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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Morris v Hatch [2017] EWHC 1448 (Ch) (19 June 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2017/1448.html Cite as: [2017] EWHC 1448 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
BRISTOL DISTRICT REGISTRY
2 Redcliff Street, Bristol, BS1 6GR |
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B e f o r e :
(sitting as a Judge of the High Court)
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Erika Jeep Morris |
Claimant/ Respondent |
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- and - |
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Ian Paul Hatch |
Defendant |
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Brittany Pearce (instructed by Pride Solicitors Ltd) for the Claimant/Respondent
The Defendant did not appear and was not represented
Hearing date: 16 June 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
HHJ Paul Matthews :
Introduction
The claim
The witness summons
The application to set aside
Mr Hayes' witness statement
"8. I am advised that the claimant's solicitors most likely wish me to attend court so that they can ask me:
8.1. what steps I took to establish the source of the £250,000 paid to my firm by the defendant to enable him to buy the property;
8.2. whether the defendant stated that the funds were a loan or a gift;
8.3. what evidence I saw relative to the source of the funds; and
8.4. whether I gave any assurance to the mortgage provider HSBC about the source of the funds for the mortgage deposit."
"10. I confirm that I shall say:
10.1. that as far as I recall, the defendant told me that he had received a contribution towards the purchase monies (the sum of £250,000) as a gift from the claimant;
10.2. that in respect of another transaction (for a different client) in which the claimant had made a similar gift, a fee earner from my office contacted her private banker, Steve Lamb, of Lloyds TSB in Bristol, on 18 November 2011. The purpose of the call was to verify the source of funds and to verify that the claimant was in the habit of making gifts. Steve Lamb told us he was authorised to speak to us by the claimant and confirmed, broadly, that she was very wealthy and that he was aware of her proposed gifts. Following the call, he sent to us a certified copy of the claimant's ID. I am unable to produce the documents to verify this discussion as they fall within the scope of an instruction relating to another client;
10.3 that because the monies from the claimant were a gift, I was under no obligation to undertake any investigations into the source of funds. I knew that they came from the claimant and as I have stated above, I already had her ID documents available to me;
10.4. that (as above), when I was instructed to act on behalf of the defendant, I already had ID documents for the claimant on file (having received them in 2011 in the course of another, similarly structured transaction). I did not have to carry out any further enquiries into the claimant's identity. She was already known to me;
10.5. that in a casual conversation in Salcombe, probably at the beginning of 2012, the claimant approached me in Fore Street outside the bakery for a conversation – we walked together back to my office (which is about five minutes walk) on Island Street;
10.6. that during the conversation, the claimant indicated that as an elderly widow she did not need all of the wealth that she had, and as a result wanted to help others. In fact this sort of arrangement is not uncommon amongst the very wealthy in Salcombe. It is something that I have come across before with a small number of my own clients;
10.7. that as far as I recall I was never contacted by the claimant during the course of the transaction, and no suggestion was made to me that the monies were in fact alone. Had there been any suggestion that the monies constituted a loan, or that I could act for the claimant, I would have followed the code of conduct and told the claimant to take independent legal advice;
10.8. that had the monies been a loan, I would have had to organise a deed of priority or have alerted HSBC to the existence of a second loan; and
10.9. that whether or not I gave any assurance to HSBC is irrelevant within the context of the current action, and is a matter between HSBC and Bartons."
Mr Farooq's witness statement
"8. In paragraphs [sic] 10 Mr Hayes states his proposes [sic] what he is going to say on the basis that the Claimant would ask only matters set out in paragraph 10. That cannot be correct as there may be more questions after taking instructions from the Claimant on those proposed answers.
9. The very nature of his proposed answers warrants his attendance to the court. For the avoidance of any doubt it is necessary to state that
a. My firm offered to deposit £800 with the court office to meet any allowance which the court assesses is reasonable
b. Then my firm on behalf of the Claimant issued the witness summons
c. In an undated letter, Bartons wrote to my firm saying that it had sent the entire file to the Defendant's solicitors and thus two days attendance is disproportionate and if we did not agree to excuse his attendance he or his firm would apply to court to strike out the witness summons and seek associated costs.
d. My firm, in response, 31 May wrote to Bartons that Mr Hayes attendance is still required at the trail [sic]
e. My firm did not hear in response to that letter, and instead issued the application to strike out the summons."
"Paras [sic] 10.2 refers to events of 2011 and in any case the proper step, which Bartons should have taken, was to contact the Claimant or to advise his client to tell her to get advice from her own solicitor and represent [sic] her to confirm loan or gift. Mr Hayes has failed to explain what other gifts of the Claimant, his firm had been involved [sic], and how those old 'transactions' had any connection with the Claimant's payment of £250,000 to the defendant. He has to explain whether it was Barton's [sic] normal practice to disregard the statutory requirement…"
"Para 10.7 again seems to [sic] unconvincing…"
And in paragraph 12 he says:
"Paragraph 14 is very unconvincing".
Other paragraphs of the witness statement go on to complain that there were documents missing from the conveyancing file.
Arguments for the applicant
Arguments for the respondent
The law
"A party producing a witness shall not be allowed to impeach his credit by general evidence of bad character; but he may, in case the witness shall in the opinion of the judge prove adverse, contradict him by other evidence…"
For this purpose, Phipson at paragraph 12–61 says that a party is "adverse" when he
"bears a hostile animus to the party calling him and so does not give his evidence fairly and with a desire to tell the truth to the court. He is not adverse in the statutory sense when his testimony merely contradicts his proof or because it is unfavourable to the party calling him".
Discussion
Conclusion
Costs