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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Caws & Ors v Boyce & Ors [2007] EWHC 691 (Ch) (30 March 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2007/691.html Cite as: [2007] EWHC 691 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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(1) JACQUELINE CAWS (2) SHIRLEY CAWS (3) DAVID DUFF |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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(1) BARRY BOYCE (2) NICOLA HOARE (3) B M SAMUEL GROUP LTD (4) GARY MACNEILL |
Defendants |
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Mr William Moffett (instructed by Chambers Rutland & Crauford) for the 1st Defendant
Mr Keith Myers (instructed by Davies Simmons) for the 2nd Defendant
The 4th Defendant in person
Hearing dates: 9,13,14,15,19,20 February and 1,2 and 6 March 2007
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Henderson:
Introduction and Background
"On each and every occasion that [Mr Boyce and Miss Caws] visited [Mr MacNeill] in prison the subject matter of transferring [the Plot] was discussed and on each and every occasion [Mr Boyce and Mr MacNeill] together would tell [Miss Caws] that she should comply exactly with the directions of [Mr Boyce] or she would be putting herself and her family at immediate risk. [Miss Caws] was told that "the boys" could hire an assassin for as little as £800 who would come from central Europe, commit a murder and be gone without a trace. On two occasions [Miss Caws] was told "the boys" in particular had a habit of kidnapping children and on another occasion was told that [Mr Boyce's] wife had received a wreath delivered to her home as a warning."
The Transfers of the Plot: The Basic Facts
(a) The Transfer of the Plot to Mr Boyce
"We understand from our client that the proposed sale of the building plot in Hadley Wood is not proceeding at the present time but that your client is purchasing from ours a property at 8 West End Lane, Barnet. We are presently awaiting more precise details from our client and her mortgage account number to enable us to obtain the title deeds but, in the meantime, should be obliged if you would please confirm that your instructions accord with the foregoing."
"You will appreciate that I am concerned as to precisely what is supposed to be happening and, perhaps, either you and/or Mr Boyce would telephone me to let me know what is going on."
He went on to say that he was about to leave on holiday, and would be returning on 4
January 1999.
"… I have noted that you now wish this land to be transferred into the name of Mr Boyce.
I have prepared the necessary Transfer document, which I enclose herewith, and should be obliged if you would please sign this where indicated. … Would you please then arrange for Mr Boyce similarly to sign with his signature being similarly witnessed.
I have assumed that the property is to be transferred to him by way of a gift rather than for a money consideration. If this is not, in fact, the case then please return the document to me, let me know the price at which the property is to be transferred and I will prepare a fresh Transfer document.
Otherwise, please return the Transfer to me undated, for completion. … There will be a land registry fee payable and, perhaps, when replying, you would please let me know whether you wish me to forward my firm's account in this connection (including the land registry fee payable) to you or to Mr Boyce."
(b) The Transfer of the Plot by Mr Boyce to Miss Hoare
"Dear Michael,
Re: 8 West End Lane, Barnet
1 Hadley Farm Road, Barnet
We act for Sadlers International Limited who have agreed to purchase the above two properties from your client, Mr Caws(?). The prices are £50,000 and £150,000 respectively.
We await draft papers. "
"So far as 8 West End Lane is concerned I should be obliged if you would telephone me on receipt of this letter to confirm your instructions and to enable me to obtain certain further details from you.
With regard to 1 Hadley Farm Road I do not have any knowledge of this property and am wondering whether this is what has, in the past, been referred to as land at the side of The Grange. If so, I presume that Mr Boyce will be dealing with that aspect and, perhaps, you would please ask him to contact me to confirm his instructions in that respect."
"I do not myself know to what extent the two transactions are linked and I should be obliged, therefore, if you would please telephone me on receipt of this letter to let me know whether you are happy to proceed with the sale of the land at The Grange independently from the sale of 8 West End Lane.
I am writing in similar terms separately to Jackie Caws who is, of course, the legal owner of 8 West End Lane."
"As I mentioned to you on the telephone, the buyer's solicitor (who is local to me) was, unfortunately, involved in the Paddington rail accident and is presently hospitalised and likely to be so for some weeks.
The purchaser of the property is known to my client and, in the circumstances, it has been agreed to leave matters in abeyance for a short while."
The £45,000 and the Mortgage Frauds
Other Evidence of Property Dealing
The "Trust Deeds"
"and I met with the parties on several occasions to discuss securing the interest of Mrs Shirley Caws in respect of monies advanced by her to [Mr MacNeill and Miss Caws]."
With regard to 70 North Road, Mr Duff said he was "originally approached" by Mr MacNeill and Miss Caws in respect of a loan that "was to be paid to them" by Mrs Shirley Caws. The loan was to be secured on 70 North Road, which Miss Caws was about to purchase from the local authority. After discussion, the parties decided that rather than lend the money Mrs Shirley Caws "would obtain an interest in 70 North Road and … the money would effectively be invested in this property". However, she did not want to be a legal owner of the property, and the parties did not want to delay the purchase from the local authority, so it was agreed that the interests of Mrs Shirley Caws would be best served by her "taking a private equitable interest by virtue of a Trust Deed". A copy of a Trust Deed dated 1 November 1999 was enclosed with the letter.
The Alleged Threats
(1) In or about May 1998 Miss Caws and her mother were asked to visit Mr Boyce at Barge Lane, where he held up a list of properties and said "everything on this has to be sold or handed over to the gangsters": paragraph 2(a).(2) Miss Caws and her mother believed that the gangsters included a Mr Terence Adams, a Mr Robert Beale, a Mr David Bean, someone known as Colin and someone known as Gilbert "the stick", who Mr Boyce specifically said was a very dangerous man: paragraph 2(a).
(3) Mr Boyce said that if all the property on the list was not handed over or sold then the family of Miss Caws and her mother, Mr MacNeill and Mr Boyce and his family would all be at risk of serious injury or mortal harm from those people. According to Mr Boyce, they had in the past killed people for as little as £20,000: paragraph 2(a).
(4) The properties belonging to Miss Caws on Mr Boyce's list were the Plot and 8 West End Land; Mr Boyce's own property at Barge Lane was also on the list, and he and his wife subsequently transferred it unencumbered as a gift to a Mr Schofield who is believed by Miss Caws and her mother to be one of the gangsters: paragraph 2(a).
(5) On a subsequent visit to Mr Boyce's new property at Green Street, he told Miss Caws that "the boys" had killed somebody whom he knew and showed her a newspaper article reporting a murder, thereby indicating to her the importance of passing over the property: paragraph 2(b).
(6) Between May and September 1998 Miss Caws visited Mr MacNeill at HM Prison Woodhill where he was serving a prison sentence. These visits were made on a weekly basis, and for about half of them Mr Boyce and his wife would join Miss Caws. On each occasion the subject of transferring the Plot was discussed, and Miss Caws was told that she should comply exactly with Mr Boyce's directions or she would be putting herself and her family at immediate risk: paragraph 2(d), and see further paragraph 10 above.
(7) On a further visit in early September to Green Street, Miss Caws was told by Mr Boyce that his step-daughter (and Mr MacNeill's sister) Tracey was "in bits" because she was so worried about her child being under threat of kidnap. Mr Boyce implied that Miss Caws' daughter was similarly under threat: paragraph 2(d).
(8) Miss Caws was told by Mr Boyce in September 1998 to sell 8 West End Lane and the Plot to a Mr McAllister. Mr Boyce had a telephone which he only used to speak to "the boys", and he directed the sale to Mr McAllister either by giving instructions direct to Miss Caws' solicitors or by telling her what to tell the solicitor: paragraph 2(e).
(9) Because Mr Boyce was unable to arrange "a structure applicable to these sales" they proved abortive, and he then "proceeded to take a transfer for no value from [Miss Caws] who believed she was still under immediate threat": paragraph 2(e).
"2. On or about the 19th day of July 1999 [Mr Boyce] procured the signature of [Miss Caws] upon a Land Registry Transfer document by bad faith duress and undue influence by stating that unless [she] transferred the property to him for the sole purpose of transferring the property to [Miss Hoare] then [Miss Hoare] through her associates would kill [Miss Caws] and/or members of her family.
3. The said Transfer was prepared by a solicitor who acted for both [Miss Caws] and [Mr Boyce] and was not transferred for money or money's worth."
(1) Miss Hoare was at all material times the associate of one or more other persons, and acted under their direction: paragraph 6.(2) When Mr Boyce executed the second transfer on 15 November 1999 in favour of Miss Hoare, no true consideration passed and Mr Boyce, Miss Hoare and Mr MacNeill together "created a structure to provide an illusion of an arm's length transaction": paragraph 7.
(3) The consideration of £50,000 recited in the transfer was substantially obtained by a £45,000 bearer draft, which Mr MacNeill obtained from Mrs Shirley Caws by bad faith duress and undue influence, passing on death threats against Miss Caws, Mrs Shirley Caws and their family: paragraph 8.
(4) Mr MacNeill asked Miss Caws to arrange for her mother to obtain a mortgage on Rectory Drive, and Mrs Shirley Caws transferred that property to Miss Caws producing a release of equity of £45,000. Mr MacNeill advised Miss Caws that she and her family were still under threat of death, but if he were to pay a further £45,000 to the gangsters they would leave them alone and he would be able to be completely straight on his release from prison: paragraph 8(f).
(5) Mr MacNeill specifically asked for a bearer draft, and subsequently told Miss Caws that he had given it to the gangsters by meeting someone in an underground station in north London. He said that there would now be no further threats. He advised Miss Caws that the payment by the draft should be shown as a loan: paragraph 8(f).
(6) Alternatively, the draft was obtained by fraudulent misrepresentations made by Mr MacNeill in the above terms.
(7) Mr Boyce and/or Mr MacNeill passed the £45,000 to associates of Miss Hoare who paid the monies to the solicitor acting for Miss Hoare [i.e. Balmer Radmore] to transfer the monies back to Mr Boyce. Mr MacNeill made further fraudulent misrepresentations by advising Miss Caws and her mother "to create a loan equity structure to support the banker's draft payment to him of the £45,000", saying that he had to give the draft to dangerous people in respect of an old drug debt and unless Miss Caws and her mother did exactly as he required then he and/or other members of the family would be killed. Miss Caws and her mother complied with his demands through fear: paragraph 10.
(8) The transfer between Mr Boyce and Miss Hoare is voidable: paragraph 11.
(9) Following completion of the transfer, Mr Boyce and/ or Mr MacNeill "retained the £45,000 obtained from [Mrs Shirley Caws] for their own use": paragraph 12.
The Evidence of Miss Caws
"31. [Before the sale of Rectory Drive] I was told that [the Plot] had to go as well. This was said to me by [Mr Boyce]. At the time the property did not have planning permission. I pleaded with [him] not to take [the Plot] but he would not listen. I even suggested that the A Team let me build the property. Bradford & Bingley were lending 65% on developments. I knew that I could build the property for £67,000 as my quantity surveyor had estimated this. I wanted to do the project so badly and I thought that if I kept control I might be able to pay off the debt of [Mr MacNeill] and still retain a profit in order for me to get [him] into an honest business. Until he was transferred to Latchmere House [Mr MacNeill] was off drugs and was asking me to assist him in establishing a normal life so that he could be a worthwhile father and partner.
32. In a final attempt to keep my property I went to see [Mr Boyce] at his home in Green Street on the Isle of Wight. I literally begged him not to take this property but in a callous cruel way he just screamed at me and stormed out of the house. [Mrs Boyce] comforted me and told me that [Mr Boyce] became annoyed everytime I mentioned the Plot.
33. When I told [Mr MacNeill] what had happened he told me "just sign it over so that the debt would be paid and we would be free from all the threats when he was finally released". By this point I was so traumatised and worried for my daughter that I told [Mr MacNeill] I would just sign it over to [Mr Boyce] as I was not prepared to sign a property in my name over to this "A Team". Up to this point I had sold properties and handed over cash.
34. [Mr MacNeill] was pleased with this idea and said that the A Team would knock £140,000 off the debt. He was, at this time, aware that the local estate agents had viewed the Plot and estimated its value at £150,000.
35. I duly, and in retrospect naively, signed over the property in the offices of Gordon Shine solicitors who acted for both parties. Believing my family to be in danger I gave no thought to the possibility that the others, who I also thought were in danger, would manipulate this act to their own advantage."
"All negotiations, in which I have been involved, on the development of this site have been with Jacqueline Caws, and her architect Duncan Medhurst. At that time Jacqueline explained why the title of the site was registered in the name of [Mr Boyce]. In good faith, I have been assuming that Jacqueline continued to be the prime move in this matter. I do not understand why you did not explain that the title of the site is registered in your name since 8 December 1999, which information has only come to light this month as a result of my solicitor obtaining a copy of the title. "
The Evidence of the Other Witnesses
"The more improbable the event the stronger must be the evidence that it did occur before, on the balance of probability, its occurrence will be established."
However, before reaching a final conclusion I will examine the evidence of the other witnesses and then look at the whole picture in the round.
(1) The Claimants' other Witnesses
Mrs Shirley Caws
"This was not an investment on my part but something I agreed to do to prevent Gary getting himself killed or any of us coming to harm. I believed that the money I handed over was going to pay off his debts with the "A Team". There is no possibility that I would have sold this property or lent this money except under the threatening conditions I was in."
She added that it was Mr MacNeill who asked for this money, and who insisted that she got it for him in the form of a bearer draft.
Miss Corney
"7. The project was extremely important to her and she worked extremely hard on it from the outset. I specifically remember that she had looked into the history of the Plot, spoken to the previous owner, and had obtained a book with a photograph of the Old School House before it had been destroyed in the war. She showed me this photograph and her plans to support her application for planning [permission] and explained that she would have a better chance of being granted planning permission if she rebuilt what had been there previously. "
"We discussed her options and she considered going to the Police but was persuaded not to for fear of the consequence. Eventually she decided to transfer the property to [Mr Boyce] to free herself from the gangsters and because she did not want to be associated with them."
Mr Brian Willis
"Kath was very upset as she explained that she had been forced to take the action because of threats. In these exact words, which I will always remember, she told me "It had to go. When your grandchildren are under threat, I've had to hand it over, it had to go." "
"Certainly nothing along these lines was ever said to her in my presence at any time. I consider these allegations to be an invention on her part.
I understand that it is also said that discussions took place regarding disposal of the various properties at the times of visits to see Gary in prison. I visited him many times. I went with my husband. I went with my husband and Jackie. I went with Jackie only. At no time during any of these visits, was this subject discussed and there was no suggestion made that there were threats of personal harm to Jackie and Georgina. I consider this is another complete fabrication."
(2) Mr Boyce
"11. The first I came to know of the proposed transfer of [the Plot] to me was when [Miss Caws] approached me. I cannot be precise about the date but it was while Gary was serving his prison term. It must have been late 1998 or early 1999. [Miss Caws] was spending time in the Isle of Wight and was not far away from where I lived. We saw each other frequently. She told me that she was planning a series of property transactions. She told me that she was going to sell 8 West End Lane and buy two properties back to back namely [70 North Road and 1 Rectory Drive].
12. [Miss Caws] told me that she wanted to sell [the Plot] and did not want too much money to be passing through her bank accounts at one time. She said if it were put in my name, then I could sell it for her. I would then pay the proceeds of the sale to her in cash. I agreed to help her in this way. After all I considered I should help [her] if she asked for help like you would a daughter-in-law, especially while Gary was in prison.
13. I certainly did not threaten [her] in any way at all. The suggestion is ludicrous. Nor did I tell her that others …. posed any danger to her or repeat any threat or threats made against her by others or anything similar. Again the suggestion is pure fabrication.
14. [Miss Caws] gave no indication that she was under any pressure, or thought she was under any pressure, to sell [the Plot]. On the contrary she was calmly sure of what she wanted to do and took charge of the transaction. She instigated the instruction of solicitors, Gordon Shine & Co … to have conduct of the transfer [the Plot] into my name.
15. I really had very little involvement with the instructions given to Gordon Shine. I spoke to them on the telephone from time to time but I was just doing what [Miss Caws] required of me. When any substantial instructions or difficult questions came up I left this to [Miss Caws].
16. At every important juncture, from the first instruction of Gordon Shine to the execution of the transfer itself, it was [Miss Caws] who took the initiative. I merely complied with her wishes."
"When I received the remaining proceeds of sale from [the Plot] …. I deposited this cheque in my Nat West bank account on 17 November 1999. I then drew out this sum from my bank account in two cash sums, namely £25,000 on 23 November 1999 and £19,500 on 26 November 1999. I must take this opportunity to correct an error in my pleaded Defence which states that these were the two payments made to [Miss Caws]. These are in fact the amounts that I drew from the bank in order to pay her. I paid her in one lump cash sum. I drove the cash to her at her home in North Road, Ealing and handed it over to her there. She wanted it in cash as this was the original purpose of my involvement as she had explained it to me: that these sums should not be seen to be moving through her bank accounts. I was not in the habit of demanding receipts from [her]. I have never asked for one for this sum. It would seem to defeat the lack of formality which was the very nature of [her] plans."
(3) Miss Hoare and Mr Thorne
(4) Mr MacNeill
(1) With regard to the initial purchase of the Plot in 1995, he agreed that the initial deposit of £1,000 came from Miss Caws' bank account, and that the balance of the purchase price came from an account in the name of her uncle Mr Jim Caws. He accepted this (realistically, because there is documentary evidence to support it), even though he had obtained a brief witness statement from Mr Jim Caws which disclaimed any recollection of the transaction. At the beginning of the trial Mr MacNeill made an application, to which I acceded, to call Mr Caws as a witness in due course. In the event, Mr Caws was unwilling (because of illness and a recent bereavement) to attend court voluntarily, and Mr MacNeill sensibly took no steps to compel his attendance. However, Mr MacNeill maintained in both his written and his oral evidence that he gave Miss Caws a sum in cash (which he variously stated as being £10,000 or £11,000) in order to enable her to buy the Plot. He described the purchase as a joint venture between them, and said Miss Caws had picked it out because she thought it might be a good investment. It was also conveniently situated, being near their home at the time at 8 West End Lane.
(2) With regard to the events which led to his first imprisonment in 1998, Mr MacNeill said that he did not own the cannabis in the van which he crashed, and the owners of the cannabis (who were dangerous criminals) demanded compensation from him for its loss. The sum required was £100,000, which he was able to pay within six months of his imprisonment. The payment was made by an unspecified friend of his. Of the £100,000, £45,000 was lent to him in cash by Mr Thorne, £25,000 was provided by a friend called Nick Clarke, and the balance of £35,000 came from his own resources, both legitimate (the proceeds of sale of cars, trucks etc from his former garage business) and illegitimate.
(3) With regard to his subsequent arrest in 2001, and the sentencing hearing which took place before His Honour Judge McNaught on 20 March 2002, he said that the instructions which he gave to his solicitor, and the mitigation which his barrister advanced on his behalf, represented a mixture of truths and untruths, his prime object being to divert attention from the mortgage frauds which had been perpetrated by Miss Caws. To this end, he said that members of his family had been forced to dispose of properties in order to enable his debts to be paid, and referred to threats allegedly made for that purpose. The true position, however, was that some of the threats (such as the delivery of a wreath to his mother, Mrs Boyce) had in fact been made many years earlier, when he was a teenager, and other threats (although real) were nothing to do with the drug dealers whose cannabis had been lost, and nothing to do with the property transactions. The most serious threats originated not from the Adams family, but from three unnamed brothers.
(4) The mortgage frauds were nothing to do with him, and were Miss Caws' idea not his. Although he did not participate in the frauds, he knew that the mortgages on Rectory Drive and 70 North Road must have been obtained fraudulently because Miss Caws was not working at the time and had no legitimate source of income sufficient to service the mortgages. He accepted, however, that it was he who got the benefit of the £45,000 raised on the sale of Rectory Drive, and handed to him by Mrs Shirley Caws in the form of the bearer draft, because he used it to repay his indebtedness to Mr Thorne.
(5) He also gave Mr Thorne first refusal on the Plot, and initially on 8 West End Lane too. He considered that he was entitled to do this because he and Miss Caws were "working together as an item", and it was he who had originally financed the purchase of the Plot with his gift of £11,000 in cash to Miss Caws. He said that Mr Thorne had helped him out in the past, and was involved in building work. He would therefore be in a position to develop the land and make a profit on it. He agreed a price of £50,000 with Mr Thorne, because this was what Miss Caws' research had led her to decide was the market value of the Plot.
(6) Although Miss Caws did not know Mr Thorne personally, he (Mr MacNeill) told her that the purchaser of the Plot was a good friend of his, and she was content with that explanation. She also wanted the Plot to be sold. Their purpose in buying it, as with all their other property transactions, had been "to earn a few quid". Mr MacNeill had not been involved in the property business himself before he met Miss Caws, apart from the purchase of his garage business. She was the one who obtained mortgages, and she was the driving force behind the property transactions. He agreed that she could be described as "highly manipulative".
(7) With regard to the bearer draft for £45,000, Mrs Shirley Caws was told by Mr MacNeill and Miss Caws that the money was needed for the building works on 70 North Road, which had already been started. He said to her that a bearer draft would be "an easy way" to provide the money, and she was happy to go along with that. She gave the draft to him of her own volition, and not as the result of any improper pressure. However, Miss Caws was in fact using other sources of money to pay for the building works at 70 North Road, so Mr MacNeill decided to use the draft to repay his debt to Mr Thorne instead.
(1) I am not satisfied that Mr MacNeill provided any part of the purchase price of the Plot, either directly or indirectly. I am also not satisfied that there was any agreement or understanding between him and Miss Caws that he was to have a beneficial interest in the Plot. It follows that for the purposes of this action I proceed on the footing that the Plot was her property, both legally and beneficially, no claim to a share in it having been advanced by or on behalf of her uncle.(2) With some hesitation, I accept that Mr MacNeill was able to pay off the "debt" which he owed to the criminal owners of the lost cannabis with the help of substantial cash loans from Mr Thorne. Even if that is wrong, I am satisfied that this particular debt was repaid without the forced sale or transfer of any properties belonging to him or Miss Caws or Mrs Shirley Caws. I am unable to form a concluded view whether the amount demanded by the criminals was indeed as much as £100,000, or whether Mr Thorne did in fact lend him as much as £45,000, although I do not rule out the possibility that Mr MacNeill's evidence on these points is substantially correct. Mr Thorne's evidence about his loans to Mr MacNeill was in my view both vague and unsatisfactory. He said he had lent Mr MacNeill in excess of £45,000 "over the years", and in response to a request for further information in March 2005 provided copies of entries in a Halifax Building Society pass book which show cash withdrawals totalling about £16,000 between January 1998 and April 1999, against which Mr Thorne has written "Gary". It was put to Mr Thorne in cross-examination that the loans by him to Mr MacNeill were a fiction, but he denied this. As I have said, I accept that substantial loans were made, although I remain sceptical whether they amounted to as much as £45,000.
(3) I do not believe that in 2002 Mr MacNeill consciously wished to divert attention away from the mortgage frauds which had enabled Miss Caws to purchase Rectory Drive and 70 North Road. I accept that he sought to build up a picture of vague and menacing threats from dangerous criminals which had led to property realisations to pay his underworld debts, but in my view his principal motive in doing this was simply to bolster the mitigation advanced on his behalf. It is ironic that the mixture of truth and falsehood which he concocted on that occasion in his own self-interest may later have suggested to Miss Caws and Mr Duff the equally unreliable mixture of truth and falsehood which in my view lies behind the claims in the present action.
(4) I am also unable to believe that Miss Caws undertook the mortgage frauds without the knowledge and encouragement of Mr MacNeill, although I accept that the idea was probably hers originally, and I believe that she then took the lead in arranging them. At this date, long before Mr Duff appeared on the scene and the relationship between Miss Caws and Mr MacNeill broke down, it seems to me highly unlikely that either of them would have undertaken independent property dealings without having first planned and discussed it with the other. As Mr MacNeill said more than once, he and Miss Caws were "an item".
(5) & (6) I accept that the opportunity to buy the Plot (and initially 8 West End Lane too) was offered by Mr MacNeill to Mr Thorne. Mr Thorne was an old friend of his, and Mr MacNeill owed him a favour. Miss Caws was in my view content for Mr MacNeill to act on her behalf in finding a purchaser, provided that the Plot was sold for £50,000 which she considered to be its market value and was the price she wanted to obtain. The purpose of the sale was to realise a quick profit, in a situation where they were unable to develop it themselves.
(7) As I have already said, I find the bearer draft and the uses to which it was put on its journey one of the most puzzling features of this case. I do not pretend to have got to the bottom of the mystery, although I strongly suspect that the draft was intended to serve some dishonest purpose by at least some of those involved. Further speculation would in my view be fruitless. What matters, for present purposes, is that the draft was used to complete the purchase of the Plot by Mr Thorne, and that the net proceeds of sale of the Plot were then (as I have found) paid by Mr Boyce to Miss Caws, who used the money in part to pay for the works of renovation at 70 North Road.
Conclusions