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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 >> Central Bank of Nigeria v Williams [2012] EWCA Civ 415 (03 April 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2012/415.html Cite as: [2012] EWCA Civ 415, [2012] 2 P&CR DG6, [2012] CP Rep 28, [2012] 3 WLR 1501, [2012] 3 All ER 579, [2012] WLR(D) 108, [2013] QB 499, [2012] WTLR 745 |
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ON APPEAL FROM High Court of Justice, Queen's Bench Division
Mr Justice Supperstone
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE BLACK
and
LORD JUSTICE TOMLINSON
____________________
CENTRAL BANK OF NIGERIA |
Defendant / Appellant |
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- and - |
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LOUIS EMOVBIRA WILLIAMS |
Claimant / Respondent |
____________________
Jonathan Adkin (instructed by Alfred James & Co Solicitors LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing date : 7 February 2012
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
The Chancellor :
(1) CBN was an active participant in the fraudulent scheme of Mr Gale and dishonestly assisted him in the fraudulent breaches of trust (para 29);
(2) CBN received and/or retained $6,020,190 paid by Mr Gale into its account knowing that they were paid in breach of trust and/or in circumstances where it would be unconscionable to retain them (para 30);
(3) By reason of its dishonest assistance in the breach of trust CBN is liable to account to him as a constructive trustee of $6,520,190 paid away by Mr Gale in fraudulent breach of trust (para 37(1));
(4) CBN received and/or retained $6,020,190 paid into its account at Midland Bank in England knowing such money to have been paid in breach of trust and/or in circumstances where retention of that money by CBN would be unconscionable (para 37(2));
(5) Dr Williams is entitled and claims to follow the $6,020,190 paid into CBN's account at Midland Bank in England, trace into the proceeds of such money and to be repaid such money or proceeds (para 37(3)).
"(1) No period of limitation prescribed by this Act shall apply to an action by a beneficiary under a trust, being an action-
(a) in respect of any fraud or fraudulent breach of trust to which the trustee was a party or privy; or
(b) to recover from the trustee trust property or the proceeds of trust property in the possession of the trustee, or previously received by the trustee and converted to his use.
[(2)…]
(3) Subject to the preceding provisions of this section, an action by a beneficiary to recover trust property or in respect of any breach of trust, not being an action for which a period of limitation is prescribed by any other provision of this Act, shall not be brought after the expiration of six years from the date on which the right of action accrued.
…
[(4)…]"
"In any action or other proceeding against a trustee or any person claiming through him except where the claim is founded upon any fraud or fraudulent breach of trust to which the trustee was party or privy, or is to recover trust property, or the proceeds thereof still retained by the trustee, or previously received by the trustee and converted to his use, the following provisions shall apply:-
(a) All rights and privileges conferred by any statute of limitations shall be enjoyed in the like manner and to the like extent as they would have been enjoyed in such action or other proceeding if the trustee or person claiming through him had not been a trustee or person claiming through him;
(b) If the action or other proceeding is brought to recover money or other property, and is one to which no existing statute of limitations applies, the trustee or person claiming through him shall be entitled to the benefit of and be at liberty to plead the lapse of time as a bar to such action or other proceeding in the like manner and to the like extent as if the claim had been against him in an action of debt for money had and received…"
"It is difficult to find any real justification for the rule that an executor or other person holding property as a trustee, but not on an "express" trust, can plead the statute, though he still retains the trust property or has converted it to his own use. The rule has been extensively modified by decisions giving such a wide meaning to "express trust" as to bring most cases of fiduciary relationship within the exception to the Trustee Act, and to raise serious doubt as to where the line is to be drawn for this purpose between express and constructive trusts. See the judgment of Bowen L.J. in Soar –v- Ashwell [1893], 2 Q.B. at p. 395) and the authorities there cited, and the cases referred to by Romer J. in re: Eyre Williams ([1923], 2 Ch. 533). It is perhaps too late now to suggest that the Trustee Act, 1888, was intended to do away with the distinction between express and constructive trusts for the purpose of the limitation of actions, though the definition of "trustee" in Sec 1(3) seems to point to that conclusion. At any rate we consider that the distinction should now be abolished, and we recommend that the exception in Sec. 8 of the Trustee Act, 1888, should be expressly made to extend to trustees whether holding on express or constructive trusts, including the personal representatives."
The exception there referred to is the part of s.8(1) which excepts:
"where the claim is founded upon any fraud or fraudulent breach of trust to which the trustee was party or privy, or is to recover trust property, or the proceeds thereof still retained by the trustee, or previously received by the trustee and converted to his use".
The actual recommendation (7) was that:
"the Statutes of Limitation should only apply to constructive trustees to the extent to which they do to express trustees (para 11);"
"(1) No period of limitation prescribed by this Act shall apply to an action by a beneficiary under a trust, being an action –
(a) in respect of any fraud or fraudulent breach of trust to which the trustee was a party or privy; or
(b) to recover from the trustee trust property or the proceeds thereof in the possession of the trustee, or previously received by the trustee and converted to his use.
(2) Subject as aforesaid, an action by a beneficiary to recover trust property or in respect of any breach of trust, not being an action for which a period of limitation is prescribed by any other provision of this Act, shall not be brought after the expiration of six years from the date on which the right of action accrued;
…
[(3)…]"
This section differed from its predecessor in two ways. First, it inverted its effect by placing the exceptions first and imposing the time bar on all other claims by a beneficiary to recover trust property or in respect of any breach of trust. Second, it made no reference to "any person claiming through" the trustee. J. Unger writing in the Modern Law Review in July 1940 expressed the view that:
"Section 19 simplifies the law of limitation of actions in respect of trust property. All constructive trustees are now subject to the same restrictions when claiming the protection of the statute as express trustees. Thus the obstacle presented by Soar v Ashwell to a proper classification of trusts has been removed."
S.21 Limitation Act 1980, quoted in paragraph 3, reproduces without any relevant change the provisions of s.19 of the Limitation Act 1939.
"Now in this case we have to deal with certain persons who are trustees, and with certain other persons who are not trustees. That is a distinction to be borne in mind throughout the case. Those who create a trust clothe the trustee with a legal power and control over the trust property, imposing on him a corresponding responsibility. That responsibility may no doubt be extended in equity to others who are not properly trustees, if they are found either making themselves trustees de son tort, or actually participating in any fraudulent conduct of the trustee to the injury of the cestui que trust. But, on the other hand, strangers are not to be made constructive trustees merely because they act as the agents of trustees in transactions within their legal powers, transactions, perhaps of which a Court of Equity may disapprove, unless those agents receive and become chargeable with some part of the trust property, or unless they assist with knowledge in a dishonest and fraudulent design on the part of the trustees. Those are the principles, as it seems to me, which we must bear in mind in dealing with the facts of this case."
"The cases seem to me to decide that, where a person has assumed, either with or without consent, to act as a trustee of money or other property, i.e., to act in a fiduciary relation with regard to it, and has in consequence been in possession of or has exercised command or control over such money or property, a Court of Equity will impose upon him all the liabilities of an express trustee, and will class him with and will call him an express trustee of an express trust. The principal liability of such a trustee is that he must discharge himself by accounting to his cestui que trusts for all such money or property without regard to lapse of time."
Bowen LJ was of the like opinion. At p.397 he said:
"It has been established beyond doubt by authority binding on this Court that a person occupying a fiduciary relation, who has property deposited with him on the strength of such relation, is to be dealt with as an express, and not merely a constructive, trustee of such property. His possession of such property is never in virtue of any right of his own, but is coloured from the first by the trust and confidence in virtue of which he received it."
Kay LJ agreed but on wider grounds. At p.405 he said:
"The result seems to be that there are certain cases of what are, strictly speaking, constructive trusts, in which the Statute of Limitations cannot be set up as a defence. Amongst these are the case where a stranger to the trust has assumed to act and has acted as a trustee, and the case where a stranger has concurred with the trustee in committing a breach of trust, and has taken possession of the trust property, knowing that it was trust property, and has not duly discharged himself of it by handing it over to the proper trustees or to the persons absolutely entitled to it.
I think that the present case comes within one or both those categories. I think that Ashwell did assume to act and acted as trustee of the funds which he received, and that he has not duly discharged himself from the plaintiff's share of those funds, and must therefore be treated as an express trustee."
"So in Soar v. Ashwell Lord Esher M.R. stated the rule as follows:- "If the breach of the legal relation relied on, whether such breach be by way of tort or contract, makes, in the view of the Court of equity, the defendant a trustee for the plaintiff, the Court of equity treats the defendant as a trustee become so by construction, and the trust is called a constructive trust; and against the breach which by construction creates the trust the Court of equity allows statutes of limitation to be vouched." And in the same case Bowen L.J., speaking of constructive trusts of this kind, said: "That time (by analogy to the statute) is no bar in the case of an express trust, but that it will be a bar in the case of a constructive trust, is a doctrine which has been clearly and long established."
As to the pre-existing law, then, there is no question; but it is contended for the appellant that the recent statute has altered the law in this respect. Sect. 47, sub-s. 1, it is said, defines a trustee as including "a trustee whose trust arises by construction or implication of law," and, accordingly, the exclusion from s. 47, sub-s. 2, of a claim to recover "trust property or the proceeds thereof still retained by the trustee" must apply to property in the hands of a constructive trustee or of any person claiming under him otherwise than by purchase for value without notice. If this contention be correct, then the section, which was presumably passed for the relief of trustees, has seriously altered for the worse the position of a constructive trustee, and (to use the words of Sir William Grant in the case above cited) a doctrine has been introduced which may be "fatal to the security of property." It does not appear to their Lordships that the section has this effect. The expressions "trust property" and "retained by the trustee" properly apply, not to a case where a person having taken possession of property on his own behalf, is liable to be declared a trustee by the Court; but rather to a case where he originally took possession upon trust for or on behalf of others. In other words, they refer to cases where a trust arose before the occurrence of the transaction impeached and not to cases where it arises only by reason of that transaction. The exception no doubt applies, not only to an express trustee named in the instrument of trust, but also to those persons who under the rules explained in Soar v. Ashwell (1) and other cases are to be treated as being in a like position; but in their Lordships' opinion it does not apply to a mere constructive trustee of the character described in the judgment of Sir William Grant."
"Before 1890, when the Trustee Act 1888 ('the 1888 Act') came into operation, a claim against an express trustee was never barred by lapse of time. The Court of Chancery had developed the rule that, in the absence of laches or acquiescence, such a trustee was accountable without limit of time. The rule was confirmed by s.25(3) of the Judicature Act 1873, which provided that no claim by a cestui que trust against his trustee for any property held on an express trust, or in respect of any breach of such trust, should be held to be barred by any statute of limitation.
The explanation for the rule was that the possession of an express trustee is never in virtue of any right of his own but is taken from the first for and on behalf of the beneficiaries. His possession was consequently treated as the possession of the beneficiaries, with the result that time did not run in his favour against them: see the classic judgment of Lord Redesdale in Hovenden v Lord Annesley (1806) 2 Sch. & Lef. 607 at pp. 633-4.
The rule did not depend upon the nature of the trustee's appointment, and it was applied to trustees de son tort and to directors and other fiduciaries who, though not strictly trustees, were in an analogous position and who abused the trust and confidence reposed in them to obtain their principal's property for themselves. Such persons are properly described as constructive trustees.
Regrettably, however, the expressions 'constructive trust' and 'constructive trustee' have been used by equity lawyers to describe two entirely different situations. The first covers those cases already mentioned, where the defendant, though not expressly appointed as trustee, has assumed the duties of a trustee by a lawful transaction which was independent of and preceded the breach of trust and is not impeached by the plaintiff. The second covers those cases where the trust obligation arises as a direct consequence of the unlawful transaction which is impeached by the plaintiff."
"It seems to me, therefore, that the Act of 1888 was certainly designed to deal with both those cases (i.e. proceedings against both the trustee and against those claiming through him). It is not at all clear whether the Act of 1939 has the same purpose, but it may be so. The point is taken by counsel on behalf of the defendant that the defendant does not claim through the fraudulent trustee. He also said with regard to s 19(1) that the action was not in respect of any fraud or fraudulent breach of trust, because the action against the defendant in the present case is based on the receipt by it without any fraud of moneys which were part of the trust fund belonging to the plaintiff. I think that the words "in respect of any fraud or fraudulent breach of trust" are wide enough to cover the present case, because it is the fraudulent payment by Titley to the defendant which is the origin of the proceedings against the defendant. It is because the defendant received that payment by virtue of Titley's fraudulent breach of trust that the plaintiff is able to bring this action against it. Consequently, so far as those words are concerned the provision seems to me wide enough."
"86. It seems to me to be clear to follow from the judgments in the above cases that the references in s. 21(1)(a) to a "breach of trust" and "trustee" cannot apply to Category 2 cases. These must be a reference to express trustees and those who are treated as express trustees i.e. those in Category 1 and to breaches of trust by such persons.
87. However, even if one adopts this limited meaning, Mr Godsmark makes the point that s. 21(1)(a) is not on its face limited to claims against such trustees, unlike s 21(1)(b) which is so limited. As a matter of statutory interpretation he says that the Dishonest Assistance Claims are claims "in respect of any fraud or fraudulent breach of trust [i.e. the trusts constituted by the Will] to which the trustee [Mr Pollard] was a party or privy." There is considerable force in this submission which gives full meaning to the words "in respect of' and it is supported by what Dankwerts J said in G.L. Baker v Medway Building and Supplies Ltd.
88. I consider that the answer to this submission is supplied by what Millett LJ said in Paragon. In considering whether the former distinction between the two categories of constructive trust had been abrogated by the Limitation Act 1939, among the "formidable arguments" in favour of the negative answer Millett LJ considered the question of whether Parliament in enacting the 1939 Act had intended to adopt the wider recommendation of the Law Reform Committee or merely put an end to the mischief to which it had drawn attention. At p 412 j - 413b, he said:
"As a matter of statutory construction the question turns on the meaning of the opening words of s 21(1) of the 1980 Act (re-enacting in similar terms the opening words of s 19(3) of the 1939 Act. As Harpum noted in his influential article "The stranger as constructive trustee" (1986) 102 LQR 267 at 288, these are not apt to cover constructive trusts of the second kind. This is because they refer to ".. an action by a beneficiary under a trust... to which the trustee...". As Harpum observed, these words would appear to be prima facie applicable only to those whose trusteeship precedes the occurrence which is the subject of the claim against them and not those whose trusteeship arises only by reason of that occurrence."
In that article, Mr Harpum, to support the observation referred to, points out that s. 21(1)(a) speaks of an action "by a beneficiary under a trust", the substance of which is some claim against "the" (not "any") trustee.
89. Accordingly, I find that s. 21(1)(a) only applies to claims against express trustees and Category 1 trustees. It also follows that I consider that the views tentatively expressed in Lewin, and by Mr Mitchell, to which I have earlier referred are wrong.
90. In reaching this conclusion, I bear in mind that the provisions of s. 21(1)(a) are an exception to the normal applicable periods of limitation. Category 2 encompasses persons who dishonestly participate in a fraud. In general, fraud claims are subject to a primary limitation period of six years (see s. 2 of the 1980 Act). It is not illogical that this period should also apply to Category 2 claims. The exception in s. 21(1)(a) only applies to express trustees or Category 1 trustees who are treated in the same way for limitation purposes.
91. For these reasons, I find that the exception in s. 21(1)(a) of the 1980 Act has no application to the Dishonest Assistance Claims against Mrs Pollard."
"123. Later in his judgment at paragraph 84 Mr Sheldon describes Lord Millett in this passage as "dealing with a claim for dishonest assistance in a fraudulent breach of trust", as in the case with which he was dealing, and found that the Limitation Act could be pleaded as a defence to the claim.
124. With respect to Mr Sheldon, nowhere in his judgment does Lord Millett describe the assistance given by Mr Amhurst to the fraud as being assistance to a fraudulent breach of trust. He does not do so in the passage cited. All the defendants to the claim save Mr Livingstone were strangers to the claimant. Mr Livingstone was its chief executive. It is not clear if he was also a director. In any event the case does not seem to proceed on the basis that he or any of the other defendants were trustees or fiduciaries of the assets of the claimant whose fraud, in dealing with those assets, had been assisted by the actions of Mr Amhurst.
125. In my judgment, Section 21(1) of the Limitation Act 1980, following the decision of Mr Justice Dankwerts in the G.L. Baker Ltd case and the obiter dicta of Lord Esher and Bowen LJ in Soar v Ashwell, is to be construed as applying to accessories to the fraudulent breaches of trust of others with the result that no period of limitation is applicable to claims against them. I do not read the decision of the House of Lords in the Dubai Aluminium case as authority to the contrary.
126. For these reasons, if I had not already concluded that a defence of limitation was not available to Mr Alford because he was a category 1 fiduciary but was to be treated as an accessory to the fraudulent breaches of trust of Johnston and Spillane, with respect to him, I would not have followed Mr Sheldon's decision in the Cattley case and would have concluded that no limitation period applied to Statek's claim against him as an accessory to that fraudulent breach of trust."
"23. In my opinion, therefore, non-fiduciaries do not come within the definition of trustees in s.19 of the 1939 Act or s.20 of the Ordinance. It is necessary however to deal with a different submission, which is that by some process of attraction, one category of non-fiduciaries, namely, persons who dishonestly assist a trustee in a fraudulent breach of trust, should be treated in the same way as the trustee and not allowed a limitation defence.
24. This argument has the high authority of some dicta of Lord Esher MR and Bowen and Kay LJJ in Soar v. Ashwell [1893] 2 QB 390. These remarks have been subjected to minute analysis in the cases and academic writings but I am willing to accept that they support the proposition that dishonest assisters cannot rely on a limitation defence. Nevertheless, I think that they are wrong in principle and unsupported by authority. The principle is not that the limitation defence is denied to people who were dishonest. It plainly applies to claims based on ordinary common law fraud. The principle is that the limitation period is denied to fiduciaries. But dishonest assisters are not fiduciaries. It might be surprising, as Millett LJ said in the Paragon Finance case (at p.414), if a person primarily liable was entitled to plead the Limitation Act when someone who assisted him could not. But there seems no reason in fairness or logic why the reverse should not be true. And in any case, Royal Brunei Airlines Sdn Bhd v. Tan [1995] 2 AC 378 shows that the liability of a dishonest assister is independent of the dishonesty of the trustee or other fiduciary. Mr Scott placed some reliance upon Millett LJ's observation that "a principled system of limitation would also treat a claim against an accessory as barred when the claim against the principal was barred and not before": see Paragon Finance, ibid. That showed, he said, that if the fraudulent trustee is never entitled to plead limitation, the dishonest assister should not be entitled to do so. But I do not think Millett LJ could have meant this, which would be contrary to most of his reasoning and to his subsequent clear statement in Dubai Aluminium Co Ltd v. Salaam [2003] 2 AC 366, 404 that a dishonest assister is not a fiduciary and can plead the Limitation Act.
25. It remains to consider the alternative argument that, as a matter of construction, a claim against a dishonest assister may be within s.20 because it is "in respect of", in the sense of being accessory to, the actual trustee's fraudulent breach of trust. It is true that in certain contexts the words "in respect of" may have a very wide meaning and the possibility of such a meaning being given to the words in s.20 was tentatively considered by Danckwerts J in G L Baker Ltd v. Medway Building and Supplies Ltd [1958] 1 WLR 1216, 1222. But I think that in the context of s.20 of the Ordinance it simply means that the beneficiary must be claiming against the trustee on the ground that he has committed a fraudulent breach of trust. If it had been intended to include claims against dishonest assisters or other non-fiduciaries on the ground that they were accessories to the breach of trust, the language would have been a good deal clearer."
(1) The time bar imposed by s.19(2) was intended to cover all claims by a beneficiary to recover trust property or in respect of any breach of trust, other than those excepted by s.19(1), against whomsoever the claim was made, not only the trustee and others claiming through him.
(2) The expressions 'trust' and 'trustee' used in s.19 extend to implied and constructive trusts generally without reference to any particular category of constructive trust.
(3) The exception for which s.19(1)(b) allows is expressly limited to claims against 'the trustee'.
Accordingly, it does not follow that the distinction between category 1 and category 2 constructive trusts to which the Privy Council referred in Taylor v Davies [1920] AC 636 when considering the Canadian equivalent to s.8 Trustee Act 1888 has been imported into the definition of trust and trustee contained in s.68(17) Trustee Act 1925 and applied to Limitation Act 1939 by s.50 thereof. Nor is there any reason to treat the references to "the trustee" in both paragraphs (a) and (b) of s.19(1) as limited to an express or de jure trustee. No doubt such a trustee is included but those references are wide enough to include a constructive trustee as well.
"s.19(1) of the Limitation Act 1939...inverted the wording of s.8(1) of the 1888 Act, but did not alter its effect."
That is not an assumption I am prepared to make. In addition I accept the submission of counsel for Dr Williams summarised in paragraph 18 above that it is clear from s.19(2) that the scope of s.19 was wider than that of s.8 Trustee Act 1888.
Black LJ :
"This Act is one which I understand was drafted by a very eminent Chancery lawyer, but none the less it is one which gives to considerable difficulties of interpretation whenever the court is concerned with its application."
This case maintains that tradition, giving rise to an interpretation problem in relation to section 21 to which, in my view, there is no wholly satisfactory answer.
"I think that in the context of s 20 of the Ordinance it simply means that the beneficiary must be claiming against the trustee on the ground that he has committed a fraudulent breach of trust. If it had been intended to include claims against dishonest assisters or other non-fiduciaries on the ground that they were accessories to the breach of trust, the language would have been a good deal clearer."
i) an action by a beneficiary
ii) to recover trust property or in respect of any breach of trust
iii) not being an action for which a period of limitation is prescribed by any other provision of the Act.
"(1) No period of limitation prescribed by this Act shall apply to an action by a beneficiary under a trust, being an action:-
(a) in respect of any fraud or fraudulent breach of trust to which the trustee was a party or privy; or
(b) to recover from the trustee trust property or the proceeds of trust property in the possession of the trustee, or previously received by the trustee and converted to his use."
Tomlinson LJ :