BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Raymond Saul & Co (A Firm) v Holden & Anor [2008] EWHC 8565 (Ch) (16 December 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2008/8565.html Cite as: [2009] WTLR 233, [2008] EWHC 8565 (Ch), [2009] BPIR 50 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
(sitting as a Deputy Judge of the High Court)
____________________
IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF BERTHA HEMMING (deceased) RAYMOND SAUL & CO. (a firm) |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
||
JOLYON HOLDEN (as personal representative of Bernard Leslie Hemming deceased) LOUISE MARY BRITTEN (as trustee in bankruptcy of the estate of Bernard Leslie Hemming) |
Defendants |
____________________
Mr. Robert Denman (of Holden & Co.) for the First Defendant
Miss Constance Mahoney (instructed by Moon Beever) for the Second Defendant
Hearing date: 10 December 2008
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr. RICHARD SNOWDEN QC :
Background
"the Estate has no other choice but to commence proceedings pursuant to CPR Part 64 where it will ask the Court to determine the issue and the Executor will seek an Order that the Trustee in Bankruptcy should pay the costs of that claim, personally."
"As regards Claim No. HC06C01642, we note that your firm is on the opposite side of the record to not only the Trustee in Bankruptcy but also Bernard Hemming. Of course, there will have to be an application to substitute Mr. Holden, as executor of Bernard Hemming, as the First Defendant. As things stand at present, we do not see any point in resolving the substantive dispute raised by these proceedings. There is no more reason to do so now than there was at the time of the sale of [the cottage]. Either the bankruptcy can be fully dealt with out of what is left of the proceeds of sale of [the cottage] or it will have to come out of [the farmhouse].
What, however, is essential to be dealt with in relation to this claim is the question of costs. For the reasons we have given, we do not accept that you should ever have raised an issue with the Trustee as to what should happen to the proceeds of sale of [the cottage]. It seems obvious from the information that is available now and was available to you in 2005, that those proceeds should have been used to discharge the bankruptcy.
All that issue has done is generate a staggering increase in costs. Given this, we see no reason why you should take any of your costs from the estate of Bertha Hemming. Further, we will contend that the costs of the Trustee in Bankruptcy, particularly insofar as they relate to this litigation, should not be borne by either Bertha's or Bernard's estates either. As to who, between yourselves and the Trustee and her legal advisors, should bear those costs is a matter for determination by the Court unless you agree it between yourselves."
Jurisdiction
The rival submissions
Analysis
"In a case where the dispute is between rival claimants to a beneficial interest in the subject matter of the trust, rather the duty of the trustee is to remain neutral and (in the absence of any court direction to the contrary and substantially as happened in Merry's case [1898] 1 Ch 306) offer to submit to the court's directions leaving it to the rivals to fight their battles. If this stance is adopted, in respect of the costs necessarily and properly incurred e.g. in serving a defence agreeing to submit to the courts direction and in making discovery, the trustees will be entitled to an indemnity and lien. If the trustees do actively defend the trust and succeed, e.g. in challenging a claim by the settlor to set aside for undue influence, they may be entitled to their costs out of the trust, for they have preserved the interests of the beneficiaries under the trust: consider In re Holden, Ex parte Official Receiver (1887) 20 Q.B.D. 43. But if they fail, then in particular in the case of hostile litigation although in an exceptional case the court may consider that the trustees should have their costs (see Bullock v. Lloyds Bank Ltd. [1955] 1 Ch. 317) ordinarily the trustees will not be entitled to any indemnity, for they have incurred expenditure and liabilities in an unsuccessful effort to prefer one class of beneficiaries e.g. the express beneficiaries specified in the trust instrument, over another e.g. the trustees in bankruptcy or creditors, and so have acted unreasonably and otherwise than for the benefit of the trust estate: consider R.S.C., Ord. 62, r. 6; and see National Anti-Vivisection Society v. Duddington, The Times, 23 November 1989 and Snell's Equity, 29th ed. (1990), p. 258."
"It seems to me that the thrust of what Lightman J. says is that if the trustees decide not to be neutral, but to take sides in a dispute between beneficiaries, they must accept that, if the side which they support loses, they will be at risk of being subjected to an order for costs."
"I accept that usually applications by trustees for directions are friendly litigation, and that the trustees' costs are paid out of the fund. I also accept that the usual instance of hostile or adversarial litigation in which trustees are involved is external litigation between the trustees and a third party, for example in a dispute with a third party about property comprised in the trust fund. However, in my judgment there can, albeit exceptionally, be cases of applications to the court by trustees which, although being internal in the sense that only the trustees and the beneficiaries are involved, are hostile or adversarial litigation.
This case was adversarial litigation and the trustees chose to make it such. I am not criticising them for their choice; it was an understandable choice. However, what I do say is that, having decided to launch proceedings which, as between themselves and the cousins can only realistically be seen as adversarial, the trustees cannot complain if, the proceedings having gone against them, the normal consequences for a losing adverse litigant follow."
Conclusion