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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Wood v Lowe & Ors [2016] EWHC 1010 (Ch) (05 May 2016) URL: https://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2016/1010.html Cite as: [2016] EWHC 1010 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
LEEDS DISTRICT REGISTRY
IN BANKRUPTCY
IN THE MATTER OF THE INSOLVENCY ACT 1986
RE: KEITH LOWE, ALAN LAWRENCE ROSS (DECEASED), EMMA JANE LOWE- MARSHALL and ANNE ELIZABETH LOWE
The Courthouse, 1, Oxford Row Leeds LS1 3BG |
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B e f o r e :
(Sitting as a High Court Judge)
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CHRISTOPHER WOOD as Trustee in Bankruptcy of Keith Lowe and Administrator of the Estate of Alan Lawrence Ross (Deceased) |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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(1) KEITH LOWE (2) ANNE ELIZABETH LOWE (3) EMMA JANE LOWE-MARSHALL (4) STEVEN MARSHALL (5) MARTIN HALLIGAN |
Respondents |
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The first and second respondents appeared in person
Eleanor d'Arcy instructed by Carrick Read Insolvency appeared for the third and fourth respondents
Jonathan French instructed by Lupton Fawcett Denison Till appeared for the fifth respondent on costs only
Hearing dates: 7-11 March, 11 April 2016
Hand down Judgment 5 May 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
HH Judge Roger Kaye QC:
Introduction
- First, The Grange, Priesthorpe Road, Farsley, Pudsey, LS28 5RE currently registered (since 7 June 2004) in the sole name of Mr Lowe at HM Land Registry with freehold title absolute and comprised in title number WYK221723[2]. It has sometimes been referred to as "Upper Grange" and "Lower Grange" (reflecting different parts of the property) but I shall refer to it simply as "The Grange". By way of an undated assignment thought to have been made on 6 November 2002 ("the 2002 Assignment") the beneficial interest in the Grange was assigned to the third respondent, Mrs Emma Lowe-Marshall (I hope she will forgive me if, for shortness sake, I refer to her as "Emma"), the daughter of Mr and Mrs Lowe, for an expressed consideration of £250. The assignment of the beneficial interest (which is not registered or noted in any way against the registered title of the Grange) was made by a Mr Peter Sargent, Mr and Mrs Lowe's then trustee in bankruptcy. The Grange is currently occupied by Emma and her husband, the fourth respondent ("Steven") and their children.
- Secondly, Belvedere Hall, Main Street, Darley, Harrogate, HG3 2QF formerly known as Walker Barn ("Belvedere Hall"). This property is also registered at HMLR and comprised in title number NYK309574. It is registered in the joint names of Mr Lowe and his wife, Mrs Anne Lowe ("Mrs Lowe") and is expressly held on trust for themselves as tenants in common in equal shares. By a Tomlin Order made in previous proceedings (also before me) on 11 February 2016 Mrs Lowe transferred all or any interest she might have in this property to the applicant (as liquidator of Capital Design Build Ltd ("CDBL"))[3].
- was appointed trustee in bankruptcy of Mr Lowe on 20 February 2014 following the making of a further bankruptcy order against Mr Lowe on 11 November 2013 on his own petition;
- is also the insolvent administrator (appointed on 20 November 2012) of the estate of the above-named Alan Ross, deceased ("Mr Ross"), a former close family friend of Mr and Mrs Lowe and who died on 22 October 2011;
- is also the liquidator of two corporate ventures associated with Mr Lowe or his affairs, Heating Electrical Lighting and Piping Ltd ("HELP") and CDBL.
- First, by an application dated 10 June 2015 ("the Possession Application") an order for the possession and sale of The Grange and of Belvedere Hall. Emma claims the entire beneficial interest in both properties, thus contending that Mr Wood is not entitled as he claims. In this respect she is supported by her father and mother and her husband, the fourth respondent ("Steven").
- Secondly, by an application dated 17 September 2015, an order to set aside (on grounds of material irregularity) joint individual voluntary arrangements ("IVAs") approved at a creditors' meeting on 28 July 2011 proposed by Emma and Steven ("the IVA Application"). The fifth respondent, Mr Martin Halligan, an insolvency practitioner and proprietor of MPH Recovery of Morley, Leeds, acted as nominee and supervisor of this IVA. He has taken no part in the proceedings (with the acceptance of all concerned) save on the question of costs depending on the outcome. This application was a satellite application to the Possession Application and in seeking to set aside the joint IVAs (depending on the outcome of the Possession Application) Mr Wood, as I understood it, ultimately sought recovery of property (namely the Grange and Belvedere Hall) on the footing that, if these properties were owned beneficially by Emma, and (in the case of Belvedere Hall) purchased with moneys advanced by her to her parents to facilitate the purchase, then these assets (the Grange, Belvedere Hall and the benefit of the debt owed by Mr and Mrs Lowe) ought to have been disclosed in the proposals for the IVA but were not. As the case progressed however, Mr Passfield, counsel for Mr Wood, in closing expressly abandoned pursuing this application further.
The Issue and Burdens of Proof
- The Grange is registered in the sole name of Mr Lowe. But for the 2002 Assignment, the entire legal and beneficial interest in this property would vest in him as Mr Lowe's trustee in bankruptcy. Although initially inclined to challenge the validity of the 2002 Assignment (no original has been produced, that in the bundle[4] is an undated photocopy specifying the month as September but in fact is thought to have been executed or delivered on or about 6 November 2002), Mr Wood now accepts the assignment as a genuine copy executed by Mr Sargent. His case is that Emma has at all times been a nominee for her father who is the true beneficial owner.
- As to Belvedere Hall, where the property is registered in the joint names of Mr and Mrs Lowe, here the expressed beneficial interests were declared at time of acquisition by Mr and Mrs Lowe in their favour as tenants in common in equal shares. Mrs Lowe, having assigned any interest she has in this property to Mr Wood as liquidator of CDBL under a compromise of earlier proceedings (see above and below), the remaining interest of Mr Lowe vests in Mr Wood again as Mr Lowe's trustee in bankruptcy. Emma, however, now also claims that Belvedere Hall was purchased solely with moneys emanating from proceeds of sale of part of the Grange and hence is also to be regarded as her property notwithstanding it was purchased in the name of her parents and the beneficial interests declared. Her case (as advanced on her behalf by Miss d'Arcy) is based on either a constructive or resulting trust (thus avoiding the necessity for writing under s 53(2) Law of Property Act, 1925) but as regards which the declaration of trust made on the 7 October 2013[5] ("the 2013 Trust") in her favour is confirmatory (below). Mr Wood's case is that Emma fails to demonstrate she has any such beneficial interest or if she has any such interest as with the Grange she holds as a mere nominee or cipher for her father.
Representation
The Evidence
- She too accepted that her memory was not as good as it was.
- A repeated statement by her was to the effect that she did not understand matters, left them to her father, allowed her father to advise her and tell her what to do and say (though on occasions she asserted the contrary), contented herself with flipping through documents she was asked to sign and not checking, still less reading, them;
- She was (as was Mrs Lowe) plainly dominated by Mr Lowe in almost all respects as regards anything to do with property, business, legal and financial matters;
- She placed total (and to my mind unquestioning) trust, she maintained, in his advice and faith to act in her best interests;
- She accepted that he drafted (or was instrumental in the preparation of) many of the letters and documents (e.g. Part 18 responses and witness statements used in the cases she had been involved in) signed in her name (sometimes under Statements of Truth) which she did no more than flip through and did not seemingly greatly understand or challenge. In this respect she was, to say the least, cavalier whether the contents of such documents be true or not and did not seem to care one way or the other or recognise her responsibilities in this respect as, to be fair to her, demonstrated in a number of ways as set out in this judgment;
- For example, although Miss d'Arcy submitted that her case had been consistent throughout the present case, this has not always been so. Far from it. She was inconsistent in a number of statements, pleadings and letters, making different statements to different people (no doubt for different purposes) which she repeatedly sought to explain as something she did not fully comprehend. Examples included:
i. Telling the Official Receiver in November and December 2013 she had loaned her father the £750,000 to purchase Belvedere Hall (after the above mentioned 2013 Trust in her favour and in contrast to her claims in these proceedings);
ii. Stating in a Part 18 response that had not consented to her father re-mortgaging the Grange (contrary to her present evidence);
iii. Claiming in a witness statement (drafted she said by her father) in support of an attempt by her father to remove Mr Wood from office in January 2015 that she had an unsecured claim for a loan to her father of £600,000 to enable him to purchase Belvedere Hall and both in the witness statement and in a letter (also according to her probably drafted by her father) to Mr Halligan also in January 2015 that it had been agreed at the outset she was entitled to a charge over Belvedere Hall in return for the funds coming from the sale of the Coach House, part of the Grange[6] (again contrary to her present assertion that what was agreed at the outset was not a loan but that Belvedere Hall was hers);
iv. Signing confirmation letters for the purposes of the IVA proposals that her father and Mr Ross were owed substantial sums by her which she must have known were untrue or at the very least she did not know whether they were true or not or the extent to which they were true or not.
The Background
- First, the Coach House was sold in May 2005 for £750,000[10]. Emma was not a party to the contract for sale nor to the subsequent transfer. Mr Lowe provided a full title guarantee to the purchaser under s 3(1) Law of Property (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1994 impliedly covenanting to the effect that the property was free from all charges and incumbrances and all other rights exercisable by third parties. According to him £205,000 of the £750,000 was used to pay "fees" to the 1988 Settlement trustees, to repay the expenditure of family members on the redevelopment and conversion works and presumably the costs associated with the sale and purchase of Walker Barn (i.e. Belvedere Hall), then an undeveloped barn;
- Secondly, Belvedere Hall was purchased on 2 June 2005 in the names of Mr and Mrs Lowe for £545,000. The transfer (form TP 1) contained an express declaration that they held the property on trust for themselves as tenants in common in equal shares[11].
- Thirdly, Mrs Lowe sold Springwood to a company called Corporation Interest Ltd and almost immediately this property was then sold on to Mr Lowe when it was then charged to Halifax BS (now Bank of Scotland) to secure an advance of £549,000 in part to finance the purchase.
- In July 2006 Mr Lowe re-mortgaged the Grange again, this time with Birmingham Midshires and again providing a full title guarantee. Emma was not involved and did not provide any written consent though Mr Lowe's evidence was that he had informed her[12].
- In April 2007 Belvedere Hall was re-mortgaged to NatWest. Mr Lowe represented to that Bank that he had assets (including the Grange and Belvedere Hall) in excess of £5.5m. The aim of this mortgage was said to be to refurbish and develop Belvedere Hall into a house first with a view to renting it out and then ultimately as a home for Mr and Mrs Lowe[13].
- Mr Lowe re-mortgaged the Grange again in 2008 to Halifax BS.
The Grange
- First, her omissions or inconsistencies in evidence:
i. for the first time in a lengthy saga of proceedings involving the Lowe family and its properties, Emma suggested in cross- examination that her grandparents had given her the £250 (as well as, and at the same time as making a similar gift to Joanna) to use as she saw fit. No mention of this was made in her witness statement in these proceedings[22] or elsewhere. She said in her evidence that she had decided she wanted to purchase the Grange and said she gave the money from her grandparents to her parents for that purpose and assumed they had paid it to Mr Sargent.
ii. In earlier possession proceedings involving the Bank of Scotland against her and her parents seeking possession of the Grange (the proceedings were eventually compromised) Emma (above a Statement of Truth) stated in a CPR Part 18 response[23] to a Request for Further Information that Mr Lowe had proposed the assignment to her, produced it, and she signed it (no such signed copy has ever been produced), that she did not have a specific desire to purchase the beneficial interest in the Grange and did not understand what that meant, she wished to continue living in the Grange as it is/was her family home (it wasn't at the time; she lived at Springwood and only moved into the Grange after it had been purchased). She did not know whether the £250 was in fact paid. I do accept however that it was part of a plan by Mr Lowe to reacquire the properties.
- Second, the manner in which she left her father to deal with the Grange as he saw fit largely without recourse to her:
i. As previously noted, Emma's repeated mantra during her evidence was to the effect that the Grange was her property, that there were (or would have been) discussions between members of the family, that she trusted her father to act in her best interests, that she did not fully understand everything, and generally to the effect that she let him get on with everything or advise her. The picture that emerged overall was a family totally dominated by one man whom they trusted and left to get on with the property, legal, financial and business affairs. Emma seems to have simply left all matters affecting the Grange to be dealt with as and when and how her father thought appropriate. She did not necessarily understand documents she was asked to sign or even on occasions read the documents placed before her beyond, at most, flipping through them and signing them, wholly uncritically (and even incuriously) trusting, she maintained, her father to act in her best interests (without regard, as previously stated, to her own responsibilities). She was happy for her father to deal with everything.
ii. More telling was her acceptance that these properties were somehow regarded as family assets. Mr Lowe was head of the family and determined what was be done with them.
iii. Thus the entire family (and friends apparently including Mr Ross) chipped in and helped with the redevelopment of the Grange and the Coach House using cash and credit cards to assist.
iv. The Grange was registered in the sole name of Mr Lowe. Emma was over 21 at the time of the purchase (or rather repurchase) of the Grange from Mr Sargent. There was absolutely no reason if she was to live at the Grange why, given she purported to acquire the entire beneficial interest, it should not have been registered in her name.
v. The building works were also partly funded by the mortgage from NatWest in 2004 (above). Emma signed the letter of consent to the mortgage following a request from Mr Coates[24], stating she had read the letter, understood it and signed it at her father's solicitors' offices in Leeds (it appears in fact to have been signed in Bradford) again at her father's request. Again, in contrast, in her earlier statement in the Part 18 response referred to above, she stated that she did not recall the letter from Mr Coates or signing the consent, she did not understand it, never intended to sign it, and believed she was signing a document of a wholly different nature[25].
vi. She allowed her father to organise the redevelopment and conversion of the Coach House and to sell the property, dispersing the proceeds as he saw fit and for purposes (the payment to the trustees of the 1988 Settlement) of which she was ignorant. She was not a party to the contract or transfer enabling her father to (incorrectly if she had a beneficial interest) give a full title guarantee on the sale. She did not know how the balance of the proceeds of the Coach House after the purchase of Belvedere Hall (the £205,000) was dealt with apart from to pay off trustee fees, credit cards and works. She never queried what happened to it.
vii. Mr Lowe executed the two further mortgages of the Grange (above) without her consent being either formally sought or given. Again her father gave the full title guarantee. In the Part 18 response referred to she claimed to have no knowledge of these dealings after November 2002[26]. Yet in cross- examination before me she asserted there must have been discussions but could not recall any details.
viii. When Mr Lowe sought to re-mortgage Belvedere Hall (see above and below) he represented to NatWest that he was the owner of assets in excess of £5m including the Grange (valued at £1.3m) and made no mention of Emma's alleged interest in either property[27].
- Third, in addition to the foregoing she demonstrated how much she left her father to orchestrate her and her own husband's affairs with regard to both the properties:
i. Thus she allowed her father to select the insolvency practitioner she dealt with as regards her IVA. She (and her husband) mainly left the details of the proposals[28] to be sorted out between her father and Mr Hodgson. Yet she signed up to the proposals (dated 27 June 2011[29]) as made with her knowledge and approval and represented the statements were true[30].
ii. Nevertheless the proposal as signed by her failed to disclose any interest in the Grange or in Belvedere Hall on the basis she had been led to believe (by her father) they were "in negative equity" and therefore had no value.
iii. She further allowed the impression to be given in the IVA proposal that the Grange was not beneficially owned by her but rented (she did not say from whom in the IVA proposal - though Mr Lowe admitted in his evidence the disclosed specified monthly "rent" of £2083 was paid to him for the mortgage[31]).
iv. This assertion of negative equity (said to be on the advice of Mr Hodgson, who was not called) was apparently based largely on the effect of the charge in favour of the 1988 Settlement trustees (never produced), which seems to have gone off the title and then on again pursuant to Mr Lowe's arrangements to grant priority to bank mortgages. Emma seemed to have no knowledge or even curiosity about these matters. The development potential of the land as evidenced by the development and sale of the Coach House also seems not to have been taken into account in listing or assessing the value of her assets in her IVA proposal. Yet she did reveal ownership of another property at Stanningley (not part of these proceedings) and did specify that there was no equity available in respect of this property owing to the mortgage charged against it. I have to say I infer from all of this that she had no intention of revealing or asserting any beneficial ownership of the Grange;
v. She signed letters confirming the debts of Mr Lowe and Mr Ross, in my judgment, without any clue as to their accuracy or otherwise but simply because her father told her to;
vi. Although the stabling of horses at the Grange was meant to be her venture, the rent was paid over to and utilised by her father (presumably to help pay the mortgage instalments) at his discretion. Here again in the IVA she now asserted that she had been loaned the income from the stables by Mr Ross.
- Fourth, Steven's evidence adds little to the foregoing save to confirm it in relation to the IVAs.
- Fifth, I make all due allowances for Emma's age (though she appears to be well educated). I recognise too that Mr Lowe's actions as purported owner of the Grange are not necessarily Emma's. But they are informative that Emma was happily prepared to let her father deal with the Grange in such manner and as and when he saw fit. At no time does she seem to have insisted on her registration of ownership. Lest this be thought to be unfair to a daughter reposing such trust and confidence in her father, there is a fine line between trust and confidence and abdicating all responsibility. Emma never seems to have considered either her rights or her responsibilities as regards the Grange. There is no evidence she ever considered paying rates, council tax, insurance, repairs, mortgage instalments or similar outgoings. She left everything to her father because in truth he had been and was again to be and was the real legal and beneficial owner of the Grange.
Belvedere Hall
"No one now doubts that such an express declaration of trust is conclusive unless varied by subsequent agreement or affected by proprietary estoppel"
The IVA Application
Conclusion
Note 1 At least three cases involving Mr Lowe’s affairs have been reported, namely at Lowe v W Machell Joinery Ltd [2011] EWCA Civ 794; Heating Electrical Lighting and Piping Ltd (in liquidation) v Ross and Ors [2012] EWHC 3763 (Ch), [2012] BPIR 1122; Wood v Lowe [2015] EWHC 2634 (Ch), [2015] BPIR 1537. [Back]
Note 2 See Core Bundle (CB), pp. 28-29 (office copy entries) (henceforth cited thus: CB/28-29). [Back]
Note 6 See CB /100-105 (witness statement 16 January 2015 in Lowe v Wood, No. 1109 of 2014). [Back]
Note 8 See letter from Brooke North to Mr Lowe dated 27 Sep 02 at CB/1; 2002 Assignment at CB/3-5 and registration of Mr Lowe at 5/34/1108. [Back]
Note 11 6/35/1388-1392. [Back]
Note 12 Witness Statement, para. 12 at 1/14/89. [Back]
Note 13 Letter to NatWest 15 Mar 07 at CB/25-27. [Back]
Note 18 See generally CB/70-80. [Back]
Note 19 See office copy entries at CB/28-29. [Back]
Note 21 Letter 27 Sep 02 from Brooke North (Mr Coates) to Mr Lowe at CB/1. [Back]
Note 22 Witness Statement of 7 Sep 15 at 1/12/78-83. [Back]
Note 34 See CB/106-117. [Back]
Note 36 CB/68-80 for emails, attendance notes of Mr Coates and copy executed declaration of trust. [Back]
Note 37 CB/88-90 (letters), 5/34/1130 (questionnaire). [Back]