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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Favor Easy Management Ltd & Anor v Wu (aka Lisa Wu) & Ors [2011] EWHC 2017 (Ch) (29 July 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2011/2017.html Cite as: [2011] EWHC 2017 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Favor Easy Management Limited (incorporated in the Seychelles) (2) Samuel Tak Lee |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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Fuk Fei Wu (also known as Lisa Wu) Favor Easy Management Limited (incorporated in the British Virgin Islands) |
Defendants |
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Mr Crampin QC and Mr Staunton (instructed by Kamberley Solicitors) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 15-19 November, 22, 24-26 November, 21 December 2010 (Defendants' submissions) 27 January 2011 (Claimants' submissions), 8-9 March 2011
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Norris :
" "Credibility" involves wider problems than mere "demeanour" which is mostly concerned with whether the witness appears to be telling the truth as he now believes it to be. Credibility covers the following problems. First, is the witness a truthful or untruthful person? Secondly, is he, though a truthful person telling something less than the truth on this issue, or though an untruthful person, telling the truth on this issue? Thirdly, though he is a truthful person telling the truth as he sees it, did he register the intentions of the conversation correctly and, if so has his memory correctly retained them? Also, has his recollection been subsequently altered by unconscious bias or wishful thinking or by overmuch discussion of it with others? Witnesses, especially those who are emotional, who think they are morally in the right, tend very easily and unconsciously to conjure up legal rights that did not exist. It is a truism, often used in accident cases, that with every day that passes the memory becomes fainter and the imagination becomes more active. For that reason a witness, however honest, rarely persuades a judge that his present recollection is preferable to that which was taken down in writing immediately after the accident occurred. Therefore, contemporary documents are always of the utmost importance. And lastly, although the honest witness believes he heard or saw this or that, is it so improbable that it is on balance more likely that he was mistaken? On this point it is essential that the balance of probability is put correctly into the scales in weighing the credibility of the witness. And motive is one aspect of probability. All these problems compendiously are entailed when a judge assesses the credibility of a witness; they are all part of one judicial process. And in the process contemporary documents and admitted or incontrovertible facts and probabilities must play their proper part".
"(1) In certain circumstances a court may be entitled to draw adverse inferences from the absence or silence of a witness who might be expected to have material evidence to give on an issue in an action.
(2) If a court is willing to draw such inferences, they may go to strengthen the evidence adduced on that issue by the other party or to weaken the evidence, if any, adduced by the party who might reasonably have been expected to call the witness.
(3) There must, however, have been some evidence, however weak, adduced by the former on the matter in question before the court is entitled to draw the desired inference: in other words, there must be a case to answer on that issue.
(4) If the reason for the witness's absence or silence satisfies the court, then no adverse inference may be drawn. If, on the other hand, there is some credible explanation given, even if it is not wholly satisfactory, the potentially detrimental effect of his/her absence or silence may be reduced or nullified".
" If in the course of the case it is intended to suggest that a witness is not speaking the truth upon a particular point, his attention must be directed to the fact by cross-examination showing that that imputation is intended to be made, so that he may have an opportunity of making any explanation which is open to him, unless it is otherwise perfectly clear that he has had full notice beforehand that there is an intention to impeach the credibility of the story or ... the story is of an incredible and romancing character".
I would draw attention to one further passage in the speech of Lord Herschell (at P. 70-71):-
"… I have always understood that if you intend to impeach a witness you are bound, whilst he is in the box, to give him an opportunity of making any explanation which is open to him; and, as it seems to me, that is not only a rule of professional practice in the conduct of the case, but is essential to fair play and fair dealing with witnesses. Sometimes reflections have been made upon excessive cross-examination of witnesses, and it has been complained of as undue; but it seems to me that a cross-examination of a witness which errs in the direction of excess may be far more fair to him than to leave him without cross-examination, and afterwards to suggest that he is not a witness of truth, I mean upon a point on which it is not otherwise perfectly clear that he has had full notice beforehand that there is an intention to impeach the credibility of the story which he is telling. Of course I do not deny for a moment that there are cases in which that notice has been so distinctly and unmistakably given, and the point upon which he is impeached ….is so manifest, that it is not necessary to waste time in putting questions to him upon it. All I am saying is that it will not do to impeach the credibility of a witness upon a matter on which he has not had any opportunity of giving an explanation by reason of there having been no suggestion whatever in the course of the case that his story is not accepted".
This guidance, of course, falls to be applied in the particular circumstances of the individual case and in the context of litigation now conducted in a very different way from what it was in 1894 (with, under the CPR, advance notice of and, in theory, judicial control over the evidence to be adduced). But the touchstone of fair play and fair dealing remains as applicable now as then: as was made clear (in the context of allegations of deceit, fraud and dishonesty) by Rimer LJ in LB Haringey v Hines [2010] EWCA Civ 1111 at paragraphs [39] to [42].
" It may happen ... that a transferor of property causes the legal interest to vest in another person in circumstances where it is unclear whom the transferor intends to have the beneficial interest in it. Here, by operation of law, a resulting trust may arise for the benefit of the transferor. It gives effect to a default presumption about the intention of a person in making a gratuitous transfer of property: although he has transferred the legal interest, he would generally not intend to transferee to take the property beneficially ... The clearest evidence of rebuttal is an express declaration of trust ... Even where this is absent, the court aims to arrive at the parties' real intentions by considering direct evidence of all the transaction. This requires an objective inference drawn from the parties' words and conduct. As a result, the presumptions of a resulting trust or of advancement are only relied upon as default rules where there is no sufficient evidence to displace them ... The acts and declarations of the parties before or at the time of the purchase, or so immediately after it as to constitute a part of the transaction, are admissible in evidence either for or against the party who did the act or made the declaration. It has been held that subsequent acts and declarations may only be admissible as evidence against the party who made them, and not in his favour……"
"Her boss is thinking of buying a hotel for £1.6 million. The boss would then grant a lease to her two nephews for £500k premium".
The attendance note does not record any details of the property to be acquired. Shortly thereafter (on 16 October 2007) the agents handling the sale of 66 Avonmore Road sought confirmation that the purchaser had the means to pay for the property without a mortgage. Mr Tang spoke with Ms Wu and his note says:
" She would not be the buyer but her boss. I need to know the details of her boss. She wants to form a company but I do not know what company the boss requires. Requested the boss to talk to me tomorrow to clarify".
But Ms Wu then rang back and a note of that conversation reads:
" Her boss would not contact me. The boss would at least need to form a company so we can contact the formation company. Whoever acts for the boss must need to be able to obtain instructions".
"Boss may lend her the money so that she can be the purchaser. Boss requires security. She can grant a mortgage to her boss on completion".
"…. Buying company A: ask for/want "bearer share" company Liberia, BVI etc…
Prepare leasehold between company A and B: refer to the documents of yesterday….
Establish/buy British company B: change its name to "Mistress Lodge Ltd"…
Company A (anonymous) bought at £1.6 million… Company A 20 years leasehold selling/sold for £500,000…. Selling/sold to company B; plus annual rental…. first five years - £50,000/year; second five years - £80,000/year; last 10 years - £95,000/year….."
(The rental payments would total £1.6 million over the life of the lease: so the operator would pay the freeholder the purchase price of the property plus £500,000). At the foot of this note and in Ms Wu's hand is written: "The name of company A will be given to you later".
"Her B may hv a BVI company formed in HK already".
But that instruction was itself altered at a 40 minute meeting on 22 October 2007 of which there is a six line note. This note reads in part:
" She will probably instruct a formation company in HK to form a BVI company. For the purpose of this transaction, she is my client although she may receive financial assistance from her boss. Since the boss does not want to meet me, I would not be able to act for the boss".
This document was not in the Core Bundle and was not referred to at the trial. Ms Wu gave Mr Tang a cheque for £5000 drawn on her own account.
"I, being the agent of the bearer, hereby apply for and request you to allot one bearer share…. to the bearer at par. I confirm that the bearer agree (sic) to take the said share subject to the Memorandum and Articles……"
" The purchase price has been reduced by a further £10k. Her backer will send the money to me from Switzerland. The backer would like to have a look at the contract first".
" Re: Acquisition of 66 Avonmore Road…(Price of £1.57 million)
Please be informed that we have today caused HSBC Private Bank Geneva ... to wire to your firm's Barclays bank account ... CHF 365,400 for the 10% deposit for the captioned acquisition. Such sum is around £157,000. The purchaser is our firm.
Sincerely yours
Favor Easy Management Ltd
Victoria, Seychelles"
Since Ms Wu did not write English it would have been apparent to Mr Tang that this communication came from somebody else: but he would not from the face of the document know who. Such sums were indeed sent from an account in Mr Lee's name. Before the money arrived Ms Wu signed FEM Seychelles' part of the contract; and when it arrived contracts were exchanged (on 20 December 2007) on the authority of Ms Wu.
" She wants the BVI company to own the present property. She also wants the BVI company to acquire the next-door building. She will offer £1.6 million in due course ... I advised her to approach HSBC to obtain rate. Mr Simons will also arrange a mortgage through NatWest for her. Whoever can offer the best will get the deal. She wants to borrow £2 million……."
(a) At the end of a call made by Mr Lee (from Paris) to Ms Wu (on a Hong Kong number) on 9 January 2009 about an attempt by her to send her bank details Mr Lee enquired "Are they still with those files in No.2? I am too busy to deal with your case": to which Ms Wu responded "The files are of course in No.2. What did you think was not there?". The reference to "No.2" is clearly a reference to 2 Ebury Mews, where Ms Wu lived. The reference to "files" may be a reference to the books documents and records of FEM Seychelles (which its constitution said were to be kept at 2 Ebury Mews): or to other files (such as a file containing the property purchase documents, licences etc).
(b) In the course of a call on 11 January 2009 the following exchange occurred:-
"Lee: Hey the house that you bought. Have you finished the decoration of it? Don't know what the number of the next one is.
Wu: It will take eight weeks ... yes 8 to 12 weeks before getting the approval. As it is a conservation district here it will take a very long time.
Lee: Why don't you ask Ah Ming to keep an eye on it for you?"
(c) A conversation on 12 January 2009 had begun with a reference to Ms Wu attending a provincial gathering with (she said) a "big belly", with everybody knowing that she was with a rich man but not married: it ended with this exchange:-
"Wu: Now all people know. But I haven't got you, I haven't got the money. People don't see how much money you give me in the UK. In any case, if you give me a property, I can explain to people.
Lee: Why don't you buy a street in the UK?
Wu: I don't want a street. I just want a house to live in.
Lee: I am going to get angry…."
(d) In the course of a conversation on 13 January 2009 the following passage occurs:-
" Lee: Hey, about you buying the hotel next door, has the deal about the building next to the hotel in London been done yet?
Wu: It was sold a long time ago.
Lee: Is being renovated now?
Wu: Now they're waiting for the council to approve so they can start renovation.
Lee: Right."
(e) Later in that same call the conversation took this form:-
"Wu: I have no money….
Lee: What you mean by having no money?
Wu: I have no money except some living allowance, living allowance only. Now I only want to have a property. That's all I'm asking. I don't want anything else.
Lee: Hey, I'm sorry…. You are a boss yourself. As your relatives in Ningbo say you are running hotels, owning properties and earning rent in London.
Wu: True hotels…. and earning rent… To be honest you know quite well that Zhou Wen Xuan of yours stuff, I'm not allowed those now. They are just placed there. You don't belong to (unintelligible).. Belongs to me, big boss…… Look what you're talking about. Right, things about hotels and stuff are true. But I'm now living in Hong Kong at a place about the size of a bathroom. Is that right for me?
Lee: It's you who wanted to go back to Hong Kong. Why didn't you stay in London and be a big owner of a whole street?......."
(f) On 14 January 2009 Ms Wu made the following complaint:-
" Being a good father, you ... do you think it's easy to be a good father? There's a price to pay. For me, you're paying money. Right? That's the same, paying price. What do I do? I'm with a rich man. I don't have money or even a property to live in. Why am I with you? You got it all wrong. You don't give people money and property to live in, and you want women? ... Shouldn't I get my things back ?"
(g) Later in that same conversation occurs the following exchange:
"Wu: .. I'll make everything clear. I am only asking for a bit more than 10 million. It's ridiculous if I ask you for many million, but I am only asking for a bit more than 10 million to buy a property. Why do you bother so much? You said you don't trust me. I gave you what you wanted. What do you want?
Lee: Now you ask me for 14 million and you won't….
Wu: I won't do anything. I'll have a property and the hotel to do business. I won't care how much money you have. This is me. I only want a property and the hotel because I have to raise my son. You understand? That would be all….
Lee: Hey after you get the 14 million and a property at Kowloon.. you'll ask me again……"
After a short interlude Ms Wu says:-
" I only want my own things back. I want the hotel back. I want a property in Hong Kong. With the hotel I can do some business and raise my own son. And I won't bother you…….. I won't take a dime from your family in the future. I only want my hotel back. That's it …"
The debate continues and Mr Lee interjects:-
"When will you get enough? Around your hotel you can buy a whole street…."
Then after a further interval there is the following exchange:-
"Wu: Let me tell you. I won't go to you until I'm really out of money. You can refuse to pay me. Fine. Suit yourself. Don't give me then. I want my hotel back and the hotel file back. Let's finish.
Lee: Have you taken it? Have you taken it?
Wu: What? What did I take? I didn't. I told you to go to the UK and see if the file is there before you pay me…"
There is then further debate in the course of which Mr Lee suggests that Ms Wu may be committing a crime in asking for money and that he wanted to talk to his lawyer: the parties then approach a settlement and the following then occurs:-
"Lee: Let me talk to my lawyer first.
Wu: I'd most get back that thing from Zou Wen Xuan for myself. If I have enough money to live, I won't go and ask for it……………
Lee: £3 million and you get back all of Zhou Wen Xuan's title deeds and all that stuff. And you will go to the lawyer to sign?............
Wu: I don't even want your money. Do whatever you like. I only need to get back Zhou Wen Xuan's things. I told you. You can refuse to give me money. I'm not blackmailing you. Just to be clear. You can refuse to give me money. I only need to get back Zhou Wen Xuan's things. I won't see you again. I said it. I deserve all that….. I'm not blackmailing you. You can think this over. You can do what you want…………….
Wu: I get the hotel stuff and leave. I only get back what I deserve and that's it. I'll ask you for money to live when I run out of it one day……………………
Lee: If I'm going to do it, I'll go to No.2 and get the files first, and use the old option to do it. Are you done?
Wu: You go to No.2, find the files and pay. This is human talking. We have a deal. I won't take your Zhou Wen Xuan because you're afraid that one day I'll take Zhou Wen Xuan and leave. My heart will always be with you. I'm not afraid of waiting. You can even give it to me in 20 years time. That's all. We're talking as humans right? You can look at it before giving it to me. Will I use the a bit more than 10 million against your many millions?"
(h) A further call on 14 January 2009 takes up the settlement discussions on the footing that the parties were breaking up. A number of options were canvassed and their numbering became confused. But what emerged was this. The first option was that Mr Lee would pay £3 million into Miss Wu's account and the parties would go their separate ways. The second option was that Mr Lee would buy Ms Wu the Kowloon flat for HK $14 million, and when Mr Lee enquired whether he would still have to pay living expenses Ms Wu responded that he would not and that her living expenses would come from "the hotel business". That would also be a clean break. The third option was that Mr Lee would not give her any money but Ms Wu said:
" I will take the hotel business and run it myself. As long as I can live on it, I won't bother you or ask you for money at all. If I have no success, I will ask you for money to cover my living expenses".
So that would not be a clean break. After further discussion Miss Wu says:-
" I don't want to do this. I just want a property and the hotel instead of fighting against your family when you are around. ... As long as you buy me a property and give me the hotel I am happy to sign anything. Isn't that good enough?.... I am in need of a property now…. And the hotel…… I need to buy the property. I have been telling people I will buy that property. I will lose face if I don't get it. Do you understand?"
(i) Negotiations continued on 16 January 2009 and in the course of a telephone conversation on that day Ms Wu asked Mr Lee for HK$15 million repayable if a DNA test verified that the baby which she said she was then carrying did not belong to Mr Lee. There then followed this exchange:-
"Lee: No, you left out something. Are you removing things relating to Zhou Wen Xuan?
Wu: I will take Zhou Wen Xuan with me…
Lee: I've told you, if you take them that we would be turning against each other..
Wu: OK. OK. I won't take it…."
(j) In a telephone conversation on 20 January 2009 Mr Lee and Ms Wu review the money he has already given her in these terms:-
"Lee: Reflecting while eating breakfast, I wanted to ask you how much of my money was spent on you since the very beginning? I've forgotten about that….. How much did you spend on [immigration]?
Wu: That amounted to 1 million [ pounds]……..
Lee: It's not the money used to purchase the hotel "Admore London" is it?
Wu: That's a different amount of money.
Lee: How much did it cost purchasing that hotel? I've forgotten that one too?
Wu: One million and six hundred thousand.
Lee: So the two add up to 2.6 million…… on top of that, things involving Ah Ming cost me another 500,000.
Wu: You are right.
Lee: So you have spent nearly 3,000,000 of my money.
Wu: You're right.
Lee: So ... I haven't treated you badly ... Around 3 million right? It cost 500,000 to process the immigration of Ah Ming and your nephew. Correct? ... So add another £500,000 onto the tally. Then how much for purchasing the adjoining building?
Wu: That cost 1.4 plus million……..
Lee: Actually I've treated you fairly well then.
Wu: Yeah, but I did not actually get much. The stuff relating to the hotel. … Actually you have yet to give it to me. You have given me [indistinct] so far".
(k) There is a note in Mr Lee's handwriting of 27 January 2009 which summarises his conversation with Mr Wu in these terms:-
" Just found out in No.2 Ebury Street STL took out the bearer shares of Avon Hotel… She blew her top and would return to Hong Kong tomorrow and march up to STL's family… to showdown with ST Lee family. Why STL corner her like this? Very angry"
The translated transcription of the telephone call reads (so far as material):-
"Wu: What do you want? ... I sent people to collect things. You said the property has been [inaudible] and you have taken the file. Can you tell me? Now you ... you don't give me the [inaudible]. Fine. But you also take the hotel. This is an agreement between you and me. I could have taken it long ago if I wanted to. Do you have to play dirty? ... Aren't you forcing me into a corner ? That means you have left me with no choice . Now that you've taken away the one thing I live on, is it fair to me?... You have taken that box from me! Have you ever considered what I wanted to do? ... That box of hotel stuff ... The box contains the hotel's ... it has been written down that those things belong to the hotel. Now you have taken it away…. Now that you have taken the stuff relating to Zhou Wen Xuan you knew I would turn my back on you. Why didn't I take it? Why did I keep my promise?.. If I wanted the stuff relating to Zhou Wen Chuang, I could have beaten you to it. Why didn't I do it? Why are you so mean? How can you take it? I don't understand … What do you mean someone entered No.2? You entered No.2 and took the file…. Don't tell me that the stuff related to Zhou Wen Xuan flew away by itself. Could you be so mean?"
" Aged 35 ... tall, slim and elegant and graceful, mild tempered and sincere [seeking] a male aged 40-50, honest and economically sound as a spouse".
" In real estate you buy the type of property where you need rather relatively intensive people operating it, like hotel. And the operating costs of those staffs is the soft costs part…. I did not give a £1 million. I signed it when… for that is my soft cost [for my hotel], my small hotel operation, to expand my hotels in this country, small hotels. It's the soft costs in advance ".
" My contact or my business world, confidentiality, respectability and able to control your own people within the realm of management is my honour and reputation. You don't breach it by naming other people's name all over the place… it could involve those persons' private life. It would involve relations where I should not trespass into other people's business or private life…."
" So Mr Lee suggested that I found a company with no name, which is better than a company with a name. ... BVI does not have a company without a name, and so Seychelles, that country was used…."
"FEM Seychelles was set up….and Mr Lo…..explained to [her] in conversations that [she] had in Cantonese".
"Wu: When my relationship with Mr Lee was good, we had an agreement, we have promise to one another. This was the promise made when Mr Lee bought the hotel as a gift to me. He said if I caused any harm to his family relationship, and then I will return the property, the hotel to him. So I put the files in No.2, when Mr Lee can always look at it. I put it there so that he can feel comfortable."
As it was delivered this evidence struck me (and I noted it) as entirely authentic, in the sense that it set out an entirely genuine belief on the part of Ms Wu. Any such arrangement might also be seen as consistent with Mr Lee's evidence to me that being "able to control his own people within the realm of management" is "[his] honour and [his] reputation". Further, in the light of it one can see how such an arrangement was possibly being alluded to in the January 2009 telephone conversations: "This is an agreement between you and me. I could have taken it long ago if I wanted to" and "If I wanted the stuff relating to Zhou Wen Xuan I could have beaten you to it". So it seems to me that the statements to which I have referred in the preceding paragraph cannot fairly be taken as admissions by Ms Wu that 66 Avonmore Road never belonged to her.
"Q: That can only be a reference, Ms Wu, to you saying: look, Mr Lee has the bearer share, and in some way you want to try to get the hotel back from him. Isn't that right?"
To this Ms Wu answered "Yes". I fail to see how much can be made of this exchange, even when divorced from its context. But the context of the question is a denial that Ms Wu had handed the bearer share in FEM Seychelles to Mr Lee, the assertion that the file for FEM Seychelles had always been kept "in my place", a claim that the file had always been in Ms Wu's possession until it was stolen by Mr Lee, and (immediately following the exchange I have quoted) the assertion that all three files (including that for FEM Seychelles) were always kept at 2 Ebury Mews. Ms Wu did not admit that Mr Lee had the bearer share.
" Mr Lee want me to start a nameless company. Mr Lo told me that BVI is a very stable country. Politically, it's superior to Seychelles. In my memory, Mr Lee mentioned that as well. I have this in my mind and then later on my niece's and nephew's immigration plan is not successful and there's no question regarding taxation. So when the purchase of number 64 is due, so I want to use BVI to buy 64….. They said it would be better to use one company to hold two properties, so I chose BVI to hold because BVI is superior to Seychelles. This is a normal way of doing things. If I have a choice, I'd choose one that is better….. I did not make it up. Even now I do not have a very clear concept about the two companies. I only know that BVI is a better country than Seychelles and I only know that it's more stable".
That evidence seemed to me entirely genuine and I would accept it.
(a) FEM Seychelles was not a nominee for anybody. It was intended by Ms Wu (and in fact by Mr Lee) to be the beneficial owner of 66 Avonmore Road. That is why trouble was taken over the selection of the right entity.
(b) Ms Wu was the intended owner of FEM Seychelles. She arranged its incorporation, and Mr Lee paid to the solicitor acting for FEM Seychelles the monies necessary to purchase 66 Avonmore Road because (when one looks at all the evidence) he intended that property to be a gift for the benefit of Ms Wu.
(c) Upon incorporation of FEM Seychelles and for a substantial period thereafter Ms Wu had possession of the file which contained the bearer share. She held it not because she was the agent or nominee of Mr Lee, but in her own right as the owner of FEM Seychelles (and of its asset, 66 Avonmore Road).
(d) Mr Lee now has the bearer share for FEM Seychelles. That is because somebody (without any legal right so to do) took it from 2 Ebury Mews in January 2009.
(e) Possession of the bearer share for FEM Seychelles does not in fact matter any more because 66 Avonmore Road was lawfully transferred from FEM Seychelles to FEM Virgin by Ms Wu who was the sole director of (and beneficial owner of the sole share in) FEM Seychelles and (at that time) sole director of and shareholder in FEM Virgin.
(f) The purchase of 64 Avonmore Road was a personal venture of Ms Wu utilising borrowing secured on property to which she was (through her ownership of FEM Seychelles and then FEM Virgin) beneficially entitled. Mr Lee was not involved in its purchase and there was no agreement or understanding that he should be.
(g) Mr Lee did not pay for 64 Avonmore Road. 64 Avonmore Road was bought with borrowed money. Mr Lee subsequently paid money into Ms Wu's personal bank account which she then chose to use to pay off part of the borrowing she had raised. When one looks at all the evidence it is clear that when he paid the money Mr Lee intended it as a gift.
Mr Justice Norris………………………………………………………….29 July 2011