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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (King's Bench Division) Decisions >> Thomas v Porter [2023] EWHC 983 (KB) (28 April 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/KB/2023/983.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 983 (KB) |
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KING'S BENCH DIVISION
ON APPEAL FROM BIRMINGHAM CIVIL JUSTICE CENTRE
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
MR KENNETH THOMAS |
Appellant |
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- and – |
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MS DEBORAH PORTER |
Respondent |
____________________
Annie Townley (instructed by Rees Page Solicitors) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 17 January 2023
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE FREEDMAN:
I Introduction
II Summary of claim
(i) This was an attempt to introduce claims against the Respondent by way of a reply and that that was not the correct vehicle: see CPR PD 16 para 9.2 which required such a claim to be in the Particulars of Claim in circumstances where they contradicted an earlier pleading;
(ii) The claim for a loan in the Reply contradicted the claim for a declaration of trust in the Particulars of Claim.
"[12] Having refused to hear evidence relating to a loan the judge only heard evidence relating to the asserted express or constructive trust (the Claimant's case) or gift (the Defendant's case).
[13] I am concerned that this was potentially procedurally unfair and despite the high threshold I grant permission to appeal on the basis of exclusion of the claim for the payment loan being potentially unfair."
III The pleadings
"The agreement between the parties was that the mortgage would be paid off by the Claimant when his property was sold. Under the terms of the right to buy scheme, the Claimant would not be allowed to register his interest against the property at the Land Registry until the expiry of five years from the date of purchase. The Defendant therefore agreed that, following the expiry of five years the Claimant's interest in the property would be officially noted on the title of the Property. If the couple split up, the amount paid by the Claimant towards the Defendant's mortgage would be repaid immediately. The Defendant would also put a will in place to ensure that, should she die within the 5 year period, that the Claimant would be repaid out of the funds in her estate."
"The Claimant offered to provide the money to complete the purchase and it was made clear to him by the Solicitor acting for the Defendant on the purchase that if he did so it would be a gift. Despite the Claimant being insistent, the Defendant decided that her preference was to take out the mortgage and pay for the property herself as originally planned, and that is what she did."
"As to paragraph 11.
a. It is denied that there was any agreement that the mortgage would be paid off by the Claimant when his property was sold.
b. It is admitted that any "relevant disposition" of the Property within 5 years of completion would have led to the Defendant being required to repay to the Council a proportion of the Right to Buy discount, but denied that the Claimant "would not be able to register his interest against the property at the Land Registry until the expiry of five years from the date of purchase" or that the Claimant had any such interest to register.
c. It is denied that there was an agreement that any amount paid by the Claimant towards the Defendant's mortgage would be repaid immediately if they split up. It is noted that such an alleged agreement would be inconsistent with the alleged agreement that the Claimant was to have a beneficial interest in the property.
d. It is admitted that the Defendant told the Claimant that she would make a Will providing for the Property to be sold and the Claimant's gift to be returned to him out of the proceeds of sale but it is denied that this was to protect him for a 5 year period or that it gave rise to any legal obligation to make such a Will or to repay the gift."
"The Claimant chose to pay the Defendant's mortgage off as a gift to her. The Defendant did not ask him to do so and was content to continue making the repayments on the mortgage which he had taken out. The paying off of the mortgage was detrimental to the Defendant's financial position as it meant that she lost her entitlement to Tax Credits. There was no express or implied agreement that the money would be repayable in any circumstances or that by making the payment, the claimant would acquire any beneficial interest in the property."
"The Defendant offered to reimburse the amount that the Claimant had gifted to her to pay off the mortgage. She was under no obligation to do so and the offer did not involve any acknowledgment that the money was repayable or that the Claimant had any interest in the Property."
a. "The burden of proof is on the Defendant to prove that the claimant gifted the Mortgage Sum to the Defendant.
b. The Claimant denies that he offered to make, intended to make, or did make a gift of the Mortgage Sum to the Defendant in the sum of the purchase price or any similar such sum. Annexed to this Reply of at pages 3 – 4 is a text the Defendant sent to the Claimant on 7 May 2019, which states "I said later in life we would still have the house I wasn't bothered…"
c. The Claimant notes that paragraph 17 of the Defence states that the Defendant has made a Will leaving a legacy to the Claimant of the Mortgage Sum".
d. The Claimant avers that the agreed purpose of the will was to protect the Claimant by ensuring that the estate repaid the Mortgage Sum. Annexed to this Reply at pages 5 - 6 is a text the Defendant sent to the Claimant on 7 May 2019, which states "it was a way of getting your money back if I died…""
"Alternatively, if which is not admitted, the Claimant simply advanced the Mortgage Sum to the Defendant (or for her benefit) then:
i. The Defendant holds the Mortgage Sum on resulting trust for the Claimant and the Claimant is entitled to trace it into the Property; alternatively.
ii. The Defendant holds the Property on resulting trust for herself and the Claimant as tenants in common in shares proportionate to their contributions as aforesaid in paragraph 3; alternatively
iii. The Claimant is subrogated to HSBC bank in accordance with its mortgage; alternatively
iv. The Claimant's payment of the Mortgage Sum constituted a loan to the Defendant in the sum of £40,373.01, which sum was repayable upon demand and is hereby demanded."
IV The Judgment
"18. I have come to the factual conclusion that the defendant was persuaded by the claimant to allow him to pay off the mortgage after he received the proceeds of sale of his flat at 11 Norbery Crescent. The note on the solicitor's attendance sheet which is vague mentions the word "gift". The same word crops up in the covert recording of the conversation between the claimant and the defendant in August 2019. On this occasion the claimant himself uses that word in the context of the meeting with the solicitor despite initially denying in his evidence that the word gift was ever used in the solicitor's meeting. I found his evidence on this point extremely unsatisfactory and inconsistent. In cross examination he specifically said that he would argue that the word 'gift' does not appear on the attendance note. He further said there was no discussion about the money being a gift when he was at the solicitor's office, He was then asked why he used the word in a recorded conversation at P211 of the bundle where the exchange was as follows:
[defendant] That's what I'm saying and I just wanted to say that to your face and then, when they went on about this mortgage fraud and if it's a gift it's got to be a hundred percent gift, if it's proved to not be a gift it is then erm mortgage fraud and you can both get done for mortgage fraud.
[claimant] Well, when I paid the mortgage off there was no agreement and there was no mention of it being a gift, the only time it was mentioned as being a gift was when it was going through Thornes and it was a transfer from my flat to the house, and you (interrupted and unable to finish sentence)...
19. The claimant was extremely unconvincing when asked to explain this inconsistency. He said I must have got confused because there was no mention of a gift by me. He said "l don't deny there was a mention at the end of the meeting, just that there was no mention by myself". He was still adamant not to accept that the attendance note said the word 'gift'. This was a fairly desperate attempt for the claimant to backtrack on earlier evidence he had given.
20. Ultimately, the defendant's intention and the parties' intention can be gleaned objectively from this appointment at the solicitor's office as well as what appears on the attendance note. It was unnecessary for her to take advice and take the claimant to the solicitor if it was just for the fact of Thornes doing the conveyancing of both parties. If there was a common intention between them that he would have a stake in the house and be an eventual beneficial or legal owner then I am sure there would be mention of this on the attendance note. It is notable that the claimant never said there was. If the paying off of the mortgage was a formality that was consistent with a joint intention between the parties, then either no legal advice would be needed or the legal advice would reflect the intention. This attendance note referring to 'gift' is the closest thing to objective evidence as to the factual conflict lying between the claimant and defendant. My interpretation of it comes down in favour of the defendant as there would simply be no reason for the use of the word gift unless that was on the defendant's mind.
21. I have considered the provision of repayment of the sum in the will of the defendant. The fact that both parties agree that there was discussion about a provision in the defendant's will after the payment of the money to extinguish the mortgage reflects no common intention between the parties whether actual or inferred that the claimant would have a beneficial interest. In fact, the provision in the will is reflective in my judgment, of the defendant agreeing as a matter of morality and fairness, that the claimant's position should be ultimately protected. This provision in the will has now, albeit belatedly, been executed.
22. I have considered the evidence in the text message exchanges between the parties after their break up. There is no mention of an intention for the claimant to have a share in the house. There is mention of the defendant 'carrying on' for the claimant's money or making a will but I accept as a matter of fact that this was the defendant's recognition that as a moral duty, she should return the money used to him. She worked out a E300 per month repayment (see P 169). There is a further reference at PI78 which states "When I payed [paid] the mortgage you said you would make a will, and I trusted you...All I wanted was the security of my 40,000 that I put in." There is to be fair to the claimant, one mention at P 181 of him saying thought we were building a forever home for us". However, this is the only time in a number of texts that it is mentioned and is not reciprocated or suggested by the defendant. There is no mention of conversations in Feb or March of 2017 that they had talks and an agreement to go it together in respect of the property.
23. I find that the defendant was keen to establish her financial independence from the claimant despite his resources…
…
26. There were some unsatisfactory parts of the defendant's evidence as well. She was slightly inconsistent about filling in the claimant's name and signature on a document within the papers that sought to extinguish any claim that the defendant's daughter had on the property. However, this was not a significant document or point in the context of the case as a whole. Perhaps however, the most powerful evidence in her favour was that it was obvious from the evolution of the relationship that the defendant was getting increasingly concerned about the claimant's change of lifestyle when he quit his job in late 2017 and moved in with her. Suddenly he was staying at home, refusing to go back to work and claiming he was too sick to work. It was obvious that the defendant was dismayed at that time as to the claimant's apparent lifestyle choice whilst she worked. I accept her evidence that the claimant was domineering in respect on insisting that he pay off the mortgage. Her evidence was on the balance of probability truthful that the claimant justified not needing his flat as security because he understood that the family house was his security. As I have alluded to, her recollection and evidence of why she and the claimant went to Thornes solicitors did match the documentation. She said that uthe reason I took him there [the claimant] was because he was adamant he was going to be getting money for the house. I didn't want to accept it. I took him there purposely so that whatever transaction towards my property was actually logged so a solicitor knew what Ken wanted me to do [namely] accept money I didn't want. Ken was adamant that he owned Spring Road, that was it. I took him to Stephen. Stephen Sheldon [the solicitor] said to Ken that you can do whatever you want with your property and your money. He also said that Miss Porter is in a right to buy, she is a single tenant, the property would be non transferable, any money transferred to her property will be a gift. I wanted Ken to acknowledge he had no right to the property."
27. I accept what the defendant said about the moment of the mortgage being repaid when she said in evidence that "after Ken said he was going to transfer, I said I am only going to accept it if I could pay it back in the will. He never wanted security on my home and I never wanted his money. It would make me feel more at ease. said I would only accept if can leave it to you on my will. That is where the will came from". This evidence was repeated a number of times in the defendant's testimony. I have concluded, on the balance of probabilities, that it is the true position. The defendant never had in mind having the claimant as a part owner of the house. She went to see her solicitors with the claimant because she wanted to be clear about the legal position. Her agreement to repay and do right by the claimant was driven by morality and fairness rather than by a common intention that would be needed for the claimant to succeed."
V Text messages
- 3 May 2018: "Sorry it didn't work out today. I can give you 300 a month till. I can sort it I think things have gone too far for us I feel stuck in a situation I didn't want to happen…" [R to A, TB 169 (the initials meaning Respondent to Appellant, Trial Bundle)]
- 4 May 2018: "…I'd prefers to give you your money back. I'm sorry your plans for the future didn't work out for you. I kept saying keep your flat and I will sort my house out but you wouldn't listen. I will make sure I replay (sic) your kindness but will have to give you monthly as I have no option. I hope the money I give you monthly helps to sort you back out. Just wished I'd done it how I was in the first place. I hope we can sort it out and you get everything back. If anything happened to me, the kids know they have to give you the remainder. Speak soon." [R to A, TB 170-171]
- 7 May 2018: ".. But you must realise that I would like to have my money back in full, otherwise I am tied to you and I cannot move in (sic) with my life and do as I wish. I feel that I have been there for you and helped you with your family difficulties, but now I want time for my dad. You are pushing me away.xx" [A to R TB 173]
- 7 May 2018: "I can't give it in full. As you know, there is nothing I can do about it. Mortgage was set. I told you I will sort it, but you wouldn't let me. Now we in this situation that I didn't want to be in…." [R to A TB 174]
- 7 May 2018: "If you didn't want me to pay the mortgage off, why did you get the price? Why didn't you refuse then…" [A to R TB 175]
- 7 May 2018: "No, you said to me. You didn't need security as you had dads house and you and Dad have an understanding you won't be short. You wanted to pay for house for me and kids, then later you was gonna move in Dad's as it was where you was born and Grandad died. I understood that I said later in life we will still have the house. I wasn't bothered. I just wanted a home for my kids and I said later in life I would sort you for your kindness. Now things have changed for you. You want your security on house, something you never wanted. If that was the case, I would have sort my house myself. I tried to make it work but feel I cannot go back now." [R to A TB 176-177]
- 7 May 2018: "When I payed [paid] the mortgage you said you would make a will, and I trusted you, I never pressured you. All I wanted was the security of my 40,000 that I put in. I have never wanted to take anything away or profit from you and the kids, and I still don't. I'll send another text explaining. xx" [A to R TB 178]
- 7 May 2018: "And I said I'd make a will half, half which you said no, as you would have to sell house. And I said I was only buying for my kids future something. I would doing before I met you. And you, you now want it in yours, so later in life you will leave it. Kids. Sorry, as you said you wouldn't need it for your security As you had dads, it was a way of getting your money back if I died. Land give me peace of mind. I was not in debt and you had a place to live. I told you, don't sell flat. Let me pay for house. But you said you couldn't live there with me unless you contributed to it. So I couldn't win, could I?"[R to A TB 179-180]
VI The issues
(i) Was the Judge wrong or was there a serious procedural irregularity by the Judge deciding that the Appellant could not proceed with a claim based on a loan or subrogation of the mortgagee;
(ii) If so, what injustice or prejudice did the Appellant suffer, and what order, if any, should be made? If an order should be made, (a) should the Court make a different order, or (b) should the Court remit the matter to the County Court?
VII Should the Judge not have acceded to the preliminary issue and tried the loan claim?
(a) The Respondent's case
(i) It was the wrong procedure to plead the loan in the Reply.
(ii) The loan claim contradicted the claim in the Particulars of Claim of an express or constructive trust in the Property, and therefore should not have been allowed to be a part of the Reply: see CPR PD 16 para 9.2 and see also Martlett Homes Ltd v Mulalley & Co. [2021] EWHC 296 (TCC) ("Martlett") at paras. 20-21;
(iii) Without a claim based on a loan, there was not a pleaded defence to a loan.
(iv) Whilst the Reply did refer to a loan, it was not done with any particularity such that the Respondent knew what case, if any, she had to meet.
(v) There should not be any allowances to the Appellant as a litigant in person. First, the pleadings were drafted by lawyers who ought to have known the consequences of what they were doing and to have advised accordingly. The same rules apply to litigants in person as well as to represented persons, and the Judge took into account a degree of latitude against the prejudice that was or would be caused to the Respondent.
(vi) This was a case management decision which was open to the Judge. It was made in the exercise of a discretion. The Judge was in the best position as trial judge to reach conclusions as to the effect on the trial if such a plea were allowed to stand. The Court should not interfere with case management decisions of a judge who had applied the correct principles unless satisfied that the decision was so plainly wrong that it must regarded as outside the generous ambit of the discretion entrusted to the judge.
"37….these are appeals from case management decisions made in the exercise of his discretion by a judge who, because of his involvement in the case over time, had an accumulated knowledge of the background and the issues which this Court would be unable to match. The judge was in the best position to reach conclusions as to the future course of the proceedings. An appellate court should respect the judge's decisions. It should not yield to the temptation to "second guess" the judge in a matter peculiarly within his province.
38 I accept, without reservation, that this Court should not interfere with case management decisions made by a judge who has applied the correct principles, and who has taken into account the matters which should be taken into account and left out of account matters which are irrelevant, unless satisfied that the decision is so plainly wrong that it must be regarded as outside the generous ambit of the discretion entrusted to the judge…."
"50. An appellate court will only interfere with a discretionary evaluation where an appellant can identify one or more of the follows errors:
(i) a misdirection in law;
(ii) some procedural unfairness or irregularity;
(iii) that the Judge took into account irrelevant matters;
(iv) that the Judge failed to take account of relevant matters; or
(v) that the Judge made a decision which was "plainly wrong"".
(b) Discussion
(i) The pleaded defence to the claim for a proprietary interest in the Property was in large part that the moneys advanced to the mortgagee by the Appellant were advanced by way of gift to the Respondent. If it was a gift, then this was the answer not only to the proprietary claim, but also to a personal claim for a loan.
(ii) As noted above, the evidence of the Respondent had covered the areas in question, asserting that there was no agreement for repayment and on the contrary that there was discussion about a gift. Indeed, it is the same closeness of the issues in the trust and the loan claims that has given rise to the Respondent's Notice. Given that this works for the Respondent in the Respondent's Notice, so too it works the other way to provide a reason why the loan claim could have been heard without causing any or any substantial prejudice to the Respondent.
(iii) The procedural concerns were diminished in their practical effect by the fact that the Respondent had known about the claim based on a loan from the time of the Reply [29 August 2020]. The Respondent had engaged in the defence of a gift and in the notion that any promise of repayment was in the nature of a moral obligation only both in the pleadings and in the evidence.
(iv) There was therefore no substantial prejudice to the Respondent in the Court acceding to the Court treating para. 9c. of the Reply as if it was a part of the Particulars of Claim or in giving permission to amend the Particulars of Claim to include the same as part of the claim. This is not to ignore a decision like Martlett, where a claimant was not allowed to rely on a reply where the cause of action should have been in the Particulars of Claim. That case was different because there was a limitation issue and there was a specific strike out application (that is not a point taken at trial). In the instant case, there is no limitation issue and no application had been made in advance of trial.
(v) Alternatively, the burden to the Respondent in doing this was far less than the burden to the Appellant in allowing the 'preliminary issue'. It would not have necessitated an adjournment for the Respondent to have to face a case of subrogation or a personal loan.
(vi) The Judge was not addressed about the law to the effect that absent a presumption of advancement, prima facie there was an obligation to repay on the part of the payee of money. Chitty on Contracts 34th Ed.at para. 41-268 puts the matter as follows:
"If money is proved, or admitted, to have been paid by A to B, then in the absence of any circumstances suggesting a presumption of advancement, there is prima facie an obligation to repay the money; accordingly if B claims that the money was intended as a gift, the onus is on him to prove this fact": see Seldon v Davidson [1968] 1 WLR 1083.
(vii) Following oral argument and after I sought further assistance, I have been referred to the case of Chapman v Jaume [2012] 2 FLR 830 which confirms that (a) the relationship of unmarried cohabitants does not give rise to a presumption of advancement, following Stack v Dowden [2007] UKHL 17 at [112], and (b) once payment of money is proved there was prima facie an obligation to repay in the absence of a presumption of advancement: following Seldon v Davidson above. In that case, it was not an answer to the claim for repayment that there had not been found to be a contract with specific terms agreed regarding repayment: in the absence of an express term, an obligation to pay within a reasonable time would be inferred.
(vii) If there was no trust established, money was advanced by the Appellant to the Respondent without a presumption of advancement. The highest that it can be put is that they were cohabitants, but they were not married. They had not been cohabitants for long: it did not equate to a marriage and at all material times, it was not a very long term relationship.
(viii) The effect of the foregoing was to relegate in importance matters such as whether the contract had been adequately pleaded. It was for the payee in such circumstances to make the running. That is what the Respondent had done in the Defence and in her evidence, and therefore there was no or no substantial prejudice. There might have been difficulties in establishing when it was repayable as to which particulars should have been provided, but this is not something which could not have been the subject of argument at trial in the event that the Court had not accepted that the moneys advanced were by way of gift.
"The appeal court will allow an appeal where the decision of the lower court was—
(a) wrong; or
(b) unjust because of a serious procedural or other irregularity in the proceedings in the lower court."
VIII What should be the consequence of the failure to adjudicate upon the loan in the Judgment?
"So far as the second ground for interference is concerned, it must be noted that the appeal court only has power to interfere if the procedural or other irregularity which it has detected in the procedure in the lower court was a serious one, and that this irregularity caused the decision of the lower court to be an unjust decision."
"It follows that the question in this part of the case is whether the decision of the judge was unjust because of a serious procedural or other irregularity in the proceedings. It is not, however, sufficient that a serious irregularity should be shown or even that some collateral injustice should be established. The decision must be unjust. As I see it, whether the decision is unjust or not will depend upon all the circumstances of the case."
(i) By refusing to hear a case about a loan, the Judge failed properly to consider the claim for a loan or any defences to the loan. The prism for consideration was restricted to an agreement or arrangement to have a proprietary interest in the Property.
(ii) The Judge referred to the fact that the onus of proof was on the Appellant to prove the constructive or express trust: see the Judgment at paras. 11, 12 and 14 in the following terms:
"[11] the law is that in a domestic consumer context, the presumption is that the sole legal owner is presumed to be the sole beneficial owner. The burden is on the party seeking to displace this presumption to show why.
[13] the standard to which the claimant must prove his claim is on the balance of probabilities. In other words, he has to prove the above proposition so that it is more likely than not.
[14] I find that the claim it has not proved so that it is more likely than not that there was a common intention that the claimant would have a beneficial interest in the property, either by way of actual agreement, arrangement or understanding between the parties, or from inferring the same from the parties' conduct.
…
[28] In all the circumstances, there is, in my judgement, simply no evidence that persuades me on the balance of probabilities, with the burden being on the claimant, that there was an agreement, arrangement or common understanding between the parties for a constructive trust to be imposed by the court."
(iii) The Judge does not appear to have been addressed on the law referred to above, namely that absent a presumption of advancement, there was prima facie an obligation on the payee to repay moneys paid to them. If the Judge had been adjudicating upon the loan in his judgment, he ought to have contrasted the onus of proof in a trust claim and a loan claim. In the trust claim, it was on the party alleging the trust, which is to say the Appellant. In the loan claim, absent the presumption of advancement, it was on the payee to show that the money received was not repayable. The Judge has not dealt with this in his judgment because he has in effect excluded a case about a loan.
(iv) The Court's characterisation of offers to repay in WhatsApp messages and through a will as being moral obligations does not sit well with the moneys being prima facie repayable absent a presumption of advancement. If there had been gift, there would not have been any question of repayment. On the contrary, these offers were consistent with a legal obligation to repay.
(v) There is an underlying concern expressed by Mr Justice Ritchie and the Appellant that a sum of over £40,000 was a large sum, especially for these parties, such that it ought not to have been concluded lightly that there was no legal obligation to pay.
IX Respondent's Notice
(i) There was no contract between the parties – any obligation to repay the moneys was a moral one at best;
(ii) There was no intention to be legally bound – the parties were in a relationship;
(iii) At most, the agreement was that the respondent would provide for the repayment to the appellant in the will. The respondent made such provision in her will and was therefore not in breach.
(i) The money was essentially thrust into the account of the Respondent against her wishes: see Judgment paras. 18 and 26-27;
(ii) The reference to a gift in the attendance note of the solicitors was to reflect an intention of the parties that the money was to be treated as a gift: see Judgment paras. 20 and 26;
(iii) The provision of a will and references to repayment were not about a legal obligation to repay but were a recognition of a moral obligation about repayment: see Judgment paras.21-22 and 27.
"the defence…has defended on really one essential proposition, which is regardless of how you come at it, in other words, whether it is a constructive trust, whether it is a subrogation, whether it is a loan, all of that is wrong because it was a gift, pure and simple…"
(i) There was consideration in the evidence and in the submission at the trial about the claim for a loan;
(ii) The Judge considered that there was no contradiction between the evidence about the will and repayment on the one hand and a gift on the other hand.
X The law about the approach of an appellate court and its application
"Appellate courts have been repeatedly warned, by recent cases at the highest level, not to interfere with findings of fact by trial judges, unless compelled to do so. This applies not only to findings of primary fact, but also to the evaluation of those facts and to inferences to be drawn from them. The best known of these cases are: Biogen Inc v Medeva plc [1977] RPC1; Piglowska v Piglowski [1999] 1 WLR 1360; Datec Electronics Holdings Ltd v United Parcels Service Ltd [2007] UKHL 23 [2007] 1 WLR 1325; Re B (A Child) (Care Proceedings: Threshold Criteria) [2013] UKSC 33 [2013] 1 WLR 1911 and most recently and comprehensively McGraddie v McGraddie [2013] UKSC 58 [2013] 1 WLR 2477. These are all decisions either of the House of Lords or of the Supreme Court. The reasons for this approach are many. They include
i) The expertise of a trial judge is in determining what facts are relevant to the legal issues to be decided, and what those facts are if they are disputed.
ii) The trial is not a dress rehearsal. It is the first and last night of the show.
iii) Duplication of the trial judge's role on appeal is a disproportionate use of the limited resources of an appellate court, and will seldom lead to a different outcome in an individual case.
iv) In making his decisions the trial judge will have regard to the whole of the sea of evidence presented to him, whereas an appellate court will only be island hopping.
v) The atmosphere of the courtroom cannot, in any event, be recreated by reference to documents (including transcripts of evidence).
vi) Thus even if it were possible to duplicate the role of the trial judge, it cannot in practice be done."
(i) a defence of gift was equally a defence to a case about an express/constructive trust and to a case of a loan, as the Judge recognised in argument;
(ii) the defence of gift was not nullified by the repeated references to repayment in WhatsApp messages and by the will, but were, as the Judge found, simply a recognition of a moral duty of the Respondent to return the money used. It is to be noted that such moral duties were far more limited than would have been the case if there had been an agreement of a loan repayable on demand.
XI Procedural concerns
XII Disposal