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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 >> Yeoman's Row Management Ltd. & Anor v Cobbe [2006] EWCA Civ 1139 (31 July 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2006/1139.html Cite as: [2007] 1 P & CR 8, [2006] WLR 2964, [2006] 3 EGLR 107, [2006] WTLR 1473, [2007] 1 P & CR DG14, [2006] 1 WLR 2964, [2006] EWCA Civ 1139 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION
MR JUSTICE ETHERTON
HC04C02359
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE DYSON
and
SIR MARTIN NOURSE
____________________
(1) YEOMAN'S ROW MANAGEMENT LIMITED & (2) MRS ZIPPORAH LISLE-MAINWARING |
Appellants/Defendants |
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- and - |
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MR JAMES COBBE |
Respondent/Claimant |
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Smith Bernal WordWave Limited
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR THOMAS IVORY QC & MS MYRIAM STACEY (instructed by Bird & Bird) for the Respondent
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Mummery :
Introduction
Overview of case
A. The Main Judgment
Judge's detailed findings of fact and conclusions
1) Mrs LM acted as agent for YRML in her dealings with Mr Cobbe in connection with the sale and development of the Property.
2) Neither Mr Cobbe nor Mrs LM thought that the Second Agreement was a legally enforceable contract, which would only come into existence after planning permission was granted and a formal agreement was drawn up by lawyers containing terms to be negotiated and agreed additional to those of the Second Agreement. They would include some provision for security for the payment of overage, obtaining vacant possession and the obligation of the purchaser to commence, carry through and conclude the development in accordance with the planning permission.
3) Mr Cobbe believed that the Second Agreement comprised all the critical commercial terms, that the other terms were secondary and would inevitably be agreed one way or the other, and that YRML was bound in honour to enter into a formal written contract embodying the terms of the Second Agreement if Mr Cobbe obtained planning permission.
4) Mr Cobbe believed that the Second Agreement was binding on him in honour.
5) Mr Cobbe envisaged that, if Mrs LM decided not to proceed before the grant of planning permission, he would be re-imbursed his reasonable expenditure and that, if planning permission was refused, he would not be re-imbursed.
6) In those beliefs Mr Cobbe spent considerable time and effort and incurred considerable expense pursuing the planning application between the end of 2002 and 17 March 2004.
7) His beliefs and his expenditure in reliance on them were encouraged by Mrs LM, who was fully aware of the expenditure. She gave him the impression, and intended so to do, that she intended to carry through the Second Agreement into a formal binding contract if planning permission was obtained.
8) Christmas 2003 was an "aspirational date" set for obtaining planning permission, but it was not a final and irrevocable cut- off date. Mrs LM was aware that it was highly unlikely that planning permission would be obtained by then. From Christmas 2003 on she became increasingly involved in promoting a successful outcome of the planning application.
9) Sometime before Christmas 2003, however, Mrs LM had formed the settled intention not to abide by the terms of the Second Agreement, as it left deferred and uncertain a much greater proportion of the consideration in terms of overage than she originally envisaged. If planning permission was obtained, she intended to re-negotiate for a higher fixed sum. However, she deliberately refrained from giving Mr Cobbe any indication that she did not intend to carry the Second Agreement into effect and intended to re-negotiate, so as to ensure that he continued unabated his efforts to obtain planning permission. She was aware of the risks to the success of the application if she alerted Mr Cobbe to her true intentions regarding renegotiation of the Second Agreement.
10) The grant of the planning permission immediately resulted in a significant increase in the value of the Property.
11) The day after the resolution to grant planning permission (18 March 2004) Mrs LM told Mr Cobbe that the Second Agreement was no longer relevant, as planning permission had not been obtained by Christmas 2003. She would only enter an agreement on terms for payment by him of £20m together with overage.
12) Mr Cobbe believed he had been badly treated by Mrs LM and that he had been "ambushed." He reached an agreement with Mrs LM "in principle" at the end of March 2004 in an attempt to salvage a commercial deal, but he decided in May 2004 not to proceed with the March 2004 terms, because they did not provide him with a sufficiently secure and worthwhile return on the money he would have to invest in the purchase and development of the Property.
"123. …I have found as proven facts that Mrs Lisle-Mainwaring, on behalf of the First Defendant, encouraged Mr Cobbe to believe that, if Mr Cobbe succeeded in obtaining planning permission in accordance with the Second Agreement, that Agreement would be honoured, even though it was not legally binding, and that, in reliance on that belief, Mr Cobbe, to her knowledge and with her encouragement acted to his detriment. I have also concluded that, in all the circumstances, she took an unconscionable advantage of him."
" 140. The Second Agreement, broadly speaking, reflected an intention that the First Defendant, through Mrs Lisle-Mainwaring, and Mr Cobbe should share equally the increased value or commercial potentiality arising from the grant of the planning permission. In all the circumstances, including the conduct of the parties and their mutual beliefs and intentions, the minimum equity to do justice to Mr Cobbe is to order the payment to him by the First Defendant of one half of the increased value of the Property due to the grant of the planning permission."
"136. ..In the present case substantial cost was incurred, pursuant to the Second Agreement, at the risk of Mr Cobbe in return for the prospect of sharing in the commercial potential and financial rewards from the grant of planning permission. It was part of the Second Agreement that he would apply for planning permission and that he would enjoy, through the acquisition and development of the Property, the benefit of the planning permission. An order which merely entitled Mr Cobbe to reimbursement of his expenditure would not reflect the balance of the risks and rewards to him of pursuing the planning application, as perceived by both he and Mrs Lisle-Mainwaring, reflected in the terms of the Second Agreement, and it would leave the First Defendant disproportionately advantaged by the grant of planning permission.
137. …It was at the core of the understanding of the parties, reflected in the terms of the Second Agreement that if planning permission was obtained by Mr Cobbe, he would enjoy the financial and commercial rewards of the acquisition and development of the Property."
"1. In this Order the following abbreviations are used:
(1) "the Property" means the property known as 38/62 Yeoman's Row, London SW3 2AH and registered at HM Land Registry under title number BGL 20495;
(2) "the Planning Permission" means a planning permission granted on 17 March 2004 by the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea in respect of the Property and confirmed on 5 April 2004;
(3) "the Plans" means the plans drawn up by Paul Davies & Partners, architects, in respect of which the Planning Permission was granted; and
(4) "the Increase in Value" means the difference between:
(a) the open market value of the Property on 18 March 2004 with the benefit of the Planning Permission; and
(b) the open market value of the Property on 18 March 2004 without that benefit and disregarding any effect on value resulting from the planning application made on 3 July 2003 (as amended from time to time) as a consequence of the grant of planning permission.
2. If the Claimant instructs Paul Davies & Partners to permit the use of the Plans by the First Defendant or, at its direction, any other person, the Property is held to be subject to a lien in favour of the Claimant for an amount equal to half of the Increase in Value.
3. There shall be an inquiry into the amount of the Increase in Value (if any) to be heard before a Master of the Chancery Division."
Appellant's submissions
1.Mutual promises point
2.Uncertainty point
3. Subject to contract point.
4. Unconscionability point
5. Section 2 of the Law of Property (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1989 (the 1989 Act)
" (1) A contract for the sale or other disposition of an interest in land can only be made in writing and only by incorporating all the terms which the parties have expressly agreed in one document or, where contracts are exchanged, in each.
(2) The terms may be incorporated in a document either by being set out in it or by reference to some other document.
(3) The document incorporating the terms or, where contracts are exchanged, one of the documents incorporating them (but not necessarily the same one) must be signed by or on behalf of each party to the contract.
(4) ….
(5) …nothing in this section affects the creation or operation of resulting, implied or constructive trusts.
(6) …
(7) ….
(8) Section 40 of the Law of Property Act 1925 (which is superseded by this section) shall cease to have effect."
" 164. As I understood his submissions, Mr Seitler accepted that, if the Second Agreement was never an agreement of all essential terms and with all necessary certainty to give rise, subject to s 2(1) of the 1989 Act, to a legally enforceable contract, then s2 has no relevance to Mr Cobbe's claim to a proprietary estoppel."
Relief for proprietary estoppel: discussion and conclusions
"That would not be equity so much as a travesty of justice."
B. The Second Judgment
"38. I take the view that there is a patent inconsistency in the judgment of 25th February 2005 between, on the one hand, my clear findings that the Claimant should be entitled to share in the increased value of the Property as a result of the Planning Permission on the basis of vacant possession and for a lien to secure that interest and, on the other hand, the dismissal of the claims against Mrs Lisle-Mainwaring on the hypothesis, which in fact was not correct, that the essence of the claim against her was limited to one of piercing the corporate veil of the First Defendant.
39. In those circumstances, and in view of that inconsistency, I have come to the conclusion that the court has power under the inherent jurisdiction of the court or, alternatively, under the wider arm of the slip rule to clarify that aspect of the judgment and to give effect to the intention of the court as to the extent of the relief to be granted to the Claimant."
Discussion and conclusion on variation point
Result
Lord Justice Dyson :
"50. To recapitulate: there is a category of case in which the benefactor and the claimant have reached a mutual understanding which is in reasonably clear terms but does not amount to a contract. I have already referred to the typical case of a carer who has the expectation of coming into the benefactor's house, either outright or for life. In such a case the court's natural response is to fulfil the claimant's expectations. But if the claimant's expectations are uncertain, or extravagant, or out of all proportion to the detriment which the claimant has suffered, the court can and should recognise that the claimant's equity should be satisfied in another (and generally more limited) way.
51. But that does not mean that the court should in such a case abandon expectations completely, and look to the detriment suffered by the claimant as defining the appropriate measure of relief. Indeed in many cases the detriment may be even more difficult to quantify, in financial terms, than the claimant's expectations. Detriment can be quantified with reasonable precision if it consists solely of expenditure on improvements to another person's house, and in some cases of that sort an equitable charge for the expenditure may be sufficient to satisfy the equity (see Snell's Equity 30th ed para 39-21 and the authorities mentioned in that paragraph). But the detriment of an ever-increasing burden of care for an elderly person, and of having to be subservient to his or her moods and wishes, is very difficult to quantify in money terms. Moreover the claimant may not be motivated solely by reliance on the benefactor's assurances, and may receive some countervailing benefits (such as free bed and board). In such circumstances the court has to exercise a wide judgmental discretion."
Sir Martin Nourse: