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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Inglorest Investments Ltd v Campbell & Anor [2004] EWCA Civ 408 (02 April 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2004/408.html Cite as: [2004] EWCA Civ 408 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT
CHANCERY DIVISION MR DAVID MACKIE QC
SITTING AS A DEPUTY HIGH COURT JUDGE
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE MAURICE KAY
and
SIR MARTIN NOURSE
____________________
INGLOREST INVESTMENTS LTD |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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ROBERT CAMPBELL & ANR |
Respondent |
____________________
Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR RODNEY STEWART SMITH (instructed by Cumberland Ellis Peirs) for the Respondent
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Mummery :
The Dispute
(a) Contract for sale
According to this claim, which has always been and remains the primary case, Mr Dean purchased the freehold interest himself from a third party for £6,500 in September 1968. He then orally agreed to sell it for £9,550 to his company Inglorest, which was by then in the 4th year of being wound up. It is claimed that the agreement was made just a few days later, on about 29 September 1968. Nine years earlier, and well before the liquidation of Inglorest began, Mr Dean had himself acquired and then agreed to assign the residue of a long lease of the Property to Inglorest, although the leasehold interest remained registered in his name for many years after the transaction. The freehold interest was registered in Mr Dean's name on 28 October 1968, a month after the alleged agreement. No written memorandum of any contract has been found. Inglorest's case is that it is entitled to an order against Mr Dean's personal representatives for the transfer of the freehold to it on the basis that there has been part performance of the claimed contract, alternatively that equity requires that a constructive trust should be imposed in its favour to give effect to the common understanding of the parties.
(b) Resulting Trust
According to this alternative claim, which was first advanced several years after the initial assertion of a contract claim and has never been at the forefront of Inglorest's case, Mr Dean bought the freehold interest in the Property from a third party with Inglorest's money. If that was so, Inglorest was the true purchaser and it became beneficially entitled to the freehold under a resulting trust. The estate stands in the same position as Mr Dean did.
The Facts: chronological.
The Judgment
(1) The evidence
The evidence of a sale contract or other transfer of the beneficial interest in the freehold to Inglorest in September 1968 was "thin and equivocal." He was not satisfied that Inglorest acquired any right to the freehold in September 1968. That finding disposed of the claims based on contract and resulting trust.
(2) Part Performance
He rejected Inglorest's contention that there was part performance of a contract in the form of (a) the payment by Inglorest to Mr Dean of the sum of £9,550; and (b) the fact that in September 1968 Inglorest ceased to pay the £50 annual ground rent under the lease. He was not satisfied by the evidence that the sum of £9,550 was in fact paid to Mr Dean. Even if it was paid to him, the payment was not an act of part performance nor was the cessation of the ground rent. Any contract that was made between Mr Dean and Inglorest was rendered unenforceable by s 40 of the Law of Property Act 1925.
(3) Constructive Trust
He rejected the unpleaded case that a constructive trust arose from a common understanding or belief that Inglorest was the owner of the freehold by virtue of the 1968 transaction and that it was unconscionable for Mr Dean's estate to renege on it. No common understanding was established on the evidence and, in any event, the imposition of a trust in the circumstances of this case would render pointless the statutory requirements of writing or part performance, which were not satisfied.
(4) Laches
He was not satisfied that there was the requisite inequity to bring into play the doctrine of laches invoked by the personal representatives. They relied on the substantial delay and on the fact that in 1986 the then liquidator of Inglorest, Mr Spence, had admitted that the estate was entitled to the freehold and had even offered to purchase it. Thereafter no contrary claim was asserted until 14 August 1997. The delay resulted in the loss of evidence: Mr Spence had died; the recollection of other witnesses would have been less firm and precise; and documents had been lost e.g the client account ledgers of Randolph & Dean.
The Issues on the Appeal
A. Source of Purchase Price and Resulting Trust
"6. In the further alternative by reason of the fact that the Defendant's monies were used for the purchase of the Freehold and Mr Dean's clear and frequent statements that the Defendant was the owner of the Freehold and that he was not, the Claimants held the Freehold on trust for the Defendant."
" The company operated what was in effect a current bank account with Mr Dean making distributions to him through the books and bank account of Randolph & Dean. Transactions by Inglorest were recorded as entries in its client account at the solicitors Randolph & Dean. As and when properties were sold distributions were credited to Mr Dean's account with the Company and payments made to him or debited on his behalf. Among the extracts on one ledger "SR Dean Current Account" there are journal entries including a debit to him of £6,500 "Freehold 18 Queensgate" dated 25th September 1968. On the same day there is "Randolph & Dean £34,250" and "ditto" for shares. There is a further debit of £86.11 six months later, on 25th March 1969 for the purchase costs of the freehold."
B. Contract for sale
(1) At various times Mr Dean made manuscript lists and notes showing the Property as an asset of Inglorest, or not showing the Property as his own asset. (It was accepted, however, that in 1977 he had used the deeds of the leasehold and freehold titles to secure a personal loan from Barclay's Bank.)
(2) In 1982 Mr Edwards, together with Mr Dean and Mr Spence (the then liquidator of Inglorest), produced for the Inland Revenue a capital gains tax valuation of the shares in Inglorest. The calculation, which must have been based on the spread sheets, showed Inglorest as having purchased the freehold of the Property for £9,550 on 29 September 1968 and 9 Queensgate as having been sold for £10,500 on the same day. The shares in Inglorest were valued on the basis that Inglorest was entitled to the Property.
(3) Shortly before his death Mr Dean attended a conference with tax counsel, his solicitor and Mr Edwards. Mr Dean's tax affairs, in the context of mitigating estate duty, were discussed on the basis described in the Instructions to Counsel, that the freehold interest in the Property did not belong to Mr Dean.
(4) The freehold was not treated as part of Mr Dean's estate for the purposes of capital transfer tax. Until the change of view in 1986 described above the administration of the estate had proceeded on the basis that the freehold belonged to Inglorest and not to the estate. Capital transfer tax has been paid since the change of view in 1986 on the basis that the freehold was beneficially owned by Mr Dean.
C. S 40 Law of Property Act 1925
D. Satisfaction of equity by constructive trust
E.Laches, acquiescence and delay as bar to Inglorest's claims
Result
Lord Justice Maurice Kay
Sir Martin Nourse