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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Saluja v Gill (t/a P Gill Estate Agents Property Services)& Anor [2002] EWHC 1435 (Ch) (16 July 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2002/1435.html Cite as: [2002] EWHC 1435 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
ON APPEAL FROM
THE MAYORS AND CITY OF LONDON COUNTY COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
RAJINDER SINGH SALUJA |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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PARTAP SINGH GILL (Trading as P Gill Estate Agents Property Services) (2) NETLINK PROPERTY SERVICES LIMITED |
Respondents |
____________________
Mr Alun Jenkins (instructed by Messrs Sohal & Company for the Respondents)
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Laddie:
The issues and background facts
"The defendant's account of that meeting was as follows. He said that he had asked for the meeting with the claimant because he had learned from Hillingdon that the claimant had contacted them and asked for all future payments to be made direct to him and not to the defendant. At the meeting the claimant, he said, was angry because he had discovered how much profit the defendant was making from the transaction.
There was, according to the defendant, a conversation between them along the following lines. The claimant explained that he had interviewed one of the occupants at Trinity Road and had elicited details of the payments which were being made by Hillingdon on his behalf. He told the defendant that he had worked out how much he was making, and was prepared to offer him 10% of the gross sums received. The defendant replied to the effect that he did not get out of bed for 10% and said that he wished to adhere to the existing agreement whereby he paid a fixed rent of £3,200 per month. After further discussion the claimant told him that he could either accept an offer of an increased fee of 25% or "bugger off out of my office and I will have the police called". There was then an acrimonious conversation which resulted in the claimant indeed summoning the police and the defendant returning to his office to obtain all the keys to the property held by him which he then handed over to the claimant. The defendant said he felt he had no choice in the matter because he was anxious to preserve his existing warm relationship with the London Borough of Hillingdon."
"Mr J Bedale
Lloyds Bank
Bussiness (sic) Centre
Hounslow
Middx
Dear Mr Bedale
This is to confirm that I have an agreement with Dr Saluja to pay him a four weekly rent of £10080.00 minus 10% and electric and heating charges into Saluja Corporation Account at Lloyds Bank, Whitton High Street Branch.
Yours sincerely
[manuscript signature]
Mr Gill"
"In [Dr Saluja's] witness statement he said that he telephoned the defendant on 10 November and pointed out that almost three weeks had elapsed since the flats were occupied, but the defendant had still not signed any form of written agreement. The defendant replied that he would bring to the claimant's office "his letterhead", in other words a sheet of his usual headed writing paper, and would sign an agreement which would be written out on that sheet of paper. The defendant then came round to the claimant's office bringing with him a sheet of headed paper. A suitable letter recording the terms of the agreement and addressed to the claimant's bank manager was then dictated by the claimant to his secretary, Mrs Bansal, in the presence of the defendant. The letter was then typed out by Mrs Bansal and signed by the defendant in her presence.
In his written statement the claimant did not provide any explanation for the tippex corrections which were made. In oral evidence however the claimant said that when Mrs Bansal typed out the letter she had typed the claimant's name below the space for a signature from force of habit, and it had therefore become necessary to tippex over the claimant's name and substitute the words "Mr Gill". The claimant said that the letter was then faxed to his bank from his office. However the bank manager rang up to say that his name had not been spelt correctly, so the letter was subjected to a further application of tippex in the places where his name appeared; his name was correctly spelt in manuscript over the tippex; and the letter was then faxed for a second time to the bank, this time with the manager's name spelt correctly."
"I, ….., know that Dr Saluja had agreed to let the 4 flats above his surgery known as 36a Northcote Avenue to Netlink Property Services Ltd, of which Mr P GILL is the director. On the basis of a one year tenancy for the period of 19th October 98 to 18th October 99, and accordingly we dealt with Mr P Gill &/or Netlink in the knowledge that they were the tenants of the said properties & therefore the landlords, as far as we were concerned."
"A meeting took place in early October 1998 in the flat known as 36A Northcote Ave Southall. Present were Mr Saluja, Mr Gill, Dee Talbot + myself. Mr Saluja informed us that he had let the 4 flats at 36A Northcote Ave to Mr Gill for a period of 1 year from 19/10/98."
"The original document was produced in evidence by the claimant. It is stamped as "Received", presumably by the bank, on 23 January in a year which I am unable to decipher from the copy in the court bundle, but which I take to be 1999."
"… he did not strike me as the sort of person who would be likely to advance a false claim against an older person of higher professional status, against the weight of a written document which on its face clearly supports the claimant."
"It is difficult in my view to see why the defendant should ever have taken a single sheet of his own headed paper round to the claimant's surgery as was suggested. It might be thought that the defendant could quite easily have had a copy of the agreement typed out in his own office in the ordinary course of business and sent round to the claimant for signature. What in fact was typed out was not, in the event, an agreement between the parties as such but a letter of comfort to the claimant's bank manager. As the defendant pointed out, if such a document were truly required one might expect it to be executed and despatched in a reasonably pristine condition, and he could easily have had the document retyped in his office if asked or, if the matter were very urgent, he could have returned to his office and fetched another piece of paper."
"I am satisfied that on about 12 October the claimant told Valerie Garcia and Deirdre Talbot, two officers from the London Borough of Hillingdon Asylum Team, that he had let the flats to the defendant for a period of one year which they understood to run from 19 October 1998 to 18 October 1999."
The legal principles involved
"The court is rightly loth to order a new trial on the ground of fresh evidence. Interest reipublicae ut sit finis litium. The cases show that this court has given great weight to that maxim. There would be a constant succession of retrials if judgments were to be set aside merely because something fresh that might have been material has come to light." (p 377)
and
"Where a party deliberately misleads the court in a material matter, and that deception has probably tipped the scale in his favour (or even, as I think, where it may reasonably have done so), it would be wrong to allow him to retain the judgment thus unfairly procured. Finis litium is a desirable object, but it must not be sought by so great a sacrifice of justice which is and must remain the supreme object. Moreover, to allow the victor to keep the spoils so unworthily obtained would be an encouragement to such behaviour, and do even greater harm than the multiplication of trials." (p 379)
"These rules are based upon the maxim that it is in the public interest that there should be an end to litigation. But in my judgment the application of this maxim cannot be pressed to the extent of allowing a miscarriage of justice to go uncorrected." (p 381)
"Fraud goes to the root of the issue. If allegations are relevant and comply with conditions 2 and 3 of Ladd v Marshall, unless the Appellant has not acted in good faith, the court will look most carefully at whether there has been a miscarriage of justice and the plaintiff is prevented from the case being heard.
Two cases are of importance: Skone v Skone [1971] 1 WLR 812 in which the House of Lords approved the three conditions in Ladd v Marshall and said in relation to that case (Lord Hodson at p 817), and I paraphrase, that where a strong prima facie case of wilful deception is disclosed, a new trial will be ordered. That is strictly outside the very strict adherence to Ladd v Marshall.
In an unreported case, Linton v Ministry of Defence, decided by the House of Lords on 3rd December 1983, Lord Scarman set out the Ladd v Marshall conditions as approved by Skone v Skone, and said "I would add that the conditions are not exclusive of other grounds. Deception and impropriety may provide special grounds for admitting evidence." Again at p 10. "had the other party deceived and been guilty of impropriety, the discretion would be exercised to allow fresh evidence."
Mr Barlow said quite rightly that the passages referred to in Skone v Skone and Linton v MoD are obiter. He sought to distinguish the facts from the present case. In my judgment, the speeches of Lord Hodson and Lord Scarman support my view that in case of fraud, condition one is considered with a greater degree of flexibility. Too strict an adherence to Ladd v Marshall should not inhibit a consideration by the court of the justice of the case."
"The position governing applications to adduce fresh evidence on appeal is now governed by CPR r 52.11(2). The court will not consider evidence which was not before the court below unless it has given permission for it to be used. It is no longer necessary to show "special grounds." The discretion must also be exercised in accordance with the overriding objective of doing justice. However, in Banks v Cox … Morritt LJ said:
"In my view principles reflected in the rules in Ladd v Marshall remain relevant to any application for permission to rely on further evidence, not as rules but as matters which must necessarily be considered in an exercise of the discretion whether or not to permit an appellant to rely on evidence not before the court below."
… It follows from all of this that it cannot be a simple balancing exercise as the judge in this case seemed to think. He had to approach it on the basis that strong grounds were required. The Ladd v Marshall criteria are principles rather than rules but, nevertheless, they should be looked at with considerable care …" (p 2325)
"We consider that under the new, as under the old, procedure special grounds must be shown to justify the introduction of fresh evidence on appeal. In a case such as this, which is governed by the transitional provisions, we do not consider that we are placed in the straitjacket of previous authority when considering whether such special grounds have been demonstrated. That question must be considered in the light of the overriding objective of the new CPR. The old cases will, nonetheless, remain powerful persuasive authority, for they illustrate the attempts of the courts to strike a fair balance between the need for concluded litigation to be determinative of disputes and the desirability that the judicial process should achieve the right result. That task is one which accords with the overriding objective." (paragraph 11)
"In particular it will not normally be in the interests of justice to reopen a concluded trial in order to introduce fresh evidence unless that evidence will probably influence the result." (paragraph 13)
"But this must be borne in mind, and I think it is important: that at that time the plaintiff's solicitors had the evidence of the plaintiff herself and of Mr Crook, her husband, to whom these premises were well known, and in addition the evidence of three other witnesses – a newsvendor, a window cleaner and, perhaps more important than any other, one who delivered potatoes regularly at the premises – all of whom spoke as to the condition of the hand-rail, not before the accident and in the time of Mr Harley's occupation, but in the time of the defendant's occupation. All of these witnesses said – and Mr Bromilow, the man who delivered potatoes, said it with greater particularity – that this hand-rail was in an unsound condition, and that the controversial plank, the groove board, had been put in after the accident had happened. That is the case which we have to consider. I should have thought that it was not unreasonable, in those circumstances, for the plaintiff's solicitors to come to the conclusion that the case was well established and the evidence was sufficient to obtain a verdict for the plaintiff on the grounds of breach of duty of the defendant and to go no further." (p 789)
And
"But having regard to the evidence which was in the possession of the plaintiff's solicitors at the time of trial … it does not appear to me that there was anything unreasonable in the conduct of the plaintiff or those advising her in not searching so diligently that this evidence might possibly be discovered." (p 790)
"The question is whether in not making that inquiry the plaintiff's solicitors failed in that standard of duty which a solicitor owes to his client and in respect of which, if he fails, no further opportunity will be given to call the evidence which he might well have procured, but failed to do so. My opinion of this matter is that there was no failure of diligence on the part of the solicitors here. There was no reason to think that this angle would be productive or that it was necessary to make inquiries of this sort of a man who, as must be concluded, was in the other camp. ... I do not think the solicitors fell in any way short of the duty which they owed to their client, and, therefore, I do not think the rule which Ormerod LJ has already read, and which forbids the calling subsequently of further evidence which could have been with reasonable diligence called at the trial, debars us from allowing that course in this case." (p. 791).
"If it was proved that the hand-rail was firm and secure at that moment, then the plaintiff might well fail. The plaintiff's solicitors had, or appeared to have, very strong evidence on that point. … Therefore, the plaintiff's solicitors might well feel that they had clear and direct evidence on the material point and that it was not necessary or desirable to incur further expense by investigating past history, even if they were able to do so." (p 792)
"Civil litigation is now developing into a system designed to enable the parties involved to know where they stand in reality at the earliest possible stage, and at the lowest practicable cost, so that they make may make informed decisions about their prospects and the sensible conduct of their cases. Among other factors the judge exercising his discretion about costs should consider is whether one side or the other has, or has not, conducted litigation with those principles in mind." (p 807, emphasis added)
Is the proposed new evidence likely to have an important influence on any retrial?
"Dear Mr Biddell,
Dr Saluja has asked me to confirm that we presently have an agreement with Mr Gill re the above properties – who is Dr Saluja's agent. The agreement is on a night to night basis for B&B accommodation at the cost of £15 per night per person."
Could the evidence have been obtained with reasonable diligence for use at the trial?
"Q. Let me put this to you straightaway Mr Gill's case about that letter. It is not a point I particularly want to address at the moment, but whilst we are talking about the letter, it is his case that he did not sign that letter nor did he dictate it?
A. Well I was there, my secretary who is also present in the court now was there. She is willing to vouch for it. My bank manager will vouch for it.
Q. Your bank manger was not there, was he?
A. No, but in the next letter he has written he has taken Mr Gill's telephone number which I have given to him and he spoke to Mr Gill. My chartered accountant Petty Boosters (?), they will vouch for it. He has spoken to him as well.
Q. Indeed, I am sure, but none of these people were present when this letter was written, were they?
A. No, but this letter was faxed to him first and then the letter follows in the next pile. You will see it is dated later on." (Transcript Day 1 p 43)
"AGREEMENT BETWEEN
DR R.S. SALUJA & MR P.S. GILL
RE: FLATS 1,2,3,4,
36A NORTHCOTE AVENUE
SOUTHALL
UB1 2AY
C/O DR R.S. SALUJA
As per conversation today dated Thursday 15 October 1998, please accept this letter as an agreement to accepting the four flats above your clinic. I have listed below all costs involved in our discussion. I hope not to have missed any expense out that was agreed. Please accept my apologies if I have, and if you could inform me as soon as possible so as I can make the necessary amendments. I thank you for your business in advance and will in no doubt speak to you soon.
As discussed, costs to be taken out of rent: …
Council Tax at 285.78 (6 months) x 4n = 1143.12
Breakfast x 4 21.00 x 6 months …"
"It is extremely difficult to draw any conclusion from this examination. However, the balance of similarities and differences observed amount to positive evidence that the questioned signature is a genuine signature, although this evidence is only weak."