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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 >> Goyal v Florence Care Ltd & Ors [2020] EWHC 659 (Ch) (19 March 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2020/659.html Cite as: [2020] EWHC 659 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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VIDYA BHUSHAN GOYAL |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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FLORENCE CARE LIMITED SHANTHI EDWARDS DKLM LLP |
Respondents |
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There was no appearance on behalf of the First and Second Respondents
Nigel Burroughs (instructed by Beale & Company Solicitors LLP) for the Third Respondent
Hearing dates: 20 & 21 February 2020
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE MORGAN:
Introduction
i) the Appellant was represented by Mr Butler QC who also appeared for the Claimant in the County Court;ii) the First and Second Respondents did not appear and were not represented; they had been represented by counsel in the County Court;
iii) the Third Respondent was represented by Mr Burroughs who also appeared for that party in the County Court.
The First Respondent
The Second Respondent
The judgment in relation to the claim against the Second Respondent
i) The arrangements in relation to the proposed joint venture and the payment of monies by Mr Goyal to the Solicitors' client account had given rise to a fiduciary relationship between Mr Edwards and Mr Goyal;ii) Mr Edwards committed a breach of his fiduciary duty to Mr Goyal when he used the money in the Solicitors' client account for his own purposes and not for the purposes of the proposed joint venture.
iii) In particular, the use of the money in the Solicitors' client account in connection with the purchase of the Plas Eleri care home was a breach by Mr Edwards of his fiduciary duty to Mr Goyal as that purchase was not part of the proposed joint venture.
"109. This takes me to the question of remedy. I have set out at paragraph [85] of this judgment a somewhat extensive passage from the judgment of Lord Millett in the Libertarian Investments case. That case itself illustrates that even in cases where there has plainly been a breach of trust or a breach of fiduciary duty it does not axiomatically follow that such a remedy will be granted. I think that Lord Millett used the word "right" not in the sense of an absolute entitlement and intended to convey that even though the account is available in respect of breach of trust or breach of fiduciary duty it will not always be ordered by the court which will exercise its discretion, carrying out the usual balancing exercise in the context of the factual circumstances.
110. I have already accepted above that the court knows little of the Plas Eleri transaction and that argues in favour of an account. It seems to me that Mr Burroughs was correct in submitting that as a matter of discretion in some circumstances the court ought not to order an account. For all the reasons summarised above in my synopsis of his submissions, I think this is not a case where I should exercise the court's discretion to order an account of profits. This matter has gone on for too long and too much water has gone under the bridge for it to be consistent with justice, equity or, if you like, the overriding objective, for me to order an account now."
"66. At some point, submitted Mr Burroughs, the Claimant had been obliged to make an election between any claim based on losses and any claim for an account. By entering judgment, by accepting payments from the fourth Defendant and by seeking to have a charging order made it had become unjust and inequitable for the court to allow the Claimant to now pursue an account of profits The letter from the court dated 29 June 2016 at page A115a of the hearing bundle was of particular importance. By it the Claimant had been told that to amend or vary the order there must be an application made to the court. No such application had been made and the court should not allow matters to be changed now. Also, the court should bear in mind that any judgment in favour of the Claimant's argument would not bring about a final decision. This would be made after any account had been ordered and completed. It was then the Claimant would be entitled to choose between the remedy most favourable to him. This must lie some way in the future. Whether it is put in terms of an election being made or in terms of complying with the "overriding objective" (and the judgment of the Privy Council in Tan Man Sit as delivered by Lord Nicolls might be regarded as identifying a proto- "overriding objective" - see age 521H – 522C) the court ought to set its face against the matter going to the further stage of an account being taken.
67. The Bank of Australia case referred to in the judgment in Tang Man Sit and relied upon by Mr Butler QC as justifying a different election as between the fourth Defendant and teh sixth Defendant is distinguishable on its facts from the instant case. There the claims were different and the loss might have been different. Here the claims were the same and the loss would b the same."
The appeal in relation to the Second Respondent
i) The submissions at trial did not focus on the general discretion to order an account; the submissions had been about an alleged election by Mr Goyal; at the trial, Mr Butler had submitted there had not been an election and in response the various Defendants shifted their ground in closing submissions and the judge did not hold that Mr Goyal had made any relevant election;ii) The victim of a breach of fiduciary duty was entitled almost as of right to an account as to what profit the fiduciary had made from his breach;
iii) The judge did not give clear reasons as to why he was withholding an order for an account;
iv) The judge did not find that any of the normal equitable defences applied in this case;
v) There was nothing in the procedural history which supported a refusal of an account;
vi) Mr Goyal had not delayed in claiming an explanation as to what had happened to his money; I was referred to the correspondence in support of this submission;
vii) There were no procedural delays for which Mr Goyal was responsible;
viii) Mr Goyal only obtained sight of the ledger card for the Solicitors' client account in April 2018;
ix) Mr Goyal was refused specific disclosure at the Pre-Trial Review on the ground that it was premature;
x) The judge's delay in handing down judgment should not be held against Mr Goyal;
xi) A refusal of an account rewards bad behaviour by a fiduciary;
xii) Mr Edwards has not been prepared to disclose what he did with Mr Goyal's money;
xiii) Mr Edwards compounded his fault by pretending at the trial that he could not remember what he did with Mr Goyal's money;
xiv) The position is not affected by Mr Edwards' bankruptcy as Mr Goyal is interested in identifying the proprietary remedies he has following the taking of an account
Discussion and conclusion in relation to the Second Respondent
"A fiduciary is bound to account for any profit or benefit that he or she has received in breach of fiduciary duty. The principal's entitlement to an account of profits which have been made in breach of fiduciary duty is virtually as of right. It is not relevant that the profit or benefit was not made at the expense of the fiduciary's principal, provided it was made in breach of fiduciary duty."
i) The court's power to order an account is a discretionary one;ii) The court carries out a balancing exercise in the context of the factual circumstances;
iii) The lack of information about the Plas Eleri transaction pointed in favour of an order for an account;
iv) The procedural history was relevant;
v) An order for an account would not bring about a final decision;
vi) The court ought to set its face against the matter going to the further stage of an account being taken;
vii) The matter had gone on for far too long;
viii) Too much water had gone under the bridge for it to be consistent with justice or equity or the overriding objective to order an account;
ix) The reference to water under the bridge included the fact that the joint venture had collapsed, there was no hint of any significant profit having been made by Mr Edwards and Mr Edwards was bankrupt.
The order in relation to the Second Respondent
The appeal in relation to the Third Respondent
The facts in relation to the Solicitors
"Dear Sir/Madam
I have transferred £160,000 into your account which as agreed should be held till you receive further instructions and should only be used as proof of funds for exchange until advised further.
Please confirm these have been received.
Kind regards
Vidya Goyal"
"I have transferred another £590,000 on 20th August 2012 to your account.
I need confirmation you are holding a total of £750,000 ASAP for my bank manager.
Please confirm funds are being held for the purchase of Florence Care Ltd.
Please reply ASAP.
Thank you."
The construction of the February email
The need for knowledge on the part of the Solicitors
"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." [emphasis added]"
What did the Solicitors know?