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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 >> McCarthy v Proctor [2024] EWHC 684 (Ch) (26 March 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2024/684.html Cite as: [2024] EWHC 684 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS IN WALES
BUSINESS LIST (ChD)
2 Park Street, Cardiff, CF10 1ET |
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B e f o r e :
sitting as a Judge of the High Court
____________________
ANDREW EDWARD MCCARTHY |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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GRAHAM BRIAN PROCTOR |
Defendant |
____________________
Matthew Parker KC (instructed by Acuity Law Limited) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 21 February 2024
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Crown Copyright ©
Judge Keyser KC :
Introduction
The relevant law
i. he has a reasonable prospect of success in relation to each claim for which permission is sought,
ii. he has a good arguable case that the claim falls within a ground (or gateway) in paragraph 3.1 of Practice Direction 6B,
iii. England and Wales is the proper place to bring the claim.
These general principles were summarised as follows by Lord Collins of Mapesbury JSC in Altimo Holdings and Investment Ltd v Kyrgyz Mobil Tel Ltd [2011] UKPC 7, [2012] 1 WLR 1804, at [71] (citations omitted):
"On an application for permission to serve a foreign defendant (including an additional defendant to counterclaim) out of the jurisdiction, the claimant (or counterclaimant) has to satisfy three requirements … First, the claimant must satisfy the court that in relation to the foreign defendant there is a serious issue to be tried on the merits, i.e. a substantial question of fact or law, or both. The current practice in England is that this is the same test as for summary judgment, namely whether there is a real (as opposed to a fanciful) prospect of success …. Second, the claimant must satisfy the court that there is a good arguable case that the claim falls within one or more classes of case in which permission to serve out may be given. In this context "good arguable case" connotes that one side has a much better argument than the other …. Third, the claimant must satisfy the court that in all the circumstances the [jurisdiction where the case is proceeding] is clearly or distinctly the appropriate forum for the trial of the dispute, and that in all the circumstances the court ought to exercise its discretion to permit service of the proceedings out of the jurisdiction."
1) The claim for negligent misstatement has no real prospect of success;
2) This is not the appropriate jurisdiction in which to bring the claim;
3) The claimant was in breach of his duty to make full and frank disclosure to the court when he made his without-notice application for permission to serve out of the jurisdiction.
Serious question to be tried
Appropriate forum
"The principles governing the exercise of discretion set out by Lord Goff of Chieveley in Spiliada Maritime Corpn v Cansulex Ltd [1987] AC 460, 475-484, are familiar, and it is only necessary to restate these points: first, in both stay cases and in service out of the jurisdiction cases, the task of the court is to identify the forum in which the case can be suitably tried for the interests of all the parties and for the ends of justice; second, in service out of the jurisdiction cases the burden is on the claimant to persuade the court that England … is clearly the appropriate forum; third, where the claim is time-barred in the foreign jurisdiction and the claimant's claim would undoubtedly be defeated if it were brought there, practical justice should be done, so that if the claimant acted reasonably in commencing proceedings in England, and did not act unreasonably in not commencing proceedings in the foreign country, it may not be just to deprive the claimant of the benefit of the English proceedings."
"The first is that … in the [service out] cases the burden of proof rests on the plaintiff, whereas in the forum non conveniens cases that burden rests on the defendant. A second, and more fundamental, point of distinction (from which the first point of distinction in fact flows) is that in the [service out] cases the plaintiff is seeking to persuade the court to exercise its discretionary power to permit service on the defendant outside the jurisdiction. Statutory authority has specified the particular circumstances in which that power may be exercised, but leaves it to the court to decide whether to exercise its discretionary power in a particular case, while providing that leave shall not be granted 'unless it shall be made sufficiently to appear to the court that the case is a proper one for service out of the jurisdiction' …
Third, … the jurisdiction exercised under [the service out provisions] may be 'exorbitant'[1]. This has long been the law. In Société Générale de Paris v. Dreyfus Brothers (1885) 29 ChD 239, 242-243, Pearson J. said:
'it becomes a very serious question ... whether this court ought to put a foreigner, who owes no allegiance here, to the inconvenience and annoyance of being brought to contest his rights in this country, and I for one say, most distinctly, that I think this court ought to be exceedingly careful before it allows a writ to be served out of the jurisdiction.'
That statement was subsequently approved on many occasions … The effect is, not merely that the burden of proof rests on the plaintiff to persuade the court that England is the appropriate forum for the trial of the action, but that he has to show that this is clearly so. …"
At 481-482 Lord Goff observed:
"In addition, the importance to be attached to any particular ground invoked by the plaintiff may vary from case to case. For example, the fact that English law is the putative proper law of the contract may be of very great importance (as in B.P. Exploration Co. (Libya) Ltd. v. Hunt [1976] 1 W.L.R. 788, where, in my opinion, Kerr J. rightly granted leave to serve proceedings on the defendant out of the jurisdiction); or it may be of little importance as seen in the context of the whole case. In these circumstances, it is, in my judgment, necessary to include both the residence or place of business of the defendant and the relevant ground invoked by the plaintiff as factors to be considered by the court when deciding whether to exercise its discretion to grant leave; but, in so doing, the court should give to such factors the weight which, in all the circumstances of the case, it considers to be appropriate."
"The factors that may be taken into account in determining which is the natural forum for the action include: (a) the personal connections which the parties have to the countries in question; (b) the factual connections which the events relevant to the claim have with those countries; (c) factors affecting convenience or expense such as the location of the witnesses or documents; and (d) the applicable law."
In the Supreme Court, both Lord Mance and Lord Neuberger of Abbotsbury PSC agreed with Arnold J's approach. The Supreme Court confirmed that the governing law was not decisive of the appropriate forum (for example, at [10]) and indeed Lord Mance considered it to be "a factor of very little if any real potency" in that particular case (see [55]). He said at [46]:
"The governing law, which is here English, is in general terms a positive factor in favour of trial in England, because it is generally preferable, other things being equal, that a case should be tried in the country whose law applies. However, that factor is of particular force if issues of law are likely to be important and if there is evidence of relevant differences in the legal principles or rules applicable to such issues in the two countries in contention as the appropriate forum. Neither of these considerations here applies."
Lord Mance considered that consideration of witnesses was "a factor at the core of the question of appropriate forum": see [62].
"But the underlying principle requires that regard must be had to the interests of all the parties and the ends of justice; and these considerations may lead to a different conclusion in other cases. … Let me consider how the principle of forum non conveniens should be applied in a case in which the plaintiff has started proceedings in England where his claim was not time barred, but there is some other jurisdiction which, in the opinion of the court, is clearly more appropriate for the trial of the action, but where the plaintiff has not commenced proceedings and where his claim is now time barred. Now, to take some extreme examples, suppose that the plaintiff allowed the limitation period to elapse in the appropriate jurisdiction, and came here simply because he wanted to take advantage of a more generous time bar applicable in this country; or suppose that it was obvious that the plaintiff should have commenced proceedings in the appropriate jurisdiction, and yet he did not trouble to issue a protective writ there; in cases such as these, I cannot see that the court should hesitate to stay the proceedings in this country, even though the effect would be that the plaintiff's claim would inevitably be defeated by a plea of the time bar in the appropriate jurisdiction. Indeed a strong theoretical argument can be advanced for the proposition that, if there is another clearly more appropriate forum for the trial of the action, a stay should generally be granted even though the plaintiff's action would be time barred there. But, in my opinion, this is a case where practical justice should be done. And practical justice demands that, if the court considers that the plaintiff acted reasonably in commencing proceedings in this country, and that, although it appears that (putting on one side the time bar point) the appropriate forum for the trial of the action is elsewhere than England, the plaintiff did not act unreasonably in failing to commence proceedings (for example, by issuing a protective writ) in that jurisdiction within the limitation period applicable there, it would not, I think, be just to deprive the plaintiff of the benefit of having started proceedings within the limitation period applicable in this country."
The current application
"41. It is clearly established that, on an application to set aside the grant of permission to serve out of the jurisdiction, the court decides the issues arising by reference to the position at the time that the permission was originally granted and not by reference to the position at the time the application to set aside is heard. …
43. In a typical case, the grant of permission to serve out of the jurisdiction will have been granted at an ex parte hearing on the basis of the evidence adduced by the claimant alone but when the court considers an application to set aside the original grant of permission, the matter will be considered at an inter partes hearing on the basis of evidence adduced by all relevant parties. Nonetheless, the further evidence must be directed at the situation at the date when permission was originally granted: see Mohammed v Bank of Kuwait [1994] 1 WLR 1483 at 1492 per Evans LJ and Microsoft Mobile OY v Sony Europe [2018] 1 All ER (Comm) 419 at [93] per Marcus Smith J. …"
"Although the application to dispute the jurisdiction is that of the defendant, the burden of proof lies on the claimant who has to establish, to the appropriate standard, that the jurisdiction of the court is available to him. It could not be correct, for example, that the claimant obtain permission to serve out of the jurisdiction on an application without notice to the intended defendant, and, by doing so, put the defendant, who has not been heard, onto the back foot. The fact that permission was granted to the claimant in the first place is largely irrelevant at this point. It leaves no footprint; no onus is placed upon the defendant who applies to have the permission set aside; the application is in effect a rehearing of an application for permission, with the onus lying on the party who needed the permission in the first place. The court is not inhibited from discharging or varying the order, and for which the claimant now in substance (if not in form) reapplies, by reason of the fact that it has already been made."
Full and frank disclosure
"the overriding principle … that the question of whether, in the absence of full and fair disclosure, an order should be set aside and, if so, whether it should be renewed either in the same or in an altered form, is pre-eminently a matter for the court's discretion, to which … the facts (if they be such) that the non-disclosure was innocent and that an injunction or other order could properly have been granted if the relevant facts had been disclosed, are relevant. In exercising that discretion the court, like Janus, looks both backwards and forwards."
He continued:
"104. The court will look back at what has happened and examine whether, and if so, to what extent, it was not fully informed, and why, in order to decide what sanction to impose in consequence. The obligation of full disclosure, an obligation owed to the court itself, exists in order to secure the integrity of the court's process and to protect the interests of those potentially affected by whatever order the court is invited to make. The court's ability to set its order aside, and to refuse to renew it, is the sanction by which that obligation is enforced and others are deterred from breaking it. Such is the importance of the duty that, in the event of any substantial breach, the court strongly inclines towards setting its order aside and not renewing it, so as to deprive the defaulting party of any advantage that the order may have given him. This is particularly so in the case of freezing and seizure orders.
105. As to the future, the court may well be faced with a situation in which, in the light of all the material to hand after the non-disclosure has become apparent, there remains a case, possibly a strong case, for continuing or re-granting the relief sought. Whilst a strong case can never justify non disclosure, the court will not be blind to the fact that a refusal to continue or renew an order may work a real injustice, which it may wish to avoid.
106. As with all discretionary considerations, much depends on the facts. The more serious or culpable the non-disclosure, the more likely the court is to set its order aside and not renew it, however prejudicial the consequences. The stronger the case for the order sought and the less serious or culpable the non-disclosure, the more likely it is that the court may be persuaded to continue or re-grant the order originally obtained. In complicated cases it may be just to allow some margin of error. It is often easier to spot what should have been disclosed in retrospect, and after argument from those alleging non-disclosure, than it was at the time when the question of disclosure first arose."
The facts
- It was written in Spanish. (I refer below to an English translation.)
- It was said to be made in Palma de Mallorca.
- It gave the claimant's address as an address in Cardiff and the defendant's "address for service" as an address in Palma de Mallorca.
- It recorded that the claimant was the owner of the Spanish Villa, that the property was subject to a mortgage for a debt then standing at €700,000, and that the claimant was "interested in assigning the exploitation rights of the property" to the defendant.
- It contained operative clauses to the following effect:
a) By clause 1, the claimant "assigns and transfers the use and enjoyment of the property" to the defendant, "who accepts the assignment of use, enjoyment and exploitation in his favour" and who from that time onwards would be entitled to let the property and keep the rent.
b) By clause 2, the consideration for this assignment was the assumption by the defendant of all costs related to the property, including utilities, municipal taxes and mortgage payments.
c) By clause 3, delivery of possession would take place upon the signing of the agreement.
d) By clause 4, if the claimant transferred the property to a third party: (i) the amount of the sale price in excess of €700,000 should be divided equally between the claimant and the defendant; (ii) the defendant should be reimbursed from the sale price for all mortgage payments he had made; but (iii) the amount of any rent received by the defendant from letting the property was to be deducted from the amount payable to him.
e) By clause 5, the claimant could terminate the agreement unilaterally, provided he complied with all the payment provisions of clause 4.
f) Clause 7 provided that the agreement should "be governed, interpreted and fulfilled in accordance with Spanish law" and that the parties "expressly submit[ted] to the Courts of Palma de Mallorca, waiving any other jurisdiction which may correspond to them."
1) He entered into an agreement with Mr Jones ("the 2008 Asset Swap Agreement"), whereby he agreed to transfer to Mr Jones the Spanish Villa and a mooring in exchange for a yacht. The 2008 Asset Swap Agreement was not in writing, and there was no transfer of the legal title to Mr Jones; however, an unexecuted purchase agreement was drawn up for the sale by the claimant to Mr Jones or the Spanish Villa and a mooring for €1,650,000.
2) The claimant executed a Power of Attorney ("the 2008 Power of Attorney"), authorising a Spanish lawyer, Sr Serra, to sell the Spanish Villa and redeem the mortgage.
The defendant was not involved in these transactions, but the evidence filed on his behalf is to the effect that he was told about them by Mr Jones, probably later in 2008.
- The agreement was in English and was executed by the claimant in Cardiff and by the defendant in Palma de Mallorca.
- It showed the claimant domiciled at an address in Cardiff and the defendant "notification domiciled" at an address in Palma de Mallorca.
- The recitals recorded: that the claimant and Mr Jones had "signed on 29th February 2008 a purchase contract" in respect of the Spanish Villa and the mooring; that the sale of the Spanish Villa "was not recorded in a public deed" but the sale of the mooring was so recorded; that Mr Serra had been granted a power of attorney to sell the Spanish Villa and the mooring; and that the power of attorney had been withdrawn by email.
- By clause 1, the claimant transferred to the defendant "all his rights and obligations" related to the 29th February 2008 purchase contract and agreed or acknowledged that he could not sue the defendant or Mr Jones. (By clause 5 the claimant agreed to abandon his rights of action in respect of that purchase contract.)
- Clause 2 provided that the defendant would pay the claimant €150,000 and would also make all payments in respect of taxes and mortgage concerning the Spanish Villa.
- By clause 3, the claimant accepted that the power of attorney granted to Sr Serra "will be in force and cannot be withdrawal (sic) in the future." (This appears to have been intended to obviate the need for a new power of attorney as had previously been contemplated.)
- By clause 4, the claimant and the defendant agreed that the owner of the Spanish Villa and the mooring was the defendant.
- By clause 6, the claimant authorised the defendant to receive the whole of the purchase price of the Spanish Villa and the mooring, and it was recorded that the defendant "will have the right to distribute the money as he considers."
- By clause 8, the claimant and the defendant agreed to submit any dispute under the December 2014 Agreement to the courts of Palma de Mallorca. (The opening words of the clause—"With express resignation of their own law, if it's different"—might mean that the parties abjured English law in favour of Spanish law. However, I am not certain of this.)
- On 2 May 2016 the claimant sent to the defendant an email in respect of the Spanish Villa. It said in part: "950,000 euros is the amount that I am comfortable to pay you for release of the power of attorney. … I really do feel the offer is fair. If you are mindful to accept I will stay in Palma tomorrow and organise to get completed this week."
- On the same day the defendant forwarded the claimant's email to Mr Jones and wrote: "I need a deal done one way or another[.] As I have cash flow problems in Coil Color I am relying on this money, speak later." On 4 May 2016 the defendant wrote to Mr Jones by email: "This situation has dragged on to[o] long, I need to be paid, if you pay what I am owed 850k€ +- by Friday, if not I will sell to Macarthy (sic) for 950k€, for you to say to me swallow 50k€ is a joke, you have had my money for 8 years without you offering one penny, I am sorry things turned out this way."
- On 6 May 2016 Mr Jones replied: "Why you would want to sell me down the river to McCarthy is beyond me. I have always safeguarded your interests and I would never have done this to you no matter what. I am in for something like €1.6m. This was never your house to sell from under me. The POA was put in your name to protect me against McCarthy which in turn was alway (sic) going to protect your interest. McCarthy might be comfortable at €950k but I am not. The deal which we agreed was €1m and nothing less. Over to you."
- The email exchange continued. On 9 May 2016 Mr Jones wrote to the defendant: "My thinking is that everything is up for discussion but it does revolve around my retaining the equity in no. 22." On 14 May 2016 the defendant replied: "One minute you say sell to Macarthy, now you want to retain the equity. The property has passed to Mac for 950k€."
"By no later than 18 May 2016, the Defendant accepted the 2 May 2016 Offer Email orally and/or by his conduct thereby giving rise to an agreement between the Claimant and the Defendant on the terms of the 2 May 2016 Offer Email set out at paragraph 27 above (the 'May 2016 Sale Agreement'). Pursuant to the laws of Spain, the May 2016 Sale Agreement was binding as between the Claimant and the Defendant. …"
Paragraph 29 sets out the conduct relied on, including the emails in May 2016 referred to above.
- The agreement was made in Palma de Mallorca (it was signed in Sr Serra's office) and was in Spanish; again, I refer to the English translation.
- The claimant's address was shown as the Spanish Villa. The defendant's address for service was an address in Palma de Mallorca.
- The recitals recorded: that the parties had entered into the 2007 Assignment Agreement; that the claimant was interested in terminating that agreement; and that the market value of the Spanish Villa was €950,000.
- The operative parts of the 2016 Sale Agreement provided that the claimant must within three months pay to the defendant €950,000 to terminate the 2007 Assignment Agreement
"56.The fundamental flaw in the argument is that Mr Proctor did not have a security interest in the villa. Since the appeal fails both on agreement and estoppel, the question of quantum must be approached on the basis Mr Proctor was a stranger to the villa. Thus, in paying him Mr McCarthy falls foul of the basic principle that if A owes money to B, an unauthorised payment to B by C does not discharge A's debt unless A subsequently ratifies the payment, or C is compelled to pay."
Negligent misrepresentation: a real prospect of success?
"[T]he Defendant represented to the Claimant orally and/or by his conduct that (1) the Defendant beneficially owned the Villa and (2) the payment of €950,000 would be applied by the Defendant in diminution of a debt owed by a third party (Mr Allan Jones) to the Defendant ('the Jones Debt'), and the parties contracted on that basis."
- By his acceptance of the offer made by the claimant on 2 May 2016, the defendant impliedly made the following representations (I paraphrase): (i) that he had the power to give the claimant quiet possession of the Spanish Villa; (ii) that he was authorised and/or entitled as holder of a security interest to transfer Mr Jones' ownership of the Spanish Villa for €950,000 that would be applied in discharge of Mr Jones' debt to the defendant; (iii) that he believed in good faith that he was so empowered, authorised and/or entitled ("the Good Faith Representation"). (Paragraphs 31 and 38)
- By telling Mr Jones and the claimant, in the telephone conversation on 2 June 2016, that the sum of €950,000 received under the May 2016 Sale Agreement would be applied against Mr Jones' debt to him, the defendant impliedly repeated the foregoing representations. (Paragraphs 32 and 38)
- The defendant impliedly repeated the foregoing representations, and confirmed that they remained true at the date of the claimant's payment of the €950,000, by his conduct in reviewing the claimant's Defence in the Jones Claim and not contesting the truth of the claimant's case in those proceedings. (Paragraphs 36, 37 and 38)
- The defendant owed a duty to the claimant to exercise reasonable care to ensure that the representations were true and accurate; further or alternatively, the defendant warranted the truth of the representations; further or alternatively, the defendant assumed responsibility to the claimant for the truth of the representations. (Paragraphs 40 and 41)
- The findings and decision in the Jones Claim show that the representations were false. (Paragraph 42)
- The defendant failed to exercise reasonable care and skill in making the representations. (Paragraph 43)
- The claimant reasonably relied on the representations and suffered loss as a consequence. (Paragraphs 44, 45 and 46)
1) The claimant has no real prospect of establishing that the defendant made any implied representation as to his rights in relation to the Spanish Villa in May 2016, because by clause 4 of the December 2014 Agreement the claimant and the defendant had already agreed that the defendant was the owner of the Spanish Villa.
2) The claimant has no real prospect of establishing that he relied on any representation in May 2016 as to the defendant's entitlement to sell the Spanish Villa, because his own evidence is that he already believed that the defendant had that entitlement.
3) The claimant has no real prospect of establishing that the defendant owed him any duty of care in relation to the alleged representations. Two reasons were given for this submission: first, that there was no basis for finding a voluntary assumption of responsibility by the defendant; second, that the existence of a contract, namely the May 2016 Sale Agreement, precluded the implication of a representation. The latter argument, as developed in submissions, seems to me to go to the question of implication rather than duty, and I shall consider it in that context.
"17. First, so far as I was concerned, the purpose of the December 2014 Agreement was to settle Mr Jones' liability to me for breaches of the asset swap agreement I had entered into with him in February 2008 … The immediate factual context … was that:
…
17.3. At the time of revoking the power of attorney in August 2013, I understood that the beneficial interest in the Spanish villa 'was with Mr Proctor and not Allan Jones by this stage' (paragraph 35 of my first witness statement in the Jones Claim). That is because I understood that Mr Jones' beneficial interest had already been conveyed to Mr Proctor, as security for the debt owed by Mr Jones to Mr Proctor, pursuant to an agreement between Mr Jones and Mr Proctor (the 'Jones/Proctor Agreement').
…
18. Second: I did not regard one of the effects of the December 2014 Agreement as having been to convey beneficial ownership of the Spanish villa from me to Mr Proctor. As stated above, my understanding at the time of the December 2014 Agreement was that Mr Proctor was already the beneficial owner of the Spanish villa or held a security interest over it … However, I was not a party to the agreement between Mr Jones and Mr Proctor, whereby it was agreed that Mr Proctor should acquire a security interest in the villa for a debt owed to him by Mr Jones, as set out in paragraphs 15 and 16 of the Jones Claim Defence. As I explained in my evidence in the Jones Claim, I only learned about the agreement from Mr Proctor in 2010 or 2011 and I believed that he was the beneficial owner of the villa from this point. It was not therefore necessary for the December 2014 Agreement to transfer ownership of the Spanish villa from me to Mr Proctor, and I did not believe that it had that effect.
19. Third: it is true that clause 4 of the December 2014 Agreement provides as follows: 'Both parties agree that the owner of the house and the mooring stated in declaration I is Mr. BRIAN PROCTOR'. As to this provision:
19.1. I cannot recall why this was agreed. However, as regards the ownership of the Spanish villa, I believe it was probably intended to (and did) reflect our common understanding of the legal effect of the dealings between Mr Proctor, Mr Jones and myself in relation to the Spanish villa, up to that point. This was that Mr Proctor already had the right to exercise rights of ownership in relation to the Spanish villa, in order to enforce the security granted to him by Mr Jones, pursuant to the Jones/Proctor Agreement.
19.2. Apart from the Jones/Proctor Agreement, which I knew about from Mr Proctor at this time, the reason I believed Mr Proctor had these rights was because Mr Toni de Serra had indicated as much in an email dated 4 September 2013. Mr Serra was a Spanish attorney who acted for myself and Mr Proctor from time to time, and who prepared the December 2014 agreement for our signature.
19.3. Mr Serra sent me this email shortly after I had instructed him, on 30 August 2013, to cancel the power of attorney which he held in relation to the villa, and which had been executed in February 2008 at the time of the February 2008 ASA (the 'February 2008 POA'), so that Mr Jones could give Mr Serra instructions to sell the villa. …
19.4. In the 30 August 2013 email, I referred to Mr Proctor's 'interest' in the Spanish villa. In the 4 September 2013 email, Mr Serra confirmed that the villa had been 'sold' by Mr Jones to Mr Proctor. Therefore, when Mr Proctor came to sell the Spanish villa back to me in May 2016, I understood that he had that right based on the Jones/Proctor Agreement, as confirmed by (1) the 30 August 2013 email and (2) what Mr Serra had told me in the 4 September 2013 email, and not on anything in the December 2014 Agreement which post-dated these emails and the Jones/Proctor Agreement."
"I would add that the court should still consider very carefully before accepting an invitation to deal with single issues in cases where there will need to be a full trial on liability involving evidence and cross examination in any event, or where summary disposal of the single issue may well delay, because of appeals, the ultimate trial of the action: see Potter LJ in Partco v Wragg [2002] EWCA Civ 594; [2002] 2 Lloyds Rep 343 at 27(3) and cases there cited. Removing road blocks to compromise is of course one consideration, but no more than that. Moreover, it does not follow from Lewison J's seventh principle that difficult points of law, particularly those in developing areas, should be grappled with on summary applications; see Partco at 28(7). Such questions are better decided against actual rather than assumed facts. On the other hand it may be possible to say that the trajectory of the law will never on any view afford a remedy: see for example Hudson and others and HM Treasury and another [2003] EWCA Civ 1612."
Appropriate Jurisdiction
a) The claims arose out of a Spanish transaction, namely the May 2016 Sale Agreement. That agreement was made in Spain. It concerned a property in Spain, namely the Spanish Villa. The price was payable and paid in Spanish currency, namely euros. The price was paid into the defendant's bank account with a Spanish bank in Spain. Any breach of contract took place in Spain. The May 2016 Sale Agreement is governed by Spanish law.
b) The law applicable to the claim in negligent misstatement is Spanish law because either (i) the damage, namely the failure to receive the beneficial interest in the Spanish Villa, occurred in Spain or, if the loss is said to have been suffered in England and Wales, (ii) the tort is manifestly more closely connected with Spain (Rome II, Art 4(3)).
c) The law applicable to the claim for restitution is Spanish law because either (i) the claim concerns and is closely connected with a relationship arising out of contract and/or tort that is governed by Spanish law or (ii) the unjust enrichment took place in Spain by means of the receipt of €950,000 into the defendant's Spanish bank account (Rome II, Art 10(1), (3)).
d) The parties have a long history of dealings with each other in Spain. The main facts are set out above. The claimant purchased the Spanish Villa from the defendant with the assistance of finance provided by a Spanish bank. Prior agreements between them had expressly been made subject to Spanish law (the 2007 Assignment Agreement) or to the exclusive jurisdiction of the Spanish courts (the December 2014 Agreement).
e) The 2008 Asset Swap Agreement between the claimant and Mr Jones was governed by Spanish law (as accepted by the claimant and found by HHJ Jarman QC in the Jones Claim).
f) The defendant, though domiciled in the United Arab Emirates, resides much of the time in Spain and has done for many years, having first acquired a house there in 1988. His 17-year-old son lives in Mallorca and has always done so. His other two children, who live in the UK, are in late middle age (the implication, as I understood it, being that as such they are less of an attraction).
g) The defendant does not reside at all in England and Wales. He has been registered by HMRC as a non-UK-resident since 2005. During the last six years, he has typically spent less than five days each year in the UK. He "does not personally" own any assets in the UK (witness statement dated 18 October 2023 of his solicitor, Hugh Hitchcock, para 53: the wording is noted). He has no extant business interests in the UK.
h) The claimant too has close connections with Spain. At the time of his original acquisition of the Spanish Villa he was often in Mallorca. Thereafter, on his own account, that property became his second home and he would spend roughly four weeks a year there, as well as other weekends. He looked into buying another property in Spain. He had a personal bank account with CaixaBank in Spain.
i) The convenient location for a trial is Spain. The defendant is now aged 81 years and (it is said) it would be difficult for him to attend a trial in Wales. It is likely that Spanish lawyers, notably Sr Serra, would give evidence. There are no extant proceedings involving the parties in England and Wales: the Jones Claim has ended, and other proceedings between the claimant and the defendant have been settled.
a) The long history relied on by the defendant is largely no more than background; it does not bear directly on the claim and has little if any weight in identifying the appropriate forum.
b) Although it is true that the claimant's present claims against the defendant arise in connection with the May 2016 Sale Agreement, they relate directly not to that agreement but to the payment of €950,000 euros. Further, the claims arise also in connection with the findings and decision of this court in the Jones Claim.
c) The applicable law for the claim in negligent misstatement is that of England and Wales, as being the place where the damage occurred. (It is said that the damage is either the payment away of the money from the claimant's bank account in Wales or the liability incurred to Mr Jones by reason of the decision of this court in the Jones Claim.)
d) The defendant's claim that it is inconvenient to him to litigate in this country is merely tactical. In December 2021 a company apparently controlled in part by the defendant brought proceedings against the claimant in the Insolvency and Companies List in London. In February 2022 the defendant issued a claim in this court against the claimant. On both occasions the solicitors instructed were those currently acting for the defendant in these proceedings[2]. Further, both in December 2017 and again in January 2023 he has expressly or by implication intimated an intention or willingness to sue Mr Jones in this jurisdiction, and in his efforts on those occasions to recover payment from Mr Jones he has used solicitors based in Wales. His complaint that travel to Wales and staying here for the duration of any trial is belied by the fact that he continues to divide his time between Dubai and Mallorca.
e) The so-called Cambridgeshire factor weighs in favour of permitting proceedings to continue in this country: that is, the familiarity of English and Welsh lawyers, on both sides, with the background of and issues in the case is likely to make the conduct of the proceedings more efficient and proportionate in this jurisdiction than elsewhere.
f) The evidential requirements of the litigation tend to point in favour of a trial in this country. There are formal documents in Spanish, but they can easily be translated. The courts of England and Wales are well used to receiving and analysing evidence of foreign law. While it is possible (though by no means certain) that some evidence from Spanish lawyers will be received in respect of the facts of the case, the central evidence will be that of the claimant and the defendant (and, perhaps, Mr Jones: see below); their communications, both written and oral, were conducted in colloquial English and they will more easily be assessed, and their nuances picked up, by judges in this country than those of another jurisdiction.
g) In proceedings brought by the claimant against the defendant, it is likely that the defendant will seek to join Mr Jones in order to protect his own position in the event that he should lose.
h) The claimant is domiciled in the UK and lives and carries on business in Cardiff. He has only weak connections with Spain.
i) The defendant is not and has never been domiciled in Spain. (Some documents refer to him as being "notification-domiciled" at an address there, but this appears to be no more than the provision of an address for service at his lawyers' offices.) He carried on business in the UK until fairly recently, and in the London proceedings mentioned above the present claimant was alleged to have been in breach of his duties as a director of a UK company in which the present defendant was the beneficial owner of 42% of the shares.
j) There is a risk that a claim in Spain would be time-barred. The evidence of the claimant's solicitor, Mr Lee Fisher, is to the effect that the primary limitation period in Spain expired before the judgment in the Jones Claim was handed down on 17 August 2022. He states that there is "scope for arguing" that the relevant (5-year) limitation period in Spain ought to run from the date when the claimant first became aware that he had a cause of action against the defendant, namely upon hand-down of the judgment in the Jones Claim. He states: "In the circumstances, I understand there is a risk (though by no means a certainty) that, if the claimant brings the claims described above against the defendant in Spain, those claims will be statute-barred."
1) Both parties are British and remain UK subjects. This is true of the defendant as of the claimant. It is relevant to bear in mind that this case does not engage the exercise of an "exorbitant" jurisdiction "to put a foreigner, who owes no allegiance here, to the inconvenience and annoyance of being brought to contest his rights in this country" (see paragraph 12 above).
2) Neither party is domiciled in Spain. The claimant lives in Wales. The defendant is domiciled in the United Arab Emirates, albeit that he spends a significant amount of time in Spain.
3) Both parties are native speakers of English. I have no evidence that either of them is fluent in Spanish, though I can readily infer that each has at least some Spanish and that the defendant is likely to be reasonably proficient in it.
4) Evidentially, the case has in my view much closer connection with this jurisdiction than with Spain. The critical evidential matters are likely to concern the interactions of the claimant, the defendant and Mr Jones. All of these took place in English and most of them in conversation. Assessment of nuance is likely to be more satisfactorily conducted in a court sharing the same language and idiom as the protagonists. There is quite likely to be evidence from one Spanish witness, Sr Serra, but it is unlikely that the same considerations will apply to that evidence. The evidence of what was said to and by Spanish lawyers is likely to have a more formal character than the evidence of the interactions of the Welsh protagonists. Documents in Spanish can easily be translated and, if necessary, their significance explained.
5) Similarly, the convenience of witnesses weighs in favour of a trial in this jurisdiction. The claimant lives in Cardiff. So does another potential witness, whom I have not so far mentioned, Mr Andrew Mallett. (I simply do not know how likely he is to give evidence.) Mr Jones resides in Dubai, but the fact that his claim against the present claimant was brought in this court and not in Spain indicates to me the probability that, if (as I should think likely) he becomes involved as a witness or even a party, he will find this jurisdiction convenient. I accept that Sr Serra would find Spain a more convenient venue; however, I think that any evidence he might give would be relatively short, and it might even be given by video link.
6) As for the defendant, I simply do not accept the protestations on his behalf that it would be inconvenient for him to litigate in Wales. A Welshman who is happy to divide his time between Dubai and Mallorca cannot credibly say (at least, this one has not credibly said) that he is an old man who would find it burdensome to be in Wales for the purposes of litigation. This is the more the case in view of the defendant's willingness to litigate here when it suits him to do so.
7) The matter of the applicable law would tend to favour Spanish jurisdiction but is not, in my view, compelling. The applicable law of restitution seems to me to be more probably the law of Spain than that of England and Wales. The applicable law of tort is less clear; I tend to think that it is the law of this country as being that of the place where the damage (payment away of the money for nothing) was suffered; the point, however, is arguable, and counsel agreed that I was not called on to determine it. As I have noted, however, the defendant's contention that there was no reasonable cause of action in tort was advanced on the basis of the law of England and Wales. I accept that evidence will probably be required in respect of Spanish law regarding both property and contract; the courts of this jurisdiction are, however, used to receiving evidence of foreign law, and there is nothing before me to indicate that the relevant law will be controversial.
8) The so-called Cambridgeshire factor has substantial weight in this case. Both parties have Welsh solicitors and London counsel, all of whom are already very familiar with the issues in the case.
9) The question of limitation has some relevance, in my view. This is not a case where it can simply be said that the claim would be time-barred in Spain. If it were, the point would be of great significance, as there would be no good reason to think that the claimant had allowed time to expire for tactical reasons (that is, as a form of forum-shopping). However, the evidence for the claimant is that there is a real risk that a claim in Spain would be time-barred and the evidence for the defendant has neither accepted nor denied that contention. Therefore, while it cannot be said that the claim could be determined only in this jurisdiction, I proceed on the basis that if it is not determined here there is a risk that it will not receive any determination on the merits.
10) I come back to the fundamental principle, which is that the court must make an evaluative judgment to "identify in which forum the case could most suitably be tried for the interests of all the parties and for the ends of justice": the Spiliada Maritime case at 480. In my judgment, the most suitable forum is clearly England and Wales.
Full and frank disclosure
1) The claimant failed to bring to the court's attention, whether by evidence or submissions, the 2007 Assignment Agreement, the December 2014 Agreement or the 25 May 2016 Agreement, although each of those agreements was relevant both to the issues in the claim and, in particular, to the question of the appropriate forum.
2) The claimant failed to give satisfactory evidence about the payment of €950,000. One aspect of this complaint relates to the mechanism of payment; as I have said, Mr Parker rightly did not seek to make much of this. The other aspect, however, concerns the fact that the claimant's evidence did not make clear that the claimant had two personal bank accounts with CaixaBank; this connection with Spain was material to the question of appropriate forum.
Conclusion
1) I reject the defendant's contention that the claimant shows no reasonable grounds for bringing the claim in tort.
2) I reject the defendant's contention that permission to serve out of the jurisdiction should be refused by reason of a failure to make full and frank disclosure.
3) I confirm the permission to serve out of the jurisdiction.
Note 1 Lord Goff went on to explain that by “exorbitant” was meant that the jurisdiction to permit service out “should be exercised with circumspection in cases where there exists an alternative forum, viz. the courts of the foreign country where the proposed defendant does carry on business, and whose jurisdiction would be recognised under English conflict rules”: per Lord Diplock in Amin Rasheed Shipping Corporation v Kuwait Insurance Co. [1984] AC 50, at 65-66. [Back] Note 2 In fact, there were several sets of proceedings. The details are set out in the first witness statement of the claimant’s solicitor, Mr Lee Fisher, dated 22 December 2022. I do not think it necessary to burden this judgment with the precise details. [Back]