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Nelson Honey & Marketing (NZ) Limited v Pureality Trading Company Limited [2024] NZCA 276 (27 June 2024)
Last Updated: 1 July 2024
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF NEW
ZEALANDI
TE KŌTI PĪRA O AOTEAROA
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BETWEEN
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NELSON HONEY & MARKETING (NZ) LIMITED Appellant
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AND
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PUREALITY TRADING COMPANY LIMITED First Respondent
GRACE
GU Second Respondent
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Hearing:
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25 September 2023
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Court:
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Cooper P, Palmer and Jagose JJ
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Counsel:
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J T Burley and M C Staines for Appellant G D Pearson and J K Holt
for First and Second Respondents
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Judgment:
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27 June 2024 at 11.00 am
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JUDGMENT OF THE COURT
A The appeal is
dismissed.
- The
appellant must pay the respondents one set of costs for a standard appeal on a
band A basis and usual disbursements.
____________________________________________________________________
REASONS OF THE COURT
(Given by Cooper P)
Table of Contents
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Para No
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Introduction
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Background facts
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High Court judgment
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Breach of contract
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Restitutionary claims
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Negligence
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Outcome
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The appeal
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Procedural issues
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Was leave required because the application was out of time?
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Were the affidavits non‑compliant?
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(1) Breach of contract
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(2) The “restitutionary” claims
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(3) The negligence claim
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Result
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Introduction
- [1] Nelson
Honey & Marketing (NZ) Ltd (NHM) appeals against a judgment of
Associate Judge Johnston granting summary judgment to
Pureality
Trading Company Ltd (Pureality) and Ms Grace Gu (together, the
respondents), the defendants in the
High Court.[1]
- [2] NHM appeals
on the basis that the Judge erred in concluding that the respondents had
satisfied the requirement of r 12.2(2) of
the High Court Rules 2016 to
demonstrate that none of the causes of action in NHM’s statement of claim
could succeed.
Background facts
- [3] NHM
is a manufacturer and supplier of honey and related products in New Zealand
and overseas. In April 2013, NHM sought to market
its products in the
People’s Republic of China (China). For that purpose, it engaged the
services of Ms Gu, a Chinese national
who moved to Nelson in 2009, and
lived in both Nelson and Shanghai between 2011 and 2019, before relocating to
Shanghai. Ms Gu knew
Mr Paul Le Gros, a lawyer practising in Nelson,
having worked with him in connection with her business exporting wine to China.
Mr Le Gros was the chairperson of NHM and introduced Ms Gu to the company.
The Judge found that, as a consequence of the introduction,
a complicated
business relationship developed between NHM and
Ms Gu.[2]
- [4] NHM engaged
Ms Gu to provide it with advice and assistance to facilitate its entry into the
Chinese market. The Judge observed
that it appears Ms Gu incorporated Pureality
intending it to be the vehicle through which those services would be provided.
He also
found that the terms of this consultancy agreement were never
formalised.[3] The parties had
initially discussed the possibility of a joint venture for the marketing of
NHM’s products in China, and for
that purpose Ms Gu incorporated a company
in China by the name of Beijing Kiwibird International Co Ltd
(Kiwibird). Although it
was initially intended that Kiwibird would sell
NHM’s products, and that NHM would hold shares in the company, that
arrangement
did not come to fruition. The evidence does not show to what
extent, if at all, Kiwibird traded and if so, what role it played in
the
parties’ business
relationship.[4]
- [5] Ms
Gu introduced NHM to Mr Jack Wang, who was a director and shareholder of a
company based in China called Horizon Co Ltd (Horizon).
The Judge found that
there was a proposal that NHM engage Horizon as its exclusive agent for the
marketing and sale of NHM’s
products in
China.[5] He
continued:[6]
Lengthy
negotiations followed. However, while these continued, NHM and Horizon put
agency arrangements in place. In evidence, is
what the parties both identify as
the last iteration of a draft agency agreement originally prepared by
NHM’s advisers.
- [6] We
interpolate here to note that NHM alleges that in or about March 2017, following
detailed discussions between the parties,
an agreement was reached (the Horizon
Supply Agreement), whereby NHM was to supply products to Horizon who would then
on‑sell
them in China. A written contract was prepared but not executed.
The respondents contended that the unexecuted Horizon Supply Agreement
and
anything done in respect of it were the actions of NHM and Horizon and not them.
- [7] NHM says
that, in December 2014, Horizon became an authorised distributor of NHM’s
products. From then on, orders for products
were placed with NHM on the trading
accounts of Horizon and Pureality from time to time at the direction of Ms Gu.
NHM claims it
regarded Ms Gu, Pureality and Horizon as effectively one and the
same.
- [8] The Judge
found that Horizon marketed and sold NHM’s products in China through an
online trading platform called Vipshop
International Holdings Ltd (Vipshop). Ms
Gu gave evidence that she allowed Horizon to use Pureality’s account with
Vipshop
to sell products that Horizon had purchased from NHM. Ms Gu claimed
that all of the money from the sale of products through the
Vipshop account was
paid to Horizon. This arrangement was governed by the Vipshop Supply
Agreement.
- [9] The Judge
found that:
[9] Between 2014 and 2018, orders were placed with NHM
by Mr Wang and Horizon both directly and through Ms Gu and [Pureality]. NHM
received and filled orders for a substantial amount of product — as I
understand the evidence, to the value of $8,733,094.61.
The invoices issued by
NHM were addressed to Horizon.
- [10] NHM claimed
that by March 2018, Horizon owed $1,745,873.29 in respect of products which had
been supplied to the respondents,
who sold the products in China between 2014
and 2018. NHM had not received payment for the supply of these products. The
total
sum was comprised of $1,687,619.66 recorded in NHM’s records on
Horizon’s trading account, and $58,253.63 recorded on
Pureality’s
trading account. Horizon disputed its liability for any of the amount claimed
and NHM did not proceed against
it, instead suing Pureality and Ms Gu. On the
assumption the amount was outstanding, the issue raised on the
respondents’
summary judgment application was whether Ms Gu or
Pureality, or both of them, were liable for the sum owed.
High
Court judgment
- [11] NHM
commenced its proceeding against Pureality and Ms Gu in the High Court on
23 December 2021. It pleaded six causes of action
against both respondents,
either jointly or severally, alleging: breach of contract, breach of agency
obligations, a claim for money
had and received, breach of obligations as a bare
trustee of a constructive trust, unjust enrichment and negligence. In respect
of each cause of action, damages were sought against the respondents, jointly or
severally, in the sum of $1,745,873.29.
- [12] The Judge
took the view that all the claims but breach of contract and negligence
effectively covered the same
ground.[7] Consequently, in assessing
the application for summary judgment, the Judge analysed the claim under three
heads. He considered
the issues to
be:[8]
(a) first, whether there was a contract between NHM and Ms Gu, Pureality or
both, pursuant to which NHM was entitled to recover the
sum of
$1.745 million from them;
(b) second, even if there was no such contract, whether NHM had a restitutionary
claim against Ms Gu and Pureality for the same amount;
and
(c) third, whether one or both of Ms Gu and Pureality had acted negligently,
thus entitling NHM to recover damages in that amount.
Breach of contract
- [13] NHM's
pleaded claim breach of contract included the following:
- The
principal contractual arrangement pleaded in paragraphs 4 to 16 above [the
contract between NHM and Horizon] was, in substance,
between the Plaintiff and
the Defendants ... and comprised the following
documents:
27.1 The Horizon Supply Agreement between the
plaintiff and the Second Defendant [the unexecuted agreement] to manage the
Plaintiff’s
business in China pleaded in paragraph 13.
27.2 The First Defendant’s invoices for managing the
Plaintiff’s business in China pleaded in paragraph 20.
27.3 The emails from the Second Defendant to the Plaintiff in relation to
the orders for products, for delivery of those products
to China and in relation
to payment pleaded in paragraph 20.
27.4 The VIPShop Supply Agreement pleaded in paragraphs 23 and 24 [an
agreement between Pureality and Vipshop].
- The
salient provisions of the Contract included the following express terms:
28.1 That the Plaintiff was to pay the First Defendant a monthly
fee for managing its business in China.
28.2 That the First Defendant would manage the Plaintiff’s business
in China.
28.3 That the Second Defendant would assist with the setup and management
of the Plaintiff’s business in China.
- The
Contract also included the implied term that payments received by VIPShop for
the Plaintiff’s products sold/delivered on
the VIPShop online platform
would be paid to the Plaintiff by the First Defendant direct or through Horizon
directly or on instruction
of Horizon.
- [14] The
Judge was critical of the way in which the claim for breach of contract was
pleaded for a number of reasons:[9]
(a) First, the basic allegation in para 27 of its pleading was that the contract
between NHM and Horizon (the Horizon Supply Agreement)
was
“in substance” between NHM and Pureality. The contention that
the Horizon Supply Agreement established the basis
for the alleged contractual
liability of the respondents could not take NHM very far.
(b) Second, NHM’s reference in para 28 of its pleading to a consultancy
agreement between NHM and Ms Gu and Pureality, was
distinct from the Horizon
Supply Agreement.
(c) Third, NHM’s allegation that an implied term existed in para 29 of its
pleading did not identify expressly the agreement
or contract into which the
term was to be implied.
- [15] However, as
a consequence of submissions made by Mr Burley for NHM, the Judge proceeded
on the basis that NHM’s essential
allegation was that, in the course of
dealings between NHM and the respondents, Ms Gu and Pureality had agreed to
assume liability
for any debt owed to NHM by Horizon arising under the
Horizon Supply Agreement essentially as guarantors of Horizon’s
obligations.[10]
- [16] The Judge
then analysed each of the bases upon which an agreement was alleged in the
statement of claim, finding in each case
that they were unsupported by the
evidence.[11] First, he noted it
was common ground that the Horizon Supply Agreement, relied on in para
27 of the statement of claim, had never
been executed. In any event, there was
no evidence suggesting that Ms Gu or Pureality were ever intended to be parties
to it: the
Horizon Supply Agreement produced in evidence was between
NHM and Horizon. A further difficulty was that the
Horizon Supply Agreement
relied on was apparently created in 2018,
suggesting that its terms were still being negotiated at a time when most of the
debt which
was the subject of the claim had already been
incurred.[12] The Judge concluded
the Horizon Supply Agreement “could not conceivably give rise to
contractual arrangements of the sort
contended for by NHM, so as to hold Ms Gu
or [Pureality] liable for Horizon’s
debt”.[13]
- [17] Insofar as
NHM sought to rely on invoices rendered by the respondents, in para 27.2 of
its statement of claim, the Judge found
that there was only one invoice issued
by Ms Gu, and that related to her consultancy agreement, a separate contract
only tangentially
related to the Horizon Supply
Agreement.[14] There was nothing in
the invoice which could support NHM’s contractual claim against the
respondents.[15]
- [18] As to a
further allegation in para 27.3 of the statement of claim based on
correspondence between the parties, the Judge noted
that counsel had not pursued
the allegation to any significant extent in argument. But in any event, having
reviewed the correspondence
relied on, there was nothing which would support the
existence of a contract as
alleged.[16]
- [19] Finally,
as to the Vipshop Supply Agreement, that was an agreement between Pureality and
Vipshop of which NHM admitted it was
unaware at the time it claimed Ms Gu
and Pureality had guaranteed Horizon’s
obligations.[17]
Restitutionary
claims
- [20] As
to the restitutionary claims, the Judge observed they shared a common thread
— a claim by NHM that Ms Gu and Pureality
had received the funds in
circumstances in which they were obliged to pay them to
NHM.[18] He described NHM’s
pleading in relation to this as “tentative at
best”:[19]
It was
the Plaintiff’s understanding that VIPShop paid money to Horizon for the
product sold (less commission), who [sic] then
forwarded the money to the First
Defendant for payment to the Plaintiff.
- [21] The Judge
found there was no evidence that Ms Gu or Pureality were entitled to or did
receive those monies. There was evidence
that Horizon paid “some
money” to Ms Gu or Pureality for on‑payment to NHM on a “small
number of occasions”.
However, he accepted Ms Gu’s evidence that
when this did occur, these funds were in fact paid to
NHM.[20]
Negligence
- [22] Finally,
in relation to the cause of action based in negligence, specifically
“professional negligence”, the Judge
accepted a submission made by
Mr Pearson for the respondents that the statement of claim contained “no
recognisable allegation
as to the existence of a duty of care”. Further,
no particulars were given of the circumstances allegedly giving rise to such
a
duty and there was no affidavit evidence which would support such an
allegation.[21]
- [23] The Judge
acknowledged NHM had filed some affidavit evidence asserting the existence of
commitments by Ms Gu and
Pureality.[22] However, he rejected
the evidence on the basis that the witnesses were describing events which
occurred up to nine years earlier
and the evidence was not supported, and in
fact contradicted, by the contemporaneous documentation to which the Judge had
referred.[23]
- [24] The Judge
also referred at this point to a letter written to Horizon by NHM’s then
solicitors, Morrison Mallet, dated 31
August 2020. He noted that the
letter had contained a “careful and comprehensive” description of
the basis for NHM’s
claim against
Horizon.[24] Although the letter
acknowledged the roles played by Ms Gu and Pureality, significantly, it made no
suggestion that they were liable,
whether jointly with Horizon or otherwise, for
the outstanding debit balance.[25]
The letter concluded with a demand for payment of the sum of $1.745 million,
stating that NHM had engaged lawyers in China who would
proceed to enforce the
debt against Horizon unless the outstanding sum was paid within 10
days.[26]
- [25] The Judge
considered that Morrison Mallet’s analysis of the situation was
entirely consistent with the contemporaneous
documentation which he had
reviewed.[27] In short, it appeared
that facing the very real difficulties of litigating with a party in China, NHM
had turned its attention to
Ms Gu and Pureality because they were more
accessible
targets.[28]
Outcome
- [26] The
Judge concluded that Ms Gu and Pureality had demonstrated to the necessary
standard that none of the causes of action pleaded
by NHM was reasonably
arguable. He entered summary judgment for the respondents
accordingly.[29]
The
appeal
- [27] A
judge may grant summary judgment against a plaintiff if the defendant satisfies
the court that none of the causes of action
in the plaintiff’s statement
of claim can succeed.[30]
- [28] NHM’s
argument on appeal was that summary judgment should not have been granted on the
merits and also that the judgment
had been given without regard to significant
procedural irregularities on the basis of which the application for summary
judgment
should have been declined.
Procedural issues
Was leave required because the application was out of time?
- [29] The
first complaint was that the onus should have been on the respondents to
demonstrate to the High Court that they should be
permitted to file their
application for summary judgment after the filing of the statement of defence
and the commencement of the
case management process. Mr Burley submitted
that the onus was not discharged, and further that the Judge had failed to
consider
whether or not leave should be granted.
- [30] Referring
to the approach adopted in cases such as Craig v New Zealand Guardian Trust
Co Ltd,[31] Mr Burley submitted
the Judge should have considered whether there was a satisfactory explanation
for the delay in making the application,
the merits of the case for summary
judgment, and whether there was any risk of miscarriage of justice as a result
of determining
the application at the later point in time.
- [31] In
addressing these considerations, Mr Burley noted that the respondents’
affidavits had not addressed why the application
for summary judgment was filed
out of time — the only explanation advanced was in the notice of
application for summary judgment
which asserted that the respondents required
time to investigate NHM’s claims, including NHM’s relationship with
parties
independent of the respondents. Mr Burley complained that there
was no witness or documentary evidence to support that assertion.
- [32] Mr Burley
also contended the respondents and the Judge had failed to address the criteria
for leave. While the question of whether
leave should be granted was inevitably
bound up with the merits of the application, the issue of leave should not be
treated as a
formality. Turning to the risk of miscarriage of justice, Mr
Burley submitted that discovery had not yet taken place, making any
application
for summary judgment premature, and that NHM had already incurred costs in
relation to the case management process.
- [33] In sum, Mr
Burley submitted that because the respondents had not discharged their onus to
demonstrate why leave ought to have
been granted, and the Judge erred in failing
to address and make a determination in respect of these issues, there had been a
miscarriage
of justice.
- [34] In our
view, the first procedural argument is without merit and does not reflect the
procedural history of the case after the
proceeding was commenced in the
High Court. Mr Pearson provided us with more context as to the procedural
background to the application:
(a) The statement of claim was filed on 23 December 2021 and the statement of
defence on 14 March 2022. NHM then sought an extension
of time to file a reply
to the statement of defence.
(b) On 25 March 2022, Mr Pearson agreed to the extension. At the same time, he
noted that Pureality and Ms Gu might apply for summary
judgment, but before
taking that step some evidential matters needed to be clarified.
(c) There was then a case management conference, after which
Associate Judge Johnston directed a timetable for the respondents to
file and serve the application for summary judgment. The date fixed, by
consent, was 31 May 2022.
(d) On the same day as the case management conference, Mr Pearson advised
counsel for NHM and the Court that there would be a short
delay in filing the
application. NHM took no issue with this.
(e) The application was then filed on 3 June. It included an application
for leave but, given the circumstances described above,
the delayed making of
the application had already been contemplated by the Judge in establishing the
timetable.
(f) When NHM filed its notice of opposition, on 1 July 2022, it raised the issue
of delay without acknowledging its consent to the
original timetable order.
- [35] The Judge
assessed the merits in the course of dealing with the substantive application
and, in the circumstances, they did not
require any separate consideration. We
also reject any suggestion that the procedural course followed gave rise to an
injustice.
Having regard to the order establishing the agreed timetable, we
consider a separate formal grant of leave was not required. Leave
was implicit
in the timetable order made.
Were the affidavits
non‑compliant?
- [36] The
next procedural issue is a claim that in the High Court the respondents
purported to rely on unsigned and unsworn affidavits
in support of their
application for summary judgment. Mr Burley submits that the affidavits did not
comply with r 9.73(2) and (3)
of the High Court Rules and
s 11 of the Oaths and Declarations Act 1957.
- [37] There was
evidently no attempt to raise this issue in the High Court. In fact, the Judge
specifically stated that “sworn
affidavits” had been filed and
served in support of the
application.[32] It is surprising
that the issue is raised now.
- [38] Although
the six affidavits supporting the application were apparently originally
provided in unsworn form, they were sworn before
the hearing in the
High Court. Mr Pearson pointed out that sworn copies of three of the
affidavits were included in the agreed High
Court bundle of documents: Ms
Gu’s second affidavit and two of Mr Le Gros.
- [39] Mr Pearson
addressed the affidavits alleged to be unsworn. In respect of the affidavit of
Ms Helen McEwan, Mr Pearson noted
that the affidavit had been sworn on
2 June 2022, but that he had filed the unsworn copy in the High Court
electronic bundle because
it was a clearer image and would be searchable. In
respect of Ms Gu’s first affidavit and Mr Wang’s affidavit, Mr
Pearson
submitted that the only irregularity with the affidavits was that they
were affirmed remotely and scanned and emailed to New Zealand,
due to
COVID‑19 restrictions in China at the time. He noted the issue was raised
in the High Court hearing, and the Judge
had found there was no substance to the
point.
- [40] We note
that there were sworn copies of four of the relevant affidavits in this
Court’s electronic case file, prepared
by NHM’s solicitors, but that
the index of the case on appeal misleadingly described three of these as
“undated”.
It appears that Mr Burley wished to argue that the
High Court should have given the affidavits less weight because they were
originally
provided in unsworn form. That is an argument totally without merit
given that it seems, from the record before us, that the sworn
affidavits were
in fact before the Judge. This Court should not have been troubled with this
issue.
(1) Breach of contract
- [41] With
respect to the claim based on contract, Mr Burley accepted that the pleaded
cause of action would require “amendment
and refinement” were the
substantive proceeding to take place. We are unclear as to what these
amendments and refinements
might be. Mr Burley merely contended there needed to
be further clarity on the relationships and interactions between the various
parties before the statement of claim could be reframed. He also emphasised
that there had not been discovery.
- [42] Mr
Burley did not confront the Judge’s analysis of the contractual claim as
it had been pleaded — as the Judge noted,
this pleading was based on the
Horizon Supply Agreement to which Pureality and Ms Gu were not parties.
However, Mr Burley submitted
that the relationship between NHM and the
respondents was not governed by one all‑encompassing written agreement.
Regardless
of the inadequacies in NHM’s pleading, Mr Burley submitted that
the Judge erred in finding there could not be any contract
between NHM and the
respondents. Rather, the evidence was consistent with the existence of one or
more contracts which were partially
oral and partially written. This he said
was consistent with decisions taken by the parties in a meeting in June 2016
where it had
been agreed that NHM would sell its products to Pureality, and
Pureality would in turn on‑sell products to Horizon
(the 2016
meeting).[33]
- [43] In our
view, the Horizon Supply Agreement has no bearing on the relationship between
NHM and the respondents. The parties under
it are NHM and Horizon. Horizon was
appointed as the “distributor” of NHM’s products in China.
NHM would supply
its Royal Nectar range of products to Horizon and invoice
Horizon accordingly. Horizon agreed to distribute the products and, subject
to
a dispute resolution provision, to pay for it, by either irrevocable bank letter
of credit, or cash paid to NHM at the time of
the order and before dispatch of
the products.
- [44] Clearly,
no obligations were assumed under the Agreement by Ms Gu or Pureality.
In fact, as alluded to by the
Judge,[34] cl 3.4 of the
Horizon Supply Agreement provided that during the term of the agreement,
Horizon would “not enter into any contract,
engage in any transaction, or
otherwise have any dealings, directly or indirectly, with [Pureality] in
relation to this Agreement
(without obtaining the prior written consent of
[NHM])”.
- [45] This was
clearly a draft agreement between NHM and Horizon, and in our view its terms are
inconsistent with the idea that obligations
were assumed under the agreement by
either Ms Gu or Pureality. It does not matter for present purposes that
the agreement was not
executed, since NHM pleaded it as representing the
Agreement reached. And to the extent that, as the Judge observed, it was still
in draft by the time most of the invoices the subject of the claim had been
issued to Horizon, it must be assumed that it was relied
on by NHM as
representing the Agreement it had with Horizon.
- [46] We have
already described, above at [14]–[19], the way in which the Judge dealt
with each of the allegations made in NHM’s pleading. We do not consider
that Mr Burley made
a real attempt to demonstrate that the Judge was wrong. He
was left with what was, in effect, a fallback position that the agreement
between NHM and the respondents was not governed by one all‑encompassing
written agreement.
- [47] The
difficulty with that argument is that it is completely inconsistent with the
Horizon Supply Agreement, which was produced
after ongoing discussions and
dealings, and relied on in the statement of claim. Whatever was discussed
between parties in the 2016
meeting does not appear to reflect the position
later agreed to, nor the arrangements actually implemented.
- [48] We
emphasise that the Horizon Supply Agreement was relied on in NHM’s
statement of claim “as if set out in full”.
There is no reason to
assume that it does not represent what the parties in fact agreed. And, it is
difficult to see how “part
oral, part written contracts” between NHM
and the respondents, if providing for a party other than Horizon to be
responsible
for paying for NHM’s products, could have been consistent with
the Horizon Supply Agreement as pleaded.
- [49] The
possibility that there were other agreements providing for a party other than
Horizon to be responsible for paying for NHM’s
products is also difficult
to reconcile with the fact that Horizon was the party invoiced by NHM for almost
all of the debt sought
to be recovered in the claim. Mr Burley endeavoured to
argue that a contract between Pureality and NHM was established by the fact
that
$58,235 of the $1.745 million claim had been invoiced to Pureality. Ms Gu
claimed that no invoice had been received in this
amount.
- [50] Mr Matthew
Gibson, an accountant retained by NHM, provided a report headed “Summary
of Outstanding Debt for Horizon Co
Limited”, a full copy of which was
attached to Ms Gu’s first affidavit. Mr Gibson’s report listed
invoices from
18 December 2015 to 3 May 2018, with a total value of
$1,687,619.66. Each of the invoices was addressed to Horizon. Based on these
invoices, in a paragraph headed “Summary”, Mr Gibson wrote
“[b]ased on a reconciliation of data available, we believe
that core debt
of $1,687,619.66 is outstanding between Horizon and [NHM]”. In that
report, he contended that, although he
did not appear to have a full summary of
the information, he believed that Pureality had received payment either on
behalf of Horizon
or NHM. But, in his second affidavit, Mr Gibson referred to
“a statement extracted from [NHM]’s accounting system”
which,
he said, together with supporting invoices showed the outstanding balance owed
under Pureality’s separate account with
NHM — a sum of
$58,523.63.[35]
- [51] The
respondents accept that Pureality did purchase some relatively small volumes of
products from NHM, but that these transactions
were separately documented from
NHM’s transactions with Horizon.
- [52] In respect
of the allegation Pureality owed NHM a sum of $58,523, the respondents submitted
that proposition was wrong and wholly
discredited by evidence. In his
affidavit, Mr Cropp, NHM’s principal director and majority shareholder,
said that Pureality’s
debt to NHM had been paid as at 9 September
2016. This directly contradicts the evidence of Mr Gibson of the outstanding
debt owed
by Pureality. They noted that the “statement extracted from
[NHM]’s accounting system”, referred to in Mr Gibson’s
second
affidavit, comprised a statement referring to four sales, and two tax invoices,
both dated 20 June 2016. Each of the invoices
identifies the amount outstanding
— respectively $23,724.03 and $34,529.60 — together $58,523.63.
- [53] We consider
that there is no evidential basis for Pureality or Ms Gu owing NHM a sum of
$58,523.63, let alone the full $1.745
million sum claimed. Mr Gibson’s
evidence, which appears to be an
after‑the‑event reconstruction, sits unhappily with
Mr Cropp’s evidence that Pureality
had cleared its debts with NHM as
at 9 September 2016. As he was NHM’s principal at the relevant
time, we prefer his evidence.
In any event, it is clear from the statement of
claim that the basis of NHM’s contractual claim against the respondents is
the Horizon Supply Agreement. We consider that any separate supplies to
Pureality could not have been within the ambit of that agreement.
If there is
an outstanding amount owing by Pureality, it could
be the subject of a separate claim, not affected by summary judgment on the
present claim as pleaded.
- [54] The general
position taken to determining summary judgment applications is that the Court
will refrain from attempting to resolve
genuine conflicts of evidence or
assessing the credibility of the parties’ statements in their
affidavits.[36] However, we do not
consider this to be a material dispute of fact relevant to the pleaded
contractual claim. If NHM has a claim
against Pureality for $58,523.63, it is
not the claim alleged under Horizon Supply Agreement. We do not consider there
is a hypothetical
scenario in which the contractual claim as pleaded could be
arguable.[37]
- [55] In the
circumstances, we reject the appeal insofar as it concerns the claim based on
contract.
(2) The “restitutionary” claims
- [56] The
Judge dealt together with the second to fifth causes of action, which he said
were all restitutionary in
nature.[38] As noted above, they
were based on allegations of breach of agency, money had and received, breach of
constructive trust, and unjust
enrichment. The common thread linking these
claims was a contention that Ms Gu and Pureality had received $1.745
million in circumstances
that they were obliged to pay it to NHM. We note that
Mr Burley stated the restitutionary claims were his “strongest
suit”.
- [57] The claim
based on breach of agency obligations alleged that either or both of Pureality
and Ms Gu were acting as NHM’s
agents in respect of the supply of
NHM’s products. This is plainly contrary to the documentary evidence
discussed above, which
shows that the relevant invoices were sent to Horizon,
except in those few occasions where Pureality was buying the products for
its
own purposes.
- [58] If Ms Gu
had any involvement, it appears that it was limited to providing
day‑to‑day support liaising over the placement
of orders and
communication with NHM’s Mandarin‑speaking contacts, like Mr Wang
from Horizon. She gave evidence that
she was never given any authority or
decision‑making power concerning Horizon, nor was she part of the contract
NHM negotiated
with Horizon.
- [59] Pureality
also allowed Horizon to utilise Pureality’s Vipshop account, an
arrangement necessary because Horizon did not
satisfy Chinese regulatory
controls to enable it to do so. Pursuant the Vipshop Supply Agreement, between
Pureality and Vipshop,
Horizon was able to affect sales of the NHM products
— Vipshop would buy NHM’s products, which would be supplied by
Pureality.
Ms Gu gave evidence that all money from sales was due to Horizon.
- [60] We consider
that the Vipshop arrangement cannot establish any debt on behalf of Pureality or
Ms Gu to NHM, nor did it affect
any debt owed by Horizon in respect of its
contract with NHM.
- [61] Mr Cropp
said in his affidavit that even though the NHM “had one account for
Horizon and another one for Pureality at the
same time”, he understood
that “the two companies were linked and working together to sell
[NHM]’s products in
China”. Later he said in his affidavit
that NHM had a very busy year in 2016, and Horizon’s debt to NHM also
increased
significantly over the same period, but asserted he “still
considered Horizon, [Mr Wang], and [Ms Gu] as part of the same
arrangement”.
Later again, he observed that although the
distribution authority had been granted to Horizon, “[Ms Gu] definitely
considered
herself part of that company’s business”.
- [62] We accept
that the precise nature and extent of Ms Gu’s relationship with Horizon is
not clear from the affidavits. Ms
Gu stated that neither she nor Pureality had
ever been a shareholder of Horizon; Mr Wang gave similar evidence.
Mr Cropp claimed that Ms Gu told him that she
had sold a shareholding in Horizon, but that is hearsay. In the
end, we are not persuaded that it matters, in view
of the clear evidence that Horizon, and not Pureality or Ms Gu, was the
distributor
and responsible for any sums due to NHM under the Horizon Supply
Agreement.
- [63] It is
appropriate to emphasise that before the present proceeding was commenced, NHM
claimed that the debt was the responsibility
of Horizon. Not only was that the
allegation “careful[ly] and “comprehensive[ly]” made in
Morrison Mallett’s
letter of 31 August
2020,[39] but it was also the stance
NHM adopted in correspondence with Horizon. In his email, sent on 8 August
2017, Mr Wang sought compensation
for trademark investments he claimed to have
made, and for $700,000 worth of marketing expenditure on the
NHM brand name up to the
end of 2016. In her reply of 10 August,
Ms Berryman, who was NHM’s chief executive, wrote:
- [NHM] has
continued to supply product on favourable financial terms. We’ve had
substantial uncertainty of when payment for
product sold to Horizon for VIP
would occur and the old debt would be settled.
- We have been
carrying unpaid accounts for over 18 months which have reached a very large
amount of money (NZ$1.6 million) and the
interest on this money would be very
significant if this was included as a cost.
- Both parties
agreed almost a year ago that the deal outlined under the Trademark Assignment
Agreement was a means to get historical
debts paid (>NZ$700,000). You told
me that restrictions on acquiring currency quotas was the reason that this
outstanding debt
had not been paid and that the buyback of the trademarks was a
good solution.
- [NHM] has
provided marketing support to Horizon and now for sales on VIP (however I am not
aware of the $700,000 you note below and
what it represents).
- It has been very
challenging to get information about when and how much of the unpaid accounts
will be settled for the VIP platform
in particular. We agreed to specific
promotions to support the Royal Nectar brand but until the last week we
have no information
or reporting on the costs incurred for each of these
promotions. These were to be agreed on a case by case basis. We still
don’t
know how much of the outstanding invoices relating to product sold
to Horizon on VIP will be paid. While the current balance is
>NZ$900,000 I
accept that some of this amount will be offset by promotion costs and returns
– but how much based on what
was agreed between us both?
- When we
discussed the two agreements as drafts in March, you agreed to the nature of the
relationship moving forward being one of
‘preferred distributor’ in
China. The agreement provides for preferential treatment on pricing, first
right of supply
into the China market, and support, as agreed, for promotion and
marketing etc. The draft agreement was updated to more strongly
reflect this.
You could suggest changes to the most recent draft that would work for Horizon
and this would help us understand what
you are looking
for.
This exchange, which was not copied to Ms Gu or
Pureality, is inconsistent with NHM’s present stance that the outstanding
debt
was owed by the respondents.
- [64] Mr Cropp
endeavoured to rely on the notes of the 2016 meeting, discussed above at [42]. However, the minutes of this
meeting do not lead to conclusions different from those we have already
expressed about the ongoing
nature of the relationship between the parties.
There is nothing in the minutes of the 2016 meeting which suggests that either
Ms
Gu or Pureality was regarded as owing a debt to NHM, or that the parties
envisaged they would do so.
- [65] Mr Burley
submitted that there were disputes of material fact in relation to NHM’s
restitutionary causes of action which
were simply not capable of determination
only on the affidavit evidence before the Judge.
- [66] We are
satisfied on the evidence that the Judge was right to reject NHM’s
contention that Ms Gu and Pureality acted as
agents for NHM in respect of the
supply of its products into China. He was also right to reject NHM’s
claim that they had
received and wrongly retained $1,745,873.29 (the money had
and received claim), held such a sum in trust for
NHM, or had been unjustly enriched in that amount.
All of these claims were an apparent attempt to avoid the fact that NHM had
entered
into an agreement with Horizon by creating claims against Pureality and
Ms Gu, but they related to the products supplied to and required
to be paid for
by Horizon under the Horizon Supply Agreement.
(3) The
negligence claim
- [67] NHM
asserts that Ms Gu owed it a duty of care to use her best endeavours to ensure
regular payments were made for NHM’s
products and the proceeds were
regularly paid to NHM. The genesis of this duty of care is apparently Ms
Gu’s experience in
carrying out business in China, and NHM’s
reliance on her to ensure that its products were marketed, sold and paid for in
the
Chinese market.
- [68] The simple
answer to this cause of action is once again the Horizon Supply Agreement.
Under the Agreement, Horizon was NHM’s
chosen distributor, the party with
the obligation to pay for the products sourced from NHM, and the party assuming
all risk. Ms
Gu had a consultancy agreement with NHM, but there is no basis on
which she can be regarded as having a duty of care to NHM, under
which she had a
duty effectively to ensure Horizon met its obligations to NHM.
- [69] For
these reasons we are satisfied that the Judge correctly held that NHM’s
negligence claim against Ms Gu could not succeed.
Result
- [70] The
appeal is dismissed.
- [71] The
appellant must pay the respondents one set of costs for a standard appeal on a
band A basis and usual disbursements.
Solicitors:
McVeagh Fleming, Auckland for
Appellant
LegalFocus Ltd, Nelson for First and Second Respondents
[1] Nelson Honey &
Marketing (NZ) Ltd v Pureality Trading Co Ltd
[2022] NZHC 2995 [High Court judgment].
[2] At [4].
[3] At [5].
[4] At [6].
[5] At [7].
[6] At [7].
[7] At [19].
[8] At [20].
[9] At [27].
[10] At [28].
[11] At [29]–[35].
[12] At [30].
[13] At [31].
[14] At [32].
[15] At [33].
[16] At [34].
[17] At [35].
[18] At [37].
[19] At [38].
[20] At [39].
[21] At [40].
[22] At [41].
[23] At [42].
[24] At [43]–[44].
[25] At [44].
[26] At [45].
[27] At [46].
[28] At [46].
[29] At [47].
[30] High Court Rules 2016, r
12.2(2).
[31] Craig v New Zealand
Guardian Trust Co Ltd [2023] NZHC 2058.
[32] High Court judgment, above
n 1, at [21].
[33] The meeting took place in
Nelson on 3 June 2016 attended by Mr Wang, Ms Gu, Mr Cropp, Mr Le Gros
and others. Ms Gu was bracketed
with Mr Wang as an attendee from Horizon.
Among the matters discussed at the meeting was what was described as the
“existing
debt” owed to NHM (an amount of $270,000) and
Horizon’s plans to pay it off by the end of the year.
[34] High Court judgment, above
n 1, at [30].
[35] The statement is dated 27
May 2021, so is not a contemporaneous document.
[36] Robert Osborne (ed)
McGechan on Procedure (online ed, Thomson Reuters) at [HR12.2.08].
[37] See Attorney-General v
Jones (2003) 16 PRNZ 715 (CA).
[38] High Court judgment, above
n 1, at [36].
[39] High Court judgment, above
n 1, at [43].
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