Iconic Sports Eagle Investment v Textor: football, a $100m put option and a clarification of specific performance law

Commercial Court confirms a claimant need not be ready to perform at the contractual date if the other party has repudiated.
If a buyer of shares tells you a week before completion that he is not going to pay, do you still need to arrange to hand over the share certificates on the day? The answer, confirmed by the Commercial Court in Iconic Sports Eagle Investment LLC v John Textor [2026] EWHC 1498 (Comm), is no, and that conclusion has implications reaching well beyond the football industry dispute at the heart of the case.
The background involves a put option agreement under which Iconic, a minority investor in Eagle Football Holdings, was entitled to sell its shareholding back to John Textor, the majority shareholder and CEO whose portfolio includes Olympique Lyonnais and Botafogo FR. The option price exceeded US$100 million. Textor repudiated the agreement on 15 July 2024, some ten days before the repayment date. Iconic declined to accept the repudiation and instead sought specific performance. The difficulty it faced was that, having received unequivocal notice that Textor was not going to perform, it had not gone through the formalities of preparing the share transfer documentation required on its side of the deal. A share certificate that turned out to have been in Textor's possession all along was disclosed only in January 2026, attached to his own counsel's skeleton argument the week before a Court of Appeal hearing.
The question remitted to the Commercial Court by the Court of Appeal was whether Iconic could still claim specific performance in those circumstances, or whether its failure to be ready to perform on the contractual repayment date was fatal to its claim.
The answer turns on a passage that has appeared in Snell's Equity for over 40 years. In essence, Snell states that where a defendant has repudiated and the claimant has elected to keep the contract alive, the claimant need not show that it was in a position to complete during the period between the repudiation and the date of any order for specific performance, provided it can demonstrate readiness at the date when the order is made.
Textor argued that this principle was inconsistent with the modern law on repudiatory breach as established by the House of Lords in The Simona [1989]: if you keep a contract alive after repudiation, it remains alive for all purposes and you remain bound by all your own obligations. He argued Snell was simply wrong. Ms Lesley Anderson KC, sitting as a Deputy Judge, rejected that submission comprehensively. The flaw in the argument, she held, is that it conflates contract law with the law of equitable remedies. The question of whether a party was in breach of its contractual obligations is entirely separate from the question of whether the court should exercise its discretion to grant specific performance. Specific performance is a flexible, equitable remedy; it does not track contractual obligations in a mechanical way.
The authority in support of this position is more extensive than might initially appear. Davis v Spalding (1974), the case cited in the Snell footnote, directly supports the principle. It has been followed by English first instance judges including in Grant v Lapid Developments (1996) and Aymes International v Nutrition 4U (2023), and has been cited with approval at appellate level in Australia and by Lord Millett in the Hong Kong Court of Final Appeal. The deputy judge found no case in which Davis had been doubted.
The practical illustration offered by Iconic's counsel makes the point well. If a vendor repudiates a house sale a month before completion, the buyer can hardly be expected to have bank funds ready on the contracted date knowing performance will never take place. A rule requiring it would bar purchasers from specific performance for purely technical reasons unconnected with any genuine failure of intent or capacity.
This is not a narrow decision on esoteric facts. Any case involving an unaccepted repudiation, where the innocent party seeks specific performance rather than damages, now has clearer authority for the proposition that the relevant date for assessing readiness to perform is the date of the court order, not the contractual completion date. That is a meaningful clarification, and one that has been quietly supported by the textbooks for decades without ever being squarely tested at this level.
Whether Iconic is now actually ready and willing to complete remains to be determined. But after this judgement, the legal route to that determination is considerably clearer.












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