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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Clark & Anor v In Focus Asset Management & Tax Solutions Ltd [2012] EWHC 3669 (QB) (19 December 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2012/3669.html Cite as: [2012] EWHC 3669 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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(1) Mr Barry Clark (2) Mrs Julie Clark |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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In Focus Asset Management & Tax Solutions Ltd |
Respondent |
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Simon Howarth (instructed by CMS Cameron McKenna LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 17 October 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Cranston:
Introduction
Background
"With regard to your request for clarification about the effect of accepting the ombudsman's decision.....if the business did not pay the recommended balance and [the appellants] decided to sue for the balance in court, the court would make its own decision on whether or not to award anything. As such, we cannot provide any further guidance on this matter because it would be for a court to make its own ruling, based on its own consideration of [the appellant's] claim, as to whether to enable enforcement of the recommended amount awarded by the Ombudsman."
The decision appealed
"106. In this case there is no money had and received by the [respondent] which it is required to repay. The money paid to the [appellants] was received by them because the [respondent] had no choice but to pay it; there was a statutory obligation enforceable as debt. There was no mistake of law about the obligation to pay and the [appellants] cashed the cheques. Had they not accepted the decision of the Ombudsman but instead chosen to pursue their claim in the civil court, the doctrine of merger would not have operated in law as it has in this case.
107. The principles of unilateral mistake of which error by the [appellants] it is submitted the [respondent] must be presumed to have been aware do not therefore apply. The [respondent] had no option but to pay up the award because the [appellants] had informed the Ombudsman that they agreed with and accepted his decision."
The statutory scheme
"(5) A money award may not exceed the monetary limit; but the ombudsman may, if he considers that fair compensation requires payment of a larger amount, recommend that the respondent pay the complainant the balance."
"3.9.6 If the ombudsman considers that an amount more than the maximum is required as fair compensation then he may in addition recommend to the firm or licensee that it pays the balance."
"(3) The circumstances specified under sub-paragraph (2)(b) may include the following
…
(b) legal proceedings have been brought concerning the subject-matter of the complaint and the ombudsman considers that the complaint is best dealt with in those proceedings".
There is no right of appeal from the Ombudsman's decision on the merits.
The doctrine of merger
The Ombudsman's mistake and the appellants' acceptance
"I am afraid that the plaintiff was misled, and thought that he was not prejudicing his right to recover further compensation against the company … [T]he plaintiff's ignorance of the law cannot enter into consideration in determining the legal result of his consenting to the award of compensation": at 275.
Mellor J agreed and said that the plaintiff seemed to have availed himself of it in ignorance of the legal effect of what he was doing. However, he concluded, the matter became res judicata and could not be reopened: at 276.
The appellants' mistake and unjust enrichment
"The reason is that restitution for mistake rests on the fact that the plaintiff's judgment was vitiated in the matter of the transfer of wealth to the defendant. A mistake as to the future, a misprediction, does not show that the plaintiff's judgment was vitiated, only that as things turned out it was incorrectly exercised. A prediction is an exercise of judgment. To act on the basis of a prediction is to accept the risk of disappointment. If you then complain of having been mistaken you are merely asking to be relieved of a risk knowingly run…"
"[27] … I would not regard the fact that the person making the payment had doubts about his liability as conclusive of the question of whether he took the risk, particularly if the existence of these doubts was unknown to the receiving party. It would be strange if a party whose lawyer had raised a doubt on the question but who decided nevertheless that he had better pay should be in a worse position than a party who had no doubts because he had never taken any advice, particularly if the receiving party had no idea that there was any difference in the circumstances in which the two payments had been made. It would be more rational if the question of whether a party should be treated as having taken the risk depended upon the objective circumstances surrounding the payment as they could reasonably have been known to both parties, including of course the extent to which the law was known to be in doubt."
It must be recalled that at the point the appellants accepted the determination in early February 2010, the decision in Andrews v SBJ Benefit Consultants Ltd [2010] EWHC 2875 (Ch) [2011] Bus LR 1608 was still 9 months away. In the light of that decision, however, the appellants were mistaken about the law. In all the circumstances known to the parties in early February 2010 it cannot be said that the appellants took the risk of accepting the Ombudsman's determination. Rather, they were in doubt as to the legal ramifications, as evidenced by the addition of the rider. Consequently they acted because of a mistake on their part.
Conclusion