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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> English and Welsh Courts - Miscellaneous >> Adekunle & Ors v Ritchie [2007] EW Misc 5 (EWCC) (17 August 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/Misc/2007/5.html Cite as: [2007] WTLR 1505, [2007] BPIR 1177, [2007] 2 P & CR DG20, [2007] EW Misc 5 (EWCC) |
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Defendant |
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B e f o r e :
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(1) JENNIFER ADEKUNLE (2) KEBLE BEN RITCHIE (ADMINISTRATORS OF THE ESTATE OF ADASSA VERONICA RITCHIE DECEASED) |
Claimant |
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AND |
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RICHARD CHRISTOPHER RITCHIE |
Defendant |
Crown Copyright ©
1. Introduction
2. Representation
3. The Facts
3.1. Adassa Ritchie
3.2. The Tenancy
3.3. The Purchase
Discussions
1. In his first statement he does not go into much detail as to the conversations at the time of purchase. He says in paragraph 6 that he was prepared to assist his mother to purchase the property even though he was planning to marry in June 1989; he makes the point on a number of occasions that none of the other members of the family would contribute.
2. Richard Ritchie's second statement does not take the matter any further
3. He does however add to it in his third statement. In paragraph 6 he says that his mother encouraged him to purchase the property with her, and told her that it would be his one day. He says that she told all of his brothers and sisters that it would be his. He repeats this in paragraph 13. He also says that she told him on a number of occasions that the house would belong to him.
The Transfer
1. Both Adassa Ritchie and Richard Ritchie are named as the transferee.
2. It contains in Schedule A details of the price and discount as noted above.
3. It contains a number of covenants by the Transferee for which Adassa Ritchie and Richard Ritchie were jointly and severally liable.
4. It contains no express declaration as to the beneficial interests of either Adassa Ritchie or Richard Ritchie.
The Mortgage
Registration of Title
No disposition by one proprietor of the land (being the survivor of joint proprietors and not being a trust corporation) under which capital money arises is to be registered except under an order of the registrar or the Court
1. The use of the restriction was prescribed in section 58(3) of the Land Registration Act 1925. Under that section the restriction was obligatory unless it could be shown to the registrar's satisfaction that the joint proprietors were entitled for their own benefit or could a valid receipt for capital money.
2. The wording that was used in this case was a standard form of wording approved by the Chief Land Registrar current in 1989.
3. The sole purpose of the legislation was to ensure that capital moneys were paid to at least two trustees
There is no need for joint transferees to apply for the entry of this restriction but they are required to supply the information which enables the Chief Land Registrar to enter it, or refrain from entering it. In this connection, all the forms of application for first registration contain a clause to the effect that the applicants are jointly and beneficially entitled and that by law the survivor will have power to give a valid receipt for capital money arising on a disposition of the land; the applicant's solicitor must either put his signature to this statement or delete it.
3.4. Marriage of Richard Ritchie
3.5. Contributions to the Mortgage Payments
3.6. Improvements
3.7. Instructions for Adassa Ritchie's will.
3.8. Events after the death
4. Findings of Fact
4.1. Promises by Adassa Ritchie that the property would belong to Richard Ritchie
4.2. Contributions to the mortgage payments.
5. The parties beneficial interests
5.1. Express Declaration of Trust
5.2. The new approach advocated by Stack v Dowden
1. The beneficial ownership of the property should follow the legal ownership.
2. If one party claims that the beneficial ownership is different from the legal ownership, then he or she must substantiate that claim by reference to what the parties intended. As Baroness Hale pointed out in paragraph 60 of her opinion:
The search is to ascertain the parties' shared intentions, actual, inferred or imputed, with respect to the property in the light of their whole course of conduct in relation to it.She went on to approve paragraph 4.27 of the Law Commission Discussion Paper Sharing Homes
If the question really is one of the parties' 'common intention', we believe that there is much to be said for adopting what has been called a 'holistic approach' to quantification, 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.[4]
In so doing she in effect disapproved the slightly different formulation to be found in paragraph 69 of Chadwick LJ's judgment in Oxley v Hiscock[5]
3. However, it will be only in "very unusual" circumstances that the beneficial interests in the property will be found to be different from the legal interests.
4. In determining the parties' intentions, the court may consider a wide range of factors. Thus at paragraph 69 Baroness Hale says:
69. In law, 'context is everything' and the domestic context is very different from the commercial world. Each case will turn on its own facts. Many more factors than financial contributions may be relevant to divining the parties' true intentions. These include: any advice or discussions at the time of the transfer which cast light upon their intentions then; the reasons why the home was acquired in their joint names; the reasons why (if it be the case) the survivor was authorised to give a receipt for the capital moneys; the purpose for which the home was acquired; the nature of the parties' relationship; whether they had children for whom they both had responsibility to provide a home; how the purchase was financed, both initially and subsequently; how the parties arranged their finances, whether separately or together or a bit of both; how they discharged the outgoings on the property and their other household expenses. When a couple are joint owners of the home and jointly liable for the mortgage, the inferences to be drawn from who pays for what may be very different from the inferences to be drawn when only one is owner of the home. The arithmetical calculation of how much was paid by each is also likely to be less important. It will be easier to draw the inference that they intended that each should contribute as much to the household as they reasonably could and that they would share the eventual benefit or burden equally. The parties' individual characters and personalities may also be a factor in deciding where their true intentions lay. In the cohabitation context, mercenary considerations may be more to the fore than they would be in marriage, but it should not be assumed that they always take pride of place over natural love and affection. At the end of the day, having taken all this into account, cases in which the joint legal owners are to be taken to have intended that their beneficial interests should be different from their legal interests will be very unusual.
This is, therefore, a very unusual case. There cannot be many unmarried couples who have lived together for as long as this, who have had four children together, and whose affairs have been kept as rigidly separate as this couple's affairs were kept. This is all strongly indicative that they did not intend their shares, even in the property which was put into both their names, to be equal (still less that they intended a beneficial joint tenancy with the right of survivorship should one of them die before it was severed.) Before the Court of Appeal, Ms Dowden contended for a 65% share and in my view she has made good her case for that.
5.3. Application to this case.
6. Estoppel
7. Order for Sale
JOHN BEHRENS
Tuesday 21 August 2007
Note 1 [2007] 2 WLR 831 [Back] Note 2 [1993] 1 FLR 736 [Back] Note 3 See paragraphs 51 and 84 of the judgment of Baroness Hale, paragraph 130 of the judgment of Lord Neuberger [Back] Note 4 Law Com No 278, para. 4.27. [Back] Note 6 See for example paragraphs 41 – 46 of her opinion. [Back] Note 7 Trusts of Land and Appointment of Trustees Act 1996 [Back]