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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Caudle v Ld Law Ltd. [2008] EWHC 374 (QB) (29 February 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2008/374.html Cite as: [2008] WLR 1540, [2008] EWHC 374 (QB), [2008] 1 WLR 1540, [2008] WTLR 587 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ON APPEAL FROM
THE EDMONTON COUNTY COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
ANTHONY PAUL CAUDLE |
Claimant/ Appellant |
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- and - |
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LD LAW LTD |
Defendant/ Respondent |
____________________
for the Claimant/ Appellant
Mrs Constance Mahoney instructed by and for the Defendant/ Respondent
Hearing dates : 20 February 2008
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Wyn Williams :
"The Claimant is a qualifying person entitled to make an application for the grant of Letters of Administration of the estate of Late Sarah Caudle. The Defendant has in its possession documents necessary for the proper administration of the said estate, believed to include the death certificate, funeral account, bank statements, building society passbooks, credit cards statements, wage slips with tax reference, utility and other bills, and documents relating to insurance policies, pension plan and other assets. The Defendant has wrongly retained the said documents and converted them to its own use and the Claimant seeks an Order for the delivery up of the said documents and such other property of the estate as in the Defendant's position or control."
"I write to advise that together with assistance from the Probate Registry, I have reviewed who may apply for Letters of Administration to Sarah's Estate and the position appears to be this. Firstly we are agreed that Adam is the sole beneficiary of the Estate, but as he is not yet of the age of 18, it would be yourself who, as the person with parental responsibility for Adam, will need to apply. However, because Adam is under 18, at least two administrators will be needed and the second administrator should be the next permitted representative, who will be one of Sarah's parents.
Having made preliminary enquiries, I am in a position to apply for a Grant of Letters of Administration and also to market the property at 190 Hollifield. I should be grateful if you will confirm that you consent to act as administrator and I will then send you the appropriate documentation, including the draft Oath and copies of the draft account on the basis of the information received.
……………
If, however, you do not wish to act as Sarah's administrator, please confirm the position to us, as it may, in those circumstances, be necessary to apply for an Order that Mr and Mrs Camp continue to make application for the Grant of Letters of Administration."
"As set out above, an executor may perform most of the acts appertaining to his office, before probate. However, for an administrator, the general rule is that a party entitled to administration can do nothing as administrator before letters of administration are granted to him. This is because he derives his authority entirely from the appointment of the court. Before his appointment, the property vests in the Public Trustee. ………..
A person has no right to commence proceedings as an administrator before letters of administration have issued for until such time, he has no right of action. Under existing case law, the subsequent issue of letters of administration will not assist, for the grant does not for this purpose relate back ………… On the basis of these authorities, it has been held that proceedings brought by a person supposedly as administrator, but before obtaining a grant, are in nullity and cannot be validated by a later grant of administration."
"What kind of rights to the goods must the Claimant have in order that interference with it may amount to conversion? The answer is that he can maintain the action if at the time of the Defendant's act he had (1) ownership and possession of the goods, or (2) possession of them or (3) an immediate right to possession, but without either ownership or actual possession. This seems to be the law, but it can be elicited only from some confusion of terminology in the reports. Thus it is said in several cases that the Claimant must have 'a right to property in the thing and a right of possession' and that unless both the rights concur the action will not lie If 'right of property' means 'ownership' this might lead one to infer than no one can sue for conversion except an owner in possession at the date of the alleged conversion. But that is not so, for a bailee has only possession and not ownership (which remains in the bailor) and yet the bailee can sue a third party for conversion. And, as we shall see, one who has mere possession at the date of the conversion can generally sue, and so can one who has no more than a right to possess."
The learned author then provides a number of examples of cases where the Claimant has or has not been held to have an immediate right to possess the property in question. In amongst the examples this sentence appears:-
"These examples are tolerably plain, but it must depend to a large of extent on the facts of each case whether the law will attribute to a person the immediate right to possess."
It is to be observed that while each of the examples quoted by the learned author either for the existence of the right to possess or its non-existence is supported by authority, the bald sentence quoted immediately above is not so supported.
"Secondly, the principle of relation back gives, in certain circumstances, an action for a wrong committed prior to the time when the Claimant was entitled to possession. In particular a personal representative may sue for dealings with respect to goods between death and grant of probate or letters of administration, i.e. prior to the time when the Claimant was entitled to possession. The Claimant is not entitled to possession until the grant of the probate."
"Secondly, the principle of relation back gives, in certain circumstances, an action for a wrong committed prior to the time when the Claimant was entitled to possession. In particular a personal representative may sue for dealings with respect to goods between death and grant of probate or letters of administration, and a trustee in bankruptcy for dealings between the commencement of the bankruptcy and his appointment."
"The powers of an administrator to act before grant are exceptional and limited in effect to essential actions to preserve and protect the deceased's estate."
No authority is provided for that proposition but, as it seems to me, it would be an extraordinary state of affairs if that was not so. If the trespasser in the example set out paragraph 24 above was not merely refusing to release the property to B but was in the process of destroying the deceased's property it would appear extremely strange if nothing could be done, immediately, to prevent it. Mrs Mahoney accepts that B would be entitled to take effective practical action to prevent the destruction of property but yet also submits that he would not be a competent Claimant should he move, immediately, for injunctive relief or an order for delivery up.
"Even if the Court does not accept the proposition …….. that a person entitled to apply for a grant of letters of administration has a right to immediate possession of documents for the purpose of making such an application in the particular circumstances of this case:
a the Appellant asserted a right to immediate possession of estate papers;
b the Respondent believed that, but for its alleged lien, the Appellant had such a right; so that
c both parties were agreed that the Appellant had a right to immediate possession, although the parties disagreed as to whether this was or was not subject to an alleged lien."