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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Hart & Anor v Burbidge & Anor [2014] EWCA Civ 992 (22 July 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2014/992.html Cite as: [2014] EWCA Civ 992 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION
SIR WILLIAM BLACKBURNE
HC11C00559 AND HC11C00751
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE BLACK
and
LORD JUSTICE VOS
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KENNETH CHARLES HART PAUL ROGER HART |
Claimants/ Respondents |
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- and - |
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SUSAN ANNE BURBIDGE BRIAN JEFFERY BURBIDGE |
Defendants/ Appellants |
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And Between: |
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ARTHUR KENNETH GERALD SAMWAYS GRAHAM DOUGLAS SAMWAYS CHRISTINE MARGARET GARLINGE PETER KENNETH HART LEWIS ROGER HART GEMMA LOUISE HART |
Claimants/ Respondents |
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- and - |
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SUSAN ANNE BURBIDGE BRIAN JEFFERY BURBIDGE KENNETH CHARLES HART PAUL ROGER HART |
Defendants/ Appellants |
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Mr Charles Auld (instructed by Withy King LLP) for Kenneth Charles Hart and Paul Roger Hart, and for the Samways claimants
Hearing dates: 8th and 9th July 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Vos:
Introduction
Chronological background
The judge's decision
"[121] There is no challenge to the gift by [the deceased] to [Mr and Mrs Burbidge] of Unit 15 and the release of the outstanding indebtedness, together worth £319,000. But the fact that they were made and that so soon after [the deceased] made over to [Mr and Mrs Burbidge] all but a small part of the property that remained to her clearly calls for an explanation. This is especially so when the effect of so doing was also to frustrate the specific gifts in favour of her two sons and the Samways parties (and Joan) in a will executed only months earlier, and (unless the £410,000 was repaid) greatly to reduce the value of her residuary estate.
[122] The transfer to [Mr and Mrs Burbidge] of the £290,000 in February 2008 took place without [the deceased] obtaining any prior advice. The proposal to use that money and the sale proceeds of Nos 7 and 43 in the purchase of Little Manor was contrary to the advice that Mr Pick gave to her in May 2008. The subsequent application of those monies in that purchase and the manner in which they were applied (in return for no interest in or security over the property) occurred without [the deceased] receiving the advice of any solicitor, whether Mr Pick or someone else, or from any other independent adviser. She was 86 when all of this happened".
Grounds of Appeal
i) The judge was wrong to find that Mr Burbidge was liable in unjust enrichment, since the only allegation that was pleaded was that he was a constructive trustee, which the judge rejected.
ii) The judge ought not to have made any findings about quantum since the parties had agreed that further submissions on quantum would be made after judgment.
iii) The judge was wrong to hold that the sales of No 7 and No 43 and the gift of £290,000 disadvantaged the deceased, when in fact they were to her advantage in a falling market and were for her benefit in that she wanted to move in with Mr and Mrs Burbidge. The judge ought to have found that there was a perfectly proper explanation for the impugned transactions, so that the stage at which the burden of proof shifted ought never to have been reached.
iv) The judge was wrong to find that Mrs Burbidge had failed to rebut the presumption of undue influence in respect of the gift of £290,000, and should have found that this transaction did not call for any explanation, and had the perfectly proper motivation of keeping the money out of the hands of the Harts, with whom the deceased had fallen out.
v) The judge was wrong to find that Mrs Burbidge had failed to rebut the presumption of undue influence in respect of the sales of No 7 and No 43 and the purchase of Little Manor, and should have found that these transactions did not call for any explanation, because the deceased was desperate to live with Mrs Burbidge and avoid the unpleasant attentions of the Harts.
vi) The judge approached quantum in the wrong way, ignoring the facts that (i) the deceased intended to change her will to exclude the Harts, (ii) the Harts had behaved in such a way as equity would not assist them, and (iii) the deceased was better protected by a loan agreement than by an interest in Little Manor. In addition, the judge ought not to have used the sale proceeds of No 7 and No 43 in the calculation of appropriate compensation, because, if there had been no undue influence, those properties would have been sold later after the deceased died for less money.
vii) The judge was wrong to order that Mr and Mrs Burbidge should pay as much as 95% of the claimants' costs, and ought not to have required them to pay the costs of the non-party executor.
Ground 1: Claims against Mr Burbidge
Ground 2: Deciding quantum without argument
Ground 3: Did the impugned transactions require an explanation?
Ground 4: Rebuttal of the presumption in respect of the gift of £290,000
Ground 5: Rebuttal of the presumption in respect of the sales of No7 and No 43
Ground 6: The relief granted
Ground 7: Costs
Should the grant of permission to appeal be set aside?
Conclusions and disposal
Lady Justice Black:
Lord Justice Richards: