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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 >> Clarke & Anor v Corless & Anor [2009] EWHC 1636 (Ch) (08 July 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2009/1636.html Cite as: [2009] 2 P & CR DG24, [2009] EWHC 1636 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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SIMON BAYNES CLARKE SARAH BAYNES CLARKE |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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MICHAEL CORLESS JOANNE CORLESS |
Defendants |
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Timothy Morshead (instructed by Thomas Eggar, solicitors) for the defendants
Hearing dates: 10, 11, 12, 13, 16 March 2009
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Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Proudman:
The principal issue
The witnesses: general observations
Constructive trust
"It is impossible to prescribe exhaustively the circumstances sufficient to create a constructive trust but it is possible to recognise particular factual circumstances that will do so … A particular factual situation where a constructive trust has been held to have been created arises out of joint ventures relating to property, typically land. If two or more persons agree to embark on a joint venture which involves the acquisition of unidentified piece of land and a subsequent exploitation of, or dealing with, the land for the purposes of the joint venture, and one of the joint venturers, with the agreement of the others who believe him to be acting for their joint purposes, makes the acquisition in his own name but subsequently seeks to retain the land for his own benefit, the court will regard him as holding the land on trust for the joint venturers. This would be either an implied trust or a constructive trust arising from the circumstances and if, as would be likely from the facts as described, the joint venturers have not agreed and cannot agree about what is to be done with the land, the land would have to be resold and, after discharging the expenses of its purchase and any other necessary expenses of the abortive joint venture, the net proceeds of sale divided equally between the joint venturers. A number of cases exemplify the operation of a constructive trust in such a situation. Pallant v. Morgan [1953] Ch 43 was one such case. In essence, A and B agreed, prior to an auction of land in which both were interested, that A would bid for the land, that B would refrain from bidding and that if A became the purchaser the land would be divided between them….
Another case in which a constructive trust provided a remedy following a frustrated joint-venture was Banner Homes plc v. Luff Developments Ltd [2000] Ch 372. As Chadwick LJ, who gave the leading judgement in the Court of Appeal, observed at 397 "It is the pre-acquisition arrangement which colours the subsequent acquisition [of the land] by the Defendant and leads to his being treated as a trustee if he seeks to act inconsistently with it.""
"It is necessary that, in reliance on the arrangement or understanding, the non-acquiring party should do (or omit to do) something which confers an advantage on the acquiring party in relation to the acquisition of the property; or is detrimental to the ability of the non-acquiring party to acquire the property on equal terms…
What is essential is that the circumstances make it inequitable for the acquiring party to retain the property for himself in a manner inconsistent with the arrangement or understanding on which the non-acquiring party has acted. "
Facts
"At some stage we will also have to discuss the maintenance of the estate going forward and the ownership of the common areas, the gate and the roadway within the estate. I propose that this be done once the work on the Klargester has been completed…"
Mr Baynes-Clarke, having seen the letter, e-mailed Mr Corless as follows:
"You have beaten me to the letter writing- well done. I am intending to write myself but my work schedule is tight at the moment."
"Regarding the maintenance of the Carmelstead site, the residents will be forming a formal management company to manage the estate once your involvement with the estate ceases. Your responsibility to us for the Klargester unit ends on 11 March and your commitment to maintain the road surface ends in July next year…We therefore expect, once all outstanding claims by the residents have been settled, that the common land be transferred to the management company set up by the residents (as originally proposed) on 12th March 2004. Ownership of the roadway and gates should be transferred (as originally proposed) in July 2004 on the expiry of the agreement with South Heath. We would therefore expect your involvement with the estate to cease and all means of access to the estate to be returned to the residents. We will take on the responsibility of negotiating access to the woods to the north of the property with Mr Burley, who would also be happy for your involvement in the estate to cease."
"I was thinking about drafting a letter to go to the Allums, saying that the residents are setting up a management committee to take over the running of the estate and to require them to hand over the land to the management company. Once handed over we could transfer the land in front of North and South Heath to Simon and myself and we can start to manage it properly."
The e-mail then goes on to mention landscaping and the continued smell from the STP. The letter proposes a meeting "to discuss the above". Mr Gareze responded that he thought a meeting would be a good idea but it seems that no meeting took place.
"We should wait to address the land situation until this [landscaping and the STP] is sorted out…Anything to put pressure on the Allums and their contractors..."
"In addition at a later stage we would require you to transfer the tarmac road and the gates of the estate to a management company that will be set up by the residents of Carmelstead. In consideration of which the residents of Carmelstead would take over complete management of the estate with no further expense or time to be incurred by yourself."
"If it is just the land in front of our property, we would act on our own and indeed this is our primary purpose (as we were originally told that this was the land we were purchasing). This is our base case assumption.
If, however, the land is the rest of the estate, we would envisage buying it ourselves and then gifting the land in front of our neighbours' property to them in two packages, retaining the land in front of our property. This may be slightly underhand, but we do not want the potential argument about the land in front of our property, which our next door neighbours sometimes use to park in, much to our annoyance. We would want to enclose this land with gates, develop it to our design etc and we want to retain control over the issue."
What was agreed at the meeting in January 2003 and what was the nature of that agreement?
• To get Allum to fix the STP;
• To remove Allum from the remaining parts of the estate after the sale of Carmelstead to the Garezes;
• To transfer ownership of those parts to all the residents (and it followed, not to any one of them alone);
• While the details of that ownership remained to be worked out it was understood that a management company would be the vehicle for holding ownership as well as managing the estate.
"It is necessary that the pre-acquisition arrangement or understanding should contemplate that one party ... will take steps to acquire the relevant property; and that, if he does so, the other party ... will obtain some interest in that property. Further, it is necessary that (whatever private reservations the acquiring party may have) he has not informed the non-acquiring party before the acquisition ... that he no longer intends to honour the arrangement or understanding. "
The position in autumn 2004
Laches
The turning area
"The right for the Transferee and his successors in title and their respective licensees (in common with the transferor and all other persons entitled to the like rights) subject to payment of a fair proportion according to user of the cost of renewal repair and maintenance thereof… of way with and without private vehicles over the roadways within the land coloured brown on the plan annexed hereto subject to the Transferee's compliance with any regulations reasonably made by the transferor relating to the proper use thereof".
"the defendants…are not entitled to park their vehicles in such a way or otherwise use the turning area in such manner as causes unreasonable interference to the rights of the claimants under the transfer of 26 July 2001".
Screws in the fence
Ownership of the wall