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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 >> Steels v Steels & Anor [2023] EWHC 2985 (Ch) (23 November 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2023/2985.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 2985 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS IN LEEDS
CHANCERY APPEALS (ChD)
ON APPEAL FROM THE COUNT COURT AT LEEDS
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY WORK
Order of Mr Recorder Clayton dated 14 December 2022
1 Oxford Row LEEDS LS1 4DW |
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B e f o r e :
Vice-Chancellor of the County Palatine of Lancaster
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JANE STEELS |
Claimant/Appellant |
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- and - |
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(1) DARREN STEELS (2) EMMA STEELS |
Defendants/Respondents |
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Ms Holly Challenger (instructed by Foys Solicitors Inc) for the Defendants/Respondents
Hearing dates: 21 November 2023
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Crown Copyright ©
The Vice-Chancellor:
i) The Recorder was wrong in law or in his interpretation of the facts in concluding that there was a promise or assurance of sufficient strength and clarity, given that there was no promise or assurance in 2006 that the First Respondent and his brother would inherit the Property on their parents' deaths;
ii) The Recorder failed to make any adequate assessment of the countervailing benefits to the Respondents of living in the Property for 25 years, as compared with the monies that had been spent on the Property during that time, and so erred in concluding that there was some detrimental reliance;
iii) The Recorder erred in concluding that the Appellant was acting unconscionably in that there was no or little detrimental reliance;
iv) The Recorder erred in taking a broad view of the detrimental reliance of the Respondents and in concluding that, as in other cases cited to him, the Respondents had centred their lives around the assurance of being able to live in the Property;
v) The Recorder erred in appearing to decide the counterclaim on an "acquiescence" basis when no such basis had been pleaded;
vi) The effect of the Order was that the Appellant would have to find rented property to live in, in her 70s, when she had limited means to do so, unless she could raise the value of the Respondents' 27.5% stake.
"There is an issue of fact about precisely what the arrangements were when they all first moved in, although less so about the payments. Quite apart from the fact that they all had their separate 'bits' of the Property, the common understanding was certainly that they could all stay there as long as they wanted. The Claimant accepts that both she and the deceased made those assurances (W/S, para 12), but significantly, they had no idea how long that arrangement would last, and the Claimant says she always assumed that as the boys grew up they would 'fly the nest'. They certainly never discussed any contingencies, like what would happen if their relationship broke down, or if they needed to sell for any reason. The Claimant accepts that, all being well, if she and the Deceased remained in the Property down to the date of their respective deaths, it would pass to the boys, in equal shares. I think that was everyone's common expectation. I think it follows that the boys had a licence to occupy, which, or being well, was expected to be long term, and if the parents were still there on their respective deaths, they would get the Property. That is about the long and short of it. I do not accept that there were any further conversations, promising the boys a 'beneficial interest' or suggesting they could stay there forever, irrespective of the circumstances."
"They both said that when they mentioned this to the Deceased, he responded by asking them why they needed to buy a house and take on a mortgage, saying that they had everything there (the Property) and saying that the First Defendant would have to travel again to work. The Second Defendant says that in the end, they decided to stay put. Again, I accept this was substantially on the strength of the assurance that they could stay there, although they were saving themselves quite a bit of money."
"It is notable that the Defendants did not say in evidence that if they had moved out in about 2006, they would have been 'paid out' by the Deceased and the Claimant. Neither defendant mentioned this. They were going to have to find the money themselves, which tends to corroborate the limited terms of the assurances they were initially given, and, again, there is no suggestion that they had 'clocked up' a beneficial interest by then."
"the First [Respondent] and his brother were going to inherit the Property in the future, albeit it was conditional upon things working out, but that did not prevent the boys from acting in reliance upon it in the meantime. It seems to me that if, for example, the parents hit upon hard times and had to sell up, or they had a relationship breakdown, or if they needed to sell to pay for nursing care etc, there could have been no real objection to them selling at that stage, but it might have raised an argument whether it was unconscionable for the boys to get nothing."
"I think the practical reality is that if you position your life around an assurance that you are going to inherit a share in a property, you probably live to your means, which I think is what the defendants have done. Doing the best that I can, I think the defendants are some way along the scale or spectrum of detrimental reliance…. The defendants have positioned 25 years of their life around the assurance that they were going to get a share in this property. In my judgement this takes them some way along the scale or spectrum of detrimental reliance." (paras 85, 86)
"The owner of the land, O, must have encouraged C by words or conduct to believe that C has or will in the future enjoy some right or benefit over O's property that is not merely personal in nature. The mere fact that C acts to his or her detriment in the expectation of acquiring rights over O's land will not raise an equity in his favour unless O has encouraged that expectation … O's conduct may be active or passive, and need not be the promise of a specific right or interest, provided that it is 'clear enough' in the circumstances and concerns a right in property."
"In so far as the Recorder found from the conversation between the Deceased and the First Defendant in 2006 that there arose an equity which had to be satisfied he erred in doing so as such equity was not pleaded in the Defence and Counterclaim."
I refused permission for the amendment.
"… he immediately questioned why we would need to buy another house or even need to have a mortgage and he talked us out of it saying that the house was a great place for Francesca and Travis to be able to have a good life growing up and questioning why would Darren want to travel again to work when he could walk just a few steps to work while we were living at The Meadows. I would explain that shortly before this Darren had moved his operations from Tickhill to the yard at the meadows and therefore he was literally just a few yards from work. In the end Darren and I decided to stay where we were on the assurance that we had the right to live at The Meadows and treat it as our own home."
There was therefore no assurance of inheritance made in 2006 that the Respondents relied on. The Second Respondent's evidence was that they decided to remain at the Property on the basis of that 2006 assurance.