37 This allegation proceeded on the basis that the appellants would not have acquired the shares and options, in the case of the first appellant as contracting party with the respondent and in the case of the second and third appellants as contracting parties with the first appellant, had they (meaning Mr Lebbon) been aware of the status of the 14,976,825 shares. The "loss from Peptech investment" was the amount paid in consideration for the acquisition of the shares and options, less the proceeds of sale of the shares and options so acquired, plus costs and expenses and plus compensation for being unable to put the amount paid to some other profitable use.
38 The appellants' case as pleaded was that, absent the misleading or deceptive conduct, they would not have entered into any transaction or transactions of acquisition of shares or options with the respondent (in the case of the first appellant) or with the first appellant (in the case of the second and third appellants). It was not a case that, absent the misleading or deceptive conduct, they would have entered into some other transaction or transactions of acquisition of the shares and options, a transaction or transactions at a different price or different prices or otherwise on different terms. It was a "no transaction" case, not a "different transaction" case.
39 In his witness statement dated 4 February 1999, which he adopted when giving evidence as true and correct to the best of his knowledge and belief, Mr Lebbon took a no transaction position. He said -
"103. Had I known on 31 July 1997 that some 11% of the issued ordinary shares of Peptech comprised restricted securities which could not be traded for twelve months after date of issue and were soon after the date of the First Agreement to be freed from restrictions and freely tradeable, I would not have entered into the First Agreement as it could be expected that those facts would have the effect of putting downward pressure on the price of the Peptech shares for some time before and after the date of lifting of the restriction on trading because of the apprehension or reality, or both, of the sale of quantities of shares following the lifting of the restriction.
104. Had I known on 25 September 1997 that at the date of the First Agreement some 11% of the issued ordinary shares of Peptech comprised restricted securities which could not be traded for twelve months after date of issue and were soon after the date of the First Agreement to be freed from restrictions and freely tradeable, which had not been disclosed to me, I would not have entered into the Second Agreement."
40 However, this position was not maintained in Mr Lebbon's cross-examination.
41 In the beginning Mr Lebbon took the same no transaction position -
"Q. Can I suggest to you that if you had known of shares being held in escrow before you made the investment on 31 July, you also would have thought nothing of it.
A. Absolutely not, I would not have done the investment; it would have been so fundamental to the transaction."
42 There was then further cross-examination about the significance to Mr Lebbon of the status of the 14,976,825 shares as restricted securities. The significance was "that if those restricted securities were released onto the market or some of them, that could have the effect of dampening the price". His attention was drawn to the evidence in his witness statement "that if you had known that there was [sic] restricted securities in Peptech you wouldn't have proceeded with this transaction", and the effect of the following cross-examination was in substance that the market price would take account of the dampening effect of a known future release from escrow of restricted securities and that the significance of the dampening effect depended on when the investor contemplated a sale of the investment. Hence, Mr Lebbon agreed, when shares will come out of escrow will influence the investor "as to what point they enter into a transaction" because "commercially you would wait … until that had occurred before you took a placement". With specific reference to options exercisable over a long period after the date on which the securities would come out of escrow, it affected the price at which one would take the options.
43 That led to the following evidence -
"Q. You say, do you, that if you had known that there were restricted securities which might be released on to the market in late 1997 in Peptech that you would have bargained for some different option price, do you?
A. If I had proceeded with the deal I would have looked at a different price, yes.
Q. What work would you have done to try and work out what price would be appropriate?
A. Good question. I'm not sure offhand. There would be a number of things I would have done, I think.
HIS HONOUR: Q. One would have been to get Mr Story on the job?
A. Yes, your Honour, but this issue then is not just about fundamental values, which is what Mr Story's report is about, it is about pricing mechanisms and how the market might react. My inclination ---
Q. You are talking about the fact that Mr Story's exercise wouldn't know the results of it?
A. Certainly if I had proceeded with the transaction or contemplation of the transaction I would still have had a report done, but my initial reaction would be that I would not have done the transaction at that point of time. I would have waited to see the effects of this for the price to have weakened and then negotiated something.
…
SIMPKINS: Q. If immediately prior to entry into the allotment agreement you had been told that there were shares, namely the vendor's securities issued upon the acquisition of Peptech UK which were held in escrow which would be released in September 1997, you say, do you, that would have influenced your decision in relation to the options?
A. Yes.
Q. By reference to the price you would have been prepared to pay for the options?
A. And by reference to whether or not I would have gone ahead with the deal full stop.
…
SIMPKINS: Q. What you say you would have wanted the opportunity to do is to have the advantage of seeing whether any of the shares held in escrow were placed on to the market?
A. I would have wanted to see what the effect on the share price was, whether those shares, those escrow shares were dealt through the market or placed out through others or whatever."
44 A little later Mr Lebbon's evidence went -
"Q. You now understand, you say, for the first time after the events that the shares were held in escrow and came available to be listed and sold on market in early September of 1997?
A. I now understand that the shares became available for listing on 22 September, yes.
Q. Your concern, you say, is that if you had known of that fact you would have wished to observe how the market behaved for a period of some months after that?
A. For a period of time before and after that, yes.
Q. What's the relevance of the period of time before?
A. To see if the - if something is going to take place on a certain date sometimes there is a softening before that and then there is a softening after it and it restores itself. It depends on the stock as to whether the U starts here and goes here or starts before and goes out. One would look at the market dynamics.
Q. You contemplated, did you, that if this circumstance was known to the market, that is, that there were restricted securities being released from escrow conditions in September 1997, that for some period of time prior to that date the market would react adversely to that news by depressing the price?
A. Depending on the stock. Each stock is different. It is not unusual for a stock to exhibit some weakness immediately prior and to exhibit a weakness immediately after for a period of time. It does vary from stock to stock as to the length of time and how much before and after that occurs.
HIS HONOUR: Q. And it would depend on who held the restricted shares too, I would have thought?
A. And the quantum of them, how quickly they sold, the manner in which they sold.
Q. The intention of the holders?
A. It is a fairly complex set of issues you deal with. There's no precise answer, which is why you would wait until the effects were known. This was a transaction where there was risk involved and significant risk, and I was putting in a significant amount of money of my own, that had I been aware of the risks I would have waited. You know the saying you can go broke making a profit, but nobody went broke not doing a deal. I would have waited.
…
Q. But if you had not known, I want to come to some communications which suggest you did know, but if you had not known that there were restricted securities but were informed immediately before the allotment agreement that there were, you say, do you, that you would have forgone the opportunity to enter into this arrangement and deferred reflecting upon it for some number of months to wait and see what the market did?
A. In hindsight, if you asked me that question what would I have done, I believe I would have waited.
Q. And you would have waited because you didn't believe that the market was aware that there were shares held in escrow; is that right?
A. No, I would have waited because I would have seen the risk in the transaction being increased dramatically."
45 These passages show a transition from not going ahead with the particular transaction at the time to either going ahead with a different transaction or transactions but looking at a different price or more likely waiting to see what happened when the 14,976,825 shares could be traded after the expiry of the escrow periods. That left open that there would have been a different transaction or different transactions, either in July-August 1997 or later in 1997. Mr Lebbon did not give evidence that he would not have gone ahead with any transaction in the knowledge of the status of the 14,976,825 shares and in the state of the market later in 1997. But he did not give any evidence of a transaction or transactions he would or might have gone ahead with or sought to go ahead with in the knowledge of the status of the 14,976,825 shares and in the state of the market later in 1997.