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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Tee-Hillman v Tee & Ors [2002] EWCA Civ 1441 (24 September 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2002/1441.html Cite as: [2002] EWCA Civ 1441 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT
FAMILY DIVISION
(MR JUSTICE MUNBY)
Strand London, WC2 Tuesday, 24 September 2002 |
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B e f o r e :
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BRIGITTE ILSE TEE-HILLMAN | Claimant/Appellant | |
-v- | ||
(1) RONALD STANLEY TEE | ||
(2) MARTIN BLOUNT | ||
(3) TIMOTHY RUSSELL SPENDER | Defendants/Respondents |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
The Respondent did not appear and was not represented
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Crown Copyright ©
"On any objective view, by 1994 there was only one material capital asset, Gorse Meadow. It was obviously joint property. Clearly, if the wife could not afford to buy the husband out, a sale was inevitable. Litigation seems hardly appropriate in those circumstances. Negotiation or mediation should have sufficed. If it had to be litigation, relevant evidence could easily be defined and one day in court should have been ample. The fundamental error in the county court was to permit Mr Hillman's diversionary excursion into the Trusts of Land Act. The court should have perceived that because the joint owners were husband and wife, and because there were no third party interests (excluding Mr Hillman's specious claims) the only pertinent statutory provisions were contained in ss 22-25 of the Matrimonial Causes Act. Because they impose a duty on the court to redistribute or divide capital in such a way as to reflect the statutory criteria and all the circumstances of the case, they override other statutory provisions or rules of law which have the very different objective of determining proprietary interests generally between non-spouses or, in spousal cases, where a third party to the marriage claims a proprietary interest jointly with one or both of the spouses. Cases relied on by Mr Hillman involve either unmarried property owners, or married property owners to whose home a third party had contributed cash. Since 1971, when the Matrimonial Proceedings and Property Act 1970 came into force, real property and trust law has had a much reduced rôle in determining distribution and division of realty between spouses. The consequence of this error has been furious adversarial litigation, scarcely controlled by the court."
"I have no doubt at all that on the whole weight of the evidence, including statements and affidavits in previous proceedings, the oral evidence before the district Judge, all the evidence that I have heard in this case, that Mr & Mrs Tee had a clear intention that the legal and beneficial interest in Gorse Meadow should be held by them in equal shares, and that following that intention it was their joint wish that the equitable interest in the contract merged on completion of the purchase with the legal title vested in Mr & Mrs Tee in equal shares. In making that finding I reject and make it clear if I have not already done so any suggestion that Mrs Tee had at any material time forgotten that she had signed a contract or was unaware and did not support the implications of the later Transfer."
"It is . . . Gorse Meadow that has been the primary property to be considered in this action. Evidence about the contract has been new . . . I have found on investigation that its significance would have made no difference to the original decision".
"fraud, deceit, fraudulent misrepresentation and, or in the alternative, for non-disclosure of documents on the part of one or more or all of the respondents".
"47. The originating summons is simply the prelude to a wholly impermissible attempt to re-litigate issues which have already been decided adversely to Mrs Tee-Hillman in proceedings -- the trust proceedings, the ancillary relief proceedings and the negligence proceedings -- in every one of which she was a party, in every one of which she gave evidence and, incidentally, in every one of which her evidence on the crucial matter was simply rejected by the court. True it is that Mr Tee was not a party to the negligence proceedings, so Judge Bradbury's judgment cannot found any estoppel per rem judicatam -- neither a cause of action estoppel nor an issue estoppel. But that is not the point. In the first place, as I have pointed out, Judge Bradbury's judgment, given after hearing evidence from Mrs Tee-Hillman, demonstrates the total lack of merit in her claim. Furthermore, the fact that he came to the decision he did, in proceedings in which Mrs Tee-Hillman was in effect trying to set up -- albeit as against a third party -- the substance of the very claim which she now seeks to pursue against Mr Tee, makes it an abuse of the process for her now to seek to resurrect against Mr Tee the claim so comprehensively dismissed by Judge Bradbury: see the discussion by Lord Hoffman in Arthur JS Hall & Co v Simons [2000] 3 WLR 543 at pp 572D-574F.
48. In summary, Mrs Tee-Hillman's case -- by which I mean both her case as set out in the originating summons and the case which thereafter she seeks to pursue -- is, as Mr Egleton asserts, wholly unmeritorious. It cannot succeed. It is an attempt to re-write history. It has no foundation in any honest account of events given by Mrs Tee-Hillman. Its origin is, I do not doubt, to be found in the fertile ingenuity of Mr Hillman's lawyer's mind. It constitutes an abuse of the process in its widest sense. This litigation is vexatious and an abuse of the process. It must be stopped. The originating summons should be struck out.
49. Mr Hillman and Mrs Tee-Hillman have shown their determination to ignore everything that Thorpe LJ said in 1999. The history of the litigation as a whole, both before and since that judgment, tells its own tale. The time has come to put a stop to it once and for all. I am minded to make a Grepe v Loam (1887) 37 ChD 168 order."
"There was no relevant non-disclosure or misrepresentation in relation to the contract. That is clear from the findings of fact made by Judge Bradbury, having heard evidence on the point from all the relevant witnesses, as set out in paragraphs [24] and [25] above."