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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Price v Saundry & Anor [2019] EWCA Civ 2261 (18 December 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2019/2261.html Cite as: [2019] EWCA Civ 2261 |
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ON APPEAL FROM BRISTOL DISTRICT REGISTRY
His Honour Judge Paul Matthews
C30BS640
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
Vice-President of the Court of Appeal (Civil Division)
LADY JUSTICE ASPLIN
and
LORD JUSTICE ARNOLD
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Pauline Ann Price |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Valery Ann Saundry Geraldine Sanders (as Executrix of Martin Gordon Sanders, Deceased) |
1st Respondent 2nd Respondent |
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Mr Leslie Blohm QC and Mr Ewan Paton (instructed by Powells Law) for the First Respondent
the Second Respondent did not appear and was not represented
Hearing date: 3 December 2019
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Crown Copyright ©
Lady Justice Asplin:
What the judge found on the taking of the Account
The Judge's decision - Indemnity in relation to the Removal Claim
". . .
So the mere fact that the trustee has defended the claim because a claim has been made against her does not automatically mean that it is done in some interest other than that of the trust estate.
The question is whether I can go on to say that she has acted in substance for a benefit other than that of the estate. The difficulty again is that, of course, I have made no findings in relation to the allegations made under this part of the claim and I do not see how I can reach the conclusion that she has committed such misconduct as would justify her being deprived of her indemnity. In relation to the first part of the claim, I can make no order as to costs and I see no basis upon which to deprive the trustees of their indemnity."
The Judge's decision - Indemnity in relation to Account claim
"I consider that in the present case the claimant [Mrs Price] has had sufficient success on the account to justify the first defendant [Mrs Saundry] paying those costs of taking the account. The success has been not just a few small sums here and there. There were included some significant ones too. In my judgment, the claimant was wholly justified in seeking an account and has been shown to be right in a number of important matters, even if the total amount of the adjustments that will be effected as a result does not match up to some of the sums which were being bandied about in the earlier correspondence between solicitors."
In relation to the repeated attempts to produce accounts in accordance with the orders which had been made and points made in relation to discrepancies in the account, the judge stated that they added weight to his decision but that he did not think them necessary for it. See [39]. He then went on to consider the effect of the Calderbank offer and the Part 36 offer upon the basis upon which costs should be awarded and concluded at [46] that the Part 36 offer had been successful and that the consequences of CPR 36.17(4) should follow. It was his conclusion in this regard which led to costs being awarded on the standard basis before 28 December 2018 and upon the indemnity basis thereafter.
"47. The last point on this part is the question of the impact of the trustee rules, which I have referred to in CPR 46.3 and in Practice Direction 46.1, and that is whether or not the first defendant should lose her indemnity from the trust fund to which, under the general trust law, she is entitled. I ask myself, therefore, similar questions. Did the first defendant act unreasonably in the conduct of the account? Looking at the way in which the account went through, there were some glitches, there were some difficulties, but I cannot say that at any point in my judgment she acted unreasonably in the conduct of it.
48. The other question is whether the first defendant acted in substance for the benefit of another party or for herself. Here it seems to me that, in relation at any rate to the matters which were found on the account obviously the same point arises as arose before. This is that there were some payments which were struck out of the account or which were put back in because they were wrongly dealt with. But I cannot say that the first defendant was acting in substance for the benefit of another party, so I cannot find any misconduct in this case. I do not consider that there is any justification for removing the indemnity from the first defendant."
The postscript
". . . I have not found the first defendant to have been guilty of misconduct or any breach of trust causing loss to the trust fund. I have corrected the first defendant's accounting after hearing the evidence, but taking an account in this way is not at all the same as finding proved an actionable breach of trust. The default position for a trustee engaged in litigation is that he or she will have an indemnity for costs properly incurred (including for adverse costs orders) unless guilty of misconduct. In these circumstances I have no basis for saying that the first defendant is not entitled to the indemnity even in respect of the adverse costs order. In any event, I am not aware of any authority for distinguishing the cases where the trustee was also a beneficiary from that where she was not, or was defending a third party's claim and see no principled reason for doing so."
The basis for a Trustee's right to indemnity
"(1) A trustee—
(a) is entitled to be reimbursed from the trust funds, or
(b) may pay out of the trust funds,
expenses properly incurred by him when acting on behalf of the trust."
Mr Learmonth also took us to the predecessor of section 31(1), section 30(2) of the Trustee Act 1925. That was in a slightly different form. It provided:
"A trustee may reimburse himself or pay or discharge out of the trust premises all expenses incurred in or about the execution of the trusts or powers."
"(2) . . . is entitled to be paid the costs of those proceedings, insofar as they are not recovered from or paid by any other person, out of the relevant trust fund or estate."
Those costs will be assessed on the indemnity basis: CPR 46.3(3). The Rule is supplemented by 46PD.1 which provides as follows:
"1.1 A trustee or personal representative is entitled to an indemnity out of the relevant trust fund or estate for costs properly incurred. Whether costs were properly incurred depends on all the circumstances of the case including whether the trustee or personal representative ("the trustee")—
(a) obtained directions from the court before bringing or defending the proceedings;
(b) acted in the interests of the fund or estate or in substance for a benefit other than that of the estate, including the trustee's own; and
(c) acted in some way unreasonably in bringing or defending, or in the conduct of, the proceedings.
1.2 The trustee is not to be taken to have acted for a benefit other than that of the fund by reason only that the trustee has defended a claim in which relief is sought against the trustee personally."
"Where a person is or has been a party to any proceedings in the capacity of trustee . . . he shall be entitled to the costs of those proceedings, in so far as they are not recovered from or paid by any other person, out of the fund held by him in that capacity . . . and the court may order otherwise only on the ground that he has acted unreasonably or, in the case of a trustee . . . has in substance acted for his own benefit rather than for the benefit of the fund."
"While warning that it was 'well nigh impossible to lay down any general rules which can be depended on to meet the ever varying circumstances of particular cases', he said that trust litigation could be divided into three categories. First, proceedings brought by trustees to have the guidance of the court as to the construction of the trust instrument or some question arising in the course of administration. In such cases, the costs of all parties are usually treated as necessarily incurred for the benefit of the estate and ordered to be paid out of the fund. Secondly, there are cases in which the application is made by someone other than the trustees, but raises the same kind of point as in the first class and would have justified an application by the trustees. This second class is treated in the same way as the first. Thirdly, there are cases in which a beneficiary is making a hostile claim against the trustees or another beneficiary. This is treated in the same way as ordinary common law litigation and costs usually follow the event."
"Trustees may be involved in three kinds of dispute. (1) The first (which I shall call "a trust dispute") is a dispute as to the trusts on which they hold the subject matter of the settlement. This may be "friendly" litigation involving e.g. the true construction of the trust instrument or some other question arising in the course of the administration of the trust; or "hostile" litigation e.g. a challenge in whole or in part to the validity of the settlement by the settlor on grounds of undue influence or by a trustee in bankruptcy or a defrauded creditor of the settlor, in which case the claim is that the trustees hold the trust funds as trustees for the settlor, the trustee in bankruptcy or creditor in place of or in addition to the beneficiaries specified in the settlement. The line between friendly and hostile litigation, which is relevant as to the incidence of costs, is not always easy to draw: see In re Buckton; Buckton v. Buckton [1907] 2 Ch 406. (2) The second (which I shall call "a beneficiaries dispute") is a dispute with one or more of the beneficiaries as to the propriety of any action which the trustees have taken or omitted to take or may or may not take in the future. This may take the form of proceedings by a beneficiary alleging breach of trust by the trustees and seeking removal of the trustees and /or damages for breach of trust. (3) The third (which I shall call "a third party dispute") is a dispute with persons, otherwise than in the capacity of beneficiaries, in respect of rights and liabilities e.g. in contract or tort assumed by the trustees as such in the course of administration of the trust.
Trustees (express and constructive) are entitled to an indemnity against all costs, expenses and liabilities properly incurred in administering the trust and have a lien on the trust assets to secure such indemnity. Trustees have a duty to protect and preserve the trust estate for the benefit of the beneficiaries and accordingly to represent the trust in a third party dispute. Accordingly their right to an indemnity and lien extends in the case of a third party dispute to the costs of proceedings properly brought or defended for the benefit of the trust estate. Views may vary whether proceedings are properly brought or defended, and to avoid the risk of a challenge to their entitlement to the indemnity, (a beneficiary dispute), trustees are well advised to seek court authorisation before they sue or defend. . . .
A beneficiaries dispute is regarded as ordinary hostile litigation in which costs follow the event and do not come out of the trust estate: see per Hoffmann L.J. in McDonald v. Horn [1995] I.C.R. 685, 696."
"The Respondents cross-appeal from the Judge's ruling which, they claim, deprives them of their legal rights. They submit that trustees are entitled to a lien over the trust fund for their costs, and that this lien extends to the costs of litigation, including the costs of defending themselves against a charge of breach of trust: see Turner v Hancock (1882), 20 Ch.D. 303; Re Spurling's Will Trusts [1966] 1 WLR 920. The lien is only lost by misconduct.
But the principle is in my opinion overstated. Trustees are entitled to a lien on the trust fund for the costs of successfully defending themselves against an action for breach of trust. That was the position in Re Spurling's Will Trusts as it was in Walters v Woodbridge 7 Ch.D. 504 which it followed. But on what principle can one justify their right to recoup themselves out of the trust fund for the costs of unsuccessfully defending themselves against such an action? It offends all sense of justice. The Respondents rely on Turner v Hancock and submit that that was just such a case; but I do not think that it was. The action was an action for an account. On taking the accounts it was found that a sum was due from the trustee and not to him as he contended. It was therefore a case in which the trustee was unsuccessful; but it was not a case in which he was found to be guilty of misconduct or breach of trust. In the course of his judgment Sir George Jessel, MR said at p. 304;
"These rights can be lost or curtailed by such inequitable conduct on the part of a mortgagee or trustee as may amount to a violation or culpable neglect of his duty under the contract...It is not the course of the court in modern times to discourage persons from becoming trustees by inflicting costs upon them if they have done their duty, or even if they have committed an innocent breach of trust."
As Ungoed-Thomas J pointed out in Re Spurling's Will Trusts, it is not enough to deprive trustees of their right to recoup their costs out of the trust fund that the claim is a claim to recover money from them for the benefit of the trust. If the trustees succeed, then the claim was not well founded, and they cannot be denied their right of recoupment. I would add that even if the claim succeeds, yet they may not have so conducted themselves as to lose their right of recoupment.
In the present case the Judge deprived the Respondents of 20% of their costs because they had put forward arguments on which they had been unsuccessful. That was a proper exercise of his discretion. But he also deprived them of their right to recoup themselves out of the trust fund to the extent of that 20% on the ground that the claim was a hostile claim against them personally for breach of trust. In my opinion that was not a sufficient ground for denying them their contractual rights. As things stood at the conclusion of the Judge's judgment, he had held that the Respondents were absolved by Clause 15 from liability in respect of all the claims for breach of trust pleaded against them, with the result that the greater part of the Action was bound to fail (there is a claim to an account in respect of a separate matter which is not particularly contentious and which would survive). Accordingly, unless the pleadings were amended, the Action would be dismissed without any inquiry into the trustees' conduct. This would not provide any basis for depriving the Respondents of their rights."
Lord Justice Arnold:
Lord Justice Underhill: