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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Hewett v First Plus Financial Group Plc [2010] EWCA Civ 312 (24 March 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2010/312.html Cite as: [2010] 23 EG 108, [2010] EWCA Civ 312, [2010] 13 EG 83, [2010] 2 FLR 177, [2010] Fam Law 589 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM NORWICH COUNTY COURT
His Honour Judge Darroch
8PC 14707
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
and
MR JUSTICE BRIGGS
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JAYNE HEWETT |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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FIRST PLUS FINANCIAL GROUP PLC |
Respondent |
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Mr Jeremy Lightfoot (instructed by Eversheds LLP, Cardiff CF10 5BT) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 16th March 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Briggs:
INTRODUCTION
THE FACTS
"I was told it was the only way of keeping the house. It was a horrible choice."
The Judge concluded that:
"A reluctant choice, an unenthusiastic choice, a horrible choice are nevertheless choices. I am unable to say that she was not exercising her own will."
"Many couples would regard re-mortgaging as the best way and possibly the only way of rescuing a tight financial situation where one party had run up large debts."
"The donor may be led but she must not be driven and her will must be the offspring of her own volition, not a record of someone else's."
He concluded (as I have already described) that although Mrs Hewett faced a horrible choice, she made her own choice to participate in the re-mortgage. He found that there had been no oppression, no coercion, bullying or threats, and that Mrs Hewett had neither been frightened nor intimidated by her husband when deciding to accede to his request.
ANALYSIS
"I have no reason to assume that he was at the stage when the mortgage was taken out planning to leave his wife. He may have liked the set up with a comfortable home, a caring wife, children and mother in law sharing expenses."
"Take it that she (the plaintiff) intended to give it to him (the defendant): it is by no means out of the reach of the principle. The question is, not, whether she knew, what she was doing, had done, or proposed to do, but how the intention was produced:"
It is implicit in that dictum that a finding of undue influence does not depend, as a necessary pre-requisite, upon a conclusion that the victim made no decision of her own, or that her will and intention was completely overborne. No doubt there are many examples where that is shown, but a conscious exercise of will may nonetheless be vitiated by undue influence.
"32. I add a cautionary note, prompted by some of the first instance judgments in the cases currently being considered by the House. It concerns the general approach to be adopted by a court when considering whether a wife's guarantee of her husband's bank overdraft was procured by her husband's undue influence. Undue influence has a connotation of impropriety. In the eye of the law, undue influence means that influence has been misused. Statements or conduct by a husband which do not pass beyond the bounds of what may be expected of a reasonable husband in the circumstances should not, without more, be castigated as undue influence. Similarly, when a husband is forecasting the future of his business, and expressing his hopes or fears, a degree of hyperbole may be only natural. Courts should not too readily treat such exaggerations as misstatements.
33. Inaccurate explanations of a proposed transaction are a different matter. So are cases where a husband, in whom a wife has reposed trust and confidence for the management of their financial affairs, prefers his interests to hers and makes a choice for both of them on that footing. Such a husband abuses the influence he has. He fails to discharge the obligation of candour and fairness he owes a wife who is looking to him to make the major financial decisions."
After referring to the need for the law to recognise the freedom of home-owners to make economic use of their homes, he continued:
"36. At the same time, the high degree of trust and confidence and emotional interdependence which normally characterises a marriage relationship provides scope for abuse. One party may take advantage of the other's vulnerability. Unhappily, such abuse does occur. Further, it is all too easy for a husband, anxious or even desperate for bank finance, to misstate the position in some particular or to mislead the wife, wittingly or unwittingly, in some other way. The law would be seriously defective if it did not recognise these realities."
"100. In the light of the arguments before me, there are some additional observations I should make. First, although in Etridge Lord Nicholls of Birkenhead described the paradigm case of a relationship where influence is presumed as being one in which the complainant reposed trust and confidence in the other party in relation to the management of the complainant's financial affairs (§ 14), I do not consider that this description was intended to be exhaustive. To restrict the type of trust and confidence in this way would not be consistent with the authoritative exposition by Lindley LJ in Allcard v Skinner (1887) 36 Ch D 145 in which Lindley LJ referred to "cases in which the position of the donor to the donee has been such that it has been the duty of the donee to advise the donor, or even to manage his property for him". This very sentence was paraphrased by Lord Nicholls (§ 9). In addition, when describing the circumstances in which the burden of proof would shift (§ 21) Lord Nicholls used much more general language……. Second, the requisite trust and confidence can arise in the course of the impugned transaction itself: Turkey v Awadh [2005] 2 P & CR 29 (§ 11)…."
"Mis-stating the position or misleading the wife is different from an inadvertent failure to disclose, a distinction familiar in the law of misrepresentation. Of course a statement which, though strictly true, is misleading without qualification will fall within these observations of Lord Nicholls. Likewise, a deliberate suppression of information because the husband knows that, if disclosed, it will deter the wife from giving the guarantee will involve an abuse by him of her confidence. It would be unconscionable and rightly categorised as unacceptable means…."
Lord Justice Leveson:
Lord Justice Jacob: