![]() |
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | |
England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Trevellyan Developments Ltd v Schivaharan [2001] EWCA Civ 356 (8 March 2001) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2001/356.html Cite as: [2001] EWCA Civ 356 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM CENTRAL LONDON COUNTY COURT
(HIS HONOUR JUDGE MEDAWAR)
Strand London WC2 Thursday, 8th March 2001 |
||
B e f o r e :
and
LORD JUSTICE JONATHAN PARKER
____________________
TREVELLYAN DEVELOPMENTS LTD | ||
- v - | ||
KANAPATHIPILLAI SCHIVAHARAN |
____________________
Smith Bernal Reporting Limited
180 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2HD
Telephone No: 0171-421 4040 Fax No: 0171-831 8838
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR LAWRENCE JONES (instructed by England Palmer, 353 City road, London EC1V 1LR) appeared on behalf of the Respondent
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Thursday, 8th March 2001
"6. The result of our test purchases showed that although the Defendant did not sell exactly the same items like for like as the stock which were in the Plaintiff's shop, he sold the same things. When I visited his shop I saw on display stock which were identical to the Plaintiff's stock, although the Defendant sold other items as well. The items were priced up with identical labels and packed in identical carrier bags.
7. The Defendant also had identical suppliers, in some instances as the Plaintiff's suppliers. An example of such suppliers was D & D Snack Foods who supplied items such as Red Mill crisps and snacks and Primula dips. These were products peculiar to D & D Snack Foods in the South london area and, I was told, the dips were being consumer tested on the market in petrol stations. Furthermore, two items purchased by Mr Sabaratnam Sivagurunathan, the Foxes mints and Bassetts Liquorice Allsorts were Jet promotion products which the defendant confessed to taking fron the petrol station shop and which I believe were not available for resale elsewhere as they were supplied to the Plaintiffs for promotional purposes and not resale."
"Matters came to a head when former employees at the petrol station spoke of what was going on and provided Mr Trevellyan with information which fuelled his suspicions and went some way to explain what he considered to be a diminishing trading record of the petrol station shop by assessing the losses to the claimant over the period in question and in particular, the three months up to 30th June 1996. Mr Trevellyan has concluded that some £25,000 has been lost.
The basis for his calculation is the comparison with what might be expected based on audited returns of other petrol stations within the group and a comparison with how well this petrol station shop was doing before and after the period during which the defendant was largely devoted to his own interests and business between September 1995 to June 1996.
Mr Trevellyan, who is by profession an accountant, is criticised for not adducing this evidence through an independent accountant, although the defendant neither used an accountant through whom to challenge the claimant's evidence, nor challenged the underlying information upon which calculations of loss were made. The defendant has not made full disclosure of the accounts relating to his own business, let alone all of the invoices and other documents upon which they might have been produced. Test purchases made at the shop on 2nd August 1996 by Mr Shivagrunata, and Mrs Dunning, and set out in a schedule marked LJPT1, annexed to Mr Trevellyan's supplemental witness statement, dated 13th August 1998, relating to items also stocked at the petrol station shop are significant since amongst the invoices which have been disclosed by the defendant there are invoices which relate to the purchase of some such items, but no invoices relating to the purchase of some of the items, such as the Panbar snacks, which were exclusive to the petrol station. It leads to the inference that he was taking some stock from the petrol station shop and selling it as if his own stock in his shop. This would, as I find, account for some of the discrepancies.
Amongst the test purchases were, as I find, items of the claimant's stock intended to be part of free promotions to the petrol station customers for which the claimants have had to pay.
The defendant was interviewed by Mr Trevellyan in the presence of Mr McDonald on 2nd August 1999. The interview was recorded without the knowledge of the defendant, but, as I have said, I am satisfied that he was not unlawfully detained. During the course of it Mr Trevellyan showed his exasperation with the defendant and exerted considerable pressure on him to admit what Mr Trevellyan believed he had done. He made some admissions, but denied having taken any money or having stolen anything. He made some admissions in writing which he says were made under duress. These admissions are that he has confirmed using the complainant's telephone without authority in connection with his shop for which he is liable to pay. Although he now denies taking promotion stock, as I have said, I find that he did do so and he has confirmed taking unsold newspapers from his shop -- previously he described it as 'his friend's shop' -- to the petrol station without permission. There is some evidence that items from the petrol station were being sold at his shop.
He has also admitted employing someone at the petrol station, who was in receipt of family credit, or income support, but that is irrelevant so far as this enquiry is concerned.
His written admissions concluded with what is said to be an agreement to repay in respect of stock taken. For three months he is to repay £500 on the first of each month and for the following nine months £750 per month, in all amounting to £8,250. The document concludes with the words:
'Lance, if you think I steal through you, I am very sorry and apologise to you for my....'
Then the defendant says the next word is 'your', but it does not seem to be, and then it ends up with:
'.... all back losses.'
These admissions were made at a time when the defendant was under considerable pressure. They amount to little more than an admission that if there were stock losses for which he could be held responsible he would make up any financial loss suffered by the claimants.
Save for the matters mentioned, there is no direct evidence of stock losses and it is difficult to be certain about the extent of financial loss to the claimants on the evidence adduced. The defendant was plainly neglecting his duties and his dismissal was plainly justified. It does not follow that in the absence of effect by him he is to be held responsible to make up the entire estimated loss of profit.
I am satisfied that he was operating a number of what might be described as 'fiddles' which did cause loss to the claimants. These were the telephone, the return of unsold newspapers through the petrol station shop, and the sale of Jet promotion items in his shop paid for by the claimants. Over and above this it is also more probable than not that some of the claimant's stock were siphoned off and sold as if his own stock.
Taking as an example the position as regards newspapers and magazines, it cannot simply be a coincidence that during the period in question there was a dramatic unexplained fall in the profit from their sale at the petrol station shop. It is more probable than not that the defendant was causing this loss by what he was doing as evidenced by his returning his own unsold newspapers, etcetera, through the petrol station. This saved him from loss because he did not have the benefit of a sale or return agreement for his shop and it deprived the claimants of profit, if not to the full extent of the unexplained difference of £4,843.18, then to some substantial sum approaching this amount.
No great weight could normally, or would normally, be attached to admissions made under duress. It is plain that the defendant was under great pressure from Mr Trevellyan and Mr McDonald on 2nd August 1996. However, what the defendant has said has frequently been inconsistent. He has often lied and told half truths when comparing what he said in one statement or another. For example, the pleadings.
There is sufficient evidence in the matters I have referred to to conclude, as I do, that in the interview he was offering to repay money, the loss to the claimants of which he was admitting was due to him and what he claims. He makes proposals for repayment. He is not agreeing the figures put forward by Mr Trevellyan, that is to say, the £25,000, or thereabouts. There comes a time in the interview when he says:
'If I make more money, then I will pay you more money, but you have to come down.'
Mr Trevellyan goes on to accept the defendant's offer of £500 for each of three months. Under some pressure the defendant then agrees to pay £750 for each of the next nine months, as I have said £8,250 in all."
"The claimants are clearly entitled to damages. How are these to be assessed? I am unable to accept the gross margin deficiency as sufficiently establishing the loss attributable to the defendant's activities. Based on the established losses caused in relation to newspapers, and the other items that I have found proved, it is probable that some considerable part of the gross margin deficiency was caused by the defendant. There is no actual proof of the extent of financial loss, but it is unlikely to have been less than £10,000 or two-fifths of the deficiency identified.
Giving the defendant the benefit of the doubt as to the extent of the loss caused by him, I have come to the conclusion that the fair way to assess the damages is to fix them in the sum that he was prepared to admit liability to repay, that is to say £8,250. I do that, not simply in reliance on his admissions, but on the assessment of the evidence relating to what he did and the probable minimal financial effect that that would at least have on the claimants. Accordingly there will be judgment for £8,250 and the counterclaim is dismissed."
"The more serious the allegation the more cogent is the evidence required to overcome the unlikelihood of what is alleged and thus to prove it."
"It is fair to say that the judge took an extremely poor view of the applicant's credibility as a witness. Insofar as the applicant's defence depended upon his own evidence, the judge rejected it. He was clearly entitled so to do so. The judge saw and heard the applicant at a trial. He was in a much better position that an appellate court would be to assess whether the applicant was telling the truth. There is to my mind no real prospect that this Court would think it right to differ from the judge in that respect."
"The more serious the allegation the more cogent the evidence."
"During the six months ended March 1996 Mr Trevellyan and myself had completed profitability reviews of various categories of stock, in particular, newspapers, magazines and the non VAT category. Mr Trevellyan told me on several occasions that he did not understand the newspaper sales results and he suspected the returns were not being processed correctly.
Various spot checks were undertaken to confirm the accuracy of the returns. Overall the gross margin performance of the shop began to deteriorate and in the quarter ended June 1996 almost no gross profit was made. Instead of 17% - 18% the actual gross margin was less than 1%."
"Unfortunately, I do not have the video tapes themselves as these belong with the police. However, I do have the Plaintiff's security videos, which show, amongst other things:
[I leave out (a) and (b) and go to (c)]
(c) The Defendant driving a white Rascal van.
(d) The Defendant moving various boxes from the Jet petrol station out of sight to either his van or his car."
"Q. In any event you say that you saw him [that is the appellant] taking in a white paper bag which you initially thought contained cigarettes.
A. Which I photographed, yes.
Q. You cannot be sure that it contained cigarettes?
A. Let us put it this way. The answer to your question is no. I cannot be 100% sure, but if you remember what a carton of cigarettes looks like. It is long and oblong and the corners stick out about a foot from the bottom of the bag. If they were invoices they would bend and be shapeless."
"I observed this particular incident which I photographed, but what is more the video evidence shows [the appellant] taking boxes of something out of the premises at 11 or 12 o'clock at night when there were no tanker deliveries. Again, you know, when we get to cross-examination no doubt I will have an opportunity to put that evidence to [the appellant] and ask him what he was doing.
Q. But you did not see what was in the boxes?
A. The truth is, no. The evidence does show things being taken off the shelves and placed in the boxes, but from the angle of the camera, as the boxes leave the front door you cannot see inside the boxes."
"...the more serious the allegation the less likely it is that the event occurred and, hence, the stronger should be the evidence before the court concludes that the allegation is established on the balance of probability. Fraud is usually less likely than negligence."
"The more serious the allegation the more cogent is the evidence required to overcome the unlikelihood of what is alleged and thus to prove it."
"This approach also provides a means by which the balance of probability standard can accommodate one's instinctive feeling that even in civil proceedings a court should be more sure before finding serious allegations proved than when deciding less serious or trivial matters."