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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 >> Winter & Anor v Winter [2023] EWHC 2393 (Ch) (29 September 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2023/2393.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 2393 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS IN BRISTOL
PROPERTY TRUSTS AND PROBATE LIST (ChD)
2 Redcliffe Street Redcliffe Bristol BS1 6GR |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
(1) RICHARD WINTER (2) ADRIAN WINTER |
Claimants |
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- and |
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(1) PHILIP WINTER (as executor of the estate of Albert Henry Winter (Deceased)) (2) CLARKE WILLMOTT TRUST CORPORATION LIMITED |
Defendants |
____________________
Alex Troup KC (instructed by Ashfords LLP) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 18th, 19th, 20th and 21st July 2023
Further submissions filed on 17th and 30th August 2023
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Zacaroli:
The background facts
"It is clear from speaking to each of the directors that lack of communication and lack of teamwork has reached such a position that it is not possible to operate as a unified management and this is already having detrimental effects on the running of the business and its efficiency. This is not to say that the business could not carry on as it is almost indefinitely, but the results would be detrimentally affected and it would also be of further detriment to family relationships and the Bank's decision on funding the business at its current level. I cannot, in all conscience, recommend that as directors you allow the management to carry on as it has been for the last two years and that, for the good of the business and for the good of the family, an alternative policy is adopted. "
The law
"(i) Deciding whether an equity has been raised and, if so, how to satisfy it is a retrospective exercise looking backwards from the moment when the promise falls due to be performed and asking whether, in the circumstances which have actually happened, it would be unconscionable for a promise not to be kept either wholly or in part: Thorner v Major [2009] UKHL 18, [2009] 1 WLR 776, [2009] 2 FLR 405, at [57] and [101].
(ii) The ingredients necessary to raise an equity are:
(a) an assurance of sufficient clarity;
(b) reliance by the claimant on that assurance; and
(c) detriment to the claimant in consequence of his reasonable reliance: Thorner v Major [2009] UKHL 18, [2009] 1 WLR 776, [2009] 2 FLR 405, at [29].
(iii) However, no claim based on proprietary estoppel can be divided into watertight compartments. The quality of the relevant assurances may influence the issue of reliance; reliance and detriment are often intertwined, and whether there is a distinct need for a 'mutual understanding' may depend on how the other elements are formulated and understood: Gillett v Holt [2001] Ch 210, at 225; Henry v Henry [2010] UKPC 3, [2010] 1 All ER 988, at [37].
(iv) Detriment need not consist of the expenditure of money or other quantifiable financial detriment, so long as it is something substantial. The requirement must be approached as part of a broad inquiry as to whether repudiation of an assurance is or is not unconscionable in all the circumstances: Gillett v Holt, at 232; Henry v Henry, at [38].
(v) There must be a sufficient causal link between the assurance relied on and the detriment asserted. The issue of detriment must be judged at the moment when the person who has given the assurance seeks to go back on it. The question is whether (and if so to what extent) it would be unjust or inequitable to allow the person who has given the assurance to go back on it. The essential test is that of unconscionability: Gillett v Holt, at 232.
(vi) Thus the essence of the doctrine of proprietary estoppel is to do what is necessary to avoid an unconscionable result: Jennings v Rice [2002] EWCA Civ 159, [2003] 1 FCR 501, at [56].
(vii) In deciding how to satisfy any equity the court must weigh the detriment suffered by the claimant in reliance on the defendant's assurances against any countervailing benefits he enjoyed in consequence of that reliance: Henry v Henry, at [51] and [53].
(viii) Proportionality lies at the heart of the doctrine of proprietary estoppel and permeates its every application: Henry v Henry at [65]. In particular there must be a proportionality between the remedy and the detriment which is its purpose to avoid: Jennings v Rice [2002] EWCA Civ 159, [2003] 1 FCR 501, at [28] (citing from earlier cases) and [56]. This does not mean that the court should abandon expectations and seek only to compensate detrimental reliance, but if the expectation is disproportionate to the detriment, the court should satisfy the equity in a more limited way: Jennings v Rice, at [50] and [51].
(ix) In deciding how to satisfy the equity the court has to exercise a broad judgmental discretion: Jennings v Rice, at [51]. However the discretion is not unfettered. It must be exercised on a principled basis, and does not entail what His Honour Judge Weekes QC memorably called a 'portable palm tree': Taylor v Dickens [1998] 1 FLR 806 (a decision criticised for other reasons in Gillett v Holt)."
"This does not mean that the court will be seeking precisely to compensate for the detriment as its primary task, but simply to put right a disproportionality which is so large as to stand in the way of a full specific enforcement doing justice between the parties. It will be a very rare case where the detriment is equivalent in value to the expectation, and there is nothing in principle unjust in a full enforcement of the promise being worth more than the cost of the detriment, any more than there is in giving specific performance of a contract for the sale of land merely because it is worth more than the price paid for it. An example of a remedy out of all proportion to the detriment would be the full enforcement of a promise by an elderly lady to leave her carer a particular piece of jewellery if she stayed on at very low wages, which turned out on valuation by her executors to be a Fabergι worth millions. Another would be a promise to leave a generous inheritance if the promisee cared for the promisor for the rest of her life, but where she unexpectedly died two months later."
"In the end the court will have to consider its provisional remedy in the round, against all the relevant circumstances, and ask itself whether it would do justice between the parties, and whether it would cause injustice to third parties. The yardstick for that justice assessment will always be whether, if the promisor was to confer that proposed remedy upon the promisee, he would be acting unconscionably. "Minimum equity to do justice" means, in that context, a remedy which will be sufficient to enable that unconscionability question to be answered in the negative."
The assurances
"The promise must be unambiguous and must appear to have been intended to be taken seriously. Taken in its context, it must have been a promise which one might reasonably expect to be relied upon by the person to whom it was made."
Richard and Adrian
Philip
The other witnesses called by the claimants
The other witnesses called by Philip
Conclusions
The subsidiary question: what property was covered by the assurances?
Reliance
Detriment
"97. That is the answer to Ms Shea's submission that far from suffering detriment, Michael in fact enjoyed substantial benefits as a result of his hard work and commitment. He undoubtedly did. He has had rent free accommodation and the payment of most of his living expenses by the partnership. Michael's capital account as shown in the last drawn partnership accounts is over £1.4m held in mainly liquid assets. The partnership also made very substantial pension provision for Michael, leaving him with a pension fund worth £745,754.03 at John's death. To the extent that he has suffered hardship, Ms Shea says, the countervailing benefits, have eclipsed them. As Mr Jourdan says, however, where a parent promises a child a farm if they work on the farm until the parent dies, and the child does what they were asked to do, giving up the possibility of other options, and positioning their working life based on the assurances, that is likely to amount to detrimental reliance. It is not possible to put a money value on the unquantifiable detriment of committing a life to a farm and not building a different life elsewhere, nor to recreate a world without the assurances: see Habberfield [17 -18, 47 48], Suggitt v Suggitt [2011] EWHC 903 (Ch) and on appeal at [2012] EWCA Civ 1140.
98. As Lord Briggs observed in Guest the true "value" of the detriment may be impossible to assess with any confidence and prima facie where the reliant detriment has had lifelong consequences, "a detriment valuation analysis will fall upon stony ground". That was said in the context of assessing the proportionality of the remedy to the detriment, for the purposes of satisfying the equity. That seems to me to be an issue which is inextricably linked to the issue of assessing whether detriment has been suffered at all having regard to the countervailing benefits. There are no watertight compartments in proprietary estoppel."
Unconscionable?
The appropriate remedy
Contractual estoppel