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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Greville v Venables [2007] EWCA Civ 878 (19 July 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2007/878.html Cite as: [2007] EWCA Civ 878 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION
CARDIFF DISTRICT REGISTRY
(HIS HONOUR JUDGE WYN WILLIAMS
(sitting as a deputy judge of the High Court))
Strand London, WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE THOMAS
LORD JUSTICE LLOYD
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JAMES DANIEL LEWIS GREVILLE | Claimant/Appellant | |
-v- | ||
MARNIE LOUISE VENABLES | Defendant/Respondent |
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Mr Simon Clegg (instructed by Messrs Breakwells, Birmingham B2 5HG) appeared on behalf of the Respondent
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Crown Copyright ©
"(8) In or about March 2004 by an oral agreement (the 'Agreement') between the Claimant and the Defendant it was agreed that they would carry on an equine business together in partnership continuing to use the business name 'Greenvale Stud' with emphasis on the provision of quality stallions at stud and brood mares with the financial investment in the venture to be provided by the Claimant (the 'Business').
(9) It was a condition of the Agreement that the Claimant and the Defendant would have an equal interest in all assets of the Business including stallions at stud, brood mares and their progeny which would be registered in the joint names of the Claimant and Defendant and any proceeds subsequently resulting from stud fees or realised by the sale of any horse or foal would be equally divided between the Claimant and the Defendant."
"whether the Claimant and the Defendant carried on a business known as either the Green Vale Stud or Ty Llwyd Stables at Ty Llwyd, Foelgastell, LLanelli, Carmarthenshire SA14 7ES (the 'Business') in partnership."
"28. At the core of this case is a dispute about what or was not orally agreed between the Claimant and Defendant in about March 2004 about how the equine business owned by the Defendant was to be operated and owned from that time onwards. The Claimant's evidence was that in a number of discussions which took place at about that time the Defendant and he agreed that they would operate the business in partnership. Further they expressly agreed that they would be equal partners in all respects by which I mean that all partnership property would be owned equally and all profits and losses shared equally."
"29. The Defendant does not accept that any such agreement was concluded in or around March 2004. In her Affidavit sworn for the application for the freezing order her evidence was that while discussions took place between Claimant and Defendant about 'how to continue the business' no agreement was concluded and the money provided by the Claimant from March 2004 was always intended as a loan as had been the case prior to that time. In her witness statement she again acknowledged that the Claimant and she had discussions about the business and their own role in it. She said that shortly before the trip to Holland [which I interpolate took place later in 2004] there had been discussions about ownership of the horses to be purchased. She acknowledged that the Claimant had requested that he be a joint owner of any horses purchased but according to her she had refused that request and maintained the stance that any monies provided by the Claimant should be loans.
30. In paragraph 11 of her witness statement the Defendant confirmed that on a number of occasions the Claimant had asked her whether he could become a partner. On each occasion she says that she discussed it with her father (who discussed it with the accountant) and it was decided that it was not appropriate."
"31. In my judgment it is clear that a number of discussions took place between the Claimant and Defendant about the business and about the Claimant's status within it. The probability is that such discussions began at or about the time that the trip to Holland was first mooted and continued until the meeting in August 2005. Further, I am quite satisfied, indeed it is not disputed, that at some stage in this process the issue of whether the Claimant should become a partner was raised."
"39. My conclusion is that the Claimant and Defendant did not reach an agreement upon the terms which the Claimant alleges."
"It does not follow from that, however, that the Claimant and Defendant did not become partners on some terms. I appreciate that the Claimant's case is pleaded upon the basis of the express agreement set out above. However, it seems to me that I should not conclude the preliminary issues against the Claimant simply upon the basis of his pleaded case if the evidence as a whole justifies the conclusion that a partnership was formed between the Claimant and Defendant albeit not on the terms put forward in the Claimant's evidence and pleading. Therefore, I turn to consider whether or not the Claimant and Defendant were partners at any time after March 2004 on terms other than those alleged by the Claimant."
"45. The facts set out above, no doubt, provide substantial material in seeking to persuade a court that the Claimant and Defendant must have reached an agreement that they would trade in partnership together. That said, I am not persuaded on the whole of the evidence that the parties actually made an oral agreement that they were to trade as partners. In my judgment, what occurred was as follows. They discussed the possibility; they were both prepared to describe themselves as proprietors of the business to the outside world; they probably discussed ownership of the horses. However, as between themselves they did not commit to trading as partners. I am quite satisfied that there came a point in their relationship where the Claimant wanted to be a partner in the business. In my judgment, however, the Defendant never agreed that he should. In my judgment his evidence that she did [is] after-the-event rationalisation of the facts as I have found them to be.
46. The reasons why I reach the conclusion that no agreement was made can be stated shortly. Firstly, notwithstanding that I do not accept the whole of the Defendant's evidence on the central issue I found her more convincing than the Claimant. Further, I am quite satisfied that the Defendant would have consulted her father before she committed herself to such an agreement. He, no doubt, would have advised her against it as I am satisfied he did in August 2005. She would have accepted his advice. On any view the Defendant had recently been divorced when the discussions about partnership were happening. Whether or not matters relating to ancillary relief were finalised the fact of a recent divorce was bound to make the Defendant cautious about financial matters. While she may have been prepared to share in the ownership of some of the horses purchased I do not think that she would have committed herself to a partnership without the involvement of her father and, through him, the accountant."
"In my judgment, this passage makes clear that a partnership can subsist only if the alleged parties thereto have agreed that a partnership should exist. Unless the court is able to say that such an agreement has been made it cannot conclude that a partnership exists."
"But if I was, as is inevitable, going to have to think about this for some time at least, and if, and I am not saying Mr Harris is going to do it, but if he thought to himself, 'Well, if he finds that there is no partnership, I can still allege X, Y and Z', and therefore at the end of my judgment says, 'Right, well, that's the preliminary issues but now I seek leave to amend to allege this, that and the other', there is no way on earth that I at least would not listen to that, and I was just, if you like, short-cutting all this, if we have genuinely heard all the evidence that there could reasonably be about things like ownership."
"But if he [meaning Mr Harris] were, for example, simply to say, 'I assert that I am an owner either wholly or in part of horse X, Y and Z', all I am really asking is: will we ever hear any evidence in the future which is wider than the evidence we have heard about that in these proceedings?"
Mr Clegg said:
"From my perspective the answer to that is Possibly."
To which the judge said:
"Possibly, right. Fine."
"My Lord, our position is as follows. We would invite the court to make findings on the preliminary issues as they are at the moment, we will take stock at that point and if there are applications to amend that need to be made, we will pursue those at that stage."
"Subject to the qualifications made by statute and established by the case law, partnership is in English law simply 'the relation which subsists between persons carrying on a business in common with a view of profit': see section 1(1) of the Partnership Act 1890. The existence of that relation is founded on an agreement between the parties which may be express or inferred from that conduct."
The report says "from that conduct", I suspect it means "from their conduct" or perhaps simply "from conduct".
"I readily accept that contracts are not to be lightly implied. Having examined what the parties said and did, the court must be able to conclude with confidence both that the parties intended to create contractual relations and that the agreement was to the effect contended for."
"54. I have deliberately made no conclusive finding about the ownership of various horses. I have not done so since that was not essential for the resolution of the preliminary issues and in those circumstances I was asked not to make a finding by Counsel for the Defendant. However, I have no doubt that the parties will give careful consideration to what I have said about that issue before embarking upon further and expensive hearings."
"In or about March 2004 by an oral agreement ... between the Claimant and the Defendant it was agreed that they would carry on an equine business together in partnership ..."
"In the circumstances described above the Claimant seeks a declaration that the Business was operated as a partnership between the Claimant and the Defendant that was commenced in or about March 2004 ..."
ORDER: Appeal dismissed with costs, summarily assessed in the sum of £13,000 plus VAT.