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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 >> The Charity Commission for England and Wales v Framjee & Ors [2014] EWHC 2507 (Ch) (22 July 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2014/2507.html Cite as: [2014] WTLR 1489, [2015] WLR 16, [2014] EWHC 2507 (Ch), [2014] WLR(D) 340, [2015] 1 WLR 16, 17 ITELR 271 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Rolls Building, Fetter Lane London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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The Charity Commission for England and Wales |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) Pesh Framjee (2) Bryan Gunn (3) Donna Naghshineh (4) Keith Colman (5) Peter Farley |
Defendants |
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Ms Charlotte Ford (instructed by Pinsent Masons LLP) for the First Defendant
Ms Francesca Quint (instructed by Russell-Cooke LLP) for the Fourth Defendant
Hearing date: 3rd July 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE HENDERSON :
Introduction
Background
"…by reason of any mistake or omission made in good faith by any Trustee hereof or by reason of any other matter or thing other than the wilful and individual fraud on the part of the Trustee who is sought to be made liable."
The trustees had wide powers of investment, and various other administrative powers to which it is unnecessary to refer.
"Thus, on a £100 donation to a nominated charity which qualified for Gift Aid, the administration fee would be £3.99 from the Gift Aid recovered on the donation (which, on £100 at basic rate, would be £25). The nominated charity would accordingly be entitled to receive £121.01."
(a) that donations were made to the Dove Trust acting through its trustees as a principal, and not merely as an agent for the intended ultimate recipients of the gifts;
(b) that gift aid was accordingly claimed by the Dove Trust in it own right on donations made by individuals who had given the necessary gift aid declaration relating to the gift, even if the same gift made directly to the intended ultimate recipient may not have qualified (for example because it was not a charity under English law); and
(c) that the "terms and conditions" section of the website says nothing expressly about the nature of the legal relationship between donors and the Dove Trust.
Issues
(a) Did the arrangements under which the Website was operated give rise to a trust or trusts, and (if so) of what nature?
(b) Did the arrangements give rise to a contract between the donor and the Dove Trust, and (if so) what were its terms?
(c) How should the remaining funds in the Dove Trust which are referable to donations made through the Website for specified charities or good causes be distributed among the recipients nominated by the donors? In particular, should the distribution be made:
(i) on a "first in, first out" basis, in accordance with the rule in Clayton's Case;(ii) on a rateable basis, under which all the unpaid beneficiaries share pari passu; or(iii) in accordance with a simplified version of the rolling charge, or North American method, whereby two pools of assets would be created depending on whether the donations were made before or after 6 June 2013, and each pool would then be divided pro rata between the recipients entitled to share in it?
The Website
"CharityGiving is a site run by a UK charity with nearly 30 years experience in the fundraising world. CharityGiving is dedicated to giving you quality information and advice about how you can give to charities and good causes anywhere in the world, online, by telephone or post.
However you are raising money for your favourite charity, our dynamic fundraising system will help you get the most from your hard work and effort, and your supporters will be with you all the way.
We will increase your giving by up to 25% by claiming Gift Aid tax for UK taxpayers…"
"For all donations Gift Aid is the simplest and most effective method of tax-efficient giving.
You can make donations to the Dove Trust at any time.
Once you have given us a gift aid declaration, which you can do online, or by post, e-mail or telephone, you can then make donations to the Dove Trust whenever you wish.
Each donation you make is treated separately under the Gift Aid system, and there is no maximum limit to the amount you can give.
All you have to be is a UK taxpayer, paying tax of at least as much as we can reclaim.
We will reclaim the tax on your donations as soon as possible, and inform you when it is available for distribution.
Your gifts can be anonymous if you wish…
You can let the recipient know who you are if you wish – you stay in the control of how you give at all times.
You can then split your donation (money or shares) to give to as many causes as you wish, whenever you want to.
You can make one-off gifts or regular, with no administration required for the recipients of your gifts.
If you are not a UK taxpayer you can still give through the Dove Trust, and keep your giving administration simple, but we will not be able to add tax to your account."
It was then explained how the system could be used by groups of people with a common cause or purpose, and by companies or other business donors. It was pointed out that if a business was a limited company, it would receive tax relief on its giving, but the Gift Aid rules would not apply to it so the Dove Trust would be unable to supplement the donation.
"Online giving is just like a one-off donation, except that you can do it all online, at your convenience. When you make a donation online, you will be given all the options on the screen. If you want to give your money away immediately, you can choose from a list of charities or enter the charity of your choice, but you must enter the charity's registration number and name so that we can check the charity's credentials before making a gift. All online donations will be added to your account, and the tax information sent to you at the end of the year with your statement."
Four steps to giving online were then set out, the second of which said that gift aid tax, if any, "will then [be] added to your account and is ready for you to give away." There was then an illustration of how a donor could "search for the charity or good cause you would like to make a donation to", and a number of boxes showing the different stages of the donation process. The general impression given, I think it is fair to say, is that the donor was being invited to make a gift to a charity or good cause of his choice, but to do so through the machinery provided by the Dove Trust, and on the footing that the Dove Trust would (where possible) recover gift aid tax and add it to the donation.
"After a donor makes a donation, when we claim gift aid tax we make a charge of 3.99% of the net gift (which works out at approximately 3.1% of the gross gift when the tax is added), which is deducted by us from the tax before we send it on to the recipient charity.
So if someone gives £10, we claim £2.50 tax, charge 40p and send on £12.10.
If there is no Gift Aid tax to claim (eg from donations by companies, non-taxpayers, overseas donors etc) then we make no charge at all.
…
We make no charge at all for setting up a page, and no charge to the charity which benefits."
Did the arrangements give rise to a trust?
a) In order for a trust to be established, it is not necessary for a settlor to use the word "trust" or any other formal language, or to have any knowledge of trust law, so long as the traditional "three certainties" (of words, subject-matter and objects) are satisfied: see generally Lewin on Trusts (18th edition, 2008) paragraphs 4-01 to 4-18, and cases such as Paul v Constance [1977] 1 WLR 527 (CA).
b) Where money is transferred to a recipient to be paid to a third party, and that money is not intended to be at the free disposal of the recipient, it is likely that a trust will arise: see Twinsectra Ltd v Yardley [2002] UKHL 12, [2002] 2 AC 164, at [68] and [73] to [74] per Lord Millett, and the discussion in Lewin of Quistclose trusts at paragraphs 8-38 to 8-57.
c) Although not a pre-requisite, if there is a requirement for the money to be held by the recipient in a separate account, that will be a strong pointer in favour of the existence of a trust: see Twinsectra at [95], where Lord Millett referred to "the evidential significance of a requirement that the money should be kept in a separate account", and Snell's Equity (32nd edition, 2010) at paragraphs 22-015 and 25-034.
d) The court is more likely to find that a trust was intended in a charitable context than in a commercial context. So, for example, in R Jones v Attorney General (9 November 1976, unreported) Brightman J said (at p. 3H of the transcript of his judgment):
"…a person who solicits money for a charity is a trustee of the money for the purpose of handing it to the charity. A member of the public who puts money in the box is a donor of his contribution, not distinguishable in principle from any other donor or settlor of trust funds."
e) Whether the trust is an express trust for the third party, or a Quistclose trust in favour of the transferor with a power to apply the money in accordance with the stated purpose, will depend in particular upon whether it was contemplated that there was a real risk that the purpose for which the money was paid might fail: see Lewin at paragraphs 8-52 and 8-55.
"It is unconscionable for a man to obtain money on terms as to its application and then disregard the terms on which he received it. Such conduct goes beyond a mere breach of contract. As North J explained in Gibert v Gonard (1884) 54 LJ Ch 439, 440:
'It is very well known law that if one person makes a payment to another for a certain purpose, and that person takes the money knowing that it is for that purpose, he must apply it to the purpose for which it was given. He may decline to take it if he likes; but if he chooses to accept the money tendered for a particular purpose, it is his duty, and there is a legal obligation on him, to apply it for that purpose.'
The duty is not contractual but fiduciary. It may exist despite the absence of any contract at all between the parties…and it binds third parties as in the Quistclose case itself. The duty is fiduciary in character because a person who makes money available on terms that it is to be used for a particular purpose only and not for any other purpose thereby places his trust and confidence in the recipient to ensure that it is properly applied. This is a classic situation in which a fiduciary relationship arises, and since it arises in respect of a specific fund it gives rise to a trust."
"…that a donor does not direct a special application of his gift unless he subjects it to a trust which prevents the governing body of the charity from using it for its general purposes. The fact that he expects it to be used – and that it is in fact used – for a special purpose is not enough."
Was there a contract?
How should the remaining funds be distributed?
"It is plain from all three of the judgments in the Barlow Clowes case, the third being that of Dillon LJ, that the rule can be displaced by even a slight counterweight. Indeed, in terms of its actual application between beneficiaries who have in any sense met a shared misfortune, it might be more accurate to refer to the exception that is, rather than the rule in, Clayton's Case."
"We were indeed referred in the course of the argument to a third possible basis of distribution, which was called the 'rolling charge' or 'North American' method. This has been preferred by the Canadian and United States courts to tracing in accordance with Clayton's Case, as more equitable: see for instance the decision of the Ontario Court of Appeal in Re Ontario Securities Commission v Greymac Credit Corp (1986) 55 OR (2d) 673. This method goes on the basis that where funds of several depositors, or sources, have been blended in one account, each debit to the account, unless unequivocally attributable to the monies of one depositor or source (e.g. as if an investment was purchased for one), should be attributed to all the depositors so as to reduce all their deposits pro rata, instead of being attributed, as under Clayton's Case, to the earliest deposits in point of time. The reasoning is that if there is an account which has been fed only with trust monies deposited by a number of individuals, and the account holder misapplies a sum from the account for his own purposes, and that sum is lost, it is fair that the loss should be borne by all the depositors pro rata, rather than that the whole loss should fall first on the depositor who made the earliest deposit in point of time. The complexities of this method would, however, in a case where there are as many depositors as in the present case, and even with the benefits of modern computer technology, be so great and the cost would be so high, that no-one has thought to urge the Court to adopt it, and I would reject it as impracticable in the present case."
"The second solution for resolving the claims of the investors among themselves is the rolling charge or North American solution ("North American" because it is the solution adopted or favoured in preference to the rule in Clayton's Case in certain decisions of the courts in the United States and Canada because it is regarded as being manifestly fairer). This solution involves treating credits to a bank account made at different times and from different sources as a blend or cocktail with the result that when a withdrawal is made from the account it is treated as a withdrawal in the same proportions as the different interests in the account (here of the investments) bear to each other at the moment before the withdrawal is made. This solution should produce the most just result, but in this case, as counsel accept, it is not a live contender, and while it might just be possible to perform the exercise the costs involved would be out of all proportion even to the sizeable sums which are here involved."
"As between beneficiaries to whom money in an account belongs, they should share loss in proportion to their interest in the account immediately before each withdrawal. The fairness of that course is obvious. It is exemplified by the judgment of the Court in Re Ontario Securities Commission v Greymac Credit Corp (1986) 55 OR (2d) 673. But if, as here, that calculation is too difficult or expensive, the beneficiaries should in my judgment share rateably."