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The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions >> Oceania Heights Ltd v Willard Clarke Enterprises Ltd & Ors (Bahamas) [2013] UKPC 3 (30 January 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKPC/2013/3.html Cite as: [2013] UKPC 3 |
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[2013] UKPC 3
Privy Council Appeal No 0049 of 2011
JUDGMENT
Oceania Heights Limited (Appellant) v Willard Clarke Enterprises Limited & others (Respondent)
From the Court of the Commonwealth of the Bahamas
before
Lord Neuberger
Lord Mance
Lord Wilson
Lord Reed
Lord Carnwath
JUDGMENT DELIVERED BY
LORD NEUBERGER
ON
30 January 2013
Heard on 15 November 2012
Appellant Fred Smith Ruth Jordan Roderick Dawson Malone (Instructed by Simons Muirhead & Burton) |
Respondent Harvey Tynes QC Charles Mackay Joseph Moxey Elliot Lockhart (Instructed by Stephenson Harwood LLP) |
LORD NEUBERGER:
The facts
"be fully responsible for meeting all legal and other costs, liabilities and expenses incurred by [Mr] Marshall as a result thereof…, and if he is deemed to be liable in any manner to the intended purchaser then Oceania will pay any such liability or sum ordered or found due and payable".
The instant proceedings
The issues on this appeal
Oceania's argument based on Chapter 257: discussion
"[W]here a statute merely prohibits one party from entering into a contract without authority, and/or imposes a penalty upon him if he does so (i.e. a unilateral prohibition) it does not follow that the contract itself is impliedly prohibited so as to render it illegal and void. Whether or not the statute has this effect depends upon considerations of public policy in the light of the mischief which the statute is designed to prevent, its language, scope and purpose, the consequences for the innocent party, and any other relevant considerations."
"Notwithstanding subsection (1), where the beneficial owner of a lot in a subdivision prior to the commencement of this Act, conveyed … land within the subdivision but failed to obtain … the approval of the Minister in accordance with … section 4 of …Chapter 257, such … conveyance shall not be null and void due to the failure to obtain the approval … and any person who obtained title to a lot within the subdivision shall not be prejudiced by the failure of the owner of the subdivision to obtain the necessary approval… "
Oceania's argument based on Chapter 187: introduction
"If any person after having made and executed any conveyance, assignment, grant, lease, bargain, sale or mortgage of any lands or of any goods or other effects within The Bahamas, or of any estate, right or interest therein, shall afterwards make and execute any other conveyance, assignment, grant, release, bargain, sale or mortgage of the same, or any part thereof, or any estate, right or interest therein; such of the said conveyances, assignments, grants, releases, bargains, sales or mortgages, as shall be first lodged and accepted for record in the Registry shall have priority or preference; and the estate, right, title or interest of the vendee, grantee or mortgagee claiming under such conveyance, assignment, grant, release, bargain, sale or mortgage, so first lodged and accepted for record shall be deemed and taken to be good and valid and shall in no wise be defeated or affected by reason of priority in time of execution of any other such documents:
Provided that this section shall not apply to any disposition of property made with intent to defraud."
(i) The 1996 Agreement, whereby WCE agreed to convey the whole of the land to Oceania, was registered in February 1996, and falls within the scope of section 10;
(ii) Even though the contracts between WCE, through Mr Marshall, and the purchasers (or their predecessors) were entered into before the 1996 Agreement, the effect of section 10 is to give priority to the 1996 Agreement over those contracts;
(iii) Even though the Conveyances entered into in 2000/2001 apparently conveyed the legal estate in the eleven lots to the purchasers, and were (according to what the Board was told by counsel) subsequently registered, the fact that the 1996 Agreement had been registered prior to the Conveyances means that the 1996 Agreement has priority over those Conveyances;
(iv) In these circumstances, Oceania is entitled (a) to a declaration that the Conveyances are void and to a conveyance of the eleven lots from WCE, or (b) to require the purchasers to convey the eleven lots to Oceania.
Oceania's argument based on Chapter 187: can the point be taken?
Oceania's argument based on Chapter 187: discussion
Concluding remarks