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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Singh v Singh [2002] EWCA Civ 992 (28 June 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2002/992.html Cite as: [2002] EWCA Civ 992 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM DERBY COUNTY COURT
(HIS HONOUR JUDGE ORRELL)
The Strand London Thursday 28 June 2002 |
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B e f o r e :
and
LORD JUSTICE SEDLEY
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CHINDA SINGH | Appellant/Claimant | |
and | ||
SANTOKH SINGH | Respondent/Defendant |
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Smith Bernal, 190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2HD
Telephone 020 7421 4040
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
LE1 1JA) appeared on behalf of THE APPELLANT
MR MATTHEW HARDWICK (instructed by Messrs Gibb Chamers, Newcastle
upon Tyne, NE1 5XN) appeared on behalf of THE RESPONDENT
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Crown Copyright ©
Thursday 28 June 2002
"Reduced to its simplest terms, the facts are these. The claimant lives in Jarrow and has an off-licence shop there and is a shopkeeper. He had an acquaintance called Gurdev Singh Bassra. His son is called Inderjit Singh Bassra. They also knew the defendant, Santokh Singh. Santokh, with his son Harjit, ran an off-licence at 30 Overton Road in Leicester. Gurdev, according to the claimant, was a go-between who introduced the claimant to the defendant, because the claimant was interested in purchasing a twenty-year lease in respect of the defendant's shop and buying the goodwill and the stock. There was some talk of either Gurdev or, more likely, Inderjit acting as the claimant's manager, but the claimant says he was to be the purchaser of the assignment of the lease; he was to be the owner of the business. But as he was a licence holder for the sale of alcohol in Jarrow, he would need a manager and that manager would have to have the licence in Leicester from the Leicester Justices. He says that he entered into an agreement on 28th June [1997] with the defendant that he should have the assignment of the lease. Following that, he took steps to ascertain the viability of the business and paid in three tranches the sums totalling the claim.
The defendant's account is that he was approached by Gurdev Singh Bassra, who said that he wished to purchase the goodwill and take a lease of six years from the defendant, so that his son, Inderjit, could run the business. The defendant said he had no business dealings whatsoever with the claimant, he scarcely knew him and was taken completely by surprise when the claim was launched. It is not absolutely clear what happened, save this, that no lease was ever assigned to the claimant. A lease appears to have been prepared in the term of six years in favour of Inderjit, but it is by no means clear that the defendant received any payment from Inderjit and, in due course, the property was repossessed and the defendant, having received the monies from the claimant, is also in possession of the shop and its business."
"Now, I have to ask myself: on the balance of probabilities, did the defendant receive the money?"
"In the end, I greatly prefer the evidence of the claimant where it is in conflict with that of the defendant's and, as this case turns really on questions of fact, it follows that I find the facts in the way they have been described by the claimant. At all material times, the claimant believed he was about to purchase the lease. He had personal dealings face to face with Santokh, who knew exactly who he was, where he came from and why he was there in Leicester. Santokh, I find, knew that Chinda was the person who was going to buy the business. I find that he paid all the monies he said he did and that, on the balance of probabilities, through solicitors, all those monies, including the £3,147.69 found their way to the defendant, Santokh. I find that the agreement was entered into orally on 28th June in exactly the way the claimant has described, and that Santokh induced those payments through the promise that the lease should be made out in the name of the claimant, and he made that promise and that inducement took place on 28th June."
"The question is: why is it not unjust for the defendant to retain those monies and indeed the business?"
".... on 8th September, the claimant saw that the draft lease was in the name of Inderjit and not himself. He saw this at the offices of Mr Parmar, the solicitor, who gave evidence. He said that his name ought to be on the lease. As I understand his evidence and that of Mr Parmar, he did not say that his should be the only name on the lease, but that his name ought to be there and Mr Parmar said not; that was not his instruction. Notwithstanding that, the claimant handed over the first cheque, which would make its way in due course to the defendant through solicitors, of £12,500. Indeed, on 15th September, he, the claimant, had a telephone conversation with Mr Parmar in which Mr Parmar said that his name was not on the lease; he could not put it on, but he added that the claimant must sort it out with the others to avoid he, Mr Parmar, having a conflict of interest. It does appear that is what the claimant tried to do, sort it out with the others."
"He [the claimant] says all the way through that he had personal face to face dealings with Santokh Singh, and indeed with his wife, and indeed with Harjit, Santokh's son; and that he went with Harjit to the protection order proceedings in front of the Licensing Justices and, at the appropriate time, when invited by the solicitor, he stood up not as the prospective licensee but as the purchaser of the business, and that Santokh stood up as the vendor of the business."
"I find it quite unbelievable that a man should travel all the way from Jarrow to Leicester, thinking that he was the purchaser of the business -- and, clearly, he did think he was the purchaser, because he said that to Mr Parmar -- that he would sit in the back room and not be introduced with some explanation of where he came from and why he was there to the vendor and to the vendor's son, who was present."
"I find it would be unjust for the defendant to retain the sum of £27,647.69 paid to him by the claimant as the result of being induced into thinking that he was going to take a lease of twenty years on that property and that he was buying the stock and goodwill of the business on that understanding."
(a)had the claimant and the defendant ever met at all?
(b)had they reached any agreement on 28 June?
(c)were there any circumstances making it unjust that the defendant should repay the money?
"It is also pointed out that at a comparatively early stage, on 8th September, the claimant saw that the draft lease was in the name of Inderjit and not himself."