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England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Halpern & Anor v Halpern & Ors [2006] EWHC 1728 (Comm) (04 July 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2006/1728.html Cite as: [2006] 2 CLC 479, [2006] 3 WLR 946, [2006] EWHC 1728 (Comm), [2006] 2 All ER (Comm) 484, [2007] QB 88, [2006] 3 All ER 1139 |
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QUEENS BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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YISROEL MEIR HALPERN SHMUEL HALPERN |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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NOCHUM MORDECHAI HALPERN DAVID MOSHE HALPERN BEZALEL YAACOV HALPERN AKIVA ARON HALPERN ESTHER VAISFICHE |
Defendants |
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David Berkley QC and Richard Selwyn Sharpe (instructed by Simon Bergin) for the Defendants
Hearing dates : 24 May 2006
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Nigel Teare QC:
"The act of destruction of the documents is one which has benefited the defendants and prejudiced the claimants. It can neither be undone nor reversed. Nor can any pecuniary relief put the claimants in as good a position as they would have been in if the agreement could have been rescinded and matters restored to the position in which they were before the agreement was made ie that the claimants and the dayanim retained their documents, unless, perhaps Mr. Lang had retained and is prepared to produce a copy of every material document. Accordingly restitutio in integrum would not appear to be possible. It is not however clear that an inability to make restitutio in integrum is a bar to avoidance of a contract on the ground of duress. Avoidance of a contract for duress (as opposed to rescission for undue influence) is a common law remedy. In essence the illegitimate pressure imposed on the victim renders his apparent consent revocable: Anson's Law of Contract, 274. If, after the illegitimate pressure has ceased to operate, the victim treats the contract as valid, he can no longer revoke it. Equity, as a condition of granting rescission where there has been undue influence would require restitutio, at least in substance. It does not however necessarily follow that, if the victim of duress has not affirmed the contract, he loses his right of revocation if he cannot restore the other party to substantially the same position. At any rate I decline on an application for summary judgment to rule that that is so."
" A person who rescinds a contract is entitled to be restored to the position he would have been in had the contract not been made. Hence, property must be returned, possession given up, and accounts taken of profits or deterioration."
We have already seen that an important limit to rescission is that there must be restitutio in integrum. The effect of this principle is that the plaintiff must "be in a position to offer and must formally tender restitutio in integrum"; but the court will also, when rescinding the contract, order the restoration to the plaintiff of benefits received by the defendant from him under the contract. There ought to be a giving back and a taking back on both sides."
i) Rescission at common law on the grounds of fraudulent misrepresentation required an ability to give counter restitution.
ii) The logic of rescission is that the parties are put back into the position in which they would have been had there been no contract. That logic requires an ability to give counter restitution.
iii) Although no case has been found in which it was held that an ability to give counter restitution is required in order to rescind a contract on the grounds of duress there is no reason why the nature of the remedy of rescission or the circumstances in which it is available should differ depending upon whether the ground of rescission is fraud or duress.
"the plaintiff cannot avoid the contract under which he took the shares, because he cannot restore them in the same state as when he took them."
"when once it is settled that a contract induced by fraud is not void, but voidable at the option of the party defrauded, it seems to me to follow that, when that party exercises his option to rescind the contract, he must be in a state to rescind it; that is, he must be in such a situation as to be able to put the parties into their original state before the contract .. The plaintiff must rescind in toto or not at all; he cannot both keep the shares and recover the whole price. That is founded on the plainest principles of justice. If he cannot return the article he must keep it, and sue for his real damage in an action on the deceit."
"Relief under the first head, which is what in Scotland is designated restitutio in integrum, can only be had where the party seeking it is able to put those against whom it is asked in the same situation in which they stood when the contract was entered into. Indeed, this is necessarily to be inferred from the very expression, restitutio in integrum; and the same doctrine is well understood and constantly acted on in England."
"there is an obvious analogy between setting aside a disposition for duress or undue influence and setting it aside for fraud. In each case and to quote the words of Holmes J. in Fairbanks v Snow (1887) 13 NE 596,598 "the party has been subjected to an improper motive for action."
"Most importantly, it appears that the bar that restitutio in integrum is impossible generally does not apply to rescission for duress. The explanation for that is that it would generally contradict the basis for the claimant's restitution to recognise a counter-claim by the defendant: if it was illegitimate for the defendant to demand a sum of money for a particular consideration, for example, carrying out work, it would be inconsistent then to award the defendant counter-restitution for that work."
"Restoration, however, is essential to the idea of restitution. To take the simplest case, if a plaintiff who has been defrauded seeks to have the contract annulled and his money or property restored to him it would be inequitable if he did not also restore what he had got under the contract from the defendant. Though the defendant has been fraudulent, he must not be robbed, nor must the plaintiff be unjustly enriched, as he would be if he both got back what he had parted with and kept what he had received in return. The purpose of the relief is not punishment, but compensation. The rule is stated as requiring the restoration of both parties to the status quo ante "
"It is, I think, clear on principles of general justice, that as condition to a rescission there must be a restitutio in integrum. That parties must be put in statu quo. See Lord Cranworth in Addie v The Western Bank. It is a doctrine, which has often been acted upon both at law and in equity. But there is a considerable difference in the mode in which it is applied in Courts of Law and Equity, owing, as I think, to the difference of the machinery which the Courts have at their command. I speak of these Courts as they were at the time when this suit commenced, without inquiring whether the Judicature Acts make any, or if any, what difference.
It would be obviously unjust that a person who has been in possession of property under the contract which he seeks to repudiate should be allowed to throw back on the other party's hands without accounting for any benefit he may have derived from the use of the property, or if the property, though not destroyed, has been in the interval deteriorated, without making compensation for that deterioration. But as a Court of Law has no machinery at its command for taking an account of such matters, the defrauded party, if he sought his remedy at law, must in such cases keep the property and sue in an action for deceit, in which the jury, if properly directed, can do complete justice by giving as damages a full indemnity for all that the party has lost; see Clarke v Dixon and the cases there cited.
But a Court of Equity could not give damages, and, unless it can rescind the contract, can give no relief. And, on the other hand, it can take accounts of profits, and make allowance for deterioration. And I think the practice has always been for a Court of Equity to give this relief whenever, by the exercise of its powers, it can do what is practically just, though it cannot restore the parties precisely to the state they were in before the contract."
"I entertain no doubt that these misrepresentations, although not fraudulently made, are sufficient to entitle the respondent to rescind the arrangement of February 1883, if he is in a position to give as well as to demand restitution."
"This analysis of the authorities shows that the principle of restitutio in integrum is not applied with its full rigour in equity in relation to transactions entered into by persons in breach of a fiduciary relationship, and that such transactions may be set aside even though it is impossible to place the parties precisely in the position in which they were before, provided that the court can achieve practical justice between the parties by obliging the wrongdoer to give up his profits and advantages, while at the same time compensating him for any work that he has actually performed pursuant to the transaction."