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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Druce v Druce [2003] EWCA Civ 535 (11 February 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2003/535.html Cite as: [2003] EWCA Civ 535 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT
CHANCERY DIVISION
(Mr Roger Englehart QC )
(sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge)
Strand London, WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE ARDEN
MR JUSTICE MORLAND
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ALAN GERALD DRUCE | Appellant/Claimant | |
-v- | ||
ROGER ELLIS DRUCE | Respondent/Defendant |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR C NUGEE Q.C. AND MR T SEYMOUR (instructed by Messrs Lennon & Co, Chesham, Bucks) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
____________________
(AS APPROVED BY THE COURT)
CROWN COPYRIGHT©
Crown Copyright ©
"all that parcel of land situate at Frieth in the Parish of Hambledon in the County of Buckingham having a frontage to Frieth Hill of ninety feet or thereabouts a depth therefrom on the east side of one hundred and sixty two feet or thereabouts and on the west side of one hundred and fifty feet or thereabouts. All which said piece of land is for the purpose of identification only, more particularly delineated on the plan annexed hereto and thereon edged red TOGETHER with the dwellinghouse and outbuildings erected thereon or some part thereof."
"(1) That the freehold of the property known as 'Edrema', Frieth, Henley on Thames, Oxford together with the freehold garages adjoining 'Edrema' be transferred to [Roger] ….
(5) [Edwin] hereby undertakes to make the following further dispositions and transfers of his assets ….
(3) to transfer all of his assets of whatsoever nature and whether real or personal … to [Roger] absolutely for his own absolute use and benefit.
(8) It is hereby agreed and declared that this Agreement is in full and final settlement of [Edwin's] claims against [Roger and Alan] and [their] claims against [Edwin] in and arising out of the action and counterclaim herein and for the avoidance of doubt [Edwin] withdraws his claim for rectification."
In paragraph 19 of his judgment the judge identified the following issues:-
"(1) On the proper construction of the conveyance of 20 September 1976 in favour of Alan Druce did Edwin Druce convey to Alan Druce a parcel of Parsonage Meadow extending (a) for some 90 feet along the frontage of the Frieth main road or (b) along the entirety of such frontage up to the boundary with the Parsonage, that is for some 189 feet?
(2) Was the effect of the Schedule to the Tomlin order of 1 July 1991 on its true construction an agreement or acknowledgement by all parties to the action that Alan Druce was the owner of the entirety of the southern part of the western land?
(3) Is Roger Druce estopped from contending, as alleged in paragraph 11, 11A or 11B of the amended reply, that the road frontage of the land to which Alan Druce has title is some 90 feet rather than some 189 feet or from contending that the effect of the Tomlin order is as set out in (2) above?"
These are also the issues arising on this appeal, save that issue 3 is on this appeal limited to estoppel by representation relied on in paragraph 11(1) and (2) of the reply.
The Tomlin Order
The 1976 conveyance
"I return, then, to the plaintiff's conveyance. The essential parts of the first schedule contain two main features. First, what is conveyed is the land, dwelling house, garage and other buildings known as 'Brooklands South'. That verbal description raises a question of fact: what, at the date of the conveyance, could be said to be known as 'Brooklands South'? Secondly there are the words 'as the same are for the purposes of identification only more particularly delineated on the plan drawn hereon, and thereon coloured blue.' One question that arises from this language is whether the verbal description is to prevail over the plan, or whether the plan is to prevail over the verbal description, or whether they are to be co-equals.
The collocation of the phrase 'for the purposes of identification only' with the words 'more particularly delineated on the plan drawn hereon' may be said to be unfortunate; and in that I think I speak temperately. The effect of a phrase such as 'for the purposes of identification only' or 'for the purpose of facilitating identification only', or 'only for the purpose of identification' seems to me to confine the use of the plan to ascertaining where the land is situated, and to prevent the plan from controlling the parcels of land in the body of the conveyance: see Hopgood v Brown [1955] 1 WLR 213,228, Webb v Nightingale, Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Transcript No 84 of 1957. On the other hand, phrases such as 'more particularly delineated' or 'more particularly described' or 'more precisely delineated' used in reference to a plan, are words which tend to show that in case of conflict or uncertainty the plan is to prevail over any verbal description: see, for example, Eastwood v Ashton, Wallington v Townsend.
Where both forms of expression are used together, as in the present case, they may indeed tend to be mutually stultifying. Certainly I do not think that they give the plan any predominance over the parcel. Reading the conveyance as a whole, the most probable meaning, expressed as a paraphrase, seems to me that what is conveyed is whatever is known at Brooklands South, and that in order to discover the identity of Brooklands South (but for no other purpose) there is a more detailed delineation of it on the plan. Such language seems to negative any sense of the plan as showing the precise boundaries of the land."
Buckley LJ continued:
"There, Brooklands South is a specific description of a piece of land, the boundaries of which could be established by extrinsic evidence. If the plan was not to control the parcels, the plan could not have any relation to the boundaries of what was known as Brooklands South, those being matters which were implicit in the explicit description of the parcel concerned as 'what was known as Brooklands South'; and the observation by Megarry J that words such as 'for the purposes of identification only seemed to him to confine the use of the plan to ascertaining where the land is situated, was I think an obiter observation on his part and not part of his decision at all, for he was not concerned merely with that phrase but with its use in conjunction with 'more particularly delineated'".
"In this case we have the words 'for the purpose of identification only'. Those words seem to me to show quite clearly that the plan is only to be used to look and see roughly where the area is situated and not in any way to define the metes and bounds thereof."
The actual issue in Wigginton v Winster concerned whether or not the plan could be used to understand the description of the parcels or whether it could only be used to identify the location of the property. The Court of Appeal held that the former was the correct approach and decided the case accordingly.
"EXCEPT AND RESERVING unto the vendor for the benefit of … 'Edrema' … all … easements now used and enjoyed over the land hereby conveyed and which would be implied by statute or by reason of severance and take effect as easements in favour of a purchaser of … 'Edrema' as if the same had been conveyed to such purchaser and the land hereby conveyed had been retained by the vendor …"
This is a somewhat mysterious provision as Edrema was not the adjacent property. It may be explicable on the grounds that as The Parsonage Meadow had been one plot in Edwin's possession before the various conveyances, the whole of the property was known as Edrema, and what Edwin was doing was seeking to preserve rights in favour of other parts of The Parsonage Meadow which he had not already disposed of and were not to be disposed of to Alan. However, it is not known whether at this point the contemporaneous conveyance to Roger had been executed. Miss Jackson's explanation is that the reservation referred to an easement across plot A at its westerly boundary, which was a track used to enable Edwin to reach a chalet in the north west corner of The Parsonage Meadow where he kept rabbits. However, that is inconsistent with Miss Jackson's own case, since her submission is that Roger acquired the plot on which this chalet was built through the contemporaneous conveyance to him. There is no equivalent exception and reservation in Roger's conveyance. In my judgment, the exception and reservation was probably an instinctive reaction of a conveyancer who was providing for the transfer of one part of a site, the remainder of which was being retained by the vendor. This, as I see it, is more consistent with plots A and H being retained by Edwin than with the construction applied by Miss Jackson. But I do not attach great significance to this point.
"We would confirm that the land edged red is that which is and remains in our client's ownership."
That land was the land which I have called plots G, F, E, C and D. Miss Jackson submits that the judge wrongly failed to hold that the statement and plan were express representations by Roger to Alan that Alan's title included the front part of the western land (that is plot A) up to the boundary with The Old Parsonage. The judge further erred in what he held:
"I do not consider that there was any way in which Alan acted to his detriment in reliance on the hypothetical representation by his father."
The judge should have held that Alan had acted in reliance on the representation. He had lost the opportunity to seek rectification of the Tomlin order and confirm his title to the southern part or to seek a further conveyance of the said land before Edwin's death on 1st December 1993.
"I find it difficult to accept that this was his understanding. Not only do the schedule terms not say so, but I have particularly in mind Alan Druce's evidence that his grandfather could never admit that the western land was not his, Edwin Druce's, and that the only solution was for the grandfather to transfer everything to the son. In my view, Alan Druce's attitude at the time was not that the Tomlin order already gave him what he wanted but that given his good relations with his parents, he would in due course achieve what he wanted from his father."
Again, this is a finding of fact. Accordingly, in my judgment, the judge's rejection of the claim of estoppel by representation cannot be set aside. In all the circumstances, for the above reasons I would dismiss the appeal.