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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Campbell v Griffin & Ors [2001] EWCA Civ 990 (27 June 2001) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2001/990.html Cite as: (2001) 82 P & CR DG23, [2001] NPC 102, [2001] EWCA Civ 990, [2001] WTLR 981 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM WORTHING COUNTY COURT
(MR RECORDER HALL)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL Wednesday 27th June 2001 |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE THORPE
and
LORD JUSTICE ROBERT WALKER
____________________
CAMPBELL |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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GRIFFIN AND OTHERS |
Respondent |
____________________
Smith Bernal Reporting Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr C Holbech (instructed by Bennett Griffin and Partners for the first to third respondents)
Mr W Webster (instructed by The Solicitor, West Sussex County Council for the fourth respondent)
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Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE ROBERT WALKER:
"It is difficult to be accurate about the date when Mr Ascough began to lose his sense of balance but his health did deteriorate. However, Mr Ascough did have an old war injury which did result in him having headaches and blackouts. There were occasions when I would return from work to find him lying on the floor. Mrs Ascough would be unable to help him because he was such a big man. In any event she was becoming increasingly deaf so that she could not use the telephone. There were occasions when he would have been lying on the floor for a number of hours without any help. I would pick him up and give him a wash, if necessary, and put him back to bed. I would then help him to get changed, make him a drink and if he was hungry, a meal."
"When I look back I realise how dependent Mr and Mrs Ascough had become upon me to undertake basic everyday tasks for them, such as waking them in the morning, making breakfast, leaving food out for them for the rest of the day. When I returned home I would make the evening meal, clean the house and help them as and when necessary. I did not view the fact that I had become their carer with any resentment, I was simply helping friends as and when necessary."
That part of his statement was challenged in cross-examination and Mr Campbell agreed that after Mrs Garrett, the home help, was there, it was she who would get their breakfast and prepare their midday meal. But Mrs Garrett seems to have been on the scene only in 1993 (and January 1994).
"The situation is that the 'Tenant' is a Mr K Campbell who has to all intents and purposes been in the position of a Son to the Ayscoughs for the past 16 years.
We understand that he moved down to England from Scotland some 16 years ago, having lived in a Council Flat in Scotland. He lived for a short time in bed and breakfast accommodation and then moved in with the Ayscoughs, as a Tenant of the top floor of the house, paying a rent of £10.00 per week. From an early stage the Ayscoughs, who were then 80 years, demanded rent erratically but relied on Mr Campbell to provide services, such as cooking meals and shopping etc. Over the years this continued and as the Ayscoughs grew older and more feeble, Mr Campbell regarded himself as essential to their well being so that there was someone in the house to guard against emergencies. Although he continued to pay rent, Mr Ayscough was often reluctant to accept this and to a large degree treated him as a member of the family. We understand he has on several occasions indicated that he would like to adopt Mr Campbell, which Mr Campbell has, understandably, not taken seriously.
Mr Ayscough has on more than one occasion discussed with us the possibility of selling the house to Mr Campbell at a favourable price, but we have indicated that this is not practical as the house is in the joint names and Mrs Ayscough is subject to an Order of the Court of Protection. In addition we would mention in confidence that Mr Ayscough has left his interest in the house to Mr Campbell in his Will.
No doubt you will consider carefully the circumstances but we would repeat the request that Mr Campbell is regarded as taking the place of a relative in these circumstances, as we know that a suggestion that he should be made homeless would distress Mr Ayscough enormously."
"There was a problem in the nursing home that they asked me to buy clothes for Mrs Ascough because she did not have night-dresses or underwear. What I said to them was that I don't know what a 90 year old woman wears and I gave the nursing home £100 so that they could buy them themselves."
Mr Campbell said in his witness statement that the scheduled items
" ... are the basic minimum sums that I have spent and did not include daily expenditures such as food, tobacco, chocolates, household goods and other items that were needed on a daily or weekly basis. I did not retain any receipts, nor did I keep a record, as I never expected that they would be needed for the purposes of litigation. Aside from doing their shopping I would buy cigarettes for Mrs Ascough and tobacco and bottles of whiskey for Mr Ascough. I would find it impossible to put a figure on the money that I expended even on a monthly basis. The home help used to collect their pension and I never asked for the money or to be reimbursed, although Mr and Mrs Ascough did on occasion insist that I accepted money."
It is possible that the detailed schedule of part only of the expenditure had the effect of trivialising Mr Campbell's case on detriment.
"The motivation he claims for doing the jobs for Mr and Mrs Ascough was that he had been told he had a home for life. However, in giving his evidence he further went on to say that the reasons why he cooked meals for Mr and Mrs Ascough, undertook shopping, and cleaning and gardening, was friendship. Mr and Mrs Ascough, he said, needed help and whether or not they said anything to him about being able to live there for the rest of his life, this was a very close relationship. He said: "I was flattered by being treated by Mr Ascough as a son." It is clear to me - and I make a finding to this effect - that there was no causal connection between the acts of detriment which are referred to by Mr Campbell in his evidence and the assurances which he says were given by Mr and Mrs Ascough to him."
"As I have indicated my finding in this case is that the acts which Mr Campbell undertook, and which amount to the detriment which he claims as set out in the schedule of expenditure, together with the other acts which he undertook - the cooking, the shopping, the help, the undoubted help that he gave to Mr and Mrs Ascough when they were living at the property, do not, in my judgment, amount to detriment and do not amount to detriment that was undertaken by Mr Campbell because he was relying upon the assurances which he claims to have been made by Mr and Mrs Ascough.
My finding is that Mr Campbell quite properly - and I pay respect to him for his acts - acted out of friendship and a sense of responsibility. My finding is that in the circumstances of the relationship between him and Mr and Mrs Ascough he would have so acted in any event."
"Once it has been established that promises were made, and that there has been conduct by the plaintiff of such a nature that inducement may be inferred then the burden of proof shifts to the defendants to establish that he did not rely on the promises - Greasley v Cooke [1980] 1 WLR 1306; Grant v Edwards [1986] Ch 638, 657."
"Q That is right. They needed the help, whether or not they said anything to you about you being entitled to live there for the rest of your life.
A Yes
Q So you would have done these things, would you not, even if they had said nothing to you about living there for the rest of your life.
A Yes, I would not have walked past them, if he had been lying on the floor, and had not eaten for two days, you have to do something.
Q Yes. Indeed, this was almost a family sort of relationship, was it not?
A It was a very close relationship, yes."
" ... if he had been lying on the floor, and had not eaten for two days"
is not sufficient to rebut that presumption. In my judgment the judge was wrong on the issue of reliance also. In cases of this sort it is inevitable that claimants should be asked hypothetical questions of the "what if" variety but the court is not bound to attach great importance to the answers to such hypothetical questions. As Lord Denning MR said in Greasley v Cooke [1980] 1 WLR 1306, 1311,
"No one can say what she [the claimant] would have done if Kenneth and Hedley [the two brothers who owned the property] had not made those statements."
"The promises relied upon do not have to be the sole inducement for the conduct: it is sufficient if they are an inducement."
In my judgment the assurances given by the Ascoughs were an inducement to Mr Campbell's conduct, from 1990 at latest. With respect to the judge, I consider that he erred (either in his evaluation of the evidence, or in his application of the legal presumption) in his conclusion that there was no sufficient causal connection between the assurances given by the Ascoughs and the detriment suffered by Mr Campbell.
"The aim is, as Sir Arthur Hobhouse said in Plimmer v Wellington Corporation (1884) 9 AppCas 699, 714, to "look at the circumstances in each case to decide in what way the equity can be satisfied." The court approaches this task in a cautious way, in order to achieve what Scarman LJ in Crabb v Arun District Council [1976] Ch 179, 198, called "the minimum equity to do justice to the plaintiff". The wide range of possible relief appears from Snell's Equity, 30th ed. (2000) pp.641-643."
LORD JUSTICE THORPE:
THE PRESIDENT: