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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Melhuish v Fishburn [2008] EWCA Civ 1382 (19 November 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2008/1382.html Cite as: [2008] EWCA Civ 1382 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM GUILDFORD COUNTY COURT
(HIS HONOUR JUDGE REID QC)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE JACOB
and
SIR WILLIAM ALDOUS
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MELHUISH |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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FISHBURN |
Respondent |
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Mr C Auld (instructed by Messrs Draper & Co) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Tuckey:
"…as the claimant says, there has never been any agreement for the alteration or clarification of boundaries as between what is shown on the Land Registry plans and what now stands on the ground, or whether, as the defendant says, there was agreement that subject to any necessary equalisation payment (because he, the defendant, was obtaining a small additional amount of land) that the boundaries should be as they presently stand."
"The defendant's case is that it was agreed that he would give up certain pieces of land in exchange for other pieces of land given to him by the claimant. The claimant denies this. The defendant's position is that he does not resile from that but for the sake of settling the case the value of that land is such that he would pay whatever is a proper price for it because the cost of arguing in court over it is probably more than the value of the land."
So the defendant was making an open offer to pay whatever was the proper price for the additional land which the Marvin plan showed he had acquired by the agreement.
"Q. …I just do not understand your case. Is it that there was an agreement to transfer like for like, or is that there was an agreement to acquire the land for a price? I just do not see evidence of either, I am sorry.
A. There was an agreement to do a swap of parts of the land and if need be to pay for the extra 5 square metres. That is not documented anywhere, I am afraid.
…
JUDGE REID: Just going back, the agreement was to exchange land and for an equalisation payment.
Q. Yes, that was why the Marvin plan was raised.
JUDGE REID: If that was why the Marvin plan was raised, why was it raised at that late stage and not immediately after the agreement?
A. I think the various events of Mr Melhuish's stroke and my marriage and other events, we just didn't get round to it, I'm afraid.
MS PERKINS: I suggest to you that it was because the Marvin plan was commissioned directly after you constructed your garden using incorrect boundary positions, which immediately became apparent to Mr Melhuish.
A. The Marvin plan was commissioned to show the difference to agree. If the Marvin plan was going to be constructed to actually say, "you're wrong", would I have paid half?.
Q. I believe that was one of my questions to you at the outset
JUDGE REID: As far as you were concerned, the purpose of the Marvin plan was to identify (a) where the current boundary was, (b) where the Land Registry boundary was, and (c) how much land it was you were going to have to pay for.
A. Yes."
"The point that has been made forcibly on behalf of the claimant is that it is only at a very late stage that it has been made abundantly clear that what the defendant says is that there was a boundary agreement with an agreement for an equalisation payment. I take the view that, forcible though that argument is, the defendant's account is to be preferred. Firstly I took the view that in general terms he was a more reliable witness than the claimant. The claimant had a glib answer for everything. On occasion, for example, in relation to the land adjoining the nib and the land attached to the adjoining barn where he said that "yes, he transferred that additional piece of land with the adjoining barn because it upped the price", I got the firm impression that he was making things up as he went along. So far as other matters are concerned, he has of course had the misfortune to have had a number of strokes and it may well be that with the passage of time and his medical difficulties his memory has played him false in a number of respects, and that he is simply doing his best to reconstruct what must have happened. By contrast, the defendant seemed to me to be someone who was prepared to accept that there were matters that he could not remember and indeed to concede points where he felt in retrospect he had been in error."
"…the boundaries as now drawn in accordance with the Marvin plan reflecting the agreement was reached, are such that the agreement was truly an agreement regulating the boundary and that in so far as land is transferred one way or another, and indeed upon the Marvin [plan] it is clear that the land goes each way, it can indeed properly be said that the differences are trivial and therefore it cannot be suggested that the agreement falls foul of s.2 of the Law of Property (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act."
Lord Justice Jacob:
Sir William Aldous:
Order: Appeal dismissed