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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Shi v Jiangsu Native Produce Import & Exprt Corp [2009] EWCA Civ 1582 (06 October 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2009/1582.html Cite as: [2009] EWCA Civ 1582 |
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B5/2008/2010 |
COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE CENTRAL LONDON CIVIL JUSTICE CENTRE
(HIS HONOUR JUDGE RYLAND)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE DYSON
and
LORD JUSTICE LLOYD
____________________
SHI |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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JIANGSU NATIVE PRODUCE IMPORT & EXPRT CORP |
Respondent |
____________________
WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr D Dovar (instructed by Messrs Lloyds & Associates LLP) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Dyson:
The claim for salary and expenses
"I have also looked with great care at the claims made by the Claimant for sums of money which he says the Defendant owes him. I am not satisfied on the basis of the Claimant's evidence that the English company owes him any monies. Nor am I satisfied that the Defendant agreed to guarantee any debts owed by JNP to the Claimant. Neither am I satisfied that the Defendant agreed to pay £2500 per month to the Claimant after JNP was wound up. In a schedule of money claimed dated 20 March 2008 the Claimant raised for the first time a claim for out of pocket and daily expenses and maintenance from July 2002 and also sums in respect of monies invested in JNP in China together with an assumed figure for growth over the years. Those matters have not been pleaded and there has been no permission to amend the pleading to add them. I consider that they amount to another attempt to vary the amount of the figures sought by the Claimant. I am not satisfied that his oral evidence supports the claims for arrears and other figures. He has been unable to produce any satisfactory documentary evidence before me which satisfies me that he is owed such sums. The figures he has put forward vary over the years and I am not satisfied that on occasions in the past he was merely putting forward estimated figures which transpired to be inaccurate upon closer scrutiny. It follows that I do not find his money claims substantiated and I shall dismiss them."
"I was not impressed by the credibility of his evidence. Both in its written and oral form it seemed to me to change remarkably frequently, even giving him all credit for the matters which I have above set out. There was a great deal of melodrama about his evidence, which I also found unconvincing even after making all allowances. Where his evidence conflicts with any first hand account given to me by Mr Fu and/or contained in a contemporaneous document, I prefer the evidence of Mr Fu and the contents of such document to the evidence of the Claimant."
"During the stay in the UK, Mr Shi will be responsible for all expenses himself and will be responsible for any legal obligation himself. The parent company will support the Liaison Office in the aspect of business properly, and in the meantime the Liaison Office will pay US $5,000 every year to the parent company was a return at least for three years since 2003."
The claim for mesne profits by JNP China
"I consider that there are exceptional circumstances in this case. The first is the fact that the Claimant is and remains an employee of the Defendant. The second is that he was permitted by the Defendant at all times to occupy the property rent free. No rental was ever imposed or sought to be imposed by the Defendant, even after it had terminated his licence. Third, it has delayed for many years in obtaining any possession to which it might be entitled. Fourth, I accept that the Claimant believes and believed at all material times (wrongly according to my findings) that he had a right to occupy the premises as a consequence of being told so by a representative of the Defendant. I accept that proposition since I do not consider that the Claimant would have voluntarily done repairs to the property unless he thought he had a right to occupy it. Fifth, I accept that the Claimant has, in all probability, no where else where he can move to. Finally I consider that the fact that the Defendant is a Chinese corporation which has wound up its UK subsidiary is of relevance to the question of exceptional circumstances. Doing that leads me to the conclusion that the proper figure for such mesne profits/rental is what the Defendant at all times sought to have the Claimant pay for his occupation of the property, which is nil. I propose to dismiss that part of the Defendant's counterclaim."
"A person entitled to possession of land can make a claim against a person who has been in occupation without his consent on two alternative bases. The first is for the loss which he has suffered in consequence of the defendant's trespass. This is the normal measure of damages in the law of tort. The second is the value of the benefit which the occupier has received. This is a claim for restitution. The two bases of claim are mutually exclusive and the plaintiff must elect before judgment which of them he wishes to pursue. These principles are not only fair but, as Kennedy LJ demonstrated, well established by authority."
"The open market value will ordinarily be appropriate because the defendant has chosen to stay in the premises rather than pay for equivalent premises somewhere else. But such benefits may in special circumstances be subject to what Professor Birks, in his Introduction to the Law of Restitution has conveniently called subjective devaluation. This means the benefit may not be worth as much to the particular defendant as to someone else. In particular, it may be worth less to a defendant who has not been free to reject it. Mr and Mrs Ashman would probably have never occupied the premises in the first place if they had to pay £472 a month instead of the concessionary licence fee of £95. Mrs Ashman would certainly not have stayed in the premises at the market rate if she had any choice in the matter. She stayed because she could not establish priority need to be rehoused by the local authority until the eviction order had been made against her. Once the necessary proceedings had been taken she was able to obtain local authority housing at £145 per month.
In my judgment, therefore, the special circumstances in this case are created by the combination of two factors. First, the fact that the Ashmans were occupying at a concessionary licence fee. Second, the fact that Mrs Ashman had, in practice, no choice but to stay in the premises until the local authority were willing to rehouse her. The first factor is important because I think if the Ashmans had voluntarily paid the ordinary market rate, they could not claim their premises had become worth less to them because they could not find anywhere else to go.
The second factor is important because I do not think the defendant can say the premises were worth less to him than suitable accommodation he could realistically obtain. In the circumstances of this case the value to Mrs Ashman was no more than she would have had to pay for suitable local authority housing, if she could have been immediately rehoused. Allowing subjective devaluation in circumstances like this will not cause any injustice to a landlord "
"The principles in Ashman may, in my judgment, be summarised as follows: first, an owner of land which is occupied without his consent may elect whether to claim damages for the loss which he has been caused or restitution of the value of the benefit which the defendant has received.
Secondly, the fact that the owner if he had obtained possession would have let the premises at a concessionary rent, or even would not have let them at all, is irrelevant to the calculation of the benefit for the purposes of restitutionary claim. What matters is the benefit the defendant has received.
Thirdly, a benefit may be worth less to an involuntary recipient than to one who has a free choice as to whether to remain in occupation or move elsewhere.
Fourthly, the value of the right of occupation to a former licensee who has occupied at a concessionary rent and who has remained in possession only because she could not be rehoused by the local authority until a possession order has been made, would ordinarily be whichever is the higher of the former concessionary rent and what she would have paid for local authority housing suitable for her needs if she had been rehoused at the time when the notice expired."
Lord Justice Waller:
Lord Justice Lloyd:
Order: Cross-appeal PTA: allowed. Appeal dismissed