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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 >> Ely v Robson [2016] EWCA Civ 774 (26 July 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2016/774.html Cite as: [2017] 1 P &, [2017] 1 P &CR DG1, [2017] 1 FLR 1704, [2016] Fam Law 1221, [2016] EWCA Civ 774, [2016] WTLR 1383, 20 ITELR 428 |
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ON APPEAL FROM SWINDON COUNTY COURT
HIS HONOUR JUDGE BLAIR QC
A01BH315
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE KITCHIN
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Graham Timothy Ely |
Respondent (Claimant) |
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- and – |
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Vanessa Margot Robson |
Appellant (Defendant) |
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Jody Atkinson (instructed by Slee Blackwell Solicitors LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 7 July 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Kitchin:
Introduction
The background
"… As you are aware our clients have been discussing settlement and have suggested terms of compromise, details of which we set out below.
1. Whilst your client continues to live at Torbay Road, both parties jointly share the outgoings and other costs of the property (including, but not limited to mortgage repayments, utility bills and taxes) and that they likewise share the costs of their daughters' upbringing (including but not limited to schooling, clothing, holidays and gifts).
2. If your client leaves the property she ceases to contribute to the mortgage and household payments but will solely pay the whole of the costs of raising their two daughters.
3. Subject to the trust matters referred to below, your client renounces any and all other claims she has on Torbay Road.
4. Our clients renounces [sic] any and all other claims he has on Bournemouth Road and Ashley Road.
5. Save for the costs of implementing the terms of the proposed agreement (which we suggest our [sic] shared equally between our respective clients) there be no further order as to costs.
6. It is proposed that our client declares a trust upon the following terms:
(i) He remains sole legal owner and trustee of 6 Torbay Road.
(ii) Your client will have a 20% beneficial interest in remainder in 6 Torbay Road, realisable on our client's death.
(iii) Your client has a right to occupy 6 Torbay Road for as long as either Vera Ellis or Peggy Robson live.
(iv) Our client will have the right of appointment up to 80% of the trust funds together with the right to re-mortgage the property.
(v) Our client as trustee to have power to sell 6 Torbay Road whereupon your client's right of residence is terminated.
(vi) Vera Ellis have a right of residence for life but to acquire no capital interest in the property.
Given the complexity of the agreement we have advised our client to seek Counsel's advice in drawing up a settlement agreement and associated trust deed.
Our clients are considering simplifying the above deal in light of the tax implications and practical difficulties in drafting the trust deed.
Before proceeding please confirm that our [sic] client agrees that the above accurately reflects the terms of the proposed settlement."
"We refer to the above matter which is listed for trial on 13th and 14th September 2007, in the Southampton County Court.
The Claimant and Defendant have been negotiating a settlement of this matter and are both relatively close to reaching a settlement.
In the circumstances, it appears that more time will be required for the parties to correctly set out in writing the terms upon which they agree to settle this matter. However, the trial drawers [sic] nearer and therefore the parties request that the trial listed for 13th and 14th September be vacated and relisted for the first available date after 1st October 2007.
The parties believe that they will be able to finalise terms of settlement before the end of September 2007 and therefore respectfully request that this trial is vacated. Accordingly, we would ask that this letter is placed immediately before a District Judge for an order to be made on the terms suggested. We would further point out that the parties apologise for any inconvenience that may be caused to the court by this request. However, this request is made having regard to the overriding objectives of the court and with a view to saving potential costs of the trial…."
The present claim
"We had a number of conversations about my position and security vis a vis the Property [6 Torbay Road]. On each occasion the Claimant always reassured me that "what is mine is also yours". And when I specifically challenged him as to whether this included the Property and he insisted that it did, I was led to believe that I had an equal share in the Property along with the Claimant. In the first few years were living together I would say that I had this conversation with the Claimant on probably an annual basis as I felt it was a very important matter that had to be discussed. On each occasion when we had this conversation the claimant made it clear that we shared the Property on an equal basis."
The trial and judgment
"… There was certainty here in the negotiated settlement carried out between the claimant and defendant. What was left to do was purely a matter of mechanics to achieve their clearly stated objectives about their interests in the property. I find that the defendant did lead the claimant to believe that she was agreed on those objectives and those principles. The claimant relied on that by not pursuing his claim for a declaration that she had no interest whatsoever in the home. He acted to his detriment in that. The state of the agreement between them, in my view, was perfectly plain. Equity will come to his aid, therefore, in those circumstances …."
The appeal
"36. The circumstances of the present case are that the property in question was owned by the appellant before any negotiations for a joint venture agreement had commenced. The interest in the property that Mr Cobbe was expecting to acquire was an interest pursuant to a formal written agreement some of the terms of which remained still to be agreed and that never came into existence. Mr Cobbe expended his time and money in making the planning application in the knowledge that the appellant was not legally bound. Despite the unconscionability of the appellant's behaviour in withdrawing from the inchoate agreement immediately planning permission had been obtained, this seems to me a wholly inadequate basis for imposing a constructive trust over the property in order to provide Mr Cobbe with a remedy for his disappointed expectations. This property was never joint venture property and I can see no justification for treating it as though it was.
37. The unconscionable behaviour of Mrs Lisle-Mainwaring is, in my opinion, not enough in the circumstances of this case to justify Mr Cobbe's claim to have acquired, or to be awarded by the court, a beneficial interest in the property. The salient features of the case that preclude that claim are, to my mind, that the appellant owned the property before Mr Cobbe came upon the scene, that the second agreement produced by the discussions between him and Mrs Lisle-Mainwaring was known to both to be legally unenforceable, that an unenforceable promise to perform a legally unenforceable agreement—which is what an agreement 'binding in honour' comes to—can give no greater advantage than the unenforceable agreement, that Mr Cobbe's expectation of an enforceable contract, on the basis of which he applied for and obtained the grant of planning permission, was inherently speculative and contingent on Mrs Lisle-Mainwaring's decisions regarding the incomplete agreement and that Mr Cobbe never expected to acquire an interest in the property otherwise than under a legally enforceable contract. In these circumstances the imposition of the constructive trust on the property and the pro tanto divesting of the appellant's ownership of it seems to me more in the nature of an indignant reaction to Mrs Lisle-Mainwaring's unconscionable behaviour than a principled answer to Mr Cobbe's claim for relief."
"91. … Mr Cobbe's case seems to me to fail on the simple but fundamental point that, as persons experienced in the property world, both parties knew that there was no legally binding contract, and that either was therefore free to discontinue the negotiations without legal liability – that is, liability in equity as well as at law, to echo the words of Lord Cranworth LC in Ramsden v Dyson LR 1 HL 129, 145 - 146…. Mr Cobbe was therefore running a risk, but he stood to make a handsome profit if the deal went ahead, and the market stayed favourable. He may have thought that any attempt to get Mrs Lisle-Mainwaring to enter into a written contract for the grant of planning permission would be counter-productive. Whatever his reasons for doing so, the fact is that he ran a commercial risk, with his eyes open, and the outcome has proved unfortunate for him. It is true that he did not expressly state, at the time, that he was relying solely on Mrs Lisle-Mainwaring's sense of honour, but to draw that sort of distinction in a commercial context would be as realistic, in my opinion, as to draw a firm distinction depending on whether the formula "subject to contract" had or had not actually been used."
"57. In my judgment, there is a common thread running through the speeches of Lord Scott and Lord Walker. Applying what Lord Walker said in relation to proprietary estoppel also to constructive trust, that common thread is that, if the parties intend to make a formal agreement setting out the terms on which one or more of the parties is to acquire an interest in property, or, if further terms for that acquisition remain to be agreed between them so that the interest in property is not clearly identified, or if the parties did not expect their agreement to be immediately binding, neither party can rely on constructive trust as a means of enforcing their original agreement. In other words, at least in those situations, if their agreement (which does not comply with section 2(1)) is incomplete, they cannot utilise the doctrine of proprietary estoppel or the doctrine of constructive trust to make their agreement binding on the other party by virtue of section 2(5) of the 1989 Act."
Sir Brian Leveson P: