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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Mehra v Shah & Ors [2004] EWCA Civ 632 (20 May 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2004/632.html Cite as: [2004] EWCA Civ 632 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM HIGH COURT CHANCERY DIVISION
Miss Sonia Proudman QC sitting as a Deputy Judge
of the Chancery Division
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE JONATHAN PARKER
and
LORD JUSTICE DYSON
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Sangeeta Mehra |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Radiatben Rajnikant Shah & Ors |
Respondents |
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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 Ajmalul Hossain QC and Mr Richard Clegg (instructed by Turbervilles with Nelson Cuff) for the Respondents
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Jonathan Parker :
INTRODUCTION
THE BACKGROUND FACTS
"Having heard all the evidence, I have no doubt that the work contributions of the brothers were considerably greater than those of the sisters."
"[t]his kind of improvement, many years after the original purchase, is not such as to afford her an interest in the property."
"In any event, I do not accept that the bathroom was added as a property investment; it seems to me plain that the improvement was made as a gift to Rajnikant [he was ill at that time] out of sisterly feeling for his pain and distress in his illness."
"It is common ground that the draft declaration was never executed. However, it has not been denied that it is the document that was drafted by Atul Shah [a solicitor who had previously acted for the partnership]. In cross-examination Ratilal attempted to distance himself from, and indeed disown, the document completely and Tarachand asserted that it did not represent his wishes because it omitted to mention the sisters. The footer to the draft states "My Docs: Trust RC Shah", indicating that Atul Shah regarded Ratilal as his client. I find from all the evidence I have heard that the draft declaration was based on instructions from Ratilal and that the other three brothers were aware of its contents."
"The late Rajnikant Shah attended our office in 2000 and requested if he could have a copy of a draft precedent trust that we normally use. At that time he had with him a list of properties that he wanted to put in a trust. A draft was provided to him. Since then the writer did not hear further from him. After his death at the request of his executor [Punit] a copy of the draft was sent to the executor."
"Phone Conversation between Sangeeta & Ratilal Shah: 14/03/2001
Ratilal Kaka [uncle] phones on the morning of Wednesday, 14th March, 2001. He was very angry and threatening. He shouted down the phone and kept making threats. The following is an account of what was said:
Ratilal: What you have started is not a good thing. The two properties on Barking Road, Eastham are mine and Kastur's (his wife). They have nothing to do with the business. Take the cautions from these two properties off or I'll make sure you don't get anything at all.
Sangeeta: I can't do that. Both these properties are business properties by your own admission in the trust you are setting up.
Ratilal: They are in the trust through my kindness. Jatin's name in the trust is also because of their (Shah Brothers') kindness. We don't have to give him anything at all and of you carry on with this we will make sure you end up with nothing at all.
Sangeeta: All of us (Gulabchand's children) have always trusted all the Kakas (Uncles) and have waited patiently for the last 11 years. We have tried to talk to you and Shanti Kaka many times before now and every time you have either not wanted to talk to use or have told us to trust you or "Why do you worry? You are just like our children to us. We will see you OK." But 11 years on we are still waiting and you have chucked Jatin out of the business and have threatened to make him homeless. Last time we tried to talk to you, you told us, "You are not entitled to a penny and you could do what you like." So now we are doing what we need to do.
Ratilal: I am telling you, If you don't take the cautions off the Barking Road properties I will make sure 83 (Carlyle Road, Southall) is included in the business properties.
Sangeeta: You said you are setting up a trust and we have a copy of that trust document. You have included Barking Road properties in that and 83 Carlyle is not on that list. We will let the court decide.
Ratilal: You will loose. You will loose everything. The most you might get is a share of the big house and 83 as those are the only properties with Gulab's name. The rest belong to the five brothers and the five brothers alone. That's what the trust will have.
Sangeeta: Bhai [C. B. Shah] put all his life into looking after you all. He started the business and gave you all the means to earn a good living. He treated you all as equal partners and that's what we want – an equal one-sixth share of all there is. That is what the court will decide.
Ratilal: I am telling you again – take off the cautions from my properties and stop all this or I will make sure that you get nothing, not even 83. I will make sure that Jatin and his family don't live there anymore. They will be out on the streets. When you loose everything don't blame me. It will not be my fault. It will be your own fault.
Sangeeta: I can stop this only if you are willing to talk to me calmly and sort out everything without threats. Everything there must be divided equally into six shares and distributed as soon as possible. If you are not willing to do that then the cautions stay and we will let the court decide.
Ratilal: (Shouting) Take the cautions off or you will have nothing.
He then put the phone down."
"It is my judgment that the sisters were not carrying on the partnership business in common with their brothers and that the facts do not support the inference of a shared assumption that they were. The brothers alone were the partners in Fine Fabrics. It seems to me that the attempt to include the sisters stems from a wish to exclude, as far as possible, the wives and children of deceased brothers from participation in the family assets."
"…. there were no direct contributions to the purchase price of the properties such as would give rise to the necessary inference of common intention to share the beneficial ownership."
"Evidence from several of Mr Stewart's clients and also of Ramesh attested to the fact that friends and relatives of the Shah family who were leaving Kenya for England would bring money from CB Shah to England and I find as a fact that money was transferred to the brothers in England in this manner. It is fairly to be inferred that, while some of the money provided by Gulabchand came from his own resources such as his pension, some at least of the counter credits to his Barclays Bank Account represented money brought into the country from Kenya."
"…. The presumption of advancement does not operate in that way. When a father buys property in the name of his child, there is a (rebuttable) presumption that he has made a gift to that child. There is no presumption that he has made a gift to children who are not the named recipients of the property. I accept (notwithstanding certain submissions by Mr Smart to the contrary) that on the transfer of money to Gulabchand and Shantilal CB Shah did not intend to retain ownership of it or of property bought with it. However it is begging the question to make the further assumption that the recipients held the property on a further trust."
"Although there is some evidence that Fine Fabrics stock would pass through the Big House and that it was used as an office for bookkeeping and other business purposes, the Big House was bought, and used, primarily as a home for living in. It was not listed as an asset of the business in the partnership balance sheet. On the other hand, the brothers, including Shantilal, believed that they could deal with it by the draft declaration in the same way as the other business properties. In the telephone conversation of March 2001 Ratilal showed his belief that the big house belonged to only the brothers. This is consonant with the fact that money was sent from Kenya on a regular basis to the brothers and the brothers alone and it was the brothers who decided how it should be applied. Properties were vested in the brothers and the brothers alone. It seems to me that the only inference I can draw is that no distinction was made between the beneficial ownership of the Big House and any of the other assets purchased from moneys from Kenya in the names of the brothers. "
"Eventually he accepted in cross-examination that the mortgage was ultimately discharged from the proceeds of an endowment policy taken out with Legal and General and that the premiums on that policy were paid by the partnership. I also observe that by 31st December 1985 Ratilal was overdrawn on his capital account with the partnership by more than £3,000. In all these circumstances it seems plain to me that the purchase of Barking Road was mainly funded by the partnership and that Ratilal's inconsistent and unsatisfactory accounts of where he raised the balance gives rise to the inference that the property was indeed a partnership asset. I observe that (without the involvement of his wife) Ratilal had included Barking Road in the draft declaration and it seems to me that this supports the conclusion that it was not his separate property but belonged to the partnership."
THE ARGUMENTS ON THIS APPEAL
The arguments on behalf of the appellants
The arguments for the respondents
CONCLUSIONS
Lord Justice Dyson:
Lord Justice Kennedy: