Slater & Gordon’s £637m Quindell case grinds towards trial


Slater & Gordon: Trial set for October

The trial of Slater & Gordon’s £637m claim over its acquisition of Quindell’s professional services division is set for October as the two sides continue also to argue over consideration still owing.

Slater & Gordon issued a claim in June 2017 for breach of warranty and/or fraudulent misrepresentation for the £637m, plus interest in damages, that it paid for the PSD.

The deal led to a downward spiral that end with the firm being taken over by its lenders and the UK arm separated from its Australian parent.

In the newly published annual report of Watchstone – as Quindell is now known – the company said: “Whilst the group believes the claim is without merit, significant resources have been, and are expected to be, incurred in the defence of the claim.

“Clearly, in the event the claim should succeed in whole or in part this would have a substantial negative impact upon the group and, at worst, could leave the group unable to settle its debts as they fall due.”

It said that, until the case was resolved, it would not be able to distribute capital to shareholders.

Having spent £2.9m on the case during the last financial year, it has increased provision for total costs to £8.2m.

The deal contained an element of deferred consideration of up to £50m in relation to future receipts arising on noise-induced hearing loss cases which were live at the time.

The sale and purchase agreement provided that Watchstone would receive 50% of the net receipts but the report said it has received nothing to date “and no agreement has been reached as to a terminal value of the NIHL assets”.

It continued: “Therefore the provisions of the sale and purchase agreement will apply to determine the amount to be paid (if any) by Slater & Gordon.

“Based on the information supplied by Slater & Gordon (which is subject to dispute by the group) and the uncertainty of the outcome of the NIHL cases, the deferred consideration has been determined as £nil on the group’s balance sheet.”

Watchstone added that the long-running investigation by the Serious Fraud Office was continuing, while there had been no further developments on the threatened, but not commenced, shareholder class action by Liverpool firm Camps, under its brand Your Legal Friend.

Last year, the Financial Reporting Council imposed discounted fines of £780,000 on one set of Quindell’s former auditors, who it said had failed to “exercise sufficient professional scepticism”, and then £3m on KPMG, its later auditors.

Slater & Gordon was also rebuked and handed an £80,000 fine for inspecting confidential client data during the due diligence that led to the acquisition.




    Readers Comments

  • Colin Poole says:

    Might be worth checking who Watchatone have as lawyers defending the case if you are journalists! Good Luck


Leave a Comment

By clicking Submit you consent to Legal Futures storing your personal data and confirm you have read our Privacy Policy and section 5 of our Terms & Conditions which deals with user-generated content. All comments will be moderated before posting.

Required fields are marked *
Email address will not be published.

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Blog


Succession (Season 5) – Santa looks to the future

It’s time for the annual Christmas blog from Nigel Wallis, consultant at Legal Futures Associate O’Connors Legal Services.


The COLP and management 12 days of Christmas checklist

Leading up to Christmas this year, it might be a quieter time to reflect on trends, issues and regulation, and how they might impact your firm.


The next wave of AI: what’s really coming in 2025

The most exciting battle in artificial intelligence isn’t unfolding in corporate labs; it’s happening in the open-source community.


Loading animation