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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Gill v Thind & Ors [2023] EWCA Civ 1276 (02 November 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2023/1276.html Cite as: [2024] 1 WLR 2837, [2023] EWCA Civ 1276, [2024] WLR 2837, [2023] WLR(D) 466 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE, BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES, BUSINESS LIST (ChD)
David Halpern KC sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE ASPLIN
and
LORD JUSTICE ARNOLD
____________________
BALWANT SINGH GILL |
Claimant/ Appellant |
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- and - |
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(1) JASHPAL SINGH THIND (2) BALJIT GILL THIND (3) JASHPAL SINGH THIND, BALJIT GILL THIND, AVNEESH SINGH THIND AND JEEVAN SINGH THIND (AS TRUSTEES OF THE THIND SSAS PENSION FUND) |
Defendants/Respondents |
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And Between : |
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BALWANT SINGH GILL |
Petitioner/ Appellant |
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- and - |
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(1) JASHPAL SINGH THIND (2) BALJIT GILL THIND (3) JEEVES ESTATES LIMITED |
Respondents |
____________________
John Randall KC and Robert Mundy (instructed by George Green LLP) for the Respondents other than the Third Respondent to the Petition
The Third Respondent to the Petition did not appear and was not represented
Hearing date : 24 October 2023
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Arnold:
Introduction
Background
The family
The companies
Ownership issues
"(1) Mr Gill's evidence is that he agreed to enter into a joint venture with Mr and Mrs Thind in relation to The Laurels and he therefore owns his shares absolutely. He says in his trial witness statement that Mr Patel advised him to take £108,000 out of the business; it is not clear whether he is saying that he was advised to take it as a dividend. He accepts that he has not paid tax on this money, but he blames Mr Povey who prepared his tax returns.
(2) Mr Thind's evidence is that, during a family gathering in December 2005, he told Mr Gill about the Thinds' plan to buy The Laurels and to borrow part of the purchase price from the Bank. He says that Mr Gill replied: 'I will lend you the money but give it to the grandchildren, one third of it'. The cash contribution for the purchase was £400,000, and Mr Gill lent £133,000."
Management issues
The witnesses
Mr Gill
Mr and Mrs Khela
Mr Thind
Mrs Thind
Avneesh and Jeevan
Satnam Singh
Other witnesses
The judge's judgment
"The alleged trusts of the shares are said to have been created by virtue of conversations between the parties. Despite the considerable number of trial bundles, there is a distinct absence of documents recording the parties' intentions at the date of the alleged creation of each of the trusts. The issues in the case therefore turn to a significant extent on oral evidence. The documents in the case mostly post-date the alleged creation of the trusts and are relevant primarily insofar as they do, or do not, corroborate the oral evidence."
"Faced with documentary lacunae of this nature, the judge has little choice but to fall back on considerations such as the overall plausibility of the evidence, the consistency or inconsistency of the behaviour of the witness and other individuals with the witness's version of events; supporting or adverse inferences to be drawn from other documents; and the judge's assessment of the witness's credibility, including his or her impression of how they performed in the witness-box, especially when their version of events was challenged in cross-examination."
"The 2011 Option makes very little sense if Mr Thind thought that Mr Gill held the shares in JEL on trust. If, however, he believed that Mr Gill held his shares beneficially, then the document makes more sense. Mr Thind presumably assumed that Mrs Thind would survive Mr Gill, and he wanted to ensure that Mrs Thind would be able to buy out Mr Gill's estate."
"She said that she overheard a conversation between Mr Thind and Mr Gill in the Thinds' home in December 2005. She understood from this conversation that Mr Gill would lend some money for the purchase of The Laurels and that he would be given a one-third shareholding, which he would hold on trust for all of his grandchildren. She did not overhear the whole conversation, because she was also engaged in helping her mother to prepare food and in supervising the children. She did join in the conversation at one point, saying that the lounge area in The Laurels was too small and would need to be changed. Further, at one point Mr Gill addressed her as well as her husband, when he said that nothing should be said to Kundan Khela, because he would also ask Mr Gill for a loan. During 2006 she had various conversations with Mr Gill, when he used the word 'loan' but she cannot be more specific. Once again, I treat this evidence with a degree of caution."
"Mr Basu also gives evidence that he went with Mr and Mrs Thind to a difficult meeting at Mr Gill's house in mid-2018. He says that he told Mr Gill that Mr Gill held the shares in JEL on trust for all his grandchildren, to which Mr Gill replied 'for the moment'. [Counsel for Mr Gill] did not put it to Mr Basu that these (or similar) words were not said; I accept that Mr Gill used these words. It is not entirely clear what Mr Gill meant by these words, but they tend to suggest that he regarded himself as currently holding the JEL shares for the benefit of his grandchildren."
"124. I must now decide whether Mr Gill is entitled to those shares beneficially or holds them on express or resulting trust. The law is uncontroversial:
(1) In the case of an express trust, the burden is on the Defendants to prove that Mr Gill's words and actions, when viewed in the context of the surrounding facts and matters, showed a clear intention to make a disposal of the shares in question so that the alleged beneficiaries would acquire a beneficial interest. No particular formality is required. The leading case is Paul v Constance [1977] 1 WLR 527, where the Court of Appeal upheld the judge's conclusion that the words 'the money is as much yours as mine' were sufficient to create a trust on the facts of that case.
(2) In the case of a resulting trust, if Mr Gill acquired the shares without giving consideration for them, there is a presumption, easily rebutted, that he holds them on a resulting trust for whoever caused the shares to be put in his name: Vandervell v Inland Revenue Commissioners [1967] 2 AC 291 at 312D-13E per Lord Upjohn.
125. I have rejected the evidence of Mr Gill, the Khelas and Mr Thind and I have identified which documents I find to be of no assistance in resolving these issues. Leaving aside all the evidence which I have discarded, I must now decide whether the remaining evidence is sufficient to give rise to express or resulting trusts, taking into account the overall plausibility of the evidence and the other factors stated in Natwest Markets Plc v Bilta (UK) Ltd."
"In my judgment, the overall implausibility of the Thinds making a gift of the shares in JIL and Simicare, coupled with the limited reliance which I place on the evidence of Mrs Thind and Jeevan, satisfies me on the balance of probabilities that Mr Gill agreed (i) in 2004 that he and his wife would accept the share in JIL, and (ii) in 2012 that he would accept the share in Simicare, in each case as trustees for Avneesh, Jeevan and Simran equally."
"137. I have found it more difficult to determine the position in relation to Mr Gill's 100 shares in JEL. In contrast to the JIL and Simicare shares, where Mr Gill did not know that he was a shareholder and clearly gave no consideration for the shares, it is common ground that he did receive the shares in JEL and did advance substantial sums in relation to The Laurels and Sherwood, albeit that it is disputed whether these were loans or investments.
138. The Thinds' case depends upon the court accepting two propositions:
(1) That Mr Gill agreed to hold the shares on trust; and
(2) That the trust was for all his grandchildren, not merely the Thind children.
139. Mr Gill's statement to Mr Basu that he held his shares for the benefit of his grandchildren 'for the moment' (see paragraph 102 above) tends to suggest that he regarded himself as a trustee. Further, if he thought that the moneys received in respect of JEL were dividends and not repayments of loans, he should have declared them to HMRC. I reject his attempt to blame Mr Povey for not including this on his tax return and I find that he received the sums as repayment of loans. It follows that he received the shares without making any capital investment.
140. I take into account Mrs Thind's evidence, on which I place limited reliance, that Mr Gill agreed to become a trustee in 2007 in relation to The Laurels. Her evidence is bolstered by what I consider to be inherently implausible. In my judgment it is implausible that the Thinds would have agreed to give Mr Gill a one-third share in the business unless he agreed to take on one third of the liabilities and responsibilities, in particular:
(1) One third of the capital contributions, not just for the purchase of The Laurels and Sherwood, but also for the extension to The Laurels;
(2) A personal guarantee for the bank loans, alongside the guarantees given by the Thinds; and
(3) A substantial role in running the businesses, and not merely offering childcare.
141. As against this, I bear in mind that the 2011 Option Agreement tends to suggest that Mr Thind regarded Mr Gill as beneficial owner of his shares in JEL (see paragraphs 73 and 74 above), as does Mr Basu's email of 3 January 2018 (see paragraph 97 above). However, on balance I conclude that these are not sufficient to outweigh the factors set out above.
142. I have considered whether it is inherently plausible that the Thinds created a trust for all the grandchildren of Mr Gill:
(1) I bear in mind the agreed evidence that Sikh families (or at least this family) regarded all cousins as being siblings and that the Thinds were very close to Mrs Thind's existing nephews and nieces in 2007.
(2) I also bear in mind that Mr Thind said that he was not close to his own brother's children in 2007.
(3) I do regard it as slightly surprising that the Thinds intended to confer a benefit on their nephews and nieces, as well as their own children, which was not for a fixed sum but extended to one third of the entire value of The Laurels and any other businesses which subsequently became part of JEL (viz. Sherwood).
(4) However, although it seems more plausible that the trust would be limited to the Thind children, no such case is advanced by either of the parties. The only choice, on the evidence, is between a trust for all the grandchildren and full beneficial ownership for Mr Gill.
143. I therefore conclude, by a narrow margin, that Mr Gill received 100 shares in JEL as express trustee for all his grandchildren.
144. This leaves the difficulty of ascertaining the terms of the trust, which are far from clear. I accept that the parties intended the shares to be divided between all grandchildren, but that leaves the question of the cut-off date. The parties contemplated in 2007 that Mrs Benning might have further children in the future and I find that they intended to include these children. At the date of the trust, the Thinds had not yet fallen out with Kuldeep and there is nothing to suggest that they intended to exclude Kuldeep's unborn children. However, I have not heard counsel's submissions on when the class was intended to close …. I will need to hear further submissions before declaring the terms of the trust.
145. If I am wrong in finding that there was an express trust, I would have concluded that Mr Gill's shares in JEL are held on a resulting trust for Mr and Mrs Thind, on the basis that they alone provided the capital for these companies and that Mr Gill's only contribution was by way of loans which have been largely repaid."
The appeal
Ground 1
"… there must be a clear declaration of trust and that means there must be clear evidence from what is said or done of an intention to create a trust — or, as [counsel] put it, 'an intention to dispose of a property or a fund so that somebody else to the exclusion of the disponent acquires the beneficial interest in it.'"
"The judge, rightly treating the basic problem in the case as a question of fact, reached this conclusion. He said:
'… I am quite satisfied that it was the intention of Mrs. Paul and Mr. Constance to create a trust in which both of them were interested.'
In this court the issue becomes: was there sufficient evidence to justify the judge in reaching that conclusion of fact? In submitting that there was, [counsel for the claimant] draws attention first and foremost to the words used. When one bears in mind the unsophisticated character of the deceased and his relationship with the plaintiff during the last few years or his life, [counsel for the claimant] submits that the words that he did use on more than one occasion, 'This money is as much yours as mine,' convey clearly a present declaration that the existing fund was as much the plaintiff's as his own. The judge accepted that conclusion. I think that he was well justified in doing so and, indeed, I think that he was right to do so. There are, as [counsel for the claimant] reminded us, other features in the history of the relationship between the plaintiff and the deceased which support the interpretation of those words as an express declaration of trust. I have already described the interview with the bank manager when the account was opened. I have mentioned also the putting of the 'bingo' winnings into the account and the one withdrawal for the benefit of both of them.
It might, however, be thought that this was a borderline case, since it is not easy to pin-point a specific moment of declaration, and one must exclude from one's mind any case built upon the existence of an implied or constructive trust, for this case was put forward at the trial and is now argued by the plaintiff as one of express declaration of trust. … The question, therefore, is whether, in all the circumstances, the use of those words on numerous occasions as between the deceased and the plaintiff constituted an express declaration of trust. The judge found that they did. For myself, I think that he was right so to find."
Ground 2
Ground 3
Ground 4
Respondents' notice
"Dad did say trust for grand kids even to me and now he has changed his story. I [don't] want dads money always comes with strings attached but this is the extreme he would go so he doesn't keep his word and would rather give his money away to the lawyers than the grandchildren."
This was adduced as hearsay evidence and Mr Gill did not apply to cross-examine Mrs Benning on it. Thirdly, Satnam Singh gave evidence (which the judge mentioned at [111]) that Mr Thind had told him in 2006 that Mr Gill had lent some money towards the purchase of the Laurels and that the amount Mr Gill had lent was going towards a trust for the Gills' grandchildren.
Conclusion
Lady Justice Asplin:
Lord Justice Peter Jackson: