5 juillet 2024
Disputes Quick Read – 13 de 105 Publications
What constitutes "reasonable detail" in a notice of a claim for breach of warranty under a share purchase agreement (SPA)? There have been several judgments in recent years grappling with that question, the most recent of which was the Court of Appeal's decision in Drax Smart Generation Holdco Ltd v Scottish Power Retail Holdings Ltd [2024] EWCA Civ 477.
In that case, the Court of Appeal held that the requirement in the notice of claims clause to state the nature of the claim in reasonable detail did not require the notifying party to set out the precise basis on which damages were claimed. The judgment highlighted the nuances in interpreting 'reasonable detail' required for such notices, balancing technical compliance against commercial realities and purposes.
A contractual notice of claim should not be a trap to invalidate legitimate claims through technicalities. The Court emphasised that such notices do not need to spell out every aspect with detailed specificity, especially if such detail would not serve any commercial purpose or aid in assessing liability. The purpose of a notice clause within an SPA is to allow the recipient of the notice to investigate the claim and take legal advice.
Lord Justice Males, who delivered the leading judgment, confirmed: "While a seller's interest will always be to knock the claim out if it can on the technical ground that the notice is insufficient, courts should not interpret such clauses as imposing requirements which serve no real commercial purpose unless compelled to do so by the language of the clause." This, of course, contains similar reasoning to the Court of Appeal's decision a few years ago in Dodika Ltd & Ors v United Luck Group Holdings Ltd [2021] EWCA Civ 638.
The precise requirements of a notice will depend on the terms agreed by the parties under the SPA, but seeking to draw together some themes on the preparation of notices, key considerations should include:
The judgment in Drax suggests that a claimant providing a notice of claim may be afforded some leeway where the recipient argues that a notice is insufficiently detailed as long as enough information is provided to fulfil the commercial purpose of the notification by allowing recipients to assess the claim. However, each case will turn on its facts, and the key point is that a notice of claim should be prepared in accordance with the notice provisions contained within the SPA.
If you'd like to know more about what this might mean for you or your business, reach out to a member of our Disputes and Investigations team.
Andrew Howell and Natalia Faekova unpack an extraordinary case. A Mexican billionaire's strong fraud claim. Former Israeli intelligence operatives hired to target the defendant's solicitor. Secret recordings over wine and dinner. A judge who called it 'anathema to civil litigation' but may have been 'too lenient'.
19 novembre 2025
During an LSLA lecture on transparency and open justice, Mrs Justice Cockerill, recently appointed as Deputy Head of Civil Justice, outlined a pilot practice direction (PD) that will place select court documents squarely in the public domain via a new, public-facing side of the electronic court file (CE-File).
21 octobre 2025
11 juin 2025
30 janvier 2025
6 décembre 2024
14 novembre 2024
14 novembre 2024
15 octobre 2024
14 décembre 2023
13 décembre 2023
17 octobre 2023
4 août 2023
21 juillet 2023
10 juillet 2023
1 juin 2023
20 avril 2023
8 mars 2023
14 février 2023
13 février 2023
8 février 2023
19 janvier 2023
3 octobre 2022
22 septembre 2022
9 août 2022
25 juillet 2022
6 juillet 2022
Welcome news for those pursuing fraud claims in the English Courts
28 juillet 2022
27 juillet 2022
29 juillet 2022
17 juin 2022
13 juin 2022
26 mai 2022
31 mai 2022
4 avril 2022
5 avril 2022
31 mars 2022
21 septembre 2021
13 septembre 2021
6 septembre 2021
2 août 2021
21 juillet 2021
15 juillet 2021
5 mai 2021
21 avril 2021
31 mars 2021
26 février 2021
24 février 2021
20 janvier 2021
12 janvier 2021
23 novembre 2020
16 octobre 2020
23 septembre 2020
7 octobre 2020
15 avril 2020
27 avril 2020
21 avril 2020
2 juin 2020
16 juin 2020
9 juillet 2020
21 juillet 2020
3 décembre 2021
24 novembre 2021
8 octobre 2021
10 janvier 2022
20 janvier 2022
22 mars 2022
7 avril 2022