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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Benjamin v Benjamin & Anor [2024] EWHC 215 (Ch) (09 February 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2024/215.html Cite as: [2024] EWHC 215 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
PROPERTY TRUSTS AND PROBATE LIST (ChD)
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
(1) Herman Baryohai Benjamin |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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(1) Raymond Ephraim Benjamin (2) Daisy Rebecca Benjamin |
Defendants |
____________________
Aidan Briggs (instructed by Howard Kennedy LLP) for the Defendants
Hearing date: 6 November 2023
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Crown Copyright ©
This judgment will be handed down remotely by circulation to the parties' representatives by email and release to The National Archives. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 10:00 am on 9 February 2024
Master McQuail:
Introduction
The Claim
The Background
The Law on Costs on Discontinuance
"Unless the court orders otherwise, a claimant who discontinues is liable for the costs which a defendant against whom the claimant discontinues incurred on or before the date on which notice of discontinuance was served on the defendant."
"(1) when a claimant discontinues the proceedings, there is a presumption by reason of CPR 38.6 that the defendant should recover his costs; the burden is on the claimant to show a good reason for departing from that position;
(2) the fact that the claimant would or might well have succeeded at trial is not itself a sufficient reason for doing so;
(3) however, if it is plain that the claim would have failed, that is an additional factor in favour of applying the presumption;
(4) the mere fact that the claimant's decision to discontinue may have been motivated by practical, pragmatic or financial reasons as opposed to a lack of confidence in the merits of the case will not suffice to displace the presumption;
(5) if the claimant is to succeed in displacing the presumption he will usually need to show a change of circumstances to which he has not himself contributed;
(6) however, no change in circumstances is likely to suffice unless it has been brought about by some form of unreasonable conduct on the part of the defendant which in all the circumstances provides a good reason for departing from the rule."
"a claimant who seeks to persuade the court to depart from the default rule must provide cogent reasons and is unlikely to be able to satisfy the court that there is good reason to do so save in unusual circumstances."
"It is also important to step back and look at this case, and the default rule, in the round. The presumption in rule 38.6 arises because, in the ordinary case, the discontinuance of a claim by a claimant against a defendant will usually amount to an admission or an acceptance that the proceedings should never have been commenced. In such a case, the starting point must be that the defendant is entitled to its costs, and that is reflected in the default rule."
Relevant Law on Incapacity
Submissions on behalf of the Claimant
(i) although it is not for me to consider whether the claim would have succeeded, I can take into account whether the claimant achieved in substance what he was seeking: Ashany and Hewson v Wells. Just as in those cases in which the claimant succeeded in obtaining documents, here the claimant achieved the original aim of his claim, namely the disclosure and information to understand the state of the Trust and what had happened to the BPL shares provided by Howard Kennedy on 7 December 2022. Discontinuance cannot be equated with failure;
(ii) as in those cases, the relevant change of circumstance here, to which the claimant did not contribute and which made continuation of the proceedings pointless, was that provision of disclosure and information;
(iii) the change in circumstances was the result of the defendants' previous unreasonable behaviour. As in Nelson's Yard and Hewson v Wells, the defendants failed to engage with the claimant's pre-action correspondence. The first defendant's behaviour included stating to the claimant that lawyers need not be involved and continuing to make assurances about BPL to him. In addition, Mr Craig said that he was instructed in relation to the Trust but failed to respond either substantively or in a way that indicated there was any difficulty about obtaining instructions. The claimant's enquiries ranged more widely than the answers provided because the claimant did not know what had happened with the Trust or BPL shares. The defendants must have had the DOA or the means to obtain a copy during the pre-action period, but no explanation has been offered as to why it was not produced before December 2022. In the circumstances the claimant was entitled in September 2022 to say "enough is enough" and issue the claim which is a consequence about which the defendants were warned by the 26 April 2022 letter;
(iv) the defendants' failure to provide information about the Trust was either inexplicable or may have been a deliberate strategy to keep information from the claimant. Once Mr Slavin was in place as the litigation friend the disclosure was given voluntarily. Paragraphs 16(a) and 16(b) of the Pre-Action Conduct Practice Direction make plain that failure to respond to pre-action correspondence may lead to adverse costs consequences including the award of indemnity costs. Under CPR 44.3 litigation behaviour "outside the norm" may lead to the award of indemnity costs. The defendants' unreasonable behaviour should be condemned in the award of indemnity costs up to 20 January 2023 by which date the claimant had had an opportunity to review the disclosure and information provided on 7 December 2022 and decide to discontinue. Thereafter Mr Hilton says the dispute was about costs and if the claimant succeeds up to that date standard basis costs are appropriate thereafter.
(i) provision of the share register was no answer to the claimant's enquiry of the defendants about the Trust and that was pointed out in Blake Morgan's letter of 13 June 2022. Benny's legal ownership of the shares would have been consistent with any of his being appointed trustee in place of the defendants, with him having purchased the shares for full consideration or, as it turned out, with the shares having apparently been appointed to him beneficially;
(ii) it is not right that the claimant did not ask if Benny was a trustee, Blake Morgan asked that question in letters of 31 May and 13 June 2022 but got no answer;
(iii) that the Trust apparently no longer has assets is irrelevant, it would have assets if the DOA were not valid. Additionally, the claimant was unaware of the lack of assets because he was not told that by the defendants, but that does not affect the claimant's entitlement to disclosure and information;
(iv) the possibility that the defendants will be personally liable for costs if there are no assets from which they might be indemnified is also no answer. If the DOA is valid it expressly preserves the equitable lien or charge against the Trust assets, and there would remain a personal right of indemnity. If the defendants are not entitled to rely on their right of indemnity for the costs of the claim, it is because they were not properly incurred. It is not suggested that the defendants will seek to exercise their right of indemnity, but the claimant would oppose the defendants seeking to recover any costs liability from the Trust;
(v) the defendants' now established lack of capacity is no answer. The defendants must be assumed to have capacity unless it is established that they lack capacity, which cannot be established merely by reference to their age or condition: ss. 1(2) and 2(3) Mental Capacity Act 2005 (MCA 2005). There is no evidence of incapacity, in the case of the second defendant before 7 November 2022, and in the case of the first defendant before 21 November 2022. Howard Kennedy's position is that obtaining any assessment of capacity at an earlier date was of "no value". The evidence is that the claimant was not aware of any incapacity, and he was entitled to rely on Mr Craig, representing that he was acting for the defendants. If Mr Craig was aware or ought to have been or become aware of any incapacity it was incumbent upon him to deal appropriately with the claimant's correspondence in the defendants' best interests either by seeking the appointment of a deputy or directly by giving disclosure on behalf of the defendants. Bowstead & Reynolds on Agency, 22nd Edition at [10-020] explains that a solicitor for a client who has lost capacity will have such residual authority, which is consistent with rule 3.1 of SRA Code of Conduct which provides that where it is not possible to obtain a client's instructions there is an obligation to act in the client's best interests;
(vi) an argument that the claimant could only recover costs for the period 13 June to 23 September 2022 makes no sense. The claimant's entitlement to costs of the claim must commence with the costs of his letter of 14 March 2022 or at latest the letter of 26 April 2022. The only possible date at which there might be a break in an entitlement to costs is at 20 January 2023 when the claimant accepted the proceedings were pointless, but thereafter the question is one of "costs of costs" and should follow the event.
Submissions on behalf of the Defendants
(i) all that has been established is what the claimant knew in 2021 which was that the BPL shares had been transferred to Benny in 2017;
(ii) of the 17 categories of documents sought by the letter of 26 April 2022 only one was provided because none of the others exist;
(iii) had an order for disclosure been made it would have been at the claimant's expense, there being no Trust assets from which the defendants could be indemnified. Since the Trust Deed excludes liability for loss to the Trust Fund, save as a result of fraud or dishonesty, a personal costs order against the defendants would have been unlikely to be made. This position was acknowledged by the claimant as he offered to pay the costs of the provision of the documents in the 26 April 2022 letter;
(iv) the claimant should have served his notice of discontinuance far earlier than July 2023, since he had achieved all he was going to achieve by the proceedings on 7 December 2022.
(i) there is no dispute now that the defendants lack capacity to litigate, and it must be more likely than not that they lacked that capacity in March 2022, there being no evidence of any change in either's capacity:
(ii) the claimant accepts his mother has had "mental and memory problems since around 2014 and was diagnosed with dementia in 2019" and having spoken to his father about the claim should have appreciated that there was a risk he lacked capacity. The claimant must have known or suspected that they lacked capacity before these proceedings were issued;
(iii) the defendants cannot be criticised for failing to respond because of their lack of capacity and CPR Part 21 is there to protect protected parties by making ineffective any step in proceedings taken before a litigation friend has been appointed. If as Bailey v Warren makes clear incapacitous parties cannot be held to a pre-action compromise they should not be penalised for pre-action conduct;
(iv) the decision voluntarily to disclose trust documents to a beneficiary upon request is one requiring an exercise of the trustees' discretion - Breakspear v Ackland [2009] Ch 32 at [67] and since it must be exercised unanimously if one or both of the trustees lacked capacity to litigate it is overwhelmingly likely they lacked capacity to exercise that discretion pre-action.
The Claimant's responsive Submissions on Incapacity
(i) the starting point is that the law presumes a person is competent. It is not for me to decide on the basis of inference that the defendants may have lacked capacity in the pre-action period, that would only be a finding open to me if evidence had been adduced to that effect, and the defendants' advisors have opted not to do that;
(ii) the claimant has never been competent to assess his parents' capacity or lack of it;
(iii) the first defendant remains a director of BPL as appears from the accounts for the year ending 30 June 2022 prepared in March 2023. He also remained a registered pharmacist during 2022;
(iv) Mr Craig's unqualified answer to the question asked by Blake Morgan whether he was acting for the defendants in relation to the Trust was in the affirmative;
(v) the threshold for capacity to act as a trustee (or former trustee) may be lower than the litigation capacity threshold, but there is in any event no evidence one way or another;
(vi) since Mr Slavin, advised by Howard Kennedy, provided the requested disclosure and information in December 2022, it is hard to see how Mr Craig or Mr Slavin or the defendants could and should not have provided the same disclosure and information in March or April 2022.
Discussion and Conclusions
Disapplication of the Default Rule
Does Possible Incapacity Change the Answer?
Judgment