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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 >> Aspden v Elvy [2012] EWHC 1387 (Ch) (23 May 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2012/1387.html Cite as: [2012] EWHC 1387 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
LEEDS DISTRICT REGISTRY
Oxford Row Leeds LS1 3BG |
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B e f o r e :
sitting as a Judge of the High Court in Leeds
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ARTHUR ASPDEN |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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JOY MARIE ELVY |
Defendant |
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Elizabeth Darlington (instructed by Lee & Priestley) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 23, 24 and 25 April 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
Judge Behrens:
1. Introduction
2. Witnesses
3. The facts
3.1 The parties
3.2 The acquisition of Outlaithe Farm
An old stone built farmhouse together with several original outbuildings and also new pig breeding buildings. The house is in need of a damp proof course, a central heating system, a wiring check and serious consideration must be given to an early re-roofing of the property. Outside the whole yard area needs cleaning up. Your applicant should not attempt to proceed with the purchase of the property unless he is prepared to spend considerable money on bringing the property round to a better standard.
3.3 Work done to Outlaithe Farm
1.1 Noah's Ark
3.5 Mr Aspden's employment
3.6 Mr Aspden's litigation against Webb's Poultry
3.7 Separation in 1996
3.8 Mr Aspden's litigation against Birchall Blackburn and the Smith Partnership
64. I regret to have to make the finding which is inevitable on any proper analysis of the facts of the case, that Mr Aspden has deliberately misrepresented the truth as to the circumstances in which settlement of his claim against Webb's Poultry was achieved in late 1997 and early 1998. He has misconstrued the documentation in an attempt retrospectively to construct a case that was simply never there. In doing so he has attacked the credibility of a highly competent and thoroughly honest solicitor whose actions in negotiating the settlement were at all times carried out with the interests of Mr Aspden uppermost. It is quite clear to me that at the time, everyone professionally advising him genuinely believed that only a fool would have failed to agree to the settlement on the terms agreed.
65. In my judgment not only must this claim be dismissed, but it was a claim that should never have been brought.
3.9 The Transfer of Outlaithe Barn in 2006
Mr Aspden's case
1. He describes Judge Grenfell's ruling on Wednesday 18 January 2006 as "the worst day of my life". He said that he contemplated suicide and that his emotional state was low.
2. On Friday 20 January 2006 he spoke to Ms Elvy on the telephone. She came to see him the following day (Saturday 21 January 2006). He told her that that if the worst came to the worst there would be a charge of the farm to cover any order for costs. He said he would ring fence the farmhouse which should be sufficient to cover both parties' costs and that he would draw out £60,000 in cash from his bank account to prevent it being used for costs.
3. He said he thought he could convert the barn to be his new home. Ms Elvy said that she too would be losing her home because the child benefit would cease. That prompted Mr Aspden to say that Ms Elvy was welcome to come with the children and live with him in the barn. Ms Elvy accepted. He then proposed marriage suggesting a registry office. Ms Elvy did not accept at once. She said she would need time to think about it.
4. Later on 21 January 2006 Ms Elvy suggested putting the remainder of the property in her name so as to make it more difficult for the creditors to recover it if the farmhouse was insufficient to pay the costs. There was a discussion about Inheritance Tax ("IHT"). Ms Elvy said that if everything was in her name there would not be an IHT bill if Mr Aspden died before her. Mr Aspden however was concerned that if he died first he would be left with an IHT bill on his own property. He suggested that it would not be in their interest to sign over all the property and he thus suggested dividing it into two parts. He says that they walked the boundaries to decide a suitable division of the remainder of the property.
5. On Sunday 22 January 2006 Ms Elvy came to Outlaithe Farm before lunch. She was still keen that the whole of the remainder of the property should be put in her name. She said that because we were getting married IHT would no longer be an issue for either of them. She suggested that the parties make "back to back" wills.
6. Mr Aspden accepted the suggestion. He told Ms Elvy that she was probably right and that it was best to put the remainder of the property in her name. Ms Elvy said that they ought to get a move on and invited Mr Aspden to give her the Deeds which she would take to a non-practising solicitor friend, Mr Tordoff.
7. Ms Elvy took the Deeds and returned the same day. Mr Tordoff would do the conveyancing free of charge but required £220 for land registry fee. He gave her a cheque for £200.
Ms Elvy's case
1. She describes Mr Aspden as becoming increasingly tense as the litigation against Birchall Blackburn and The Smith Partnership came to fruition. Some two weeks before the action was due to be heard he spoke to Ms Elvy at the kennels. He was in a state. He told her he was going to lose the farm. He would have to put the farmhouse up for sale so he could pay his debts.
2. Ms Elvy had the Noah's Ark business there. In addition there were two elderly horses which would have to be put down. She suggested he did not have to sell the whole of the property He could split it to get the value from the house to pay the debts off.
3. A day or two later Mr Aspden approached Ms Elvy and thrust the Deeds at her. He told her to take them and put the property into her name. She was surprised and queried his reasoning. He said the property was going to come to her anyway so she might as well have it then.
4. Ms Elvy went to see Mr Tordoff. He advised her that she should not put the whole property into her own name as she would be party to a fraudulent transaction in an attempt to deprive the creditors of assets and funds. Mr Tordoff suggested that the property be divided so as to ensure that the value of Mr Aspden's part exceeded the amount due to creditors.
5. Ms Elvy explained this to Mr Aspden who agreed. Ms Elvy returned to Mr Tordoff who agreed to draw up the plans for the Transfer and prepare any relevant Deeds. He said that it would take about a fortnight. Ms Elvy recalls that it did take about a fortnight. She also recalls that they walked the boundaries to identify the boundaries of the part to be sold off.
6. Once Mr Tordoff had prepared the relevant documents she collected them and took them with the witness (her neighbour Mrs Leigh) to be signed. She then took them back to Mr Tordoff who informed her that he needed £220 for the Land Registry fee. The next day she went back to Mr Aspden who gave her a cheque for the £220 fee.
The documents
The Transfer
The Office Copy
The cheque for the Land Registry Fee
Mr Aspden's Will
Mr Aspden's Bank Statement
Newspaper Advertisement.
3.10 The sale of Outlaithe Farm
3.11 Conversion of Outlaithe Barn
The works
The cost of the works
3.12 These proceedings
There was never any understanding or intention that there would be any continuing interest in favour of [Mr Aspden] in the property. It is accepted that your client made further small gifts of money when our client began renovating the barn but not specifically for this purpose. To suggest that the gifts amounted to £100,000 is fanciful and we question whether your client would e able to provide evidence of such payments.
4. The Law
4.1 Beneficial Entitlement[1]
1. The starting point or presumption is that the parties hold the property as beneficial joint tenants. The presumption is difficult to displace or rebut. It can be rebutted where it is established that the parties actually intended at the time of acquisition of the property to hold in equity otherwise than as joint tenants. Guidance is given in paragraph 69 of the speech of Baroness Hale as to the factors necessary to rebut the presumption.
2. At the first stage the intention is to be deduced objectively – it is the intention which was reasonably understood by the other party to be manifested by that other party's words or conduct. If the intention so deduced indicates in what shares the property was to be held the court gives effect to that intention.
3. If the intention so deduced does not indicate in what shares the property was to be held then (at this stage) the court is obliged to decide upon their respective entitlement by reference to what is fair having regard to the whole course of dealing in relation to the property
4. If the parties' intention changes subsequently the court is obliged to give effect to the changed intention. In such a case the court must first seek to ascertain the changed intention objectively and where possible give effect to that intention. Where that search proves fruitless the court is entitled to decide upon that intention by reference to what is fair.
63. …There are differences between sole and joint names cases when trying to divine the common intentions or understanding between the parties. I know of no case in which a sole legal owner (there being no declaration of trust) has been held to hold the property on a beneficial joint tenancy. But a court may well hold that joint legal owners (there being no declaration of trust) are also beneficial joint tenants. Another difference is that it will almost always have been a conscious decision to put the house into joint names. Even if the parties have not executed the transfer, they will usually, if not invariably, have executed the contract which precedes it. Committing oneself to spend large sums of money on a place to live is not normally done by accident or without giving it a moment's thought.
69. …When a couple are joint owners of the home and jointly liable for the mortgage, the inferences to be drawn from who pays for what may be very different from the inferences to be drawn when only one is owner of the home. The arithmetical calculation of how much was paid by each is also likely to be less important. It will be easier to draw the inference that they intended that each should contribute as much to the household as they reasonably could and that they would share the eventual benefit or burden equally. The parties' individual characters and personalities may also be a factor in deciding where their true intentions lay. In the cohabitation context, mercenary considerations may be more to the fore than they would be in marriage, but it should not be assumed that they always take pride of place over natural love and affection. At the end of the day, having taken all this into account, cases in which the joint legal owners are to be taken to have intended that their beneficial interests should be different from their legal interests will be very unusual.
In paragraphs 16 and 17 of the judgments of Lord Walker and Baroness Hale in Jones v Kernott they said:
16. …To the extent that we recognise that a "common intention" trust is of central importance to "joint names" as well as "single names" cases, we are going some way to meet that hope. Nevertheless it is important to point out that the starting point for analysis is different in the two situations. That is so even though it may be necessary to enquire into the varied circumstances and reasons why a house or flat has been acquired in a single name or in joint names…
17. The starting point is different because the claimant whose name is not on the proprietorship register has the burden of establishing some sort of implied trust, normally what is now termed a "common intention" constructive trust. The claimant whose name is on the register starts (in the absence of an express declaration of trust in different terms, and subject to what is said below about resulting trusts) with the presumption (or assumption) of a beneficial joint tenancy.
"... if the circumstances so demand, a constructive trust can arise some years after the property has been acquired by, and registered in the sole name of, one party who (at the time of the acquisition) was, beyond dispute, the sole beneficial owner: Gissing v. Gissing [1971] AC 886 901 D-E and Bernard v. Josephs [1982] Ch 391, 404 E-F. But, as those cases show in the absence of an express post-acquisition agreement, a court will be slow to infer from conduct alone that parties intended to vary existing beneficial interests established at the time of acquisition."
97. Jones v Kernott was, however, a case where such an intention was inferred by the county court judge whose decision was upheld by a deputy high court judge, one member of the Court of Appeal and five members of the Supreme Court.
4.2 Proprietary Estoppel
[15] Lord Walker, in para 29 of his opinion, identified the three main elements requisite for a claim based on proprietary estoppel as, first, a representation made or assurance given to the claimant; second, reliance by the claimant on the representation or assurance; and, third, some detriment incurred by the claimant as a consequence of that reliance. These elements would, I think, always be necessary but might, in a particular case, not be sufficient. Thus, for example, the representation or assurance would need to have been sufficiently clear and unequivocal; the reliance by the claimant would need to have been reasonable in all the circumstances; and the detriment would need to have been sufficiently substantial to justify the intervention of equity.
There is a clear line of authority from at least Crabb to the present day which establishes that once the elements of proprietary estoppel are established an equity arises. The value of that equity will depend upon all the circumstances including the expectation and the detriment. The task of the court is to do justice. The most essential requirement is that there must be proportionality between the expectation and the detriment.
5. Findings of Fact/ Conclusions .
5.1 Acquisition of Outlaithe Farm
It follows that in my view Mr Aspden was entitled to Outlaithe Farm both at law and in equity at the time of its acquisition in 1986.
5.2 Work carried out by Ms Elvy on Outlaithe Farm.
5.3 Domestic Violence
5.4 The Transfer of Outlaithe Barn
1. The Transfer is dated 21 January 2006, yet on Mr Aspden's account he did not agree to the transfer until the following day. It is, of course, possible that the Transfer has been misdated by Mr Tordoff but there is no reason why he should have put the wrong date on it.
2. Mr Aspden's chronology gives a very short timescale for the preparation of the Transfer by Mr Tordoff. The 22 January 2006 was a Sunday. It is, of course possible that Mr Tordoff could have drawn up the Transfer (including the plan) on the 22 January 2006 but it is inherently unlikely. In evidence Mr Aspden thought that there was about a week between the agreement and the date when it was signed but this is not possible on Mr Aspden's account. First it is common ground that Mr Aspden wrote the cheque to the Land Registry on 22 January 2006. There is no reason why he would have done that before the transfer was executed. Second it is clear that the Land Registry received the application on 25 January 2006. It must therefore have been sent by 24 January 2006 at the latest.
3. If, as Mr Aspden asserts, the parties agreed make back to back wills why did Ms Elvy not make such a will on 24 January 2006? Mr Aspden purchased a will form from W H Smith. Why did he not purchase two forms? Ms Elvy was present at and organised the execution of Mr Aspden's will. It would have been the simplest thing for her to execute her will at the same time.
4. If, as the advertisement in the Craven Herald suggests the instructions were "New" Mr Aspden must be wrong when he says he put Outlaithe Farm on the market in January 2006.
5. Mr Aspden's account is extremely complicated and convoluted involving a number of different proposals and discussions including discussions about disposals aimed to defeat creditors and involving spouse exemptions for IHT. It did not surprise me in the least when Ms Elvy said she knew nothing about IHT.
6. If, as Mr Aspden asserts Ms Elvy agreed to marry him it is somewhat surprising that he did not mention marriage again to her during the course of the conversion works and did not tell the children.
5.5 Conversion of Outlaithe Barn
The work carried out by Mr Aspden
The financial contribution of Mr Aspden
5.6 Interest acquired by Mr Aspden
It might in exceptional circumstances be inferred that the parties agreed to alter their beneficial interests after the house was bought; an example would be if the man bought the house in the first place and the woman years later used a legacy to build an extra floor to make more room for the children. In such circumstances the obvious inference would be that the parties agreed that the woman should acquire a share in the greatly increased value of the house produced by her money …
6. Conclusion
Note 1 Much of this part of the judgment is derived from an extra judicial lecture given by HH Judge Stuart Bridge to the Judicial College and for which I am greatly indebted. [Back]