Home News CCJ dismisses Blairmont Rice Investments’ appeal
– affirms orders of Guyana’s Court of Appeal
In a judgment rendered on Friday, the Caribbean Court of Justice (CCJ) has dismissed an appeal from Guyana in the matter of Blairmont Rice Investments Inc v Kayman Sankar Investments Ltd, Kayman Sankar and Company Ltd, and Beni Sankar. In so doing, the CCJ has affirmed the orders of the Court of Appeal.
The regional court heard the appeal on January 26, 2021.
Blairmont Rice Investments Inc (the “purchaser”) and Kayman Sankar Investments Ltd, Kayman Sankar, and Company Ltd, and Beni Sankar (the “vendors”) entered into three contracts in December 2006 for the purchase and sale of lands in Von Better, Berbice.
At the time, the parties understood that the purchase price was to be used to satisfy the vendors’ debt which was owed to the bank. Payment of the purchase price was spread over nine years with twice-yearly instalments which were to be paid in June and December of each year.
The purchaser did not pay either of its installments for the year 2010, even though the vendors reminded that payments were due.
As a result, by letter dated January 17, 2011, the vendors communicated to the purchaser that they accepted that the contracts were terminated and would now treat the commercial relationship between the parties as being over.
The purchaser did not accept that the contracts were terminated, and this prompted the vendors to take legal action. At the time when legal action began, the purchaser had been struck off the register of companies.
The High Court decided in favour of the vendors, and the purchaser appealed to the Court of Appeal. That court decided that the payment clause was an “essential” or very important term, and a breach (or failure to comply) with it went to the heart of the contract, causing the contract to be terminated.
The purchaser then appealed to the CCJ, which determined that there were two issues to be addressed. They are: was the purchaser’s failure to make payment in 2010 so serious a breach as to allow the vendors to terminate the contracts? And considering that the purchaser was a company that had been struck off the register of companies, could it defend itself legally?
The CCJ, in a majority judgment delivered by Justice Andrew Burgess, determined that the payment clause was an “innominate” or “intermediate” term (this is a term in a contract that could be breached in either a minor or significant way). In coming to this decision, the Court said the question to be asked was what a reasonable person would have understood the parties to mean by use of the language in the payment clause.
In considering the language, it was clear there was a variety of consequences that could be caused by the failure to make the payments. Therefore, the payment clause was an “innominate” or “intermediate” term.
The CCJ then looked at the consequence of the breach and decided that it was a significant one, because it deprived the vendors of the whole benefit of the agreements. The benefit was that the payments be made in a timely manner to prevent the vendors from losing their properties to the bank.
Given the significance of the breach, the vendors could rightly terminate the contracts.
As to the second issue, the Court decided that a company that has been struck off the companies’ register is not to be treated as if it no longer exists in law; rather, it is to be treated as if its personality in law is suspended.
Company Law in Guyana ensures that companies that are struck off the register cannot escape their liabilities, and therefore a person could bring legal action against a struck-off company so as to hold it accountable.
For this reason, the Court decided that the purchaser could defend the action brought against it by the vendors. The Court said this interpretation of the law is one that is rational, reasonable and fair.
Justice Peter Jamadar, in a concurring judgment, added that innominate or intermediate terms were part of Caribbean Contract Law even though this had not been widely explored in regional case law. He said the classification of terms as “innominate” allows for flexibility and advances the development of Caribbean Law.
Justice Jamadar agreed that the payment clause was an innominate term, and breach of it made the central purpose, i.e., the satisfaction of the Vendor’s indebtedness to the bank, unrealisable.
President Justice Adrian Saunders agreed with the result reached by the majority on the first issue, but, in his view, the payment clause was a condition (meaning a term of a contract that is so significant or important that it goes to the “heart” of the contract).
In relation to the striking off the register issue, President Saunders disagreed with the majority. He found that a struck-off company could not ordinarily bring a legal action, or have a legal action brought against it. However, section 488 of the Companies Act created an exception, where a person could enforce a liability against a struck-off company once that liability existed while the company was registered.
Section 487(5) of the Companies Act allowed a person with such a claim of an existing liability against a struck-off company to have that company restored to bring legal action against it. The President found that, in the present case, the legal action brought was not an existing liability; rather, it was a case to determine whether a liability even existed, and so the legal action could not fall under the exception created by section 488. The President concluded that the proceedings had no legal effect.
The Court, therefore, decided that Blairmont Rice Investments Inc had standing, and dismissed the appeal, thereby affirming the orders of the Court of Appeal. The Court also ordered that Blairmont Rice Investments Inc pay the vendors’ basic costs of $ 1,750,250.
Attorneys-at-law Jamela Ali SC, Sanjeev Datadin, and Donavan Rangiah appeared for Blairmont Rice Investments Inc, while Juman-Yassin SC and Teni Housty appeared for the vendors.