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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions >> Liberty Homes (Kent) Ltd v Rajakanthan & Ors [2022] EWHC 2201 (TCC) (19 August 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2022/2201.html Cite as: [2022] EWHC 2201 (TCC), 205 Con LR 91, [2022] TCLR 7 |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT (QBD)
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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LIBERTY HOMES (KENT) LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and |
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(1) KANAGARATNAM RAJAKANTHAN (2) DONATA RAJAKANTHAN (3) KANAGARATNAM RAJAMOGAN (4) JANE RAJAMOGAN (5) RICHARD SUREN RAJAMOGAN (6) NATALIE REKA DOWDING (7) FOREST DOWDING (8) JASON RAJAMOGAN (9) RUTH RAJAMOGAN (10) NICHOLAS JAMES CARE HOMES LIMITED (11) REGAL CARE TRADING LIMITED (12) JRN GARAGES LIMITED (13) UNIQUEHELP LIMITED |
Defendants |
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Daniel Churcher (instructed by Thomson Snell & Passmore LLP) for the First, Tenth, Eleventh and Thirteenth Defendants/ Applicants
Hearing date: 19 July 2022
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Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Jefford DBE:
Introduction
The applications
(i) The first is to strike out the claimants' Particulars of Claim, or portions thereof, and/or for summary judgment on certain claims. The draft Order provided with the application identifies those claims as (i) all claims against Mr Ragakanthan which allege that he was guarantor for one or more of the other defendants; (ii) all claims against the defendants in unjust enrichment; (iii) the claim described as "Assorted Care Home Works and Services"; and (iv) the global claim in the sum of £2,588,813 plus VAT, alternatively £2,627,019 plus VAT. The last of these, whether or not properly described as a global claim, captures the claim described as "All Claims" in the Particulars of Claim. "All Claims" itself encompasses all the separate claims made.
(ii) The second application is for security for costs. The application is expressly for security by way of payment into court.
The story so far
"For the avoidance of doubt, none of the defendants will be able to raise any arguable defence on the basis of any lack of contractual formality. In particular, the terms of each agreement were sufficiently certain, including with respect to the scope of works and/or services to be provided".
That was a clear indication that the claimant had a positive case as to each agreement alleged to have been entered into with each defendant and a case which encompassed the terms of such contracts, in particular in relation to the scope of works and services to be provided and, it might reasonably be inferred, actually provided. Leaving aside the Beacon Hill Lodge claims, the letter, at paragraph 10, said that it annexed a final account valuation for Four Oaks; a Consultancy Services Valuation for Regal Care Trading; a Valuation for 129 Foxley Lane; a Valuation for 129A Foxley Lane; a Valuation for 14 Arden Grove; and a "Schedule of Care Home related Works, Valuation and Supporting Invoices". These valuations were said to have been made by a quantity surveyor, Mr Harrison, and the provision of these documents would seem to have been consistent with the claimant's position that there was a clear scope of works to be undertaken, and in fact undertaken, on each project, which enabled such valuations to be made.
"We accept there is some ambiguity with respect to the exact liabilities of certain of the defendants. For the most part, such ambiguity has arisen due to the defendants' own conduct, including (a) acting as each other's agents (whether authorised to do so or not); (b) assuming each other's liabilities (whether authorised to do so or not); and (c) failure to keep and provide adequate contractual documentation and payment records. For completeness, therefore, all parties presently considered to owe sums to Liberty Homes have been included in this letter."
(i) On 10 November 2020, 10 Page Heath Lane Bromley (also known as Liberty Court), with a stated value of £3.69 million was transferred to Liberty Holdings (Kent) Ltd.
(ii) On 12 November 2020, Courtways, Holwood Park Avenue, Orpington, with a stated value of £1,663,790, was transferred to Liberty GB Ltd.
(iii) On 19 November 2020, 12 Page Heath Lane, Bromley, with a stated value of £910,000, as transferred to Liberty GB Ltd.
(iv) On 19 November 2020, 126 Main Road, Biggin Hill and land next to 134 Main Road was transferred to Liberty GB Ltd.
(v) On 25 November 2020, Knoll Court, 18 Station Road, Orpington was transferred to Liberty Investments (Kent) Ltd.
(vi) On 25 November 2020, Flat 2, Page Heath Court, Bromley, with a value of £413,924 was transferred to Liberty Investments (Kent) Ltd.
The application to strike out
Particulars of Claim
Part 2
"Most of the claims arise of out unpaid works and services carried out over several years and relating to various matters. Those matters include building projects and repair and maintenance agreements ("Final Account Claims") as well as consultancy services ("Consultancy Claim") ."
A right to payment is asserted under the Housing Grants, Construction and Regeneration Act 1996 and the Scheme and under terms implied by section 15 of the Supply of Goods and Services Act 1982 and section 51 of the Consumer Rights Act 2015.
Parts 3 and 4
Four Oaks
"Kanagaratnam and Donata Rajakanthan reside at Four Oaks. They personally contracted with Liberty for the demolition of the original property at 12 Park Avenue and for the design, construction and project management of a 12,500 square foot luxury dwelling in or around March 2011. The initial contract price was estimated at £2,037,590.36 and contained various provisional sums . Throughout the course of the project, Donata Rajakanthan frequently instructed variations to Liberty's original scope of works. Kanagaratnam and Donata Rajakanthan moved back into their property in late 2015 and building control certified the works in early 2016. By the time of completion, numerous variations had been instructed, significantly increasing the final contract sum. .. As per Liberty's final account, substantial sums remain outstanding and which are detailed below .." [emphasis added]
The paragraph further sets out Liberty Homes' case that invoices were paid by the tenth defendant, NJCH, and that a "line of credit" was extended by due dates for payment being deferred.
The basis of the application to strike out
Four Oaks
Submissions in respect of Four Oaks
"7.3 Where a claim is based upon a written agreement:
(1) a copy of the contract or documents constituting the agreement should be attached to or served with the particulars of claim .., and
.
7.4 Where a claim is based upon an oral agreement, the particulars of claim should set out the contractual claim used and state by whom, to whom, when and where they were spoken.
7.5 Where a claim is based upon an agreement by conduct, the particulars of claim must specify the conduct relied on and state by whom, when and where the acts constituting the conduct were done."
Discussion
"The purpose of the pleading or statement of case is to inform the other party what the case is that is being brought against him. It is necessary that the other party understands the case which is being brought against him so that he may plead to it in response, disclose those of his documents which are relevant to that case and prepare witness statements which support his defence. If the case which is brought against him is vague or incoherent he will not, or may not, be able to do any of those things. Time and costs will, or may, be wasted if the defendant seeks to respond to a vague and incoherent case. It is also necessary for the Court to understand the case which is brought so that it may fairly and expeditiously decide the case and in a matter which saves unnecessary expense.
19. It is not fair and just that the Defendant cannot be sure of the case he has to meet. If the Amended Particulars of Claim are not struck out there is a very real risk that unnecessary expense will be incurred by the Defendant in preparing to defend allegations which are not pursued, that he will be impeded in his defence of allegations which are pursued and that the Court will not be sure of the case which it must decide."
"CPR 16.4(1)(a) requires that a particulars of claim must include "a concise statement of the facts on which the claimant relies". Thus, where the particulars of claim contain an allegation of breach of contract and/or negligence, it must be pleaded in such a way as to allow the defendant to know the case it has to meet. The pleading needs to set out clearly what it is that the defendant failed to do that it should have done, and/or what the defendant did that it should not have done, what would have happened but for those acts or omissions, and the loss that eventuated. Those are "the facts" relied on in support of the allegation, and are required in order that proper witness statements (and if necessary an expert's report) can be obtained by both sides which address the specific allegations made."
"I profoundly disagree with that assumption. The days of the court requiring parties in detailed commercial and construction cases to plead out everything to the nth degree are over. It is not sensible; it is not cost effective; it is not proportionate. The parties, with the assistance of the court if they cannot agree, are duty bound to find a way of trying out the principal issues between them in a sensible and proportionate way. Of course, in certain types of construction dispute, it will be necessary to investigate what Lord Dyson once called "the grinding detail" of such claims, but that investigation should only ever be commensurate with the overriding objective. Pleading out every last detail at the outset of the proceedings should not be regarded as the paradigm method of framing such disputes, particularly if there are more proportionate alternatives which still enable the defendant to know the case that it has to meet."
(i) It must be necessary for the claimant to plead the contract that includes how the contract was formed and, depending on how it was formed, the particulars required by the Practice Direction.
(ii) These are not just formalities. They enable the defendant and the court to know not only how the contract is alleged to have been formed but what the relevant terms of the contract are, whether express or implied.
(iii) Those terms need to be set out because without them there is no statement of the basis on which the sums said to be due are due, when they became due and how they have been calculated or assessed or ascertained.
(iv) It is unsatisfactory and confusing to advance a case which suggests that there are express terms of the contract relevant to payment such as the existence of a contract price - but not to set out those express terms and then to rely instead on statutory implied terms.
Conclusions on Four Oaks
Contractual claims
Unjust enrichment
"Alternatively, the goods, services and/or money provided/loaned give rise to a claim in restitution. It is beyond argument that each of the defendants was enriched at the expense of Liberty Homes with respect to the goods, services and/or money it provided. As (re)payment remains outstanding for those goods, services and loan, we maintain that such enrichment was unjust and that Liberty Homes is entitled to claim in quantum valebat, quantum meruit and for money had and received, respectively."
"55. Courts and commentators have broken down the conceptual structure of a claim in unjust enrichment into four elements: i) Has the defendant been enriched? ii) Was the enrichment at the claimant's expense? iii) Was the enrichment unjust? iv) Are there any defences "
57. As regards the third question, the claimant must positively identify what has been described as "the unjust factor" (see Samsoodar v Capital Insurance Company Ltd. (Trinidad and Tobago) [2020] UKPC 33 .. at [19] and Goof and Jones at 1/21). There is widespread judicial acceptance of this terminology and the need for an unjust factor (see for example Kleinwort Benson at 408-409[1]; Chief Constable of the Greater Manchester Police v Wigan Athletic AFC Ltd. [2008] EWCA Civ 1449 .. at [50], [62] and [67]; Test Claimant in the FII Group Litigation v Revenue and Customs Commissioners [2012] UKSC . At [81]).
58. It is the "unjust factor" that distinguishes the English claim in unjust enrichment from the civilian "absence of basis" approach. Examples of unjust factors include mistake, duress, undue influence, failure of consideration, necessity and legal compulsion. These unjust factors are recognised because they establish that the claimant did not intend the defendant to receive a benefit in the circumstances, either because the claimant never had any intent to benefit the defendant in those circumstances or the intent was vitiated or qualified in some way.
59. An unjust enrichment claim is not based on a wide ranging and open-ended assessment of fairness (or justice) in the round, rather, it is a common law remedy requiring a claimant to make out an established category of "unjust factor" in order to trigger the claim. .."
" invalidity of a relevant contract is not a necessary prerequisite to a successful claim in unjust enrichment. That is not to say that claims in unjust enrichment must not respect contractual regimes and the allocation of risk agreed between the parties. On the contrary, as explained by Professor Burrows in The Restatement (at 3(6)), an "often overlooked but crucial" element of the unjust factors scheme is:
" that an unjust factor does not normally override a legal obligation of the claimant to confer the benefit on the defendant. The existence of the legal obligation means that the unjust factor is nullified so that the enrichment at the claimant's expense is not unjust ""
Foxley Lane
(i) In 2017, Kanagaratnam Rajamogan contracted with Liberty Homes to refurbish and extend an existing house at 129 Foxley Lane. This appears to be set out as factual background and the contract is not the subject of any claim in these proceedings which claims appear to relate to the subsequent engagement of Liberty Homes.
(ii) Quoting paragraph 37:
"He subsequently engaged Liberty to demolish the garage in situ, to convert 129 Foxley Lane into two separate flats (ground and first floor flats) and to build a second house on the property 129A Foxley Lane. The contract price for the works to Foxley Lane and 129A Foxley Lane was agreed in the total sum of £600,000, comprising £150,000 for the former and £450,000 for the latter."
"Final accounts have now been prepared for both 129 (flat conversion) and 129A Foxley Lane (new build of a detached house), valuing them at £50,958 and £589,675, respectively. Nothing has been paid by the Defendants in respect of these works since their completion approximately four years ago, during which time both properties have appreciated considerably in value."
(i) At paragraph 37, the claimant says that "Kanagaratnam Rajakanthan agreed to stand in as guarantor/surety for Kanagaratnam Rajamogan in the event the latter did not pay."
(ii) At paragraph 60, the claimant says that "regardless of the exact identity of the party (-ies) with whom Liberty contracted", none of the defendants against whom this claim is made has made any payments to Liberty and that includes "Kanagaratnam Rajakanthan who acted as guarantor/ surety in the event of non-payment".
(iii) In paragraph 63, these sums are claimed from the first defendant as loss and damage.
(iv) In paragraph 83.1, these sums are claimed from the first defendant as the unpaid price for the work done and services provided "pursuant to a contract made between the parties for the planning, design, alteration, conversion and construction of the properties "; alternatively as damages; alternatively on the bases of unjust enrichment, quantum meruit or quantum valebat. There is again a claim for a declaration as to the true value of the final account assessed pursuant to the terms of the contract or the Scheme.
The position of the first defendant
"The essential distinguishing feature of a contract of guarantee is that the liability of the guarantor is always ancillary, or secondary, to that of the principal, who remains primarily liable to the creditor. There is no liability on the guarantor unless and until the principal has failed to perform his obligations. "
"No objection is taken by the First Defendant who clearly agrees to indemnity the Second (sic) Defendant against the sums due from him to Liberty Homes in that email exchange. Further the said email exchange is confirmation in writing from the First defendant that he accepted liability to discharge third party debts owed to Liberty Homes albeit as a matter of fact it is disputed those sums have in fact been discharged. The email chain is not limited to the First Defendant recognising his obligation as an indemnifier, but also indicates that the First Defendant accepted a liability, in writing, to act as guarantor."
"Further to your telephone conversation, please see below communications. We are waiting to receive our over payment amount of £427k from Liberty Homes Limited. The amount due towards your Purley house and petrol station £750,000 is included in our payments and it is fully settled. Please forward to me the invoices for my files." (My emphasis)
"After your phone call to me today, I just spoke with Kan and he told me that all my financial liabilities towards you was fully paid by him and you still owe him money and not the other way. You did tell me that things are with the solicitors and courts. This is unfortunate, if the two of you can't come to any settlement over your financial disputes this may be the only way for the two of you to resolve this. However, please do understand my plight, I asked for financial help from Kan to pay your debt when I found out it was impossible for me to get a mortgage. He has agreed and now tells me my debt to you is fully paid by him and I am a free man. There is no point in harassing me over this again and again as Kan had said to me these sums were fully paid already. I am copying Kan to keep all in the loop.
I hope that you do realize, as I had no means to pay you, I had to rely on Kan to settle this matter on my behalf which he had done. If there is any remaining dispute between you then that is a matter for you and Kan as you will see from his confirmation e-mail below to me.
I hope that you will soon over come you financial problems and happy again."
(Emphasis added)
"When I stand back from the detail and look at this case in the round, I conclude that as at 20 June/3 July 2014 the position as to causation of the fire was not so clear as to justify the grant of summary judgment on liability in favour of the claimants. Also I think it was inappropriate to do so when similar issues remained to be determined at a full trial as between the other parties. In the particular circumstances of this case that constitutes a "compelling reason" not to enter summary judgment within the meaning of CPR 24.2(b). A judge in multi-party litigation must aim to do justice as between all parties involved in the case."
Jackson LJ further made the point that there would be far less cost saving than in other cases because the issues of causation would still have to be gone into and the claimants would have to participate in the trial in order to establish the quantum of their claim.
The position of the further defendants
"60. At all material times, Kanagaratnam, Jane, Richard, Jason, and Ruth Rajamogan and Forest and Natalie Dowding were aware that Liberty had been contracted to refurbish 129 Foxley Lane and build a new house at 129A Foxley Lane. Regardless of the exact identity of the party(-ies) with whom Liberty contracted in the refurbishment and construction of the Foxley Lane properties (including Kanagaratnam Rajakanthan who acted as guarantor/ surety in the event of non-payment), none has made any payments to Liberty in respect of the same.
61. Minimally, this amounts to an egregious instance of unjust enrichment seven of the Defendants are knowingly living in flats and a house effectively built for free by Liberty for them. This state of affairs was never intended to be the case and insofar as any of the Defendants asserts otherwise namely, that no payment is due to Liberty for the acquisition and/or ongoing occupation of these properties such a position defies common sense and practical justice."
Assorted Care Home Works and Services
The contractual claim
"Between 2016 and 2020, Liberty was engaged to provide building, refurbishment and facilities management services to various care homes . under the control of Kanagaratnam Rajakanthan, including those owned by NJCH and RCHL (and, after its insolvency, RCTL) [the eleventh defendant]. The scope of these works and services was extensive, including building repairs and the preparation of planning applications. One of those care homes was Alpine Care Home in Sevenoaks, at which Liberty, inter alia, refurbished various rooms, installed a new heating system and built en suites. The works undertaken to Alpine and the other care homes are detailed below."
"Many of the services provided by Liberty were carried out on an as-needed basis, pursuant to a broader repair and maintenance arrangement between the parties. The agreements for such works varied in formality but broadly entailed Liberty managing, servicing or otherwise attending the care homes to address building and planning issues. Most, if not all, of such works were directly instructed by Kanagaratnam Rajakanthan."
Unjust enrichment
14 Arden Grove
"Kanagaratnam Rajamogan was responsible for payment of these works in the first instance, although as they related to their mother's house, Kanagaratnam Rajakanthan once again agreed to stand in as guarantor/surety in the event Kanagaratnam Rajamogan did not pay. In the event, the works undertaken at 14 Arden Grove remain unpaid."
The Loan Claim
"Richard Rajamogan is the director of JRN [the twelfth defendant]. His father, Kanagaratnam Rajamogan, is the company secretary. In March 2015, Richard Rajamogan approached Liberty and sought a loan in order for JRN to put down a deposit on a petrol station in Harbledown. A loan of £200,000 was approved by David Caulfield on behalf of Liberty and repayable by JRN. It was understood that the loan was repayable by Richard Rajamogan (company director) or his father, Kanagaratnam Rajamogan. In the further alternative, the loan was repayable by Kanagaratnam Rajakanthan, who acted as a guarantor/ surety (and who himself personally loaned a further £200,000 in respect of the petrol station purchase). The loan amount was transferred to the client account of Hodders Law, a firm of solicitors representing JRN. Natalie Dowding was employed as a solicitor by Hodders at the time. Richard Rajamogan was also a client. The loan remains unpaid."
"70. The identity of the debtor was not explicitly recorded at the time the loan was made. Even so, it was understood between the parties that the money was being loaned in order to purchase the petrol station, thereby making the debtor in the first instance its nominal owner (ie JRN) and alternatively its beneficial owners (ie its shareholders). The beneficial owners were Richard Rajamogan (JRN's sole director and majority shareholder) and his father, Kanagaratnam Rajamogan (who, as company secretary, procured the loan in the first place.
71. In the further alternative, Kanagaratnam Rajakanthan had personally guaranteed Liberty's loan (and has since incorrectly claimed to have repaid it). Liberty maintains that all are jointly liable in respect of repayment of this loan, which remains outstanding." (Emphasis added)
The Consulting (or Consultancy) Claim
"These services and advice were of considerable commercial value to the aforementioned Defendants and provided pursuant to an agreement that Liberty would be compensated for the same".
The Rent Claim
"It was verbally agreed between David Caulfield, on behalf of Liberty, and Kanagaratnam, Jane and Natalie Rajamogan, that accommodation would be provided on the basis that they would repay Liberty, although payment would not become due until they were financially able to do so. Kanagaratnam Rajakanthan was to stand in as guarantor/ surety in the event of non-payment. At the time of the agreement it was known by all parties that the monthly market rent was £1,600. Liberty agreed to a reduced monthly rent of £1,400 .. The Rajamogans occupied the flat for 4 years, until approximately April 2016, at which point they owed Liberty the sum of £67,200 in rent (although such rent did not fall due until they were able to pay it). That money has never been paid."
(i) At paragraph 88.1, the claimant claims the sum of £67,200 from Mr Rajakanthan and the Rajamogans as arrears of rent.
(ii) At paragraph 88.2, the claimant sets out alternative bases of claim. The first of these (paragraph 88.2.1) is "Payment of an outstanding debt (or guarantee/indemnity in respect of the same)".
Other claims
The application for security for costs
The threshold test
" . The analogy with the freezing order jurisdiction is particularly apt, in my view, because it reflects the test which a claimant has to satisfy in order to obtain protection for satisfaction of any judgment which it might obtain against a defendant. An application by a defendant for an order for security for costs is the converse side of the coin [in a footnote, she added that the analogy was not precise, since the freezing order does not provide actual security for the claim]. There should, it seems to me, be an appropriate symmetry between the two tests that respectively entitle a claimant to a freezing order to satisfy any judgment, and a defendant (or appellant) to security for costs. .."
"If, on analysis, there was no consideration in respect of the asset transfers, and they were not valid dividends in specie, Liberty Homes would retain a beneficial interest in those properties or be entitled to unwind the transaction pursuant to section 432 of the Insolvency Act 1986. For that reason, the court does not accept Mr Levenstein's submission that no useful purpose can be served by continuation of the freezing injunction or that it is oppressive."
Discretion
The relevance of the freezing injunction
Stifling the claim
"However, the court should consider not only whether the plaintiff company can provide security out of its own resources to continue the litigation, but also whether it can raise the amount needed from its directors, its shareholders or other backers or interested persons. As this is likely to be peculiarly within the knowledge of the plaintiff company, it is for the plaintiff to satisfy the court that it would be prevented by an order for security from continuing the litigation ."
(i) Liberty GB Ltd.'s Financial Statement to the year ended 31 October 2021 states in the notes that it holds freehold property valued at £3,602,422. Its total net assets, however, are £3,816, taking account of liabilities to creditors of over £3.5 million.
(ii) Liberty Holdings (Kent) Ltd's Financial Statement to year ended 31 October 2021 shows its total net assets as £4,619,272. The notes state that it holds freehold property with a value of £1,473,251 which is less than the value of Liberty Court when transferred to this company.
(iii) Liberty Investments (Kent) Ltd. holds freehold property valued at £413,925. It has creditors falling due within a year in the like amount and has nominal net assets.
The applicants' cost estimate
"Although I accept that the quantification of an order for security for costs is necessarily a "broad-brush" exercise of assessment, bearing in mind the possible prejudice to the respondent of too much security being ordered, the Court must interrogate the estimates of incurred and future costs provided by the applicant. This exercise will not nearly approximate a detailed assessment of costs, but it will be similar to a summary assessment or a costs budgeting exercise. To this end, it is incumbent on the applicant to provide a sufficiently detailed breakdown of costs in support of its application to satisfy the Court that the amount of security which will be ordered will provide the necessary protection to the applicant and avoid any unnecessary prejudice to the respondent. In the even that a sufficiently detailed breakdown is before the Court, in order to ensure that the security ordered provides the necessary protection to the applicant, the Court should resolve any doubt in favour of the applicant. However, if there is no sufficiently detailed breakdown of costs before the Court, any uncertainty arising from the inadequate breakdown should be resolved in favour of the respondent."
Security from the Caulfields
Conclusions
Note 1 Kleinwort Benson Ltd. v Lincoln City Council [1999] 1 AC 349. [Back]