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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 >> Balevents Ltd v Sartori [2012] EWCA Civ 1508 (28 November 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2012/1508.html Cite as: [2012] EWCA Civ 1508 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION
BIRMINGHAM DISTRICT REGISTRY
Mr Justice Kitchin
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE RIMER
and
LORD JUSTICE TOMLINSON
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BALEVENTS LIMITED |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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ALLAN JAMES SARTORI |
Respondent |
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Mr Stephen Jourdan QC and Mr William Hansen (instructed by Howell & Co Solicitors) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 3 and 4 October 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Rimer :
Introduction
The background to the dispute
'50. … as Mr Sartori and Mr Sherwin explained to me, the business was run by Mr Sartori and Mr Sherwin just as before, by which I understood them to mean that they and their wives accepted and agreed that Mr Sartori owned the Land but that he continued to pay the rent he received from Mr Timms into the business. Although I did not hear evidence from Mr Kelly, he was intimately involved with the rescue of the business and I consider it overwhelmingly likely that he too accepted and agreed the Land belonged to Mr Sartori.' (Emphasis supplied)
'52. … Throughout his evidence before me Mr Sartori was frank and candid and I believe he answered all questions put to him honestly and to the best of his recollection. He had no explanation for the documents he prepared in connection with his IVA because there was none to offer.'
'63. Resolving this issue is not easy. It was contended on behalf of Mr Reddy that the sums paid to Mr Sartori are simply not referable to rent because by this time Balevents had received far more than this. Further, it continued to receive rent for some time thereafter and, until 2010, Mr Sartori took no steps to retain that rent for himself. There is considerable force in these points but, having heard Mr Sartori's evidence, I believe he did consider the rent was properly his, that he expressed this to Mr Reddy and that he considered the payments he received went some way to reimbursing him. Moreover, I do not believe he was ever as familiar with the true finances of the business as Mr Reddy.'
The first application to admit new evidence
'… A bonus after 2007 was paid to [Mr Sartori] for £100,000 and another bonus of £10,000 was paid the following year by either [Broomco] or [Balevents] and the rent came back effectively to [Mr Sartori] through this means after his [IVA] ceased in 2007 and by which time [Broomco's] successor company [Balevents] was in much better shape.'
Mr Randall's point is that the case there made was apparently that Mr Sartori was claiming to have made a gift of the rent to Broomco and that it was then 'effectively' repaid to him by two bonuses. It did not assert the making of a loan to Broomco, nor was the 'bonus' allegation to the effect that the payments to Mr Sartori in 2007 and 2008 were repayments of a loan. The Defence did not, therefore, make a case that might cause Balevents to consider whether the unearthing of Broomco's accounting records would be of help.
'[Mr Sartori] continued to run a sandwich and takeaway food unit from the Land until 1991 when he permitted part of it to be used in conjunction with Ronnie Scott's and part to be used for the purposes of a fast food stand operated by Mr Timms, for which Mr Timms paid rent to [Mr Sartori] until 2002. Thereafter, such rent or license [sic] fee was paid to the Rocket Club at the direction of and with the agreement of [Mr Sartori].'
Again, whilst that raised an issue as to when the rent was first paid to Broomco, it did not assert that, when so paid, it was paid by way of a loan.
'4. Throughout my business partnership with [Mr Sartori], the income generated from the food units … was always put into the business by [Mr Sartori], by way of Director's loan. It was always indicated that this was separate to the Ronnie Scott's business.'
'… he provided a rather confused explanation of how this was dealt with from an accounting perspective but remained unshaken in his evidence that the money was treated as coming from Mr Sartori's land, just as they had agreed.'
The second application to admit fresh evidence
'… as far as we are concerned the frontage in front of Ronnie Scott's is owned by P&O Properties and leased to me on a 40 year lease. At the time of writing this letter I've asked our lawyers Wragge & Co to look into this and to furnish me with a letter I can pass on to you confirming the details of the terrace.'
The lease was a 25-year one, not a 40-year one, and was to JEL, not to Mr Sartori, but the significance of what he said was that he was apparently making an admission against interest by denying any personal entitlement to the Land and was asserting that it was comprised in JEL's lease. The inconsistency between that and his case at the trial needs no elaboration. The final letter in the clip is dated 14 November 1995, from P&O to Mr Sartori, and it resulted from an enforcement officer's visit to P&O who had related Mr Sartori's apparent claim that the lease permitted the sale of hot and cold snacks on and off the premises. The purport of the letter was to deny that the lease granted any permission for the sale of hot/cold takeaway food from the site.
Lord Justice Tomlinson :
Lord Justice Longmore :