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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 >> Mannering v Highscore Scaffolding Ltd & Anor [2022] EWHC 2257 (Ch) (22 June 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2022/2257.html Cite as: [2022] EWHC 2257 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS
OF ENGLAND AND WALES
CHANCERY DIVISION
Fetter Lane London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
LEANNE MANNERING |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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(1) HIGHSCORE SCAFFOLDING LIMITED (2) NICHOLAS GARY COOK |
Respondents |
____________________
MR N OSTROWSKI (instructed by Gullands Solicitors) appeared on behalf of the Respondents.
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE LEECH:
Background
"It is agreed that Leanne Mannering shall transfer her holding of one ordinary share in Highscore Scaffolding Limited to Nicholas Gary Cook by way of an outright gift in consideration of which Nicholas Gary Cook shall not take up any of the issued shares nor have any beneficial interest whatsoever in Fluke Footwear Agency Limited."
The Law
"(1) An instrument which— (a) is executed on or after 1st May 1987, (b) is of a kind specified in the Schedule hereto for the purposes of this regulation, and (c)is certified by a certificate which fulfils the conditions of regulation 3 to be an instrument of that kind, shall be exempt from duty under the provisions specified in paragraph (2) of this regulation."
"(1) Upon the production of an instrument chargeable with any duty as evidence in any court of civil judicature in any part of the United Kingdom, or before any arbitrator or referee, notice shall be taken by the judge, arbitrator, or referee of any omission or insufficiency of the stamp thereon, and [the instrument may], on payment to the officer of the court whose duty it is to read the instrument, or to the arbitrator or referee, of the amount of the unpaid duty, and [any interest or penalty] payable on stamping the same, and of a further sum of one pound, be received in evidence, saving all just exceptions on other grounds.
(2) The officer, or arbitrator, or referee receiving [the duty and any interest or penalty] shall give a receipt for the same, and make an entry in a book kept for that purpose of the payment and of the amount thereof, and shall communicate to the Commissioners the name or title of the proceeding in which, and of the party from whom, he received [the duty and any interest or penalty], and the date and description of the instrument, and shall pay over to such person as the Commissioners may appoint the money received by him for [the duty and any interest or penalty].
(3) On production to the Commissioners of any instrument in respect of which [any duty, interest or penalty] has been paid, together with the receipt, the payment of [the duty, interest and penalty] shall be denoted on the instrument.
(4) Save as aforesaid, an instrument executed in any part of the United Kingdom, or relating, wheresoever executed, to any property situate, or to any matter or thing done or to be done, in any part of the United Kingdom, shall not, except in criminal proceedings, be given in evidence, or be available for any purpose whatever, unless it is duly stamped in accordance with the law in force at the time when it was [executed].
(5) Where an instrument is denoted with any duty by a method required or permitted by the law in force at the time when it is stamped, the method is to be treated for the purposes of subsection (4) as being in accordance with the law in force at the time when the instrument was executed."
"The legislation contains no provision which enables the Revenue to sue for stamp duty. This is because no legal obligation is imposed on the taxpayer to pay the duty or even to submit to instruments for adjudication or stamping. As Donovan LJ observed in Henry and Constable (Brewers) Ltd v IRC [1961] 1 WLR 1504 at 1511: 'There was, however, no legal obligation on the taxpayers to stamp the transfers. There was simply the prospect of future disabilities if they did not'."
"The contract for sale, Declaration of Trust and Transfer were all instruments "relating to property situated … in the United Kingdom" and accordingly could not be given in evidence or be made available for any purpose unless duly stamped. In the meantime, however, the instruments were not nullities. A person may accept an unstamped instrument if he wishes (Marx v Estates and General Investments Ltd [1976] 1 WLR 388), but he cannot be compelled to do so (Maynard v Consolidated Kent Collieries Corporation Ltd [1903] 2 KB 121). The Revenue are in the same position. A private individual would normally be most unwise to accept an unstamped document, since he could not adduce it in evidence later without first stamping it. The Revenue have no such inhibition. They can proceed on the basis of inadmissible evidence, and leave it to the taxpayer to challenge their assessment by appeal, when he will be unable to rely on inadmissible evidence. This is because the court is in a different position. It must proceed on evidence. It may not receive an unstamped document in evidence. Where the instrument is unstamped, secondary evidence of it (whether by way of photocopy or otherwise) may not be given. But this does not preclude the court from resolving disputes of fact which can be resolved without reference to the inadmissible evidence or from acting where it is called upon to decide a question of law on the undisputed facts stated in a case stated. The circumstance that the facts also appear in an unstamped instrument which it is unnecessary to put in evidence does not prevent the court from acting on the facts appearing in the case stated."
"The instrument of transfer of a share may be in any usual form or in any other form which the directors may approve and shall be executed by or on behalf of the transferor and, unless the share is fully paid, by or on behalf of the transferee."
"95. Pivotal to the issue in this case are the events between about June and October 2007. There is no evidence to suggest that Ms Mannering and Mr Cook were not on reasonable or even good terms at the time. The decision had been made that with the assistance of Mr Cook, Ms Mannering would start a new business and in July 2007 Agency was incorporated. Stock for the new venture was bought with the benefit of £20,000 from Highscore authorised by Mr Cook in two tranches of £10,000. The evidence at the hearing was that both Mr Cook and Ms Mannering were optimistic about the future of Agency. It was a good idea and they both believed that the company would be successful. Loaning or giving £20,000 to Ms Mannering is not, in my view, the action of a person intent on committing a fraud in a few weeks.
96. By the summer of 2007, Ms Mannering was aware that she had been removed as a director and secretary for Highscore. I find that she did not know until after the event and that on discovery, she was not happy. But as she said at the hearing, had she been asked she would have agreed. She knew her credit rating was poor and I am satisfied that this affected Mr Cook's ability to secure the loans from the company.
97. I am satisfied that the state of Ms Mannering's credit rating was the motivation for the transfer of her share in Highscore. With that motivation, I find that Mr Cook and Ms Mannering reached an agreement to separate their interest in their respective companies. As indicated, there was a great deal of optimism about the future of Agency. It seems that Highscore was also growing. Mr Cook was in a position where he wanted to invest in the company and I believe that he regarded its future as good."
"There is also evidence that payments were made to Ms Mannering for several years after 2007. Furthermore, Ms Mannering's car was provided and paid for by Highscore. All of this is inconsistent with an attempt to defraud in summer 2007. Thirdly, it is a very serious matter to allege fraud."
"Notwithstanding the express language in s.14 of the Stamp Act, it is the settled practice to allow an unstamped document to be used upon the personal undertaking, not of the parties to the action, but of solicitors who are officers of the court to stamp it and to produce it so stamped before the order is drawn up."
"In my judgment, the position is that the declaration of trust required to be stamped as an instrument by which an interest in property was, on being sold, vested in the purchaser or in another person on behalf of or at the direction of the purchaser: Finance Act 1999 Schedule 13 (Transfer on Sale) paragraphs 1(2) and 4. Ad valorem duty of 1% was payable, plus interest and penalties for late stamping. As Mr Welch had not paid the stamp duty on the declaration of trust or the deed of transfer and there was no undertaking to the court by a solicitor, as an officer of the court, to pay it (see Re Coolgardie Goldfields Ltd [1900] 1 Ch 475 on the established practice of the court) neither of the documents, though valid, could be "given in evidence, or be available for any purpose whatever..": section 14(4) Stamp Act 1891. These wide words have been construed as precluding secondary evidence of unstamped documents, whether in the form of copies or by reference to their recitals or by oral evidence of their contents: Re Brown & Root McDermott Fabricators Ltd [1996] STC 483; Parinv (Hatfield) Ltd v IRC [1996] STC 933. The undertaking given by Mr Welch to the court did not make inadmissible evidence admissible in the proceedings. It follows that, as neither document was stamped, Mr Welch was unable to establish a beneficial interest in the Lease by means of them or of secondary evidence of them."
"Mr Welch caused Mr McGuane to execute two documents, the declaration of trust and the transfer. The former document was required to be stamped and could therefore not be admitted in evidence until that had happened. I need not consider whether it would have been open to the judge to accept an undertaking from a litigant in person for this purpose because it was always open to Mr Welch to apply for an adjournment to enable him to get the declaration of trust stamped if he wished to adduce it in evidence. But the document has never been stamped, and, as Mummery LJ has demonstrated, the court must in those circumstances pay no regard to its contents and must not admit any secondary evidence to prove its contents."
"41. In view of the terms of s.14, I am of opinion that the two stock transfer forms, Nos 7/16 and 7/17 of process, are not admissible in evidence if the pursuer's account of the meetings of 25 or 26 June 2001 is correct. The result of this is that the pursuer is unable to establish that the 98 non-subscriber shares in Manorgate were ever transferred to the first and second defenders. Consequently, even if the pursuer's version of what was agreed at the meeting on 25 or 26 June 2001 is correct, he cannot demonstrate that he has fulfilled his part of the bargain agreed at that meeting, and he is accordingly unable to enforce the defenders' part of the bargain. That result follows, in my view, from the plain meaning of section 14 as applied to the two stock transfer forms. It is not disputed that the forms required to be stamped. If the transfer was for substantial consideration, it is clear that conveyance on sale duty would be payable, related to the amount of the consideration. In that event, when the forms were stamped, the consideration stated in the instrument should have been a proper estimate of the value of the benefits provided by the first and second defenders to the pursuer. That could not have been the sum of £49 that is stated on each of the stock transfer forms. In these circumstances, it seems plain that, if the pursuer's account of the transaction is correct, the two instruments were inadequately stamped. Section 14 makes it clear that, if a document has not been properly stamped, the court must note the insufficiency in the stamp and the document may not be given in evidence. The result is that the pursuer cannot found on the two stock transfer forms, nos 7/16 and 7/17 of process.
42. The two stock transfer forms are in my opinion essential to establish any transfer of the 98 non-subscriber shares by the pursuer to the defenders. Counsel for the pursuer relied on certain admissions in the defences. The relevant admissions, however, are very limited in their terms; they are as follows..."
"Counsel for the pursuer stated that, if I were against the pursuer on this matter, the pursuer would undertake to pay the relevant duty. In my opinion, an offer of that sort is not appropriate. Section 14 is subject to an exception where the party founding on the document undertakes to pay the duty in question, and that provision has been applied in the cases referred to in paragraph [40] above. In those cases, however, the undertaking was an unequivocal undertaking to pay the duty. No such undertaking has been given in the present case. The undertaking given is conditional upon the court's finding against the pursuer. For that to happen, however, the court must come to a view on the evidence led at the proof, and in reaching that view, if the instrument in question has not been duly stamped, it must ignore that instrument. Consequently, I am obliged to reach a view on the issues arising at the proof without reference to the two stock transfer forms. In that event there can be no room for a subsequent undertaking to pay the duty; if an undertaking is to be effective it must be given at the time when the instrument is relied on in evidence or not at all."
MR OSTROWSKI: No objections to that.