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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 >> Page & Anor v Hewetts Solicitors & Anor [2012] EWCA Civ 805 (15 June 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2012/805.html Cite as: [2012] CP Rep 40, [2012] EWCA Civ 805 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE CHANCERY DIVISION
Ms Susan Prevezer (sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge)
CH2011/0112
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LEWISON
and
DAME JANET SMITH
____________________
Anthony John Page Terence Albert Page (as administrators of the estates of Annie Harriet Page & Aubrey Wilfred Page) |
Appellant/ Claimants |
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and – |
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Hewetts Solicitors Christopher Robert Fuller |
Respondent/ Defendants |
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MR DAN STACEY (instructed by Hewetts Solicitors/Henmans Solicitors) for the Respondent
Hearing date : 15 May 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE LEWISON :
"Dear Chris
RE 284b KIDMORE ROAD READING (SITE 1)
262 KIDMORE ROAD READING (SITE 2)
Further to our recent meetings, I would confirm the terms agreed between Sahana Enterprises Limited and Exnine as follows:
1. Sahana had made an unconditional offer as follows via the Estate Agents of £190,000 to buy site 2 as it stands, which I understand has been accepted and legal matters are proceedings.
2. Once the purchase of site 2 has been completed, Sahana hereby irrecoverably agree to pay the sum of £5,000 to Mr Tony Page for a three month option on site 1 to purchase site 1 at its market value plus 15%.
3. In the event that Sahana obtain Planning Permission for three dwellings on site 2, then we confirm a joint venture profit of £6,000 will be paid to Exnine Developments, in the event that Sahana obtain Planning Permission for four units, the joint venture profit will be £10,000.
4. Sahana acknowledge the introduction of these two sites via Exnine Developments and confirm that the introduction fee will be paid at a rate of £5,000.00 in respect of each dwelling unit, for which Planning Consent is granted on sites 1 and 2. Such payment to be paid to Exnine Developments within twenty-eight days of the grant of such Planning Permission.
…
7. If Sahana sells the land before Planning Permission is obtained then we agree to pay Exnine Developments the sum of £10,000.00 within 28 days of completion.
8. If Sahana fail to obtain Planning Permission and sell the site on we agree to pay Exnine Developments 25% of the Nett profit within 28 Days of completion."
i) Mr Fuller was guilty of professional misconduct due to a conflict of interest because "he acted for me and someone else on related matters";ii) He has been negligent "because he has not acted with my best interests at heart";
iii) Mr Fuller appointed Philip Baker to market 262 Kidmore Road. "We have since been advised that Mr Fuller and Philip Baker have common interests in the developer, Sahana Homes, who subsequently purchased the property";
iv) Sahana purchased the property for £190,000 but "we have since been advised … that the real value of the site was closer to £350,000."
"… in breach of the duties set out at paragraph 9 above and in breach of fiduciary duty … [Mr Fuller] … introduced Sahana … to 262 … in return for payment … as evidenced by a letter dated 17.2.99…"
"In further breach of the duties set out in paragraph 9 above and in breach of fiduciary duty, [Mr Fuller] recommended and advised Anthony Page that Sahana's offer was the best, not to market 262 any further, not to pursue an enquiry from another developer and to accept Sahana's offer of £190,000."
i) Mr Fuller dishonestly assisted Mr Page to commit that breach of trust;ii) Hewetts and Mr Fuller are accountable to the estates for such profits as Mr Fuller made from the sale of 262 Kidmore Road and
iii) Hewetts and Mr Fuller are liable to compensate the estates for the loss of the difference between £190,000 and the open market value of 262 Kidmore Road in about February 1999.
"As a result of those breaches of duty, the estate suffered loss and damage."
"As regards the common law claims, in my judgment the Master was correct in holding that the breach of retainer/negligence claim was known to the Claimants by or after 25 November 2000 and that both this claim and the breach of fiduciary duty claim are both statute barred. I agree with the Master, at Paragraph 14 of the Judgment, that the Claimants' letter to the OSS of 25 November 2000 shows that the Claimants knew sufficient facts to start time running in respect of these claims. At least the gist of the claim for damages for causing the Property to be sold at an undervalue appears to have been known to the Claimants by this date."
"An action for an account shall not be brought after the expiration of any time limit under this Act which is applicable to the claim which is the basis of the duty to account."
"(1) Proceedings are started when the court issues a claim form at the request of the claimant.
(2) A claim form is issued on the date entered on the form by the court."
"5.1 Proceedings are started when the court issues a claim form at the request of the claimant (see rule 7.2) but where the claim form as issued was received in the court office on a date earlier than the date on which it was issued by the court, the claim is 'brought' for the purposes of the Limitation Act 1980 and any other relevant statute on that earlier date.
5.2 The date on which the claim form was received by the court will be recorded by a date stamp either on the claim form held on the court file or on the letter that accompanied the claim form when it was received by the court.
5.3 An inquiry as to the date on which the claim form was received by the court should be directed to a court officer.
5.4 Parties proposing to start a claim which is approaching the expiry of the limitation period should recognise the potential importance of establishing the date the claim form was received by the court and should themselves make arrangements to record the date."
"In any event I am not satisfied on a balance of probabilities that the claim form did reach the Post Room (EB04/EB05) or the Chancery Registry; if it had reached the Registry then in particular the accompanying cheque would have been logged."
"There is a real `gap' in the evidence one would expect from the Claimants' solicitors in defence of a summary judgment application. Mr Last does not in his witness statement deal with the procedure by which the Claim Form was put in the DX (in particular, who would have done this, in circumstances where Mr Last says that it was not him), nor whether or not there is any record of documents logged by the firm. Indeed, Mr Last gives no evidence of any searches undertaken to find the documents. The Master carefully analysed the evidence that was before him- including the text of the Chancery Operations Manager's Note (set out at Paragraph 48) and rightly, in my view, concluded that it was unlikely that any loss of the document occurred in the Registry. The evidence put in by the Defendants was that the Chancery Registry had no record of receipt of any documents in relation to the Claim during December 2008, and I agree with Mr Stacey, that no good explanation has been given by the Claimants for the failure to inquire as to whether the Claim Form had been received by the Court. The Claimants were perilously close to the limitation deadline in December 2008, and it appears that no inquiry whatsoever was made for over 6 weeks from early December 2008 to mid January 2009, even though the sealed Claim Form had not been returned to the Claimants' solicitors and the solicitors' cheque had not been cashed. As mentioned above, the Practice Direction makes clear that the burden is on a claimant to ensure that the date of receipt of a Claim Form is established, and in this case, the Claimants' solicitors manifestly failed to do this."
"I start simply by looking at the words used in the statute and the Rules. I approach them by expecting to find the expiry of a limitation period fixed by reference to something which the claimant has to do, rather than something which someone else such as the court has to do. The time at which a claimant "brings" his claim form to the court with a request that it be issued is something he has to do; the time at which his request is complied with is not because it is done by the court and is something over which he has no real control. Put another way one act is unilateral and the other is transactional. Looked at in this way I do not agree with the judge or Mr Norman that in this context the verb "to bring" has the same meaning as the verb "to start". The 1980 Act can perfectly properly be construed so that in the context of the CPR a claim is brought when the claimant's request for the issue of a claim form (together with the court fee) is delivered to the court office. Paragraph 5 of the Practice Direction gives sensible guidance to ensure that the actual date of delivery is readily ascertainable by recording the date of receipt." (Emphasis added)
"It would be indeed surprising and harsh if a party who had done all that was required of him, should find himself unable to obtain the assistance of the court because the court itself had failed in some matter of procedure. Furthermore, when the rules lay down a time limit which has to be observed by a party to the litigation, their aim is to achieve whatever particular purpose is in mind by controlling the action of the party, and where on the reading of the appropriate rule that seems to be its intention it would be quite ridiculous, as I see it, to make the party responsible for anything that has subsequently to be done by the court. "
"… one can only treat the words "apply to the Court" as meaning doing all that is in your power to do to set the wheels of justice in motion according to the procedure that is laid down for the pursuit of the relief which you are asking."
DAME JANET SMITH :
LORD JUSTICE LAWS :