BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Stone Heritage Developments Ltd & Ors v Davis Blank Furniss (A Firm) [2007] EWCA Civ 765 (24 July 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2007/765.html Cite as: [2007] EWCA Civ 765, [2007] Lloyd's Rep PN 33 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM HIGH COURT CHANCERY DIVISION,
MANCHESTER DISTRICT REGISTY
HIS HONOUR JUDGE DAVID HODGE QC
1999SNO01697
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LLOYD
and
LORD JUSTICE TOULSON
____________________
STONE HERITAGE DEVELOPMENTS LTD & ORS |
Appellant |
|
- and - |
||
DAVIS BLANK FURNISS (A FIRM) |
Respondent |
____________________
Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr W Flenley (instructed by Messrs. Halliwells Llp) for the Respondent
Hearing dates : 26/27 June 2007
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
The Chancellor:
"Despite the knowledge of Mr Shalom that... the proposed development extended beyond the boundary line of [the Howarth Land] [the Solicitors] caused or permitted [Stone] to enter into the Development Agreement without qualification or reservation or otherwise taking any steps to protect the interests of [Stone] or advising or cautioning [Stone] that the intended development would or could give rise to the difficulties which in fact ensued..."
"In particular, since Mr Shalom knew that [Stone] intended or hoped to acquire [the Bolton Clear Title Land] and/or [the Possessory Title Land] and/or proposed to or might make such acquisition through the Howarths he should have:
(i) included provision in the Development Agreement for the purposes of any development it wished to undertake on all or any part of [that land] (both as regards its construction and for the benefit of the properties as developed thereafter erected on such land) to have the following rights (alternatively such of them as it was able to secure) in favour of all or any of [that land] across all or any of [the Howarth Land] whether within their paper title or upon [the Possessory Title Land], namely: access, rights of way and all other easements or rights reasonably necessary for the purpose both of effecting the development and for the proper use thereafter of the properties constructed thereon."
The amendment continued with various other allegations of breach of duty to comparable effect.
(1) Mr Shalom was negligent in failing to point out to Stone that the licence provisions of the Development Agreement should be extended to enable development of any part of the Possessory Title Land Stone might acquire in the future;
(2) Had such advice been given the Howarths would have agreed to such an extension;
(3) The loss claimed by Stone was not caused by that alleged negligence of the Solicitors;
(4) Mr Shalom was not negligent in failing to give similar advice to Stone in respect of the Bolton Clear Title Land;
(5) Had such advice been given the Howarths would not have agreed to the requisite extension; and
(6) In any event the loss claimed was not caused by any such negligence.
In the light of those conclusions the Judge dismissed the claim and refused permission to appeal. Such permission was granted by Carnwath LJ on 7th February 2007. A respondent's notice was served by the Solicitors on 2nd March 2007. In the result the Solicitors challenge the judge's conclusions summarised in propositions (1) and (2). Stone appeals from the Judge's conclusions summarised in propositions (3) to (6). I will, as necessary, deal with those contentions in due course but first it is necessary to set out the facts in much greater detail.
"267. I am satisfied that the plan endorsed by Mr Shalom was a copy of the larger of the two plans that had been faxed through to Mr Shalom by Fieldings on the 15th October....I accept Mr Shalom's evidence that by endorsing the plan, Mr Shalom was not verifying the boundaries but merely marking up the plan....
268...
269. It is common ground that possessory title was mentioned to Mr Shalom by Mr Mortazavi. The source of Mr Mortazavi's knowledge was Mr Charles Howarth. Mr Charles Howarth told me, and I accept, that he had discussed Bolton's letter of the 20th October with Arnold Brown and with Mr Mortazavi before Mr Howarth replied to it on the 28th October. The terms of that reply are instructive...The last paragraph of the letter of the 28th October is also instructive, referring as it does to the general tidying up of the boundary being left until after the members have considered the Howarths' request to purchase, whereupon, "the matter of the present boundary will be irrelevant."
270. Mr Charles Howarth said in cross-examination that at that time they had not discovered the extent of the discrepancy. All he said to Mr Mortazavi at the time was, "There is a discrepancy at our boundary which will have to be sorted out." I infer, on the balance of probabilities, that the terms of Mr Howarth's response of the 28th October to Bolton had been discussed between Charles Howarth, Arnold Brown and Mr Mortazavi by the time Mr Shalom met with them on-site on the 29th October. I have no doubt that, alerted to the fact that the Howarths occupied additional land outside the boundary shown on the title plans he was marking up, Mr Shalom must have queried whether he need be concerned about this for the purposes of the development agreement. Given his previous discussions with Mr Charles Howarth, I am satisfied on the balance of probabilities that Mr Mortazavi told Mr Shalom that the discrepancy would be cured by the purchase of the additional land from the Council after which, to adopt the language used by Mr Howarth in his letter to Bolton of the 28th October, the matter of the present boundary would be "irrelevant".
[271 – 274 the judge discussed passages in various witness statements and answers given in cross-examination.]
275. Given the discussions between Mr Arnold Brown, Mr Mortazavi and Mr Charles Howarth, and the fact that an application for planning permission had already been submitted on the 27th October, Mr Mortazavi must have appreciated that there was a risk that part of the proposed development was to be constructed on the possessory title land, even if he did not know this for certain. In my judgment it is inconceivable that he would have said that this land was not required for the purposes of the development if he did not know the precise extent of the discrepancy. However, I am prepared to accept that he told Mr Shalom that the development agreement need not concern itself with any land beyond the Howarths' paper title because Mr Mortazavi believed that this would be resolved by the acquisition of the additional land from the Council, which no-one envisaged would present any difficulty. I accept that Mr Mortazavi may well not have indicated the precise extent of the possessory title land to Mr Shalom. On the evidence Mr Mortazavi may well not even have appreciated it himself. I should say that everyone seems to have been focusing at this time on the land at the north east of the site to the possible exclusion of the land to the north west. This may explain the area of the blue hatching on Mr Shalom's faxed plan.
276. For all these reasons, I therefore find that the position reached at the meeting was not entirely that propounded either by Mr Mortazavi or by Mr Shalom.
[(1) - (2)]
(3) I reject Mr Mortazavi's evidence that he did not tell Mr Shalom that the development agreement did not need to concern itself with the possessory title land. On the other hand,
(4) I reject Mr Shalom's evidence that Mr Mortazavi told him that the possessory title land was not part of the development.
277. I accept that, as Mr Mortazavi was prepared to admit, Mr Shalom may have misunderstood him in two respects:
(1) Mr Shalom may not have appreciated that the possessory title land extended beyond the land hatched blue on the faxed plan, which was the land referred to in his attendance note as the orange land. Such a conclusion is consistent with the lack of any indication of an area of grey land when Mr Shalom came to mark up the faxed plan which had been sent to him on the 15th October at the site meeting.
(2) Mr Shalom also appears to have misunderstood Mr Mortazavi's reference to the extra strip of land being "a bonus" if it could be obtained. To the extent that this extra strip represented possessory title land, it was part of the original negotiations, and it was not "a bonus".
278. At paragraph 8 of his first witness statement Mr Charles Howarth said...,
"Although I have no specific recollection, due to the passage of time, it is my opinion that the orange land was probably all of the land which fell outside the first owner's paper title, including the grey land and the additional land which the claimants wish to acquire for the purposes of the additional development."
In my judgment he was correct, subject to the qualifications resulting from Mr Shalom's misunderstandings as to the precise extent of the orange land and the fact that it was a bonus and not part of the original negotiations. Mr Mortazavi accepted that he appreciated that the development agreement did not extend to the Bolton clear title land. It follows from my findings of fact that he must have appreciated that it did not extend to the possessory title land; and I so find. That finding is consistent with the absence of any expression of surprise or protestation by or from Stone Heritage or its representatives in response to Mr Jones's discovery in late March or early April 1993 that the boundaries shown on the development agreement plan and the block plan did not match."
"You know that signing these documents and dating them is against my advice.
Nevertheless if you do proceed to have the documents signed and dated you keep one copy and the Howarths keep the other. Would you then inform me as soon as you have signed an undated Agreement. Thereafter would you please forward it to me."
(1) "I have no doubt that, alerted to the fact that the Howarths occupied additional land outside the boundary shown on the title plans he was marking up, Mr Shalom must have queried whether he need be concerned about this for the purposes of the development agreement" [Para 270].
(2) "I am satisfied on the balance of probabilities that Mr Mortazavi told Mr Shalom that the discrepancy would be cured by the purchase of the additional land from the Council after which, to adopt the language used by Mr Howarth …, the matter of the present boundary would be 'irrelevant'." [Ibid.]
(3) "I am prepared to accept that [Mr Mortazavi] told Mr Shalom that the development agreement need not concern itself with any land beyond the Howarths' paper title because Mr Mortazavi believed that this would be resolved by the acquisition of the additional land from the Council, which no-one envisaged would present any difficulty." [Para.275].
(4) "I reject Mr Mortazavi's evidence that he did not tell Mr Shalom that the development agreement did not need to concern itself with the possessory title land [Para 276(3)]."
(5) "I reject Mr Shalom's evidence that Mr Mortazavi told him that the possessory title land was not part of the development" [para.276(4)].
(6) "Mr Mortazavi accepted that he appreciated that the development agreement did not extend to the Bolton clear title land. It follows from my findings of fact that he must have appreciated that it did not extend to the possessory title land; and I so find [Para 278]."
"310. As I say, I bear all of those competing considerations, and all of the arguments of counsel, in mind. I am acutely conscious that the standard is that of the reasonably competent solicitor practising in the field of property and conveyancing and the drafting of development agreements rather than that of the particularly meticulous and conscientious practitioner. I bear in mind in particular all that [counsel for the Solicitors] has submitted. Nevertheless, with some hesitation, and after much anxious consideration, I have concluded that at the 29th October 1992 site meeting, when alerted to the issue of a possessory title, a reasonably competent solicitor, let alone the particularly meticulous and conscientious practitioner, would have said, "Hold on a moment, Mr Mortazavi. It's all well and good, if you do succeed in acquiring the additional land from Bolton; then we will have to conclude a fresh agreement with the Howarths directed to the particular area of land which you succeed in acquiring, and the particular circumstances of the acquisition, and the stage at which the development has reached, and the form which the development is to take. But what if you don't succeed in acquiring the land from Bolton, so that there is no new agreement to be negotiated with the Howarths? In those circumstances, would you want the ability to apply the provisions of this development agreement which I am in the course of drafting to the possessory title land? After all, you have said that the extra land is a bonus; but how do you know that that is the case, as regards the possessory title land, when we don't even know the precise extent of the paper title on the ground?"
311. Contrary to Mr Shalom's apparent understanding, the reality in fact was that the possessory title land was not a bonus; it was part of the original negotiations. It had already been taken into account in arriving at the price of £850,000. In my judgment, Mr Shalom's attitude was entirely, and unduly, reactive rather than proactive; and, as a result, he missed out on an opportunity to appreciate the significance of these points. In my judgment, such advice would have been directed to a hidden pitfall of which a reasonable businessman might well have been expected to be unaware. I adopt in that regard the language of Lord Scott in the Pickersgill case, which itself was derived from the language of Sir Thomas Bingham MR in the earlier case of Reeves v Thrings and Long."
"In support of my conclusion it is worth noting that Mr Charles Howarth said in cross-examination, "I thought while they had a licence to use our land, if they bought land next door they could develop it." Mr Charles Howarth clearly misunderstood the extent of the rights conferred by the development agreement and its implications. In those circumstances, I consider it understandable that Mr Mortazavi did so too. This was a hidden pitfall of the development agreement in the form in which Mr Shalom had drafted it; a hidden pitfall which only became apparent once it was appreciated, subsequent to the initial drafting, that there was not only land to which the Howarths had a paper title, but also land to which they asserted a claim by way of adverse possession. For these reasons I therefore find Mr Shalom, and through him the Defendants, in breach of duty in failing to enquire as to whether the provisions of the development agreement should be extended so as to apply to the possessory title land if the extra land was not in fact acquired from Bolton. In that context I find that the enquiry that was raised in paragraph 2 of Mr Shalom's typed attendance note, and which was forwarded to Stone Heritage, to have been inadequate, and also misleading, directed as it was to land that was described as "a bonus", and not part of the original negotiations, when, in relation to the possessory title land, that was not in fact the case."
"...Even if Mr Shalom had, in a pre-contract report, spelled out that the development agreement did not extend to the possessory title land, he would have been doing no more than alerting Stone Heritage to that which it already knew. What Stone Heritage needed was the advice that the development agreement should be extended so as to apply to the possessory title land if the purchase of the additional Council land did not proceed. Nor, in my judgment, can Mr Shalom rely on the advice and warnings that he gave at the end of November against a premature signing and conclusion of the development agreement since these did not identify, or extend to or encompass, the particular issue of the possessory title land and the question whether, if the extra Council land was not acquired, the development agreement should be expanded so as to apply to that possessory title land."
"Having found Mr Shalom, and thus the Defendants, in breach of duty to that extent, I should nevertheless make it clear that, given Mr Mortazavi's knowledge and appreciation that the development agreement did not extend to the additional land that it was hoped to acquire from the Council, and that a further development agreement would be required in that regard, I do not consider that Mr Shalom or the Defendants were in breach of duty in not advising as to the inclusion of any terms regarding the Bolton clear title land. In my judgment, the perception and assessment of the risks of that latter omission as to the Bolton clear title land clearly fell at the client's door rather than that of the solicitors. They were not a hidden pitfall. The hidden pitfall was the omission to advise as to what might be done if the Bolton land was not acquired in terms of the possessory title land which had always, in my judgment, been part of the original negotiation."
"A solicitor is not a general insurer against his client's legal problems. His duties are defined by the terms of the agreed retainer....
the solicitor only has to expend time and effort in what he has been engaged to do and for which the client has agreed to pay. He is under no general obligation to expend time and effort on issues outside the retainer. However if, in the course of doing that for which he is retained, he becomes aware of a risk or a potential risk to the client, it is his duty to inform the client. In doing that he is neither going beyond the scope of his instructions nor is he doing 'extra' work for which he is not to be paid. He is simply reporting back to the client on issues of concern which he learns as a result of and in the course of carrying out his express instructions. In relation to this I was struck by the analogy drawn by [counsel for the Claimant]. If a dentist is asked to treat a patient's tooth and on looking into the latter's mouth he notices that an adjacent tooth is in need of treatment, it is his duty to warn the patient accordingly. So too, if in the course of carrying out instructions within his area of competence a lawyer notices or ought to notice a problem or risk for the client of which it is reasonable to assume that the client may not be aware, the lawyer must warn him."
Neither side challenged the principle, merely its application in the circumstances of this case.
"The Solicitors were not retained to advise about insurance by their client, who was perfectly competent to deal with such matters. Nevertheless, when, out of the blue, what was thought to be a tactical counterclaim was threatened, would a reasonably competent solicitor have immediately asked about insurance and advised notification? I think the judge's view that he would not is unassailable, supported as it is by the fact that such questions did not occur at the time to other experienced solicitors."
"What Stone Heritage needed was the advice that the development agreement should be extended so as to apply to the possessory title land if the purchase of the additional Council land did not proceed."
But the instruction given to Mr Shalom by Mr Mortazavi at the site meeting on 29th October 1992 excluded any such consideration. Mr Shalom was then told that the Development Agreement should not concern either the Possessory Title Land or the Bolton Clear Title Land. If it was not to concern the development of that land still less should it have concerned rights over the Howarth Land to enable such development.
Lord Justice Lloyd:
Lord Justice Toulson: