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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 >> Lloyd v MGL (Rugby) Ltd & Anor [2007] EWCA Civ 153 (28 February 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2007/153.html Cite as: [2007] EWCA Civ 153 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT
OF JUSTICE, CHANCERY DIVISION,
BIRMINGHAM DISTRICT REGISTRY
H.H. JUDGE NORRIS Q.C. sitting as a
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT, CHANCERY DIVISION.
LOWER COURT NO: BM330303
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE WILSON
and
SIR PETER GIBSON
____________________
WILLIAM DAVID LLOYD |
First Defendant/ First Appellant |
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- and - |
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MGL (RUGBY) LIMITED -and- ANDREW MICHAEL SUTCLIFFE |
Second Defendant/Second Appellant Claimant/ Respondent |
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WordWave International Ltd
A Merrill Communications Company
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Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr Simon Clegg (instructed by Alsters Kelly, Leamington Spa) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
Hearing date: 19 December 2006
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Wilson:
INTRODUCTION
"that there has arisen an equity in favour of [Mr Sutcliffe], following and as a result of [his] participation in the development of the site at Willes Road, which needs to be satisfied by [MGL] and may upon enquiry need to be satisfied by [Mr Lloyd]."
Thereupon the judge gave directions for the assembly of evidence for a further hearing at which he might determine the nature and extent of the equity; no doubt they are in abeyance pending determination of this appeal. He ordered MGL to pay 70% of Mr Sutcliffe's costs to date, without prejudice to the latter's right to seek an analogous order against Mr Lloyd once relief was determined.
(i) In a written agreement dated 15 January 2002 Mr Sutcliffe and Mr Lloyd provided that the agreement represented "the entire understanding" between them in relation to "matters dealt with" therein. In that (so the argument runs) the project in relation to Willes Road was "dealt with" therein albeit in such a way as to create a contract only in relation to an ancillary aspect of it, the judge was not entitled to collect a constituent of the estoppel from extraneous material which he interpreted as evidence of an understanding in relation to the project.(ii) In that the judge held that the property to which Mr Sutcliffe's equity attached was part (namely the profit) of the proceeds of development of the property at Willes Road and in that such property is owned by MGL, it was not open to him to hold that it might need to be satisfied by Mr Lloyd personally.
(iii) Nor, conversely, was it open to the judge to hold that the equity needed to be satisfied by MGL. Here the argument is that the representations held to give rise to the understanding had been made by Mr Lloyd personally; that Mr Sutcliffe never even pleaded that they should be attributed to MGL; and that the judge was wrong so to attribute them.
(iv) The judge was also wrong to hold that it would be unconscionable to allow MGL and Mr Lloyd to escape the attachment of legal consequences to what he held to be their representations to Mr Sutcliffe that he would participate in the profit generated by the development of Willes Road. In my view Mr Taylor, who appears on behalf of Mr Lloyd and MGL, has not yet secured permission to argue this ground. Upon surveying Mr Taylor's draft grounds of appeal, the trial judge granted permission to appeal upon certain specific grounds and also, unwisely, "on any ground which asserts that the legal conclusion reached is not justified by the facts found". Oblivious of the meaning of the words "on any ground", which I believe to be "on any subsequently specified ground", Mr Taylor interprets the judge's permission as giving him carte blanche to raise, without specification in the grounds of appeal, any challenge to the judge's application of the doctrine of proprietary estoppel to the facts which he found. Indeed, in that the notion of unconscionability is the centre of the doctrine to which all of its strands are, as if by vectors, linked, Mr Taylor has felt emboldened to cast all his remaining points under that single rubric. On balance I think that we should give him permission; waive the need for formal amendment; and address the less insubstantial parts of his argument.
THE FACTS
(a) by the transfer to him at par of Ms Wakelin's 49% and of 1% out of Mr Lloyd's holding, Mr Sutcliffe would become an equal owner and then co-director of Nimega with Mr Lloyd;(b) when possible, Nimega would exercise the options to purchase and develop the sites to maximum advantage;
(c) the contribution of Mr Lloyd was to have procured the sites at the prices in the option agreements and the contribution of Mr Sutcliffe would be to provide the project management, design and construction;
(d) each of them would invest equal amounts in the venture;
(e) the eventual profit would be divided equally between them;
(f) the above terms would need to be spelt out in greater detail; and
(g) the understanding, together with the greater detail, would need to be given effect in a more formal arrangement and meanwhile it was capable of modification and refinement.
"[Nimega] intends to exercise the option on the Dunchurch Road site and develop the property and give effect to the business plan dated 10 January 2002 and which is appended to this agreement "
(a) recital (F) to the agreement provided:"[Nimega] will, after the exercise of the Willes Road option, forthwith transfer the Willes Road property to Mr Lloyd and Ms [Wakelin] at the price defined in clause 10 below."(b) clause 10 of the agreement provided:
"[Nimega] will, at the request of Mr Lloyd and Ms [Wakelin], exercise the option dated 31 August 2001 to acquire Willes Road and will make all reasonable endeavours to complete the purchase of the land and will immediately forthwith transfer Willes Road to Mr Lloyd and Ms [Wakelin] (or to a company owned by them if they shall so request) for the sum [payable by Nimega to Total for the property], plus all reasonable costs incurred thereon."(c) paragraph (1) of the plan, entitled "Company purpose and objective", provided:
"[Nimega] is formed to facilitate business between [Mr] Sutcliffe and [Mr] Lloyd The first project being the acquisition and development of the former petrol station at Dunchurch Road The initial objective and understanding being that [Mr Lloyd] acquired the site and [Mr Sutcliffe] would develop it through his business Both parties would charge reasonable expenses, with the net profit being split equally within the framework of [Nimega]. If successful, it is envisaged that the company will continue to undertake similar projects or any other venture considered appropriate and beneficial."(d) paragraph (3)(a) of the plan, entitled "Salary", provided:
"Beyond the Dunchurch Road and Willes Road projects, any legitimate work undertaken by a shareholder/director's business or other company should be charged for in the normal manner "
"This Agreement supersedes any previous agreement between the parties in relation to the matters dealt with herein and represents the entire understanding between the parties in relation thereto."
(a) At times throughout 2002 Mr Sutcliffe, with ultimate success, worked with experts and government agencies to achieve extension of the environmental confirmation to residential use.(b) In February 2002 Mr Sutcliffe gave formal instructions to Mr Manning to prepare a planning application in accordance with his scheme. The application was submitted in April 2002 and granted in August 2002.
(c) In March 2002 Mr Sutcliffe commissioned a valuation of the proposed development for the purposes of applications for funding.
(d) In June 2002 Mr Sutcliffe, purporting to act on behalf of MGL, selected chartered quantity surveyors and instructed them to estimate the development costs, excluding any profit element; thereafter he liaised with them with a view to the progression of their work.
(e) Also in June 2002 Mr Sutcliffe reported to the Nimega board about the satisfactory progress of the plans for the development.
(f) Following the grant of planning permission Mr Sutcliffe instructed consulting engineers to dig trial pits in order to assess the foundations of neighbouring properties and the feasibility of Mr Manning's plan.
(g) Following a meeting in September 2002 Mr Sutcliffe instructed the consulting engineers and a building regulations specialist to prepare an application for building regulations approval. It was submitted in November 2002 and subsequently granted.
(h) Also in September 2002 Mr Sutcliffe responded to Mr Lloyd's written request to arrange a valuation for borrowing purposes. Mr Lloyd had written "I am sure that we will sell a number of units "off plan" and suggest that initially we release only three or four units at a starting price of £250,000".
"In summary, by about the end of 2002 Mr Sutcliffe had by the selection, co-ordination and supervision of a professional team coupled with his own input prepared for MGL a residential project at Willes Road of quality and density higher than might have been expected. The site that cost £120,000 had become a project that was estimated to realise residential sales of £2.2 million The question is: why had he done all this? Was it simply in the hope that he would be awarded a building contract? Or was it because he thought that there was an understanding or framework in place that he would be rewarded for all this application with a share in the development profits, though the precise contractual arrangements conferring this entitlement had not been put in place?"
(a) In June 2002 Mr Lloyd was about to make a lengthy visit to the U.S. Mr Sutcliffe expressed concern to him that, in the event of Mr Lloyd's death, he, Mr Sutcliffe, would have difficulty in establishing his rights in respect of the development. Mr Lloyd in effect agreed to humour him. It was agreed, first, that, by an exchange of correspondence, MGL would agree to pay £100,000 to Mr Sutcliffe for his management of the development project. The figure was arbitrary; and for some reason no such correspondence actually passed. It was agreed, second, that, by executing a codicil to his will, Mr Lloyd would bequeath his shares in Nimega to Mr Sutcliffe in the event of his death while abroad. The codicil was duly executed.(b) In October 2002 Mr Lloyd informed his solicitor that "[Mr Sutcliffe] and I are looking to formalise our building contractual position between [MGL] and [him] for the development of Willes Road that is simple [and] that will satisfy the banks".
(c) At about the same time Mr Sutcliffe wrote to his accountant (and in similar terms to his solicitor) that "We have a site in Leamington which we are going to do as a joint venture between [me] and [MGL]. The basis being that I build it and we split the profit. Is there a simple form of contract for this ?"
(d) In October 2002 the quantity surveyors prepared written proposals for production to the bank in which, on instructions from Mr Sutcliffe, they asserted "[Mr Sutcliffe] will build at cost [and] will not include profit as [he has] a stake in the success of the development". The proposals were sent to Mr Lloyd, who made no objection to this assertion.
(e) Late in 2002 the solicitors for Mr Sutcliffe and for Mr Lloyd and MGL were at odds as to the mechanism by which Mr Sutcliffe would participate in the profit of the development. But throughout the negotiations there was, so the judge found, a clear recognition even on the part of Mr Lloyd and MGL that Mr Sutcliffe was intended so to participate.
(f) By letter to Mr Lloyd dated 11 November 2002, his solicitor referred to "the bones of your agreement that MGL will provide the property, [Mr Sutcliffe] will build the flats and the parties will share the profit" and stated that, with funds to be borrowed, MGL will "use these to discharge the ongoing expenses of [Mr Sutcliffe] with a final payment to be made by reference to the ultimate profit made by MGL".
(g) By email sent to Mr Sutcliffe at about the same time, Mr Lloyd stated "[You have done work] on the basis of understanding and agreement [that a contract would be reached] and we have to keep [issues between our solicitors] in perspective within this framework the agreement with you for building this site is in the end a profit share and you will be reimbursed all costs incurred in relation to building the site ".
(a) Mr Sutcliffe would be unlikely to have been interested in a sale unless he understood that, irrespective of performance of any works of development, he was already entitled to a share in the increase in the value of the site; and(b) Mr Lloyd would be unlikely to have consulted Mr Sutcliffe about a possible sale unless he accepted that the latter had a financial interest in its outcome. To one agent Mr Lloyd had written "I was pleased to receive the informal proposition of £700,000 for the Willes Road site once again I have to discuss this with [Mr Sutcliffe]".
THE JUDGE'S CONCLUSIONS
(a) that from the outset there had been a clear understanding on the basis of which Mr Sutcliffe and Mr Lloyd were prepared to proceed in relation to the development;(b) that the understanding had taken the form of a joint venture;
(c) that prior to January 2002 the proposed mechanism of the venture had been their equal ownership of Willes Road through Nimega and that in and after January 2002 it had been changed to a building or other contract by which Mr Sutcliffe would secure an interest in the profit of the development;
(d) that both men had conducted themselves on the footing that there was such a joint venture. Of particular relevance in this regard were:
(i) Mr Sutcliffe's advance to Nimega in order to facilitate the passage of funds to MGL vital to its purchase of Willes Road;(ii) Mr Sutcliffe's investment of substantial time and effort in compiling the entire development package; and(iii) Mr Lloyd's acceptance of Mr Sutcliffe's interest in the discussions about sale of Willes Road to another developer; and(e) that Mr Sutcliffe had provided a key to the success of the development.
"An equity arises where
(a) the owner of land (O) induces, encourages or allows the claimant (C) to believe that he has or will enjoy some right or benefit over O's property;
(b) in reliance upon this belief, C acts to his detriment to the knowledge of O; and
(c) O then seeks to take unconscionable advantage of C by denying him the right or benefit which he expected to receive."
"In my judgment both parties proceeded from the autumn of 2001 on the understanding that Willes Road was to be developed as a joint venture in the manner I have outlined: from January 2002 this original understanding was modified so that Mr Sutcliffe's participation in the development profit was not to come to him through ownership of shares in the company that owned the development site, but through the award of a contract or contracts which would contain a profit share mechanism. Mr Sutcliffe gave of his skills (imparting key knowledge and applying critical judgement) on the faith of that understanding (which understanding Mr Lloyd shared). It would be unconscionable for Mr Lloyd to take advantage of the fact that the parties did not in the event agree detailed terms as they had contemplated."
FIRST GROUND OF APPEAL
"Willes Road was not "dealt with" in the shareholders' agreement. Part of the arrangements concerning it (viz. who was to acquire it) were recorded but the shareholders' agreement plainly assumes that there were other (unrecorded) arrangements, which is why the business plan refers to Willes Road as a "project" and as a project where [Mr Sutcliffe] is to build at cost."
"In or about mid 2002 [Mr Sutcliffe] and [Mr Lloyd] agreed that Willes Road would be developed before Dunchurch Road Further it was by implication agreed that in so doing the terms applicable thereto were those which had been agreed between [them]. It was made by [Mr Lloyd] both on behalf of Nimega and [MGL]."
In a later paragraph he claimed that, if all matters thus pleaded did not amount to an agreement, they nevertheless created an estoppel. In my view paragraph 19, drafted of course prior to reliance in the defence on clause 17.1 of the agreement, was an adequate pleading that after 15 January 2002 Mr Lloyd (and indeed MGL: see [34] below) had, with Mr Sutcliffe, reiterated the terms of the understanding, as modified at the meeting on 4 January 2002, about the development. As for evidence that, by words or inference from conduct, the parties had thereafter so reiterated them, there was a mass of it: see [14], [15], [17] and [18] above.
SECOND GROUND OF APPEAL
" I have held that the original understanding was reached between Mr Sutcliffe and Mr Lloyd but that there was never any suggestion that MGL did not regard itself as also bound by that understanding , and [so] took unconscionable advantage. In these circumstances the equity stands primarily to be satisfied by [MGL] (at whose disposal profits from the project apparently are). But I do not know what has become of the proceeds of the development, and the binding of MGL did not release Mr Lloyd (in the event that he acquires or has acquired directly or indirectly an interest in the profits of the development). In those circumstances I will declare that there has arisen an equity in favour of [Mr Sutcliffe] which needs to be satisfied by [MGL] and may upon inquiry need to be satisfied by [Mr Lloyd]."
THIRD GROUND OF APPEAL
FOURTH GROUND OF APPEAL
(a) The understanding in this case was not between family members but between astute businessmen who anticipated entry into a contract but never achieved it. Although a proprietary estoppel can arise during a period of anticipation of entry into a contract (see the Cobbe case above, in particular per Mummery L.J. at [55] and [56]), equity should be slow to disorientate businessmen by attaching legal consequences to their dealings during a period in relation to which they would reasonably expect otherwise.(b) The promises of Mr Lloyd and (for the purposes of this argument) of MGL were thin and woolly. In particular they lacked one feature, the presence of which is either necessary to the creation of an estoppel or at any rate an important factor in any conclusion that it would be unconscionable to accede to the later stance of the promisors. The absent feature is that Mr Lloyd and MGL never suggested to Mr Sutcliffe that their promises were irrevocable or, in the words of Arden L.J. in Kinane v. Mackie-Conteh [2005] EWCA Civ 45, at [29], that they "created an enforceable obligation".
(c) Although Mr Sutcliffe acted to his detriment in reliance on their promises, his actions were insubstantial; they cost him little in terms of time or money; they mainly took the form of procuring third party assistance, which, in his absence, Mr Lloyd and MGL could probably have procured through other channels; and, in particular, they amounted only to straightforward, initial steps towards what, pursuant to the understanding, was to be Mr Sutcliffe's substantial contribution, namely the physical development, which in the event he never undertook.
(d) In principle Mr Sutcliffe's proper remedy, if any, would have been by way of quantum meruit. His claim in that regard was dismissed only because he failed to lay sensible evidence of quantum before the judge. It is no function of equity to pile remedy upon remedy.
(e) The judge ignored the fact, established in evidence, that the relationship of Mr Lloyd and MGL with Mr Sutcliffe broke down only because of unreasonable delay on the part of the latter in "breaking ground" at Willes Road. The fact should have compelled a conclusion, no doubt expressed in terms of what was conscionable, that Mr Sutcliffe deserved no equitable embrace.
"[the trial judge] must, it seems to me, have been exaggerating the degree to which a promise of this sort must be expressly made irrevocable if it is to found an estoppel. As already noted, it is the other party's detrimental reliance on the promise which makes it irrevocable."
The law requires that the promisor should make clear not that the promise cannot be revoked but that it will not be revoked. In the words of Mummery L.J. in the Cobbe case above at [51], "the crucial element is that the defendant has created or encouraged the belief on the part of the claimant that the defendant will not withdraw from the assurance, arrangement or understanding." In that the judgment of this court in the Cobbe case postdates the judge's judgment, the "crucial element", thus defined, was not clearly drawn to his attention and he did not specifically address it. But, had he been asked to do so, he could have reached only one conclusion, namely that, from October 2001 in the case of Mr Lloyd and from early in 2002 in the case of MGL, each of them so persistently and over so many months, gave assurances, by words and conduct, to Mr Sutcliffe that he was to enjoy a share in the profit of the development, and so protractedly watched him act to his detriment in reliance upon them, that they thereby made clear that their assurances would not be revoked. Indeed Mr Taylor does not argue to the contrary: his argument is cast on the absence of a "could", not on the absence of a "would".
"Although I received detailed evidence as to the breakdown of negotiations it was not suggested by either party that which of them was ultimately the cause of the breakdown affected their respective rights. For the purpose of adjudicating upon those rights I was simply to take the breakdown of the negotiations as a 'given'."
In his grounds of appeal Mr Taylor did not include a complaint that the judge had failed to find and then to weigh the fact that Mr Sutcliffe was guilty of unreasonable delay; and not even under the generic permission unwisely granted by the judge did Mr Taylor secure permission to complain about it. On the basis that there would be no complaint in this court about the judge's findings or absence of findings of fact, the five trial bundles were, by agreement, condensed into parts of two bundles. I agree with Mr Clegg, on behalf of Mr Sutcliffe, that it is intolerable that he should be the subject of an attempted ambush on a point of fact which could never reasonably have been considered to be an issue before this court.
" it will only be in exceptional cases that a claimant will be able to satisfy the requirements of proprietary estoppel in a case of continuing negotiations towards a possible contract A "floodgates" argument is no justification for refusing relief "
Mr Taylor's argument at [36(c)] above referable to the extent of the acts done, and in particular not done, by Mr Sutcliffe arises more directly in the second stage of the enquiry at which the judge will identify the minimum equity to which in justice Mr Sutcliffe is entitled. In this regard the judge has already indicated that Mr Sutcliffe "cannot fairly hope to share in the profit of the development to the same extent as if he had undertaken the building". Mr Taylor's argument at [36(d)] above that Mr Sutcliffe's proper remedy, if any, was by way of quantum meruit must be set beside his denial before the judge that such a remedy was available to Mr Sutcliffe even in principle. In any event, in that the focus of the remedy would have been on the objective value of the work done by Mr Sutcliffe, rather than its subjective value to Mr Lloyd and MGL in terms of the enhancement of their ability to extract profit from the development, it would have failed to reflect the essence of the understanding from which they have unconscionably sought to resile.
CONCLUSION
Sir Peter Gibson:
Lord Justice Maurice Kay :