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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 >> Rosesilver Group Corp v Paton [2015] EWHC 1758 (Ch) (19 June 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2015/1758.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 1758 (Ch), [2015] CN 1037 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Rolls Building, 7 Rolls Buildings Fetter Lane, London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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Rosesilver Group Corp. |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Ian Paton |
Defendant |
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Mr Kavan Gunaratna (instructed by Strafford Law Ltd) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 11th & 12th June 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Mann:
(a) The price is expressed to be £850,000.
(b) The purchase price is said to be payable as to £90,000 on the date of the contract, £210,000 to Miss Clutterbuck, and as to £550,000 on completion.
(c) The deposit is said to be £300,000 pounds.
(d) Clause 3 says: "A deposit in the sum specified in the Schedule has been paid either by telegraphic transfer to the Seller's Solicitors client account…". The solicitors are identified as Messrs Brook Martin and Co. One of the principals in that firm is a Mr Stephen Brook; further reference will be made to him below.
(e) The completion date is said to be "Upon seven days written notice to be served by the Buyer upon the Seller". Added to those typed words are the manuscript words "and upon completion Amanda Clutterbuck will if in occupation deliver vacant possession of the property".
(f) Clause 24 is an "Entire Contract" clause which provides:
"This agreement constitutes the entire agreement between the parties to the exclusion of any antecedent statement or representation whether oral or written and/or implied… and the Buyer hereby acknowledges that save as to the written statements of the Seller's Solicitors prior to the making of this Agreement the Buyer has not entered into this agreement in reliance wholly or partly on any statement or representation made to the Buyer and the parties agree that this Agreement may only be varied or modified (whether by way of collateral contract or otherwise) in writing under the hands of the parties or their Solicitors."
(g) Clause 26 provides:
"Amanda Clutterbuck hereby acknowledges that at the request of Ian Paton the Buyer has paid direct to her the sum of £210,000 prior to the date hereof and Ian Paton acknowledges that he so directed payment and that the same be a credit against the purchase price herein."
(h) The Buyer is defined in the schedule as being the present claimant. Miss Clutterbuck's name also appears there, but it has been deleted and the deletion initialled. The amount of the deposit and the "capacity in which deposit is held" have been inserted in manuscript, and those additions, together with the manuscript addition to the completion date provision (identified above) have all been initialled apparently by Mr Paton and Miss Clutterbuck. Miss Clutterbuck has also signed the contract.
(a) The purchase price is deemed to be £1,000,000 instead of £850,000 and is deemed to be inclusive of the payments to be made in accordance with clause 4. In fact in his evidence Mr Forrester says that the clause 4 sums were to be paid in addition to the £1m.
(b) Under clause 26 of the first agreement, the sum of £210,000 (payable to Miss Clutterbuck) should be deemed to read £360,000, and in the Supplemental Agreement Miss Clutterbuck acknowledged at the request of the Seller that the buyer had paid that sum to her directly prior to the date thereof, and the Seller acknowledged that he had so directed payment and that the same be credited against the purchase price.
(c) Mr Paton and Miss Clutterbuck acknowledged that the amounts respectively paid to them to date in cash and amounting in aggregate to £450,000 were paid by Sator on behalf of the Seller. This averment does not make sense. I suspect that the "by" should be a "to".
(d) Under clause 3.1 the seller agreed to make and pursue a ninety year lease extension. On completion the seller was to assign for no consideration the benefit of that claim. Clause 4 provided that the buyer would provide to the Seller all payments due in order to conclude the making of such a claim.
(e) The agreement was signed by Mr Paton and Miss Clutterbuck.
(a) The two contracts were admitted as being documents entered into by Mr Paton and the claimant. However, it was averred that the manuscript addition about completion was not original and had been added after execution by a person unknown and without the knowledge of Mr Paton. This allegation was made notwithstanding the fact that he seemed to have initialled those words. Mr Barry Isaacs QC, who appeared for the claimant on this application, described that as an allegation of forgery. I'm not sure that that is a fair characterisation of the allegation, but it is right to observe that by the time the application came before me that point seems to have been abandoned by Mr Paton.
(b) Paragraph 4 reads:
"4 The Defendant entered into the May 2011 agreement in order to provide security for loan finance from [Sator] to the defendant and/or Amanda Clutterbuck ("Ms Clutterbuck"), the primary purpose of such loans… being to finance the Defendant's and Ms Clutterbuck's proceedings against a woman going by the name of Sarah Al Amoudi ("the Al Amoudi litigation") and related litigation. As at 2011 the property was worth approximately £1.1 million and the Defendant simply would not have sold it for £850,000. The Defendant was induced to enter into the May 2011 agreement by Stephen Brook ("Mr Brook") a partner of Brook Martin & Co-solicitors ("BM"). In particular:
(a) Mr Brook was and had been since approximately 2004 the Defendant's and Ms Clutterbuck's solicitor and the Defendant trusted Mr Brook to act in his best interests;
(b) In breach of his duties including fiduciary duties to the Defendant, and despite representing BM [Brook Martin, Mr Brook's firm] as being the Defendant's solicitors, in (and possibly before) and after 2011 Mr Brook was in reality acting primarily or solely for the Claimant and (unknown to the Defendant at the time) acting primarily to promote the best interests of the Claimant and/or Sator at the Defendant's expense;
(c) The Defendant entered into the May 2011 agreement and into the agreement dated 31st May 2013 referred to in the Particulars of Claim… relying upon representations by the Claimant and by Mr Brook (in reality on the Claimant's behalf) that the Claimant had no intention whatever of taking any action to compel the sale and/or transfer the property from the Defendant to the Claimant unless the Al Amoudi litigation and related litigation were completely unsuccessful; such representations were made fraudulently either known by the maker not to be true or with the maker's recklessness as to whether or not they were true;
(d) As at 2013, the value of the property had increased such that it was worth significantly more than £1.1 million."
(c) Paragraph 5 pleads that by reason of breaches of fiduciary duty and fraudulent misrepresentation Mr Paton was entitled to, and thereby did, treat the two agreements as rescinded.
(a) Paragraph 5 contained a repetition of the averment that the May 2011 agreement was "to provide security", in the same terms as the paragraph set out above, but ending with the words: "its being envisaged that such loans would be repaid following successful conclusion of the Al Amoudi litigation or the Defendant and Ms Clutterbuck's claim [described as "the EN litigation"].
(b) Paragraph 6 contains the same denial that the manuscript addition to the completion provision was present on the original contract.
(c) Paragraph 8 reads:
"Immediately prior to the Defendant's signing the May 2011 agreement, Mr Brook confirmed to the Defendant that the purpose of the May 2011 agreement was to provide Sator with security for its said loans in case the Defendant was unable to repay the loan if the Al Amoudi litigation was lost. It was agreed that part of the loan monies would therefore be treated as a deposit paid, in the event that a sale was to be pursued. The Defendant was told by Mr Brook as agent for the Claimant that the Claimant would not take any action to compel the sale and/or transfer of the property from the Defendant to the Claimant unless the Al Amoudi litigation and related litigation [being the EN litigation] concluded completely unsuccessfully; and that if the Defendant and/or Ms Clutterbuck repaid the said loan to Sator, the May 2011 agreement would cease to have effect. This amounted to a promise by the Claimant, which the Defendant accepted, and it was an expressly agreed term that the sale would not proceed unless the Defendant had failed to repay the loan on conclusion of the Al Amoudi litigation."
(d) paragraph 9 pleads that the Al Amoudi application had not been concluded. Paragraph 10 records that the May 2011 agreement failed to record the expressly agreed term, that that failure was an oversight and seeks rectification. Paragraph 12 pleads breach of fiduciary duty on the part of Mr Brook, based on his acting as solicitor for the Claimant as well as being "solicitor and trusted adviser of the Defendant". There is an alternative averment that Mr Brook had "a connection or financial interest in Sator which was not declared to the Defendant at the time of the agreement."
(d) paragraphs 14 and 15 contain an undue influence claim against Mr Brook.
"9. Mr Brook represented to us before we exchanged contracts with Rosesilver that this contract would be mutually rescinded following the outcome of either the SAA [the Al Amoudi] litigation or the EN proceedings which contrary to Mr Forrester's evidence are still both ongoing."
"Mr Brook's failure to induce me to sign my signature to [a particular consent document]… I believe caused Mr Brook to instigate these proceedings in breach of our understanding that the contract would be rescinded at the end of the SAA and EN proceedings."
Once again, absolutely no explanation is given. All she says about it is to quote an email of 20th June 2014, to which I return below.
"The monies will be provided by Sator Properties Ltd who have a second all monies Charge on the property, as you know.
As we have discussed in the past, the hope is that the outcome of your current litigation cases will be such as to allow you and Ian to repay Sator, at least, its capital debt which you will see from the enclosed current list this stands at £1,507,437.33 (and to which will be added the cost of the enfranchisement). That being the case you will be able to retain ownership of this flat in which, of course, the Lease will have been extended from 50 years with a ground rent to 140 years with no ground rent."
You have already signed documentation to confirm that you will vacate the flat in the event of the Sale Contract to Rosesilver Group Corp proceeding to completion but for the sake of good order and from the perspective of Sator, I am enclosing a declaration for signing by you confirming what it says, ie that in the event that Sator calls in its loan you understand that you have to vacate …"
"See attached. [The attachment is not exhibited in these proceedings but can be inferred to be a document relating to the amount required to acquire the extended lease.]
If you add Asbury's fees it makes a totals [sic] of £195,044.80 which, from previous discussions, we are agreed is a very good price for a 90 year extension of both flat and parking space and extinguishment of the ground rent.
Rosesilver Corp Group has to pay this under the sale contract and Martin [Mr Forrester] has confirmed that it will do so.
I wrote to Amanda last week with a consent form to sign so that the housekeeping is in order and she told Guy that she was going to sign this before a solicitor and return it to me. Whether or not she signs it the fact is that the sale to Rosesilver is with vacant possession on completion and you have Beth [presumably "both"] signed the contract to so provide. My strategy, as you know, has been to try and so agree things with Martin that we wait for the outcome of the Nicholl case [the EN litigation] before he completes the contract to buy in the hope that you will be able to repay your debts to him (for which, as you know, I am now 50% responsible) and the contract can be mutually rescinded. However, with almost a one-month unexplained silence from you both and with all emails and voice messages ignored this is a difficult notion to sell and that should not surprise you…"
(i) Mr Forrester's evidence was that the money which the contract stated to have been paid to Miss Clutterbuck was set off against her indebtedness to Sator, and had that not happened then Sator would not have then lent further moneys to her. However, a form of statement of account exhibited by Mr Forrester does not show any such reduction. In fact, it not only fails to record that reduction, it actually contains a positive note to the effect that the £450,000 payable to Miss Clutterbuck was to be "set off on completion against the deposit payable on the sale [of the property]." His witness statement suggests that he considered this to have been consistent with the contract and what he has said earlier about the treatment of the moneys, but it plainly is not.
(ii) The two items of correspondence identified above demonstrate that there was apparently some discussion about rescinding the contract if the loans were repaid. These assertions, made by Mr Brook, who acted for Rosesilver in the matter, do not make obvious commercial sense if the matter was, as Mr Forrester would have it, a "normal" commercial contract for the sale of property at its proper value. There was obviously some discussion of the point, but the motivation for those discussions remains unclear and puzzling. Notwithstanding that, this correspondence does not go far enough to fill in the evidential shortcomings of Miss Clutterbuck's witness statement so as to enable an arguable defence to be established.
(iii) The provision in the contract for completion (on 7 days notice) is unusual.
(iv) There is no satisfactory explanation as to why there was an increase in the purchase price in 2013. Mr Forrester does not offer one. If he had already got a deal, why would he volunteer an increased purchase price?
(v) An email of 6th August 2014 from Mr Brook to Mr Paton says:
"I will write to you separately regarding the sale of the property and the progress made since you and Amanda confirmed to me, on 28th February last, that the property was on the market with Best Gap. Can you please let me have an update as it seems odd that there have been no offers to date."
It was not explained in the evidence why Mr Paton was selling a property which he had agreed to sell to Rosesilver, but by the same token this was not relied on in the application as demonstrating some other relationship in relation to the property.
"If the applicant for summary judgment adduces credible evidence in support of their application, the respondent becomes subject to an evidential burden of proving some real prospect of success or some other reason for a trial. The standard of proof required of the respondent is not high. It suffices merely to rebut the applicant's statement of belief. The language of r.24.2 (no real prospect no other reason ) indicates that, in determining the question, the court must apply a negative test. The respondent's case must carry some degree of conviction: the court is not required to accept without question any assertion they make: Britannia Building Society v Prangley June 12, 2000, unrep. , Ch D; for pre- CPR authorities on this point see National Westminster Bank Plc v Daniel [1993] I W.L.R. 1453 ; [1994] 1 All E.R. 156 and the cases cited therein. However, the proper disposal of an issue under Pt 24 does not involve the judge in conducting a mini-trial (Swain v Hillman [2001] 1 All ER 91). Therefore, the Court hearing a Pt 24 application should be wary of trying issues of fact on evidence where the facts are apparently credible and are to be set against the facts being advanced by the other side. Choosing between them is the function of the trial judge, not the judge on an interim application, unless there is some inherent improbability in what is being asserted or some extraneous evidence which would contradict it (Fashion Gossip Ltd v Esprit Telecoms UK Ltd July 27, 2000, unrep. , CA; cf. Day v RAC Motoring Services Ltd [1999] 1 All E.R. 1007, per Ward L.J. at 1013 propounding the adoption of a negative test on applications to set aside default judgments). When deciding whether the respondent has some real prospect of success the court should not apply the standard which would be applicable at the trial, namely the balance of probabilities on the evidence presented; on an application for summary judgment the court should also consider the evidence that could reasonably be expected to be available at trial (Royal Brompton Hospital NHS Trust v Hammond (No.5) , [2001] EWCA Civ 550, CA)."