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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 >> Baker & Anor v Dunne & Ors [2016] EWHC 2318 (Ch) (20 September 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2016/2318.html Cite as: [2016] EWHC 2318 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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(1) PHILIP THOMAS BAKER (2) RAYMOND WILLIAM PREEDY |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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(1) JONATHAN ANTHONY DUNNE (2) SARAH FENTON (3) PETER LEE DUNNE |
Defendants |
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Clare Stanley QC (instructed by Jirehouse) for the First Defendant
Mark Mullen (instructed by Wedlake Bell LLP) for the Second and Third Defendants
Hearing date: 14 July 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
CHIEF MASTER MARSH :
Background
i) On 20 January 2016 and subsequently on 2 February 2016 CRS wrote to Jirehouse seeking proposals for the delivery of vacant possession. The second letter said the Trustees would be seeking a writ of possession.
ii) On 4 February 2016 Jirehouse responded and provided a valuation report from Mr Martin Willis FRICS of Fleurets. The report is dated January 2015 (some 12 months before it was provided to the Trustees). He valued the freehold of the premises on a vacant possession basis at £2.1 million and advised that the market rent was £100,000.00. He gave an investment value figure for the property of £1.58 million assuming that one of Jonathan's companies was in occupation and trading.
iii) Jirehouse also provided a letter of 5 November 2015 advising that marriage value for a tenant as of February 2015 was £190,000.00. Jirehouse alleged that it would be a breach of trust for the Trustees to seek vacant possession because the value of the premises would be increased by Jonathan remaining in possession and running the business. They also said that if he was not permitted to remain in possession, he would remove the fixtures and fittings, furnishings and effects including amongst other items the windows, doors, staircase, flooring and so on.
iv) On 15 February 2016 CRS replied. They pointed out that the removal of fixtures and fittings and other items would constitute criminal damage and they took issue with some of the advice provided by Mr Willis. Importantly, the suggestion that seeking vacant possession would be a breach of trust was denied not least because the Trustees had obtained Beddoe relief in connection with the Possession Proceedings. CRS went on to say that Jonathan and his companies were estopped from claiming breach of trust having had an opportunity to raise this suggestion in the original Beddoe proceedings, the Possession Proceedings and the application to the Court of Appeal for a stay.
v) In their reply dated 29 February 2016 Jirehouse disputed the estoppel.
"17. Should the Trustees follow through on their threatened scheme, any trading, marketing, and any sale purporting to be of a going concern would;
(1) Represent that the business was trading through or with the AA Group's approval or authority (and not that of another company);
(2) Represent that the services were being provided, or made available, with the AA Group's approval or authority (as not that of another organisation or group);
(3) Represent that the Albert Arms business was continuously trading as part of the AA Group and that the same custom ought to be attracted;
(4) Represent that any such marketing or sale was with the AA Group's approval, authority, or sanction.
18. However, the representations would not be true as;
(1) Any such trading or provision of services would not be within the AA Group's approval or authority;
(2) The business would not have been continually trading as part of the AA Group;
(3) Any trading as the 'Albert Arms' or anything colourably similar would not be affiliated with the AA Group;
(4) There would be no ongoing link between the AA Group and the Freehold property."
"I GIVE to my Executors all my interest in the freehold public house known as The Albert Arms … including the contents thereof the stock-in-trade and the goodwill of the business of publicans run from the premises ….".
It is not open to Jonathan to appropriate that goodwill to himself by virtue by virtue of his occupation and use of the Albert Arms without legal entitlement. Such goodwill as is truly personal to him and his companies will remain his and may be taken with him.
i) Disputed the Trustees construction of the trusts which necessitated the construction claim but conceded the issue shortly before the hearing.
ii) Resisted the Trustees application for authorisation to pursue possession proceedings but was unsuccessful.
iii) Resisted the possession proceedings and again was unsuccessful. Ultimately his appeal, on a ground which was not raised before Master Matthews, was also unsuccessful.
iv) Issued separate proceedings against the second defendant (claim HC-2015-000626) in respect to a further property which the defendants have a beneficial interest. He failed to attend a directions hearing in February 2016, failed to comply with subsequent directions as a result of which his claim was struck out and failed to pay costs which were to be paid as a condition of relief from sanctions and reinstatement of the claim even though Jirehouse undertook to pay such costs.
v) Made an application seeking an order that he be entitled to set off the costs which he was ordered to pay in respect of the Trustees application for authorisation to bring possession proceedings against the sums to which he claimed to be entitled in claim HC-2015-000626. That application was unsuccessful.
vi) Issued breach of confidentiality proceedings against the second defendant.
vii) Threatened to remove fixtures and fittings from the Albert Arms.
viii) Very late in the day, threatened the Trustees with breach of trust proceedings and with a claim for passing off.
Henderson v Henderson estoppel
"The Court of Appeal made four points of general application: [1] if the prospects of success are uncertain but the case is not suitable for summary judgment for either party, it is inappropriate to weigh the prospects of success in the balance in deciding whether it is an abuse of process to bring the claim in the later proceedings …; [2] delay, of itself, is not relevant to whether the second claim is an abuse of process; [3] a claimant's failure to use reasonable diligence in finding out facts relevant to whether they had a possible claim might be relevant to the abuse of process issue, but there was no general principle that a potential claimant was under a duty to exercise reasonable diligence to find out the facts relevant to whether they had or might have a claim; [4] a claimant who keeps a second claim up their sleeve while prosecuting the first is at high risk of being held to have abused the court's process. Furthermore, as was stated in Aldi Stores, the proper course is for the claimant to raise the possibility of the second claim with the court so that appropriate case management directions can be given."
Conclusion