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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 >> Paton v Rosesilver Group Corp [2017] EWCA Civ 158 (24 March 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2017/158.html Cite as: [2017] EWCA Civ 158 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION
The Honourable Mr Justice Mann
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
and
SIR CHRISTOPHER CLARKE
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IAN PATON |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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ROSESILVER GROUP CORP. |
Respondent |
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Mr Barry Isaacs QC and Mr Ryan Perkins (instructed by Gordons Solicitors Limited) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 26 January 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Henderson:
Introduction
"(1) The learned Judge made an error of fact, in holding that Mr Brook was not acting as Mr Paton's solicitor in the transaction, or that such a relationship was not vouched for in any way in the evidence.
(2) The learned Judge also erred to the extent that he held that Mr Paton had no real prospect of proving that Mr Brook had an undisclosed personal interest in the transaction."
Background
The contract for sale of the Property
(a) The 2011 Contract
(b) The Supplemental Agreement
(a) The purchase price was deemed to be £1 million instead of £850,000.(b) For the avoidance of doubt, it was provided that "the Property" should include the associated parking bay at 26 Belgravia Court registered under a separate title number.
(c) The sum of £210,000 in clause 26 of the 2011 Contract was deemed to be £360,000, and Ms Clutterbuck and Mr Paton made similar acknowledgments to those which they had previously made in relation to the increased sum.
(d) Mr Paton and Ms Clutterbuck further acknowledged that the amounts respectively paid to them to date in cash, amounting in aggregate to £450,000 (i.e. the £360,000 paid to Ms Clutterbuck, and the £90,000 paid to Mr Paton), "were paid by Sator Properties Limited on behalf of the Seller". The reference to "the Seller" was presumably a mistake for "the Buyer".
(e) Mr Paton agreed to serve a notice under section 42 of the Leasehold Reform Housing and Urban Development Act 1993 so as to make and pursue a claim for a 90-year extension of the lease of the Property, and to sign all necessary documentation for that purpose. On completion, he would assign the benefit of that claim to the buyer for no consideration; but by clause 4 Rosesilver agreed to provide to Mr Paton "all payments due in order to conclude the making of the claim".
Statements of case
"As at 2011 the property was worth approximately £1.1 million and the Defendant simply would not have sold it for £850,000. The Defendant was induced to enter into the May 2011 agreement by Stephen Brook ("Mr Brook") a partner of Brook Martin & Co Solicitors ("BM"). In particular:
(a) Mr Brook was and had been since approximately 2004 the Defendant's and Ms Clutterbuck's solicitor and the Defendant trusted Mr Brook to act in his best interests;
(b) in breach of his duties including fiduciary duties to the Defendant, and despite representing BM as being the Defendant's solicitors, in (and possibly before) and after 2011 Mr Brook was in reality acting primarily or solely for the Claimant and (unknown to the Defendant at the time) acting primarily to promote the best interests of the Claimant and/or Sator at the Defendant's expense;
…
(d) as at 2013, the value of the property had increased such that it was worth significantly more than £1.1 million."
"3. At all material times from around 2004 until April 2014 [Mr Brook] was the trusted solicitor and adviser of the Defendant and of [Ms Clutterbuck] especially in connection with their property and finance matters. Mr Brook stood in a fiduciary position towards the Defendant and Ms Clutterbuck who placed their trust and confidence in him always to act in their best interests.
…
Breach of fiduciary duty
12. Further, at all material times in connection with this matter Mr Brook was acting as solicitor and agent to the Claimant with its authority to conclude contacts on its behalf, as well as solicitor and trusted adviser of the Defendant. Alternatively, Mr Brook had (whether through his wife or otherwise) a connection or financial interest in Sator which was not declared to the Defendant at the time of the agreement.
13. At no stage did Mr Brook take any steps to explain the position to the Defendant such as the implications of his acting for both parties and of his conflict of interest given that he was acting for both the Claimant and Sator as well as for the Defendant or that there were limits as to how far he could advise the Defendant (or Ms Clutterbuck) or tell them all relevant facts because he was also acting for the counterparty to the transaction. Accordingly, at no stage was there full or informed consent by the Defendant (or by Ms Clutterbuck) to Mr Brook's acting for both sides to the transaction. The Claimant was on notice of Mr Brook's having failed to obtain such consent."
The Judge's judgment
"42. Mr Gunaratna's last proposed line of defence is rescission on the basis of an undisclosed conflict of interest. In his skeleton argument he said the contract was to be set aside because it was procured by Mr Brook acting in breach of fiduciary duty, and it would be unconscionable for the claimant to rely on it given its notice of that conflict, acquired through Mr Brook who acted as its agent. The conflict is said to arise from Mr Brook's having some sort of interest in Rosesilver and/or Sator. The draft amended Defence (which I am prepared to take as outlining the nature of the case of Mr Paton) is that Mr Brook was acting as solicitor and agent to the claimant with authority to conclude contracts, as well as the solicitor and trusted adviser of the defendant. There is an alternative plea that Mr Brook had an interest (unparticularised) in Sator. That is said to give rise to an undisclosed conflict of interest.
43. If it were the case that Mr Brook were acting in the transaction as solicitor for Mr Paton, and advising him, while at the same time having some sort of interest in the transaction himself, then there might be case for there being a conflict of duty which might be capable of justifying setting aside the contract. To that extent Mr Gunaratna's submissions were capable of being based in principle. However, once again the problem for Mr Paton is that they are not based in evidence. The material for supposing that Mr Brook had an undisclosed interest in the transaction is no more than a passing supposition. More importantly, the important fact that Mr Brook was somehow acting for Mr Paton in the transaction is simply not vouched for in any way in the evidence. Once again Ms Clutterbuck's (and Mr Paton's) failure to explain how the transaction came about means that an important evidential basis is lacking. Just because he had acted for Mr Paton in the past does not mean that he was acting for him in this matter. Even Mr Paton's unadmitted witness statement does not demonstrate that Mr Brook was acting for him in this transaction, which is particularly striking bearing in mind that this witness statement must have been created with the draft pleading in mind.
44. In the circumstances this line of defence, too, fails."
The first ground: was there a breach of the dual employment rule?
"There is no general rule of law to the effect that a solicitor should never act for both parties in a transaction where their interests may conflict. Rather is the position that he may act provided that he has obtained the informed consent of both to his acting. Informed consent means consent given in the knowledge that there is a conflict between the parties and that as a result the solicitor may be disabled from disclosing to each party the full knowledge which he possesses as to the transaction or may be disabled from giving advice to one party which conflicts with the interests of the other. If the parties are content to proceed upon this basis the solicitor may properly act.
…
In determining whether a solicitor has obtained informed consent to acting for parties with conflicting interests it is essential to determine precisely what services are required of him by the parties. In this case Holland J was satisfied that Mrs Mouat [the client] was not concerned about the wisdom of the transaction and was
"merely [seeking] the service of the solicitor to ensure that the transaction [was] given proper and full effect by way of ascertaining questions of title and ensuring that by appropriate documentation the parties [achieved] what they [had] contracted for."
…
Their Lordships are accordingly satisfied that Mrs Mouat required of Mr Boyce [the solicitor] no more than that he should carry out the necessary conveyancing on her behalf and explain to her the legal implications of the transaction …
When a client in full command of his faculties and apparently aware of what he is doing seeks the assistance of a solicitor in the carrying out of a particular transaction, that solicitor is under no duty whether before or after accepting instructions to go beyond those instructions by proffering unsought advice on the wisdom of the transaction. To hold otherwise could impose intolerable burdens on solicitors."
(a) the agreement was affirmed by Mr Paton, in the knowledge that Mr Brook acted as the solicitor in relation to the transaction for both Mr Paton and Rosesilver; and/or
(b) Mr Paton is estopped from rescinding the agreement, because he led Rosesilver to believe by his conduct that he intended to affirm the agreement, and Rosesilver then acted to its detriment in reliance on his conduct by making various payments, including the sums paid for the extension of the lease in August 2014, and the further sums paid to avoid repossession of the Property from April 2014; and/or
(c) it would be unfair and disproportionate to rescind the agreement, in the light of the above facts, because if Mr Brook did breach his fiduciary to Mr Paton, the more appropriate relief would be an award of equitable compensation against Mr Brook.
I will merely indicate that, had it been necessary to rule on these issues, I would have held that the estoppel argument was well-founded, but the other arguments could not be resolved without a trial.
The second ground: did Mr Brook have an undisclosed personal interest in the transaction?
"… Miss Clutterbuck does provide some suggestions that Mr Brook may have some sort of interest in the loans, or in Sator (it is understandable that in the circumstances she may not know of any covert relationship in relation to these matters) but they are no more than suggestions. While the transaction has unusual features (see above) they do not, in my view, even raise a prima facie case of a transaction requiring explanation as that requirement exists in the law of undue influence."
"My strategy, as you know, has been to try and so agree things with Martin [i.e. Mr Forrester] that we wait for the outcome of the Nicholl case before he completes the contract to buy in the hope that you will be able to repay your debt to him (for which, as you know, I am now 50% responsible) and the contract can be mutually rescinded."
"The material for supposing that Mr Brook had an undisclosed interest in the transaction is no more than a passing supposition."
"Unless it orders otherwise, the appeal court will not receive –
(a) oral evidence; or
(b) evidence which was not before the lower court."
(a) the evidence could not have been obtained with reasonable diligence for use at the trial;(b) the evidence must be such that, if given, it would probably have an important influence on the result of the case, although it need not be decisive; and
(c) the evidence must be such as is presumably to be believed, or in other words, it must be apparently credible, although it need not be incontrovertible.
These principles will normally guide the exercise of the court's discretion in rule 52.11(2), subject to the overriding objective in rule 1.1(1) of enabling the court to deal with the case justly and at proportionate cost.
(1) First, he exhibits material indicating that Rosesilver is a wholly-owned subsidiary of a company called Highstead Holdings Limited ("Highstead"). Mr Forrester's evidence shows that this is true, but irrelevant. Mr Forrester is the sole shareholder of Highstead, as well as being the sole shareholder of Sator. The judge was therefore right to rely on Mr Forrester's evidence that he was the sole beneficial owner of both companies, although it would have been more accurate to say that he was indirectly the sole beneficial owner of Rosesilver, through his intermediate 100% shareholding in Highstead. Mr Forrester's evidence also shows that Mr Brook has never been a director of either company.(2) Secondly, Mr Dykes produces Land Registry official copy entries which show that the freehold premises at 29 York Street, London, W1 have been owned by Mr Brook since 1999, and were mortgaged by him to Highstead by way of a legal charge dated 10 June 2014. This is no doubt true, but is again irrelevant. The fact that Highstead has a charge over a property owned by Mr Brook from which he conducts his business as a solicitor does not mean, or even suggest, that Mr Brook had an undisclosed interest in Sator or Highstead which could have placed him in a position of conflict when acting for Mr Paton in relation to the sale of the Property to Rosesilver. Mr Dykes also alleges that Highstead's charge "does not arise out of an "arms length" agreement for mortgage finance in the conventional way", but again it is impossible to discern the relevance of this allegation, even if true.
(3) Thirdly, Mr Dykes claims to have discovered new evidence that "neither Mr Paton nor Ms Clutterbuck ever actually owed substantial monies to [Sator] at all". The so-called "new evidence", however, turns out to be an "absence of evidence", arising from the alleged failure of solicitors acting for Brook Martin, in pending proceedings brought against that firm by Mr Paton and Ms Clutterbuck, to provide copies of Sator's client ledgers in response to requests made in correspondence by Mr Dykes. This allegation seems to me purely speculative, and to lack any credible foundation. The evidence before the judge included, as I have said, a promissory note signed by Ms Clutterbuck on 20 March 2014, recording that she owed Sator a sum in excess of £1.4 million: see [12] above. Similarly, the evidence in relation to Mr Paton included evidence that he agreed in 2010 that he owed Sator £1.5 million, inclusive of interest: see the judgment at [2], referring to the uncontested evidence of Mr Forrester to that effect. Furthermore, Mr Dykes himself acknowledges that the solicitors acting for Brook Martin have claimed that Sator's client ledgers are privileged. Mr Dykes does not agree with this, but the present proceedings are not the appropriate forum in which to resolve a dispute of that nature.
(4) Fourthly, Mr Dykes seeks to adduce evidence suggesting that payments due from Rosesilver under the agreement for sale of the Property "did not involve physical payments by Rosesilver, but took the form (if anything) of reductions in Ms Clutterbuck's (purported) indebtedness to Sator". Mr Dykes also questions whether the £180,000 paid for the extension of the lease actually emanated from Rosesilver. The short answer to these, and related, allegations is that, even if they were established, it is wholly obscure how they would support the second ground of appeal by tending to show that Mr Brook had an undisclosed personal interest in the transaction. I therefore decline to spend further time examining the detail of the allegations, which appear to me at best flimsy and speculative.
Conclusion
Sir Christopher Clarke: