BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Culliford & Anor vThorpe [2018] EWHC 426 (Ch) (08 March 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2018/426.html Cite as: [2018] EWHC 426 (Ch) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
CHANCERY DIVISION
BRISTOL DISTRICT REGISTRY
2 Redcliff Street, Bristol, BS1 6GR |
||
B e f o r e :
(sitting as a Judge of the High Court)
____________________
(1) Stephen John Culliford (2) Dawn Lane |
Claimants |
|
- and - |
||
Jocelyn Thorpe |
Defendant |
____________________
Joss Knight (instructed by Burnetts) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 14-15 December 2017
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
HHJ Paul Matthews :
Introduction
The witnesses
Facts found
The Law
"The first and fundamental question which must always be resolved is whether, independently of any inference to be drawn from the conduct of the parties in the course of sharing the house as their home and managing their joint affairs, there has at any time prior to acquisition, or exceptionally at some later date, been any agreement, arrangement or understanding reached between them that the property is to be shared beneficially. The finding of an agreement or arrangement to share in this sense can only, I think, be based on evidence of express discussions between the partners, however imperfectly remembered and however imprecise their terms may have been. Once a finding to this effect is made it will only be necessary for the partner asserting a claim to a beneficial interest against the partner entitled to the legal estate to show that he or she has acted to his or her detriment or significantly altered his or her position in reliance on the agreement in order to give rise to a constructive trust or a proprietary estoppel."
Although the House in Stack v Dowden did not agree with some aspects of the decision in Rosset, there was no suggestion that the basic requirements for common intention constructive trust where the parties reached an agreement as to the beneficial ownership of a house were any different from those set out by Lord Bridge.
"29. My Lords, this appeal is concerned with proprietary estoppel. An academic authority (Simon Gardner, An Introduction to Land Law (2007), p 101) has recently commented: "There is no definition of proprietary estoppel that is both comprehensive and uncontroversial (and many attempts at one have been neither)." Nevertheless most scholars agree that the doctrine is based on three main elements, although they express them in slightly different terms: a representation or assurance made to the claimant; reliance on it by the claimant; and detriment to the claimant in consequence of his (reasonable) reliance: see Megarry & Wade, The Law of Real Property , 7th ed (2008), para 16–001; Gray & Gray, Elements of Land Law , 5th ed (2009), para 9.2.8; Snell's Equity , 31st ed (2005), paras 10–16 to 10–19; Gardner, An Introduction to Land Law (2007), para 7.1.1."
That summary will suffice for the moment, though I shall deal in more detail with certain points in due course.
Some general points
"What amounts to sufficient clarity, in a case of this sort, is hugely dependent on context."
"24. In my judgment, the agreement did not apply in the events which unfolded. It only covered the case where there was a slight imbalance in contributions. Neither party fussed over minor differences in payments made by them. Since they had no formal system of accounting, there was no system for equalising contributions. They did not place much store on that consideration. The Recorder put this down to the strength of their friendship. But the fact that they were strong friends simply meant that one party would not chase each other for money which the other did not have. It did not, in my judgment, mean that they gave up any chance of substantial equality at the end of the day. The express agreement put forward by Mr Gallarotti, and accepted by the Recorder, shows that the parties were concerned that their ultimate shares in the Flat should, broadly speaking, represent their contributions to it.
25. Accordingly, in my judgment, the inference to be made from the parties' course of conduct was that they intended that their financial contributions should be taken into account but not that there should be any precise accounting.
26. One of Mr Aylwin's submissions is that the Recorder elided the process of finding a beneficial interest with that of determining its size. That is not how I see it. I conclude that, having found that there was an agreement which applied in particular circumstances, the Recorder did not go on to consider whether those circumstances occurred. Thus, in my judgment, the Recorder failed to pursue the logic of her own findings. She had found that at the date of the acquisition the parties recognised that there was some slight disparity between their contributions. However, in the event, she found that the disparity was much greater than the parties had expected at the date of their agreement. She found that Mr Gallarotti agreed that if he paid less towards the purchase price he would make that up by paying more towards the mortgage. If that was the agreement then she should have looked at the amount of the mortgage payments Mr Gallarotti had paid. He palpably had not made a substantial contribution on her findings. The logical result of the agreement, therefore, was that the agreement for 50/50 sharing was at an end. Miss Parker's submissions do not meet that point. The Recorder should have held that this was the case when the parties agreed to go their separate ways and Mr Gallarotti left the Flat. By that point in time, the only inference that could be drawn was that the parties intended the beneficial ownership should, in substance, reflect their financial contributions. It was wholly implausible that Mr Sebastianelli should make a substantial gift to Mr Gallarotti. Here were two flat sharers who were not in a family unit. They were people who for convenience lived together until they established their own homes."
"undertaking a survey of the whole course of dealing between the parties and taking account of all conduct which throws light on the question what shares were intended": see Stack v Dowden [2007] 2 AC 432, [61].
But in a case where the agreement of the parties is established on the evidence, and that evidence does not show or even suggest any subsequent variation of that agreement, I do not see the need to look at the subsequent conduct in order to assess what the agreement was.
"first and fundamental question which must always be resolved is whether, independently of any inference to be drawn from the conduct of the parties in the course of sharing the house as their home and managing their joint affairs, there has at any time prior to acquisition, or exceptionally at some later date, been any agreement, arrangement or understanding reached between them that the property is to be shared beneficially" (emphasis supplied).
Application of the law to the facts: common intention constructive trust
Application of the law to the facts: proprietary estoppel
Unconscionability and detriment
"A resulting, implied or constructive trust – and it is unnecessary for present purposes to distinguish between these three classes of trust – is created by a transaction between the trustee and the cestui que trust in connection with the acquisition by the trustee of a legal estate in land, whenever the trustee has so conducted himself that it would be inequitable to allow him to deny to the cestui que trust a beneficial interest in the land acquired. and he will be held so to have conducted himself if by his words or conduct he has induced the cestui que trust to act to his own detriment in the reasonable belief that by so acting he was acquiring a beneficial interest in the land."
"39. There is a lively controversy about the essential aim of the exercise of this broad judgmental discretion. One line of authority takes the view that the essential aim of the discretion is to give effect to the claimant's expectation unless it would be disproportionate to do so. The other takes the view that essential aim of the discretion is to ensure that the claimant's reliance interest is protected, so that she is compensated for such detriment as she has suffered. The two approaches, in their starkest form, are fundamentally different: see Cobbe v Yeoman's Row Management Ltd [2006] EWCA Civ 1139, [2006] 1 WLR 2964 at [120] (reversed on a different point [2008] UKHL 55; [2008] 1 WLR 1752). Much scholarly opinion favours the second approach: see Snell's Equity (33rd ed) para 12-048; Wilken and Ghaly, Waiver Variation and Estoppel (3rd ed) para 11.94; McFarlane The Law of Proprietary Estoppel, para 7.37; McFarlane and Sales: Promises, detriment, and liability: lessons from proprietary estoppel (2015) LQR 610. Others argue that the outcome will reflect both the expectation and the reliance interest and that it will normally be somewhere between the two: Gardner: The remedial discretion in proprietary estoppel – again [2006] LQR 492. Logically, there is much to be said for the second approach. Since the essence of proprietary estoppel is the combination of expectation and detriment, if either is absent the claim must fail. If, therefore, the detriment can be fairly quantified and a claimant receives full compensation for that detriment, that compensation ought, in principle, to remove the foundation of the claim: Robertson: The reliance basis of proprietary estoppel remedies [2008] Conv 295. Fortunately, I do not think that we are required to resolve this controversy on this appeal."
"the subsequent expenditure by the son, with the approbation of the father, supplied a valuable consideration originally wanting".
In other words, the detriment turned the promise into an obligation enforceable in equity.
Remedy
"50. To recapitulate: there is a category of case in which the benefactor and the claimant have reached a mutual understanding which is in reasonably clear terms but does not amount to a contract. I have already referred to the typical case of a carer who has the expectation of coming into the benefactor's house, either outright or for life. In such a case the court's natural response is to fulfil the claimant's expectations. But if the claimant's expectations are uncertain, or extravagant, or out of all proportion to the detriment which the claimant has suffered, the court can and should recognise that the claimant's equity should be satisfied in another (and generally more limited) way.
51. But that does not mean that the court should in such a case abandon expectations completely, and look to the detriment suffered by the claimant as defining the appropriate measure of relief. Indeed in many cases the detriment may be even more difficult to quantify, in financial terms, than the claimant's expectations. Detriment can be quantified with reasonable precision if it consists solely of expenditure on improvements to another person's house, and in some cases of that sort an equitable charge for the expenditure may be sufficient to satisfy the equity (see Snell's Equity 30th ed para 39-21 and the authorities mentioned in that paragraph). But the detriment of an ever-increasing burden of care for an elderly person, and of having to be subservient to his or her moods and wishes, is very difficult to quantify in money terms. Moreover the claimant may not be motivated solely by reliance on the benefactor's assurances, and may receive some countervailing benefits (such as free bed and board). In such circumstances the court has to exercise a wide judgmental discretion."