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The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions >> Ringo and Others v. Lee Gee Kee and Others (Hong Kong) [1997] UKPC 13 (17th March, 1997) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKPC/1997/13.html Cite as: [1997] UKPC 13 |
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Privy Council Appeal No. 27 of 1996
(1) Chong Kai Tai Ringo and
(2) Ying Kai Ying Appellants
v.
(1) Lee Gee Kee and
(2) Hung Ming Ming Respondents
FROM
THE COURT OF APPEAL OF HONG KONG
---------------
JUDGMENT OF THE LORDS OF THE
JUDICIAL
COMMITTEE OF THE PRIVY COUNCIL,
Delivered the 17th March 1997
------------------
Present
at the hearing:-
Lord Steyn
Lord Hoffmann
Lord Hope of Craighead
Lord Clyde
Lord Hutton
·[Delivered
by Lord Hutton]
-------------------------
1. The issue arising on this appeal is whether the
Court of Appeal of Hong Kong was right in setting aside an order made by the
High Court for specific performance of an agreement to sell a flat in the New
Territories in Hong Kong.
2. On 6th July 1991 the parties entered into a
written provisional agreement ("the agreement") in Chinese writing on
a form produced by an estate agent whereby the appellants agreed to purchase
and the respondents agreed to sell Flat G, 38th Floor of Block 2, Belvedere
Garden, Phase 3, Tsuen Wan. The
purchase price was HK$1,870,000.00. The
agreement contained the following provisions for payment:-
"Initial deposit will be paid
upon
signing this provisional Initial
Sale
and Purchase AgreementDeposit HK$50,000.00
first payment at Solicitors
firm on 12th July 1991First payment
HK$137,000.00
HK$
balance of the purchase price
on 17th July 1991BalanceHK$1,683,000.00"
5. The agreement contained a number of clauses
under the heading "Terms of Agreement for both Parties". There were nine clauses and the relevant
clauses (as translated into English by the respondents whose translation did
not differ materially from the appellants' translation) were as follows:-
"(3)Transaction by vacant possession
before signing the Assignment.
(4)If in the midway the Purchaser does not
perform this agreement, then the initial deposit paid would be forfeited by the
Seller, who has the right to resell the property in any way or to keep it for
self-use, and the Purchaser is not entitled to dispute.
(5)If the Seller fails to perform this
agreement, a double amount to the initial deposits must be paid to the
Purchaser as compensation, Hong Kong Currency 100,000. The Seller is entitled to re-sell the
property in any way or for self-use, the Purchaser cannot dispute.
(6)The initial deposit paid by the Purchaser
will be confirmed upon being acknowledged by the Seller, otherwise it
will be returned and there is no claim on each other."
6. After the agreement had been signed on 6th July
1991, although there was some correspondence between the respective solicitors
about a formal agreement, no such agreement was entered into between the
parties.
7. The sale to the appellants was the last in a
chain of sales and sub-sales. On 10th
January 1990, when the building containing the flat had not been completed, Ling
Fung Development Limited ("the developers") and others agreed to sell
the flat to Wong Mui Chun and Chan Po Shan.
On 7th March 1991 Wong Mui Chun and Chan Po Shan agreed to sell it on to
Jiu Sze Man. On 10th April 1991, Jiu
Sze Man agreed to sell it on to Lee Gee Kee and Hung Ming Ming, the
respondents.
8. In the Court of Appeal Litton V.-P. observed
that the sale between the appellants and the respondents took place "in a
very heated market" and Ching J.A. stated:-
"There is an enormous amount of
speculation in the sale and purchase of flats of this type, probably undreamed
of in other jurisdictions. When a new
development is put on the market people queue up, sometimes overnight, for
flats. Some of them have neither the
ability nor the intention to complete the purchase. They queue up simply so that they can sell their places in the
queue to those who come later for many tens of thousands of dollars. Others sign a provisional agreement and put
down a deposit knowing that they do not have and will not be able to obtain the
finance to make subsequent payments, perhaps even the first of them. Those who buy from them may be in a similar
position and it is not uncommon for there to be four or five sub-purchasers
before there is an assignment, usually at or about the time of the completion
of the building. For these reasons it
is important to each of the vendors that payment should be made on time."
9. The appellants duly paid the deposit of
HK$50,000.00 and also made the first payment of HK$137,000.00 on 12th July
1991.
10. Their Lordships consider it to be clear that
after the signing of the agreement on 6th July 1991 the solicitors for both the
vendors and the purchasers treated 17th July 1991 as the date for
completion. On 12th July 1991 the
purchasers' solicitors, Messrs. Lam, Lee and Lai, wrote to the vendors'
solicitors, Messrs. Boris Lui & Co., and stated:-
"Please note that the date of completion
mentioned in the above Provisional Agreement for Sale and Purchase i.e. 17th
July 1991 is approaching, we would request at least 7 working days to peruse
all the title deeds and documents and should be grateful if you would let us
know whether your client would like to postpone the completion date."
11. However, it is clear from the evidence of Miss
Lam Chu Dik, a conveyancing clerk in the office of the vendors' solicitors,
that they did not agree to this request to postpone the completion date.
12. On 17th July 1991 the vendors' solicitors wrote
to the purchasers' solicitors as follows:-
"
We refer to the telephone conversation between your Miss Chow and our
Miss Lam this morning.
According to the Chinese Provisional Agreement for Sale and Purchase
dated 6th July 1991, the completion of the sale and purchase of the above
property will be taken place on today.
Therefore, we shall be obliged if you will let us have your draft
Assignment for our approval and let us have your cheque for the sum of
HK$1,683,000.00 on or before 4.00 p.m. today.
Your
attention in this matter is highly appreciated."
13. On 17th July 1991 after receipt of this letter
by fax the purchasers' solicitors wrote to the vendors' solicitors and stated:-
"
We refer to our letter to you dated 15th July 1991 and your reply letter
dated 16th July 1991 which we received at about 11.00 a.m. on 17th July 1991.
We
also refer to the numerous telephone conversation between your Miss Lam and our
Miss Chow in which your Miss Lam (threatened) us that if our client could not
send the balance of purchase price of our clients' purchase of the above
property to your office in Yuen Long before 4.00 p.m., your client would
forfeit all deposit paid by our client before and would treat the provisional
Agreement for Sale and Purchase dated 6.7.1991 as repudiated by our client.
We
consider that such attitude taking by your client is very unreasonable on the
following grounds:-
1.In our letter dated 15.7.1991, we have raised
certain requisitions of your client's title to the above property and not until
about 11.00 a.m. this morning, you have given us a satisfactorily reply, which
leaves us no time to prepare completion.
2.At 3.31 p.m., you have faxed to us a letter
to us requesting for a draft Assignment for your approval and for a sum of
HK$1,683,000.00 on or before 4.00 p.m. today.
We consider that your requests are very unreasonable without giving us
time to prepare the draft Assignment and to obtain a mortgage loan from our
client's proposed mortgagee. We would
like to confirm that we have received mortgage instructions as early as on 12th
July 1991 to prepare a mortgage whereby the lender will finance our client to
purchase the above property.
3.The Provisional Agreement for Sale and
Purchase dated 6.7.1991 does not make time is of the essence of the contract.
4.In all circumstances, we consider that our
client is entitled to have a reasonable time to complete their purchase of the
above property.
Our
Mr. Lam has tried to (contact) your Miss Lam by telephone twice but could not
get in touch with her. Neither does
your Miss Lam give a return call to our Mr. Lam even our Mr. Lam has left a
message to her.
Anyway, we are now preparing the draft assignment and shall send to you
for your approval as soon as we can.
If
your client chooses to take an unreasonable attitude to terminate the
Provisional Agreement for Sale and Purchase, we are instructed to take all
legal steps to enforce our clients' rights under the Provisional Agreement for
sale and Purchase."
14. On 17th July 1991 the purchasers' solicitors
wrote a further letter to the vendors' solicitors. This letter was not sent until the next day, 18th July 1991. It stated:-
"
We refer to our letter to you of today's date and now send you herewith
our draft Assignment in respect of the above property for your approval on
behalf of your client, the 3rd Confirmor herein.
Please
let us have the following reply:-
1.our draft Assignment in respect of the above
property duly approved by the Vendor, 1st Confirmor's solicitors, 2nd
Confirmor's solicitors and yours; and
2.your specific instructions as how should we
split our cheques covering the balance of purchase price."
15. On 18th July 1991 the vendors' solicitors wrote
to the purchasers' solicitors claiming that the purchasers had wrongfully
repudiated the agreement and stating that the repudiation was accepted by the
vendors:-
"
We refer to our letter to you dated 17th July 1991 and up to this moment
you still fail to send us the balance of purchase price for the sum of
HK$1,683,000.00.
According to the Chinese Provisional Agreement for Sale and Purchase
dated 6th July 1991 made between our representative clients completion of the
sale and purchase ought to take place on 17th July 1991. Your client has wrongly repudiated
the said Agreement which repudiation
is accepted by our client. In the circumstances, our client hereby
forfeit the initial deposit paid by your client to ours under the said
Agreement and reserve all their rights in the above matter.
In the
meantime, we enclose herewith a cheque for the sum of HK$137,000.00 drawn in
your favour being the further deposit and shall be obliged if you will return
all the title deeds and documents to us on or before 4.00 p.m. today."
16. The purchasers' solicitors requested the
vendors' solicitors to withdraw their letter of 18th July 1991 alleging
repudiation of the agreement by the purchasers, but the allegation was not
withdrawn and on 29th July 1991 the purchasers issued a writ of summons
claiming specific performance of the agreement.
17. In the High Court Deputy Judge Pang held that
time was not of the essence of the agreement and that the purchasers were
entitled to complete the transaction within a reasonable time after 17th July
1991. He therefore made an order for
specific performance.
18. In the Court of Appeal all three members of the
Court held that time was of the essence, and this finding was not challenged by
the appellants before their Lordships' Board.
The majority, Litton V.-P. and Ching J.A., allowed the vendors' appeal
and held that, having regard to the circumstances obtaining in Hong Kong, it
was not necessary to imply that completion by the vendors was to be
simultaneous with payment by the purchasers, and that the purchasers had been
in breach by their failure to make payment of the balance of the purchase money
before midnight on 17th July 1991, but that the vendors had not been in
breach. Accordingly they ruled that the
purchasers were not entitled to an order for specific performance.
19. Godfrey J.A., dissenting, held that the
obligation of the purchasers to make payment was concurrent with the obligation
of the vendors to deliver an executed assignment on 17th July 1991, and that as
the vendors were not able to hand over the executed assignment on 17th July
they could not treat the purchasers as having repudiated the agreement by not
paying the balance of the purchase price on that date.
20. Therefore three questions arise for the
consideration of this Board. First,
were the obligations of the parties concurrent so that payment by the
purchasers and delivery of the assignment by the vendors were to be
simultaneous? Secondly, were the
vendors unable to complete
by delivery of the assignment
before midnight
(pursuant to the Hong Kong "midnight
rule") on 17th July 1991? Thirdly,
if the vendors were unable to make delivery of the assignment before midnight
on 17th July, were they thereby debarred from claiming that the purchasers had
repudiated the contract by non-payment on that date?
21. There is clear authority that the obligation of
the purchaser to pay and the obligation of the vendor to complete by giving an
executed assignment are to be carried out simultaneously unless there is an
express or implied term to the contrary.
In Palmer v. Lark [1945] Ch. 182, 184 Vaisey J. stated:-
"It is a fundamental principle that the
payment of the purchase money and the delivery of the conveyance are to be
simultaneous acts to be performed inter-changeably."
In Edward Wong Finance Co. Ltd. v. Johnson,
Stokes & Master (a firm) [1984] AC 296, 303 delivering the judgment
of this Board Lord Brightman stated:-
"The normal method of completing a
contract for the sale of land in England is for the purchaser's solicitor to
deliver to the vendor's solicitor a draft for the balance of the purchase money
in exchange for an executed grant of the land or interest in land contracted to
be sold; if the property is subject to a mortgage, the mortgagee will either be
a party to the grant and receive the whole or part of the purchase money by way
of redemption; or he will execute a separate release of his charge in return
for the redemption money; if the property purchased is to be financed by a new
mortgage, the loan will be made against delivery of the executed grant and
instrument of charge. In other words,
the payment of money and perfection of title are simultaneous
transactions. This procedure is merely
a reflection, in the context of a contract for the sale of land, of the
common-sense principle that, in the absence of an agreement for credit, the
purchase money is not handed over to the vendor or anyone else except in
exchange for the delivery of the subject matter of the sale, whether it be a
loaf of bread or a parcel of land; and, if a loan is made on security, the
money advanced is not handed over save in exchange for a charge executed by a
person who can show a good title to the intended security."
22. Therefore their Lordships respectfully differ
from the opinion of the majority of the Court of Appeal who approached the
point by asking was it "possible" (Ching J.A.) or
"necessary" (Litton V.-P.) to imply a term that payment and
completion by the vendors were to be simultaneous and concluded against the
background of the very heated market that it was not. Their Lordships are of opinion that under
the principle stated by Vaisey J. the question is not whether the circumstances
require the implication of a term that payment and completion were to be
simultaneous, but whether the circumstances require the implication of a term
that there would be a departure from the normal rule that they would be
simultaneous, and their Lordships consider that there is nothing in the
discussions and correspondence between the parties and in the background to
give rise to the implication of such a term.
23. Mr. Oliver Q.C., for the respondents, submitted
that the parties contemplated a "Hong Kong style" completion under
which the vendors' solicitors would not hand over an executed assignment in
return for the balance of the purchase money, but would on or before receipt of
the payment give undertakings relating to the execution and delivery of the
assignment and the giving of vacant possession. However, as Godfrey J.A. pointed out, the agreement did not so
provide and, moreover, there were no discussions or correspondence between the
parties as to the giving of undertakings or as to their terms, and their
Lordships consider that there was nothing to displace the requirement that the
executed assignment was to be delivered simultaneously with the payment of the
balance of the purchase price.
24. Their Lordships now turn to consider the second
question whether the vendors were unable to complete by delivering an executed
assignment before midnight on 17th July 1991.
In their Lordships' opinion the evidence established that the vendors
were not in a position to complete before that time. It had been agreed in the correspondence between the solicitors
that it was necessary that one of the parties in the chain of sales and
sub-sales, Jiu Sze Man (referred to as "the 2nd Confirmor"), should
execute the assignment to the purchasers.
In a letter of 15th July 1991 the purchasers' solicitors requested:-
"Therefore the 2nd Confirmor is required
to execute the Assignment to our client personally as the 2nd Confirmor and as
attorney for the 1st Confirmor if the 1st Confirmor will not execute the
Assignment personally."
25. By a letter dated 16th July 1991 the vendors'
solicitors agreed to this request and stated:-
"We shall procure the 2nd Confirmor, Jiu
Sze Man, to execute the Assignment upon completion as the 2nd Confirmor and as
attorney for the 1st Confirmor."
26. However the vendors' answer to an interrogatory
from the purchasers and the evidence of Miss Lam, the conveyancing clerk
employed by the vendors' solicitors,
revealed that they had taken
no steps to ensure that Jiu Sze Man would be
present in their office on 17th July 1991 to execute the assignment to the
purchasers. The answer was as follows:-
"To Interrogatory No. 7(a), namely, `Look
at the letter of Lam, Lee & Lai dated the 15th July 1991:-
(a)In paragraph 2:
Did the 2nd confirmor attend your instructing
solicitors' premises in Yuen Long at 4.00 p.m. or shortly thereafter for
completion? If the answer is in the
negative, stated why he did not,', I, to the best of my knowledge, information
and belief and subject to further investigation, say:
27. No, because by their letter 16th July 1991 to
Lam, Lee and Lai, Boris Lui & Co. had replied that they shall procure the
2nd confirmor, Jiu Sze Man, to execute the assignment upon completion as the
2nd confirmor and as attorney for the 1st confirmor. Further, the Plaintiffs failed to pay the balance price of
HK$1,683,000 on 17th July 1991."
"Q.You wrote on the 16th July 1991, item
2:
`We shall procure the second confirmor, Jiu Sze
Man, to execute the Assignment upon completion as the second confirmor as
attorney for the first confirmor'.
Do you see that?
A.Yes.
Q.You didn't arrange for him to attend at the
completion at five to four, did you?
A.Right."
"Q.Now, Madam -- so you would agree with
me, would you not, that there could be no completion taking place at 4 o'clock
on that day?
A.I will promise them that they would be done
later."
30. In his judgment Ching J.A. stated that the
purchasers had not pleaded in their amended reply that the vendors were not
able to complete on 17th July by handing over an executed assignment, and that
no evidence was given and no cross-examination was carried out on this
point. Litton V.-P. also stated that as
the point whether the vendors were able to complete on 17th July had not
been explored evidentially in the High Court, it
would not be right for the Court of Appeal to make a finding on the point. However their Lordships observe, with
respect, that the two passages from the cross-examination of Miss Lam set out
above make it clear that the point that the vendors were unable to complete on
17th July was explored in the evidence and no objection was taken by the
vendors that this point had not been adequately pleaded by the purchasers in
their reply.
31. Mr. West, for the purchasers, submitted that
there were two further reasons why the vendors were unable to perform their
obligations under the agreement before midnight on 17th July 1991. Clause 3 of the agreement provided:-
"Transaction by vacant possession before
signing the Assignment."
32. Mr. West submitted that the evidence of Miss
Lam in cross-examination made it clear that the vendors' solicitors had not
made the necessary arrangements to be able to give vacant possession before
midnight on 17th July:-
"Q.Madam, the reason you imposed this time
limit was you know that you hadn't asked for vacant possession of the flat from
the developer, isn't that right?
A.Right."
33. If the agreement presently under consideration
had been made in England in the English language relating to property in this
country, their Lordships would have been of opinion that this submission was
correct. But in his judgment Ching J.A.
stated:-
"Attention was drawn to clause (3) of the
provisional agreement which, so far as it was not deleted, provided:-
`Transaction by vacant possession before
signing the Assignment.'
Whatever this may mean it is difficult to see
how this assists the Plaintiffs. The
words in the Chinese Language for vacant possession are perfectly well
understood. They mean that when the
assignment is made there must be no sitting tenant or other occupant."
34. As their Lordships would be slow to differ from
a judge in Hong Kong as to the meaning of a clause in a contract written in the
Chinese language, and as the point is not vital to the decision of this appeal,
their Lordships do not propose to express an opinion on this submission.
The
decision of this Board in the Edward Wong Finance Company case
established that a
solicitor for a purchaser buying a property subject to a mortgage to be
discharged from the purchase monies would be at risk of liability for
professional negligence if he failed to split the completion cheque between the
vendor's solicitor and the vendor's mortgagee.
It was submitted by Mr. West on behalf of the
purchasers that the vendors were further in breach of their obligations because
their solicitors had failed to supply the purchasers' solicitors with the
necessary information as to splitting the cheque between the vendors and their
mortgagee before midnight on 17th July 1991.
In reply to this submission Mr. Oliver contended that there was no
obligation imposed upon the vendors' solicitors to give this information before
the purchasers' solicitors requested it, and that the purchasers' solicitors
had not requested this information until 18th July on which date they
transmitted their letter dated 17th July 1991.
Having regard to their decision that the vendors were unable to perform
their obligation to deliver the executed assignment before midnight on 17th
July 1991, their Lordships consider it unnecessary to express an opinion on
this point.
35. In relation to the third question their
Lordships consider it to be clear that as the obligations of both parties were
concurrent and as the vendors were unable to deliver an executed assignment to
the purchasers on 17th July, they were not entitled to claim that the
purchasers had repudiated the contract by failing to pay the balance of the
purchase money on that date. In those
circumstances time ceased to be of the essence of the contract and the parties
had a reasonable time in which to complete.
The position was well stated by Hunter J.A. in Camberra Investment
Ltd. v. Chan Wai-tak [1989] 1 H.K.L.R. 568, 574:-
"I regard the point as fundamental and
very relevant as revealing both parties to have been at fault. Their obligations under clause 3 were
mutual. The duty of the defendant to
tender an executed assignment and that of the plaintiff to tender the balance
of the purchase price were concurrent conditions. Neither performed: neither tendered: neither triggered the corresponding
obligation of the other. The defendant
neither executed nor tendered an assignment before 1 pm and thereafter was
denying his obligation so to act and preventing his solicitor from taking any
step to that end. The plaintiff tried
to tender and failed. The cheque
constituted at most conditional payment and not the `full' payment
required. An effective tender required
cash or its equivalent, neither of which was available that Saturday afternoon.
In my judgment this contract remained
uncompleted at midnight on 28th February by the fault of both parties. It did not then terminate as was at one time
suggested. It remained on foot with the
substitution of a reasonable time for the failed express condition." Accordingly,
their Lordships have formed the opinion (for reasons which are substantially
the same as those given by Godfrey J.A.) that as the vendors were not in a
position to complete before midnight on 17th July 1991 they were not entitled
to claim that the purchasers had repudiated the agreement by not paying the
balance of the purchase money before midnight on that date.
36. Their Lordships further observe that the
decision of the majority of the Court of Appeal that payment by the purchasers
and completion by the vendors were not to be simultaneous appears to have been
influenced by two factual assumptions which their Lordships were informed were
incorrect. These were that the building
was not completed at the time the parties entered into the agreement of 6th
July 1991, and that the earlier purchasers in the chain from the developers
were unable to make payment under their respective contracts until the vendors
in this case had received payment from their purchasers. But their Lordships were informed on the
hearing of this appeal that it was not in dispute that the building had been
completed and that the earlier vendors had been paid before the agreement of
6th July 1991 was signed by the parties.
37. The final issue for determination is whether
the purchasers are entitled to an order for specific performance. It is not in dispute that they are ready and
willing to perform their obligations under the agreement. But it is submitted on behalf of the vendors
that clause 5 of the agreement (the terms of which are set out in the earlier
part of this judgment) operates to bar the remedy of specific performance and
restricts the purchasers to recovering $100,000, being double the amount of the
initial deposit.
38. Mr. Oliver submitted that clauses 4 and 5 were
to be read together and made provision for the only remedies available if
either the purchasers or the vendors were in breach of their obligations under
the agreement. He pointed to the word "must"
in clause 5 and submitted that the clause was not drafted in terms which gave
the purchasers an option as to the remedies they could pursue, but that the
clause restricted them to the receipt of double the amount of the initial
deposit. He further argued that the
second sentence of the clause, stating that the purchasers could not dispute a
resale by the vendors, was inconsistent with a right in the purchasers to claim
specific performance.
39. The vendors' reliance on clause 5 gives rise to
two questions. One question is whether,
even if clause 5 would have barred a claim for specific performance if the
vendors had accepted that they were in default in performing their obligations
and had offered to pay
$100,000 pursuant to the clause, they can now rely on the clause having
failed to offer payment under it and having claimed that the purchasers had
repudiated the agreement. The other
question is whether, if they had offered to pay $100,000 timeously, clause 5
would have barred a claim for specific performance. Godfrey J.A answered the first question against the vendors and
stated:-
"Are the purchasers entitled to
specific performance?
In my judgment, they are. Although the agreement contained the
familiar provision providing in certain circumstances for the return by the
vendors to the purchasers of an amount equal to double the purchasers' deposit,
the right to so is not a right which the vendors ever claimed to exercise. They purported to forfeit the purchasers'
deposit altogether and to call off the transaction. Had they elected, instead, to pay to the purchasers the `double
amount to the initial deposits' mentioned in the agreement, the case might have
been very different. But the vendors,
having elected (without sufficient justification) to treat the contract as at
an end, cannot be allowed now to resile from that election."
40. Their Lordships are in agreement with this part
of the judgment of Godfrey J.A. in relation to the first question and are of
opinion that, as the vendors never offered to pay the sum specified in clause 5
but claimed that the contract was ended by reason of repudiation by the
purchasers, they cannot now seek to rely on the clause.
41. In relation to the second question counsel
cited the judgment of this Board in Abdul Cader Abdeen v. Abdul Careem
Mohamed Thaheer (1958) AC 116 and a number of judgments of the Courts in
Hong Kong. In those cases the decision
whether a clause providing for the payment of a liquidated amount barred
specific performance was a matter of construction turning on the precise
wording of the individual clause.
Having regard to their ruling on the first question their Lordships
consider it unnecessary to decide as a matter of construction whether clause 5
would have barred a claim for specific performance if payment had been offered
in due time.
42. Their Lordships will humbly advise Her Majesty
that the appeal should be allowed, the order of the Court of Appeal set aside
and the order of Deputy Judge Pang for specific performance restored. The respondents will pay the appellants'
costs before their Lordships' Board and in the Court of Appeal.
© CROWN
COPYRIGHT as at the date of judgment.