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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Hayer v Hayer [2012] EWCA Civ 257 (12 January 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2012/257.html Cite as: [2012] EWCA Civ 257 |
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ON APPEAL FROM CENTRAL LONDON CIVIL JUSTICE CENTRE
(HIS HONOUR JUDGE COWELL)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE RICHARDS
and
LORD JUSTICE PATTEN
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Parminder Singh Hayer |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Kushvinder Singh Hayer |
Respondent |
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Mr Lloyd Sefton-Smith (instructed by Beverley Morris and Co) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
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Lady Justice Arden:
"Alternatively, if, which is denied, the alleged Trust Deed was (a) settled and engrossed by King Prior & Co solicitors in 1997 and (b) duly executed by the Defendant on or around 16th December 1996, the Defendant will contend that the Trust Deed is unenforceable and/or liable to be set aside because:
(i) the Defendant reposed trust and confidence in the vendor, Jagdish Singh Hayer, and acted under his direction to the extent that any such Trust Deed was executed under his undue influence;
(ii) during the antecedent meeting with King Prior & Co, Jagdish Singh Hayer gave express instructions to the solicitor which falsely represented that the transfer of the Property was 'a gift' and not for valuable consideration;
(iii) as a result of the said misrepresentation, King Prior & Co did not and were not obliged to give the Defendant advice as to the otherwise inexplicable disadvantage he might suffer upon executing the Trust Deed;
(iv) consequently and further, if the Defendant signed the Deeds of Gift and/or Trust then he did so without proper knowledge or understanding of their effect save that he believed they transferred the Property into his own name.
18. By reason of matters aforesaid, the Claimant cannot reply upon the strict terms of the Trust Deed and is estopped from doing so; or in the alternative the Trust Deed should be set aside; or in the further alternative the Trust Deed is wholly or partially unenforceable as against the Defendant."
"Had Mr Prior known of the true bargain, that Kushvinder was buying 19 Russell Road, the price being part money and in part relinquishing of ownership over another asset, whatever share beneficially he may have had in those assets, namely 9 St James Avenue, Mr Prior would have seen that it was not for the vendor to tell the purchaser what to do with the property being bought, but rather for the purchaser to decide what interest in it if any to give away. Indeed, it was Kushvinder rather than Jagdish who required independent legal advice, but the need for Kushvinder to receive independent advice cannot have been either apparent or appreciated by Mr Prior."
That leads to a matter which I shall come to a little later but it is right that I should define the matter that was crucially in issue at the start of the trial: was the trust deed validly executed?
"50. I felt it was in the general interests of justice to raise the point. That is the point that the defendant did not know what he was saying. It was not, as I have indicated, the first case in my experience of this kind. In a genuine case, as I think this is, of a person signing, having no understanding of the effect of the document, as later explained to him and no memory except that he signed two or more documents at the time, the alternative plea 'it is a forgery, but if it is not I did not understand what I was signing' is not quite so surprising or suspicious as it might at first seem. There was therefore an adjournment at the end of Friday in case the parties might be able to come to terms. That did not happen and the trial resumed on Monday morning yesterday.
51. A number of issues arise. First, whether any amendment to the pleading should be necessary. If it were necessary, whether it should be permitted and, if it were permitted, whether there should be a further amendment in order to enable the claimant either to cross-examine some of the witnesses who were called or to call further evidence. All these matters have occasioned on my part considerable thought.
52. An amendment was formulated by Mr Sefton-Smith on behalf of the defendant and it concentrates on four points. The first is that the defendant proposed trust and confidence in the vendor, Jagdish, and acted under his direction to the extent that any such trust deed was executed under his undue influence. The crucial point here is that the defendant acted under the direction of Jagdish; that that is the case depends not only on my having accepted Kushvinder's evidence to that effect, but also crucially upon the letter at page 292, which confirms that the instructions for the trust deed came from Jagdish. It is a confirmation given by Mr Basi [the solicitor subsequently instructed by Jagdish] in his letter.
53.What more in the cross-examination of witnesses already heard or in the adducing of further evidence could be added by the claimant to that? Mr Prior has no recall of the drafting of the trust deed. We know that it was done on Jagdish's instructions. We know from various passages in the celebrated case of Royal Bank of Scotland v Etridge ... that pressure is neither necessary or sufficient in cases where a person is accustomed to do what he is told, including signing documents when he is told to go and sign them.
54. The second point is formulated in this way: during the antecedent meeting with King Prior and Co, Jagdish gave express instructions to the solicitor which falsely represented that a transfer of the property was a gift and not for valuable consideration. That, it seems to me, cannot possibly be doubted. What more could come from Mr Prior? His evidence was to that very effect. He said he was told that it was not a sale but a transfer to the son for no value, and indeed it is perfectly evidence from the deed of trust itself that that is what Mr Prior understood the transaction to be.
55. The third point is expressed in this way: as a result of the said misrepresentation King Prior did not and were not obliged to give the defendant advice as to the otherwise inexplicable disadvantage he might suffer upon executing the deed. Again, I cannot see that there is anything more that could be adduced either by way of cross-examination or further evidence to refute that. The solicitor was incapable of giving correct advice to Kushvinder. In short, Kushvinder could not possibly have signed the document after full, free and informed thought, and I stress 'informed' because the solicitor could not have informed them of the true situation. That is the third point.
56. The fourth point is expressed in this way. Consequently and further: if the defendant signed the deed of trust and trust deed, then he did so without proper knowledge or understanding of their effect, save that he believed that they transferred the property into his own name. Again, it is only too evident from everything that Kushvinder did after December 1996 that he believed that the property was his. His only doubt is that his wife might have had some interest in it and it seems to me again that the fourth point cannot be doubted"
"I have already expressed my view about the significance of that evidence, and I do not think that would assist at all [for the claimant to have the opportunity of obtaining of a valuation evidence]. The fact remains, in my judgment, that the consideration of the payments made and the relinquishing of ownership of 9 St James' Avenue were amply sufficient to amount to a purchase of 19 Russell Road, amply sufficient to justify the defendant in believing that he had paid for and acquired absolute ownership of 19 Russell Road."
"In short, in the light of the four points, I have mentioned it is unrealistic to think that any further evidence or cross examination could remove those four points, the cornerstones of this new defence on the part of the defendant. I appreciate that in saying all that I am not giving the claimant any opportunity to adduce further evidence or cross-examine further, but I am very conscious of the fact that this is a family dispute which has taken four and a half days of evidence already, even though there were some days of late starts. It has been very costly to both parties."
"63. When a beneficiary under a will has prepared it and been responsible for its execution, in many cases purporting to be as agent in the will making process, the burden shifts to the beneficiary of showing that the testator was clearly aware of and had had brought home to him the effect of the will. In those many cases there is a clear conflict between the duty of the agent to act on the proper wishes of the testator and the agent's interest in obtaining a benefit of himself or indeed some other third party.
64. It seems to me that the same general principles apply in the case of voluntary gifts made otherwise than by will. In probate cases the true creatures, actual undue influence and the plea of want and knowledge of approval (where the circumstances shift the burden on to the beneficiary) complement each other and cover under those headings the same spectrum covered by the actual and presumed undue influence (where similarly the burden of proof is shifted) as they are called and categorised in the field of voluntary gifts other than wills."
And then he refers to the speech of Lord Nicholls in Etridge at paragraph 6 to 19.
"65. Of course in their detail the facts may be of different significance. For example the failure to provide a testator with a copy of the executed will which, if available and known to the testator, might induce him on further reflection to make a new one, is a very suspicious circumstance. In this case what I have called the four corner stones are in my judgment of crucial significance in this inter vivos disposition. I see no reason why this case should not fit into the kind of case envisaged by Lord Nicholls, in particular in paragraphs 13 and 14. Here we have a man, Kushvinder, who at his father's direction, with a growing family and a son by his former wife, who has bought the house for and who will need a home for them all as long as any of them wish to remain, and of whom he and his wife are likely to remain the longest of all, gives half his home away to the son, thereby putting in jeopardy the existence of the home beyond such time as the son may choose. It seems to me that the trust deed cannot readily be accounted for by the ordinary motives of ordinary persons in that relationship and calls for explanation.
66. Therefore my ultimate conclusion that this is a case where the trust deed falls to be set aside. Although it was validly executed, it falls to be set aside; whether one calls it for want of knowledge and approval or by reason of undue influence is perhaps a matter than can be left to others who might like labelling cases, but whatever it is this is a case in which a court of equity would not allow the document to stand."
So that was the conclusion of the judge's judgment.
Lord Justice Richards:
Lord Justice Patten:
Order: Appeal allowed