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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Lenderink-Woods v Zurich Assurance Ltd & Ors [2015] EWHC 3634 (Ch) (14 December 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2015/3634.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 3634 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
MANCHESTER DISTRICT REGISTRY
1 Bridge Street West Manchester |
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B e f o r e :
VICE-CHANCELLOR OF THE COUNTY PALATINE
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ANGELA LENDERINK-WOODS |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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ZURICH ASSURANCE LIMITED ZURICH ADVICE NETWORK LIMITED CHERRY LENDERINK |
Defendants |
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Gerard McMeel (instructed by DAC Beachcroft) for the First and Second Defendants
Hearing date: 9 October 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Norris:
"The major objective though of our first year's meetings was to reduce (mitigate) inheritance tax via trusts so that [Mrs Lenderink-Woods'] daughters' inheritance would not be heavily taxed".
a) The reasonably competent financial adviser would have appreciated that all liability to Inheritance Tax (rather than simply Inheritance Tax on any increase in value) could have been removed by investing the Portfolio and the cash deposit in exempt gilts or off-shore unit trusts:
b) A reasonably competent financial adviser would not have advised the Loan Trust Scheme because of its inflexibility (in particular in relation to the limits upon the amounts that could be withdrawn each year):
c) A reasonably competent financial adviser would have warned that the Bonds carried high charges when compared with direct investments:
d) A reasonably competent financial adviser would not have stated (as it is alleged Mr Davies did state) that the costs of the Loan Trust Scheme were "just 2%", but would have drawn attention to the initial charges incurred when the Bonds were taken out, to the fact that the charges for the first year were about 4.5% or more, and that there were ongoing annual charges of at least 2.3% on the value of the Bonds (not simply on the growth).
"37(a) Insofar as necessary the Claimant will rely on section 14A of the Limitation Act 1980
(b) Any complaints, if any, by the Claimant made to the Second Defendant's appointed agent in 2009, or subsequently, were in relation to investment performance of the Bonds, not in relation to the decision to embark upon the Loan Trust Scheme
(c) The Claimant first had knowledge that the advice to enter into the Loan Trust Scheme was the cause of the losses where Mr Joe Willows… sent an email to the Claimant… on 20 February 2012 following a conversation on 16 February 2012…
(d) The Claimant continued to seek, receive and rely upon advice from Huw Davies up to and beyond 10 December 2011".
a) Knowledge of the material facts about the damage in respect of which damages are claimed (being such facts as would lead a reasonable person who had suffered such damage to consider it sufficiently serious to justify instituting proceedings for damages against someone who did not dispute liability and could satisfy judgment);
b) Knowledge that the damage was attributable in whole or in part to the acts or omissions of which Mrs Lenderink-Woods now complains as being negligent:
c) In each case "knowledge" in the sense of knowledge she actually had or knowledge which she might have reasonably been expected to acquire from facts observable or ascertainable by her (or ascertainable with the help of appropriate expert advice which it was reasonable to seek).
a) For the purposes of section 14A(5) and (6)(a) "knowledge" of the material facts means knowing facts with sufficient confidence to justify embarking upon the preliminaries to the issue of a writ: Haward v Fawcetts [2006] UKHL 9 at [9].
b) For the purposes of section 14A(6)(b) and (8)(a) establishing "knowledge" that the damage was "attributable" to the acts of which complaint is made requires one to look at the way Mrs Lenderink-Woods puts her case, to distil what she is complaining about and then to ask (i) whether in broad terms she had knowledge in the relevant period of the facts on which her present complaint is based: and (ii) whether she knew that there was a real possibility that the matters of complaint were causally relevant to the damage of which she now complains: see Hawards v Fawcetts at paragraphs [10] and [11] and Hallam-Eames v Merrett Syndicates [2001] Lloyd Rep PN 178 at 181 column 1.
c) For time to start running on a claim for defective advice there has to be something which would reasonably cause the recipient to start asking questions about the advice received: Haward v Fawcetts at paragraph [21].
d) Where one is looking not at actual knowledge but at constructive knowledge the Court must have regard to the characteristics of the person in the position of Mrs Lenderink-Woods (but not to any characteristics that are peculiar to her): Gravgaard v Alderidge & Brownlee [2004] EWCA Civ 1529 at [20]-[22].
Although nearly a dozen other cases were cited both at first instance and in the Court of Appeal, these were either applications of the words of the statute to particular facts or illustrations of the principles which I have identified in the authorities. I shall therefore not refer to them further.
a) Knowledge of the material facts about the damage in respect of which damages are claimed (i.e. that there was a better alternative):
b) Knowledge that Mr Davies could have considered alternatives to the Loan Trust Scheme but had not made enquiries or recommended things that other competent financial advisors would have considered or recommended:
c) Knowledge that what Mr Davies had or had not done was causally relevant to the predicament in which she found herself, locked into the Loan Trust Scheme and Bonds with her capital eroding:
d) Knowledge of those matters with such a degree of confidence as would justify embarking upon the preliminaries to the issue of a writ.
In conducting this examination the Court is not concerned with the question whether Mrs Lenderink-Woods might reasonably have been expected to know that what Mr Davies did or did not do involved "negligence" as a matter of law: that is not a relevant consideration.
"I still seek to understand the mechanism of premiums being paid out and withdrawals coming directly out of capital. This confuses me. I can understand a Portfolio loosing (sic) due to various changes in the stock market. I cannot understand taking money directly out of capital except in extreme emergency situations… I would like to know how we have gotten to this place since, for the moment at least, I am having to manage the money over here".
To this her sister Annabelle added:-
"I must say I am more confused and I was hoping it would be possible for you to give us an overview of this account and when and from (principal or income) of the account the withdrawals came. Birgit is very concerned as it appears that it seems to have come from the principal. I too find that disturbing".
"All [monies] …..in [Costa Rica] come under UK inheritance tax rules even though she is an expat; bank balance, savings, cash… the only thing that will not come under UK inheritance tax law is her property in CR which she has made over to us to make probate simpler…".
Inherent in that analysis is the assumption (approved by Mr Davies) that although resident in Costa Rica Mrs Lenderick-Woods was domiciled in the United Kingdom. In fact an examination of the position (by a financial adviser if it fell within the skills of a reasonably competent adviser, or by an appropriately qualified solicitor on the recommendation of a financial adviser if it did not) would have shown that in 2011 (as in 2001) Mrs Lenderink-Woods had acquired a domicile of dependency in the Netherlands when she married her husband in 1945, which domicile she retained notwithstanding the passing of the Domicile and Matrimonial Proceedings Act 1973 (unless she had subsequently acquired a domicile of choice in Costa Rica).
"You can hand over [Mrs Lenderink-Woods'] investments… to solicitors for the UK and solicitors in CR. If you feel my advice is no longer required then all I would say is, do you want the expense of seeing solicitors, passing on the requirements etc etc? Where will the money come from to pay them; the solicitors?"
"Does she fall under UK or CR estate tax laws, or both? What are the alternatives to Life Assurance Bonds to increase income?... when we tried to do the math on the inheritance tax advantage gained by her arrangement it seemed to us that there wasn't really going to be any, given her current circumstances, is this right?"
"I have become somewhat uncomfortable with this arrangement and my mother and I agree that it is time to take a long hard look at where she stands financially and what, if anything, would be the best thing to do. It is time for a fresh, unbiased assessment from a sector other than the one that is currently benefiting from their arrangement with her. Since 2009 I have been trying to get information about the fees that she is being charged and it was like pulling teeth. I finally know somewhat now and it has shocked my mother".
"… a Claimant who instructs an appropriate expert is not penalised for shortcomings in that expert's work. If the expert fails to discover or advise of something which he should have discovered or advised of, the Claimant is not fixed with constructive knowledge by reason of the expert's failing. It follows that if the Claimant continues to rely upon the Defendant for advice and the Defendant does not inform him that there is a problem, the Claimant will not be fixed with constructive knowledge".
a) that the Portfolio was originally liable to bear Inheritance Tax, the Portfolio is still liable to bear inheritance tax (though any increase in value is not) and so Mrs Lenderink-Woods' Inheritance Tax position had not been adversely affected; and
b) that although the use of the Loan Trust Scheme was not entirely necessary, it did not seem that Mrs Lenderink-Woods had suffered a financial loss by reason of the Portfolio having been placed in a gift and loan trust.
The Adjudication proceeds on the footing that the only alternative was to have placed the Portfolio into an offshore trust which would have involved a chargeable lifetime transfer and a periodic 10 year charge (together with an exit charge). Why an offshore trust is thought to be the only alternative is not clear. The Adjudication does not consider the option of investment in exempt gilts. The Adjudication does not address either the reconstruction claim or the reimbursement claim as advanced in the present proceedings.