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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 >> Pooni & Anor v Nazran [2015] EWHC 1899 (QB) (09 July 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2015/1899.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 1899 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(sitting as a Judge of the High Court)
____________________
JAGTAR SINGH POONI JASWINDER KAUR POONI |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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TERVINDER SINGH NAZRAN |
Defendant |
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James Morgan (instructed by Ansons LLP) for the defendant
Hearing dates: 16, 17 and 18 June 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
His Honour Judge Richard Seymour Q.C. :
Introduction
"3. SALE OF THE PROPERTY
Subject to the terms and conditions of this Agreement, the Seller agrees to sell the Property and the Purchaser agrees to purchase the Property.
4. PURCHASE PRICE
4.1 The Purchase Price for the Property shall be AED 40,000,000/- (UAE Dirhams Forty Million only).
4.2 The Purchase Price shall be paid in Post Dated Cheques as follows:
No. Date Amount (Dhs.)
1 10th December 2005 6,500,000/-
2 31st March 2006 8,375,000/-
3 31st July 2006 8,375,000/-
4 30th November 2006 8,375,000/-
5 31st March 2007 8,375,000/-
4.3 …
4.4 If the failure to honor [sic] any of the checks [sic] as stated in Clause 4.2 hereof has not been remedied within fifteen (15) days from the date of written notification from the Seller of the failure to deliver or honor any such checks, the Seller shall be entitled to terminate this Agreement by written notice to the Purchaser in accordance with Clause 12.1 hereof.
…
6. POSSESSION
6.1 Subject to signature of this Agreement and upon receipt of the Seller of the 40% payment of the Purchase Price, the Seller shall grant and provide to the Purchaser exclusive unrestricted and unlimited physical access to and exclusive physical possession of the Property in writing to enable the Purchaser to develop the Property and to plan, design and commence construction of the Building.
6.2 Subject to Clause 6.3 hereof, on the Completion Date the Seller shall transfer to the Purchaser Freehold Title to the Property and provide the Purchaser with evidence of the registration of the Purchaser's Freehold Title at, and a Freehold Title deed in the Purchaser's name issued by, the Dubai Lands Department. In connection therewith, the Parties shall bear the respective governmental fees imposed by the Dubai Lands Department on a seller and purchaser for transfer of title.
…
9. REPRESENTATIONS AND WARRANTIES BY SELLER
The Seller represents and warrants to the Purchaser that:
…
9.5 the Purchaser shall have the right to Sell the Property, Building and/or Units;
…"
"DPR [i.e. the Nazran Company] guarantees the buyer:
1. To buy back the Apartment at £200,000 by date 1st March 2007 (should extension be required it will not be more than 6 months from the completion date). Or instead the Buyer can keep the Apartment (the decision to keep the Apartment is to be made in writing to DPR 3month [sic] prior to the completion date or indicate it now by circling one the following: Keeping apartment or Buy Back).[Neither was circled]
2. The Apartment is Freehold as per the Dubai Laws.
3. A contract of purchase will be issued by DPR in due course on a standard format, subject to the approval of the master developer – City of Arabia. In the unlikely case of non approval of the project, DPR will refund the full amount deposited."
"INTRODUCTION
A) A site has identified a site [sic] in the development area in Dubai, United Arab Emirates known as the City of Arabia ("Land") where it is proposed to construct a building comprising of apartments ("Tower").
B) Dubai Property Ring Limited (registered in the Seychelles) having its place of business at [address given] has been established as the corporate entity which will acquire the Land and procure the construction of the Tower.
C) Dubai Property Ring Limited has offered to sell two bedroomed apartments in the Tower to each of T S Nazran and a syndicate of others (including the Buyer [defined as both Dr. Pooni and Mrs. Pooni] for £100,000 (one hundred thousand pounds sterling).
D) This Agreement sets out the terms which apply to the £100,000 provided by the Buyer to T S Nazran for the purchase of an apartment in the Tower.
IT IS AGREED as follows:
1. Investment
T S Nazran hereby confirms receipt of the sum of £100,000 (one hundred thousand pounds sterling) from the Buyer.
T S Nazran undertakes to use the £100,000 received from the Buyer, subject to the terms of this Agreement, for the acquisition for the Buyer of a two bed roomed apartment in the Tower, as identified on the DPR [i.e. Nazran Company] IP1 form issued to the Buyer by Dubai Property Ring Limited ("Apartment").
The £100,000 provided by the Buyer will be repayable in accordance with the terms of this Agreement.
2. Assurances
In consideration of the Buyer providing £100,000 to him, T S Nazran warrants to the Buyer that:
2.1 T S Nazran is both a shareholder and a director of Dubai Property Ring Limited;
2.2 full legal and beneficial title, in accordance with the laws of Dubai, to the Land vests in Dubai Property Ring Limited (subject to the payment of further instalments of the purchase price for the Land);
2.3 T S Nazran has purchased an apartment in the Tower for £100,000 and such purchase has been made on terms no more favourable than the terms of this Agreement;
2.4 T S Nazran will not release any of the £100,000 provided by the Buyer to Dubai Property Ring Limited until it is confirmed that T S Nazran will be entitled to sell the Land and to reimburse the Buyer in accordance with the provisions of this Agreement; and
2.5 T S Nazran will ensure that the £100,000 provided by the Buyer will only be released to Dubai Property Ring Limited upon satisfactory confirmation by Dubai Property Ring Limited to the Buyer of ownership of the Apartment by the Buyer.
3. Repayment
T S Nazran undertakes that if appropriate detailed terms cannot be agreed with Dubai Property Ring Limited that he shall not release the £100,000 provided by the Buyer to Dubai Property Ring Limited and shall ensure that the £100,000 shall be returned to the Buyer, in which event the Buyer shall not become the owner of the Apartment.
T S Nazran further undertakes that the £100,000 provided by the Buyer will only be released to Dubai Property Ring Limited on the following terms:
3.1 Dubai Property Ring Limited undertakes to inform the Buyer when it is about to commence construction of the Tower, the Buyer shall then be entitled by written notice to Dubai Property Ring Limited to require it to procure the purchase of the Apartment (such right to be exercised by notice to Dubai Property Ring Limited within two weeks of receiving notification that construction is about to commence0.
In the event of such notice being served by the Buyer then within four weeks Dubai Property Ring Limited shall (subject to delivery to it of such title and transfer documentation to the Apartment by the payment to the Buyers in Dhirams [sic]of an amount equivalent to £200,000 converted at the Exchange Rate (as defined in clause 5.1). For the avoidance of doubt if the Apartment is valued at more than the amount payable to the Buyer in accordance with the terms of this clause such excess shall belong to Dubai Property Ring Limited; or
3.2 if the construction of the Tower has not commenced by the expiry of eighteen months from the date of this Agreement then Dubai Property Ring Limited shall (subject to delivery to it of such title and transfer documentation to the Apartment as it shall reasonably require) procure the purchase of the Apartment by the payment to the Buyer in Dhirams [sic] of an amount equivalent to £100,000 converted at the Exchange Rate (as defined in clause 5.1). For the avoidance of doubt if the Apartment is valued at more than the amount payable to the Buyer in accordance with the terms of this clause such excess shall belong to Dubai Property Ring Limited.
If Dubai Property Ring Limited has informed the Buyer of its intention to commence construction of the Tower and the Buyer fails to serve notice in accordance with clause 3.1 above then title to the Apartment shall continue to vest in the Buyer and the Buyer shall be deemed to have forgone any right to require Dubai Property Ring Limited to procure the purchase of the Apartment.
…"
"… the Defendant released the Claimants [sic] total funds for the two apartments of £200,000 to a holding account in which syndicate funds were deposited as a collective, funds were transferred from this account on behalf of DPR [i.e. the Nazran Company] directly to the master developer and land Seller's account in or about December 2005 towards the first instalment of the land as per the LandSPA [i.e. the Purchase Agreement] terms in which DPR is the registered purchaser. The Defendant did not withhold or utilise the Claimants [sic] funds for any other purpose."
"Paragraph 5 is denied. As is set out fully above, the Defendant as managing director for DPR, in accordance with the terms of the agreement, released the funds of £200,000 directly to the master developer [i.e. the Group] (as part of the first instalment to purchase the land) for DPR on or about December 2005 on the date the LandSPA was signed without delay and therefore utilised the Claimants [sic] funds for the purpose they were intended for, i.e., to purchase the land. Therefore, neither the Defendant not the Company [i.e. the Nazran Company] hold any funds on trust for the Claimants, either as pleaded or at all, and further these funds were released in accordance with the agreements with the Claimants."
"35. [Reliance upon the actual words of clause 1 (or of clause 2.4, clause 2.5 or clause 3)] ignores other provisions in the Guarantees, the background knowledge of the parties and the clear commercial purpose of the arrangements with the early investors. In particular:
a. It is clear from the Form [IP1] and is accepted by the Pooni's [sic] that their "purchase" of the apartments was off-plan and prior to construction of even the tower;
b. That is underlined by §3.1 and §3.2 of the Guarantee which specifically identified that DPR would give notice when it was about to commence construction of the tower and/or would "purchase" the apartment if construction of the tower had not commenced;
c. Moreover, clear background facts known to the parties were that DPR (i) could not construct the apartments without first acquiring the Property and (ii) could not acquire the Property without using the early investments to pay for the initial instalments;
d. It would therefore make no commercial sense at all if as Mr. [sic] Pooni suggests later in his statement, the investment was not to be released until "we were actually going to own the apartments as a finished product and would have something to show for our investment, something that we could either sell back to DPRL…"
e. Accordingly, words such as "sell", "purchase" and "acquisition" have to be construed accordingly: they did not mean the sale/purchase of a then physically identifiable apartment or the use of investments to acquire such a thing;
f. That quoted part of clause 1 cannot be construed as a catch-all promise that in the event that the Pooni's [sic] did not become owners of a physically constructed apartment, Mr. Nazran would be liable to reimburse them their investment. This was something that only DPR promised pursuant to §3.2 of the Guarantee.
36. Accordingly, the quoted part of clause 1 has to be read in terms that the investment was to be used in connection with, or as a step in the process of, the acquisition of an apartment in the tower. The use of the investment to purchase the Property on which the tower (that would contain the apartment) was to be built, was well within the scope thereof and there was no breach. That is supported by the other "terms of this Agreement", including §2.4 and §2.5 referred to below."
"Further, the Claimants have failed to mitigate their loss by not accepting the £200,000 offered to them by DPR in or about May 2008."
"Mitigation of Loss
44. The Pooni's [sic] are not entitled to recover for any loss which they ought to have avoided by taking reasonable steps to so do: McGregor on Damages (19th ed) at 9-014 et seq.
45. During 2008 to 2009 there were various offers by DPR of alternative agreements to facilitate payment of at least the total investment of £200,000 to the Pooni's [sic]. They say that these offers were conditional, they did not provide a guarantee of payment and in any event they wanted the full £400,000 (plus compensation) in accordance with their contractual rights.
46. But by refusing at least the revised draft agreement dated 15th February 2009 [C166-169], the Pooni's [sic] failed to take reasonable steps which would have led to them recovering the £200,000 that they now claim. In particular:
a. The draft agreement provided for payment of the £200,000 by 31st March 2009;
b. In the event that payment was not made as promised, then the new agreement would be "null and void" meaning that the Pooni's [sic] were not prejudiced if payment was not made;
c. There is good evidence that had the Pooni's [sic] entered into the new agreement then they would have received payment as was the case with other early investors, including Mr. Sahota …
d. The Pooni's [sic] refusal appears to have been based on the erroneous assumption that they were entitled to the full £400,000 from DPR under §3.1 of the Guarantees, but in fact their rights were limited to the £200,000 under §3.1 …
e. A claim at the level of £400,000 has not been pursued against Mr. Nazran or DPR."
Construction of the Guarantees
"The principles may be summarised as follows.
(1) Interpretation is the ascertainment of the meaning which the document would convey to a reasonable person having all the background knowledge which would reasonably have been available to the parties in the situation in which they were at the time of the contract.
(2) The background was famously referred to by Lord Wilberforce as the "matrix of fact", but this phrase is, if anything, an understated description of what the background may include. Subject to the requirement that it should have been reasonably available to the parties and to the exception to be mentioned next, it includes absolutely anything which would have affected the way in which the language of the document would have been understood by a reasonable man.
(3) The law excludes from the admissible background the previous negotiations of the parties and their declarations of subjective intent. They are admissible only in an action for rectification. The law makes this distinction for reasons of practical policy and, in this respect only, legal interpretation differs from the way we would interpret utterances in ordinary life. The boundaries of this exception are in some respects unclear. But this is not the occasion on which to explore them.
(4) The meaning which a document (or any other utterance) would convey to a reasonable man is not the same thing as the meaning of its words. The meaning of words is a matter of dictionaries and grammars; the meaning of the document is what the parties using those words against the relevant background would reasonably have been understood to mean. The background may not merely enable the reasonable man to choose between the possible meanings of words which are ambiguous but even (as occasionally happens in ordinary life) to conclude that the parties must, for whatever reason, have used the wrong words or syntax: see Mannai Investments Co. Ltd. v. Eagle Star Life Assurance Co. Ltd. [1997] AC 749.
(5) The "rule" that words should be given their "natural and ordinary meaning" reflects the common sense proposition that we do not easily accept that people have made linguistic mistakes, particularly in formal documents. On the other hand, if one would nevertheless conclude from the background that something must have gone wrong with the language, the law does not require judges to attribute to the parties an intention which they plainly could not have had. Lord Diplock made this point more vigorously when he said in Antaios Compania Naviera SA v. Salen Rederierna AB [1985] AC 191, 201:
"if detailed semantic and syntactical analysis of words in a commercial contract is going to lead to a conclusion which flouts business commonsense, it must be made to yield to business commonsense."
"The clause can be properly understood as only requiring confirmation by DPR to the Pooni's [sic] that upon construction of the relevant apartment (and assuming that the option under §3.1 of the Guarantee had not been exercised) they would be the owners of it;"
"11. The Claimant's [sic] entered into two Guarantee's [sic] with me on 24th and 25th November 2005. These were witnessed by Mr. Stanley Dcosta [sic] who was working for ARE. As per Exhibit 24.
1.2 [sic] Prior to making the investment of £200,000 to secure the apartment units in the off plan development with DPR. [sic] The 1st Claimant attended a number of presentations met with myself and Mr. Stanley D'costa prior to investing. Almost always the 1st Claimant attended with Mr. Gary Sahota and another investor by the name of Mr. Ajaib Benning, who was also introduced by Mr. Gary Sahota. The Claimant took away DVD's marketing material, copies of the Personal Guarantees, and reservation form, later further meetings were held to talk through the Reservation Department, Personal Guarantee document and a specimen "Land Sales Purchase Agreement" document that was issued by IMG [i.e. the Group], which later became the agreement on which basis the land was purchased. The last page showed the master plan that was to be constructed. Exhibit 2.
12. The 1st Claimant was shown
12.1 a draft LAND Sales Purchase Agreement (LandSPA) and a a [sic] refund clause (Clause 12). A specimen version of the LandSPA had been issued from the master developer (IMG) of the City of Arabia, to show each of the Syndicate members and obtain their interest and consent to proceed. The Claimant's [sic] were shown the LandSPA document and its contents were explained on a word for word basis to the Syndicate members by myself. The 1st Claimant at the time often attended meetings with Gary Sahota and Mr. Ajaib Benning.
12.2 The 1st Claimant were [sic] informed of my decision to participate in the Dubai's realestate [sic] market and its vision to expand and create a city of tourism all of which was backed by the worlds [sic] press reports
12.3 We also discussed the great possibilities of growth on completion of the tower and the master plan of the City of Arabia
12.4 In addition to the Land SPA e [sic] a secondary Government contract which underpinned the making of the City of Arabia and referred to it as The Plan, this was a contract from the Govt Dept of Tourism which bound IMG to perform and complete (deliver) the City of Arabia within a certain time.
12.5 The claimants told me that they were confident in Dubai's real-estate market and its booming growth
12.6 I told them that they had direct access to myself in DPR and that the company DPR was a new company that had a clean sheet and no debts
12.7 The claimants as they were going to make payments to me, I made them aware of how I would act in the Guarantee to make sure that their funds were safely invested. I also explained that if the project was not to proceed before off plan sales, their funds were to return from DPR in which I would do my best in selling off the land in the open market, or if construction of the project had not proceeded within 24 months DPR would arrange for a refund as per clause 3.2. The growth would come only if the business proceeded and successfully completed with off plan Sales [sic] and with the Construction [sic] of the Tower starting, the fail safe mechanism and final resort to receive funds back was by actioning the refund clause 12 of the LANDSPA [sic].
12.8 I made the Claimants also aware of the risks n [sic] the presentations that DPR:
12.8.1 was not owning the land; but purchasing the land via a staged Syndicated fund raising process
12.8.2 Was to apply for planning and design approvals and that no planning approvals on the building design of the Tower from government authorities [sic]
12.8.3 Would have to find customers and market the towers [sic] presence in the region to make the sales possible
12.8.4 Was buying the land in City of Arabia which that at the time was a desert landscape with no infrastructure."
"The nub of the arrangement, as it was explained to me, was that a number of investors would 'forward purchase' apartments in the block, that is to say, buy them off plan and before they were built, the purchase monies thereby raised being used to buy the land and to fund the development of the site. Accordingly we were being invited to buy apartments, not the land itself, and we were definitely not investing in or becoming shareholders of DPRL, despite what Mr. Nazran asserts."
Mitigation of loss
"The Investor hereby acknowledges receipt of the Investment from DPR and hereby releases TSN [Mr. Nazran] from all obligations and liabilities pursuant to the terms of the Existing Personal Guarantee."
"In consideration of the premises herein the Investor hereby releases TSN from all obligations and liabilities pursuant to the terms of the Existing Personal Guarantee.
The Investor acknowledges that repayment of the Investment by DPR to the Investor has been agreed to and accepted by the legal authorities in Dubai strictly on the understanding that any such repayments must not be made to the detriment of other investors nor to the detriment of the construction programme generally and, consequently, agrees to accept repayment of the Investment at some time following the Commencement of Construction provisionally (but not absolutely) scheduled for sometime in 2009.
The Investor hereby acknowledges that payment of the above mentioned sum must be by way of withdrawals from the Escrow Account with such withdrawals being subject to the rules and regulations of the Escrow Account for the time being in force. The Investor shall not hold DPR responsible for any delays occasioned in paying the above mentioned payment to the Investor where such delays are occasioned through no fault of DPR."
"In consideration of the premises herein the Investor hereby releases TSN from all obligations and liabilities pursuant to the terms of the Existing Personal Guarantee
The Investor acknowledges that repayment of the Investment by DPR has been agreed to and accepted by the legal authorities in Dubai strictly on the understanding that any such repayments must not be made to the detriment of other investors nor to the detriment of the construction programme generally and, consequently, agrees to accept repayment of the Investment at some time following the Commencement of Construction provisionally (but not absolutely) scheduled for sometime in 2009
The Investor hereby acknowledges that payment of the above mentioned sum must be by way of withdrawals from the Escrow Account with such withdrawals being subject to the rules and regulations of the Escrow Account for the time being in force. The Investor shall not hold DPR responsible for any delays occasioned in paying the above mentioned payment to the Investor where such delays are occasioned through no fault of DPR."
"The Investor hereby accepts repayment of the Investment in the sum of Two Hundred Thousand Pounds (£200,000) such sum to be paid on or before 31 March 2009 and hereby releases TSN from all obligations and liabilities pursuant to the terms of the Existing Personal Guarantee.
The Investor hereby acknowledges that payment of the above mentioned sum must be by way of withdrawals from the Escrow Account with such withdrawals being subject to the rules and regulations of the Escrow Account for the time being in force. The Investor shall not hold DPR responsible for any delays occasioned in paying the above mentioned payment to the Investor where such delays are occasioned through no fault of DPR.
The Parties hereby acknowledge that the entirety of this Agreement is conditional upon the happening of the Conditional Event [paying the £200,000] in the absence of which this Agreement (in its entirety) shall be null and void and the terms and conditions of the Principal Agreement shall remain in force."
Conclusion