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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 >> Sutton v Sutton & Anor [2009] EWHC 2576 (Ch) (29 October 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2009/2576.html Cite as: [2009] EWHC 2576 (Ch), (2010) 12 ITELR 627, [2010] WTLR 115 |
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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 High Court
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ROSALIE SUTTON |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) MARK PHILIP SUTTON (2)SUSAN DEOBRAH SUTTON (acting as Trustees of the Edrosa Settlement) |
Defendants |
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Richard Dew (instructed by Donnelly Si Elliott LLP) for the Defendants
Hearing date: 6 October 2009
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Christopher Nugee QC:
Introduction
i) Did Mr Sutton have capacity to execute the transfer ?
ii) If he did not, is the effect of that to make the transfer void or voidable ?
iii) Should the Court grant the declaration as asked ?
Facts
Did Mr Sutton lack capacity ?
"In the circumstances, it seems to me that the law is this. The degree or extent of understanding required in respect of any instrument is relative to the particular transaction which it is to effect. In the case of a will the degree required is always high. In the case of a contract, a deed made for consideration or a gift inter vivos, whether by deed or otherwise, the degree required varies with the circumstances of the transaction. Thus, at one extreme, if the subject matter and value of a gift are trivial in relation to the donor's other assets a low degree of understanding will suffice. But, at the other extreme, if its effect is to dispose of the donor's only asset of value and thus, for practical purposes, to pre-empt the devolution of his estate under his will or on his intestacy, then the degree of understanding required is as high as that required for a will, and the donor must understand the claims of all potential donees and the extent of the property to he disposed of."
In the present case, it is unlikely that Edrosa was Mr Sutton's only asset of value in 1997 because it is probable that he already owned investments of some value, but as I have already said I am prepared to infer that it was his principal asset. I therefore proceed on the basis that the degree of understanding that he had to have for the gift to be valid was a high one and that he had to be capable of understanding not only the general nature of the transaction but also the claims of other potential donees.
i) The first suggestion that Mr Sutton was becoming confused was in November 1996. He was on his way from his home at Tangmere to see a Dr Ridley at Sherburne Hospital and lost his way. The previous month he had driven up to Manchester without a problem.
ii) On 26 February 1997 Mr Sutton was seen by Dr Hammans, a consultant neurologist. By then there had been a number of other matters which Mrs Sutton brought to Dr Hammans' attention. On 11 February Mr Sutton had ordered 6 new cars (or possibly 4) for friends from the garage where he normally bought his cars. (She had to cancel the order explaining it was a mistake). He had insisted she wrote a letter about a new TV video programmer and photocopied the letter many times (although she thought it was simply that he could not work it); he had left a tap running and flooded the bathroom.
iii) In June 1997 Mr Sutton was seen by Dr Collier (a Senior House Officer to Dr Amaladoss, a consultant psychiatrist). Mrs Sutton told Dr Collier that her husband had increased difficulty remembering his way around and she had encouraged him to stop driving some months before; that he was becoming very worried about some problems they were having with the television; and that he had some quite marked problems with both short term and long term memory.
iv) On 28 June 1997, Mrs Sutton recorded in her diary that Mr Sutton's memory was getting worse. They had parked in a car park but did not have the correct change for it; he had gone off and borrowed some money; meanwhile she had found a car park attendant who had given them a free ticket, but when she returned to the car, she found he had got back in and put his seat belt on ready to go home.
v) On 4 July, they went shopping and left the car in the car park. When they returned she found that he had left the car door wide open for 2 hours.
vi) The next day he tried to take her into an estate agents and suggested they buy a place in France; she thought this was triggered by a TV programme they had been watching the day before.
vii) On 7 July, she asked him to put the groceries in the fridge and he put them in the freezer in the garage.
viii) The next entry in the diary relates to a Tuesday (I mink 15 July) when she kept finding that the TV Times was being changed to Saturday; she asked him what day it was and he thought it was Saturday.
ix) On 22 July, they were going to have lunch in a pub and he asked her if the name of the pub was "Epsylon", which was the name of a place where he had worked years before.
x) On 28 July he suggested out of the blue that they should buy a caravan.
xi) On 4 August Mark and Susan Sutton took them out to a restaurant to celebrate their golden wedding anniversary. Susan asked Mrs Sutton what her husband had bought for their anniversary but she replied that he had forgotten it. This struck Mark as very odd as he never forgot birthdays and anniversaries. Susan noticed that Mrs Sutton had to order for him.
xii) On 30 August Mrs Sutton was driving to Ford and he told her she was going the wrong way although she was going the usual way.
xiii) On 17 September she got up to find that he had cooked himself some bacon and left the pan on the cooker full on and nearly ruined her new pan.
xiv) On 19 September Mrs Sutton told Rita Mahoney, a Community Psychiatric Nurse, that they had returned from a week's holiday in Devon and that she felt she could have screamed in the days preceding the holiday, that her husband had got much worse, that he had left her pan on the hob, had left the taps on the previous week, and forgot to switch off appliances.
Some of these incidents are trivial in themselves; but taken together they show a consistent pattern of Mr Sutton exhibiting confused and forgetful behaviour over the months leading up to and immediately after the execution of the transfer at the end of August 1997. This does not by itself mean that he was incapable of understanding the nature and effect of the transfer - as Mr Dew said, he could be confused as to time and space and as to what he had done last week but still have the abilities to understand the significance and effect of the transfer of his home - but it does suggest a real question mark over his degree of mental capacity at the time.
i) In August 1996 Mr Sutton was suffering from back and shoulder pain and stiffness. His GP, Dr Mallam, referred him to Dr Ridley, a consultant physician and rheumatologist.
ii) This particular problem was treated with medication, but on 19 February 1997 Dr Mallam referred him again to Dr Ridley saying that he appeared to be suffering from an acute onset of loss of memory (this was based on what Mrs Sutton had told him). Dr Ridley sent him on to Dr Hammans, who saw him on 26 February 1997.
iii) Dr Hammans performed a test known as the mini mental state examination or MMSE. Mr Sutton scored 20 out of a possible 30, showing mild disorientation, failure of attention and calculation and recall. For example he did not know the date or which clinic he was in; was asked to count backwards from 100 by 7 and only got the first answer right; and he could only recall one out of three objects given to him earlier. His language however was good.
iv) Dr Hammans' conclusion was that this had the flavour of confusional state rather than dementia and he arranged for him to have a brain scan.
v) Dr Hammans saw Mr Sutton again on 12 March 1997. The brain scan had shown some shrinkage of the brain (atrophy) but no other abnormality. He thought that Mr Sutton might have some organic cognitive decline but that the symptoms might be contributed to by anxiety and possible depression, and recommended that he be seen by a psychiatrist.
vi) Dr Mallam then referred Mr Sutton to Dr Amaladoss, a consultant psychiatrist with the Mental Health Services for the Elderly. He was in fact seen by Dr Collier, under Dr Amaladoss' supervision, on 18 June 1997. She recorded his cognitive function as "obviously slightly poor, especially] LTM" (which I take to be long term memory). She also performed an MMSE test. She scored this as 24 out of 30, although his performance was very similar to the previous occasion: he did not know the day or date, did not know which county he was in, could only recall two out of three objects given to him, and was unable to count backwards from 100 by 7s at all, giving 94, 92, 88, 86 and 84. Dr Collier nevertheless gave him a higher score than before; this was because she gave him an alternative task to the counting backwards by 7s (spelling "world" backwards) on which he scored 4 out of 5. Dr Hammans comments that this was a slightly generous way to assess him, and that if she had assessed his calculation rather than his spelling, the score would have been similar to his own. This seems to me to be right.
vii) On this basis Dr Amaladoss diagnosed Mr Sutton as suffering from the early stages of a vascular dementia and recommended that he be seen by a community psychiatric nurse. The nurse (Ms Mahoney) visited at roughly monthly intervals, noting on 7 July that Mrs Sutton was citing his forgetfulness and his being "sometimes muddled" as the greatest concern, and on 18 August that Mr Sutton appeared more confused and admitted to feeling more muddled.
Void or voidable
"That was a case where the instruments in question were deeds made for consideration. A large part of the judgment was concerned with the question whether such a deed, if made by a person without sufficient mental capacity, is void or merely voidable. The facts of the present case make it unnecessary for me to consider whether that distinction could be material in the case of a voluntary disposition, and I express no view on that point."
This seems to me to make it clear that the fact that he in the event declared the transfer void is not to be taken as any decision whether the transfer was void or voidable, it making no difference on the facts of that case. I therefore agree with the comment of Warren J in Qutb v Hussain [2005] EWHC 157 (Ch) at [25] that
"Notwithstanding the form of the order made, Re Beaney is not, therefore, an authority in support of the proposition that a gift made by a person lacking capacity is void rather than voidable."
"Incapacity to make a contract can, as was made clear in Beaney, found a claim by the incapable contracting party (or his estate) to set the contract aside, but there are two material differences as compared with a like challenge to avoid a gift. First a contract entered into by someone lacking the requisite capacity is at most voidable, not void. Secondly, it will only be voidable if (being a contract other than for necessaries) it can be shown that the other contracting party was aware of the incapacity: see The Imperial Loan Company, Limited v. Stone [1892] 1 QB 599,at 601 per Lord Esher M.R."
This indicates that Rimer J proceeded on the basis that incapacity in relation to a gift made the gift void (as opposed to incapacity in relation to a contract where at most it makes the contract voidable); and indeed later in his judgment he declared two comparatively minor gifts (of cars or the money to buy them) void (at [180]-[181]). But the main purport of the passage I have cited is to set out the requisites for setting aside a contract for lack of capacity. These are well established and there is no suggestion from the judgment that there had been any dispute about them; there is also no indication in the judgment that he had heard any argument on the effect of incapacity on a gift, and no suggestion that it made any difference in that case. Indeed Rimer J concluded his judgment by saying that he would set aside both the agreement in relation to the house and the gifts of the cars (at [197]) which suggests that he saw no significant distinction between declaring the gifts void and setting them aside. I do not therefore think his judgment can fairly be regarded as a considered decision reached after argument that incapacity renders a gift void rather than voidable.
"I do not accept that the gift is voidable. It is void. See In re Beaney and The Special Trustees for Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children v Rushin [ie Re Morris] at para 24. In any event I would not have been inclined to make an order in the form which Mr Strutt suggests. The suggestion would mean that John would have no access to a capital asset which is in truth his. The fact also is that George and Marion have had the benefit of rent-free accommodation for 16 years."
This case is therefore a decision that incapacity makes a gift void rather than voidable, albeit one that would not appear to have made any difference to the outcome in practical terms. It is not clear however how much argument Mr Garnett had on the point; and for the reasons I have already given, I do not think the authorities he referred to really decided the point, Re Beaney being no authority for the proposition that lack of capacity makes a gift void rather than voidable, and Re Morris not being a considered decision to that effect either.
"However, the proposition that a gift, in these circumstances, is rendered voidable rather than void has not, as I have already noted, been argued before me let alone has it been suggested that Rimer J and Mr Garnett were clearly wrong. I proceed therefore on the basis that a gift would be rendered void as a result of the lack of capacity of the donor to understand the transaction in die sense necessary."
I read this as a decision by Warren J to proceed on the basis that the earlier decisions are correct, but really as a matter of comity and without having heard argument. Again it does not appear to have made a difference in that case.
"Upon the authorities as they now stand, it appears to us that we ought to regard it as settled law that an instrument of conveyance executed by a person incapable of understanding its effect, in the sense of its general purport, is not on that account void, though in the circumstances it may be voidable by the conveyor or his representatives."
Mr Dew argues that this case is only authority for the position in regard to conveyances for valuable consideration and that voluntary conveyances are different. I accept that the actual decision in the case was concerned with what was in form a conveyance for consideration, each sister conveying her share to each other. But this was largely a matter of form as the only effect was to leave each sister with a severed one-third share instead of the one-third interest as joint tenant each had before, and as I understand it, it was always possible for such a joint tenant to bring about a severance unilaterally, for example by conveying away her share to a third party in trust for herself. The fact that the deed was technically made for consideration does not seem to have been significant.
"It would be absurd to say that a settlor who at the time did not have sufficient mental capacity validly to make it could not afterwards adopt or affirm it when he gained or regained his capacity, yet if it was void he could never make it good except by starting all over again."
He also referred to the High Court decision in Gibbons v Wright and said that he could see no acceptable reason why the same rules there laid down in relation to an instrument conveying properly for consideration should not apply to a voluntary deed of settlement. He then went on to consider various defences, and among other things held that the plaintiff had elected to adopt and affirm the deed on several occasions since 1935; and also said that he would have been inclined to reject the plaintiffs claims on the grounds of laches, acquiescence and delay.
Summary