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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 >> Singh v Jhutti & Anor [2021] EWHC 2272 (Ch) (09 August 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2021/2272.html Cite as: [2021] EWHC 2272 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS IN BIRMINGHAM
Bull Street, Birmingham B4 6DS |
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B e f o r e :
(Sitting as a Judge of the High Court)
____________________
Ashok Singh |
Claimant |
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- and – |
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(1) Parminder Singh Jhutti (2) Harmale Singh Jhutti |
Defendants |
____________________
Stuart Hornett and Tom Frazer (instructed by Trowers & Hamlins LLP) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 22, 23, 24, 25, 26 February, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 15, 16, 17, 18 March 2021
Draft judgment circulated to the parties' legal representatives on 29 July 2021 by email.
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
His Honour Judge Richard Williams:
Introduction
a. Prior to the appointment of the Receivers, C's close family and friends (including C's mother as well as D1 and his wife) invested significant amounts of money into the Properties ("the Original Investors"). D1 and his wife had funds invested totalling £250,000;
b. C was the victim of the banking scandal when his monthly mortgage payments spiralled as a result of having been mis-sold interest rate hedging products by NatWest, which led to the appointment of the Receivers. C found out that the Receivers were about to auction the Properties with reserves well below what they were worth;
c. The Original Investors would have lost their investments if the Receivers sold the Properties at auction at an undervalue. Therefore, C obtained an injunction to restrain the Receivers from selling the Properties at auction. C approached family and friends ("the Alleged Buy Back Consortium"), who offered to loan total funds of £935,00 to go alongside bank funding to purchase the Properties from the Receivers. The Alleged Buy Back Consortium included some of the Original Investors such as D1, who otherwise stood to lose their investments if the Properties were sold by the Receivers at auction. D1 offered to lend C the sum of £400,000;
d. NatWest insisted that any Properties purchased in more than one lot had to be purchased by a single nominated purchaser. As the acquisition was to be funded in part by bank finance, D1, who had the best credit rating, was chosen by C (in consultation with C's financial adviser) and agreed to act as representative for the Alleged Buy Back Consortium;
e. There was an oral agreement between D1 and C that D1 would sell the Properties back to C within 12 to 18 months of the acquisition and at the same price that D1 had paid for them. C's intention during the interim period was to renovate and then refinance the Properties in his own name so that he could apply the monies he raised against the Properties to –
i. repay the monies loaned by the members of the Alleged Buy Back Consortium; and
ii. give the Original Investors the options of either (1) being repaid the amounts of their original investments or (2) retaining their original investments in the re-acquired property portfolio.
f. As negotiations with the Receivers progressed and in order to provide some comfort to the Receivers, C arranged for third parties (including other members of the Alleged Buy Back Consortium), who had their own funds and so were not reliant upon bank funding, to purchase some of the Properties on the understanding that they would later be sold to the defendants and once adequate finance was in place.
g. As a result of continuing delays in obtaining bank finance in the name of D1 -
i. Bridging finance was required to complete the purchase/re-purchase of the Properties from the Receivers/third parties. It was the bridging companies that insisted that D2 act as co-representative in light of D1's age, and
ii. In order to reduce the amount of the required lending from the bridging companies, C arranged for the defendants to purchase by way of deferred consideration those Properties that had been acquired in the names of the other members of the Alleged Buy Back Consortium. Those members of the Alleged Buy Back Consortium agreed to lend the purchase monies to C and the defendants until such time as C was able to refinance the Properties in his name and thereby complete the rescue of the property portfolio;
h. The other members of the Alleged Buy Back Consortium sent their monies either directly to the conveyancing solicitors, Rubric Lois King ("RLK"), to be used in the purchase of the Properties by the defendants or to the defendants' own bank account, which monies the defendants then paid on to RLK;
i. The oral agreement between C and the defendants was subsequently recorded and evidenced in a number of written agreements signed by the parties ("the Disputed Agreements") including in particular an agreement dated 6 January 2013 ("the Sale Agreement"), which at the defendants' request extended the time for completion of the re-purchase of the Properties by C from the defendants to 12 months from the date of that agreement;
j. Following the acquisition of the Properties in the names of the defendants, they double-crossed C. They acted behind C's back to snatch the Properties for themselves and to prevent the sale back to C. As a result, the defendants obtained for themselves and their family a windfall potentially worth millions of pounds and notwithstanding that C and the other members of the Alleged Buy Back Consortium contributed some £650,000 towards the purchase and renovation of the Properties. By the time the extended period for C to complete the re-purchase from the defendants had come to an end, the Properties were worth considerably more than the defendants had paid for them and would have provided ample security to enable C to refinance the Properties into his name whilst also paying off the monies owed to the Original Investors and the members of the Alleged Buy Back Consortium; and
k. C seeks a declaration that the defendants hold the Properties for his benefit on a constructive trust subject to payment of the purchase price or in the alternative an order for specific performance of the Sale Agreement.
a. D1 was never an Original Investor, although he did make a short term interest free loan of £200,000 to C to assist him with cash flow problems that C was then experiencing. D1 felt obliged to help C in his time of need since over several years C had without payment assisted D1 and his wife to buy and sell a number of single investment properties;
b. D1 sought repayment of the loan in order to use those monies, together with a credit facility he had obtained of £400,000 (also with NatWest), to invest in a property portfolio for the exclusive benefit of the defendants and their family. C was unable to repay the loan at that time, but rather offered to assist the defendants to purchase a property portfolio (including by negotiating with the Receivers, arranging bank finance, liaising with solicitors and managing the Properties on behalf of the defendants once acquired) as C had done in the past when D1 and his wife had purchased other investment properties albeit on a smaller scale. C explained to the defendants that the property portfolio belonged to a Mr Shiv Sharma, who had got into financial difficulties, and was being sold cheaply by receivers with whom he had contacts. C assured the defendants that the property portfolio represented a good buy notwithstanding that some of the properties were in a poor condition and needed renovating. The defendants trusted C, who was an experienced property developer;
c. C advised the defendants that they would urgently need to exchange contracts for the purchase of the property portfolio before bank finance was in place otherwise they would lose this valuable opportunity. Thereafter, there were delays on the part of C in securing bank finance, which resulted in:
i. Several of the Properties being initially purchased by associates of C on the understanding that the defendants would subsequently purchase those Properties from C's associates once adequate finance had been secured,
ii. The defendants had to take out short term (6 months) bridging finance to complete the purchase/re-purchase of the Properties from the Receivers/C's associates,
iii. Significant additional costs/expenses were incurred by the defendants and which by April 2012 stood at some £470,000 (including the costs of the bridging finance). C accepted that he was responsible for causing these additional costs/expenses, which he agreed should be added to his original debt of £200,000,
iv. C agreed to obtain funds from his associates to cover any shortfalls on completion, and on the basis that C would be responsible for paying back his associates and those payments would go towards reducing C's debt with the defendants,
v. C also agreed that C's debt be partly repaid by some of his associates transferring the Properties that they had purchased from the Receivers to the defendants without any payments being required and again C arranging to pay those associates back himself,
vi. The defendants do not dispute that C's associates contributed funds totalling £480,000 towards the defendants' purchase of the Properties, although they were not aware of the full extent of those third party funds until much later. At the time of completion of the purchases of the Properties, the defendants were only aware of third party funds totalling £173,000 because those funds were paid directly into the defendants' bank account before onward transmission to RLK;
d. Following completion of the purchase of all the Properties by the defendants, they began to lose trust in C as a result of his continuing failure to arrange the bank finance and progress the renovations. As the bridging loans fell in, it became increasingly more difficult to contact C and so the defendants decided to take matters into their own hands by opening discussions directly with Lloyds TSB and without telling C;
e. In October 2012, the defendants discovered via an estate agent that C was in fact the former owner of the Properties. C had misled the defendants by falsely claiming that that the Properties were owned by Shiv Sharma. In addition, RLK, who were acting primarily in the interests of C and whose conduct is clearly questionable, failed to advise the defendants that the Properties were owned by C. Therefore, the defendants decided to take control of the Properties away from C and to dis-instruct RLK;
f. The defendants were only able to prevent the bridging companies placing the Properties into receivership and avoid financial ruin through the support and assistance (including financial) provided to them by associates, family and friends. The defendants spent a total of some £942,000 in connection with the Properties including (i) the costs of purchasing/renovating the Properties and (ii) paying the extra costs/penalties of the bridging finance;
g. The defendants never agreed to act as nominees/representatives for any buy back consortium, which they knew nothing about at the time. Their signatures on the Disputed Agreements are forgeries.
Background in more detail
a. There was a familial connection;
b. They had known each other for many years;
c. C had assisted D1 to buy and sell investment properties over several years with D1 placing significant trust in C to source and negotiate the purchase/sale of those properties;
d. C was younger than D1, but older than D1's children. C referred to D1 as "Uncle" out of a sign of respect and confided in D1 about personal matters.
There was clearly a substantial degree of mutual trust and affection prior to the events in question.
a. Flat 4, 369 Gillott Road – £45,000 – to be purchased by Mr Satpal Singh ("SS") and his wife, Mrs Sukhdip Johal; and
b. Flat 5, 136 Portland Road – £55,000 – to be purchased Mr Gagandeep Singh Khurl ("GSK");
It is the defendants' case that they were advised by C to remove these Properties temporarily from the NatWest portfolio to reduce the amount of the bank lending, although the defendants would be given the opportunity subsequently to re-purchase them from C's associates at the same prices that they had paid for them. It is C's case that SS and GSK were members of the Alleged Buy Back Consortium and were buying these properties as his representatives.
a. 13 Anderson Road - £110,000;
b. 23 & 25 Portland Road - £650,000;
c. 63 St Mary's Road - £100,000;
d. 584 Stratford Road - £100,000;
e. 496 City Road - £150,000;
f. 169 South Road - £90,000;
g. 171 South Road - £90,000;
h. 58 Swindon Road - £85,000;
i. 9 & 11 St Augustine's Road - £400,000;
j. 149 (a) (b) & 151 (a) (b) South Road - £130,000; and
k. 157 (a) (b), 159 (a) (b), 161 (a) (b), 163 (a) (b) and 167 South Road - £245,000
Total price - £2.15 million.[1]
a. £25,000 transferred to RLK by GSK on 18 October 2011;
b. £25,000 transferred to RLK by C by way of instalments of £10,000 paid on 18 October 2011, £5,000 paid on 19 October and £10,000 paid on 18 November 2011; and
c. £120,000 transferred to RLK on 18 November 2011 by Mr Avtar Singh Gosal ("ASG") via his company, Western Heating Limited.
It is the defendants' case that they were not aware of the introduction of these third party funds at the time.
a. Flat 4, 369 Gillott Road purchased for £45,000 by SS and his wife, who between them contributed the total sum of £25,686.34 by way of instalments paid to RLK of £4,000 on 16 November and of £21,686.34 on 8 December 2011;
b. Flat 5, 136 Portland Road purchased for £55,000 by GSK, who contributed the total sum of £50,000 by way of instalments paid to RLK of £25,00 on 18 October, £10,000 on 18 October, £5,000 on 19 October and £10,000 on 18 November 2011;
c. 13 Anderson Road purchased by Mr Davinderjit Singh Mander ("DSM") for £110,000 following an assignment of the benefit of the contract by D1 and utilising the 10% deposit already paid. DSM transferred to RLK the sum of £112,000 on 13 December 2011; and
d. The South Road properties purchased by Westpoint Holdings Limited ("Westpoint") for £550,000 following assignments of the benefit of the contracts by the defendants and utilising the 10% deposits already paid.
It is the defendants' case that, as with Flat 4, 369 Gillott Road and Flat 5, 136 Portland Road, C advised the defendants that they would be given an opportunity subsequently to purchase 13 Anderson Road and the South Road properties from C's associates once the bank finance had been arranged. Although the defendants were told that they would be able to purchase 13 Anderson Road for the price paid for it by DSM, Westpoint insisted that they be paid the sum of £655,500 with the 10% deposit already paid by the defendants being credited to this sum. The defendants say that they were unhappy with the situation generally and in particular at having to pay Westpoint £100,000 more than Westpoint had actually paid the Receivers, but C told them that they had no other option. C appreciated that this additional cost had been incurred as a result of his failure to raise the bank finance in time, and so he told the defendants that he would add the £100,000 to the debt that he already owed them. It is C's case that as the negotiations with the Receivers progressed, it was necessary for some of the Properties to be sold to individual members of the Alleged Buy Back Consortium (SS, GSK and DSM) and others be sold to persons not connected to the Alleged Buy Back Consortium (Westpoint and also Mr Jeetender Singh Sahota in respect of the later sale of 21 Clarendon Road). The defendants did not complain about this because they knew that they were only ever acting as representatives of the Alleged Buy Back Consortium.
a. RLK had successfully negotiated with the Receivers an extension for completion until 30 January 2012, but subject to payment of a further 10% deposit of the aggregate sale price of £1.735 million, which would be paid out of the Retained Monies;
b. If the defendants did not complete on 30 January 2012 the Receivers would serve notices to complete. If completion did not take place within 10 days of such notices, the Receivers would be entitled to terminate the contracts and keep all the deposits paid by the defendants; and
c. "You must be absolutely sure that you will be in a position to have funding in place to meet these strict deadlines or you will face the risk of losing the further deposit of £173,500 that the seller requires. If you have any doubts as to whether this will be achievable you should not agree to the extension".
a. A secured bridging loan of £442,000 from Capital Bridging Finance Limited ("Capital") for a period of 6 months. After deduction of advanced interest, the net amount paid to RLK on 16 March 2012 was £399,110; and
b. £214,000 paid by D2 to RLK on 20 March 2012. This sum in turn comprised –
i. £95,000 transferred into the defendants' bank accounts by or at the direction of Mr Kulvinder Singh Phull ("KSP"), an associate of C;
ii. £8,000 cash paid by C into the defendants' account; and
iii. £111,000 raised by the defendants.
Again, it is the defendants' case that C agreed that these third party funds introduced by C (£103,000) be set off against the debt he owed to the defendants.
a. The re-purchases of Flat 5, 136 Portland Road for £85,000, 13 Anderson Road for £250,000 and Flat 4, 369 Gillott Road for £60,000 from C's associates. However, the consideration was deferred with no monies being paid by the defendants, and the properties were included in the security to the bridging companies to secure the finance necessary to complete on the other properties. It is the defendants' case that C wanted to make a part payment of his debt and so arranged the transfer of the properties to the defendants without payment and C said that he would arrange payment direct with his associates. It is C's case that the sellers as members of the Alleged Buy Back Consortium agreed to lend the purchase monies until such time as C was able to refinance the Properties back into his name; and
b. The purchases of 496 City Road for £150,000, 23 & 25 Portland Road for £650,000, 63 St Mary's Road for £100,000, 584 Stratford Road for £100,000 and 9 & 11 St Augustine's Road for £400,000, which were financed by way of the following bridging finance -
i. On 5 April 2012, £155,000 from Capital for a period of 6 months secured on 63 St Mary's Road and 584 Stratford Road,
ii. On 12 April 2012, an initial advance of £364,000 against a total facility of £520,000 from Capital for a period of 6 months secured on 9 & 11 St Augustine's Road,
iii. On 23 April 2012, £475,750 from West One Loans Limited ("WestOne") for a period of 6 months secured on 23 & 25 Portland Road and 496 City Road,
iv. On 16 April 2012, £295,000 from Capital for a period of 6 months secured on 58 Swindon Road, Flat 5, 136 Portland Road, 13 Anderson Road and Flat 4, 369 Gillott Road.
It is the defendants' case that very considerable extra cost was incurred as a result of having to take out this expensive bridging finance (£137,045 for Capital and £59,646 for WestOne), which C agreed would be added to his debt.
General observations upon the evidence of witnesses of fact
Interference with memory
"[19.] The process of civil litigation itself subjects the memories of witnesses to powerful biases. The nature of litigation is such that witnesses often have a stake in a particular version of events. This is obvious where the witness is a party or has a tie of loyalty (such as an employment relationship) to a party to the proceedings. Other, more subtle influences include allegiances created by the process of preparing a witness statement and of coming to court to give evidence for one side in the dispute. A desire to assist, or at least not to prejudice, the party who has called the witness or that party's lawyers, as well as a natural desire to give a good impression in a public forum, can be significant motivating forces.
[20.] Considerable interference with memory is also introduced in civil litigation by the procedure of preparing for trial. A witness is asked to make a statement, often (as in the present case) when a long time has already elapsed since the relevant events. The statement is usually drafted for the witness by a lawyer who is inevitably conscious of the significance for the issues in the case of what the witness does nor does not say. The statement is made after the witness's memory has been "refreshed" by reading documents. The documents considered often include statements of case and other argumentative material as well as documents which the witness did not see at the time or which came into existence after the events which he or she is being asked to recall. The statement may go through several iterations before it is finalised. Then, usually months later, the witness will be asked to re-read his or her statement and review documents again before giving evidence in court. The effect of this process is to establish in the mind of the witness the matters recorded in his or her own statement and other written material, whether they be true or false, and to cause the witness's memory of events to be based increasingly on this material and later interpretations of it rather than on the original experience of the events."
a. Proceedings were not issued until 5 October 2017 and even then without there having been any pre-action correspondence. It was directed that exchange of witness statements take place by 11 February 2020. Therefore, the witnesses were being asked for the first time to record in writing their recollections of events and conversations that took place some 8 to 9 years beforehand; and
b. Very few of the witnesses can be regarded as detached or objective observers being either the parties themselves or persons closely connected and loyal to the parties through friendship, family, longstanding business relationships and/or the local Sikh Temple. Indeed, some of C's witnesses have a direct financial interest in the outcome of the proceedings, since in the event of a successful outcome C has promised to repay them monies they are allegedly owed. Therefore, the vast majority of witnesses in this case were subject to significant motivating forces and powerful biases.
Indicators of unsatisfactory witness evidence
a. Evasive and argumentative answers;
b. Tangential speeches avoiding the questions;
c. Blaming legal advisers for documentation (statements of case and witness statements);
d. Disclosure and evidence shortcomings;
e. Self-contradiction;
f. Internal inconsistency;
g. Shifting case;
h. New evidence; and
i. Selective disclosure.
In my assessment, much of the witness evidence in this case was tainted by indicators of unsatisfactory witness evidence. I am unable in the course of this judgment to refer to each and every such indication. Rather, I will by way of illustration give specific examples by reference to the relevant witnesses and in particular by reference to the parties themselves, who were the primary witnesses of fact in this case and who gave their oral evidence over a total of almost 2 weeks.
Lucas direction
Assessment of the primary witnesses of fact
Caught in lies
a. Both C and D2 were willing to make false statements for financial gain;
b. Whilst this case may in part be about maintaining reputations in the local community, it is primarily about financial gain through recovering/retaining the Properties;
c. The false statements were made in circumstances were each party was under a heightened duty of candour – C in relation to contracts of insurance and D2 in relation to contracts concerning the safeguarding of highly vulnerable people; and
d. C and D2 in their oral evidence sought to double down on their lies by bizarrely resorting to some sort of metaphysical justification. They sought to explain that whilst their statements were not true at the time that they were made, they might somehow become true in due course when the Properties were subsequently rented out or the supported living contracts were subsequently awarded.
In my assessment, these false statements when combined with the ludicrous attempts in oral evidence at justification seriously undermined the credibility of C and D2.
C
a. Evasive - C was unable or unwilling to give a straight answer to a straight question – For example –
i. whether he ever had in his possession any originals of the Disputed Agreements,
ii. whether his overdraft with Lloyds TSB went to over £900,000 in 2010,
iii. what property was he buying on 20 February 2012 and which he referred to in his email to DSM dated 15 February 2012?
b. Shifting case – For example –
i. Initially C asserted in his statement of case that all the monies provided to him by the Original Investors were by way of unsecured loans, but subsequently in his written/oral evidence he maintained that the majority of the monies were provided by way of investments;
ii. In support of his application for the Injunction, C served a witness statement dated 15 September 2011 in which he explained that he had been unable to collect the rents as he usually did because he suffered a suspected heart attack in February/March 2011 and was bedridden. As a result, the loan repayments were not made, and he was only able to resume collecting the rents in August 2011 when recovered from his illness. However, in his oral evidence, C said that he was bedridden only for a couple of weeks and in any event his wife and/or son collected the rents in his place. He claimed that although the rents were collected in full he had been unable to make the loan repayments because NatWest failed to advise him which account needed which money;
c. Tangential speeches - C avoided answering questions by giving irrelevant speeches about the financial crash of 2008, although I accept that C genuinely feels with some justification that he was the victim of the banking scandal;
d. Disclosure shortcomings – For example –
i. in his disclosure questionnaire in response to the question relating to data sources/locations, including email servers, C stated that all relevant emails were stored on C's PC. In response to the question regarding irretrievable documents, C stated that he changed his PC in 2013, and so the original computer was no longer available for inspection because it had been destroyed. C claimed to have printed off hard copies of all relevant emails, which were available for inspection. During the course of his oral evidence, C was taken to an email dated 14 March 2012 sent to him by RLK. C confirmed that, as recorded on the hard copy, he had printed off this email on 12 June 2017. He also confirmed that, notwithstanding what he had stated in his disclosure questionnaire, in fact his emails remained retrievable, since they were saved and stored on the server. When asked why he had not disclosed this fact in his replies to questionnaire and despite having been specifically asked to identify any email server, C sought to blame his solicitor,
ii. on 30 January 2012, Shaun Kidson of Lloyds TSB sent an email to C seeking highly relevant information including why the portfolio was for sale, who was selling it, why had D1 decided to acquire property on this scale and the source of D1's funds. C said in evidence that he responded, but did not have a copy of that response despite the email being sent to the same email address [email protected] to which RLK's email had been sent on 14 March 2012 and printed off on 12 June 2017,
iii. by letter dated 16 February 2021, C's solicitor disclosed copies of agreements dated 16 February 2011, 16 March 2012 and 19 April 2012 recording that KSP was making loans respectively of £30,000, £95,000 and £30,000 to D1. The timing of this disclosure a few days before the start of the trial is surprising to say the least. The covering letter from C's solicitors sought to explain the late disclosure on the basis that they had only "been provided today from" KSP. However, in his oral evidence KSP denied having provided copies of those agreements to C's solicitors on 16 February 2021;
e. Self-contradiction – C changed his evidence often within minutes of having given it – For example –
i. how the Disputed Agreements were produced and who retained the originals,
ii. C claimed that when Lloyds TSB and Bank of India failed to come up with the funding, C agreed, on behalf of all the investors, that the Properties also be put in the name of D2 because he was young and had a professional background, and therefore satisfied the criteria imposed by the bridging companies. However, later in his oral evidence, C accepted that, when D2 signed the contracts for sale on 16 November 2011, Lloyds TSB and Bank of India had not yet indicated that they were not prepared to provide funding such that D2's nomination could not be explained by reference to the lending criteria of any bridging financers. C then suggested that Lloyds TSB may possibly have wanted a further person as the consortium head, although he could not remember.
The defendants
a. D2 was very excited by this very large property transaction entered into for the benefit not only of the defendants but also their family and very keen to learn the ropes from C as an experienced property developer; and
b. D1 was supportive of his son but nevertheless cautious and concerned about the high level of borrowing required.
However, the defendants' admitted inaction (e.g. not making a list of the Properties, not viewing internally the vast majority of the Properties, not undertaking any surveys, not reading RLK's property reports and not thinking through where the money for exchange or completion was coming from) was wholly inconsistent with the defendants' stated intentions/motives. In oral evidence they sought to explain this all away by repeatedly adopting the shared mantra that they trusted C, left everything to C to sort out and/or only did whatever C directed them to do. However, whilst I have no doubt that the defendants trusted C at the time, trust alone fails to explain away the defendants' apparent lack of any interest or curiosity in what they were buying and how it was being financed. I will explore this internal inconsistency in more detail later in the judgment, but for now a good example is when D2 was asked why he had not discussed with C the potential rental income to be generated from the Properties, which on the defendants' own case would obviously be vitally important to know as the rental income was required to service the high level of borrowing. There followed the following exchange:
D2. "Like I say. I was so – I just hadn't done that kind of thing before so I didn't know to ask the sort of pertinent questions that you're saying I should have asked. I just didn't do it, I just wanted the property"
Q. "You just went round them like some gormless tourist, just looking at them and not engaging in any conversation about them. Is that it?"
A. "Like I said, we went to those three, we drove around, had sort of simple conversations about them. There was so much trust in Ashok, you know, this is good, this is good property, dah dah dah dah, and it was just, I just took it at face value, as did my Dad."
D2
a. Self-contradiction – D2 initially recalled receiving an email from RLK attaching the property reports but was unable to recall what if any documents were attached to that email. When it became clear that at least one of those reports referred to C as the registered proprietor, D2 changed his evidence and was adamant that he had never received the property reports;
b. Evasive – D2 repeatedly failed to give a straight answer to the straight question whether or not he checked the defendants' email account for receipt of the property reports from RLK; and
c. New evidence – D2 appeared to be making up his evidence as he went along in an attempt to answer questions consistent with the defendants' case. D2 initially said in his oral evidence (consistent with his written evidence) that when conducting a drive by viewing of the majority of the Properties he carried out calculations in his head as to the likely rental income generated by over 30 units. When asked how he had kept a running total in his head as they drove from one property to the next, D1 changed his evidence to say variously:
"I did jot something down, but I didn't keep records of my notes",
"Yes, I wrote down on paper the number of units. I don't know whether I wrote down the address or anything. I wrote down the number of units rather than the addresses",
"I sat down at the end of the day, after the last property…I think I wrote it, that's what I remember doing, writing it down and doing a quick calculation"
D1
a. When asked why it mattered in October 2012 if the Properties were previously owned by C rather than Shiv Sharma, D1 said that he was heartbroken because C had lied to him, which lie "hurt me much more than anything." However, in the defence and D1's witness statement, D1 sought to minimise the extent of his relationship with C describing him as "a long standing acquaintance and family friend", whom he "occasionally saw....at common social and religious gatherings at the temple". When asked, D1 was unable to offer any coherent explanation as to why he had felt heartbroken if there was no real friendship;
b. D1 accepted that he knew at the time that the sum of £170,000 needed to be paid on exchange of contracts for the balance of the deposit. D1 repeatedly avoided answering the question where then did he think this money was coming from if not from him by saying that if C had asked for the money he would have paid it. Ultimately, D1 said that he did not know where the £170,000 was coming from and could not explain it;
c. D1 accepted that there was also a substantial shortfall in the completion monies, which he had not become aware of until after the defendants obtained and considered RLK's files much later. D1 was asked how did he think at the time of completion the shortfall was to be met? D1's incoherent response was that "I think that what we think of the money, not due until Ashok ask us. So that's all we know….I didn't think. I only think about a great deal for sure when they ask me the money….I thought this is the solicitor's duty to tell us….they have not told us anything….that's why we're fishy about hiding this from us."
d. D1 accepted in his oral evidence that it was clear from the conveyancing documents that he signed that C owned the Properties. Initially he said that he did not read the documents before signing them. He claimed that he had a clear memory of not reading them at the time. Later and no doubt reflecting the very large number of conveyancing documents that D1 signed, D1 changed his evidence to say that he couldn't remember reading documents before signing them or did not think he had read them before signing.
Conclusion
Assessment of the other witnesses of fact
On behalf of C:
SS
DSM
KSP
a. in his oral evidence, he struggled to explain how and on what terms his £100,000 had originally been invested in the NatWest portfolio. He sought to explain away this surprising lack of knowledge by claiming that in fact £100,000 was not a lot of money to him. However, that claim stood in stark contrast to his written evidence in which he stated that he was not in a position to lose the £100,000 original investment and he needed to do everything within his capability to safeguard that investment, which is why he then committed a further £125,000 as a member of the Alleged Buy Back Consortium. When that inconsistency was pointed out to KSP he quickly changed his oral evidence to confirm that £100,000 was a lot of money to him after all, and
b. in his written evidence KSP stated that in April 2012 he dropped off cash totalling £30,000 to C, which was to be collected by D1 and sent to RLK. C informed KSP that he would get D1 when collecting the money to sign a loan agreement. KSP stated that he "knows and [has] seen that the first defendant has signed this loan agreement.". In his oral evidence, KSP confirmed that the loan agreement to which he was referring to in his written evidence was the document dated 19 April 2012 and a copy of which was disclosed shortly before the start of the trial. When it was pointed out that D1 was not a signatory to that document, which was only signed by KSP and C, KSP admitted that his written evidence was mistaken in that he had not seen D1 sign the document. He claimed that this error arose as a result of him failing to read his witness statement properly before signing it, although he claimed in his oral evidence for the first time that he had handed the cash directly to D1 at C's office, which, if true, begs the question why D1 was not a signatory to the loan agreement in any event.
HKN
a. HKN struggled to explain how JC4C, which at the time was generating very modest turnover and nominal profits, could ever have invested £220,000 into the NatWest portfolio. Initially, she said that the money may have come from a property sale. However, she then admitted that JC4C did not own any property at the time and any property was owned by C. She finally settled on not being able to recall where the money had come from notwithstanding the significant amount allegedly involved and that she was a director of the company; and
b. HKN claimed in her written evidence that "I had many discussions with both the defendants at my office. On many occasions [D1] would come to the office by himself and other occasions both the defendants would be in the meetings. These meetings were with regards the buy back of the NatWest property portfolio. These conversations were always in front of Ashok…..The dates that I can remember that I saw either or both the defendants are (a) 17 November 2011, (b) 12 December 2011, (c) 20 April 2012, (d) 25 April 2012, (e) 15 September 2012, there are further meetings that I have had with both defendants during the period from October 2011 to November 2012 and up to 2013. I recall that on these occasions that I saw documents being signed by all parties during these meetings." However, HKN sought in cross examination to distance herself from her written evidence by claiming that in fact she had not been involved in any meetings with the defendants to discuss the buy back and indeed she did not even know that they had agreed to head the Alleged Buy Back Consortium until January 2012. HKN further claimed that, although she was not involved directly in any discussions, she was nevertheless able to recall on specific dates looking across the open plan office and seeing C and the defendants signing some documents. When asked how she could possibly now remember those specific dates, HKN replied "I can't, I can't recall." This surprising and frankly bizarre change in evidence no doubt reflected the fact that in an earlier witness statement dated 5 May 2015, which was prepared in support of an application to restrain ASG from presenting a winding up petition against JC4C and which was included in the trial bundles, HKN stated (with my emphasis added) that she "became aware in or around September 2011 that RBS had exercised its powers…to take [the] properties back…..[and C] was working on arrangements to re-finance and potentially purchase back the portfolio. It is very important to emphasise however that I did not know in late 2011 of the details of the arrangements and the specifics of the parties involved."
Mr Jagjit Singh Gill ("JSG")
Mrs Darshan Kaur ("DK")
AH
a. AH claimed that he was able to recall the details of the alleged meetings on 18 and 19 October 2011 because of the sense of urgency at the time. However, when asked what discussions regarding bank finance had actually taken place at the meeting on 19 October 2011, which AH claimed he had specifically requested in response to further questions raised by Lloyds TSB, AH struggled to recall the details – "Like I said, that could have been….As far as a I can recall, it could, it may have been that perhaps his accounts weren't up to date, perhaps they needed projections.";
b. On 4 October 2011, Darren Billinge at Lloyds TSB sent an email to AH thanking him for the introduction to the defendants and requesting further information to enable him to seek formal credit approval. This meeting with Lloyds TSB was before (i) the date of the alleged meeting with D1 on 18 October 2011 when D1 was apparently told by AH and agreed to be the sole representative for the Alleged Buy Back Consortium and (ii) when D2 allegedly agreed to act as co-representative at the insistence of the bridging companies. In his oral evidence AH was simply unable at all to recall this meeting with Darren Billinge. Nevertheless, he said that he must have replied to the email, although he was not sure by what means since "It may have been by email or I may have hand dropped a document to him." If by email, he said he would not have retained a copy; and
c. As a result of AH having failed to arrange bank finance, the defendants exchanged contracts without funding in place. This was clearly a high risk strategy. Indeed, by letter dated 21 December 2011, RLK advised the defendants that the Receivers had agreed an extension for completion to 30 January 2012, subject to payment of a further 10% deposit. RLK warned (with my emphasis added) that "You must be absolutely sure that you will be in a position to have funding in place to meet these strict deadlines or you will face the risk of losing the further deposit of £173,500 that the seller requires. If you have any doubts as to whether this will be achievable you should not agree to the extension". The defendants agreed the extension but were only able to complete by entering into expensive and short term bridging finance. Therefore, the reasons why the banks were ultimately unwilling to lend to the defendants must surely have been at the forefront of AH's mind and a real concern particularly after he had (on his own evidence) spoken to the banks prior to exchange of contracts and assured C and D1 that D1 was best placed to secure such funding. When asked why the banks did not actually lend to the defendants, AH's superficial response was "I think we just didn't have enough time." However, that explanation makes no sense bearing in mind that the bridging finance was first arranged in March 2012 some 4 months after exchange of contracts. AH merely commented that "Banks can be slow at the time", although earlier in his oral evidence AH was unable to recall whether or not he had even told the banks that the defendants exchanged contracts on 21 November 2011 and so were committed to the deal such that time was of the essence.
On behalf of the defendants:
Mr Gurpreet Singh Bhullar ("GSB")
Mr Amrik Chote ("AC")
ASG
Mr Saghwat Hussain ("SH")
a. prior to meeting the defendants for the first time Mike McGowan briefed SH that he had spoken to D1, who was very upset that C had lied to him about owning the Properties. At the meeting in or around October 2012, it was discussed that the defendants were faced with having to arrange and pay for significant works that had to be completed within a very short period of time in order to secure bank funding. It was agreed that Vanguard would get as many teams together as possible to do the works as quickly as possible with the cost being split. The defendants would pay the labour costs and Vanguard agreed to pay for the materials. This was on the proviso that once the works had been completed and the Properties refinanced, Vanguard would get the entire portfolio to manage; and
b. The extent of the works was huge, and they had to go back to brick in a number of the Properties. Some of the Properties did not even have ceilings with 9 & 11 St Augustine's Road being in the worst condition. Whilst waiting for the bank to agree to lend, the defendants were under pressure from the bridging companies to pay some monies towards penalties and interest being incurred. Therefore, Vanguard advised the defendants to sell 9 & 11 St Augustine's Road, which they duly did for £410,000, to raise funds to pay to the bridging companies.
Mr Jaisheel Najran ("JN")
GSK
Mr Jaswant Singh ("JS")
a. He was contacted in January 2012 to assist with financing of the Properties, which were not habitable and not mortgageable via normal bank funding. He considered that specialist finance was required to enable the Properties to be refurbished so that they could be let and become income producing before being refinanced via a term mortgage. JS therefore arranged the bridging loans with Capital and WestOne so that C, as the defendants' property manager, could complete the refurbishment works;
b. However, JS found it difficult to contact C as to the progress of the refurbishment works. When JS did manage to speak to C he just came up with excuses for the continuing delays. During this time the bridging companies were becoming very concerned about the works not being completed and the Properties not being capable of refinance or sale. Around the time the loans were reaching maturity, JS met with D1, who said that C had lied to him and he now needed to take control of the Properties away from C. The defendants then arranged to get all the works completed themselves whilst JS negotiated extensions with the bridging companies. The bridging loans were ultimately redeemed on 21 December 2012 through a loan with Lloyds Bank, although JS was not involved with arranging that particular loan.
Mr Baljit Takhar ("BT")
a. In September/October 2012, D1 met with BT to discuss the bridging finance. BT advised that there was a significant risk of the Properties going into receivership, since the defendants had extended the finance beyond the term and the penalties/interest were adding up daily running into thousands of pounds. BT further advised that there needed to be some refinancing, ideally with a first tier lender rather than with bridging finance. BT had worked previously with Paul Atkinson at Lloyds TSB and arranged for him to meet with the defendants. BT brokered a refinancing deal between the defendants and Lloyds TSB. Initially, Lloyds TSB refused to lend because the valuations had identified a number of repairing issues, but after some further negotiations the bank agreed to a reduced lend provided that the Properties were renovated and re-valued; and
b. In late October or early November 2012, BT received a telephone call from D2, who said that the defendants had discovered that C had previously owned the Properties, which made them realise that C had been dishonest in his dealings with them. However, BT did not see this as relevant and stressed the importance of securing the refinance with Lloyds TSB.
Overall treatment of the evidence of the witnesses of fact
[57] "Speaking from my own experience, I have found it essential in cases of fraud, when considering the credibility of witnesses, always to test their veracity by reference to the objective facts proved independently of their testimony, in particular by reference to the documents in the case, and also to pay particular regard to their motives and to the overall probabilities. It is frequently very difficult to tell whether a witness is telling the truth or not; and where there is a conflict of evidence such as there was in the present case, reference to the objective facts and documents, to the witnesses' motives, and to the overall probabilities, can be of very great assistance to a Judge in ascertaining the truth."
Failure to call a witness of fact to give evidence
"From this line of authority I derive the following principles……
(1) In certain circumstances a court may be entitled to draw adverse inferences from the absence or silence of a witness who might be expected to have material evidence to give on an issue in an action.
(2) If a court is willing to draw such inferences, they may go to strengthen the evidence adduced on that issue by the other party or to weaken the evidence, if any, adduced by the party who might reasonably have been expected to call the witness.
(3) There must, however, have been some evidence, however weak, adduced by the former on the matter in question before the court is entitled to draw the desired inference: in other words, there must be a case to answer on that issue.
(4) If the reason for the witness's absence or silence satisfies the court, then no such adverse inference may be drawn. If, on the other hand, there is some credible explanation given, even if it is not wholly satisfactory, the potentially detrimental effect of his/her absence or silence may be reduced or nullified."
Burden and standard of proof
a. The allegation of forgery against C is a very serious allegation to make – it is an allegation of dishonesty and of a criminal offence. [Although, I also note that C makes allegations of dishonesty against the defendants and in particular in relation to their evidence that they were misled into believing that the Properties belonged to Shiv Sharma.];
b. Relying upon the speech of Lord Nicholls in Re: H and Others (Minors) [1996] AC 563, the more serious the allegation the less likely it is to be true, and so the stronger/more cogent evidence required to establish that allegation on the balance of probabilities; and
c. The Court has to be very sure that an allegation of forgery is made out.
"64. Lord Nicholls' nuanced explanation left room for the nostrum, "the more serious the allegation, the more cogent the evidence needed to prove it", to take hold and be repeated time and time again in fact-finding hearings in care proceedings…………..
……………..
70. My Lords, for that reason I would go further and announce loud and clear that the standard of proof in finding the facts necessary to establish the threshold under section 31(2) or the welfare considerations in section 1 of the 1989 Act is the simple balance of probabilities, neither more nor less. Neither the seriousness of the allegation nor the seriousness of the consequences should make any difference to the standard of proof to be applied in determining the facts. The inherent probabilities are simply something to be taken into account, where relevant, in deciding where the truth lies……
………………
72. As to the seriousness of the allegation, there is no logical or necessary connection between seriousness and probability. Some seriously harmful behaviour, such as murder, is sufficiently rare to be inherently improbable in most circumstances. Even then there are circumstances, such as a body with its throat cut and no weapon to hand, where it is not at all improbable. Other seriously harmful behaviour, such as alcohol or drug abuse, is regrettably all too common and not at all improbable. Nor are serious allegations made in a vacuum. Consider the famous example of the animal seen in Regent's Park. If it is seen outside the zoo on a stretch of greensward regularly used for walking dogs, then of course it is more likely to be a dog than a lion. If it is seen in the zoo next to the lions' enclosure when the door is open, then it may well be more likely to be a lion than a dog."
"the more serious the allegation the more assiduous must be the exploration of alternative explanations, and the more cogent must be the evidence of a malign rather than a more benign rationale"
"given the gravity of what is alleged, and its consequences, and the need for cogent proof"
"Again, I take into account that the more serious the allegation and the more improbable the event sought to be established"
"the stronger must be the evidence that it did occur before, on the balance of probabilities, its occurrence will be established"
[117] In general it is legitimate and conventional, and a fair starting point, that fraud and dishonesty are inherently improbable, such that cogent evidence is required for their proof. But that is because, other things being equal, people do not usually act dishonestly, and it can be no more than a starting point. Ultimately, the only question is whether it has been proved that the occurrence of the fact in issue, in this case dishonesty…, was more probable than not."
Expert evidence
Evidence and argument
Was D1 an Original Investor?
C's evidence
a. An investor would provide C with money and C would then select the property or properties in which that money was to be invested by way of purchase, renovation and/or mortgage payments ("Category 1 Investor");
b. An investor would pay a specific sum of money to C for C to invest generally in the property market and for a specific return mostly within a specific time period ("Category 2 Investor"); and
c. An investor would pay money for the purchase/renovation of properties to be used by JC4C in the care home/ supported living sector. The investors would receive returns on their investments in various ways, but the returns were always linked to the underlying investments in the properties rather than giving rise to any interest in JC4C itself ("Category 3 Investor").
Although the properties were registered in C's name, he considered that Category 1 Investors and Category 3 Investors acquired beneficial interests in the particular properties (by way of a share of the rent and/or a share of the proceeds of sale) that they had invested in and calculated by reference to the amount of their investments.
a. DK – £100,000 - Category 1 Investor;
b. Mr Nirmal Singh - £200,000 – Category 1 Investor;
c. Mr Jujhar Singh Dhaliwal – £70,000 – Category 1 Investor;
d. Mr Gurnaik Singh Purewal and Mrs Balvir Kaur - £47,000 – Category 2 Investor;
e. Mr Pardeep Singh Purewal - £150,000 – Category 1 Investor;
f. Mr Mohan Singh Kandola - £400,000 – Category 1 Investor;
g. Mr JSG - £250,000 – Category 1 Investor;
h. Mr Malkait Singh Hayer - £100,000 – Category 3 Investor;
i. KSP - £100,000 – Category 3 Investor; and
j. HKN - £60,000 – Category 1 investor.
D1's evidence
Conclusion
a. In his evidence, C stated that the majority of the Original Investors (including D1 from at least December 2009) were either Category 1 Investors or Category 3 Investors, who had thereby acquired beneficial interests in particular properties. However, in his Response to the Defendants' Part 18 Request for Further Information dated 20 April 2018 ("the RRFI") and signed by C with a statement of truth, C stated that:
[Under Paragraph 3 – Response (2)b)] "…it was more usual for the Claimant to receive investments by way of unsecured loans (and that was the basis on which all Original Investors provided sum[s] of money to the Claimant), on occasion, an investor would invest in a company of which the Claimant was a shareholder and director and through which the Claimant would then invest in property."
[Under Paragraph 6 – Response (3)c. and having listed the Original Investors including D1] "There may have been other individuals who loaned sums which the Claimant cannot now recall. The above sums are stated to the best of the Claimant's knowledge or recollection. They were loaned to the Claimant between in or about 2002 and in or about 2009/2010. The Claimant cannot now recall the precise dates of each loan made by each Original Investor."
[Under Paragraph 6 – Response (3)e.] "The Original Investors had neither interests in the entirety of the Original Portfolio, nor in specific properties therein. They had an interest in the payment by the Claimant, on an agreed future date, of an agreed sum representing a profit on the sums that they had loaned to the Claimant".
b. C relies upon a letter he says he wrote to the Receivers dated 30 September 2011. In that letter, C states that "Mr Parminder Singh Jhutti and his wife Mrs Nirmal Kaur Jhutti loaned me £200,000…..If they were to lose £200,000 this would be devastating for them especially at their age…….I have loaned approximately £1.5m from private individuals for my……property portfolio.";
c. The above quoted extracts from the RRFI and the letter to the Receivers, which expressly record that the sums paid by the Original Investors were loans that did not give rise to any beneficial interests in particular properties, are diametrically opposed to C's evidence, but consistent with D1's evidence.
d. In his written evidence, C claimed that the terms on which D1, Nirmal Singh, Jujhar Singh Dhaliwal and Pardeep Singh Purewal made their investments were recorded in writing, although copies of those investment agreements were no longer in C's possession or control and despite having claimed in his oral evidence that it was his practice to retain copies of important documents. Further, by the time C came to give his oral evidence, he claimed that in fact over 50% of the Original Investors had been provided with written investment agreements. However, none of these alleged written agreements were included in C's disclosure. Indeed, in the RRFI, C stated that:
"The loans and investments….were typically agreed orally. This reflected the informal nature of the arrangements and the fact that they were made between the Claimant and friends of his, including the First Defendant, and were based on mutual trust and confidence. On some occasions, normally at the request of the relevant investor, the Claimant entered into written agreements."
e. The RRFI lists the identities of the Original Investors to the best of C's knowledge and recollection. There are, however, significant inconsistencies between the Original Investors listed in the RRFI and those listed in C's written evidence. For example, the RRFI lists JC4C as having invested £220,000, but C's written evidence refers to JC4C as having invested £60,000. In C's written evidence, he lists DK as being an Original Investor (£100,000), but there is no reference in the RRFI to DK being an Original Investor.
f. When asked to clarify the investments made by D1, C's evidence was inconsistent and ultimately made absolutely no commercial sense -
i. in his written evidence, C stated that in 2007 he was an established property developer, and he did not need D1's investment. Nevertheless, D1 insisted on C accepting the £200,000 as D1 wanted to diversify by making money in property, but without actually buying property,
ii. however, it is not disputed that D1 had by then already for several years been making money from buying and selling properties. In his oral evidence, C sought to explain away this inconsistency by claiming that D1 no longer wanted the "headache" of dealing with his own properties. It is difficult to understand why D1 would have considered this to be a "headache" when, on C's own evidence, he "free of charge.… on behalf of [D1] drove all the purchases and managed everything from sourcing the properties to renovating them and eventually selling them on." C also sought to explain D1's investment on the basis that he wished to maximise his returns by moving away from investing in single properties, which begs the question why, on C's evidence, did D1 then in 2009 wish for "his money to be rolled up in a specific property" in the NatWest portfolio being 23 Portland Road,
iii. when asked in his oral evidence why C was initially willing to borrow £200,000 from D1 (apparently at D1's insistence without C even needing the money) at such a high rate of interest (12.5% per annum), C said that he could afford to do it and he knew that the properties would benefit from a substantial uplift once the borrowed monies were used to renovate the Properties. When asked why C had not sought to borrow the money from elsewhere at a lower rate of interest, C said that it was just going to be for a 2 year period. When asked how he intended to pay D1 the sum of £250,000 at the expiry of the 2 year period, C admitted that at that time he only had £130,000 of cleared funds in his account (notwithstanding that he allegedly presented D1 with a cheque for the full amount). Initially, he said in evidence that he would have increased his overdraft facility, but later said that he would have refinanced the properties (which allegedly had a couple of million pounds' worth of equity in them) to release the balance of the funds needed to repay D1. C was unable to explain why he had not simply refinanced the properties in the first place at a much lower rate of interest in order to raise the monies, if needed,
iv. C claimed that in 2009, D1 agreed to roll over the original £200,000 investment plus the £50,000 interest earned thereon into 23 Portland Road in return for D1 receiving "a portion of the rental income" but only "once JC4C had received a supporting living contract on the property". It makes absolutely no commercial sense for D1 to have agreed to invest such a significant amount of money without acquiring any interest in 23 Portland Road other than an entitlement to receive an unspecified portion of the rental income, but only if and when JC4C secured a supported living contract on the property, which it never did. This is all the more inexplicable by reference to C's written evidence that, so far as the £200,000 initial investment, D1 "wanted his capital assured". In his oral evidence, C admitted that, pending JC4C securing any supported living contract, 23 Portland Road was otherwise tenanted. Even then it does not appear that D1's alleged £250,000 investment was sufficient to entitle D1 to receive any share of that interim rental income;
g. C was unable to provide any convincing explanation as to what he actually did with the £200,000 received from D1. C stated in his written evidence that he "invested [D1's] money to buy and develop properties as per our agreement". However, in his oral evidence on the first day of the trial, C admitted that the £200,000 was not used to buy any properties. Rather he said that the whole of the £250,000 was spent on either paying consultants to assist with the tender for the Home Office Contract (which would be consistent with D1's evidence that C needed the money because of cash flow problems, although the tender was not submitted until 2010) or renovations to 23 Portland Road for supported living, 496 City Road for a children's care home and 584 Stratford Road for a children's care home. On the second day of the trial, C's evidence was that only the initial £200,000 had been used by C because the balance of £50,000 was interest. C described the renovation works to 23 Portland Road as including taking the plaster back to the bare brick, skimming the walls, changing all the pipes, changing the door frames and doors, decorating throughout, installing new kitchens/bathrooms, installing new electrical wiring and installing a new gas boiler after taking the gas mains out to the road because otherwise there was no gas, it was all electric. However, the valuation reports contained within the trial bundle are not consistent with C having spent substantial monies on renovations to any of these properties and indeed are more consistent with C having allowed at least some of the properties to fall into disrepair –
i. The valuation of 23 Portland Road prepared by Silk Plant & Associates dated 13 November 2012 (following an inspection on 7 November 2012) noted that the property required refurbishment and in particular to four of the bathrooms and notwithstanding C's evidence that he had installed new bathrooms. The report further noted that "no gas is provided to any of the flats and that the gas is not connected to the property…..[with] no gas installations to any of the flats" and again notwithstanding C's evidence that he had connected the flats to the gas mains and installed a new gas boiler. Finally, the report noted that "The whole of the suspended floor to the rear right side ground floor flat within the main building including the entrance, main lounge, kitchen area, bedroom and bathroom had all been affected significantly by dry rot with the timber joist having rotted and decayed." It was recommended that "the dry rot…needs to be eradicated totally from the building or it will continue to spread, causing decay across the whole building.",
ii. The valuation report for 584 Stratford Road prepared by Silk Plant & Associates dated 12 November 2012 (following an inspection on 8 November 2012) described the property as being "in an extremely poor state of repair and condition" and noted that "very little work had been done" to the property. It was further noted that "the main roof covering had not been repaired and in particular…..was open to the elements for the vast majority of the roof area with slates completely missing allowing water to cascade into the property and the central core of the building around the bathroom, hallway and down into the main ground floor hallway area and kitchen……The property is in effect in a shell condition and requires completely refurbishing and overhauling",
iii. The valuation report for 496 City Road prepared by Silk Plant & Associates dated 15 November 2012 (following an inspection on 8 November 2012) expressed the view that works needed to be completed "prior to the property being capable of beneficial occupation." It was "estimated that the total cost for undertaking the work including cost of works and supervision will be around £13,500 exclusive of VAT" and would "take up to two months to complete",
I remind myself that the stated investment model for Category 3 Investors was that C's properties would be refurbished to enable JC4C to secure care/supported living contracts on those properties, but it is not disputed that prior to the appointment of the Receivers no contracts had been secured on any of the Properties;
h. When C was asked to clarify the nature of the investments of the other Original Investors, his oral evidence was confused and confusing. Indeed, that confusion was shared by C's own witnesses. For example –
i. In his written evidence, C stated that in 2007 Mr Nirmal Singh, his wife and mother-in-law viewed 9 St Augustine's Road, which C was looking to buy. Nirmal and his wife agreed to invest £200,000 into the property with the majority of the funds being received by C on 11 January 2008. They raised these funds by re-mortgaging their own home. The terms of the investment were that Nirmal would be entitled on the sale of the property to receive his £200,000 plus 50% of the equity. Nirmal was not called to give oral evidence, but in his written statement relied upon by C, Nirmal stated that his investment was used to renovate the property so that it could be turned into a care home to be operated by JC4C. When that statement was put to C during his oral evidence, C said that Nirmal was not correct, and the monies had been used to purchase the property in late 2007. When it was then pointed out to C that 9 St Augustine's Road was in fact purchased by C in November 2006 so that Nirmal's investment could not have been used to purchase the property, C struggled to explain what he had actually done with Nirmal's money other than paying it into his bank account and using some of it to begin to renovate 9 St Augustine's Road. However, the valuation report for 9 St Augustine's Road prepared by Silk Plant & Associates dated 19 November 2012 described the property as "semi-derelict…in extremely poor condition." C sought to explain this away on the basis that he only started the renovation works some time in December 2010/January 2011 shortly before the Receivers were appointed. Whilst the valuation report did note that "some refurbish[ment] work had been carried out" albeit "in a confusing and ad hoc manner", the author of the report also expressed the opinion that "it does not appear that any work has been undertaken to the properties for some considerable time." In addition, it makes no sense that, having received the bulk of the money from Nirmal in January 2008, the money would simply rest in C's bank account for some 3 years until C finally began the renovation works, which were supposedly cut short by the appointment of the Receivers;
ii. In his written evidence C described how KSP approached him and asked whether he could invest some money into property. Given that it was 2010 and only two years after the financial crash, C explained that it was difficult to renovate and sell properties at a profit as the market was depressed. C explained that the best way to add value was to purchase a property linked to JC4C that would increase in value by virtue of having a care contract. KSP agreed to make an investment of £100,000 by transferring the monies to JC4C in February/March 2011 in return for which KSP acquired "an interest in the properties". However, in his oral evidence, C was forced to admit that KSP's money had not been used to purchase any property, since by the time JC4C received the money all the properties in the NatWest portfolio had already been purchased. C was again unable to explain what he had done with this money other than using some of it to pay towards the costs of the tender for the Home Office Contract. In his evidence KSP stated that he ran his own welding company and wished to diversify into another sector of business. In late 2009, he met with C and HKN to look into how he could join their new business in the care sector. After a couple of meetings, KSP decided to invest in JC4C by transferring £100,000 to the company in tranches from late 2009 onwards and by assisting with the submission of the tender for the Home Office Contract. It was agreed that, if the tender was successful, KSP and his wife would receive a shareholding in JC4C, which in turn would enjoy 20% of the profits with the remaining 80% of the profits being shared between other members of the bid team. However, HKN states in her written evidence that she "made it very clear…in my conversations with the original investors (especially those that paid sums into JC4C) that their financial interests were solely confined to the equity in properties that were registered in Ashok's name and not in my company." Indeed, HKN specifically refers to receiving funds from KSP on the basis that he was "purchasing a beneficial interest in properties legally owned by Ashok…which were in the process of/had already been made care home compliant". Therefore, in summary, KSP believed he was investing in JC4C, C believed KSP was investing for C to purchase properties and HKN believed that KSP was investing to renovate properties already owned by C;
iii. It was KSP's further written evidence that when it was announced that the tender for the Home Office Contract had been unsuccessful in June 2011 his £100,000 was then distributed by JC4C into C's NatWest portfolio. However, in their oral evidence, KSP and HKN (being the sole signatory for JC4C's bank account) were unable to explain what actually happened to this money when it was supposedly distributed into the NatWest portfolio. That apparent lack of interest on the part of KSP was surprising to say the least when considered in the context of his written evidence regarding his subsequent £125,000 investment in the Alleged Buy Back Consortium. He stated in his written evidence that "I told Asok that I wanted to hook my £125,000 onto a particular set of properties….I wanted to have the satisfaction of knowing that my funds were on a particular set of properties."
iv. In his evidence, JSG explained that he invested in properties to be used by JC4C in servicing care contracts. JSG was aware that the properties would need to be renovated and various contracts would need to be won by JC4C before the properties could be rented out. In July 2008, JSG paid £100,000 to acquire a 50% beneficial interest in 63 St Mary's Road. In November 2009, JSG paid £85,800 to acquire a 50% beneficial interest in 584 Stratford Road, which was then mortgaged a few months later to raise £100,000. The mortgage monies were paid directly to C, who confirmed that he would be using at least part of the monies to pay for renovations. However, no renovations were carried out, and JSG did not receive any share of any rents from either property. JSG does not know what C did with the £100,000 taken out of 584 Stratford Road, which sum broadly equated to the amount of JSG's original investment. He said that he felt that C had let him down. In his written evidence, C confirms that he received the monies from JSG to purchase the properties but fails to explain upon what terms JSG was making those payments. In her written evidence, HKN stated that the monies from JSG were paid to JC4C to purchase a beneficial interest in properties already owned by C, which "were in the process of/already been made care home compliant". However, earlier in her written evidence, HKN states that JC4C started trading in 2010 and that it was only in "late 2010 Ashok and I started the process of making Ashok's properties care home compliant." That would have been over 12 months after JSG had paid over his monies to JC4C;
v. HKN claimed that by early 2000 her equitable interest in the NatWest portfolio was worth £60,000, but she was unable to explain how that could have been bearing in mind that the first property in the NatWest portfolio was not purchased by C until 18 June 2003;
vi. HKN claimed that JC4C invested £220,000 in the NatWest Portfolio to acquire a beneficial interest in the properties. However, she was unable in her oral evidence to recall any details claiming that she "was not privy to it" as C "was actually dealing with all that side of stuff". That oral evidence was in stark contrast to HKN's written evidence where she stated that "JC4C not only directed and advised Ashok what work had to be done, but also paid for the works to these properties to have them adapted." In any event, it difficult to see how JC4C could ever have invested such a substantial sum, since earlier in her oral evidence HKN confirmed that, in each of the financial year endings May 2011 and May 2012, JC4C generated profits of some £16,000 against turnover of some £60,000. In her oral evidence, HKN bizarrely sought to explain this financial dichotomy by claiming that the investment monies might have emanated from the sale of a property, before quickly acknowledging that JC4C did not in fact own any properties;
i. C claims that his primary motivation in arranging the Alleged Buy Back Consortium was to save the investments made by the Original Investors. His stated plan was that once C had recovered the Properties then the Original Investors would be given the options of either recovering the amounts they had originally invested or retaining their investments in the property portfolio. At the conclusion of his oral evidence, C was asked to clarify in general terms (i) what it was that the Original Investors had actually invested in and (ii) how and when were investment returns to be determined? C's attempt at clarification raised more questions than it answered. For example, in relation to Category 3 Investors he said that if they "wanted a dividend, they could have had a dividend" or "a monthly income from that property, they could have got that". At one point in his evidence C was forced to concede that investment arrangements were "quite fluid." It is difficult to understand how the Original Investors could have been given the option of retaining their investments in the property portfolio once rescued if they did not know or understand what actually those investments comprised.
Summary of the written evidence of the parties regarding the purchase/finance of the Properties
C's evidence
a. The purchase price was £2.5 million;
b. The identities of all the other members of the Alleged Buy Back Consortium;
c. C would be using AH to arrange the balance of the funding with Lloyds TSB and/or Bank of India;
d. C would negotiate the purchase of the properties from the Receivers using RLK;
e. C would buy back the properties from D1 within 12 to 18 months;
f. In the meantime, C would pay the costs of renovations, and JC4C would pay the property insurance premiums and collect the rents;
g. The identities of and amounts of money committed by the Original Investors; and
h. There would be sufficient funds in the properties to pay back both the Original Investors and the members of the Alleged Buy Back Consortium once C had re-mortgaged the properties in his name.
At the conclusion of the meeting, C wrote down these discussion points and gave D1 the document.
"I write further to instructions provided by Mr Ashok Singh in respect to the proposed sale of his property portfolio.
Mr Singh has instructed me that you are agreeable to be put forward as a representative of a number of proposed purchases of the aforementioned portfolio.
I therefore enclose herewith a Lock Out Contract which identifies you as the "buyer" of a number of properties set out in appendix one of the Contract. I draw your attention to paragraph 3 which sets out your obligations as "buyer".
I must also make it clear that despite the Contract indicating that I am your solicitor i.e. the buyer's solicitor I have not provided you with any advice on the contents of the Contract and if you do agree to sign and enter into the Contract you do so at your own risk.
I trust that I have made my position clear and look forward to hearing from you as a matter of urgency."
a. DSM purchased 13 Anderson Road for £110,000;
b. SS and his wife purchased Flat 4, 369 Gillott Road for £45,000 by providing £25,000 and the balance of the purchase price being met from funds provided by other members of the Alleged Buy Back Consortium;
c. GSK purchased Flat 5, 136 Portland Road for £55,000 providing £50,000 and the balance of the purchase price being met from funds provided by other members of the Alleged Buy Back Consortium.
D1 did not complain about any of those purchases by third parties because he knew that he was only ever acting as representatives for the Buy Back Consortium. Indeed, C and D1 signed Disputed Agreements dated 3 December 2011 (x 3) confirming that DSM, SS and GSK were agreeing to purchase these properties as C's representatives on the understanding that they would be selling them back to C within a couple of months.
a. KSP, who agreed to loan the sum of £125,000 as recorded in the Disputed Agreement dated 3 March 2012;
b. Mr Hayer, who agreed to loan the sum of £85,000 as recorded in the Disputed Agreement also dated 3 March 2012; and
c. JC4C, who paid £67,923 into the defendants' bank account.
Defendants' evidence
a. Total funds input by the defendants and their associates - £942,265;
b. Total penalties caused by C = £1,095,993.39;
c. Total funds input by C and his associates = £491,286.34 and
d. Total still owed by C = £604,707.05.
Inherent probabilities and commercial common sense
a. C's intention was to save the investments made by the Original Investors including his mother;
b. C took action to rescue the Properties from the Receivers. He instructed RLK and brought proceedings against the Receivers to obtain the Injunction. He wrote to and attended meetings with the Receivers and NatWest in an attempt to stop the Properties being sold off and in which he made clear the existence of the Alleged Buy Back Consortium;
c. Having expended time and money in obtaining the Injunction, it is not disputed that C then paid or arranged payment of substantial sums of money[3] towards the cost of purchase/re-purchase of the Properties by the defendants. The defendants have been forced to accept that they knew at the time of at least some of these payments from third parties, since the payments were made direct into their bank account:
d. None of that makes any sense at all unless, as C says, the Properties were being purchased by the defendants as C's representatives, so that C could use the real values of the Properties (as opposed to the lower prices sought by the Receivers) to save the investments made by the Original Investors through the defendants selling them back to C at the same price as they had bought them for;
e. D1 had very good reasons to agree to buy the Properties as representative for the Alleged Buy Back Consortium and thereafter sell them back to C -
i. It was the best way for D1 to secure C's ability to repay him the £200,000 that he had lent D1 along with the £50,000 interest payment that they had agreed;
ii. D1 was keen for JC4C to provide D2 with a role and financial reward from successful tenders, which required servicing from the Properties;
f. To explain the payments made by third parties, the defendants have had to advance their ridiculous case that C kept telling them that the costs incurred during the course of raising funding should be added to the debt that C owed them. That incredible story requires the court to believe that -
i. C was doing all that he did to secure more time to pay back £200,000 for a loan,
ii. C provided extensive time, effort and his services in relation to management of the Properties for no form of reward,
iii. C agreed to take personal responsibility for all additional costs and expenses incurred in connection with the purchase by the defendants of the Properties for their own benefit. D2 has calculated those "penalties" in the total sum of £1.095 million of which C continues to owe £607,707.
The defendants' motive for making up the Shiv Sharma story must necessarily have been to try to disprove C's case that they knew that they were purchasing the Properties in a representative capacity; and
g. C's case is consistent with the contemporaneous documents and makes perfect sense whereas the defendants' case does none of those things.
a. The court can and should readily accept that the defendants put almost blind faith in C, not only because this was their evidence, but also because this was the evidence of every other witness who had given C money. This trust explains why the defendants may (with the benefit of hindsight) have acted irrationally at times in the course of events from September 2011 onwards;
b. It is important that C had been heavily involved in previous property deals for D1, which were done without any payment to C and on at least 2 occasions without D1 viewing the properties prior to purchase;
c. The defendants' actions were consistent with them buying the Properties in their own right and not for others –
i. they made direct net payments to RLK of £607,051 towards the purchase costs,
ii. they committed themselves to expensive bridging finance,
iii. when the bridging loans fell in, they incurred penalties and default interest and were threatened with enforcement action and receivership. As a result, they were forced to sell 9 & 11 St Augustine's Road to meet an impending bridging payment,
iv. they had to borrow from friends and family to pay for repairs required by Lloyds TSB to bring the remaining Properties up to a mortgageable condition and to fund the balance needed to redeem the bridging finance.
It is nonsensical that the defendants would do all of this and take such huge risks simply to be under an obligation to transfer the Properties back to C for the price they paid and only in return for the supposed £250,000 D1 originally invested;
d. It makes sense that C would agree to add the ever-increasing costs and expenses to the debt that was owed D1. It is entirely believable that C would have given such an assurance even if he did not mean to honour it. Once the court accepts that C perpetuated a deception on the defendants by not telling them about any buy back consortium, the court can and should accept that C continued that deception by telling the defendants to add the costs and expenses to his debt; and
e. The defendants' version of events is inherently more probable and credible than C's and fits with the theory that C did not inform them of any buy back consortium or obtain their agreement to head it but rather used and manipulated the defendants.
a. It makes no commercial sense on C's case that the defendants would (i) put at risk some £600,000 and (ii) agree to take out very substantial additional borrowing to purchase the Properties for C simply to secure repayment of a loan of £200,000 (which is the amount I have found was due) and secure for D2 a role in JC4C, which at that time had not been successful in any tenders; and
b. It makes no commercial sense on the defendants' case that C would promise to pay very substantial additional costs and expenses (some £480,000[4]) arising in connection with the purchase of the Properties by the defendants for their own benefit simply to secure more time to pay back an original loan of £200,000.
Disputed Agreements
Expert evidence
Written evidence of Mr Handy
a. The available copy documents provided strong evidence to support the proposition that D1 did not sign any of the Disputed Agreements. Although he could not exclude the possibility that D1 was responsible, Mr Handy considered this unlikely; and
b. There was evidence, albeit weak, that D2 did not sign any of the Disputed Agreements. Based on the available copy documents, the support for the proposition that D2 was not responsible was greater than the support for the proposition that D2 was responsible.
C's submissions
a. Whilst there is no challenge to those conclusions based upon the 6 representative signatures of each of the defendants, the reality is that Mr Handy's reports are extremely limited. He was given an extremely small sample of signatures, which were all selected because they were consistent with each other and different from the disputed signatures. A feature of this case is that those representative signatures were not "agreed" representative signatures;
b. The only contemporaneous signature provided to Mr Handy on behalf of D1 is that of a passport signature, which Mr Handy admitted was "not ideal". It beggars belief that this would be the only signature provided from 2012, when the defendants had access to dozens of signatures from that time including those contained in the conveyancing documents. The only conclusion that can be drawn is that these documents were not provided because they demonstrate a variation in the signature of D1, which the defendants wanted to keep from the handwriting expert. It has to be remembered that the defendants had taken all the files back from RLK in October 2012 – so they knew precisely what documents would come out on disclosure. They did not even show Mr Handy the Sale Agreement until they were satisfied with his conclusion in his first report, and that he was happy to base it on the representatives signatures they had provided;
c. In cross examination, Mr Handy was shown contemporaneous documents in the trial bundles, which contained undisputed signatures of D1. Those signatures were very different from the carefully selected and miniscule sample of signatures that Mr Handy was given. By way of example:
i. in his written evidence, Mr Handy identified as a key differential the length of the cross bar on the "tt", which was shown in the disputed signatures to extend far beyond the second "t". In contradistinction to the 6 reference signatures, Mr Handy was taken to contemporaneous undisputed signatures where the length of the cross bar on the "tt" also extended far beyond the second "t",
ii. in his written evidence, Mr Handy identified another key differential as the "Jh", which was shown in the disputed signatures to extend well above the height of the preceding "P" and "S". Again, in contradistinction to the 6 reference signatures, Mr Handy was taken to contemporaneous undisputed signatures where the "Jh" extended well above the height of the preceding "P" and "S";
d. Mr Handy's conclusions, based on four major differences in the sample signatures to the questioned documents, are inevitably weakened by the fact that D1's signature can be shown to have significant variations outside the scope of the small batch of sample signatures that he was shown;
e. Whilst Mr Handy said that he would have to go away before reconsidering his conclusions in the light of the signatures he had been shown, he could not rule out that the reference signatures were selected to be consistent with each other but different from those on the Disputed Agreements; and
f. Furthermore "strong evidence" is only halfway up the scale, and "weak evidence" is less than halfway up it so the weight of the handwriting expert's opinion (based on copies and no use of a microscope which he confirmed to the court meant that he was using his eyes, just as the judge could use his own eyes) is one for the court to assess against all of the relevant testimony, and in particular the defendants' narrative as opposed to that of C. In this case the court obtains little assistance from the handwriting evidence due to the limitations that arise (a) from the fact that the expert had only copy documents and (b) from the self-serving limited selection of signatures provided to him.
Conclusion
a. C does not challenge Mr Handy's opinions based upon the 6 representative signatures of each of the defendants;
b. Mr Handy, whom I found to be an impressive and careful witness, said that the reference documents he had been provided with were sufficient to enable him to undertake a proper comparison since "they are very consistent over a fairly long period of time.";
c. In his oral evidence, Mr Handy conceded that the contemporaneous signatures he had now been shown might possibly alter his conclusions, although he would first have to study them and reconsider their significance. He could not say without undertaking a proper detailed analysis whether or not they would affect his conclusions. There were other differentials that he had relied upon in coming to those conclusions;
d. Mr Handy said that he had not very often been questioned in the witness box for the first time to form a view based upon documents seen for the first time about the suitability or otherwise of reference documents;
e. Paragraph 17 of the case management order dated 17 April 2019 provides that the "time for service of any question addressed to an expert instructed jointly or by another party is not later than 14 days after service of that expert's report….Any such question shall be answered within 14 days of service." If Mr Handy was to be questioned by reference to other signature documents then those documents could and should have been put to Mr Handy long before the trial so that he could have undertaken a proper analysis. As Mr Handy said he "cannot just look at them briefly and say "yes" or "no" my conclusion would alter"; and
f. I agree with the submissions made on behalf of the defendants that the court should not simply assume in C's favour that Mr Handy's conclusions would be any different if he had been given the appropriate time in which to consider the other signature documents, particularly when C had every opportunity to put his own expert evidence before the court and/or put written questions to Mr Handy in advance of the trial.
How and why the Disputed Agreements were allegedly produced
Curious features
"Ashok will repay Parminder a total of £650,000 and any other nominal costs that Parminder might have occurred during the process of purchasing the RBS portfolio. This payment will be the full monies that Parminder will receive from the RBS property portfolio. This payment will be the full monies that Parminder will receive from the RBS portfolio. Parminder accepts that he will retain no interest in the RBS property portfolio apart from his £650,000 contribution and or other disbursements that Parminder and Ashok have occurred."
Clearly there is a typographical error in that the word "occurred" is used (2x) rather than the word "incurred".
"Ashok will repay Parminder and Harmale a total of £650,000 and any other nominal costs that Parminder and Harmale might have occurred during the process of purchasing the RBS portfolio. This payment will be the full monies that Parminder and Harmale will receive from the RBS portfolio. This payment will be the full monies that Parminder and Harmale will receive from the RBS property portfolio. Parminder and Harmale accepts that they will retain no interest in the RBS property portfolio apart from their £650,000 contribution and or other disbursements that Parminder, Harmale and Ashok have occurred."
This paragraph is in almost identical terms as the penultimate paragraph in the second Disputed Agreement dated 17 November 2011 and repeats the same typographical error by including the word "occurred" (2x) rather than the word "incurred". The only change is by adding D2's name alongside D1's name and where necessary amending the singular to the plural with one exception being the word "accepts", which ought to have read "accept".
"Ashok will repay Parminder and Harmale a total of £650,000 and any other nominal costs that Parminder and Harmale might have occurred during the process of purchasing the RBS portfolio.
The £650,000 payment will be the full monies that Parminder and Harmale will receive from the RBS property portfolio purchase. Parminder and Harmale accepts that they will retain no other interest in the RBS property portfolio apart from their £650,000 contribution that they have made."
These paragraphs are in substantially the same form as the penultimate paragraph of the Disputed Agreement dated 12 December 2011, and importantly carry forward the same typographical mistakes by including the words "occurred" and "accepts". I remind myself that the Disputed Agreement dated 12 December 2011 and the Sale Agreement were allegedly typed from scratch, but respectively by C and either D1 or most likely D2. It is simply unbelievable that exactly the same typographical mistakes were made months apart by different people when apparently typing up these documents from scratch. The more plausible explanation is that these documents have been replicated from a soft copy.
Monies allegedly owed by C to the defendants
a. £80,000 from D1 on 18 October 2011;
b. £400,000 from D1 on 12 December 2011;
c. £58,000 from D2 on 13 December 2011;
d. £214,000 from D2 on 20 March 2012; and
e. £26,000 from the defendants on 18 April 2012
The defendants accept that the payment of £214,000 on 20 March 2012 included the sum of £103,000 paid to them by C's associates. In addition, on 28 February 2012, RLK paid the defendants the sum of £67,949.51 from retained funds. Therefore, the total net sum paid to RLK by the defendants for the purchase of the Properties was £607,051.[5]
Monies allegedly provided by members of the Alleged Buy Back Consortium not for profit
a. SS and his wife provided £25,000 to part fund the purchase of Flat 4, 369 Gillott Road for £45,000; and
b. DSM provided £112,000 to fund the purchase of 13 Anderson Road for £110,000.
Completion of these purchases took place on 14 December 2014. It is also not disputed that these properties were then transferred to the defendants on 23 April 2012 without any purchase monies being paid.
a. A Disputed Agreement dated 22 April 2012, which expressly states that C had been instructed to sign it on behalf of SS and his wife, records that on the sale of Flat 4, 369 Gillott Road to the defendants, SS and his wife would loan the proceeds of sale to C and the defendants for a period of 9 to 12 months after which time SS and his wife would receive £45,000. If, however, payment was made after 12 months, SS and his wife would receive £60,000. In other words, SS and his wife were to receive either £45,000 or £60,000 on their original loan of £25,000, which would clearly have represented a very generous rate of return;
b. C claimed in his oral evidence that notwithstanding what was stated in the Disputed Agreement dated 22 April 2012, there was a separate understanding with SS and his wife that they would only ever get back their original £25,000. Whilst another Disputed Agreement dated 23 April 2012 does indeed refer to SS and his wife only receiving back £25,000, that was not apparently something that had ever been agreed by SS or his wife. SS said in his oral evidence that he was owed £45,000 by the defendants because he had not received any money for the property at the time it was sold to the defendants (and notwithstanding that the stated sale price was £60,000). SS's wife emailed the conveyancing solicitors on 18 April 2012 requesting that the net proceeds of sale be paid into SS's account. To add to the confusion, the Particulars of Claim assert that the effect of the Sale Agreement was that part of the £2.2 million to be paid by C to the defendants was to be applied to discharge an unsecured loan of £60,000 made by SS and his wife to C; and
c. Another Disputed Agreement dated 22 April 2012 records that DSM would loan the money from the proceeds of sale of 13 Anderson Road to C and the defendants for a period of 9 months. If the loan was paid off within 12 months then DSM would receive £110,000, but if paid off after 12 months DSM would receive £250,000. C claimed in his oral evidence that this figure of £250,000 was simply "a typo" and the stated figure ought to have been £112,000. However, the Particulars of Claim allege that the effect of the Sale Agreement was that part of the £2.2 million to be paid by C to the defendants would be applied to discharge an unsecured loan made by DSM to C of £250,000.
When it was put to C in evidence that these particular agreements made no sense by reference to his own case (which they clearly do not), he merely said that in hindsight it would probably have been better to get them drawn up by solicitors, which was a surprising concession bearing in mind that RLK were instructed throughout the period when the Disputed Agreements (save for the Sale Agreement) were allegedly drafted.
Other members of the Alleged Buy Back Consortium being unaware of the Disputed Agreements
GSK
DSM
28 May 2012
"I am a little in the dark about my funds and need some answers. On April 20 I loaned Parminder/Harmale Jhutti £185,000 based on your instructions. I was under the impression my funds were going to be moved into another property which was going to be used for care work?"
12 June 2012
"Last but not least --- can you explain what happened with my Anderson Road funds? I have asked you numerous times but no answer?"
21 July 2012
"When we completed the Anderson Road sale you basically gave me 2 minutes to make a decision about moving my money to another deal. I was under the impression the money was being moved into another property on City Road. Instead it was loaned out under your direction. Until you and I are ready to move it into a property I would like to have my money returned and deposited into my HSBC UK account. Let me know when this is done – sooner the better."
If the Disputed Agreements were genuine, then surely C could and would have responded to DSM with copies of or by reference to the terms of those documents rather than simply failing to provide any explanation to DSM, particularly as the Disputed Agreement dated 22 April 2012 was allegedly signed by C on DSM's instructions.
ASG
a. On 18 November 2011, HKN emailed ASG's son –
"Can you ask…to transfer it asap, as we will be at our meeting with the council at 2pm and the solicitor is going to send an email to the council to confirm that he is holding the money.
The account details for the money transfer is as follows
[RLK's account details]
Sorry about the delay but just needed to talk to my husband if the money was to go into Just Call 4 care or the Solicitors"
b. Thereafter, ASG's son and HKN exchanged text messages including –
16 February 2012
ASG's son to HKN "….need the money urgently. We told [C] that this money is off our business overdraft and all other money is tied up right now so we needed it back quickly."
HKN to ASG's son "….think there has been a bit of misunderstanding with regards to this money…we are having some problems if u could please bear with us and will get this sorted as soon as possible."
ASG's son to HKN "That's fine but you needed to tell us when….At the time [C] said he only needed it for a few weeks"
HKN to ASG's son "I know really sorry as I didn't know he borrowed from yourselves until a couple of weeks ago. He did need it for a few weeks but had some major problems so he is stuck but he is trying to get it sorted"
23 April 2012
ASG's son to HKN "…And my dad….only got your dad involved because for almost 4 months after taking the money nobody called to explain why money we lent for 10 days still hadn't been paid and he didn't call to let us know why. One phone call is all it would of taken to explain if something has gone wrong and if he needed more time. The start of the year is always the most tough for us and with all our overdraft gone you have no idea how difficult past few months have been for us."
"It is strenuously denied that Just Call 4 Care is indebted to Mr Goal in the sum alleged.
We understand that a payment of £120,000 was made by Mr Gosal to RLK Solicitors Limited on 18 November 201.
It is understood that RLK Solicitors were acting on behalf of P S Jhutti and H S Jhutti. The money was we understand loaned to those parties and is due for repayment by them."
There is no reference in that letter to any documents relied upon by JC4C and in particular any loan agreement purportedly signed by C on behalf of ASG. Another surprising feature is that, when copies of the documents were finally retrieved from storage and exhibited to C's witness statement dated 5 May 2015, C stated that he "was concerned to record the position in writing and so I prepared a loan document dated 18 November 2011." It is of course now C's case that the Disputed Agreements were prepared at D1's insistence. In addition, C fails in his 2015 witness statement to mention or disclose a copy of the second Disputed Agreement dated 18 November 2011, which he now relies upon in these proceedings, and which records that ASG was loaning the sum of £120,000 for a period of 3 to 4 months so exchange could take place.
Timing of the Sale Agreement
a. Having decided to take control of the Properties away from C, the defendants would then sign a document agreeing to relinquish control back to C; and
b. Recorded in that same document, which was allegedly typed by one or other of the defendants, are a series of errors that seriously adversely affect the defendants' interests even on C's own case – not just understating the amount of the monies that they were owed, but also agreeing expressly to sell 9 & 11 St Augustine's Road to C notwithstanding that that those properties were sold back in November 2012 to part pay down the bridging finance.
Was the 19 October Letter signed by D1?
a. The 19 October Letter and the Second Letter, in basic format without RLK's header, and purportedly signed by D1 in the empty space above Mr Sheppard's printed name; and
b. Faxes of the 19 October Letter and the Second Letter purportedly signed by D1 alongside the signature of Mr Sheppard.
a. Mr Handy was of the opinion that there is strong evidence to support the proposition that D1 did not sign these documents;
b. It is submitted on behalf of C that it is obvious why Mr Sheppard had taken the trouble to ensure that the warnings contained within the letters were acknowledged by D1 by way of signatures in the correct places and before the £80,000 was transferred to the Receivers' solicitors in respect of the Lock Out Agreement. However, if Mr Sheppard had gone to so much trouble to obtain D1's signatures on the letters, it is inexplicable why the letters do not (i) expressly request that D1 sign and return them and/or (ii) contain any signature blocks to receive D1's signatures;
c. It was the evidence of C and AH that D1 signed in the wrong places the first letters faxed over by RLK. However, the copy signed documents disclosed by C are in basic format and there is no evidence of any fax transmissions. C was unable to explain how the 19 October Letter in basic format would have come into his possession for D1 to sign it in the first place. AH said for the first time in his oral evidence that it may have been emailed over rather than faxed, although he could not now recall despite claiming at the same time to remember the events very well. C has disclosed a copy of an email sent to him (at AH's email address) on 19 October 2011 attaching a copy of the Second Letter in basic format for D1's urgent attention. However, that email also makes no mention of D1 signing and returning a copy of the letter. Rather it asks that "either [D1] or [C] contact me on receipt."
d. The letters disclosed by C and containing the signatures of Mr Sheppard confirm that they were sent by fax by RLK at 16:59 (the 19 October Letter) and 17:42 (the Second Letter). The email sent by RLK attaching the Second Letter in basic format is timed at 17:44. Those timings must mean on C's case that:
i. the email timed at 17:44 attaching the Second Letter in basic format was sent after Mr Sheppard had apparently already sent an unsigned version of the Second Letter in basic format, received a fax back but signed by D1 in the wrong place, signed the Second Letter and faxed that signed version to AH's office for D1 to countersign. If that is true then what useful purpose was served by Mr Sheppard then emailing the Second Letter in basic format again at 17:44?
ii. having signed the 19 October Letter in the wrong place, D1 made exactly the same mistake by then signing the Second Letter in the wrong place. C's only explanation for this was to blame the pressure of time.
None of this makes any sense. The more likely explanation is that, as stated on the letters themselves, in respect of each letter RLK only sent by fax a signed copy whilst at the same time sending by way of an email attachment a copy in basic format. That version of events is entirely consistent with the fact that on 19 October 2011 and timed at 6:24 pm Mr Sheppard forwarded a copy of his earlier email to AH timed at 17:44 stating that he looked forward to hearing from D1 that evening. There was no need for Mr Sheppard to speak to D1 later that evening if he had already been able to secure D1's signatures on the letters and bearing in mind that D1 was not at that time a client of RLK, who were not instructed by the defendants until 15 November 2011.
e. It was C's evidence that following the meeting at AH's offices he dropped the original signed versions of the letters to RLK because Mr Sheppard wanted to retain them on his file. However, despite the alleged importance to RLK of obtaining and retaining letters (both faxed copies and originals) with D1's signature upon them, none are to be found on RLK's disclosed files. The letters appear in RLK's disclosure only once and in one format with both signed by Mr Sheppard only; and
f. It was the evidence of C and AH that (after AH had spoken to Lloyd's TSB and Bank of India earlier that day) they met on 17 October 2011 to discuss and agree that D1 be nominated as head of the Alleged Buy Back Consortium. C and D1 further stated that it was only on 17 October 2011 and again on 18 October 2011 that D1 was first notified that he had been appointed as representative of the Alleged Buy Back Consortium as he was best placed to secure in his name the required bank finance to complete the purchase from the Receivers. C and AH say that at AH's request they then met with D1 at AH's offices on 19 October 2011 to discuss further the bank finance – C says the purpose of the meeting was to meet with representatives of the banks, whilst AH says the purpose of the meeting was to discuss how best to respond to queries raised by Lloyds TSB. It was during this meeting they say that D1 countersigned the letters from RLK. C and AH each claimed that that they could recall these meetings very well because of their importance. However, the undisputed contemporaneous documents include an email sent on 4 October 2011 by Lloyds TSB to AH in the following terms:
"Avtar, it was very good to see you again and thanks for the introduction to Mr Jhutti.
Both Mike and myself could see some positives in the proposal, but in order to get to a stage where formal credit approval is sought, I will need the following information;
- Details of the proposed company structure………..
- Assets/Liabilities, Income & Expenditure from each Director……..
- Details of Mr Jhutti senior's existing property portfolio in his name. (I've attached an electronic version of a property schedule that can be used)…….
- Brief details on the background and property experience of the main parties.
- Copies of latest 6 months personal and business bank statements for each of the main parties.
- Copies of latest 3 years accounts for any business one of te main parties run.
…………..
- Accountants confirmation that all of the tax affairs of the main parties are up to date.
………….
I look forward to hearing from you and the Jhutti's soon."
This email was forwarded by AH to D2 later the same day. It confirms that both defendants were already in discussions with Lloyds TSB by 4 October 2011 and makes a complete nonsense of the elaborate and convoluted story told by C and AH about how and why the alleged meeting with D1 on 19 October 2011 came about.
The parties' intentions
C
a. C wrote letters dated 9 September 2011 in identical terms to Gagen Sharma, an insolvency practitioner, and AH confirming that he had so far raised £935,000 with the help of family, friends and some of his original investors to buy the Properties back;
b. C wrote a letter dated 13 September 2011 to the Receivers confirming that he had raised a total of £935,000 from a consortium of family, friends and original investors. He emphasised the importance of him buying back the Properties so that he could pay back the many individuals who had originally loaned him money to buy and renovate the Properties;
c. C wrote a letter dated 30 September 2011 to RLK confirming the identity of the members of the Buy Back Consortium, which included D1, and the amounts that they had pledged making total available funds of £1.025 million; and
d. C wrote a letter dated 10 October 2011 to NatWest confirming that he had raised £935,000 by way of loans from various individuals so that he could purchase the Properties back. He also detailed those individuals who had loaned him money to purchase the Properties in the first place.
"It was a requirement of [NatWest] (as secured lender on the Properties) communicated to the Claimant on or around 10 October 2011 that there had to be a single nominated purchaser of the Properties (although they were in the event content to accept there being two named purchasers)."
However, in their letter dated 21 September 2011 the Receivers' solicitors requested:
"The names and addresses of the intended purchasers…
Details of the structure of the proposed purchase, for example will the properties be purchased as a portfolio or in single lots? If the properties are to be purchased in more than one lot, please provide the name of the intended purchaser(s) for each lot.
………………
Confirmation of whether the purchasers will agree to pay a non-refundable deposit to obtain a period of exclusivity to exchange of contracts."
It is clear from the contents of this letter that the Receivers were not insisting upon there being a single nominated purchaser. C was simply unable or unwilling in his oral evidence to give a straight answer to the repeated question of whether or not in fact NatWest had ever insisted upon there being a single nominated purchaser. In addition, if that was true, why did the Receivers ultimately agree to sell the majority of the Properties jointly to the defendants, rather than to D1 alone.
a. There is no other good reason why C would have taken the time, trouble and expense of applying for and obtaining the Injunction to prevent the proposed sale by the Receivers at the auction on 15 September 2011;
b. On 3 October 2011, the Receivers wrote to RLK stating (with my emphasis added) that "the properties will be sold at auction on 20 October 2011, unless your client's nominated purchaser is able to proceed to exchange of contracts, at the price previously discussed, before that date.";
c. RLK's attendance note dated 12 October 2011 records a telephone conversation in which C confirmed that for the meeting later that day with the Receivers "he should have ID documents for the five purchasers of the properties that were going to be exchanged next week for a combined sale price of £470,000";
d. By email dated 13 October 2011, the Receivers advised NatWest upon the "outcome of the meeting we have had with Mr Singh and his solicitor Ian Shepherd yesterday afternoon….In summary Mr Singh informed us that he has spent the last three weeks endeavouring to arrange the funding to back up his purchase proposal for parties connected to him to acquire the properties. He has advised he is working with five individuals, some of which are based overseas, to purchase the properties";
e. On 19 October 2011, RLK (Mr Sheppard) wrote confirming that C had instructed RLK that D1 was "agreeable to be put forward as a representative"; and
f. The Lock Out Agreement, which was drafted by the Receivers' solicitors at around this time, named D1 as the buyer of the Properties.
a. On 15 November 2011, the Receivers' solicitors emailed RLK refusing an extension of time, insisting upon exchange by 21 November 2011 and requesting "by tomorrow…details of the buyers";
b. Later on 15 November 2011, RLK (Mr Bhogal) emailed the Receivers' solicitors and attached (with my emphasis added) "a list of the nominated buyer's for each lot as required under the terms of the lock-out agreement…..I shall confirm the identity of the nominated buyer of 63 St Mary's Road by close of business tomorrow." The attachment named the defendants as the nominated buyers of the Properties other than of 63 St Mary's Road, which was left "TBC".
a. I have already referred to C misleading ASG that the £120,000 was needed as a short term loan in support of a tender by JC4C;
b. On 24 January 2012, C sent DSM a long email encouraging him to visit the UK in late January/early February in which case C would be able to secure a total loan facility of £8 million for DSM as part of a consortium of 5 people to purchase property. In his oral evidence, C confirmed that he was trying through this email to put together another buy back consortium to save the Lloyds TSB and possibly the Mortgage Express portfolios and with C purchasing the properties from the consortium members after 6 months. However, there is absolutely no reference anywhere in the email to DSM to the properties being purchased from C's receivers and then being sold back to C a short time thereafter. Rather C refers to the "big advantage" for DSM "is you could probably pull most if not all your money out of the investment…….within a year or so after you invested the money to purchase that property. This is always a good option and the one that I always take." In response, DSM makes clear that he is not interested in this option since "my cash situation is not as liquid as I would like. This will reduce my investments funds for the UK." The tone of C's emails then becomes terse giving the impression that he is trying to help DSM, rather than the other way around –
Email dated 1 February 2012
"Do not forget we are only doing the property purchases for logistic reason for you. I have already promised these properties to other people. They are only giving them to us for your loan purposes"
Email dated 15 February 2012
"I've done a lot of work here dave to get you the best possible deal for you with the banks, and it's a really good deal, but you need to tell me what you want to do as the facility amounts are so vast. There will also be a lot more questions about you if you are by yourself."
c. In a letter dated 17 April 2012 sent to C, RLK confirmed the "Current position" regarding 44 Croftdown Road, which fell within the Lloyds TSB portfolio, as being "Agents are still awaiting confirmation that the sum of £400,000 is being raised by Messrs Jhutti". In his oral evidence, and after much obfuscation, C finally confirmed that D1 had agreed to raise £400,000 in order to save the Lloyds TSB portfolio by mortgaging his family home. It is clearly absurd to suggest that, having already committed £538,000 to saving the NatWest portfolio, D1 would ever have agreed to putting his own home at risk to raise a further £400,000 to save another property portfolio in which it is not disputed he had no financial interest in whatsoever.
The defendants
"I was excited at the prospect";
"Gosh, this is great, we should do this, jump in";
"Once I'd sort of heard the figure of, you know, 2.5 [million pounds] I was sort of thinking: well this is great, this is wonderful…this is exactly what I'd looked at";
"This is a great opportunity, we should grab it with both hands";
"It was a very exciting prospect to me";
"It was Ashok that was going to guide me through [the] process"; and
"I wanted to learn the process".
The conduct of the parties
C
a. C instructed RLK and obtained the Injunction to prevent the Receivers from selling the Properties at auction. C arranged payment of RLK's fees (£7,800) for doing so. Thereafter, C negotiated with the Receivers and NatWest for the sale of the Properties to his nominated buyer(s);
b. By reference to RLK's ledger sheets and correspondence, it is evident that C paid or arranged payment of the following sums towards the cost of purchase/re-purchase of the Properties by the defendants -
i. £33,000 from C,
ii. £14,200 from JC4C
iii. £25,000 from SS
iv. £120,000 from ASG,
v. £112,000 from DSM,
vi. £50,000 from GSK,
vii. £70,0000 from Mrs Hayer,
viii. £95,000 from KSP,
Total = £519,200; and
c. C agreed to be responsible for managing the Properties including undertaking renovations and paying the insurance premiums.
The defendants
a. C disputes that the defendants visited any of the Properties prior to exchange of contracts. However, even on their own case, the defendants only viewed internally 3 of the Properties being 13 Anderson Road, 9 & 11 St Augustine's Road and 21 Clarendon Road with the latter 2 Properties observed to be in poor condition. The defendants say that they saw the remaining Properties from the outside whilst being driven round by C. Even then D2 said in his oral evidence that they did not get out of the car, but "stopped for a moment and had a conversation about [the particular property]……which wasn't a very sort of long conversation". D2 said that he did not discuss the rentals with C, but "he had a thought in his own head of what the rentals would be", which is consistent with what he stated in his written evidence. However, he then changed his evidence by claiming that in fact at each property he jotted down on a piece of paper the number of units and then at the end of the day carried out a calculation by multiplying the number of units by either £500 or £600, which figures were based upon the rent payable on his father's two investment properties, to get a total rental income of at least £250,000 per annum. He said that his calculation was based upon "35 units or something. Between 30 and 35 units….35 units. I think I had a figure of 30.". It is utterly preposterous that D2 would have calculated, if true, the potential rental income in this haphazard way before making a multi-million pound investment on behalf of his family and by taking on substantial debt, which would need to be serviced through the rental income. Also, for someone who had no knowledge of property development/management but was keen to learn from C, why would he not even have discussed this vitally important and obvious issue with C? D2's explanation was "I was just excited at the prospect of having them, and then you glaze over everything", which is no rational explanation at all;
b. In his oral evidence, D2 denied that C provided the defendants with a list of the Properties prior to the Lock Out Agreement. Therefore, on the defendants' own case D1 committed £80,000 without even having a record of the addresses of the Properties that he was committed to buying;
c. After payment by D1 on 18 October of the £80,000 due under the Lock Out Agreement, the balance of the deposit payable on exchange of contracts on 21 November 2011 was £170,000. The payment of the balance as evidenced by RLK's ledger was funded not by the defendants, but by C or his associates –
i. £120,000 loaned by C from ASG and paid direct to RLK on 18 November 2011,
ii. £25,000 paid by C to RLK by instalments on 18 October 2011 and 19 November 2011,
iii. £25,000 paid by GSK to RLK on 18 October 2011.
In his oral evidence, D1, who attended RLK's offices on 15 November 2011 to sign the contracts, accepted that he had known that the balance of the deposit was payable on exchange. Indeed, on 17 November 2011, RLK (Mr Bhogal) had emailed the defendants to confirm (with my emphasis added) that "As discussed, I shall need deposit monies equal to 10% of each property being purchased in our client account by no later than mid-day on Friday 18 November 2011…For the avoidance of doubt our bank details are as follows…". However, D1 was unable to explain in his oral evidence how he thought this very substantial deposit was to be fully funded, if not by him. He simply stated that he was unable to answer that question. That response is even more surprising when considered in the context of D2's oral evidence that "My father certainly was nervous about the prospect of [buying almost 30 properties] and clearly he hadn't, like you say, done anything like that before". If that was true, no doubt D1 would have been very careful to ensure how the deposit was to be paid or at the very least discuss further with RLK how it was going to be paid;
d. D2 was similarly at a loss to understand or explain the shortfall in completion monies (£318,000 on C's case or £120,000 on the defendants' case);
e. The defendants did not read the reports (x 12) for the Properties prepared by RLK and sent to them by way of attachments to an email dated 17 November 2011 and marked "IMPORTANT". The reports stated that the defendants would be
"buying the property in its actual state and condition and you are deemed to have checked its condition before exchanging contracts. The Receivers will provide no warranty or assurances as to the conditions of the property or what services are connected.
You must therefore be satisfied about the states and condition of the Property from your own inspection of the Property. You may wish to instruct a surveyor to carry out a structural survey prior to exchange of contracts.";
f. The defendants did not obtain structural surveys despite being advised to do so by RLK. The defendants said that there was simply not the time available because C was repeatedly advising them of the need to act quickly otherwise they would lose out on this valuable opportunity. That evidence is perhaps consistent with what is stated by DSM in his email to C dated 21 July 2012 when he complains about being given only 2 minutes to decide about moving his funds to another deal. However, if the defendants did not have the time to obtain structural surveys then surely that was even more reason for them to at least view the inside of the Properties prior to exchange of contracts. The defendants said that they simply trusted C that this was a good buy, but that does not explain why the defendants, or at the very least D2, would not have been at least curious at this supposedly exciting and monumental time to see the inside of the Properties that they were buying. D1 suggested that C had previously purchased individual properties without D1 seeing them beforehand, but this was of course a very different proposition in that the defendants were allegedly committing themselves to purchase for the long term financial wellbeing of their family a large portfolio of properties funded by way of very substantial borrowing; and
g. The defendants did not read any of numerous conveyancing documents that they signed including:
i. The Memoranda of sale (x 12) signed at RLK's offices by D1 on 15 November 2011 and by D2 on 16 November 2011;
ii. The Supplemental Contract of sale dated 16 January 2012 ;
iii. The Further Supplemental Contract of sale dated 29 February 2012;
iv. The Incentive Agreement dated 29 February 2012; and
v. The TR1s.
It is extraordinary that both D1 (who was an experienced business man supposedly very concerned about the substantial level of personal borrowing required), and D2 (who was professionally qualified, had been involved in the drafting of tenders and was supposedly keen to learn more generally about the property business) chose not to read any of these important legal documents before signing them and in particular the TR1s, which were sent by post to the defendants, who presumably could have read them at their leisure. The defendants sought, unsuccessfully in my view, to explain their distinct lack of interest in the documents that they were signing by reverting to their repeated mantra that they simply trusted C, although of course C was not a lawyer and himself had previously asked D2 (with his superior grasp of written English) to assist with the drafting of legal documents in the form of tenders;
h. One of the few contemporaneous emails between C and the defendants disclosed in these proceedings is the one dated 11 June 2012 sent by C to D2 and attaching the spreadsheets confirming the current position in relation to each of the Properties. It was D2's evidence that they were prepared by C at D2's specific request. The 3rd spreadsheet records that –
i. 58 Swindon Road would "be going on the market for £120,000 in 2 weeks",
ii. 63 St Mary's Road would "be going on the market for £127,000 in 1 week",
iii. 584 Stratford Road would "go on the market for about £175,000" once £8000 had been spent on renovations.
Earlier in his written evidence D2 stated that "I told Ashok I was displeased with the sale of 21 Clarendon Road to someone else, as we are now losing properties rather than gaining properties". The sale of 21 Clarendon Road to Mr Sahota completed on 20 February 2012. It was submitted on behalf of the defendants in closing that "It is common ground that there would have been a shortfall on the Aldermore offer, which meant that properties would have to be sold (which was plainly unattractive given the cost and emotional pain used to retain them up to that point)". Yet some 4 months after the sale of 21 Clarendon Road and some 4 months before the Aldermore offer, the defendants were being told by C that 3 of the Properties with a combined value of £422,000 were shortly to be sold off. Surely the defendants would have been very upset to hear that news and in light of their wish to secure a large property portfolio for the long term benefit of their family. However, D2 stated in his written evidence that when he got the email from C "I was concerned about the condition of the properties. However, my father still trusted that Ashok would get done what needed to be done. We took the decision that Ashok was handling it and did not feel like we needed to view the remainder of the properties or take any action." Again, the defendants' complete inaction in response to being told of the imminent sales of 3 of the Properties cannot be explained away simply on the basis that they trusted C. This inaction is again entirely consistent with C's case that they were merely acting in representative capacities.
Shiv Sharma
Submissions
a. The defendants decided in October 2012 to deceive C by seeking funding from Lloyds TSB without his knowledge so that they could grab the Properties for themselves. That is why they had to dis-instruct RLK, who knew the basis on which the defendants had purchased the Properties. The picture of a family in financial crisis and why they say they went to Lloyds TSB behind C's back is merely a mask to cover the brutal truth of what they were really up to. The extraordinary story about C deceiving them by saying the Properties belonged to someone called Shiv Sharma is the best the defendants could come up with in an attempt to explain why they say they excluded C;
b. It is unfathomable why, if C was wanting to perpetrate such a deceit, that he would have recommended that the defendants instruct as their conveyancers RLK, who had already acted on C's behalf in obtaining the Injunction against the Receivers and who were advised by C's letter dated 18 October 2011 that there was no need to raise any pre-contract enquiries as he owned the properties and already knew all the answers;
c. The name Shiv Sharma appears nowhere in the contemporaneous documents and indeed the first mention of that name is only in the defence served on 18 May 2018. By stark contrast the conveyancing documents signed by the defendants and disclosed by RLK make plain beyond doubt that the defendants are lying when they say they thought the seller was Shiv Sharma; and
d. The best that D2 can do to explain away the conveyancing documents that they signed naming C as the seller is to implicate by inference, Mr Bhogal, the conveyancing solicitor at RLK, in a conspiracy to mislead the defendants about the true identity of the seller. D2 has deliberately fabricated this account to overcome the obvious flaw in his story. To get away with it he has to ask the court to believe that RLK were at best grossly negligent and at worst dishonest and in collusion with C – without of course ever putting that case to RLK for them to respond. How the defendants think the court can make findings of serious misconduct/negligence/dishonesty against RLK when they have not even brought them to court to give evidence (waiving privilege) is a mystery.
a. It is accepted that the Shiv Sharma account does not fit with the conveyancing documents. However, had the defendants really been acting in the Machiavellian manner alleged, they would surely have come up with a better story that fitted the conveyancing documents;
b. It is entirely common for clients to sign conveyancing documents without reading or understanding them. They trusted C and were not concerned with the legal niceties;
c. The defendants' evidence is corroborated by GSB, SH and BT, who all thought that the defendants genuinely believed that someone other than C was the seller;
d. The defendants regard RLK's conduct as "fishy" and with some justification as was evidenced by RLK's email to C on 18 January 2012, which dealt with C's contribution of £2,557.75 to the Receivers costs agreed on 4 October 2011, and deliberately not copied to the defendants. However, it is not necessary for the court to find that there was any collusion between C and RLK in order for the claim to be dismissed. This is not a trial of whether RLK acted dishonestly or negligently. What the court is being asked to find is that the defendants were not told about the Alleged Buy Back Consortium and did not agree to act as its head. What is clear from the documents is that RLK took instructions from C on matters on which they were instructed by others; and
e. C's reason for not calling anyone from RLK on the ground that RLK acted for the defendants and so would be divulging privileged information is not a good one. RLK were not instructed by the defendants until 15 November 2011. Most of the crucial discussions and key events had (on C's case) already occurred by that date. In any event, C could have at least requested that the defendants waive privilege, but no such request was made.
Analysis and conclusion
a. The Memoranda of sale state at the top of the opening page that the "Seller" is "Ashok Singh care of the Receivers";
b. The Supplemental Contract, the Further Supplemental Contract and the Incentive Agreement all state at the top of the page under the heading "PARTICUALARS" that "The Seller" is "Ashok Singh (acting by direction of the Receivers)";
c. The TR1s state (i) on the opening page that the "Transferor" is "Ashok Singh (acting by Joint Law of Property Act receivers)" and (ii) on the execution pages that the document was being "Signed as a deed by Ashok Singh acting by Simon Hunt his joint fixed charge receiver".
Whilst I accept that it is common for clients to sign conveyancing documents without reading or understanding all the legal niceties, it is not at all common for clients to sign conveyancing documents without at least checking or taking an interest in the basic particulars i.e. the names of the buyer/seller, the property details and the price.
a. I accept the submission made by counsel for C that no honest conveyancing solicitor would have allowed C to say all that uncorrected if it had been said. Counsel for the defendants appeared to accept the force of that argument by submitting in closing that perhaps Mr Bhogal had not heard the conversation, but this possibility was never suggested by D2 in his oral evidence;
b. It is submitted on behalf of the defendants that this is not a trial of whether RLK acted dishonestly. However, in his written evidence D2 stated (in the context of funds provided by third parties towards the purchase of the Properties) "This raised serious questions to me about RLK and their involvement, and whether they had colluded with Ashok". Indeed, in opening it was submitted on behalf of the defendants that "It is now in fact clear that RLK were acting primarily in the interests of the Claimant and actively concealed information from the Defendants." During D2's oral evidence, and whilst acknowledging what a serious allegation he was making against Mr Bhogal, D2 was asked if "Mr Bhogal sat back and let his own client be deceived" to which D2 replied "That's correct, that's what happened." If I accept as true D2's evidence regarding the alleged conversation then by implication I must also find that Mr Bhogal remained silent and was guilty of serious misconduct by way of dishonest concealment;
c. Although I was not referred to the case in submissions, in MRH Solicitors -v- The County Court sitting at Manchester [2015] EWHC 1795 (Admin) it was held that the court below was wrong to have made findings that solicitors had been dishonest when they had no opportunity to give evidence to rebut the allegation of dishonesty. In giving the judgement of the court, Nicol J held:
"[34] We well understand how the Recorder's suspicions were aroused. However, in the absence of good reason a Judge ought to be extremely cautious before making conclusive findings of fraud unless the person concerned has at least had the opportunity to give evidence to rebut the allegations. This is a matter of elementary fairness. In Vogon International Ltd v the Serious Fraud Office [2004] EWCA Civ 104 at [29] May LJ (with whom Lord Phillips MR and Jonathan Parker LJ agreed) said,
"It is, I regret to say, elementary common fairness that neither parties to the litigation, their counsel nor judges should make serious imputations or findings in any litigation when the person concerned against whom such imputations or findings are made have not been given a proper opportunity of dealing with the imputations and defending themselves."
[35] This is not only required because of fairness to the party affected but also to avoid the Court falling into error – see for instance Co-operative Group (CWS) Ltd v International Computers [2003] EWCA Civ 1955 at [ 38]. As Megarry J memorably said in John v Rees [1970] CH 345, 402,
"As everybody who has anything to do with the law well knows, the path of the law is strewn with examples of open and shut cases which, somehow, were not; of unanswerable charges which, in the event, were answered; of inexplicable conduct, which was fully explained…Nor are those with any knowledge of human nature who pause to think for a moment likely to underestimate the feelings of resentment of those who find that a decision against them has been made without their being afforded any opportunity to influence the course of events"."
d. It is accepted that the defendants have at no time put any allegations directly to RLK. In my judgment it is simply unfair to raise very serious allegations against RLK generally, and Mr Bhogal in particular, indirectly in the course of these proceedings without giving them the opportunity to respond. At the time the conversation allegedly took place in front of Mr Bhogal, RLK were retained by the defendants. Having raised an allegation against Mr Bhogal that required to be answered, the defendants ought to have called Mr Bhogal to give evidence (waiving privilege);
e. If Mr Bhogal had been called to give evidence it is almost inevitable that he would have denied the allegation made against him. On 24 December 2019, the defendants' current solicitors wrote to RLK requesting further information whilst stating that "having kept our clients' monies in an account together with third party monies cannot be a proper justification for your failure to provide this information." RLK responded by way of letter dated 10 January 2020 in which they stated that "we do not accept that your clients were unaware that other parties, along with your clients, were involved in the property transactions with…Receivers for properties in the name of Ashok Singh." Even if Mr Bhogal had been called as a witness, it would still have been necessary for me to consider his evidence and assess its credibility in the light of the contemporaneous documents and the inherent probabilities of the case. However, a finding of dishonesty against a solicitor (and an officer of the court) should not be made without the most careful consideration of what the solicitor says in their own defence, and especially when (as in this case) no motive for such dishonesty has ever been suggested – Clydesdale Bank PLC v Workman and others [2016] EWCA Civ 73. In conclusion, I draw an adverse inference against the defendants by reason of the fact that they chose not to call Mr Bhogal as a witness because they knew that he would very likely contradict D2's evidence about the alleged crucial conversation that took place between C and D2 in front of Mr Bhogal;
f. It was D2's evidence that as a result of the defendants purchasing the Properties they incurred net losses of over £600,000. Whilst I can understand that the defendants may not have had the funds or indeed the stomach to pursue legal proceedings against RLK, it is simply incredible that they did not even consider it worthwhile submitting any complaint to RLK and/or the Solicitors Regulation Authority, if they genuinely believed their allegations of collusion/deliberate concealment to be true;
g. On 17 November 2011, the day after the conversation with C allegedly took place, RLK sent to the defendants the email marked "IMPORTANT" and referring to the attached property reports. Immediately after being asked in evidence if he was sure that he had never been told by RLK that C was the owner of the Properties, D2 was taken to this email and there then followed a lengthy period of questions and answers -
i. Initially, D2 said that he could remember seeing the email at the time, but he did not know what was attached to it and could not remember being given copies of the property reports,
ii. When asked, if the property reports were not attached to the email, why did he not ask RLK to re-send them, D2 responded "Because our relationship with RLK really wasn't so much a relationship with them as with Ashok. So if RLK asked for this or asked for that, we only ever tended to do something when Ashok said. So if they would have said something, that it was something of importance, we would have expected Ashok to pre-told us or told us something about it.",
iii. D2 accepted that RLK clearly wanted the defendants to read the property reports before agreeing to exchange of contracts,
iv. D2 was taken through the first part of the property report for the South Road properties before saying that he did not think that this report "was seen" by the defendants,
v. D2 was then taken to the next section of the property report, which stated that "You will buy subject to these [local land] charges and you will become liable for any amounts secured (unless you can agree with the registered proprietor of the property, Mr Ashok Singh, to pay these on or before completion)." When it was put to D2 that this report clearly showed that C, not Shiv Sharma, owned the properties D2 said "This letter has no letterhead to it, it has not been signed and I didn't get to see this letter….Again, I didn't get this document…All I'm saying is I didn't receive these at the time, did not see these at the time, not on those letterheads, not been signed, so I don't know of their existence."
vi. Therefore, having initially claimed that he could not recall what, if any, documents were attached to RLK's email, D2 changed his evidence to suggest that the property reports may not be genuine, and the defendants had definitely not received them. On being asked what checks had been made to ascertain whether or not the property reports had been emailed before making serious allegations of collusion against RLK there then followed an extraordinary exchange between counsel for C and D2 -
Q. What checks have you made of your emails and the Ablex emails to see what was received?
A. We did all the checks, checked every email, checked every in and out, every date, everything we could have.
Q. So if you checked this email for 17 November and it did not have the attachments to it - is that what you are saying you did?
A. Say I did what, sorry?
Q. Are you saying you checked this email and it did not have any attachments to it?
A. I'm saying what we had was this email and that's all we've got, and that's all
Q. No. Are you saying you checked and you did not have any of these reports?
A. So this email address, ablexuk, ablex.com, is no longer in existence.
Q. So you did not check it?
A. So we checked, we checked everything that we could have and everything we had saved on the computer, whatever we could have, and declared - disclosed everything.
Q. So you did not check the mailbox for [email protected] because it does not exist anymore?
A. We checked everything that was on our computer, anything that we stored on the computer, and we disclosed every document that we had.
Q. I am going to try once more. Did you check the emails for the address [email protected]?
A. Again, we checked the computer for every document we had, and these are the documents - the documents I disclosed are the documents that I had in my possession, and everything else was disclosed.
Q. This is my last attempt. Did you check the email account [email protected]?
A. What I checked was what was on our computer and what had been stored on our computer, any emails or whatever else they were, and that email isn't in existence anymore so whatever was stored on our - on my Dad's computer at the time, we downloaded, got it and we've submitted it.
Q. So can I just say: is it a yes or no? Can I make it easy for you? Did you check the email account for [email protected]? Yes or no?
A. No, the account isn't in existence.
It was clear to me that D2 was making up his evidence as he went along in an unsuccessful attempt to answer questions consistent with the defendants' case that, notwithstanding what was stated in the property report, RLK had nevertheless sought to conceal the identity of C as the true owner of the Properties, which the defendants only became aware of in October 2012, and despite the property report being referred to as an attachment to an email marked "IMPORTANT" and sent to the defendants for them to read prior to exchange of contracts.
The defendants taking control of the Properties in October 2012
"Thank you very much for your time yesterday, and for the extensive pack that you put together for me, which I have read this morning.
As I advised this afternoon, I have spoken with my underwriters today, to gauge their thoughts around the proposed deal, and a number of possible issues have been highlighted, and detailed below, however I think having spoken to Mr Jhutti these can be easily overcome.
…………..
The headlines for the proposed finance is as follows;
Total lend £1.95m – split £1.7 to the bridging company and 250k for refurbishment."
Cash payment of £25,000
a. 6 November – £15,000 to Capital;
b. 20 November - £10,000 to Capital;
c. 22 November – £6660.50 to WestOne; and
d. 27 November - £6660.50 to WestOne.
e. Total payments - £38,321.
a. It might be expected that collecting and handing over such a substantial amount of cash would be memorable. However, in contradiction to DK's written evidence, HKN states that rather than witnessing DK personally handing the cash over to D1 at JC4C's offices, it was HKN who "personally collected £25,000 from my mother in law..and gave this to Parminder to help him and Harmale pay the bridging finance monthly payment in November 2012."; and
b. The bank statements disclosed by the defendants show the sources from which the bridging companies were paid. There is no recorded cash receipt of £25,000.
Rent for renovations
Missing in action
a. C raised concerns (via his MP) with Lloyds TSB over (i) its failure to give him notice of its intention to repossess the properties charged to it and (ii) the failure of the then appointed receivers to meet with C to discuss the possible sale of those properties to a consortium of buyers arranged by C. In a letter of response dated 22 June 2012, Lloyds TSB stated that –
"[C] operated well run accounts until midway through 2010. At this point, [C] promised to reduce his overdraft by selling some of his property, but he failed to honour this commitment. However, of more concern to us, he stopped paying his rental income into his account, resulting in the overdraft escalating to more than £900,000.
[C] did not respond to our correspondence and we eventually took the commercial decision to close his business accounts and………..
In the absence of any contact or repayment proposals from [C], we decided to call in our security.
……………
We do not accept that we did not give him adequate notice of our intentions. In my view, we have been patient with [C] and I am not sure what more we could have done. We now know that [C] has moved from the address that we were writing to, but he did not advise us of this. We understand that he moved abroad, which I believe was a less than responsible action, given the level of borrowing that he had with us and other lenders.";
b. On 20 April 2012, Jeevan Purewal of Monaco Insurance emailed C –
"We are disappointed that after leaving at least 10 messages for you and also your promises that you would come into our office to resolve the outstanding premium issues, you failed to do so.
You issued a deposit cheque for £1,500 which you stopped and despite many promises that you would bring in a replacement cheque this has not happened. You also instructed us to take the balance via direct debit facility utilising Close Premium Finance and again you cancelled the instruction despite signing the mandate."
c. DSM sent to C increasingly desperate and angry emails over his missing funds -
21 July 2012
"You were suppose to email me a few weeks back and nothing as of yet?"
28 July 2012
"I know you did not want to speak to me last week because I asked for money but this week the matter is getting serious…..Can you email me a urgent update."
24 October 2013
"you're causing me undue stress and I'm frankly at the end of my rope….on Sept 12 you said funds are coming any day and you would call me within 4 days. Today is Oct 24, almost 45 days later! Enough is enough. If I don't hear from you tomorrow I'm taking matters to the next level."
2 November 2013
"I don't know how many times I have to tell you to stop avoiding me!!!!"
2 November 2013
"STOP AVOIDING ME!!! You know it stresses me out"
d. ASG's son sent HKN increasingly desperate text messages asking C to contact his father/provide an update urgently about repayment of the £120,000 loan -
30 January 2012
"Could you ask Ashok to ring my dad up"
31 January 2012
"think [C] didn't get a chance to call my dad. Could you let him know it's a bit urgent so if he could call him as soon as he can"
8 February 2012
"account details for Western Heating are…..Could you please send over the money urgently"
13 February 2012
"could you let me know what the situation is with the payment. Twice now we have had to extend the completion date and they are imposing penalties"
13 February 2012
"Please let us know ASAP as like I said it is a bit urgent now"
15 February 2012
"just wanted to see what the situation is [C] still hasn't rang and the money hasn't been sent over yet either."
16 February 2012
"we have missed another completion today….This is getting a bit ridiculous now, we really need to know what is going on and need the money urgently."
20 February 2012
"Any update..? We have another completion date this week."
21 February 2012
"Can you tell him to call my dad up, it's pretty urgent."
23 February 2012
"Any further update…? Also he still hasn't called my dad up to explain what is going on."
23 April 2012
"Well…it has been 5 months now and Ashok still hasn't even rang once to explain what has happened and why he hasn't paid any money back or what's wrong. We have lost our money in India as well because of this and couldn't complete our deal there."
23 April 2012
"I'm not blaming you and nor is my dad and nobody has ever said it was your fault because it was Ashok who rang us not you. But for five months he hasn't even called once to let us know what has happened. We cant get hold of him because he doesn't answer his calls either and he isn't calling even after you forwarding our messages"
a. On 4 September 2012 Capital emailed JS requesting "an urgent update on the redemption of this loan";
b. On 5 September 2012, JS forwarded Capital's email to C and the defendants stating –
"I am being chased daily on this now and I have tried to keep them off the subject
Cannot do any more need answer today
On 15 they will want interest payment and new fees to renew the loan. The rate will go up because you will be in default.
Can I have an urgent answer today. Don't avoid this they are serious on this point.
Await a urgent reply."
c. On 6 September 2012, Capital emailed JS "Still waiting for an update on this case redemption is due on 15th September. Will this be on time? Have you copies of any refinance?"
d. On 6 September 2012, JS forwarded Capital's email to C and the defendants stating –
"I am getting this daily now please respond to me or u shall have to tell them the truth that I am not getting any reply from you??
I don't want to do that but there is a limit to what I can do on this.
Reply to me very urgent."
e. Also, on 6 September 2012, JS emailed C and copied in the defendants –
"Ashok
I have asked many times for the proof of sale or refinance not for my benefit but for the lender as am being chased daily.
Can I please have this today????
Please do not play with these people as I know they will not mess about.
Await your urgent reply."
f. On 1 November 2012, JS forwarded an email from Capital (threatening the appointment of receivers) to C and the defendants stating –
"You will see from the email…...that they are now getting serious. The problem is that you have advised me the following and I in accordance with the information that you have given me told them the same.
I had a long telephone conversation with them today and he said to me that for more than 8 weeks now funds have been promised and nothing has turned up.
- First we told them funds were due from relatives overseas
- Then we gave them copy of BTL mortgage offers
- Then we advised that we had imminent sales
They questioned me on why none of the above has materialised?"
These contemporaneous emails corroborate JS's evidence that (i) as the dates for redeeming the bridging loans drew closer and he began chasing C for progress on the renovations, C rarely answered JS's calls and (ii) when JS did manage to speak to C he just came up with excuses.
"Further to our meeting two weeks ago I confirm the following –
1. Bridge £400k agreed and we enclose revised invoice, please see this is paid immediately.
2. We also had agreement in principle for a higher loan to value bridge, but paperwork not signed and returned.
3. We have not had the promised information for Lloyds/TSB.
It is disappointing that you have not updated Lloyds, particularly as Lloyds were reluctant to support the Jhuttis again following previous dealings.
We had to persuade them and you have let us down.
I cannot see Lloyds looking at any future deals for the Jhuttis.
Obviously we still expect payment of our invoice."
Increasing financial pressure on the defendants
a. By letters dated 19 July 2012 and 31 August 2012 (x3), Capital wrote to the defendants confirming that the 4 loans were due for redemption on 15 September, 18 October (x2) and 19 October 2012. The total redemption figure was £1,284,380. Those letters were in similar terms whereby Capital expressly reserved "the option of instruction to our solicitors to take steps to enforce repayment of the loan and other sums payable under the Agreement if the redemption date is not met. The rate of interest will also increase to the amount indicated in the …Agreement." The default rates of interest under the Loan Facility Agreements were 3% per month being equivalent to almost £40,000 per month across all 4 loans;
b. Having agreed a 4 week extension, Capital wrote to the defendants on 19 September 2012 –
"to confirm that your loan…..was due to be redeemed on 15 September 2012.
The default interest at a rate of 3% which is £13,260 and a fee of 25 to extend the loan of £8,840 will need to be paid by 21st September 2012."
c. On 19 September 2012, JS emailed a copy of Capital's letter to C and stated "This needs to be sorted out ASAP and paid by Friday";
d. On 21 September 2012, Capital emailed JS requesting an "update…..on the progress. If we do not get this resolved ASAP we shall be taking the appropriate action. Please advise urgently."
e. On 24 September, JS emailed C and the defendants stating that "the amount of £22,100 needs to be made today."
f. On 25 September 2012, WestOne wrote to the defendants to advise them that its loan of £475,750 was due to be repaid on 22 October 2012.
g. On 16 October 2012, WestOne emailed JS to confirm that –
"Please ensure that the Jhuttis pay in a minimum of £13,321 by 23rd October and that you advise us of a capital reduction that you mentioned.
Should this be received then we would allow the loan to continue for a further month without issuing proceedings with interest accruing at the…rate of 2.85% until 23rd November.
h. On 17 October 2012, JS forwarded WestOne's email to C and the defendants stating that "You will see what West One are now looking for if the loan is to be extended from the due date they require the payment listed below to be made."
i. On 1 November 2012, Capital emailed JS –
"This loan was due for redemption on 19th October 2012 and we were told that a partial redemption of £300,000 was to be made across the Jhutti portfolio back in September but so far we haven't received any monies. We haven't received a default payment either on the loan to extend by a month.
We agreed to defer the appointment of asset managers/receivers and litigation lawyers which would have added considerable cost to the account on the basis that we would receive the above figure over two weeks ago. Unless this is received within the next 5 working days we will be left with no alternative but to proceeds as per the above."
The same day, JS forwarded Capital's email on to C and the defendants.
j. On 6 November 2012, JS emailed the defendants –
"As per our telephone conversation I discussed the outstanding payments with Capital last night, they have agreed to accept cleared funds of £15,000 in their bank account by midday tomorrow…and they will not appoint PLA receivers or Asset managers.
This payment will be towards the interest accruing on the loans.
However, they have again stated that they cannot wait indefinitely as they are a short term lender.
The situation needs urgent attention so that the refinancing is completed swiftly.
We need to provide them a confirmed date this we as to when all the loans will be repaid, and provide supporting documentation.
I await your urgent update on this matter."
k. On 20 November 2012, WestOne sent a letter of demand to the defendants –
"…the term of your loan expired on the 22nd October 2012, and payment of your liability was due to be repaid, in full, on that date. Payment has not been received as required.
The balance outstanding at the date hereof amounts to £475,750 and we hereby demand the immediate payment of this sum. Please note that charges will apply and that interest continues to accrue on your liability at the rate of 2.8% per month…..
Please note that in the absence of payment we will have no alternative but to take steps to enforce our security which may include the appointment of Law of Property Act receivers."
l. On 22 November 2012, WestOne emailed the defendants confirming that provided payments totalling £13,321 were made by 28 November 2012, they would "stave off Mcintyre Hudson's recovery processes until 20th December".
Internal inconsistency
a. D1 was and still is a trustee of the local Sikh temple, which put him in an elevated position of trust. He had a good reputation within the Sikh community;
b. C and other members of the Alleged Buy Back Consortium trusted D1;
c. D1 was a successful businessman and had been in business for at least 30 years, and because of that business success he had a good credit rating; and
d. D1 had been strongly motivated in becoming a member of the Alleged Buy Back Consortium by a desire to help others by seeking to protect the interests of the Original Investors.
When did C know that the defendants had taken control of the Properties?
"29/10/12
ASB receiving call from Harmale Jhutti
He wished to dis-instruct this firm. No reasons given but he requires copies of his files.
30/10/12
Call from Ashok Singh confirming that this firm was still instructed and that he would ask Harmale to call me to confirm as such. ASB confirming that Jhutti was our client so what this firm had to do was decided by them.
01/11/12
ASB calling Harmale Jhutti. He re-confirms that he wishes to dis-instruct this firm. HE instructs us to issue letters to all buyers solicitors confirming as such."
Conclusion
a. The defendants took control of the Properties in October 2012 because –
i. The defendants had lost confidence and trust in C due to C's continuing failures to renovate the Properties, arrange the bank lending and engage fully with them/JS,
ii. As a result of C's ongoing failure to arrange the promised bank lending, the defendants were left in an extremely precarious position such that they and their family faced financial ruin as a result of the real and repeated threats of the bridging companies to appoint receivers over the Properties; and
b. By the time that RLK were dis-instructed, C knew that the defendants had taken control of the Properties and thereafter he had no further involvement with the Properties.
Standing back
a. C forged the defendants' signatures on the Disputed Agreements and 19 October letters; and
b. The defendants fabricated their story about Shiv Sharma in an attempt to conceal that fact that they knew from the outset that C owned the Properties.
a. The defendants purchase the Properties as C's nominees/representatives and sell them back to C within a short period of time (i) at no cost to the defendants and (ii) upon repayment to D1 of the original £200,000 loan;
b. D1 contribute towards the cost of purchase the sum of £400,000 drawn down from his NatWest facility and in the context of representations made by C that the Properties were (i) worth considerably more than the prices agreed by the Receivers and (ii) in generally good condition although some renovations were required;
c. C contribute significant funds raised from family and friends;
d. The balance of the funding be raised by way of bank finance; and
e. C make all the necessary arrangements including completing the renovations and arranging the required bank finance.
a. C accepted that he was at fault for causing the serious predicament that the defendants found themselves in and, as on previous occasions when he had let people down, he then went missing; and/or
b. C came to the realisation that he would not be able to refinance the Properties himself in order to buy them back from the defendants and even if the defendants were able to avoid the bridging companies putting them into receivership. C's credit rating would undoubtedly have been adversely affected by the fact that all 5 of his property portfolios had been put into receivership by April 2012. Even AH accepted in his oral evidence that those receiverships would have been flagged on any application for credit, which would have made a big difference to C's creditworthiness. C appeared to accept that his poor credit rating seriously undermined his case, since he then claimed for the first time in his oral evidence that, in the alternative, he would have raised the necessary funds by establishing a second consortium. In essence, C would have been borrowing money from friends/family to pay back money already borrowed from friends/family to pay back money lent to/invested with C by friends/family. I agree with the submission made on behalf of the defendants that this was complete financial fantasy and not for the first time. By way of further examples, whilst all 5 of C's property portfolios had been put into receivership by April 2012:
i. on 7 February 2012, C emailed Shaun Kidson at Lloyds TSB to apologise for the delay in responding "but we are tendering for about £75 million pounds worth of contracts with 11 different councils at the moment." I remind myself that JC4C owned no properties and was reliant upon C's properties to service any such contracts,
ii. on 5 June 2012, C emailed DSM to explain why he had not responded to earlier emails, but "I have not had any time for the last 6 weeks, its been really hectic. You know they say the recession is the best time to start a new business and I am starting up a couple of new ventures, there's just so much money to be made at the moment." I remind myself that this email was sent at the very time that C was apparently struggling to arrange bank finance for the defendants to pay off the bridging companies.
Application of the facts as found to the law
Specific Performance
Constructive trust
"[29]…..a common intention constructive trust could arise where (i) there was an express agreement between parties as to the ownership of property (ii) which was relied upon by the claimant (iii) to his or her detriment such that (iv) it would be unconscionable for the defendant to deny the claimant's ownership of the property."
a. C failed to keep to his side of the bargain by not progressing the renovations and arranging the bank finance as he promised, which left the defendants and their family horribly financially exposed having been required to complete the purchases with very substantial bridging loans;
b. After the defendants had agreed to assist C in his time of need by buying the Properties from the Receivers, C then effectively abandoned the defendants in their own time of need as the bridging loans fell in and they themselves now faced the very real and imminent prospect of (i) receivers again being appointed over the Properties and (ii) the bridging companies seeking to recover any shortfalls from the defendants personally following the sale of the Properties at auction;
c. The defendants were left in an invidious position and they had no other choice but to take matters into their own hands in a desperate attempt to protect themselves and their family;
d. Upon taking control of the Properties, the defendants were forced to raise/expend significant funds urgently to renovate the Properties and to pay monies due to the bridging companies by way of penalties/redemptions; and
e. Only after the defendants have spent considerable time, money and energy stabilising the position, C now seeks to uphold an arrangement that he himself departed from many years ago leaving the defendants to resolve a financial crisis not of their making.
Overall conclusion
Note 1 In addition, the defendants contracted to purchase 21 Clarendon Road for 250,000, although that property was subsequently purchased by a third party unconnected with the Alleged Buy Back Consortium. [Back] Note 2 It was also GSK’s evidence that he saw C forge D1’s signature on a letter prepared by C to prove that GSK had lent the money to D1. That allegation of forgery was not put to C in cross examination. In the circumstances, I consider that it would be unfair and decline to make any finding in relation to that particular allegation. I have not attached any weight to GSK’s evidence in that regard. [Back] Note 3 £455,000 as per Appendix 3 to C’s Skeleton Argument and updated in opening. [Back] Note 4 Calculated at £477,766.27 as at June 2012 as per Table 1, Schedule D, to the defendants’ Skeleton Argument. [Back] Note 5 Schedule C to the defendants’ Skeleton Argument [Back] Note 6 SH did claim for the first time in his oral evidence that he actually participated in the conversation during which the defendants were told for the first time that C owned the Properties, but for the reasons given earlier I did not find SH to be a credible witness. [Back] Note 7 Schedule E to the defendants’ Skeleton Argument. [Back]