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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 >> Hurst v Green & Ors [2022] EWHC 2895 (Ch) (15 November 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2022/2895.html Cite as: [2022] EWHC 2895 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
INSOLVENCY & COMPANIES LIST (ChD)
IN THE MATTER OF THE EXTENDED CIVIL RESTRAINT ORDER DATED 28TH MAY 2021 MADE AGAINST MR ROBERT HURST
AND IN THE MATTER OF MR HURST'S RENEWED APPLICATION FOR PERMISSION TO MAKE A SERIES OF APPLICATIONS
7 Rolls Buildings Fetter Lane, London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
MR ROBERT HURST |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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(1) MRS EVELYN GREEN (2) MR DAVID GREEN (3) MR IAN MABLIN |
Respondents |
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____________________
Crown Copyright ©
COVID-19: This judgment was handed down remotely by circulation to the parties' representatives by email. It will also be released for publication on the National Archive website. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be Tuesday 15th November 2022 at 2pm.
Mr Justice Mellor:
Introduction
i) To review, pursuant to s.375(1) of the Insolvency Act 1986, the decisions of Fancourt J. dated 5 February 2020 and 28 May 2021;
ii) Annulment, pursuant to s.282(1)(a) of the Insolvency Act 1986, of the Bankruptcy Order made against the Applicant dated 15 February 2018;
iii) Recission of the Order of Master Price dated 3 August 2016 in action HC-2016-001002;
iv) An Order requiring the repayment of the sum of £200,497.59 paid pursuant to the Order of Master Price on 3 August and 19 December 2016, plus interest thereon
6. This is yet another attempt by Mr Hurst to undo the whole sequence of judicial decisions made against him based on essentially the same arguments which have now been considered and rejected numerous times.
7. I am satisfied that if I were to grant Mr Hurst the permission he seeks, the steps that he contemplates in:
a. Reviewing the decisions of Fancourt J. dated 5 February 2020 and 28 May 2021;
b. Annulling the Bankruptcy Order made against the Applicant dated 15 February 2018;
c. Rescinding the Order of Master Price dated 3 August 2016 in action HC-2016-001002, and thereby securing an Order requiring the repayment of the sum of £200,497.59 paid pursuant to the Order of Master Price on 3 August and 19 December 2016, plus interest thereon;
would each amount to an abuse of the process of the Court.
'35. It can be seen therefore, that there is essentially nothing new in Mr Hurst's latest application. It rests on the same regurgitated points, from which Mr Hurst seeks to draw what Fancourt J. characterised (correctly in my view) 'inferences of a highly speculative nature'.
36. Therefore, I remain of the view which I expressed in my Order dated 20th December 2021 (see paragraph Error! Reference source not found.) Accordingly I refuse the permission which Mr Hurst seeks, to apply for a fourth time seeking to annul his bankruptcy. In my view, this application was totally without merit.
37. Finally, in the alternative to his application for reconsideration, Mr Hurst sought permission to appeal, which I refuse.
38. A review of the original judgment of Master Price reveals a very long-running and bitter dispute between Mr Hurst and Mr and Mrs Green. It also reveals that Mr Hurst was ready, even at that point, to engage in unsupported surmise to try to establish a case of undue influence being exerted over his late mother. As Fancourt J. observed at [26] of his Second Judgment, Mr Hurst is unable to be objective and can only see a conspiracy involving his brother-in-law and sister and others. His obsession has consumed more than his fair share of judicial resources already.'
i) Mr Hurst made an informal application for permission to make the applications set out above in a witness statement dated 27 October 2022 which he sent that day.
ii) I considered his witness statement and its exhibit against the background of the Judgments (a) of Fancourt J. dated 5 February 2020 (the neutral citation for which is [2020] EWHC 344 (Ch)) ('the First Judgment') (b) 28 May 2021 (the neutral citation for which is [2021] EWHC 1767 (Ch)) ('the Second Judgment') and (c) my own judgment dated 19th April 2022 (the neutral citation for which I set out above).
iii) Having considered his application, by my Order dated 28 October 2022, I refused Mr Hurst the permission(s) he sought, for the reasons set out in that Order and which I reproduce below.
The reasons given in my Order dated 28th October 2022
2. Mr Hurst's application is founded upon a payment ('the Payment') made by Berwin Leighton Paisner (BLP) of £200,000 to Greenbrook Industries Limited (GIL) on 29 June 2016, a company he says was controlled by David Green (the Second Respondent) and his brother, Richard Green.
3. Having made his allegations concerning the Payment, Mr Hurst seeks to mix them into support for his long-standing view that undue influence was exerted over his mother in 2003 – see, in his latest witness statement, [19]-[23].
4. I have previously rejected Mr Hurst's application for the same relief, made on different grounds, albeit ones which overlap with Mr Hurst's allegations of undue influence: see my judgment dated 19th April 2022 under neutral citation [2022] EWHC 796 (Ch).
5. At the time of the Payment, BLP were the solicitors acting for the Claimants in Claim No. HC-2016-001002, being Evelyn Green, David Green (her husband) and Ian Mablin (the long-standing accountant who had acted for many years for Hanna Hurst and her husband until his death in 1985, and was executor of his estate), against Mr Hurst as Defendant. The claim form in that action was issued on 23 March 2016. The claimants brought the claim in their capacity as trustees of the Hanna Hurst Life Interest Trust, Hanna (sometimes referred to as Hannah) Hurst being the mother of Evelyn and Robert Hurst, and who passed away in August 2014. Mr Hurst was the sole executor of her will.
6. As executor, and with the agreement of the claimants, Mr Hurst arranged the sale of the property in which Mrs Hanna Hurst had lived for many years, for some £2.38m. At her death, she retained the legal title to that property, but that was subject to two trusts she created in 2003, the first being the Life Interest Trust and the second, the Children's Trust. These trusts were set up as part of an attempted tax mitigation scheme, designed to avoid inheritance tax.
7. The claimants were beneficially entitled to the proceeds of sale of the property, after deduction of monies due to mortgagees and the costs of sale. After those deductions, some £1.9m remained.
8. BLP made a proposal as how that balance should be dealt with by Mr Hurst but he did not accept those proposals and proceeded to deal with the monies as he thought fit.
9. That resulted in the claim being issued by the claimants against Mr Hurst, seeking, initially, some £405,071.81 which they said should be the sum available to the beneficiaries of the trusts, namely, the first claimant, Mr Hurst's wife (Stephanie) and their respective children.
10. The claimants sought summary judgment against Mr Hurst and it was this application which came before Master Price on 3rd August 2016. Mr Hurst resisted summary judgment on various grounds, each of which Master Price considered. He concluded that none gave rise to any triable issue which had any realistic prospect of success and so granted summary judgment against Mr Hurst. Mr Hurst did not appeal.
11. Mr Hurst's grounds included allegations of undue influence and breach of fiduciary duty, described in the judgment of Master Price. Mr Hurst's principal assertion of undue influence concerned events in 2003 when Mrs Hanna Hurst established the 'double trust' arrangement. The alleged breaches of fiduciary duty were levelled at the second claimant for failing to consult with the other trustees regarding the possibility of unwinding the trust arrangements in 2005 after the passing of the Finance Act 2004, which contained provisions which removed the efficacy of the double trust arrangement. The third limb of the alleged undue influence concerned a gift made by Mrs Hanna Hurst in 2011 in the sum of £100,000 to pay for the wedding of the daughter of the first and second claimants. This sum was raised by Mrs Hurst taking out an equity release mortgage, with the consent of the trustees, to raise a sum of nearly £200,000. Mr Hurst was seeking to recoup those monies back into Mrs Hurst's estate.
12. Against that background, Mr Hurst alleges the Payment was a clear breach of trust and he accuses BLP of allowing use of its client account as a banking facility in order to enable a clear breach of trust by its clients, contrary to paragraph 14.5 of the Code of Conduct of the Solicitors Regulation Authority.
13. Mr Hurst points out that the Payment was made some five weeks before the hearing before Master Price, at which summary judgment was granted against him. He says that neither he nor Master Price was aware of this payment. He alleges that, had Master Price been aware of this payment, he would not have granted summary judgment and would have ordered a trial, at which (so Mr Hurst alleges) Mr Green and Mr Whitehead would have had to justify the payment of £200,000 to Greenbrook.
14. Having considered Master Price's judgment (once again), I am unable to understand how evidence that the Payment had been made some five weeks earlier could possibly have persuaded him against granting summary judgment.
15. In the exhibit to his latest witness statement, Mr Hurst exhibited a two-page print out from what appears to be the client account maintained by BLP in respect of the claimants' instruction. The print-outs were made on 2nd March 2017. They evidence the Payment being made. However, I have no doubt that BLP made the Payment on the instructions of their clients.
16. If the Payment was made in breach of trust and that breach caused loss to the beneficiaries, I have no doubt whatsoever that any such breach would have been challenged and if not remedied, would have been the subject of proceedings brought by or at the instigation of Mr Hurst, a serial litigant, who has also been the driving force behind actions brough by his wife, Stephanie. Mr Hurst does not mention that any proceedings for breach of trust have ever been brought and I am sure he would have mentioned them, had they existed and more so, had they been successful.
17. On receipt of Mr Hurst's latest application and witness statement, I enquired as to when Mr Hurst have first received copies of the print-outs from the BLP client account. He responded promptly, acknowledging that he received those print-outs in March 2017 and accepting that he could have drawn it to the Court's attention at an earlier date.
18. In fact, he had done so. As I recorded in my April 2022 judgment at 39(i), Mr Hurst sent me the print-out on 1st April 2022, just as I was completing that judgment.
19. However, having considered the matter in more detail on the basis of Mr Hurst's latest witness statement, I have reached the same conclusion as I stated in paragraph 39(i) of my earlier judgment that the Payment 'changes nothing, apart from confirming Mr Hurst's obsession and lack of objectivity'.
20. In determining this application, I have assumed what Mr Hurst alleges regarding the Payment is true. However, even if the Payment was made in breach of trust, that would not have provided the slightest support for any of the grounds on which Mr Hurst was resisting the grant of summary judgment before Master Price. Just in terms of timing, the Payment was made some 13 years after Mrs Hurst made the trusts, some 11 years after the alleged breach of fiduciary duty and some 5 years after the third limb of alleged undue influence. The Payment had nothing whatsoever to do with any of the grounds considered by Master Price and would not, as I have already said, have altered the outcome.
21. However, standing back from the detail, I should consider whether there is any substance in the more general allegation underlying Mr Hurst's application. In the same email in which he responded to my enquiry, Mr Hurst was at pains to remind me of various dicta concerning Judgments obtained by fraud e.g. 'Once a judgment is tainted by deceit, it is fatally flawed'. Thus, Mr Hurst's underlying allegation appears to be that the summary judgment granted by Master Price was obtained by fraud: that there was some sort of long-standing conspiracy involving the claimants in the 2016 action and BLP, which had endured from 2003. I am entirely satisfied there is no substance in that notion.
22. There is a further consideration. There must be finality in litigation. Mr Hurst could have made his point about the Payment in any of his numerous previous attempts to undo the Order of Master Price, the Bankruptcy Order and the decisions of Fancourt J. It is reasonable to infer that the reason he did not do so was because he understood the Payment, even if a breach of trust, was an entirely separate matter.
23. Thus, this is yet another attempt by Mr Hurst to undo the whole sequence of judicial decisions made against him. His previous attempts were based on essentially the same arguments which have now been considered and rejected numerous times. This new attempt relies on a new allegation, but one which Mr Hurst attempts to use to resurrect all his previous arguments.
24. Overall, I am satisfied that if I were to grant Mr Hurst the permission he seeks, the steps that he contemplates in:
a. Reviewing the decisions of Fancourt J. dated 5 February 2020 and 28 May 2021;
b. Annulling the Bankruptcy Order made against the Applicant dated 15 February 2018;
c. Rescinding the Order of Master Price dated 3 August 2016 in action HC-2016-001002, and thereby securing an Order requiring the repayment of the sum of £200,497.59 paid pursuant to the Order of Master Price on 3 August and 19 December 2016, plus interest thereon;
would each amount to an abuse of the process of the Court.
25. Accordingly, for these reasons I refuse the permission Mr Hurst seeks. For what it is worth, I also certify that this latest Application was totally without merit.
Subsequent events
i) If Master Price had been aware of Mr Whitehead's breach of rule 14.5, he would not have granted summary judgment against Mr Hurst;
ii) If ICC Judge Prentis and Fancourt J. had been aware of Mr Whitehead's breach of rule 14.5, they would have decided differently.
My conclusions
Should the ECRO be extended?
i) The application to reconsider made via his letter dated 20th December 2021, dealt with in my judgment [2022] EWHC 796.
ii) The application made via his witness statement dated 27th October 2022, dealt with in my Order dated 28th October 2022.
iii) The further application made via his witness statements of 1st and 2nd November 2022, dealt with in this judgment.
'38. From these authorities it is clear that, in considering whether it is appropriate to extend the ECRO, I cannot go back to the beginning and ask whether the court would now be justified in imposing a further ECRO. For one thing, that would be to give double credit for the applications or claims held to be "totally without merit" that justified the order in the first place. For another, the filter mechanism means that there are not inherently likely to be many further applications anyway, much less many which are "totally without merit". Third, the test for an extension is simply whether the court considers that it is "appropriate" to do so. It is quite different from the test for the first ECRO.
39. On the other hand, in considering whether it is "appropriate", all the circumstances must be taken into account. Here, the Defendant's conduct leading to the ECRO is still relevant, not least as setting the scene: cf Noel v Society of Lloyd's [2010] EWHC 360, [38]-[46]. Normal people do not behave in this way. They eventually accept that they have lost, and move on. For such persons, not subject to an ECRO, the subsequent conduct on its own might be more susceptible of an innocent, non-vexatious explanation. But where an ECRO has properly been made, what comes afterwards is seen through the prism of the earlier conduct. In such a case it is easier to see the likelihood of further vexatious conduct. This is not double-counting, but rather better understanding a person's motivation in acting in a particular way.'