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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Cooper v PRG Powerhouse Ltd & Ors [2008] EWHC 498 (Ch) (14 March 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2008/498.html Cite as: [2008] 2 All ER (Comm) 964, [2008] 2 P & CR DG4, [2008] BPIR 492, [2008] EWHC 498 (Ch), [2008] BCC 588 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Simon Cooper |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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PRG Powerhouse Limited (in creditors' voluntary liquidation) Martha Thompson Simon James Michaels (4) James Joseph Bannon (the joint liquidators of the above-named company) |
Respondents |
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Lexa Hilliard (instructed by Taylor Wessing) for the Respondents
Hearing dates: 27/2/08-28/2/08
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Evans-Lombe:
"9. At around the time of my aforesaid resignation and subsequently (in particular in around early May 2006) I reached an agreement with Godfrey Davis whereby I would make a lump-sum payment to discharge the credit agreement. At around the same time, I reached an agreement with the Company (as part of the agreed termination provisions in relation to my employment with the Company) that the Company would pay £3,000 towards the lump sum agreed with Godfrey Davis and that it would arrange to transmit the balance of the said lump sum (namely £34,239.00) on my behalf to Godfrey Davis.
10. The reason it was agreed that the Company (and not I) should pay the lump sum to Godfrey Davis was purely for convenience. As stated above, it was the Company that had hitherto made payments (on my behalf) under the financing agreement, and the Company was itself making a contribution of £3,000 to the overall sum. It made good sense for the Company to make the final balloon payment, even though I was personally paying £34,239.00 towards the overall sum. The arrangements agreed between the Company and me are reflected in a letter from Mr. Chris Onslow (the Company's CEO) to me dated 24 October 2005, a letter from Mr. Sean Hoskin (the Company's payroll manager) to me dated 12 May 2006, and a further letter from Mr. Hoskin to me dated 27 July 2006, copies of which are exhibited at pages 50, 51 and 52, respectively."
"I am writing to confirm the details regarding your departure from Powerhouse and severance payment in relation to this.
As agreed your employment will be terminated on 28th October 2005. You will receive the following payments at this time:-
A Termination payment of £92,000 will be made to you within 14 days of leaving the Company. The first £30,000 of this payment will tax [sic] free and the remainder will be liable to lower rate tax and NI deductions. This termination payment includes payment in lieu of notice, 6 months Pension contribution and Healthcare cover.
You will be able to retain your Company mobile phone and all bills will become payable by yourself from the 28th October 2005.
You will be able to retain your Company car for a period of 6 months from your leaving date along with your Company fuel card. You will have the opportunity to purchase the car at a reduced price and this will be agreed with you prior to the 28th April 2006."
"With reference to your recent conversations with Chris concerning your vehicle, I can confirm the following.
The lease company have quoted a purchase price of £38,899.08. It has been agreed that the Company will fund £3,000 of the price and therefore we require a cheque from yourself for £35,899.08. Please note however that this price is only guaranteed until 31st May 2006 and we will therefore require cleared funds by this date in order for the purchase to go through.
If you would like to make the funds direct into our account, the details are as follows:
S/C : 20-00-00
S/C : 00232815
If you have any queries please do not hesitate to contact me."
The Company's bank account no. 00232815 referred to in this letter was the payroll account of the Company. The material parts of the letter of 27th July 2006 were as follows:-
"I write with reference to your purchase of your car ownership vehicle – BF55POV.
I confirm receipt of your payment for £34,239 and can confirm that this payment is now being forwarded to Godfrey Davis.
On receipt of the monies Godfrey Davis will make the necessary arrangements to have the ownership documentation forwarded to you."
"13. I made this payment on the clear understanding with the Company, reached both with Mr Onslow and Mr Hoskin on its behalf and reflected in the terms of Mr Hoskin's aforementioned letter of 27th July 2006, that the Company would forward the monies on to Godfrey Davis (together with an additional £3,000 contributed by the Company itself) in full and final settlement of the sums due under the credit agreement between myself and Godfrey Davis."
"…When the sum of £34,239 was paid by me to the Company on 7th July 2006, it was – as stated above – paid for the specific purpose of paying a debt to a third party, Godfrey Davis. That was the basis (and the only basis) upon which it was paid by me and upon which the Company agreed to receive it, a matter which cannot be seriously disputed. There was no intention on either side's part that the sums transferred should be available to the Company's general creditors."
"1. A Declaration that the monies paid by the Applicant to the First Respondent on or around 7th July 2006 in the sum of £34,239 were held on trust for the Applicant for the purpose of paying them to Godfrey Davies (Contract Hire) Limited in connection with the completion of his purchase of a Mercedes Benz CLK Cabriolet with registration number BF55POV and, if that purpose failed for any reason, repayment to the Claimant.
2. Further, a Declaration that the purpose for which the said monies were paid to the First Respondent failed when the First Respondent entered into administration on 1st August 2006, such monies by that date had not yet been paid to Godfrey Davis (Contract Hire) Limited.
3. Further, or in the alternative, a Direction that the Second to Fourth Defendants [the Liquidators] do cause the First Respondent to repay to the Applicant to the sum of £34,239 plus interest (or equitable compensation in lieu thereof), alternatively that the Second to Fourth Respondents do cause the First Respondent to pay such sum or sums to Godfrey Davies (Contract Hire) Limited on behalf of the Applicant."
Was the Payment subject to a purpose trust?
The law
"1. The loan monies will be retained by us until such time as they are applied in the acquisition of property on behalf of our client.
2. The loan monies will be used solely for the acquisition of property on behalf of our client and for no other purpose."
"(3) Was there a Quistclose trust?
68 Money advanced by way of loan normally becomes the property of the borrower. He is free to apply the money as he chooses, and save to the extent to which he may have taken security for repayment the lender takes the risk of the borrower's insolvency. But it is well established that a loan to a borrower for a specific purpose where the borrower is not free to apply the money for any other purpose gives rise to fiduciary obligations on the part of the borrower which a court of equity will enforce. In the earlier cases the purpose was to enable the borrower to pay his creditors or some of them, but the principle is not limited to such cases.
69 Such arrangements are commonly described as creating "a Quistclose trust", after the well known decision of the House in Quistclose Investments Ltd v Rolls Razor Ltd [1970] AC 567 in which Lord Wilberforce confirmed the validity of such arrangements and explained their legal consequences. When the money is advanced, the lender acquires a right, enforceable in equity, to see that it is applied for the stated purpose, or more accurately to prevent its application for any other purpose. This prevents the borrower from obtaining any beneficial interest in the money, at least while the designated purpose is still capable of being carried out. Once the purpose has been carried out, the lender has his normal remedy in debt. If for any reason the purpose cannot be carried out, the question arises whether the money falls within the general fund of the borrower's assets, in which case it passes to his trustee in bankruptcy in the event of his insolvency and the lender is merely a loan creditor; or whether it is held on a resulting trust for the lender. This depends on the intention of the parties collected from the terms of the arrangement and the circumstances of the case.
70 In the present case Twinsectra contends that paragraphs 1 and 2 of the undertaking which Mr Sims signed on 24 December created a Quistclose trust. Mr Leach denies this and advances a number of objections to the existence of a trust. He says that Twinsectra lacked the necessary intention to create a trust, and relies on evidence that Twinsectra looked exclusively to Mr Sims' personal undertaking to repay the loan as its security for repayment. He says that commercial life would be impossible if trusts were lightly inferred from slight material, and that it is not enough to agree that a loan is to be made for a particular purpose. There must be something more, for example, a requirement that the money be paid into a segregated account, before it is appropriate to infer that a trust has been created. In the present case the money was paid into Mr Sims' client account, but that is sufficiently explained by the fact that it was not Mr Sims' money but his client's; it provides no basis for an inference that the money was held in trust for anyone other than Mr Yardley. Then it is said that a trust requires certainty of objects and this was lacking, for the stated purpose "to be applied in the purchase of property" is too uncertain to be enforced. Finally it is said that no trust in favour of Twinsectra could arise prior to the failure of the stated purpose, and this did not occur until the money was misapplied by Mr Yardley's companies.
Intention
71 The first two objections are soon disposed of. A settlor must, of course, possess the necessary intention to create a trust, but his subjective intentions are irrelevant. If he enters into arrangements which have the effect of creating a trust, it is not necessary that he should appreciate that they do so; it is sufficient that he intends to enter into them. Whether paragraphs 1 and 2 of the undertaking created a Quistclose trust turns on the true construction of those paragraphs.
72 The fact that Twinsectra relied for its security exclusively on Mr Sims's personal liability to repay goes to Twinsecrra's subjective intention and is not relevant to the construction of the undertaking, but it is in any case not inconsistent with the trust alleged. Arrangements of this kind are not intended to provide security for repayment of the loan, but to prevent the money from being applied otherwise than in accordance with the lender's wishes. If the money is properly applied the loan is unsecured. This was true of all the decided cases, including the Quistclose case itself.
The effect of the undertaking
73 A Quistclose trust does not necessarily arise merely because money is paid for a particular purpose. A lender will often inquire into the purpose for which a loan is sought in order to decide whether he would be justified in making it. He may be said to lend the money for the purpose in question, but this is not enough to create a trust; once lent the money is at the free disposal of the borrower. Similarly payments in advance for goods or services are paid for a particular purpose, but such payments do not ordinarily create a trust. The money is intended to be at the free disposal of the supplier and may be used as part of his cashflow. Commercial life would be impossible if this were not the case.
74 The question in every case is whether the parties intended the money to be at the free disposal of the recipient: In re Goldcorp Exchange Ltd [1995] 1 AC 74, 100 per Lord Mustill. His freedom to dispose of the money is necessarily excluded by an arrangement that the money shall be used exclusively for the stated purpose, for as Lord Wilberforce observed in the Quistclose case [1970] AC 567, 580:
"A necessary consequence from this, by a process simply of interpretation, must be that if, for any reason, [the purpose could not be carried out,] the money was to be returned to [the lender]: the word 'only' or 'exclusively' can have no other meaning or effect."
In the Quistclose case a public quoted company in financial difficulties had declared a final dividend. Failure to pay the dividend, which had been approved by the shareholders, would cause a loss of confidence and almost certainly drive the company into liquidation. Accordingly the company arranged to borrow a sum of money "on condition that it is used to pay the forthcoming dividend". The money was paid into a special account at the company's bank, with which the company had an overdraft. The bank confirmed that the money "will only be used for the purpose of paying the dividend due on 24 ]uly 1964". The House held that the circumstances were sufficient to create a trust of which the bank had notice, and that when the company went into liquidation without having paid the dividend the money was repayable to the lender.
75 In the present case paragraphs 1 and 2 of the undertaking are crystal clear. Mr Sims undertook that the money would be used solely for the acquisition of property and for no other purpose; and was to be retained by his firm until so applied. It would not be held by Mr Sims simply to Mr Yardley's order; and it would not be at Mr Yardley's free disposition. Any payment by Mr Sims of the money, whether to Mr Yardley or anyone else, otherwise than for the acquisition of property would constitute a breach of trust.
76 Mr Leach insisted that such a payment would, no doubt, constitute a breach of contract, but there was no reason to invoke equitable principles merely because Mr Sims was a solicitor. But Mr Sims's status as a solicitor has nothing to do with it. Equity's intervention is more principled than this. It is unconscionable for a man to obtain money on terms as to its application and then disregard the terms on which he received it. Such conduct goes beyond a mere breach of contract. As North J explained in Gibert v Gonard (1884) 54 LJ Ch 439, 440:
"It is very well known law that if one person makes a payment to another for a certain purpose, and that person takes the money knowing that it is for that purpose, he must apply it to the purpose for which it was given. He may decline to take it if he likes; but if he chooses to accept the money tendered for a particular purpose, it is his duty, and there is a legal obligation on him, to apply it for that purpose."
The duty is not contractual but fiduciary. It may exist despite the absence of any contract at all between the parties, as in Rose v Rose (1986) 7 NSWLR 679; and it binds third parties as in the Quistclose case itself. The duty is fiduciary in character because a person who makes money available on terms that it is to be used for a particular purpose only and not for any other purpose thereby places his trust and confidence in the recipient to ensure that it is properly applied. This is a classic situation in which a fiduciary relationship arises, and since it arises in respect of a specific fund it gives rise to a trust."
"The duty is fiduciary in character because a person who makes money available on terms that it is to be used for a particular purpose only and not for any other purpose thereby places his trust and confidence in the recipient to ensure that it is properly applied."
"As to segregation of funds the effect of the authorities seems to be that a requirement to keep money separate is normally an indicator that they are impressed with a trust, and that the absence of such a requirement, if there are no other indicators of a trust, normally negatives it. The fact that a transaction contemplates the mingling of funds is, therefore, not necessarily fatal to a trust."
Is Mr Cooper's payment traceable in the hands of the administrators/ liquidators?
"The other point is that not all bank account transactions are final; some are provisional. It might be that the balance on a given day is £500, and the claimant is in the position to assert that £500 of value traceably exists in the account. On the next day a cheque might be drawn on the account for £600, leading to a provisional balance of £100 overdrawn. If that cheque were dishonoured, the balance would return to £500. The claimant's ability to trace would not be affected. The cheque having been dishonoured, the value never actually left the account. Provisional transactions which are reversed should therefore simply be ignored."