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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Herbert v Doyle & Anor [2008] EWHC 2663 (Ch) (30 September 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2008/2663.html Cite as: [2008] EWHC 2663 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(Sitting as a Deputy Judge of the Chancery Division)
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JULIAN ROGER HERBERT |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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LEONARD DOYLE AND ANOTHER |
Defendants |
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PO Box 1336, Kingston-Upon-Thames KT1 1QT
Tel No: 020 8974 7305 Fax No: 020 8974 7301
Email Address: [email protected]
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Miss Amanda Tipples (Instructed by Moore Blatch) appeared on behalf of Defendants
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Crown Copyright ©
MR HERBERT QC:
"84(B). If the Defendants (i) execute a proper transfer transferring to the Claimant the freehold of the Green Parking Spaces and, (ii) pay the Claimant £15,000 the Claimant shall be bound to forthwith:
a. execute a proper transfer transferring to the Defendants (i) the freehold of the Red Parking Spaces and (ii) the freehold of the car parking spaces situated on the Claimant's Land which is numbered "F2" on the plan annexed to the Particulars of Claim.
b complete the construction of the Staff Room Extension in accordance with the specification agreed in February 2004 and the requirements of current building regulations (The Building Regulations 2000 (S1. 2000 No. 2531) as amended) and, upon completion of the aforesaid building works to the Staff Room Extension the Claimant shall notify the New Forest District Council that the aforesaid building works have been completed so that the New Forest District Council shall give a completion certificate in respect of the Staff Room Extension under the aforesaid regulations.
(c) grant the Defendants a lease of the Staff Room Extension, on the same terms mutatis mutandis as the Lease.
(d) install electrically operated gates to the Car Park Entrance.
(e) grant the Defendants the Compressor House Lease."
"It is relevant to notice that the amendments to Mr Cobbe's pleaded prayer for relief, made when the specific performance and damages for breach of contract claims were abandoned, include the following:
'(4). Alternatively a declaration that [the defendant company and Mrs Lisle-Mainwaring] are estopped from denying that [Mr Cobbe] has such interest in the property and/or the proceeds of sale thereof as the court thinks fit.'
This is the only pleaded formulation of the estoppel relied on by Mr Cobbe and, with respect to the pleader, is both meaningless and pointless."
Pausing there, I take that comment to mean that it is no good relying on an estoppel to the effect that the promisor is estopped from denying the promisee's entitlement to relief. This conclusion is justified by what follows and I continue the quotation:
"Etherton J concluded, in paragraph 85 of his judgment, that the facts of the case 'gave rise to a proprietary estoppel equity in favour of Mr Cobbe', but nowhere identified the content of the estoppel. Mummery LJ agreed (paragraphs 60 and 61 of his judgment, concurred in by Dyson LJ (paragraph 120) and Sir Martin Nourse (paragraph 141), but he, too, did not address the content of the estoppel. Both Etherton J and Mummery LJ regarded the proprietary estoppel conclusion as justified by the unconscionability of Mrs Lisle-Mainwaring's conduct. My Lords, unconscionability of conduct may well lead to a remedy but, in my opinion, proprietary estoppel cannot be the route to it unless the ingredients for a proprietary estoppel are present. These ingredients should include, in principle, a proprietary claim made by a claimant and an answer to that claim based on some fact, or some point of mixed fact and law, that the person against whom the claim is made can be estopped from asserting. To treat a "proprietary estoppel equity" as requiring neither a proprietary claim by the claimant nor an estoppel against the defendant but simply unconscionable behaviour is, in my respectful opinion, a recipe for confusion."
Later, Lord Scott added at paragraph 28, in what I read as trenchant terms:
"Proprietary estoppel requires, in my opinion, clarity as to what it is that the object of the estoppel is to be estopped from denying, or asserting, and clarity as to the interest in the property in question that that denial, or assertion, would otherwise defeat. If these requirements are not recognised, proprietary estoppel will lose contact with its roots and risk becoming unprincipled and therefore unpredictable, if it has not already become so."
"The preconditions for the application of proprietary estoppel are met only if and to the extent that the representee is left unconscionably disadvantaged by his reliance on the relevant assurance of entitlement. Only then does his change of position truly operate to his detriment. The minimal objective of estoppel doctrine is to neutralise any unacceptable prejudice which would otherwise flow from the representor's departure from the assumptions engendered by his assurance of rights. Accordingly the element of 'detriment' which underlies all successful estoppel claims is ultimately measurable only in terms of whether it would be 'unfair or unjust' if the party who induced the expectation or assumed state of affairs were left free to ignore it. It must be shown that, by surrendering the representee to a subsisting and unremedied prejudice, the representor is 'taking advantage of him in a way which is unconscionable, inequitable or unjust'."
"In these circumstances, I conclude that the following principles apply where a party is seeking to call fresh evidence on a new point after judgment has been given but before the order has been drawn up: (1) the court has jurisdiction to grant an application to amend the pleadings to raise new points and/or to call fresh evidence and/or to hear fresh argument; (2) the court must clearly exercise its discretion in relation to such an application in a way best designed to achieve justice; (3) the general rules relating to amendment apply so that: (a) while it is no doubt desirable in general that litigants should be permitted to take any reasonably arguable point, it should by no means be assumed that the court will accede to an application merely because the other party can, in financial terms, be compensated in costs; (b) as with any other application for leave to amend, consideration must be given to anxieties and legitimate expectations of the other party, the efficient conduct of litigation, and the inconvenience caused to other litigants; (4) quite apart from, and over and above, those principles, because it is inherently contrary to the public interest and unfair on the other side that an unsuccessful party should be able to raise new points or call fresh evidence after a full and final judgment has been given against him, it would generally require an exceptional case before the court was prepared to accede to an application where the applicant could not satisfy the three requirements in Ladd v. Marshall ; (5) almost inevitably, each case will have particular features which the court will think it right to take into account when deciding how to dispose of the application before it; (6) the court should be astute to discourage applications which involve parties seeking to put in late evidence, but cases where new evidence is found after judgment is given and before the order is drawn up will be comparatively rare."
"I cannot agree with this submission, which overlooks the fundamental difference in the principles applicable in a case where the argument before a judge is still open and continuing and a case where he has actually delivered judgment. In a case where the application to amend is made before delivery of judgment, the court has a wide discretion to permit amendment in the interests of justice, and, even at a late stage, will be disposed to exercise that discretion in favour of the applicant, subject to an appropriate order as to costs, if it considers that this is necessary to dispose of all the true issues arising between the parties. If the application is made after judgment, however, the situation is quite different because the applicant is then obliged to invoke the Barrell jurisdiction."
I pause there to say that the Barrell jurisdiction is the jurisdiction for a judge to reverse his decision before the order is perfected, derived from the case In re Barrell Enterprises [1973] 1 WLR 19.
Sir Christopher Slade continued:
"Since there must be some finality in litigation and litigants cannot be allowed unlimited bites at the cherry, it is not surprising that, according to the authorities, there are stringent limits to the exercise of the discretion conferred on the court by the Barrell jurisdiction. In that case itself [1973] 1 W.L.R. 19, Russell L.J., delivering the judgment of the Court of Appeal, said, at pp. 23-24:
"When oral judgments have been given, either in a court of first instance or on appeal, the successful party ought, save in most exceptional circumstances, to be able to assume that the judgment is a valid and effective one."
Russell L.J. went on to say, at p. 24: 'The cases to which we were referred in which judgments in civil courts have been varied after delivery … were all cases in which some most unusual element was present.'
This principle must apply a fortiori where the judgment is a formal written judgment in final form, handed down after the parties have been given the opportunity to consider it in draft and make representations on the draft. The principle recognises that the doing of justice requires justice to both parties in litigation, not merely one."
"The matter cannot be looked at simply as a question of exercising a discretion to grant leave to amend. This must be so where a judge has pronounced judgment in favour of the defendants on a statement of claim, particularly where, as in this case, the judge has specifically enquired of the plaintiff's counsel during the hearing of the defendants' application that the action be dismissed and again when judgment was pronounced if such an amendment has been considered and was going to be sought and has been told that it has been considered and it has been decided not to seek such an amendment. Such an application must be subject to a more stringent test than would an application for leave to amend made during the hearing of the defendants' application and prior to judgment being given. The question is how that greater stringency is to be expressed? It is clearly not satisfactory for the plaintiff to be allowed to wait to see the outcome of the defendants' application and then, if the judge decides in the defendants' favour, to apply for an amendment. There must be some satisfactory reason for failure to apply for the amendment at the proper time. The proper time is either before the defendants' application is heard or during the hearing of the application."
I may say that that was in the context of a Defendant's application to strike out the Plaintiff's claim. The application was successful and the application to amend was an application of the Plaintiff to raise a new cause of action, which, if successful, would have reversed the decision. A little later Roch LJ referred to the fourth principle formulated by Neuberger J in the Charlesworth case requiring an exceptional case where the application could not satisfy the requirements in Ladd v. Marshall and went on:
"I would adopt the approach of Neuberger J. in that case and apply it to the circumstances of the present case. There was a full and final judgment given against the plaintiff. There is no suggestion that the application of 20 October 1999 came about because of the emergence of new evidence or new information. The court should require the party seeking to reopen the full and final judgment to demonstrate that it is an exceptional case or that there are strong reasons for doing so. The plaintiff did not begin to do that. Consequently the application should have been refused."