforce the payment of money due under the Contract to Bone shall not in any way prejudice or affect the obligations of River Island, Moylan, Tompkins and Wilkes;
(c)as between Bone and Moylan, Tompkins and Wilkes, each of Moylan, Tompkins and Wilkes are to be considered the principal debtor and obligor for the payment of moneys due and performance of obligations under the Contract.
19The amendment that Ms Cheeseman sought to make, in her submissions in reply, was to delete the words "it was a term of the contract that" in the chapeau to para 48.
20The application was opposed by Mr E A Walker of counsel, who appeared for Mr Moylan, and by Mr Ogborne.
21Reference was made to the very late state of the proceedings in which the application was pressed. Mr Ogborne pointed to a letter written by his instructing solicitors to the solicitors for Mr Bone shortly before the hearing, in which it was said that, on the assumption that Mr Bone's case was limited to the pleadings as they stood and the evidence comprised in the court book, Mr Tomkins would not adduce any evidence.
22Mr Walker noted that he had expressly stated that his client was answering the pleaded case which, he submitted, was a case that the guarantee arose as "a term of the Contract". It is certainly correct that Mr Walker's submissions had focused, among other things, on the absence of privity between Mr Bone on the one hand and Mr Moylan on the other under the contract for sale, either as originally made or as varied by the deed.
23Ms Cheeseman submitted that on a fair reading of para 48, bearing in mind that this was a proceeding in the commercial list, it was clear that Mr Bone was suing on the deed, either on its own or in conjunction with the contract. In any event, she submitted, there could be no real prejudice.
24I do not think that para 48 can be read in the expansive way that Ms Cheeseman suggested. As a matter of plain English, it seems to me to say that any liability that the directors may have arises under their guarantees, which guarantees were terms of the contract as it was varied by the deed. In other words, on a fair reading of para 48, I think that Mr Bone is suing the directors on guarantees given by them pursuant to the varied contract. That understanding is reinforced by the relevant wording of the deed, in so far as it purports to make the guarantee obligation a term of the varied contract. I will come to this in due course.
25However, I have real difficulty in understanding how the case for either Mr Moylan or Mr Tomkins might have been conducted differently if para 48 had always been framed in the way that Ms Cheeseman sought, by amendment, to frame it. As pleaded, the case was whether there was a contract in existence, on which the directors could be sued, that contained the guarantee obligation. That contract had been nominated as the contract for sale of land. The guarantee obligation was said to be included in the contract for sale of land, and enforceable against the directors, because of the provisions of the deed. Thus, the enforceability of the deed against the directors was a necessary element of the pleaded case.
26On the case sought to be made by the amendment, the question is whether, on the proper construction of the deed, and bearing in mind the fact that each of the directors was said to have signed sealed and delivered it, although none of them was named as a party, any liability attaches, under the deed, pursuant to the guarantee obligation.
27There was a deal of evidence as to the circumstances in which the negotiations for an extension of time, and the terms on which it might be granted, had occurred. None of that any of that evidence was relevant to the question of construction. The question is what, objectively, the parties to the litigation sought to achieve by the deed in the circumstances in which it was made, taking into account its terms, the fact that the directors were not named as parties to it, that it included a provision for them to guarantee the obligations of Wallalong, and that they signed it in their individual capacities.
28No doubt, irrelevant and thus inadmissible evidence could have been sought as to subjective intention. No doubt, probably irrelevant and probably inadmissible further evidence of the negotiations for the variation might have been adduced. But in my view, although the cases might have been conducted differently, the reality is that neither the cross-examination of Mr Bone nor the evidence sought to be adduced for Mr Moylan or Mr Tomkins (neither of whom, in the result, gave evidence) would have been any different if the pleading had been amended at some appropriate time prior to the hearing.
29I accept, of course, that the opening submissions would have been put differently. But neither Mr Walker nor Mr Ogborne submitted that he was unable to meet, at the level of principle, the case sought to be made: that liability derived directly, from the deed, and not indirectly, through the contract for sale. Indeed, Mr Walker addressed that very issue, on the basis that, contrary to his stated position, the question of the proper construction of the deed, standing by itself, was in issue. So, too, did Mr Ogborne; although he said repeatedly, and correctly, that on the case as pleaded, the real question related to the contract for sale.
30I note also, at this point, that in each of his various list responses up until the last version filed on 10 February 2012 (but apparently not served until 20 February 2012), Mr Moylan had admitted, that he was liable as a guarantor for any damage flowing from any breach of contract by Wallalong. Thus, I would infer that until shortly before the hearing, Mr Moylan prepared on the basis that he was a guarantor and that the real question was one of any liability that Wallalong might have to Mr Bone. There was no explanation of how the late change in his list response could have caused any different course to be taken in preparation which depended on a narrow and critical view of the relevant allegations in para 48 of Mr Bone's list statement.
31Again, Mr Tomkins in his list response has put in issue both whether, on the proper construction of the deed, he guaranteed Wallalong's obligations to Mr Bone and whether, on the proper construction of the contract for sale, he did so. It follows, in my view, that the issues raised by Mr Tomkins (or understood by him as arising) include whether the deed, as opposed to the contract, imposes any liability. Thus, having regard to the terms of his list response, I would infer that Mr Tomkins had prepared on the basis that liability as a guarantor was to be considered both under the deed and under the contract for sale.
32In those circumstances, I conclude that Mr Bone should have leave to amend in the manner sought. It follows that, in dealing with the issues, I will (so far as it is relevant) proceed on the basis that para 48 is shorn of the words "it was a term of the Contract that".