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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Advanced Industrial Technology Corporation Ltd v Bond Street Jewellers Ltd & Anor [2006] EWCA Civ 923 (04 July 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2006/923.html Cite as: [2006] EWCA Civ 923 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
HIS HONOUR JUDGE SEYMOUR Q.C.
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE HALLETT
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Advanced Industrial Technology Corporation Ltd |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Bond Street Jewellers Ltd and Jonathan Rolf Condrup |
1st Respondent 2nd Respondent |
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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)
Edward Rowntree (instructed by MTC Law Limited) for the Respondents
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Scott Baker:
1) Neither Mr Condrup nor his company owned the necklace, which belonged to Mr Hamilton. Nor did either have the authority of Mr Hamilton to pawn his necklace.
2) The necklace was given into the possession of the appellant.
3) The appellant made a loan of £80,000.
4) At the term date of the loan (8 April 2005) both the principal sum and interest were outstanding.
5) On 27 May 2005 the appellant, through Mr Slack, agreed for the necklace to be released for Mr Condrup to show a prospective customer but instead it was returned to the order of Mr Hamilton.
1) Whether the pawnor of the necklace was Mr Condrup or his company.
2) Whether Mr Condrup expressly told Mr Slack that neither he nor his company either owned the necklace or had authority to pawn it.
"I am really sorry about the delay in coming back to you!
I have just got back from a trip to Dubai and felt so rotten I left the office yesterday early without opening my e-mails.
I am sorry for the late payment of the £20,000 interest. The fact is the owner is rather old and has just returned from holiday to their home in the Channel Islands and taken rather ill.
I can't really speak to the wife about it the matter as it is highly confidential and assume she knows nothing about it. I realise the pressure there is to settle at least the interest. I will be on holiday next week. Can this wait until I get back on the Monday 24 October?
Please e-mail your response to my travelling e-mail."
Mr Condrup then gives his travelling e-mail address and concludes with the words:
"apologies for the delay and if you could bear with me in the circumstances I would be most grateful. I am aware that it is in his interests to pay A.S.A.P as the interest carries on at 4%/month."
"The judge did not deal with the main point upon which summary judgment was sought. Although it is based on an allegation of fraud, in view of the e-mail of 15 October 2005 from the respondent to the claimant the appeal has prospects of success."
"On 8 April 2004, the date on which the first credit agreement was entered into by (the first respondent) and on which Slack took possession of the necklace, I told him that (the first respondent) had the necklace on sale or return from its client, who would require net proceeds of £150,000 should either (the first respondent) or Slack find a buyer. It was agreed that (the first respondent) would have access to the necklace by appointment to show to its prospective clients."
Significantly, what he does not say is that he had no authority to pawn the necklace. That express admission only comes later.
"In a desperate effort to avoid liquidation, a capital loan of £80,000 was obtained from a commercial organisation. This loan was secured by pledging a client's emerald and diamond necklace valued at £150,000."
The legal issue
"My Lords, I come next to the question of whether Mr Mehra was liable for his deceit. To put the question in this way may seem tendentious but I do not think that it is unfair. Mr Mehra says, and the Court of Appeal accepted, that he committed no deceit because he made the representation on behalf of Oakprime and it was relied upon as a representation by Oakprime. That is true but seems to me irrelevant. Mr Mehra made a fraudulent misrepresentation intending SCB to rely upon it and SCB did rely upon it. The fact that by virtue of the law of agency his representation and the knowledge with which he made it would also be attributed to Oakprime would be of interest in an action against Oakprime. But that cannot detract from the fact that they were his representation and his knowledge. He was the only human being involved in making the representation to SCB (apart from administrative assistance like someone to type the letter and carry the papers round to the bank). It is true that SCB relied upon Mr Mehra's representation being attributable to Oakprime because it was the beneficiary under the credit. But they also relied upon it being Mr Mehra's representation, because otherwise there could have been no representation and no attribution."
He continued a little later at para 22:
"But Mr Mehra was not being sued for the company's tort. He was being sued for his own tort and all the elements of that tort were proved against him. Having put the question the way he did, Evans LJ answered it by saying that the fact that Mr Mehra was a director did not in itself make him liable. That of course is true. He is liable not because he was a director but because he committed a fraud."
The other members of the House agreed. Lord Rodger of Earlsferry added at p.1560 para 40:
"If he had been a mere employee of Oakprime and had done the same things and written the same letters on behalf of the company in that capacity, it could never have been suggested that Mr Mehra was not personally liable for his fraudulent acts. His status as a director when he executed the fraud cannot invest him with immunity."
"I think, in the present case, on the face of the particulars, especially when amended as proposed, a cause of action was disclosed. It must be taken upon the statement of the plaintiff that the advertisement was issued some indirect motive, and that the farm was not to be let. This amounts to a false representation. It was a false statement knowingly made and published in order to be read by persons who would be likely to be tenants of farms, and the natural consequence would be that the person who was desirous of becoming a tenant would, upon reading the advertisement, incur expense in looking at the farm. This, it is alleged, is what the plaintiff did. It must also be taken that this was a representation made to the plaintiff."
Quain J said at p.37:
"I think the particulars disclose a cause of action, which ought to have been heard on the merits. They in effect allege the plaintiff falsely, and well knowing he had no authority to sell the farm, represented that he had, and published an advertisement to that effect. It is quite clear that all persons who were likely to take a farm, or might be reasonably contemplating taking a farm, acting upon that advertisement, and incurring expense in consequence of that false representation, have a remedy by action for deceit. It appears to me that the particulars and the amendment do disclose a cause of action for deceit; and under such circumstances I think the judge ought to have heard the case, and the case should be sent back to him to be further heard."
Archibald J concurred with both judgments.
"In sum, I do not think that, in the absence of express language, any line is to be drawn between the various possible causes of or motives for non-disclosure. It is not in this way that the distinction is to be drawn. The question to my mind is whether a non-disclosure can support a claim in fraud, with its remedies in damages and/or rescission: either because (on) analysis it amounts or gives rise to a fraudulent misrepresentation or perchance for any other reason."
Lord Bingham said Rix L.J had made an important but uncontentious point that silence, where there is a duty to speak, may amount to misrepresentation.
"….where there is a duty or an obligation to speak, and a man in breach of that duty or obligation holds his tongue and does not speak, and does not say the thing he was bound to say, if that was done with the intention of inducing the other party to act upon the belief that the reason why he did not speak was because he had nothing to say, I should be inclined myself to hold that that was fraud also."
He observed that the half truth without disclosure of the other half is, as Lord MacNaghten said in Gluckstein v Barnes [1900] AC 240, 241 "no better than a downright falsehood."
(1) £80,000.
(2) £4,750 being the costs payable to Mr Hamilton.
(3) Interest at the rate specified in the agreements for the duration of the agreements and that apart, interest at the short term investment rate.
No doubt the parties can agree the overall sum.