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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 >> Earl of Plymouth & Ors v Rees & Anor [2021] EWHC 3180 (Ch) (30 November 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2021/3180.html Cite as: [2021] EWHC 3180 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS IN WALES
PROPERTY TRUSTS AND PROBATE LIST (Ch)
2 Park Street, Cardiff CF10 1E7 |
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B e f o r e :
Sitting as a judge of the High Court
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(1) THE RIGHT HONOURABLE IVOR EDWARD OTHER WINDSOR-CLIVE EARL OF PLYMOUTH (2) LADY EMMA WINDSOR-CLIVE (3) THE HONOURABLE DAVID JUSTIN WINDSOR-CLIVE (as Trustees of St Fagans No 1 and No 2 Trusts) |
Claimants/Pt 20 Defendants |
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- and - |
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(1) JENKIN THOMAS REES (Deceased) (by his representative GERALD PHILLIP REES) (2) GERALD PHILLIP REES |
Defendants/Pt 20 Claimants |
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Ms Rebecca Cattermole (instructed by Ebery Williams) for the defendants
Hearing dates: 18 and 19 November 2021
Crown Copyright ©
HH JUDGE JARMAN QC:
"In respect of your family's conversations with Richard Knight in the past and my discussions with you now, there has never been any intention by the landlords not to treat you fairly and, furthermore, generously in return for your co-operation. The statutory basis for compensation is five times the rent, so £45,000 for the entire holding, but we have offered you £500,000 which is over ten times as much. Through you[r] agent, you have asked for £1 million and that is w[h]ere the difference lies. Of course, it is for Barry Meade to advise you on these matters and I do not seek to discuss this with you directly."
"However, I can say that we remain open to further discussions to see if an amicable agreement can be reached. In those circumstances, as above, we would expect to be more generous than a compensation payment of five times the rent providing that we can reach an agreement in a timely way."
"The proprietary estoppel line of cases are concerned with the question whether an owner of property can, by insisting on his strict legal rights therein, defeat an expectation of an interest in that property, it being an expectation which he has raised by his conduct which has been relied on by the claimant. The question does not arise otherwise than in connection with some asset in respect of which it has been represented, or is alleged to have been represented, that the claimant is to have some interest. All the relevant cases…raise that question.
The present case does not raise that question. A representation that 'financial security' would be provided by the deceased to the plaintiff, and on which I will assume she acted, is not a representation that she is to have some equitable or legal interest in any particular asset or assets."
"Mr Cobbe's expectation, encouraged by Mrs Lisle-Mainwaring, was that upon the grant of planning permission there would be a successful negotiation of the outstanding terms of a contract for the sale of the property to him, or to some company of his, and that a formal contract, which would include the already agreed core terms of the second agreement as well as the additional new terms agreed upon, would be prepared and entered into. An expectation dependent upon the conclusion of a successful negotiation is not an expectation of an interest having any comparable certainty to the certainty of the terms of the lessees' interest under the Taylors Fashions option. In the Taylors Fashions case both the content of the estoppel, i.e. an estoppel barring the new freeholders from asserting that the option was unenforceable for want of registration, and the interest the estoppel was intended to protect, i.e. the option to have a renewal of the lease, were clear and certain. Not so here. The present case is one in which an unformulated estoppel is being asserted in order to protect Mr Cobbe's interest under an oral agreement for the purchase of land that lacked both the requisite statutory formalities (s.2 of the 1989 Act) and was, in a contractual sense, incomplete."
"I would prefer to say (while conscious that it is a thoroughly question-begging formulation) that to establish a proprietary estoppel the relevant assurance must be clear enough. What amounts to sufficient clarity, in a case of this sort, is hugely dependent on context. I respectfully concur in the way Hoffmann LJ put it in Walton v Walton (in which the mother's "stock phrase" to her son, who had worked for low wages on her farm since he left school at fifteen, was "You can't have more money and a farm one day"). Hoffmann LJ stated at para 16:
"The promise must be unambiguous and must appear to have been intended to be taken seriously. Taken in its context, it must have been a promise which one might reasonably expect to be relied upon by the person to whom it was made."
"In my opinion it is a necessary element of proprietary estoppel that the assurances given to the claimant (expressly or impliedly, or, in standing-by cases, tacitly) should relate to identified property owned (or, perhaps, about to be owned) by the defendant. That is one of the main distinguishing features between the two varieties of equitable estoppel, that is promissory estoppel and proprietary estoppel. The former must be based on an existing legal relationship (usually a contract, but not necessarily a contract relating to land). The latter need not be based on an existing legal relationship, but it must relate to identified property (usually land) owned (or, perhaps, about to be owned) by the defendant. It is the relation to identified land of the defendant that has enabled proprietary estoppel to develop as a sword, and not merely a shield: see Lord Denning MR in Crabb v Arun DC [1976] Ch 179, 187."
"The situation is to my mind quite different from a case like Layton v Martin [1986] 2 FLR 227, in which the deceased made an unspecific promise of "financial security"."
"There are two fundamental differences between that case and this case. First, the nature of the uncertainty in the two cases is entirely different. It is well encapsulated by Lord Walker's distinction between "intangible legal rights" and "the tangible property which he or she expects to get", in Cobbe [2008] 1 WLR 1752, para 68. In that case, there was no doubt about the physical identity of the property. However, there was total uncertainty as to the nature or terms of any benefit (property interest, contractual right, or money), and, if a property interest, as to the nature of that interest (freehold, leasehold, or charge), to be accorded to Mr Cobbe.
In this case, the extent of the farm might change, but, on the Deputy Judge's analysis, there is, as I see it, no doubt as to what was the subject of the assurance, namely the farm as it existed from time to time…
Secondly, the analysis of the law in Cobbe [2008] 1 WLR 1752 was against the background of very different facts. The relationship between the parties in that case was entirely arm's length and commercial, and the person raising the estoppel was a highly experienced businessman. The circumstances were such that the parties could well have been expected to enter into a contract, however, although they discussed contractual terms, they had consciously chosen not to do so. They had intentionally left their legal relationship to be negotiated, and each of them knew that neither of them was legally bound."