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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Challen v Challen & Anor (Rev 1) [2020] EWHC 1330 (Ch) (27 May 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2020/1330.html Cite as: [2020] 3 WLR 440, [2020] EWHC 1330 (Ch), [2020] Ch 692, [2021] 2 All ER 738, [2020] WTLR 859, [2020] WLR(D) 356 |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS IN BRISTOL
PROPERTY TRUSTS AND PROBATE LIST (ChD)
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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GEORGINA SARAH ANN LOUISE CHALLEN |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) JAMES CHALLEN (2) DAVID CHALLEN |
Defendants |
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The Defendants did not appear and were not represented
Hearing date: 6 May 2020
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Crown Copyright ©
Covid-19 Protocol: This judgment was handed down by the judge remotely by circulation to the parties' representatives by email and release to BAILII on the date shown at 10:30 am.
HHJ Paul Matthews :
INTRODUCTION
THE 'FORFEITURE RULE'
Common Law
"The principle of public policy invoked is in my opinion rightly asserted. It appears to me that no system of jurisprudence can with reason include amongst the rights which it enforces rights directly resulting to the person asserting them from the crime of that person. If no action can arise from fraud it seems impossible to suppose that it can arise from felony or misdemeanour....... This principle of public policy, like all such principles, must be applied to all cases to which it can be applied without reference to the particular character of the right asserted or the form of its assertion."
"It is clear that the law is that no person can obtain, or enforce, any rights resulting to him from his own crime; neither can his representative, claiming under him, obtain or enforce any such rights. The human mind revolts at the very idea that any other doctrine could be possible in our system of jurisprudence."
"What is important is that neither principle is absolute. It is not every criminal offence which will bring the principle into play."
"The logical test, in my judgment, is whether the person seeking the indemnity was guilty of deliberate, intentional and unlawful violence, or threats of violence. If he was, and death resulted therefrom, then, however unintended the final death of the victim may have been, the court should not entertain the claim for indemnity."
"Although public policy is rightly regarded as an unruly steed which should be cautiously ridden, I am confident that public policy undoubtedly requires that no one who threatens unlawful violence with a loaded gun should be allowed to enforce a claim for indemnity against any liability he may incur as a result of having so acted. I do not intend to lay down any wider proposition. In particular, I am not deciding that a man who has committed manslaughter would, in any circumstances, be prevented from enforcing a contract of indemnity in respect of any liability he may have incurred for causing death or from inheriting under a will or upon the intestacy of anyone whom he has killed. Manslaughter is a crime which varies infinitely in its seriousness. It may come very near to murder or amount to little more than inadvertence…"
"In an age of violence—an age where the use of firearms is all too frequent it would I think be very odd if a man who had had in his hands a loaded shotgun from which a shot had been fired and had killed another at a time when he had just assaulted that other with the gun could recover on an insurance policy which protected him from liability if he was negligent in the use of the shotgun. This was in fact a grave case of manslaughter and in my judgment the judge was right in saying that the defendant could not recover against the Prudential on the grounds of public policy."
"Mr Jackson [counsel for the claimant] submits that the forfeiture rule does not apply to every case of manslaughter. He pointed out that cases of manslaughter may vary enormously in gravity from the deliberate to the unintentional, and he submitted that in the light of recent authorities the appropriate test was that propounded by Geoffrey Lane J in Gray and Another v Barr [1970] 2 QB 626, 640: has the person been guilty of deliberate, intentional and unlawful violence or threats of violence?
[ … ]
There is no authority binding on me that compels me to apply that test to a succession case such as the present case. I must choose between following the decision in Re Giles (Deceased) [[1972] Ch 544] and following Vinelott J in Re K (Deceased) [[1985] FLR 558] in applying the Gray v Barr test. I have no hesitation in taking the latter course. The concepts of public policy are not fixed and immutable. The recent cases show that the courts have come to recognise that so varied are the circumstances which may amount to manslaughter that it would not be just to apply the forfeiture rule in every case of proof of manslaughter."
"In my judgment the judge ought, on the facts of this case, to have held that the rule applied, but that in the circumstances the plaintiff should be relieved of its effect under the Forfeiture Act 1982".
The Forfeiture Act 1982
"The 'forfeiture rule'.
1(1) In this Act, the "forfeiture rule" means the rule of public policy which in certain circumstances precludes a person who has unlawfully killed another from acquiring a benefit in consequence of the killing.
(2) References in this Act to a person who has unlawfully killed another include a reference to a person who has unlawfully aided, abetted, counselled or procured the death of that other and references in this Act to unlawful killing shall be interpreted accordingly.
Power to modify the rule.
2(1) Where a court determines that the forfeiture rule has precluded a person (in this section referred to as "the offender") who has unlawfully killed another from acquiring any interest in property mentioned in subsection (4) below, the court may make an order under this section modifying [or excluding] the effect of that rule.
(2) The court shall not make an order under this section modifying [or excluding] the effect of the forfeiture rule in any case unless it is satisfied that, having regard to the conduct of the offender and of the deceased and to such other circumstances as appear to the court to be material, the justice of the case requires the effect of the rule to be so modified [or excluded] in that case.
(3) In any case where a person stands convicted of an offence of which unlawful killing is an element, the court shall not make an order under this section modifying [or excluding] the effect of the forfeiture rule in that case unless proceedings for the purpose are brought before the expiry of the period of three months beginning with his conviction [relevant period].
[(3A) In subsection (3) above, the "relevant period" is the period of 6 months beginning with—
(a) the end of the period allowed for bringing an appeal against the conviction, or
(b) if such an appeal is brought, the conclusion of proceedings on the appeal.]
(4) The interests in property referred to in subsection (1) above are—
(a) any beneficial interest in property which (apart from the forfeiture rule) the offender would have acquired—
(i) under the deceased's will (including, as respects Scotland, any writing having testamentary effect) or the law relating to intestacy or by way of ius relicti, ius relictae or legitim;
(ii) on the nomination of the deceased in accordance with the provisions of any enactment;
(iii) as a donatio mortis causa made by the deceased; or
(iv) under a special destination (whether relating to heritable or moveable property); or
(b) any beneficial interest in property which (apart from the forfeiture rule) the offender would have acquired in consequence of the death of the deceased, being property which, before the death, was held on trust for any person.
(5) An order under this section may modify [or exclude] the effect of the forfeiture rule in respect of any interest in property to which the determination referred to in subsection (1) above relates and may do so in either or both of the following ways, that is—
(a) where there is more than one such interest, by excluding the application of the rule in respect of any (but not all)[or all] of those interests; and
(b) in the case of any such interest in property, by excluding the application of the rule in respect of [all or any] part of the property.
(6) On the making of an order under this section [modifying the effect of the forfeiture rule], the forfeiture rule shall have effect for all purposes (including purposes relating to anything done before the order is made) subject to the modifications made by the order.
(7) The court shall not make an order under this section modifying the effect of the forfeiture rule in respect of any interest in property which, in consequence of the rule, has been acquired before the coming into force of this section by a person other than the offender or a person claiming through him.
(8) In this section—
"property" includes any chose in action or incorporeal moveable property; and
"will" includes codicil.
[ … ]
Exclusion of murderers.
5. Nothing in this Act or in any order made under section 2 or referred to in section 3(1) of this Act [ … ] shall affect the application of the forfeiture rule in the case of a person who stands convicted of murder."
THE FACTS OF THIS CASE
"Richard said he would take me back if I signed a post nuptial agreement. I said I would and we both saw solicitors yesterday. I then found out he was seeing someone and sleeping with them and had no intention of taking me back. It was all a game so he could get everything. He was going to get me to sign and then issue divorce proceedings. I can't live without him. Said it would take him time but he felt the same. Now I find he is seeing women and sleeping with them. He did this in order to get his own back on me. All those prostitutes and other women – how could he? Please look after David, James and Pepe. I am sorry but I can't live without Richard. All my love, Sally."
" … you were not delusional. You felt trapped and manipulated because you were trapped and manipulated. Your psychiatric state was abnormal, whether it was personality disorder, bipolar, adjustment or all three. You were capable of thought, what you were unable to do was control your behaviour. Your reaction was to that of a situation which you perceived accurately. All of this appears to have led you to carry a hammer on more than one occasion when you knew you were going to see your husband at the former matrimonial home. I think because you knew you might come under intolerable pressure and you wanted a weapon to be able to cut through the situation and resolve it once and for all by killing him. You were consumed by the hope that none of that would happen. In that sense you did not plan or premeditate the killing, as you hoped it would never happen. But you knew in the state you were you could be exposed to a level of stress that could cause you to lose control, and wanted to be ready if that happened. …"
THE ISSUES
Timing of the application
"In any case where a person stands convicted of an offence of which unlawful killing is an element, the court shall not make an order under this section modifying the effect of the forfeiture rule in that case unless proceedings for the purpose are brought before the expiry of the period of three months beginning with his conviction".
"10. … The Forfeiture Act is concerned with the adjustment of property rights and confers upon an individual a right to apply to the Court within a defined period. It is a form of limitation period similar to that applying to applications for reasonable provision to be made out of the estate or for rectification of a will, but (unlike the statutes which confer those rights) the Act gives the Court no discretion to extend the time for commencement of the action."
The original conviction for murder
"It is unclear at what date time begins to run when a murder conviction is reduced to manslaughter on appeal. On a strict reading of the Forfeiture Act 1982 it would appear that the three month time-limit runs from the original conviction, although it is arguable that the court should postpone the period for an application to 3 months after an appeal, as this would be the first date upon which an application could be made (although such an argument would have limited prospects of success).
One way in which the problem could be avoided would be for a person to make an application within three months of the initial conviction, that application being stayed pending the outcome of the appeal."
The meaning of 'conviction' in section 2(3)
"Much of the difficulty has arisen from the fact that 'conviction' is commonly used with two different meanings. It often is used to mean final disposal of a case and it is not uncommon for it to be used as meaning a finding of guilt. It is proper to say that a plea cannot be changed after 'conviction' in the former sense. But it does not at all follow that a plea cannot be changed after 'conviction' in the latter sense. It is perfectly true that 'conviction' is used in this latter sense in the Magistrates' Courts Act, 1952, and a number of other statutes. But I cannot infer from that any intention of the legislature to alter as regards summary jurisdiction the old rule that a plea can be changed at any time before final disposal of the case."
"Before your Lordships issue was joined on whether the cases of Sheridan and Grant were properly decided, the contention against the decisions being that a plea of autrefois convict only lies where there has been a conviction in the broader sense of the word, that is to say, a finding of guilt followed by an adjudication on what should be done with the convicted person by way of punishment, or otherwise."
"Though reference is often made to the 'acceptance' of a plea there is no necessity for any formal pronouncement. All that is denoted by such an 'acceptance' is that a court is proceeding to consider what is the appropriate course to take in regard to a person who, as the court thinks, with full appreciation of what he is doing and with adequate understanding of what is involved in and what are the ingredients of a charge preferred against him, has fully and freely acknowledged and confessed to the court that he is guilty of the charge. … The words 'convict' and 'conviction' in the Act are not always used with the same meaning. If, however, the word 'convict' in this subsection is used in the sense of a finding of guilt (as opposed to a finding of guilt coupled with the making of some order) the question that is now raised is whether the fact that there is an acceptance of a plea of guilty made by an accused (which may amount to 'convicting the accused'—see section 14 (3))—prevents a court from allowing a withdrawal of the plea at any time before sentence."
"The primary meaning of the word 'conviction' denotes the judicial determination of a case; it is a judgment which involves two matters, a finding of guilt or the acceptance of a plea of guilty followed by sentence. Until there is such a judicial determination the case is not concluded, the court is not functus officio and a plea of autrefois convict cannot be entertained. This has been the law from the earliest times…
But the word 'conviction' is used also in a secondary sense, that is, to express a verdict of guilty or acceptance of a plea of guilty before the adjudication which is only completed by sentence. Not only is the word used frequently in this sense in many judgments, but also in many places in statutes dealing with these matters. As Tindal CJ said in Burgess's case, 7 Man & G 481, 504: 'The word "conviction" is undoubtedly verbum equivocum. It is sometimes used as meaning the verdict of a jury, and at other times, in its more strictly legal sense, for the sentence of the court'."
"(2) On an indictment for murder a person found not guilty of murder may be found guilty— (a) of manslaughter, or of causing grievous bodily harm with intent to do so; or (b) of any offence of which he may be found guilty under an enactment specifically so providing, or under section 4(2) of this Act; or (c) of an attempt to commit murder, or of an attempt to commit any other offence of which he might be found guilty; but may not be found guilty of any offence not included above."
This replaced parts of the common law rules which, for present purposes at least, were to similar effect, although the unreplaced common law rules were not thereby abolished: R v Saunders [1988] AC 148, HL.
"(5) Where a person arraigned on an indictment pleads not guilty of an offence charged in the indictment but guilty of some other offence of which he might be found guilty on that charge, and he is convicted on that plea of guilty without trial for the offence of which he has pleaded not guilty, then (whether or not the two offences are separately charged in distinct counts) his conviction of the one offence shall be an acquittal of the other."
"In those circumstances it is quite clear, as is seen from Rex v Soanes [[1948] 1 All ER 285, CCA] that the judge had got a discretion to refuse to accept a plea of guilty to the lesser charges."
This case was in fact decided before the 1967 Act was passed, but in my judgment nothing turns on that for present purposes.
"it is quite clear that whilst no doubt the confession of guilt is the highest conviction, nowhere is it stated either in Hale or Hawkins when the conviction occurred. It is clear that it does not occur at the time of the recording because otherwise it would be impossible for a judge to allow a plea to be changed, as is perfectly possible up to sentence, and indeed in one of the cases a verdict of a jury itself was set aside before sentence. In the judgment of the court it only ranks as a conviction when the defendant is sentenced".
"… before the expiry of the [relevant period].
(3A) In subsection (3) above, the "relevant period" is the period of 6 months beginning with—
(a) the end of the period allowed for bringing an appeal against the conviction, or
(b) if such an appeal is brought, the conclusion of proceedings on the appeal.]
The test to be applied
"The court shall not make an order under this section modifying the effect of the forfeiture rule in any case unless it is satisfied that, having regard to the conduct of the offender and of the deceased and to such other circumstances as appear to the court to be material, the justice of the case requires the effect of the rule to be so modified in that case."
This requires the court to take all the relevant circumstances into account, and to decide whether "the justice of the case" requires that the forfeiture rule be modified in its application to the particular case.
"The first, and paramount consideration, must be whether the culpability attending the beneficiary's criminal conduct was such as to justify the application of the forfeiture rule at all. The question of the extent to which the criminal should be blamed for committing the crime is a familiar one for the sentencing judge in the criminal jurisdiction, but not one that the judge exercising a civil law jurisdiction welcomes as the test for determining entitlement to property. I have already given my reasons for suggesting that it is likely to be appropriate to relieve the unsuccessful party to a suicide pact of all effect of the forfeiture rule. Each case must be assessed on its own facts. Had Miss Plant's decision to take her own life been an understandable reaction to the pending consequences of her theft, a case could well have been made out for saying that this gave to her participation in the suicide pact a culpability that should properly be reflected by the application, at least to a degree, of the forfeiture rule. I do not, however, see this case in that light. The desperation that led Miss Plant to decide to kill herself, and which led to the suicide pact, was an irrational and tragic reaction to her predicament. I do not consider that the nature of Miss Plant's conduct alters what I have indicated should be the normal approach when dealing with a suicide pact—that there should be full relief against forfeiture. The assets with which this case is concerned were in no way derived from Mr. Dunbar's family. They are the fruits of insurance taken out by Mr. Dunbar for the benefit of Miss Plant. So far as his family is concerned, the judge rightly described the consequence of the forfeiture rule to be the conferring on them of an unwelcome windfall. While I can appreciate, and sympathise with, the emotions which I suspect underlie this litigation, I have reached the conclusion that there should be full relief against the forfeiture rule, and I would allow this appeal so as to grant that relief."
"Having taken the wrong approach, the judge failed, in my view, to give consideration in his reasons to all the factors material to the exercise of his discretion. In those circumstances it is open to this court to exercise the discretion afresh on the basis of the relevant material. On doing that, I have in fact reached the same conclusion as the judge on the limited scope of the modification order. It is difficult to draw the line with confidence. The point at which the judge drew it is not obviously wrong. The court is entitled to take into account a whole range of circumstances relevant to the discretion, quite apart from the conduct of the offender and the deceased: the relationship between them; the degree of moral culpability for what has happened; the nature and gravity of the offence; the intentions of the deceased; the size of the estate and the value of the property in dispute; the financial position of the offender; and the moral claims and wishes of those who would be entitled to take the property on the application of the forfeiture rule. On consideration of all those circumstances I conclude that the appeal should be dismissed on this point…"
"be positively satisfied that the justice of the case requires the forfeiture rule to be modified".
He referred to the statement of Phillips LJ (quoted above) that the "first and paramount consideration" must be whether the forfeiture rule applied to the case at all. On the other hand, he also considered that the judgment of Mummery LJ (and in particular the extract set out above) gave some indication of matters which the court may consider when deciding whether to grant relief. There is no suggestion that I can see in the judgment of Patten J that there was any inconsistency or conflict between the approaches of these two appellate judges to the law and to the matters which must be taken into account by the court in exercising the discretion conferred by section 2(2).
"I have to consider whether the interests of justice require the forfeiture rule to be modified in this case. It seems to me clear that they do not. The reforms introduced by the Homicide Act 1957 were designed to preserve certain classes of offender from capital punishment for killings carried out by reason of diminished responsibility or under provocation. But the 1982 Act recognises in terms that cases of manslaughter do not qualify for relief for that reason alone. The case must be one in which an exception to the rule of public policy requires to be made in order to do justice. Had Parliament intended to disapply the forfeiture rule in all cases of manslaughter involving diminished responsibility, it would have enacted the 1982 Act in a very different form. In the present case Mr M. was killed by someone he had befriended and to whom he had only ever been generous. He was rewarded by violence and abuse, both physical and financial. Mr D.'s mental condition may have robbed him of a measure of responsibility for the actual killing, but it does not remove from him the responsibility for allowing that situation ever to arise. He is still, to a significant extent, morally culpable for what he did, and this was recognised by the sentencing Judge in a term of 6 years' imprisonment, which is at the upper end of the band of 2 to 7 years suggested by the Court of Appeal as appropriate for this kind of case: see Archbold at para 19-81. Mr Holmes asked me to show compassion for Mr D. in the order which I made, but that is not the test. I have to take into account all the relevant factors, including the wider circumstances I have referred to, and these include the position of the deceased's family. I have to decide, against that background, whether the justice of the case requires a modification of the forfeiture rule. I have reached the conclusion that, in the circumstances I have outlined in this Judgment, it does not."
"10. … The effect of these different approaches was held by Patten J in Dalton v Latham (ante) at 11 as meaning that the first and paramount consideration is that identified by Philips LJ but that such is not the only factor to be considered and that the other factors to be considered included those identified by Mummery LJ. I would be entitled to depart from that approach [ie that of Patten J] only if satisfied that it was plainly wrong. That is not my view. On the contrary, with respect, I consider it to be the correct approach not least because it is consistent with the terms of the Act."
The threshold question
Exercise of discretion
"… we can see that we let her down. We knew that she did not have any friends, so had no one to share her pain. Had we tried, then she would have talked to us about it. Had we been there for her to provide her with the support she so obviously needed, this might not have happened. We will always carry this regret and guilt because our mother deserved better than that from us."
Conclusion