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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Lohia & Anor v Lohia [2001] EWCA Civ 1691 (25 October 2001) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2001/1691.html Cite as: [2001] EWCA Civ 1691 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM ORDER OF MR N STRAUSS QC
(Sitting as a deputy High Court Judge in Chancery Division)
Strand London WC2 Thursday, 25th October 2001 |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE MUMMERY
SIR CHRISTOPHER SLADE
____________________
LOHIA and Another | Respondents | |
- v - | ||
LOHIA | Appellant |
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Smith Bernal Reporting Limited, 190 Fleet Street,
London EC4A 2HD
Tel: 0171 421 4040
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
appeared on behalf of the Appellant
MR W GELDART (Instructed by Harman Garfinkel & Co of London)
appeared on behalf of the Respondents
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Crown Copyright ©
The Facts
The Judgment
The Appellant's Submissions
" ..... I must therefore ..... conclude, again on the balance of probabilities, that he was unwilling to explain the nature of the arrangements which led to the transfer."
"In a voluntary conveyance a resulting trust for the grantor shall not be implied merely by reason that the property is not expressed to be conveyed for the use or benefit of the grantee."
"I agree with Mr Chambers' view that, on a plain reading of Section 60, the presumption has been abolished. It seems to me that Section 60 (1) establishes a general rule that a conveyance should be construed according to the words it uses so that [it] is possible to tell from it who holds the legal and beneficial interest in the land. Consistently with this, Section 60 (3) provides, in effect, that a voluntary conveyance means what it says; it is not necessary to use additional words to make it effective. It is likely that by 1925 the suspicion with which gifts of land were formerly viewed, which was at least one of the underlying reasons for the presumption, would no longer have been regarded as material, and the purpose of Section 60 (3) was accordingly to do away with the presumption of a resulting trust in the cases of voluntary conveyance and to make it necessary for the person seeking to establish a resulting trust to prove it. Another consideration is that Section 60 (3), unless so construed, would be something of a trap for the unwary conveyancer, since the suggestion implicit in its wording that it is no longer necessary to use the old formula would be misleading, except in cases in which the presumption of advancement applied.
As against all this, the countervailing consideration, that Section 60 (3) on this view would change the law with regard to real property alone, and therefore would lead to different conclusions in relation to real and personal property in the same situation, does not seem to me to be a factor of sufficient potency to displace the natural construction of the section.
Accordingly, I hold that a voluntary conveyance does not give rise to a presumption of a resulting trust. This view appears to be supported by the weight of academic opinion, albeit without any such detailed analysis as to be found in Mr Chambers' work."
"B Voluntary Conveyances
If a feoffment were made before the Statute of Uses to a stranger in blood without the receipt of a money consideration (i.e. a voluntary conveyance), and without declaring a use in favour of the feoffee, the rule was that the land must be held by the feoffee to the use of the feoffor. The equitable interest that thus returned by implication to the feoffor was called a resulting use. The effect of the enactment by the Statute of Uses that a cestui que use should have the legal estate was, of course, that the legal estate resulted to the feoffor. In order to prevent this it became the practice in the case of such a conveyance to declare in the habendum of the deed that the land was granted `unto and to the use of' the grantee. The repeal of the Statute of Uses by the legislation of 1925 would, in the absence of a further enactment, have restored the original rule, and it might have led practitioners to believe that the expression `to the use of' was still necessary in order to render a voluntary conveyance effective."