Potter v Potter: PC 22 Jul 2004

PC (New Zealand) The parties’ relationship failed. They had bought a house together and entered into a trust deed.
Held: ‘Defeasible interests in land are certainly conceptually possible. In England such interests may, for example, be created under the School Sites Acts. And, subject always to the rule against perpetuities, private trusts may create beneficial interests subject to defeasance on the occurrence, or non-occurrence, of specified events. But defeasance conditions in private trusts are invariably express conditions.’ In this case the claimant sought an implied condition. The breakdown of the relationship was no reason to vary the express trusts created.

Judges:

Lord Hoffmann, Lord Hope of Craighead, Lord Scott of Foscote, Lord Walker of Gestingthorpe, Baroness Hale of Richmond

Citations:

[2004] UKPC 41

Links:

Bailii, PC

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedBarclays Bank Ltd v Quistclose Investments Ltd; etc HL 31-Oct-1968
R Ltd were in serious financial difficulties. The company’s overdraft with the appellant bank was almost twice its permitted limit. The company sought a loan of 1 million pounds from a financier, who was willing to lend the company that sum provided . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Equity

Updated: 11 June 2022; Ref: scu.200080

Filby v Mortgage Express (No 2) Limited: CA 22 Jun 2004

Mr and Mrs Filby’s matrimonial home was charged to the Halifax. They also had an unsecured loan with the Midland Bank. Mr Filby sought to remortgage the matrimonial home with Mortgage Express. The mortgage advance was paid to solicitors who used part of it to redeem the Halifax mortgage and another part in the reduction of the debit balance on the development loan account with the Midland. However Mrs Filby had not signed the mortgage, and so, as against her, it was void. Mortgage Express claimed to be subrogated, amongst other things, to the rights of the Midland Bank against Mrs Filby to the extent that the joint debt to them had been discharged with their money.
Held:
May LJ spoke as to subrogation: ‘Accordingly so far as is relevant to this appeal, the remedy of equitable subrogation is a restitutionary remedy available to reverse what would otherwise be unjust enrichment of a defendant at the expense of the claimant. The defendant is enriched if his financial position is materially improved, usually as here where the defendant is relieved of a financial burden – see Peter Birks, An Introduction to The Law of Restitution page 93. The enrichment will be at the expense of the claimant if in reality it was the claimant’s money which effected the improvement. Subject to special defences, questions of policy or exceptional circumstances affecting the balance of justice, the enrichment will be unjust if the claimant did not get the security he bargained for when he advanced the money which in reality effected the improvement, and if the defendant’s financial improvement is properly seen as a windfall. The remedy does not extend to giving the claimant more than he bargained for. The remedy is not limited to cases where either or both the claimant and defendant intended that the money advanced should be used to effect the improvement. It is sufficient that it was in fact in reality so used. The remedy is flexible and adaptable to produce a just result. Within this framework, the remedy is discretionary in the sense that at each stage it is a matter of judgment whether on the facts the necessary elements are fulfilled.’

Judges:

Kennedy, May, Hooper LJJ

Citations:

[2004] EWCA Civ 759, [2004] All ER (D) 198 (Jun)

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedWestdeutsche Landesbank Girozentrale v Islington London Borough Council HL 22-May-1996
Simple interest only on rate swap damages
The bank had paid money to the local authority under a contract which turned out to be ultra vires and void. The question was whether, in addition to ordering the repayment of the money to the bank on unjust enrichment principles, the court could . .

Cited by:

CitedBank of Cyprus UK Ltd v Menelaou SC 4-Nov-2015
The bank customers, now appellants, redeemed a mortgage over their property, and the property was transferred to family members, who in turn borrowed from the same lender. A bank employee simply changed the name on the mortgage. This was ineffective . .
CitedBank of Cyprus UK Ltd v Menelaou SC 4-Nov-2015
The bank customers, now appellants, redeemed a mortgage over their property, and the property was transferred to family members, who in turn borrowed from the same lender. A bank employee simply changed the name on the mortgage. This was ineffective . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Equity

Updated: 11 June 2022; Ref: scu.198303

Cobbett v Brock: CA 1855

Knowledge of the undue influence of a husband over his wife in securing her signature to a charge is required before a lender is bound by that undue influence.

Judges:

Sir John Romilly MR

Citations:

(1855) 20 Beav 524

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedRoyal Bank of Scotland v Etridge (No 2); Barclays Bank plc v Harris; Midland Bank plc v Wallace, etc HL 11-Oct-2001
Wives had charged the family homes to secure their husband’s business borrowings, and now resisted possession orders, claiming undue influence.
Held: Undue influence is an equitable protection created to undo the effect of excess influence of . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Equity

Updated: 11 June 2022; Ref: scu.224817

Equity and Law Home Loans Ltd v Prestridge and Another: CA 15 Jan 1992

The Building Society chargee was entitled to possession because the charge was signed, but only to extent of the knowledge of the person signing charge. A woman partner had charged the house originally, but her partner had then unlawfully re-mortgaged it without her knowledge. Her interests did not have precedence up to the value of the original loan.

Citations:

Gazette 15-Jan-1992

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Equity

Updated: 11 June 2022; Ref: scu.80359

Rawson v Samuel: 15 Apr 1841

Cottenham LC said: ‘We speak familiarly of equitable set-off as distinguished from set-off at law, but it will be found that this equitable set-off exists in cases where the party seeking the benefit of it can show some equitable ground for being protected against his adversary’s demands. The mere existence of cross demands is not sufficient.’ and ‘Several cases were cited in support of the injunction but in every one of them except Williams v Davies (1829) 2 Sim 461 it will be found that the equity of the bill impeached the title to the legal demand.’

Judges:

Cottenham LC

Citations:

(1841) 1 Cr and Ph 161, [1841] EngR 491, (1839, 1840, 1841) Cr and Ph 161, (1841) 41 ER 451

Links:

Commonlii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

See AlsoRawson v Samuel 29-Nov-1838
A bill was filed for an account of dealings and transactions between the parties and to restrain an action brought by the Defendant against the Plaintiff for a breach of contract in n ot accepting bills drawn on him by the Defendant.
Held: The . .
See AlsoRawson v Samuel 22-Feb-1839
. .

Cited by:

CitedBritish Anzani (Felixstowe) Ltd v International Marine Management (UK) Ltd ChD 19-Dec-1978
Money expended by a tenant on discharging his landlord’s covenants will in appropriate circumstances operate as a partial or a complete discharge so as to furnish a defence at law to a claim for unpaid rent; and where the tenant has suffered damage . .
CitedAries Tanker Corp v Total Transport Ltd; The Aries HL 1977
Claims for freight charges are an exception to the general rule that all claims between parties must be resolved in one action. A claim for freight cannot be a claim ‘on the same grounds’ as a counter-claim for loss or damage arising out of the . .
CitedDole Dried Fruit and Nut Co v Trustin Kerwood Ltd CA 1990
The defendant had an exclusive distributorship agency for the plaintiff in England. Under that agreement, the plaintiff sold its prunes and raisins to the defendant under separate contracts of sale. The plaintiff claimed the price of goods sold . .
CitedGeldof Metaalconstructie Nv v Simon Carves Ltd CA 11-Jun-2010
The parties contracted for the supply and installation of pressure vessels by Geldof (G) for a building constructed by Simon Carves (SC). The contract contained a clause denying the remedy of set-off. G sued for the sale price, and SC now sought an . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Equity

Updated: 09 June 2022; Ref: scu.247741

Scholefield Goodman and Sons Ltd v Zyngier: PC 16 Aug 1985

(Victoria) By a mortgage executed in favour of the bank Mrs Zyngier covenanted to pay to the bank any sums which might be owed to it either by herself or by a named company, including any amounts for or in respect of any bills of exchange on which the company might be liable ‘either primarily or only in the event of any other person failing to duly pay the same’. Lord Brightman: ‘ The fundamental question in the present case, therefore, is whether upon the true construction of the bargain between the bank and Mrs Zyngier, Mrs Zyngier placed herself, as regards bills of exchange accepted by Zinaldi and thereafter dishonoured, in the position of a co-surety alongside the drawer or indorser; or whether, upon the true construction of the bargain, her liability to the bank upon a bill was intended to be limited to a case of default by the parties liable upon the bill. If it were the true meaning of the mortgage that the bank was required to call upon the parties to the bill before it called upon Mrs Zyngier to make good her default, then ex hypothesi no injustice ensued to the drawer upon the bank’s adoption of that course and no case for the intervention of a court of equity could arise. If a third party (in the instant case Mrs Zyngier) guarantees a bill of exchange for the benefit of a bank which discounts it, the normal understanding will be that the surety guarantees that payment will be made by one or other of the parties to the bill who are liable upon it, whether as acceptor or drawer or indorser. It will not be the normal understanding that the surety intends to place himself on a level with the drawer, so as to be answerable equally with the drawer if the acceptor defaults. There is no reason why he should. There is no reason to suppose that, in a contract between the bank and the surety, the surety desires to confer a benefit on the drawer and to share with him the responsibility for a dishonoured acceptance. Nor is there any reason why the bank should wish to call upon the surety for payment until the parties to the bill have defaulted.’ and ‘Contribution is founded on the principle that equality is equity, and there is no room for the application of this doctrine unless the surety against whom contribution is claimed has placed himself on the same level of liability as the surety who claims contribution from him. It would be possible for a bank guarantee to be so worded that the surety deliberately places himself upon an equal footing with the drawer or indorser of the bill discounted by the bank, but it would produce an irrational result. It is not a construction to be adopted unless the intention is clear, because there is no reason why the bank and the third party who gives the guarantee to the bank should have such an intention.’

Judges:

Lord Brightman

Citations:

[1986] AC 562, [1985] UKPC 31, [1985] 3 All ER 105, [1986] FLR 1, [1985] 3 WLR 953

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

Australia

Cited by:

CitedCaledonian North Sea Ltd v London Bridge Engineering Ltd and Others HL 7-Feb-2002
Substantial personal injury claims had been settled following the Piper Alpha disaster. Where a contractual indemnity had been provided under a contract, and insurance had also been taken out, but the insurance had not been a contractual . .
CitedDay v Shaw and Another ChD 17-Jan-2014
Mr and Mrs Shaw had granted a second charge over their jointly-owned matrimonial home to secure the personal guarantee given by their daughter and by Mr Shaw in respect of a bank loan to a company (Avon). Their daughter and Mr Shaw were the . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Banking, Equity

Updated: 08 June 2022; Ref: scu.191163

Commerzbank Ag v Price-Jones: CA 21 Nov 2003

The respondent had received a bonus of andpound;250,000. His employers wrote to him in error increasing it. He later chose to stay rather than take redundancy because he now expected the full amount. He resisted an order for restitution. The employer appealed.
Held: The judge had not focussed sufficiently on the terms of the letter. ‘As the Bank mistakenly made an overpayment of andpound;250,000 to Mr Price-Jones on 15 December 2000 it is entitled to restitution of that sum, unless Mr Price-Jones can establish that his position so changed that it is inequitable in all the circumstances to require him to make full restitution to the Bank. ‘The defendant had to demonstrate a sufficient causal link, in this case between the offer and his not leaving the bank. However in this case there was no ‘disenrichment’ and no reason in equity for him not to make restitution. The appeal was allowed.

Judges:

Lord Justice Mummery Lord Justice Sedley Mr Justice Munby

Citations:

Times 26-Nov-2003, [2003] EWCA Civ 1663

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedLipkin Gorman (a Firm) v Karpnale Ltd HL 6-Jun-1991
The plaintiff firm of solicitors sought to recover money which had been stolen from them by a partner, and then gambled away with the defendant. He had purchased their gaming chips, and the plaintiff argued that these, being gambling debts, were . .
CitedPhilip Collins Limited v Davis 2000
The court discussed the change of position needed to be established by a defendant resisting a claim for restitution of money paid under a mistake: The ‘change of position . . must, on the evidence, be referable in some way to the payment of [the] . .
CitedScottish Equitable v Derby 16-Mar-2001
The claimant company sought repayment of a sum paid in error to the defendant. She replied that she had changed her position as a result of and relying upon the payment.
Held: The court gave as ‘the most obvious example’ of the kind of . .
CitedNational Westminster Bank Plc v Somer International (Uk) Limited CA 22-Jun-2001
The bank by mistake credited andpound;76,000 to the Defendant’s account and erroneously later indicated that it had come from a customer of the Defendant, M; in reliance on that, the Defendant dispatched goods to the value of some andpound;13,000 to . .
CitedDextra Bank and Trust Company Limited v Bank of Jamaica PC 26-Nov-2001
(Jamaica) A cheque was drawn which was used as part a complex financial arrangement intended to purchase foreign currency to work around Jamaica’s foreign exchange control regulations. It was asserted that by presenting the cheque used in the . .
CitedNiru Battery Manufacturing Company, Bank Sepah Iran v Milestone Trading Limited CA 23-Oct-2003
The claimant had contracted to purchase lead from some of the defendants. There were delays in payment but when funds were made available they should have been repaid. An incorrect bill of lading was presented. The bill certified that the goods had . .
CitedCordell v Second Clanfield Properties Ltd 1969
In a fast developing area of law, judges should acknowledge the value of ‘fertilisers of thought’: ‘argued law is tough law . . I would expose those views to the testing and refining process of argument. Today, as of old, by good disputing shall the . .
CitedMaddison v Alderson HL 1883
The requirement of the doctrine of part performance is that the acts of part performance relied upon must be ‘referable’ to the contract sued on. The principle underlying the doctrine of part performance was expressed by Lord Selborne: ‘In a suit . .
CitedSouth Tyneside Metropolitan BC v Svenska International plc 1995
The question was asked as to whether an anticipatory change of position could support a defence to a claim for restitution: ‘save perhaps in exceptional circumstances, the defence of change of position is in principle confined to changes which take . .
CitedSutton v Sutton 1984
The husband and his wife agreed that in consideration, inter alia, of the wife consenting to the husband divorcing her on the ground of two years’ separation and consent, he would transfer the matrimonial home to her, and she would take over . .
CitedX v X (Y and Z intervening) FD 9-Nov-2001
The court considered an agreement under which the quid pro quo for the payment of a sum of money was a husband’s agreement not to defend his wife’s petition for divorce grounded on his behaviour (even though he believed that he had grounds for . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Equity, Banking, Employment

Updated: 08 June 2022; Ref: scu.188224

Bristol and West Building Society v Henning: CA 2 Apr 1985

Citations:

[1985] CLY 2950, [1985] 2 All ER 606, [1985] EWCA Civ 6, [1985] 1 WLR 778

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

AppliedEquity and Law Home Loans Ltd v Prestidge CA 1992
A house was bought in the name of one partner in an unmarried couple. It was subject to a mortgage, and the non-owner contributed a capital sum. The landowner later remortgaged for a larger sum, but without the partner’s consent. The landowner then . .
CitedScott v Southern Pacific Mortgages Ltd and Others SC 22-Oct-2014
The appellant challenged a sale and rent back transaction. He said that the proposed purchaser had misrepresented the transaction to them. The Court was asked s whether the home owners had interests whose priority was protected by virtue of section . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land, Equity

Updated: 08 June 2022; Ref: scu.187402

Century SA (UK) Ltd v Clibbery and Another: CA 17 Jul 2003

The major shareholder in the claimant company allowed the defendant and her mother to occupy a substantial house owned by the company. When possession was sought, the defendant argued that it had been promised to her that she could live there for as long as she wished. The defendant now asserted a proprietary estoppel, and appealed summary judgment against her.
Held: The matter should go to full trial.

Citations:

[2003] EWCA Civ 1374

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedGillett v Holt and Another CA 23-Mar-2000
Repeated Assurances Created Equitable Estoppel
Repeated assurances, given over years, that the claimant would acquire an interest in property on the death of the person giving the re-assurance, and upon which the claimant relied to his detriment, could found a claim of equitable estoppel. The . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Estoppel, Equity

Updated: 08 June 2022; Ref: scu.187102

Niru Battery Manufacturing Company, Bank Sepah Iran v Milestone Trading Limited: CA 23 Oct 2003

The claimant had contracted to purchase lead from some of the defendants. There were delays in payment but when funds were made available they should have been repaid. An incorrect bill of lading was presented. The bill certified that the goods had been loaded, but they had not.
Held: An inspector certifying the goods should know what was expected, and in this case it was to confirm that the goods had been laden. SGS was in breach of its duty to check that they were laden. The judge was correct to find that default causative of the loss. The judge was entitled to reach the conclusion which he did on deceit. The defence of change of position to a claim for restitution was not lost only where the defendant was dishonest or had otherwise behaved wrongfully. Where a recipient of money knew it was as a result of a mistake of factor of law it would be unconscionable not to order its return. The judge was entitled to find that the bank was not acting in good faith when it paid on the money it had received without further inquiry.

Judges:

Lord Justice Clarke Lord Justice Sedley The President

Citations:

[2003] EWCA Civ 1446, [2004] 1 All ER (Comm) 193, Gazette 20-Sep-2003, [2004] QB 985

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

Civil Liability (Contribution) Act 1978

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedRoyal Brompton Hospital National Health Service Trust v Hammond and others HL 25-Apr-2002
The claimants sought damages against the defendants for their late delivery of a building. The contractors sought to share the damages with the architects who had certified the delays, defeating their own claims.
Held: The Act sought to extend . .
CitedHenderson v Merrett Syndicates Ltd HL 25-Jul-1994
Lloyds Agents Owe Care Duty to Member; no Contract
Managing agents conducted the financial affairs of the Lloyds Names belonging to the syndicates under their charge. It was alleged that they managed these affairs with a lack of due careleading to enormous losses.
Held: The assumption of . .
CitedStandard Chartered Bank v Pakistan National Shipping Corporation 1998
‘The tort of deceit involves a false representation made by the defendant, who knows it to be untrue, or who has no belief in its truth, or who is reckless as to its truth. If the defendant intended that the plaintiff should act in reliance on such . .
CitedWilliams and Another v Natural Life Health Foods Ltd and Another HL 30-Apr-1998
A company director was not personally reliable in negligence for bad advice given by him as director unless it could clearly be shown that he had willingly accepted such personal responsibility. A special relationship involving an assumption of . .
CitedMontrod Ltd v Grundkotter Fleischvertriebs GmbH CA 20-Dec-2001
A beneficiary under a letter of credit does not owe a duty of care to the applicant (not the buyer) in presenting documents under the letter of credit. . .
CitedAssicurazioni Generali Spa v Arab Insurance Group (BSC) CA 13-Nov-2002
Rehearing/Review – Little Difference on Appeal
The appellant asked the Court to reverse a decision on the facts reached in the lower court.
Held: The appeal failed (Majority decision). The court’s approach should be the same whether the case was dealt with as a rehearing or as a review. . .
CitedBank of Credit and Commerce International (Overseas) Limited (In Liquidation); BCCI Holdings (Luxembourg) SA (In Liquidation); Bank of Credit and Commerce International SA (In Liquidation) v Price Waterhouse CA 13-Feb-1998
The special relationship between an auditor and a bank, meant that a duty of care could extend even to a second bank with its own auditors. In determining whether there had been an assumption of responsibility, the the relevant factors would include . .
CitedParkinson v St James and Seacroft University Hospital NHS Trust CA 11-Apr-2001
A mother had undergone a negligent sterilisation, and in due course she gave birth to a disabled child.
Held: The right to bodily integrity is the first and most important of the interests protected by the law of tort. The cases saying that . .
CitedHedley Byrne and Co Ltd v Heller and Partners Ltd HL 28-May-1963
Banker’s Liability for Negligent Reference
The appellants were advertising agents. They were liable themselves for advertising space taken for a client, and had sought a financial reference from the defendant bankers to the client. The reference was negligent, but the bankers denied any . .
CitedWilliams; Reid v Natural Life Health Foods Limited and Mistlin CA 5-Dec-1996
(Majority) A director of a one man company himself could himself be liable for negligent advice outside his duties as a director where his personal character known to be relied upon. In order to fix a director with personal liability, it must be . .
CitedThe Ikarian Reefer CA 1995
The court reversed the decision of the trial judge that the plaintiff insured shipowners had not deliberately scuttled their vessel or cast her away: ‘(1) The burden of showing that the trial Judge was wrong lies on the appellant . . (2) When . .
CitedBenmax v Austin Motor Co Ltd HL 1955
Except for cases which are expressly limited to questions of law, an appellant is entitled to appeal from the Court of Session to the House against any finding, whether it be a finding of law, a finding of fact or a finding involving both law and . .
CitedArmagas Ltd v Mundogas SA (‘The Ocean Frost’) CA 1985
Proof of corruption not needed for bribe
In establishing that money was paid as an improper inducement or bribe, proof of corruptness or a corrupt motive was unnecessary.
When a court looks at a decision of a judge at first instance, the court stressed the need to look at the . .
CitedIn re H and R (Minors) (Child Sexual Abuse: Standard of Proof) HL 14-Dec-1995
Evidence allowed – Care Application after Abuse
Children had made allegations of serious sexual abuse against their step-father. He was acquitted at trial, but the local authority went ahead with care proceedings. The parents appealed against a finding that a likely risk to the children had still . .
CitedTwinsectra Ltd v Yardley and Others HL 21-Mar-2002
Solicitors acted in a loan, giving an undertaking as to its application. In breach of that undertaking they released it to the borrower. The appellants appealed a finding of liability as contributors to the breach.
Held: ‘Money in a . .
CitedLipkin Gorman (a Firm) v Karpnale Ltd HL 6-Jun-1991
The plaintiff firm of solicitors sought to recover money which had been stolen from them by a partner, and then gambled away with the defendant. He had purchased their gaming chips, and the plaintiff argued that these, being gambling debts, were . .
CitedMedforth v Blake and others CA 26-May-1999
A receiver appointed to manage a business had duties over and above those of mere good faith. A receiver who failed to obtain discounts normally obtainable for supplies to the business might be liable for that failure. when considering the position . .
CitedBank of Credit and Commerce International (Overseas) Ltd and Another v Akindele CA 22-Jun-2000
The test of whether a person who received funds held them on constructive trust, was not whether he himself was dishonest, but rather whether he had knowledge of circumstances which made it unconscionable to hold on to the money received. In respect . .
CitedKenneth Starling v Lloyds TSB Bank plc CA 10-Nov-1999
The setting aside of the statutory power of a mortgagor in possession to grant a lease, by the mortgage itself did not create in the lender a duty of good faith properly to consider a request from the mortgagor for permission to let the property. It . .
CitedKleinwort Benson Ltd v Lincoln City Council etc HL 29-Jul-1998
Right of Recovery of Money Paid under Mistake
Kleinwort Benson had made payments to a local authority under swap agreements which were thought to be legally enforceable when made. Subsequently, a decision of the House of Lords, (Hazell v. Hammersmith and Fulham) established that such swap . .
CitedDextra Bank and Trust Company Limited v Bank of Jamaica PC 26-Nov-2001
(Jamaica) A cheque was drawn which was used as part a complex financial arrangement intended to purchase foreign currency to work around Jamaica’s foreign exchange control regulations. It was asserted that by presenting the cheque used in the . .
See AlsoNiru Battery Manufacturing Company and Another v Milestone Trading Ltd and others ComC 11-Jul-2002
. .
Appeal fromNIRU Battery Manufacturing Company and Another v Milestone Trading Ltd and others ComC 8-May-2003
There was a contract for the sale of lead ingots. The sale was supported by letters of credit but inaccurate certificates were issued to release payment. The parties sought now to amend the contributions in the light of the Royal Brompton Hospital . .

Cited by:

CitedCommerzbank Ag v Price-Jones CA 21-Nov-2003
The respondent had received a bonus of andpound;250,000. His employers wrote to him in error increasing it. He later chose to stay rather than take redundancy because he now expected the full amount. He resisted an order for restitution. The . .
CitedIS Innovative Software Ltd v Howes CA 19-Feb-2004
It was alleged that the defendant had backdated contracts of employment to a time when he had been employed by the claimant, and had induced staff to leave. The company appealed dismissal of its claim.
Held: The advantage of the court . .
CitedAbouRahmah and Another v Abacha and others QBD 28-Nov-2005
Claims were made as to an alleged fraud by some of the respondents. . .
CitedJeremy D Stone Consultants Ltd and Another v National Westminster Bank Plc and Another ChD 11-Feb-2013
The claimants asserted an equitable claim against funds held by the defendant bank in the name of a company owned by another defendant who they said defrauded them through a Ponzi investment scheme.
Held: The claim failed. On the evidence, the . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Banking, Equity

Updated: 08 June 2022; Ref: scu.187060

Government of Newfoundland v Newfoundland Railway: PC 7 Feb 1888

A railway company and its assignees brought action the Government. Under the contract the company was to build a railway subsidised by the government. The railway was not completed. The parties disputed whether the contract was ‘entire’ and no part of the subsidy was payable unless the railway as a whole was completed. The company succeeded on that. The government counterclaimed for the non-completion, and sought a set off from the subsidies.
Held: The Board emphasised the intertwined nature of the obligations, and said that it ‘had no hesitation in saying that in this contract the claims for subsidy and for non-construction ought to be set against one another.’ The set-off could not be made as against the assignees: that once notice of the assignment of the debt had been given, ‘the debt or claim is so severed from the rest of the contract that the assignee may hold it free from any counter-claim in respect of other terms of the same contract.’ However it distinguished between a set-off properly allowable under the contract itself, which bound an assignee of a debt due under that contract, and a cross-claim which might ‘arise from any fresh transaction freely entered into by [the government] after notice of assignment by the company.’ In the first case, ‘It would be a lamentable thing if it were found to be the law that a party to a contract may assign a portion of it, perhaps a beneficial portion, so that the assignee shall take the benefit, wholly discharged of any counter-claim by the other party in respect of the rest of the contract, which may be burdensome. There is no universal rule that claims arising out of the same contract may be set against one another in all circumstances . . Unliquidated damages may be set off as between the original parties, and also against an assignee if flowing out of and inseparably connected with dealings and transactions which also give rise to the subject of the assignment.’

Judges:

Lord Hobhouse

Citations:

(1888) 13 App Cas 199, [1888] UKPC 7

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

Canada

Cited by:

CitedSmith v Muscat CA 10-Jul-2003
The tenant was sued by his landlord for arrears of rent, but sought an equitable set-off for damages for disrepair accruing under the previous landlord.
Held: If the entitlement to recover arrears of rent passes from assignor to assignee, and . .
CitedEdlington Properties Limited v J H Fenner and Co Limited CA 22-Mar-2006
The landlord had assigned the reversion of the lease. There was an outstanding dispute with the tenant defendant who owed arrears of rent, but sought to set these off against a claim for damages for the landlord’s failure to construct the factory in . .
CitedGeldof Metaalconstructie Nv v Simon Carves Ltd CA 11-Jun-2010
The parties contracted for the supply and installation of pressure vessels by Geldof (G) for a building constructed by Simon Carves (SC). The contract contained a clause denying the remedy of set-off. G sued for the sale price, and SC now sought an . .
CitedDole Dried Fruit and Nut Co v Trustin Kerwood Ltd CA 1990
The defendant had an exclusive distributorship agency for the plaintiff in England. Under that agreement, the plaintiff sold its prunes and raisins to the defendant under separate contracts of sale. The plaintiff claimed the price of goods sold . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Equity, Contract

Updated: 08 June 2022; Ref: scu.185867

Dole Dried Fruit and Nut Co v Trustin Kerwood Ltd: CA 1990

The defendant had an exclusive distributorship agency for the plaintiff in England. Under that agreement, the plaintiff sold its prunes and raisins to the defendant under separate contracts of sale. The plaintiff claimed the price of goods sold under the latest of such sale contracts. Three weeks later the plaintiffs commenced separate proceedings in which they claimed $735,000 for goods sold and delivered under several sales. The defendants did not dispute the plaintiff’s claim but claimed in equity to set-off their counterclaim for unliquidated damages for repudiation by the plaintiff of the distributorship agreement.
Held: The counterclaim could be set off, creating an arguable defence to the claim for the price of goods sold.
Lloyd LJ regarded the impeachment test and the Newfoundland Railway test as merely ‘the same test in different language’. Referred to the exceptional rule about no set-off against freight, he continued: ‘But for all ordinary purposes, the modern law of equitable set-off is to be taken as accurately stated by the Court of Appeal in Hanak v. Green . . It is not enough that the counterclaim is ‘in some way related to the transaction which gives rise to the claim’. It must be ‘so closely connected with the plaintiff’s demand that it would be manifestly unjust to allow him to enforce payment without taking into account the crossclaim’: see The Nanfri per Lord Denning . . The authority of these cases has not been diminished by The Dominique. They establish that the mere existence of a crossclaim is insufficient. The claim and crossclaim must arise out of the same contract or transaction, and must also be so inseparably connected that the one ought not to be enforced without taking into account the other.’
and ‘The sale contracts were thus concluded in fulfilment of the agency agreement.’ and ‘In those circumstances the claim and the counterclaim are sufficiently closely connected to make it unjust to allow the plaintiffs to claim the price of goods sold and delivered without taking account of the defendants’ counterclaim for damages for breach of the agency agreement. If that is right, then the defendants are entitled to rely on their counterclaim as a set-off. It follows that they have an arguable defence for the purposes of [Order 14]. Accordingly I would dismiss the plaintiffs’ appeal.’

Judges:

Lloyd LJ

Citations:

[1990] 2 Ll Rep 309, [1990] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 309

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

ApprovedHanak v Green CA 1958
A builder was sued for his failure to complete the works he had contracted for. The buider sought a set-off against that claim of three of his one claims. One, under the contract, was for losses from the defendant’s refusal to allow his workmen . .
CitedRawson v Samuel 15-Apr-1841
Cottenham LC said: ‘We speak familiarly of equitable set-off as distinguished from set-off at law, but it will be found that this equitable set-off exists in cases where the party seeking the benefit of it can show some equitable ground for being . .
CitedHanak v Green CA 1958
A builder was sued for his failure to complete the works he had contracted for. The buider sought a set-off against that claim of three of his one claims. One, under the contract, was for losses from the defendant’s refusal to allow his workmen . .
CitedBank of Boston Connecticut v European Grain and Shipping Ltd (‘The Dominique’) HL 1989
A shipping company and a shipper responsible for the freight disputed the effect of their contract. The ship was duly loaded with its cargo and set out for the voyage from India to Europe. The bills of lading were signed. When the ship called at . .
CitedFederal Commerce Ltd v Molena Alpha Inc; (The ‘Nanfri’) CA 1978
The court considered whether claim as against a shipowner could be set off against sums due under a time charter hire.
Held: Save for any contractual provision to the contrary a tenant is entitled to deduct from the rent payable, so as to . .
CitedGovernment of Newfoundland v Newfoundland Railway PC 7-Feb-1888
A railway company and its assignees brought action the Government. Under the contract the company was to build a railway subsidised by the government. The railway was not completed. The parties disputed whether the contract was ‘entire’ and no part . .

Cited by:

CitedGeldof Metaalconstructie Nv v Simon Carves Ltd CA 11-Jun-2010
The parties contracted for the supply and installation of pressure vessels by Geldof (G) for a building constructed by Simon Carves (SC). The contract contained a clause denying the remedy of set-off. G sued for the sale price, and SC now sought an . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract, Equity

Updated: 07 June 2022; Ref: scu.416757

Bankes v Jarvis: 1903

The plaintiff was his son’s agent. The son purchased a veterinary surgeon’s practice from the defendant, agreeing to pay the rent and indemnify the defendant against liability under a lease of premises from which the practice was carried on. The son then decided to leave the country, and gave the plaintiff authority to sell the practice. The plaintiff sold it on his son’s behalf back to the defendant, in a second transaction. The defendant owed andpound;50 under that second transaction, but the son owed the defendant andpound;21 for rent and a further andpound;30 for failure to perform covenants in the lease, under the first transaction. That was a quantified counterclaim for unliquidated damages. When the plaintiff sued the defendant for the andpound;50, the defendant claimed to be able to set off the andpound;5.
Held: A claim for unliquidated damages may be set off against a claim for debt.
Channell J said: ‘The Judicature Act and more especially the Rules distinctly put an unliquidated claim on the same footing as a liquidated claim for the purpose of set-off and consequently the defendant’s claim against the plaintiff’s son, which, if liquidated, could have been pleaded before the Judicature Act as a set-off to the plaintiff’s claim can now, although unliquidated be relied on as a defence to the extent of the claim.’

Judges:

Channell J

Citations:

[1903] 1 KB 549

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedBritish Anzani (Felixstowe) Ltd v International Marine Management (UK) Ltd ChD 19-Dec-1978
Money expended by a tenant on discharging his landlord’s covenants will in appropriate circumstances operate as a partial or a complete discharge so as to furnish a defence at law to a claim for unpaid rent; and where the tenant has suffered damage . .
ExaminedHanak v Green CA 1958
A builder was sued for his failure to complete the works he had contracted for. The buider sought a set-off against that claim of three of his one claims. One, under the contract, was for losses from the defendant’s refusal to allow his workmen . .
CitedGeldof Metaalconstructie Nv v Simon Carves Ltd CA 11-Jun-2010
The parties contracted for the supply and installation of pressure vessels by Geldof (G) for a building constructed by Simon Carves (SC). The contract contained a clause denying the remedy of set-off. G sued for the sale price, and SC now sought an . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Equity, Litigation Practice

Updated: 07 June 2022; Ref: scu.247743

Deutsche Morgan Grenfell Group Plc v The Commissioners of Inland Revenue, HM Attorney General: ChD 18 Jul 2003

The taxpayer sought to bring an action for restitution by the revenue of sums paid under a mistake of law. Under the Metallgesellschaft decision, rights of election for recovery of overpaid tax applied only between UK resident companies.
Held: The limitation period began only upon the decision which stated the law, and not upon the parties first presenting the arguments which were upheld. The payment had been made under a mistake of law, and was recoverable by way of restitution.

Judges:

The Hon Mr Justice Park

Citations:

[2003] EWHC 1779 (Ch), Times 30-Jul-2003, [2003] EWHC 1866 (Ch)

Links:

Bailii, Bailii

Statutes:

Limitation Act 1980 32(1)(c)

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedMetallgesellschaft Ltd and Others v Inland Revenue Commissioners and Another Hoechst Ag and Another v Same ECJ 8-Mar-2001
The British law which meant that non-resident parent companies of British based businesses were not able to recover interest on payments of advance corporation tax, was discriminatory against other European based companies. Accordingly the law was . .
CitedHazell v Hammersmith and Fulham London Borough Council HL 1991
Swap deals outwith Council powers
The authority entered into interest rate swap deals to protect itself against adverse money market movements. They began to lose substantial amounts when interest rates rose, and the district auditor sought a declaration that the contracts were . .
CitedKleinwort Benson Ltd v Lincoln City Council etc HL 29-Jul-1998
Right of Recovery of Money Paid under Mistake
Kleinwort Benson had made payments to a local authority under swap agreements which were thought to be legally enforceable when made. Subsequently, a decision of the House of Lords, (Hazell v. Hammersmith and Fulham) established that such swap . .

Cited by:

Appeal fromInland Revenue and Another v Deutsche Morgan Grenfell Group Plc CA 4-Feb-2005
The company sought repayment of excess advance corporation tax payments made under a mistake of law. The question was the extent of the effect of the ruling in Klienwort Benson, in particular whether it covered sums paid as taxation, and how the law . .
At First InstanceDeutsche Morgan Grenfell Group Plc v Inland Revenue and Another HL 25-Oct-2006
The tax payer had overpaid Advance Corporation Tax under an error of law. It sought repayment. The revenue contended that the claim was time barred.
Held: The claim was in restitution, and the limitation period began to run from the date when . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Corporation Tax, Equity, Equity

Updated: 07 June 2022; Ref: scu.184887

Hoghton v Hoghton: CA 16 Apr 1852

When a person has made a large voluntary disposition the burden is thrown on the party benefitting to show that the disposition was made fairly and honestly and in full understanding of the nature and consequences of the transaction. Romilly MR discussed the ‘sacred’ nature of ‘without prejudice’ negotiation and that he would disregard ‘admissions made solely for the purpose of compromise’.

Judges:

Romilly MR

Citations:

(1852) 15 Beav 278, [1852] EngR 446, (1852) 15 Beav 278, (1852) 51 ER 545

Links:

Commonlii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedBarclays Bank Plc v O’Brien and Another HL 21-Oct-1993
The wife joined in a charge on the family home to secure her husband’s business borrowings. The husband was found to have misrepresented to her the effect of the deed, and the bank had been aware that she might be reluctant to sign the deed.
CitedCutts v Head and Another CA 7-Dec-1983
There had been a trial of 35 days regarding rights of way over land, which had proved fruitless, and where some orders had been made without jurisdiction. The result had been inconclusive. The costs order was now appealed, the plaintiff complaining . .
CitedOfulue and Another v Bossert HL 11-Mar-2009
The parties disputed ownership of land, one claiming adverse possession. In the course of negotations, the possessor made a without prejudice offer to purchase the paper owner’s title. The paper owner claimed that this was an acknowledgement under . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract, Equity, Litigation Practice

Updated: 07 June 2022; Ref: scu.180576

Wilson v Truelove: ChD 25 Mar 2003

The claimants requested a declaration that an option to repurchase land was void under the 1964 Act.
Held: The option to repurchase land was prima facie void. The right arose on the coming into existence of the agreement, or at the latest on the original purchase. The defendants sought assistance in equity under an estoppel by convention. The fact that the defendant’s right arose under statute did not prevent equity overriding that right. To establish an estoppel generally it was necessary to identify some unconscionable conduct on the part of the defendant. None was shown here. To establish an estoppel by convention, there was no requirement for unconscionable behaviour, but it was necessary to show some common mistake as to the meaning of the contract, followed by a course of conduct establishing reliance upon that conventional interpretation. That was absent here. The parties were merely mistaken.

Judges:

Simon Berry QC

Citations:

Times 21-Feb-2003, Gazette 13-Mar-2003, Gazette 10-Apr-2003, [2003] EWHC 750 (Ch), [2003] 23 EG 136, [2003] 2 EGLR 63, [2003] 10 EG 164, [2003] WTLR 609

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

Perpetuities and Accumulations Act 1964 9(2)

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedAdams v Lindsell KBD 5-Jun-1818
No Contract by Post until Acceptance Received
The defendant sent his offer of wool for sale to the plaintiff by post. The plaintiff’s acceptance was at first misdirected. Before receiving the reply the defendant had sold the wool elsewhere, but this was only after he would have received the . .
CitedCrabb v Arun District Council CA 23-Jul-1975
The plaintiff was led to believe that he would acquire a right of access to his land. In reliance on that belief he sold off part of his land, leaving the remainder landlocked.
Held: His claim to have raised an equity was upheld. The plaintiff . .
CitedAmalgamated Investment and Property Co Ltd (in Liq) v Texas Commerce International Bank Ltd CA 1982
The court explained the nature of an estoppel by convention.
Lord Denning MR said: ‘The doctrine of estoppel is one of the most flexible and useful in the armoury of the law. But it has become overloaded with cases. That is why I have not gone . .
CitedKeen v Holland CA 1984
Oliver LJ rejected a submission that, where parties were shown to have a common view about the legal effect of a contract into which they had entered and it was established that one of them would not, to the other’s knowledge, have entered into it . .
CitedShah v Shah CA 10-Apr-2001
The court was asked as to the enforceability of a document under the terms of which the defendants were to make a payment of pounds 1.5 million to the claimant. The document was described as a deed and provided for each defendant to sign in the . .

Cited by:

CitedTaylor v Couch ChD 1-Mar-2012
The case raised the question of law involving the application of the rule against perpetuities to what, on the claimant’s case, is a right of pre-emption created before the coming into force in 2010 of the Perpetuities and Accumulations Act 2009.’ . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land, Equity, Estoppel

Updated: 07 June 2022; Ref: scu.180367

Bhullar and others v Bhullar and Another: CA 31 Mar 2003

The claimants were 50% shareholders in a property investment company and sought relief alleging prejudicial conduct of the company’s affairs. After a falling out, two directors purchased property adjacent to a company property but in their own company name.
Held: The company had not been looking to acquire further property, and the purchase could not be described as a developing business opportunity in the standard sense. Where a fiduciary has exploited a commercial opportunity for his own benefit, the relevant question is not whether the party to whom the duty is owed had some kind of beneficial interest in the opportunity: that would be too formalistic and restrictive an approach. Rather, it is simply whether the fiduciary’s exploitation of the opportunity is such as to attract the application of the rule. Each case must be viewed on its own facts. In this case there was a conflict, and the director had acted in breach of his duty to the company. The directors were liable for profits resulting from the acquisition of a property neighbouring that of their company even though they had obtained this information not as directors but as passers-by: ‘the existence of the opportunity was information which it was relevant for the company to know, and it follows that [the directors] were under a duty to communicate it to the company.’

Judges:

Lord Justice Brooke Lord Justice Schiemann Lord Justice Jonathon Parker

Citations:

[2003] EWCA Civ 424, [2003] 2 BCLC 241

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

Companies Act 1985 459

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedRegal (Hastings) Ltd v Gulliver HL 20-Feb-1942
Directors Liability for Actions Ouside the Company
Regal negotiated for the purchase of two cinemas in Hastings. There were five directors on the board, including Mr Gulliver, the chairman. Regal incorporated a subsidiary, Hastings Amalgamated Cinemas Ltd, with a share capital of 5,000 pounds. There . .
CitedPhipps v Boardman HL 3-Nov-1966
A trustee has a duty to exploit any available opportunity for the trust. ‘Rules of equity have to be applied to such a great diversity of circumstances that they can be stated only in the most general terms and applied with particular attention to . .
CitedAberdeen Railway Co v Blaikie Brothers HL 1854
The plaintiff needed a large quantity of iron chairs (rail sockets) and contracted for their supply over an 18-month period with Blaikie Bros a partnership. Thomas Blaikie was the managing partner of Blaikie Bros and a director and the chairman of . .
CitedNew Zealand Netherlands Society ‘Oranje’ Inc v Laurentuis Cornelis Kuys PC 1963
(New Zealand) The scope of a fiduciary duty may be modified by a course of dealing by the person to whom the duty is owed. ‘The obligation not to profit from a position of trust, or, as it sometimes relevant to put it, not to allow a conflict to . .
CitedParker v McKenna CA 1874
The directors of a bank acquired for themselves, and made a profit on, certain shares the subject of a new issue that were not taken up by the bank’s shareholders.
Held: James LJ said: ‘I do not think it is necessary, but it appears to me very . .
See AlsoBhullar and others v Bhullar and others CA 26-Sep-2002
Renewed application for leave to appeal . .

Cited by:

CitedFassihim, Liddiardrams, International Ltd, Isograph Ltd v Item Software (UK) Ltd CA 30-Sep-2004
The first defendant (F) had been employed by a company involved in a distribution agreement. He had sought to set up a competing arrangement whilst a director of the claimant, and diverted a contract to his new company.
Held: A company . .
CitedUltraframe (UK) Ltd v Fielding and others ChD 27-Jul-2005
The parties had engaged in a bitter 95 day trial in which allegations of forgery, theft, false accounting, blackmail and arson. A company owning patents and other rights had become insolvent, and the real concern was the destination and ownership of . .
CitedO’Donnell v Shanahan and Another CA 22-Jul-2009
The claimant appealed against dismissal of her petition for an order for the defendants to purchase her shares at a fair value, saying that they had acted unfairly toward her. Her co-directors had acquired, for another company of which they were . .
CitedFHR European Ventures Llp and Others v Cedar Capital Partners Llc SC 16-Jul-2014
Approprietary remedy against Fraudulent Agent
The Court was asked whether a bribe or secret commission received by an agent is held by the agent on trust for his principal, or whether the principal merely has a claim for equitable compensation in a sum equal to the value of the bribe or . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Company, Equity

Updated: 07 June 2022; Ref: scu.180322

Rowe, Regina (on the Application of) v Vale of White Horse District Council: Admn 7 Mar 2003

The local council sought to claim payment for sewerage services enjoyed by a householder.
Held: Where a supplier has supplied services to another and there is no contractual relationship in existence, the law may afford to the supplier restitutionary remedy. Lightman J said: ‘there are four essential ingredients to a claim in restitution:
(i) a benefit must have been gained by the defendant;
(ii) the benefit must have been obtained at the claimant’s expense;
(iii) it must be legally unjust, that is to say there must exist a factor (referred to as an unjust fact) rendering it unjust, for the defendant to retain the benefit;
(iv) there must be no defence available to extinguish or reduce the defendant’s liability to make restitution.’

Judges:

The Hon Mr Justice Lightman

Citations:

[2003] 1 Lloyds Rep 418, [2003] EWHC 388 (Admin)

Links:

Bailii

Citing:

CitedFibrosa Spolka Akcyjna v Fairbairn Lawson Combe Barbour Ltd HL 15-Jun-1942
A contract for the supply by the respondents of special machinery to be manufactured by them was treated as an ordinary contract for the sale of goods. It began valid, but suffered frustration by the outbreak of war.
Held: Lord Wright restated . .

Cited by:

CitedGreater Manchester Police v Wigan Athletic AFC Ltd ChD 21-Dec-2007
The claimant sought payment under section 25 from the defendant football club for the costs of policing football matches. The defendant said that the sums were not due since the events had been over-policed, and had not been agreed or requested.
CitedGreater Manchester Police v Wigan Athletic AFC Ltd CA 19-Dec-2008
The parties disputed the amounts payable by a football club to the police for the attendance of police officers at matches. The defendant appealed against a finding that it had requested the services for which charges had been made under section 25 . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Utilities, Local Government, Equity

Updated: 07 June 2022; Ref: scu.179910

Mohamad Al Fayed v The Commissioner of Police of the Metropolis: CA 29 May 2002

During an action, advice from counsel had been inadvertently disclosed to the claimants. The defendant sought to restrain use of the papers in the trial. It was accepted that the papers attracted legal professional privilege, but the police also sought public interest immunity.
Held: A solicitor considering documents released to him owes no duty to the disclosing party. Once disclosure has in fact been made, it is too late to seek an injunction to protect the document against use, save in the case of an obvious mistake. The court is exercising an equitable jurisdiction, and there are no rigid rules. There had been discussions about the disclosure or withholding of different documents on different grounds, and the mistake need not have been obvious. The injunction was discharged.
Clarke LJ set out the principles applicable: ‘In our judgment the following principles can be derived from those cases:
i) A party giving inspection of documents must decide before doing so what privileged documents he wishes to allow the other party to see and what he does not.
ii) Although the privilege is that of the client and not the solicitor, a party clothes his solicitor with ostensible authority (if not implied or express authority) to waive privilege in respect of relevant documents.
iii) A solicitor considering documents made available by the other party to litigation owes no duty of care to that party and is in general entitled to assume that any privilege which might otherwise have been claimed for such documents has been waived.
iv) In these circumstances, where a party has given inspection of documents, including privileged documents which he has allowed the other party to inspect by mistake, it will in general be too late for him to claim privilege in order to attempt to correct the mistake by obtaining injunctive relief.
v) However, the court has jurisdiction to intervene to prevent the use of documents made available for inspection by mistake where justice requires, as for example in the case of inspection procured by fraud.
vi) In the absence of fraud, all will depend upon the circumstances, but the court may grant an injunction if the documents have been made available for inspection as a result of an obvious mistake.
vii) A mistake is likely to be held to be obvious and an injunction granted where the documents are received by a solicitor and:
a) the solicitor appreciates that a mistake has been made before making some use of the documents; or
b) it would be obvious to a reasonable solicitor in his position that a mistake has been made;
and, in either case, there are no other circumstances which would make it unjust or inequitable to grant relief.
viii) Where a solicitor gives detailed consideration to the question whether the documents have been made available for inspection by mistake and honestly concludes that they have not, that fact will be a relevant (and in many cases an important) pointer to the conclusion that it would not be obvious to the reasonable solicitor that a mistake had been made, but is not conclusive; the decision remains a matter for the court.
ix) In both the cases identified in vii) a) and b) above there are many circumstances in which it may nevertheless be held to be inequitable or unjust to grant relief, but all will depend upon the particular circumstances.
x) Since the court is exercising an equitable jurisdiction, there are no rigid rules.’

Judges:

Lord Justice Walker, Lord Phillips MR, Clarke LJ

Citations:

Gazette 01-Aug-2002, [2002] EWCA Civ 780, A2/2002/0758

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

Civil Procedure Rules 31.2

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedGuinness Peat Properties Ltd v Fitzroy Robinson Partnership CA 1987
Property developers (‘GPR’) were suing their architects (‘FRP’) in negligence. The claim against FRP was covered by a professional indemnity insurance policy. Once FRP was notified of GPR’s claim, FRP sent a ‘notification of claim’ to its insurer . .
CitedDerby and Co Ltd v Weldon (No 8) CA 27-Jul-1990
There had been a lengthy and contentious process of discovery. Certain documents with legal professional privilege had also been handed over inadvertently. The plaintiff sought their return and an order against them being used.
Held: The . .
CitedPizzey v Ford Motor Co Ltd CA 10-Mar-1993
Reports which had been mistakenly disclosed by a solicitor were admitted in evidence. . .
CitedInternational Business Machines Corporation v Phoenix International (Computers) Ltd ChD 28-Jul-1994
The defendant had, by mistake, included in bundles of documents produced on discovery opinions and other legally privileged material.
Held: A competent solicitor would see immediately that these had been disclosed by mistake, and an order was . .
CitedBreeze v John Stacey and Sons Ltd CA 21-Jun-1999
The introduction of the Civil Procedures Rules has done nothing to change the rules or principles affecting the receipt of privileged and confidence protected documents inadvertently disclosed to a party. He had no obligation to examine them . .

Cited by:

CitedMMI Research Ltd v Cellxion Ltd and Others ChD 24-Sep-2007
The claimant had accidentally disclosed a confidential document it should not have done. The defendant argued that there had been a waiver of privilege.
Held: Applying Al Fayed, it could not in these circumstances be said that the mistake was . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Litigation Practice, Civil Procedure Rules, Equity

Updated: 06 June 2022; Ref: scu.171335

On Demand Information Plc and others v Michael Gerson (Finance) Plc and others: HL 18 Apr 2002

The claimant took equipment under leases. After the initial period the rentals would be renewed without substantial further rental payments. The company went into administration after or toward the end of the initial period, and the lessors sought to reclaim the equipment. The administrators sought to sell it. During the case an order was made for it to be sold. After that sale, an order for relief from forfeiture could no longer be made.
Held: For an order for the sale of property in proceedings it had to be of a perishable value, and the action had to concern it. That applied here. To be such, an order should not affect the underlying position of the parties, even if it did affect the remedies which were available to give them effect. The application for relief from forfeiture was a means to an end: that of obtaining the underlying value. That was still achievable, and the order for sale had been valid.

Judges:

Lord Nicholls of Birkenhead, Lord Browne-Wilkinson, Lord Hobhouse of Woodborough, Lord Millett and Lord Scott of Foscote

Citations:

Times 02-May-2002, Gazette 23-May-2002, [2002] UKHL 13, [2003] 1 AC 368, [2002] CLC 1140, [2002] 1 All ER (Comm) 641, [2002] BCC 673, [2002] 2 WLR 919, [2002] 2 All ER 949

Links:

House of Lords, Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

Appeal fromOn Demand Information Plc and Another v Michael Gerson (Finance) Plc and Another CA 19-Sep-2000
The power to grant relief from forfeiture in finance leases was real, but ceased to be available after property repossessed by the finance company had been contracted for sale by the applicants. The application for relief was in its nature, an . .

Cited by:

Appealed toOn Demand Information Plc and Another v Michael Gerson (Finance) Plc and Another CA 19-Sep-2000
The power to grant relief from forfeiture in finance leases was real, but ceased to be available after property repossessed by the finance company had been contracted for sale by the applicants. The application for relief was in its nature, an . .
CitedSirius International Insurance Company (Publ) v FAI General Insurance Limited and others HL 2-Dec-2004
The appellant had taken certain insurance risks on behalf of the respondents, subject to banking indemnities. Disputes arose and were settled under a Tomlin order, which was now itself subject to challenge.
Held: The appeal was allowed. The . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Litigation Practice, Equity

Updated: 05 June 2022; Ref: scu.169832

Halifax Plc v Omar: CA 20 Feb 2002

The respondent occupied a flat as a tenant. The landlord had acquired it by means of a fraud on the claimant lender. The lender had been given an equitable charge over the property, and now claimed possession as subrogated to the original fraudulent owner. The tenant claimed to have taken and paid for a lease from one of the later parties to the fraud. He claimed an equitable charge by subrogation in priority to the claimant. The lender had not taken steps to register any caution to protect its interests.
Held: There are three requirements for subrogation. The money must have been used to pay the purchase price, that it had been paid by them solely for this purpose, and that the transaction was always to be on the basis that they would achieve a charge. Tracing is neither a claim nor a remedy but a process, and subrogation is a remedy, not a cause of action. The respondent was an innocent third party purchaser without notice of the claimant’s interest. There is a distinction between subrogation to a security, which includes rights in rem, and subrogation merely to the indebtedness itself which operated only in personam. The doctrine of subrogation is that, where A’s money is used to pay off B, a secured creditor, A is entitled in equity to an assignment of B’s security rights. The appeal failed, and the interest of the lender had priority.

Judges:

Lord Justice Simon Brown, Lord Justice Laws, And, Lord Justice Jonathan Parker

Citations:

[2002] EWCA Civ 121

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedBoscawen and Others v Bajwa and Others; Abbey National Plc v Boscawen and Others CA 10-Apr-1995
The defendant had charged his property to the Halifax. Abbey supplied funds to secure its discharge, but its own charge was not registered. It sought to take advantage of the Halifax’s charge which had still not been removed.
Held: A mortgagee . .
CitedBanque Financiere De La Cite v Parc (Battersea) Ltd and Others HL 16-Apr-1998
The making of an order for restitution after finding an unjust enrichment by subrogation, is not dependant upon having found any common or unilateral intention of the parties. The House distinguished between contractual subrogation of the kind most . .
ApprovedBurston Finance Ltd v Spierway Ltd ChD 1974
The lender took a charge over a property held by a company which subsequently became void because it was not registered within the required period at Companies House.
Held: A voidable charge is a valid charge unless and until set aside: . .

Cited by:

CitedCheltenham and Gloucester Plc v Appleyard and Another CA 15-Mar-2004
The owners had purchased their property with a loan from the BBBS. A charge was then given to BCCI, which charge said no further charge could be registered without BCCI ‘s consent. The C and G agreed to lend a sum to refinance the entire borrowings, . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land, Equity, Registered Land

Updated: 05 June 2022; Ref: scu.167634

Allan v Rea Brothers Trustees Limited: CA 8 Feb 2002

The claimant appealed dismissal of his claim for damages for breach of trust. The respondent had administered his pension, a ‘small self-administered scheme’. The regulations required a pensioner trustee who took on specific duties. He had been persuaded by a crook to appoint the defendant to act, knowing that it was intended to draw from the scheme unlawfully, by pretending to be an employee of a company scheme to which the assets had been transferred.
Held: The money transferred was already subject to an express trust. There was a difference between a proprietary and a personal remedy for breach of trust, the latter being affected by the knowledge of the breach in the claimant. Although the transfer of funds did not create a resulting trust, the assets were already trust assets. A beneficiary cannot complain of a breach of trust in which he knowingly participated or acquiesced. Appeal dismissed.

Judges:

Lord Justice Aldous, Lord Justice Robert Walker, Lord Justice Keene

Citations:

[2002] EWCA Civ 85

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

Retirement Benefits Schemes (Restriction on Discretion to Approve) (Small Self-Administered Schemes) Regulations 1991 (1991 No.1614)

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedStannard v Fisons Pension Trust Limited CA 1991
Fisons had sold their fertiliser division to Norsk Hydro. Acting on advice of actuaries and thinking that the fund was in deficit, the trustees made a transfer to a new fund to provide for pensions of transferring employees in accordance with a . .

Cited by:

CitedClark v Cutland CA 18-Jun-2003
One director discovered that his co-director had withdrawn substantial sums from the company. . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Financial Services, Trusts, Equity

Updated: 05 June 2022; Ref: scu.167592

Nurdin and Peacock Plc v D B Ramsden and Co Ltd: ChD 18 Feb 1999

A mistake of law was sufficient to ground an order for the repayment of money paid under that mistake. It was not necessary for there to be a mistaken belief of a liability to do so, provided the mistake was the cause of the overpayment.

Citations:

Times 18-Feb-1999, Gazette 24-Feb-1999

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

See alsoD B Ramsden and Co Ltd v Nurdin and Peacock Plc and Another ChD 14-Sep-1998
The tenant overpaid rent, including a payment in May 1997 on advice that the payment would be recoverable following litigation establishing that it was an overpayment. The court later held that the payments in question were indeed overpayments. The . .

Cited by:

See AlsoD B Ramsden and Co Ltd v Nurdin and Peacock Plc and Another ChD 14-Sep-1998
The tenant overpaid rent, including a payment in May 1997 on advice that the payment would be recoverable following litigation establishing that it was an overpayment. The court later held that the payments in question were indeed overpayments. The . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Equity

Updated: 05 June 2022; Ref: scu.84391

Langton v Langton and Another: ChD 24 Feb 1995

The doctrine of ‘unconscionable bargain’ does not extend to gifts obtained by undue influence.

Citations:

Times 24-Feb-1995, [1995] 2 FLR 890

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedRandall v Randall ChD 30-Jul-2004
The executor sought to set aside gifts made by the deceased, an elderly aunt before her death to his brother, alleging undue influence.
Held: The recipient had acted falsely in failing to declare overpayments of benefits. The deceased had been . .
CitedForsdike v Forsdike CA 21-Feb-1997
The claimant appealed dismissal of his claim to set aside a transfer by way of gift by his father on the basis of an alleged undue influence.
Held: The judges was entitled to make the findings he had done, and to be impressed by the spacing of . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Equity, Undue Influence

Updated: 04 June 2022; Ref: scu.82950

Mace and Others v Rutland House Textiles Ltd (In Administrative Receivership): ChD 1 Dec 1999

Company pension trustees granted a sub-lease to the company, and the same solicitor acted for both parties. The company sought rectification of what it claimed was a mistake in the lease. Despite the absence of any clear evidence of the precise nature of the mistake, without any outward expression of accord from which a common intention could be derived, rectification was available where the mistake was as to the language. The trustees should not be prevented from seeking to show their case. The absence of any outward and explicit instructions was not enough to defeat an application for rectification of the agreement, provided there was convincing proof of the common intention asserted.

Citations:

Gazette 01-Dec-1999, Times 11-Jan-2000

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Contract, Equity

Updated: 04 June 2022; Ref: scu.83272

Re Woodstock (a bankrupt): ChD 19 Nov 1979

Walton J drew attention in his judgment to the need for the courts, in considering how the equity of exoneration should work as between a husband and a wife, to take into account the relationship which husbands and wives bear, or ought to bear, to one another in their family affairs in current times. The guide that Victorian cases can provide to the inferences which should be drawn from the dealings with one another of husbands and wives today is often not very valuable.
As to the case of Hall v Hall: ‘I do not think I have to go into the interesting question whether that case is now good law in view of completely changed social conditions. It appears to me that that case was decided in the days when the wife did nothing except sit at home and run the household and boss the servants about, and the husband was expected to be, and indeed was, the provider. Times have now changed, and I am very far from that if that case were to be heard on precisely the same facts tomorrow, the decision would necessarily be the same.’ ‘

Judges:

Walton J

Citations:

Unrported,19 November 1979

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedHall v Hall ChD 1911
An equity of exoneration in favour of a wife arises ‘at the time she charges her estate’. The doctrine of exoneration is based on an inference in each case from all the facts of that particular case. Where one co-habitee joins in granting a charge . .

Cited by:

CitedIn Re Pittortou (a bankrupt) ChD 1985
H and W charged the property to secure the H’s overdrawn bank account. The account was used both for his business and for payment of expenses relating to the matrimonial home. H was adjudicated bankrupt. W sought her equity to be exonerated from H’s . .
CitedDay v Shaw and Another ChD 17-Jan-2014
Mr and Mrs Shaw had granted a second charge over their jointly-owned matrimonial home to secure the personal guarantee given by their daughter and by Mr Shaw in respect of a bank loan to a company (Avon). Their daughter and Mr Shaw were the . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Equity

Updated: 02 June 2022; Ref: scu.567253

Union Eagle Limited v Golden Achievement Limited: PC 3 Feb 1997

(Hong Kong) The parties had contracted with each other for the sale of land. Completion was to take place on the appointed day at 5:00pm. A ten per cent deposit had been paid, and time had been made of the essence. The seller sought to rescind the contract when the buyer was 10 minutes late in tendering the completion money.
Held: Equity will not prevent the rescission of a land contract for delay in completion. If time was of the essence, strict compliance must have been what was intended.

Judges:

Lord Hoffmann, Lord Goff of Chieveley, Lord Griffiths, Lord Mustill, Lord Hope of Craighead

Citations:

Times 07-Feb-1997, [1997] UKPC 5, [1997] 2 WLR 341, [1997] AC 514, [1997] 2 All ER 215

Links:

Bailii

Citing:

CitedWorkers Trust and Merchant Bank Ltd v Dojap Investments Ltd PC 22-Feb-1993
(Jamaica) The purchaser at an auction had been obliged under the terms of the auction contract to pay a deposit of 25%. He failed to complete, and the vendor took the deposit by way of forfeit. The standard deposit payable would be 10%. The Court of . .

Cited by:

CitedDun and Bradstreet Software Services (England) Ltd; Dun and Bradstreet Software Services Ltd v Provident Mutual Life Assurance Association and General Accident Linked Life Assurance CA 9-Jun-1997
Break clauses had been exercised on behalf of the plaintiffs. The defendant landlords appealed a decision upholding the notices. A penalty rent had been sought.
Held: There had been no sufficient agency established to validate the notice. The . .
CitedKalatara Holdings Ltd v Benedict Thomas Andersen and Another Chd 25-Jan-2008
The claimant sought specific performance of a contract to buy land from the defendant. The defendant sought summary dismissal of the claim and forfeiture of the deposit. It had been intended that the property would be ‘rolled over’ on a sub-sale. . .
CitedChinnock v Hocaoglu and Another CA 29-Oct-2008
The parties had contracted for the sale of a property subject to a residential tenancy under the 1987 Act. The purchaser appealed refusal of specific performance, the court having found that it had failed to meet a precondition for serving a notice . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Equity, Commonwealth, Land

Updated: 01 June 2022; Ref: scu.159217

Dollar Land (Cumbernauld) Ltd v CIN Properties Ltd (Scotland): HL 16 Jul 1998

(Scotland) The appellants sought compensation under the law of unjustified enrichment for losses sustained as a result of the exercise against them of a conventional irritancy.
Held: Where a landlord recovered possession of land under lease by an irritancy clause and thereby took benefit of substantial rents paid by former sub-tenants, was not subject to law of unjust enrichment and did not have to re-pay profits

Judges:

Lord Browne-Wilkinson, Lord Jauncey of Tullichettle, Lord Nolan, Lord Hoffmann, Lord Hope of Craighead

Citations:

Times 24-Aug-1998, [1998] UKHL 26, [1998] UKHL 53

Links:

House of Lords, Bailii, Bailii

Jurisdiction:

Scotland

Citing:

CitedDorchester Studios (Glasgow) Ltd v Stone HL 1975
The House was asked whether an irritancy clause was unreasonable. . .
Appeal fromDollar Land (Cumbernauld) Ltd v CIN Properties Ltd OHCS 21-Apr-1995
An arrangement creating a common economic interest is not enough to create partnership. . .
See AlsoCumbernauld and Kilsyth District Council v Dollar Land (Cumbernauld) Ltd HL 22-Jul-1993
A walkway had existed from the town centre to residential areas. When the land was acquired the defendant new owners sought to close the walkway. The authority asserted that a public right of way had been acquired.
Held: There was no need to . .
CitedMoncreiff v Hay 1842
The landlord acquired the growing crops sown by the tenant when he enforced an irritancy clause in a lease of agricultural property. . .
CitedChalmer’s Trustee v Dick’s Trustee 1909
The enforcement of an irritancy clause in an agricultural lease had deprived the tenants of all property in the crops growing at the time when the leases were terminated. . .
CitedStewart v Watson 1864
An irritancy clause taking effect on the sequestration of a tenant was lawful and, in contradistinction to a legal irritancy, could not be purged. . .
See AlsoCIN Properties Ltd v Dollar Land (Cumbernauld) Ltd HL 21-May-1992
. .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Equity

Updated: 31 May 2022; Ref: scu.158957

Governor and Company of the Bank of Scotland v Brunswick Development (1987) Ltd and Another: HL 24 Mar 1999

(Scotland) The grantor of a document was the principal under a deed, not the signatory, where these were different people. The right to rectification was decided accordingly.

Judges:

Lord Browne-Wilkinson, Lord Steyn, Lord Hoffmann, Lord Clyde, Lord Hutton

Citations:

Times 05-May-1999, [1999] UKHL 16

Links:

House of Lords, Bailii

Statutes:

Requirements of Writing (Scotland) Act 1995 Sch 2

Jurisdiction:

Scotland

Land, Equity

Updated: 31 May 2022; Ref: scu.159000

Islamic Press Agency Inc v Abdullah Abbas Al-Wazir: CA 31 Jul 2001

Equity recognises a right to payment of interest on a debt on discharge of a mortgage, even where the charge did not itself contain any such provision. Here a separate loan had come to be charged on the property, and there was no sufficient reason to displace the rule recognising the right to equitable interest.

Judges:

Lord Justice Henry, Lord Justice Robert Walker and Sir Anthony Evans

Citations:

Times 04-Oct-2001, [2001] EWCA Civ 1276

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Equity

Updated: 31 May 2022; Ref: scu.147649

Companhia De Seguros Imperio v Heath (REBX) Ltd and Others: CA 20 Jul 2000

Although a claim for breach of fiduciary duty, as a claim in equity, was not subject to the same limitation periods imposed by the Act as claims in tort or contract, a court exercising an equitable jurisdiction should apply similar periods under the equitable principle of acquiescence. A six year limitation period should be applied by analogy to a claim for equitable compensation for dishonest breach of fiduciary duty by an underwriter. Claims against the underwriter in contract and tort based on the same facts were statute barred under sections 2 and 5 of the 1980 Act. More than six years had expired since the accrual of the cause of action. The analogy of the six year time limit for claims in contract and tort would have been applied by a court of equity before 1 July 1940 to the claim for breach of fiduciary duty.

Judges:

Waller LJ

Citations:

Times 26-Sep-2000, [2001] 1 WLR 112, [2000] EWCA Civ 219

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

Limitation Act 1980 2 5

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

Appeal fromCompanhia De Seguros Imperio v Heath (Rebx) Ltd and others ComC 30-Mar-1999
ComC Insurer/reinsurer claimed damages from brokers for breach of written binding authority agreements made in 1970s – claim in tort for breaches of fiduciary duties and of duties coextensive to those under the . .

Cited by:

CitedDEG-Deutsche Investitions und Entwicklungsgesellschaft mbH v Koshy and Other (No 3); Gwembe Valley Development Co Ltd (in receivership) v Same (No 3) CA 28-Jul-2003
The company sought to recover damages from a director who had acted dishonestly, by concealing a financial interest in a different company which had made loans to the claimant company. He replied that the claim was out of time. At first instance the . .
Appealed toCompanhia De Seguros Imperio v Heath (Rebx) Ltd and others ComC 30-Mar-1999
ComC Insurer/reinsurer claimed damages from brokers for breach of written binding authority agreements made in 1970s – claim in tort for breaches of fiduciary duties and of duties coextensive to those under the . .
CitedP and O Nedlloyd Bv v Arab Metals Co and others CA 13-Dec-2006
An order for specific performance had been refused in a disputed contract for carriage. The claimant argued that normal limitation periods should not be applied by analogy.
Held: Because there was no corresponding legal remedy the remedy in . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Equity, Limitation

Updated: 31 May 2022; Ref: scu.147252

Collins, Etridge; Gonzalez v Union Bank of Switzerland Barclays Bank Plc Richard Caplan and Co (a Firm) St Georges Street Trustees Limited St James’s Trustees Limited: CA 25 May 2000

The claimants sought permission to appeal after their claim had been struck out. The claim had alleged fraud against the first defendant, and the court had found that claim to have no real prospect of success. They said that the bank had provided a financial reference upon which they relied in turning down one offer for a golf course development in Spain in favour of an offer apparently supported by the reference. The judge had held that they had not relied on the reference.
Held: The documentation made the position clear, and no businessman of any experience would have relied on the purported reference, and the reference was also subject to an effective disclaimer. The evidence now sought to be admitted could with reasonable diligence have been obtained for the trial. No important point of law or practice arose, and leave was refused.

Judges:

Otton LJ, Buxton LJ

Citations:

[2000] EWCA Civ 176

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Land, Equity, Banking, Legal Professions

Updated: 31 May 2022; Ref: scu.147209

Anthony Wroe (T/a Telepower) v Exmos Cover Limited: CA 8 Feb 2000

A licensee was in occupation of premises under an agreement which clearly denied the intention to create a tenancy. He refused to leave when requesting asserting that he was a tenant. Mistaking the law the landlord treated the occupier as a tenant and sought possession as such.
Held: The court refused jurisdiction, and the landlord was not to be estopped from returning to his assertion that the occupier was a mere licensee. There was no evidence that the occupier had relied upon any assertion that a tenancy existed to his detriment.

Citations:

Gazette 24-Feb-2000, Times 14-Mar-2000, [2000] EWCA Civ 31

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Landlord and Tenant, Equity

Updated: 31 May 2022; Ref: scu.147064

BOC Group Plc v Centeon Llc and Centeon Bio-Services Inc: CA 29 Apr 1999

The court was asked whether a clause in a share sale agreement setting out the payment obligation worked to preclude the purchaser from exercising a right of set-off when the time comes to pay a later instalment of the price.
Held: The appeal was dismissed. The right of set-off had effectively been excluded. ‘The meaning of general words, even ‘whatsoever’, may be limited by the context in which they appear. They may be used to refer to a class or category, a genus (or what Mr Pollock called a tribe) of which some but not necessarily all the members are identified in the clause. ‘ and ‘the hypothesis that the parties intended to exclude rights of set-off can be tested in this way: what words might they have used to make their meaning clear? There is not necessarily a magic formula, but words such as ‘payment in full without deduction or withholding of any sort’ are all familiar in contexts such as this. The failure of the parties to use any such words amounts to an eloquent silence. But this is not determinative of the meaning which the parties did in fact use. The phrase used, that is to say ‘not affected by … whatsoever’ does tend to include rather than exclude. That is to say, in the present case tends towards meaning that the payment of the full amount due shall not be affected in any way.’

Judges:

Evans LJ, Brooke LJ

Citations:

[1999] EWCA Civ 1293, [1999] 1 All ER (Comm) 970

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedSmith v UMB Chrysler (Scotland) Ltd HL 9-Nov-1977
The principles set out in Canada Steamship apply to ‘clauses which purport to exempt one party to a contract from liability’. The principles should be applied without ‘mechanistic construction’.
Lord Keith of Kinkel said: The tests were . .
CitedContinental Illinois National Bank and Trust Company of Chicago v John Paul Papanicolaou (The Fedora) CA 1986
The court considered the effect of a guarantee clause.
Held: The provisions of the guarantee went to timing and cash flow rather than liability. A term excluding a right of set-off is not to be treated in the same way as an exclusion clause. . .
CitedCoca-Cola Financial Corporation v Finsat International Ltd and Others CA 1-May-1996
Party may contract out of right of set-off. Issue justiciable under Order 14. . .
CitedMottram Consultants Ltd v Bernard Sunley and Sons Ltd HL 1975
Stone panels which had been fixed to the external walls of a school fell off, owing to defective fixing by the contractor.
Held: The contractor was liable for the cost of reinstating the stone panels, calculated at the date when the defect was . .
CitedInvestors Compensation Scheme Ltd v West Bromwich Building Society HL 19-Jun-1997
Account taken of circumstances wihout ambiguity
The respondent gave advice on home income plans. The individual claimants had assigned their initial claims to the scheme, but later sought also to have their mortgages in favour of the respondent set aside.
Held: Investors having once . .
CitedWRM Group Limited (Formerly Known As WRM Logistics Limited) v Wood; Burcher; Wood; Chick and Irving CA 21-Nov-1997
Breach of share sale agreement. . .
CitedSociety of Lloyd’s v Leighs; Lyon and Wilkinson and Canadian Names Intervenors CA 31-Jul-1997
. .
CitedLarsen v Sylvester HL 1908
A vessel was delayed by congestion for 9 days whilst waiting to load; she then loaded within the 84 hours allowed as laytime. The charterparty contained an exceptions clause which stated: ‘the parties hereto mutually exempt each other from all . .
CitedChandris v Isbrandtsen-Moller Co Inc CA 1950
The court considered whether an arbitrator could award interest in circumstances where section 3 of the 1934 Act expressly conferred such a power on ‘the court’ in proceedings tried in a ‘court of record’.
Held: Although section 3(1) of the . .
CitedTor Line AB v Alltrans Group of Canada (The ‘TFL Prosperity’) HL 1984
A roll-on roll-off liner tendered under a charter party did not conform to the description in the contract and the owners relied on a widely drawn exclusion clause.
Held: The owners’ argument failed. A literal interpretation would have . .
CitedConnaught Restaurants Ltd v Indoor Leisure Ltd CA 17-Sep-1993
The lease provided the tenant would pay the rent ‘without any deduction’.
Held: The words ‘without any deductions’ in a lease were ambiguous and were insufficient to exclude the tenant’s right to claim a set off. Clear words are needed before . .
CitedMarubeni Corporation v Sea Containers Ltd ComC 17-May-1995
Procedure – set-off – contract for supply of containers – construction of contract – clear words to exclude right of set-off – equitable set-off – abatement – defective containers. The words ‘without deduction’ have been held in the context of a . .
CitedBeaufort Developments (NI) Limited v Gilbert-Ash NI Limited and Others HL 26-Feb-1998
The contractual ability given to an arbitrator under standard JCT terms did not oust the court from assessing and prejudging the acts of the architect under a building contract. As to the means for interpreting documents, Lord Hoffmann said: ‘I . .

Cited by:

CitedEdlington Properties Limited v J H Fenner and Co Limited CA 22-Mar-2006
The landlord had assigned the reversion of the lease. There was an outstanding dispute with the tenant defendant who owed arrears of rent, but sought to set these off against a claim for damages for the landlord’s failure to construct the factory in . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract, Equity, Company

Updated: 30 May 2022; Ref: scu.146208

Portman Building Society v Hamlyn Taylor Neck (a Firm): CA 22 Apr 1998

The mortgage advance had been against an express requirement that the client use the property as his private residence. After the client defaulted, the appellant lender discovered that the solicitors acting for themselves and the lay client had known of his intention to use it as a guest house. The Society now appealed against strike out of its claim for restitution from the solicitors.
Held: The appeal failed. This was not a claim in restitution: ‘any claim to restitution raises the questions: (l) has the defendant been enriched? (2) If so, is his enrichment unjust? (3) Is his enrichment at the expense of the plaintiff? There are several factors which make it unjust for a defendant to retain the benefit of his enrichment; mistake is one of them. But a person cannot be unjustly enriched if he has not been enriched at all. That is why it is necessary to ask all three questions and why the fact that a payment may have been made, e.g. by mistake, is not by itself sufficient to justify a restitutionary remedy. ‘

Judges:

Millett, Morritt, Brooke LJJ

Citations:

[1998] 4 All ER 202, [1998] EWCA Civ 686

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedMothew (T/a Stapley and Co) v Bristol and West Building Society CA 24-Jul-1996
The solicitor, acting in a land purchase transaction for his lay client and the plaintiff, had unwittingly misled the claimant by telling the claimant that the purchasers were providing the balance of the purchase price themselves without recourse . .
CitedHolland v Russell 13-Jun-1861
holland_russell1861
Insurance. Suppression of material fact. Principal and agent. Money had and received. A, as agent for a foreign owner, entered into a policy of insurance on a ship in the usual form. At the time of effecting the insurance, A was in possession of a . .
CitedBarclays Bank v WJ Simms and Cooke (Southern) Ltd QBD 1979
The customer made out a cheque to pay his builder, but countermanded it. The bank paid the cheque when it was presented by mistake, and now sought repayment from the builder.
Held: The bank succeeded. The court discussed the extent of a . .
CitedRe Chapman ex parte Edwards CA 1884
The solicitor for the petitioning creditor was liable to account to the trustee for money which he had received from the debtor after he (necessarily) had notice of the act of bankruptcy on which the petition was founded and which he had paid to his . .

Cited by:

CitedJeremy D Stone Consultants Ltd and Another v National Westminster Bank Plc and Another ChD 11-Feb-2013
The claimants asserted an equitable claim against funds held by the defendant bank in the name of a company owned by another defendant who they said defrauded them through a Ponzi investment scheme.
Held: The claim failed. On the evidence, the . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Torts – Other, Equity

Updated: 30 May 2022; Ref: scu.144164

Dennis v McDonald: CA 1982

The plaintiff and defendant had lived together in a house held in their joint names. The woman left the home as a result of the man’s violence, and he kept up the mortgage payments.
Held: If in order to do equity between the parties an occupation rent should be paid, this would be declared and the appropriate inquiry ordered. Only in cases where the tenants in common not in occupation were in a position to enjoy their right to occupy but chose not to do so voluntarily, and were not excluded by any relevant factor, would the tenant in common in occupation be entitled to do so free of liability to pay an occupation rent. He held that the woman was not a free agent. She was caused to leave the family home as a result of the violence or threatened violence of the defendant. She fell within the category of person excluded from the property ‘the basic principle that a tenant in common is not liable to pay an occupation rent by virtue merely of his being in sole occupation of the property does not apply in the case where an association similar to a matrimonial association has broken down and one party is, for practical purposes, excluded from the family home.’

Judges:

Purchas J, Sir John Arnold P

Citations:

[1982] Fam 63

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedByford v Butler; In re Byford deceased ChD 10-Jun-2003
The house was owned in joint names. The husband became bankrupt, and the wife continued to pay the mortgage as to interest and capital. The trustee sought a declaration as to the ownership of the interests in the house. After the husband died, the . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land, Equity

Updated: 29 May 2022; Ref: scu.183864

In Re K: CA 1986

The court dismissed the appeal against the exercise of discretion by Vinelott J at first instance. After hearing a detailed argument as to why the Judge had not properly exercised his discretion in making a modification order which applied to all the interest accruing to a widow on the death of her husband, Griffiths LJ concluded: ‘The discretion given to the Judge by section 2(2) is couched in the widest language. I, too, would like to pay tribute to the great care and lucidity with which the Judge reviewed all the material circumstances in this case. I have not been persuaded that any grounds have been demonstrated which would justify this court in interfering with the exercise of his discretion.’

Judges:

Griffiths, Ackner and Browne-Wilkinson LJJ

Citations:

[1986] Ch 180

Statutes:

Forfeiture Act 1982 2(2)

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedDunbar (As Administrator of Tony Dunbar Deceased) v Plant CA 23-Jul-1997
The couple had decided on a suicide pact. They made repeated attempts, resulting in his death. Property had been held in joint names. The deceased’s father asked the court to apply the 1982 Act to disentitle Miss Plant.
Held: The appeal was . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Equity, Trusts

Updated: 29 May 2022; Ref: scu.185184

Mothew (T/a Stapley and Co) v Bristol and West Building Society: CA 24 Jul 1996

The solicitor, acting in a land purchase transaction for his lay client and the plaintiff, had unwittingly misled the claimant by telling the claimant that the purchasers were providing the balance of the purchase price themselves without recourse to further borrowing when he knew that they were using an overdraft to obtain further funding. The plaintiff claimed in breach of trust.
Held: A claim for damages for a solicitor’s failure to disclose the existence of a 2nd mortgage must show that damage flowed from the failure alleged.
Millett LJ said: ‘A fiduciary is someone who has undertaken to act for or on behalf of another in a particular matter in circumstances which give rise to a relationship of trust and confidence. The distinguishing obligation of a fiduciary is the obligation of loyalty. The principal is entitled to the single-minded loyalty of his fiduciary. This core liability has several facets. A fiduciary must act in good faith; he must not make a profit out of his trust; he must not place himself in a position where his duty and his interest may conflict; he may not act for his own benefit or the benefit of a third person without the informed consent of his principal. This is not intended to be an exhaustive list, but it is sufficient to indicate the nature of fiduciary obligations. They are the defining characteristics of the fiduciary.’
He is not subject to fiduciary obligations because he is a fiduciary; it is because he is subject to them that he is a fiduciary: ‘A fiduciary who acts for two principals with potentially conflicting interests without the informed consent of both is in breach of the obligation of undivided loyalty; he puts himself in a position where his duty to one principal may conflict with his duty to another . . This is sometimes described as ‘the double employment rule.” and
‘Finally, the fiduciary must take care not to find himself in a position where there is an actual conflict of duty so that he cannot fulfil his obligations to one principal without failing in his obligations to the other . . If he does, he may have no alternative but to cease to act for at least one and preferably both. The fact that he cannot fulfil his obligations to one principal without being in breach of his obligations to the other will not absolve him from liability.’
As to breach of the duty: ‘Breach of fiduciary obligation, therefore, connotes disloyalty or infidelity. Mere incompetence is not enough. A servant who loyally does his incompetent best for his master is not unfaithful and is not guilty of a breach of fiduciary duty.’
If the trustee has benefited from the breach, the court will order him to account for it on the application of the beneficiary. Millett LJ described such relief as ‘primarily restitutionary or restorative rather than compensatory’.

Judges:

Millett LJ

Citations:

Times 02-Aug-1996, [1996] EWCA Civ 533, [1998] Ch 1, [1997] 2 WLR 436, [1996] 4 All ER 698

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedBirmingham Midshires Building Society v Infields (A Firm) TCC 20-May-1999
The defendant solicitors had acted for the lenders and borrower in a mortgage transaction. The claimant sought repayment of the entire loan, alleging breach of fiduciary duty, in having preferred the interests of one client over those of another. . .
CitedArklow Investments Ltd and Another v Maclean and Others PC 1-Dec-1999
PC (New Zealand) Land was offered for sale. A potential buyer, the appellant was approached by a merchant bank with a proposal for finance. When he sought finance elsewhere, a company associated with the bank . .
CitedDEG-Deutsche Investitions und Entwicklungsgesellschaft mbH v Koshy and Other (No 3); Gwembe Valley Development Co Ltd (in receivership) v Same (No 3) CA 28-Jul-2003
The company sought to recover damages from a director who had acted dishonestly, by concealing a financial interest in a different company which had made loans to the claimant company. He replied that the claim was out of time. At first instance the . .
CitedThe Secretary of State for Trade and Industry v Goldberg, Mcavoy ChD 26-Nov-2003
The Secretary of State sought a disqualification order. The director argued that one shoul not be made in the absence of some breach of legal duty, some dishonesty should be shown.
Held: The answer was a mixture of fact and law. A breach of . .
CitedMarks and Spencer plc v Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer (A Firm) ChD 2-Jun-2004
The claimant sought an injunction preventing the respondent form of solicitors acting for a client in a bid for the claimant, saying that the firm was continuing to act for it, and that a conflict of interest arose.
Held: Though the . .
CitedMarks and Spencer Group Plc and Another v Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer CA 3-Jun-2004
The defendant firm of solicitors sought leave to appeal against an injunction requiring them not to act for a client in making a bid to take over the business of the claimant, a former client of the firm.
Held: Leave was refused. The appeal . .
CitedNewgate Stud Company, Newgate Stud Farm Llc v Penfold, Penfold Bloodstock Limited ChD 21-Dec-2004
The claimants sought damages from the defendant. He had been employed to manage their horse-racing activities, and it was alleged that he had made secret profits. The defendant denied any dishonesty, saying all matters were known to the deceased . .
CitedHilton v Barker Booth and Eastwood HL 3-Feb-2005
The claimant had instructed the defendant solicitors to act for him, where he was to contract with another client of the same solicitor in a land development. The solicitor failed to disclose that the other client had convictions for dishonesty, and . .
CitedUltraframe (UK) Ltd v Fielding and others ChD 27-Jul-2005
The parties had engaged in a bitter 95 day trial in which allegations of forgery, theft, false accounting, blackmail and arson. A company owning patents and other rights had become insolvent, and the real concern was the destination and ownership of . .
CitedRatiu, Karmel, Regent House Properties Ltd v Conway CA 22-Nov-2005
The claimant sought damages for defamation. The defendant through their company had accused him acting in such a way as to allow a conflict of interest to arise. They said that he had been invited to act on a proposed purchase but had used the . .
CitedLloyds TSB Bank Plc v Markandan and Uddin (A Firm) ChD 14-Oct-2010
The claimant sought damages saying that the defendant firm of solicitors had failed to deal properly with a conveyance having paid across the mortgage funds to a non-existent firm of solicitors and without obtaining the appropriate documents at all. . .
CitedBarnes and Another v Black Horse Ltd QBD 31-May-2011
The claimants sought repayment by the bank of sums paid to them for Payment Protection Insurance policies sold to them in connection with loans made by the bank. The Bank now resisted an application for leave to amend the particulars of the . .
CitedCook v The Mortgage Business Plc CA 24-Jan-2012
The land owners sought relief from possession orders made under mortgages given in equity release schemes: ‘If the purchaser raises all or part of the purchase price on mortgage, and then defaults, the issue arises whether the mortgagee’s right to . .
CitedPortman Building Society v Hamlyn Taylor Neck (a Firm) CA 22-Apr-1998
The mortgage advance had been against an express requirement that the client use the property as his private residence. After the client defaulted, the appellant lender discovered that the solicitors acting for themselves and the lay client had . .
CitedMortgage Express v Abensons Solicitors (A Firm) ChD 20-Apr-2012
The claimant lender sought damages against the defendant solicitors alleging negligence and breach of fiduciary duty by them in acting for them on mortgage advances. The defendants now argued that the allowance of an amendment to add the allegation . .
CitedLeeds and Holbeck Building Society v Arthur and Cole ChD 2001
A claim for breach of fiduciary duty by a solicitor as against his lender client, required that it be found that the solicitor ‘did not disclose matters which he admittedly ought to have done to the claimant, intentionally and consciously, knowing . .
CitedFHR European Ventures Llp and Others v Cedar Capital Partners Llc SC 16-Jul-2014
Approprietary remedy against Fraudulent Agent
The Court was asked whether a bribe or secret commission received by an agent is held by the agent on trust for his principal, or whether the principal merely has a claim for equitable compensation in a sum equal to the value of the bribe or . .
CitedAIB Group (UK) Plc v Mark Redler and Co Solicitors SC 5-Nov-2014
Bank not to recover more than its losses
The court was asked as to the remedy available to the appellant bank against the respondent, a firm of solicitors, for breach of the solicitors’ custodial duties in respect of money entrusted to them for the purpose of completing a loan which was to . .
CitedHalton International Inc (Holding) and Another v Guernroy Ltd ChD 9-Sep-2005
Parties had entered into a shareholders’ agreement as to voting arrengemets within a company. Thay disputed whether votes had been used in reach of that agreement, particularly as to the issue of new shares and their allotment, but the court now . .
CitedLehtimaki and Others v Cooper SC 29-Jul-2020
Charitable Company- Directors’ Status and Duties
A married couple set up a charitable foundation to assist children in developing countries. When the marriage failed an attempt was made to establish a second foundation with funds from the first, as part of W leaving the Trust. Court approval was . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Professional Negligence, Legal Professions, Equity, Agency

Updated: 29 May 2022; Ref: scu.140400

Legal Services Commission v Henthorn: QBD 4 Feb 2011

The claimant sought to recover overpayments said to have been made to the defendant barrister in the early 1990s. Interim payments on account had been made, but these were not followed by final accounts. The defendant, now retired, said that the claims were defeated by limitation and laches and were an abuse of process because of long delay by the claimant.
Held: The case of Rasool was on point and settled it that the relation between the lawyer and his client under the legal aid system remained the same despite the funding arrangement under legal aid. Under that arrangement the claimant could have begun its claim, time ran from the date that the work under the certificate was actually completed and all but two of the claims were time barred.
The claimant also claimed in restitution. However, ‘the exclusive remedy available to the LSC is that provided for by regulation 100(8)’ and no restitutionary claim could arise on the basis of the claims pleaded, and if it were available it would now be defeated by laches and limitation. Similarly the claimant had been unreasonable or unfair in its use of its powers in this way. The claim for abuse of process succeeded.
‘the Regulations gave the LSC full powers to obtain all necessary information and also provided strict time limits for the assessment process. What regrettably occurred throughout the 1990s was a culture of acquiescence in which the LSC did not seek regular reports on stale cases, did not exercise its powers of discharge when cases went to sleep and were not reported on, did not ensure that bills that were lodged for taxation outside the three month period permitted by the RSC were subject to penalties so as to discourage such delays and did not require solicitors who delayed in lodging bills of costs to lodge them under threat of discharge and consequent non-payment. In any event, it is not possible to identify the ingredients of the relevant cause of action by reference to the relaxed way in which the regulations were implemented.’

Judges:

Anthony Thornton QC J

Citations:

[2010] EWHC 3329 (QB)

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

Civil Legal Aid (General) Regulations 1989, Limitation Act 1980

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedCoburn v Colledge CA 5-Apr-1897
A solicitor commenced an action on June 12th, 1896 for his fees for work which had been completed on May 30th 1889.
Held: A period of limitation runs from the date on which the ingredients of the cause of action are complete. The statute of . .
CitedLondon Borough of Hillingdon v ARC Limited CA 7-Apr-1998
The company sought compensation for land taken under compulsory purchase powers by the defendants several years before. It now appealed against the defeat of its claim as time-barred.
Held: The appeal failed. The limitation period for a claim . .
CitedLegal Services Commission v Rasool CA 5-Mar-2008
The defendant had in 1993 obtained legal aid. Work was done but the certificate was then revoked. The Commission sought repayment of the sums paid on account to his solicitors. He replied that the claim was out of time. The Commission argued that . .
CitedLeivers v Barber Walker and Co Ltd CA 1943
Goddard LJ (dissenting) said that section 2(1)(d) of the 1939 Act changed the former position altogether, leaving the provision for limitation as regards specialties to apply only to deeds and other documents under seal (or to claims other than for . .
CitedCentral Electricity Generating Board v Halifax Corporation HL 1963
Under the 1947 Act, the assets of electricity undertakings were transferred to to electricity boards. Property held by local authorities as authorised undertakers should, on vesting day, vest in the relevant board. A question arose as to whether . .
CitedThe Child Poverty Action Group v Secretary of State for Work and Pensions SC 8-Dec-2010
The Action Group had obtained a declaration that, where an overpayment of benefits had arisen due to a miscalculation by the officers of the Department, any process of recovering the overpayment must be by the Act, and that the Department could not . .
CitedChild Poverty Action Group, Regina (on the Application of) v Secretary Of State for Work and Pensions CA 14-Oct-2009
CPAG appealed against a refusal of a declaration that the respondent could use only the 1992 Act to recover overpayment of benefits where there had been neither misrepresentation nor non-disclosure.
Held: The appeal succeeded, and the court . .
CitedDoherty and others v Birmingham City Council HL 30-Jul-2008
The House was asked ‘whether a local authority can obtain a summary order for possession against an occupier of a site which it owns and has been used for many years as a gipsy and travellers’ caravan site. His licence to occupy the site has come to . .
CitedBarber v London Borough of Croydon CA 11-Feb-2010
The tenant who suffered learning and behavioural difficulties appealed against an order for possession of his council flat. He had become aggressive with the caretaker. The council sought possession, and he defended the claim saying that the council . .

Cited by:

Appeal fromLegal Services Commission v Henthorn CA 30-Nov-2011
The Commission sought to recover what it said were payments made on account to the respondent barrister, but only after many years had passed. The Commission argued that time only began to run once it requested repayment.
Held: The appeal . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Legal Professions, Equity, Limitation, Legal Aid

Updated: 27 May 2022; Ref: scu.428706

Jones v Morgan: CA 28 Jun 2001

The claimant appealed against an order refusing him enforcement an agreement for the purchase of a one half share in a property. The judge had found the agreement to be unconscionable.
Held: The appeal was dismissed. The judge had wrongly attributed to the claimant an understanding of the amendments to the standard document for which there had been no evidence given. The doctrine that a mortgagee could not extract, under his charge, any collateral contract to purchase or stipulate for an option to purchase, any part of an interest in the mortgaged property, survived in English law but, that doctrine, against allowing anything to act as a clog on the equity of redemption, no longer serves a useful purpose in English law, and would be better if excised.
As to the former rule against a clog on the equity of a redemption, Chadwick LJ summarised the principles: ‘ (i) there is a rule that a mortgagee cannot as a term of the mortgage enter into a contract to purchase, or stipulate for an option to purchase, any part of or interest in the mortgaged property; (ii) the foundation of the rule is that a contract to purchase, or an option to purchase, any part of or interest in the mortgaged property, is repugnant to or inconsistent with the transaction of mortgage of which it forms part, and so must be rejected; (iii) the reason why the contract or option to purchase is repugnant to or inconsistent with the mortgage transaction is that it cannot stand with the contractual proviso for redemption or with the equitable right to redeem – the proviso for redemption (and, where the contractual date for redemption is past, the equitable right to redeem) requires the mortgagee to reconvey the mortgaged property to the mortgagor in the state in which it had been conveyed to him at the time of the mortgage; and (iv) it is essential, in any case to which the rule is said to apply, to consider whether or not the transaction is, in substance, a transaction of mortgage.’
Lord Phillips MR said: ‘the doctrine of a clog on the equity of redemption is, so it seems to me, an appendix to our law which no longer serves a useful purpose and would be better excised.’

Judges:

Lord Phillips of Worth Matravers MR, Pill LJ, Chadwick LJ

Citations:

Times 24-Jul-2001, [2001] EWCA Civ 995, (2001) 82 P and CR DG20, [2001] NPC 104, [2001] Lloyds Rep Bank 323, [2002] 1 EGLR 125

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedPao On and Others v Lau Yiu Long and Others PC 9-Apr-1979
(Hong Kong) The board was asked whether a contract of guarantee had been obtained by duress.
Held: Lord Scarman said: ‘Duress, whatever form it takes, is a coercion of the will so as to vitiate consent. Their Lordships agree with the . .
CitedUniverse Tankships Inc of Monrovia v International Transport Workers Federation HL 1-Apr-1981
A ship belonging to the appellants had been blacked by the defendant union. Negotiations to clear the threat resulted in payment by the appellants to a welfare fund of the defendant. The company sought its refund saying that it had been paid under . .
CitedG and C Kreglinger v The New Patagonian Meat and Cold Storage Company HL 20-Nov-1913
Mortgagor’s collateral dvantage is not a clog
The appellant woolbrokers had lent the respondent andpound;10,000 with a floating charge over its undertaking. The loan agreement provided that, for five years, the appellants would have first refusal over all sheepskins sold by the company. The . .
CitedCredit Lyonnais Bank Nederland Nv v Burch CA 20-Jun-1996
The defendant had charged her property to secure her employer’s debt. When the bank sought repossession, she said that the charge had been affected by the undue influence and that the terms of the charge were so harsh and inconscionable that a court . .
CitedCTN Cash and Carry v Gallaher CA 15-Feb-1993
The buyer paid a sum demanded by the seller who threatened otherwise to withdraw the credit facilities it provided to the buyer. The sum was not in fact due, but the demand had been made honestly. The buyer said the agreement was voidable for . .
CitedAlec Lobb (Garages) Ltd v Total Oil Ltd QBD 1983
To establish that a contract was unconscionable, a party had to have made an unconscientious use of its superior position or superior bargaining power to the detriment of someone suffering from some special disability or disadvantage. This weakness . .
CitedNoakes and Co Ltd v Rice HL 17-Dec-1901
Rule Against Clog on equity of Redemption
A mortgage of a leasehold public house contained a covenant with the mortgagee, a brewery, that the mortgagor and his successors in title would not, during the continuance of the leasehold term and whether or not any money should be owing on the . .
CitedReeve v Lisle and others CA 1902
The parties had entered into a series of agreements for loans, and partnerships. The defendants resisted a request by the plaintiff to be allowed, under the agreement, into partnership on a failure to repay the loan.
Held: The appeal . .
CitedReeve v Lisle and others HL 1902
In 1896 the plaintiffs agreed to lend andpound;5,000 to the defendant to be secured by a ship mortgage (executed later), requiring that if at any time during the period of two years the plaintiffs should elect to enter into partnership with the . .
CitedBradley v Carritt HL 11-May-1903
Shares in a tea company had been mortgaged to secure a loan from a broker on terms that the mortgagor would seek to ensure that the mortgagee should thereafter have sale of the company’s teas. The mortgage contained a covenant that, if the company . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land, Equity, Contract, Banking

Updated: 25 May 2022; Ref: scu.136162

Hurst v Bennett and Others In Re A Debtor (No 302 of 1997): CA 16 Feb 2001

A former partner in a firm could not set off sums due to him from the former partnership, against sums expended by remaining partners in acting to protect partnership property, and claimed from him. There was insufficient mutuality to enforce the set off. The one claim was by partners but as trustees, and the other was a claim directly under the partnership.

Citations:

Times 15-Mar-2001, Gazette 26-Apr-2001, [2001] EWCA Civ 182

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

Insolvency Rules 1986 (SI 1986 No 1925) 4.218(1) 4.220(1)

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Equity, Company, Insolvency

Updated: 23 May 2022; Ref: scu.135567

Bim Kemi v Blackburn Chemicals Ltd: CA 3 Apr 2001

The question was the degree of connection which must be shown between (1) a claim for unliquidated damages for breach of a contract and (2) a cross-claim for unliquidated damages for breach of a different contract between the same parties, in order to permit the latter claim to be the subject of an equitable set-off against the former claim.
Held: The degree of closeness required for an equitable or transaction set-off was that of an ‘inseparable connection’, but it was not necessary that the cross-claim should arise out of the same contract. All that was required was that it should flow from the dealings and transactions which gave rise to the subject of the claim.
Potter LJ said: ‘Like the Judge, I consider that Mr. Turner’s submissions for Blackburn are correct. In so holding, again like the Judge, I regard it as appropriate to apply the test propounded by Lord Brandon in the Bank of Boston case unconstrained by the former concept, difficult to define and apply, of ‘impeachment of title’, which has since been replaced, or at least redefined, in terms of a cross-claim which ‘flows out of and is inseparably connected with the dealings and transactions giving rise to the subject in the claim’. While the circumstances of every case call for individual consideration, it seems to be that the Dole Fruit case provides a useful parallel with the situation in this case. There, the Court was satisfied there was a sufficiently close connection in the case of a claim for the price of goods sold and delivered pursuant to a contract made under the ‘umbrella’ of a distributorship agreement which had been repudiated.’

Judges:

Potter LJ, Sedley LJ, Jonathan Parker LJ

Citations:

[2001] 2 Ll Rep 93, [2001] EWCA Civ 457, [2001] CLC 1166, [2001] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 93

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

See alsoBim Kemi Ab v Blackburn Chemicals Ltd ComC 30-Jan-2002
. .
See alsoBim Kemi Ab v Blackburn Chemicals Ltd CA 13-Feb-2003
. .
See alsoBim Kemi Ab v Blackburn Chemicals Ltd CA 24-Jun-2003
It had been argued by the claimant in written submissions (although not maintained orally) that an order for payment of pre-judgment interest on costs should never be made. As to an award of interest on costs:- ‘In any event in principle there seems . .
See alsoBim Kemi Ab v Blackburn Chemicals Limited ComC 6-Feb-2004
. .
CitedBenford Ltd and Another v Lopecan Sl QBD 30-Jul-2004
The parties disputed the coverage agreed under a distribution agreement.
Held: ‘The counterclaim operated as a defence by way of set off. In order to establish that defence the defendant will have to prove the losses pleaded . . . Until the . .
CitedInveresk Plc v Tullis Russell Papermakers Ltd SC 5-May-2010
The parties had undertaken the sale of a business (from I to TR) with part of the consideration to be payable on later calculation of the turnover. The agreement provided for an audit if the parties failed to agree. TR issued a figure. I argued that . .
See AlsoBim Kemi Ab v Blackburn Chemicals Ltd SCCO 24-Jun-2003
. .
See AlsoBlackburn Chemicals Ltd v Bim Kemi Ab CA 10-Nov-2004
The parties entered into exclusive cross marketing agreements. The defendant resisted enforcement of the contract saying it was void under European law, being contrary to Article 81. The parties were alleged to have agreed to make cross purchases. . .
CitedGeldof Metaalconstructie Nv v Simon Carves Ltd CA 11-Jun-2010
The parties contracted for the supply and installation of pressure vessels by Geldof (G) for a building constructed by Simon Carves (SC). The contract contained a clause denying the remedy of set-off. G sued for the sale price, and SC now sought an . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Equity, Contract

Updated: 23 May 2022; Ref: scu.135513

Earl Beauchamp v Winn: HL 1873

The rules in equity as to restitution after a payment made under a mistake of law apply as much to mistakes of fact as to mistakes of law.

Citations:

(1873) LR 6 HL 223

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedKleinwort Benson Ltd v Lincoln City Council etc HL 29-Jul-1998
Right of Recovery of Money Paid under Mistake
Kleinwort Benson had made payments to a local authority under swap agreements which were thought to be legally enforceable when made. Subsequently, a decision of the House of Lords, (Hazell v. Hammersmith and Fulham) established that such swap . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Equity

Updated: 19 May 2022; Ref: scu.236541

Hector v Lyons: 1988

The appellant contracted to buy a house but used his under-aged son’s name. He sought specific performance when the vendor failed to complete.
Held: Since he was neither the purchaser nor the purchaser’s agent, specific performance was refused. In unilateral mistake case goods are sold by V, to P, believing P to be X. P may fraudulently represent that he is X. In a face to face sale, the fact that V mistakes the identity of X does not render the contract void for mistake. It is a unilateral mistake as to a quality of the purchaser; only in cases where the identity of the purchaser is of direct and important materiality in inducing the vendor to enter into the contract is a mistake of that kind capable of avoiding the contract. Those principles have no application where the contract is wholly in writing. The identity of the parties is established by the names put in the contract. Once there, the court’s only task is to identify who they are. ‘In the present case the deputy judge has found as a fact that the party named in the written contract was Mr. Hector junior. It follows, in my judgment, that in the absence of rectification, which has not been claimed, or Mr. Cogley’s alternative argument based on agency the only person who can enforce that contract is the party to it, namely Mr. Hector junior.’

Judges:

Sir Nicolas Browne-Wilkinson V-C

Citations:

(1988) 58 PandCR 156

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedLewis v Averay CA 22-Jul-1971
A private seller had parted with his car in return for a worthless cheque to a rogue who persuaded him that he was the well-known actor who played Robin Hood on television, and who sold it on to the defendant.
Held: ‘When two parties have come . .
CitedKing’s Norton Metal Co Ltd v Edridge Merrett and Co Ltd CA 1879
A crook ordered some brass rivet wire from a metal manufacturer. On his stationery he represented falsely that he was in business in a big way, running a large factory and having several depots and agencies. The manufacturer supplied the goods but . .

Cited by:

CitedNorman Hudson v Shogun Finance Ltd CA 28-Jun-2001
A rogue had purchased a car, using a false name to obtain finance. He had then sold it to the defendant. The finance company claimed the car back.
Held: The dealer had not taken all the steps he might have done to check the identity of the . .
CitedShogun Finance Limited v Hudson HL 19-Nov-2003
Thief acquired no title and could not sell
A purchaser used a stolen driving licence to obtain credit for and purchase a car. He then purported to sell it to the respondent, and then disappeared. The finance company sought return of the car.
Held: (Lords Nicholls and Millett . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land, Equity, Contract

Updated: 19 May 2022; Ref: scu.188421

Lonhro v Fayed (No 2): 1992

Citations:

[1992] 1 WLR 1

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedShalson v Russo ChD 11-Jul-2003
The claimant sought recovery of substantial sums he had advanced by way of loan, where the loan was induced by fraud. He sought to trace the funds into, inter alia, a motor yacht which it had been used to purchase.
Held: The transaction was . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Equity

Updated: 19 May 2022; Ref: scu.186101

Goss and others v Laurence George Chilcott As Liquidator of Central Acceptance Limited (In Liquidation): PC 23 May 1996

(New Zealand) Mr and Mrs Goss, had been granted a loan by the claimant finance company under a mortgage instrument that had been avoided by the claimant because it had been fraudulently altered by Mr Haddon, an employee of the claimant, without the claimant’s authority. Mr Haddon was the brother of Mrs Goss. The advance from the claimant having been made available to Mr and Mrs Goss, it was as agreed between them and Mr Haddon in fact received by Mr Haddon. Mr and Mrs Goss took no security from Mr Haddon. Mr Haddon was unable to repay the advance. Mr and Mrs Goss argued that their inability to recover the money from Mr Haddon constituted a defence of change of position to the claimant’s action for restitution of the money paid for a consideration that had totally failed.
Held: The loan remained repayable despite the unenforceability of the mortgage instrument under which it was secured. The defence failed because Mr and Mrs Goss knew that the money lent would have to be repaid to the claimant and, in paying it to Mr Haddon, they had taken the risk that the loss would fall on them.
Lord Goff said: ‘From the beginning, the Defendants were under an obligation to repay the advance once it had been paid to them or to their order; and this obligation was of course unaffected by the fact that they had allowed the money to be paid over to Mr Haddon. The effect of the alteration of the mortgage instrument was that their contractual obligation to repay the money was discharged; but they had nevertheless been enriched by the receipt of the money, and prima facie were liable in restitution to restore it. They had however allowed the money to be paid over to Mr Haddon in circumstances in which, as they well knew, the money would nevertheless have to be repaid to the company. They had, therefore, in allowing the money to be paid to Mr Haddon, deliberately taken the risk that he would be unable to repay the money, in which event they themselves would have to repay it without recourse to him. Since any action by them against Mr Haddon would now be fruitless they are seeking, by invoking the defence of change of position, to shift that loss onto the company. This, in their Lordships’ opinion, they cannot do. The fact that they cannot now obtain reimbursement from Mr Haddon does not, in the circumstances of the present case, render it inequitable for them to be required to make restitution to the company in respect of the enrichment which they have received at the company’s expense.’

Judges:

Lord Goff of Chieveley, Lord Jauncey of Tullichettle, Lord Steyn, Lord Hoffmann, Lord Cooke of Thorndon

Citations:

Gazette 12-Jun-1996, Times 06-Jun-1996, [1996] UKPC 17, [1996] AC 788

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedDavidson, Public Officer, &Amp;C v Cooper And Another 6-Jul-1844
. .
CitedFibrosa Spolka Akcyjna v Fairbairn Lawson Combe Barbour Ltd HL 15-Jun-1942
A contract for the supply by the respondents of special machinery to be manufactured by them was treated as an ordinary contract for the sale of goods. It began valid, but suffered frustration by the outbreak of war.
Held: Lord Wright restated . .
CitedDavid Securities Pty Ltd v Commonwealth Bank of Australia 7-Oct-1992
(High Court of Australia ) Restitution – Money paid under mistake – Mistake of law – Right to recover – Unjust enrichment – Defences – Change of position. . .

Cited by:

CitedKommune and Another v DEPFA Acs Bank ComC 4-Sep-2009
Local authorities in Denmark sought to recover sums paid to the defendant banks for swap trading, saying that the payments had been outwith their powers. . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Banking, Commonwealth, Equity

Updated: 19 May 2022; Ref: scu.80939

Frawley v Neill: CA 1 Mar 1999

The modern approach to a laches claim, was not to test the facts against numbers of earlier cases, but to look at the situation as a whole, and to ask whether the delay made it unconscionable to permit the party to assert those rights. Aldous LJ said: ‘In my view, the more modern approach should not require an inquiry as to whether the circumstances can be fitted within the confines of a preconceived formula derived from earlier cases. The inquiry should require a broad approach, directed to ascertaining whether it would in all the circumstances be unconscionable for a party to be permitted to assert his beneficial right. No doubt the circumstances which gave rise to a particular result in decided cases are relevant to the question whether or not it would be conscionable or unconscionable for the relief to be asserted, but each case has to be decided on its facts applying the broad approach.’

Judges:

Aldous, Ward, and Swinton Thomas LJJ

Citations:

Times 05-Apr-1999, Gazette 24-Mar-1999, [1999] EWCA Civ 875, [2000] CP Rep 20

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedWilliams v Greatrex CA 1956
A purchaser agreed to buy land to be laid out in building plots. On payment of a deposit and giving notice, the purchaser was to be entitled to enter onto a particular plot in order to build on it. The arrangement met with difficulties, with the . .

Cited by:

CitedPatel and others v Shah and others CA 15-Feb-2005
The parties entered into a commercial agreement for the sale and purchase of properties.
Held: The claimants had failed to meet their part of the bargain, and had failed to make mortgage payments, leaving the defendants to do so. The . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Equity

Updated: 19 May 2022; Ref: scu.80671

Don King Productions Inc v Warren and Others: ChD 13 Apr 1998

Where partnership terms required benefit of all contracts to be assigned to the partnership, this included unassignable personal contracts which were to be held in trust for partnership, unless stated otherwise.
Lightman J said: ‘The existence of an obligation binding the conscience of the person vested with the legal ownership is the hallmark of a trust.’ and ‘in principle I can see no objection to a party to contracts involving skill and confidence or containing non-assignment provisions from becoming trustee of the benefit of being the contracting party as well as the benefit of the rights conferred. I can see no reason why the law should limit the parties’ freedom of contract to creating trusts of the fruits of such contracts received by the assignor or to creating an accounting relationship between the parties in respect of the fruits.’

Judges:

Lightman J

Citations:

Times 13-Apr-1998, Gazette 13-May-1998, [2000] Ch 291, [1998] 2 All ER 608

Citing:

See AlsoDon King Productions Inc v Warren King and Another (No 2) ChD 18-Jun-1998
An application for a Mareva injunction made ex parte was exceptionally justified when a partner failed to explain unaccounted for receipts after a full opportunity had been given, and there was no logical or innocent basis for the concealment of . .
CitedVandepitte v Preferred Accident Insurance Corp. of New York PC 1933
The plaintiff was injured in a motor accident. He failed in a direct claim against the insurers of the negligent defendant driver. The insurance was effected by the father (Mr Berry) of the negligent driver and provided that an indemnity would be . .
CitedTarget Holdings Ltd v Redferns (A Firm) and Another HL 21-Jul-1995
The defendant solicitors had acted for a purchaser, Crowngate, which had agreed to buy a property from a company called Mirage for andpound;775,000. Crowngate had arranged however that the property would first be passed through a chain of two . .

Cited by:

See AlsoDon King Productions Inc v Warren King and Another (No 2) ChD 18-Jun-1998
An application for a Mareva injunction made ex parte was exceptionally justified when a partner failed to explain unaccounted for receipts after a full opportunity had been given, and there was no logical or innocent basis for the concealment of . .
Appeal fromDon King Productions Inc v Warren; Roberts; Centurion Promotions Limited (Formerly Sports Network Limited); Sports Network Usa, Inc; Time Warner Entertainment Company, Lp and Sport International, Inc CA 19-Nov-1998
Contracts between the members of a firm and third parties, and which were subject to the partnership contract, but which were expressed to be personal and incapable of assignment, were still held on trust for the partnership, and renewals made . .
CitedUltraframe (UK) Ltd v Fielding and others ChD 27-Jul-2005
The parties had engaged in a bitter 95 day trial in which allegations of forgery, theft, false accounting, blackmail and arson. A company owning patents and other rights had become insolvent, and the real concern was the destination and ownership of . .
CitedBarbados Trust Company Ltd v Bank of Zambia and Another CA 27-Feb-2007
The creditor had assigned the debt, but without first giving the debtor defendant the necessary notice. A challenge was made to the ability of the assignee to bring the action, saying that the deed of trust appointed to circumvent the reluctance of . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Company, Equity

Updated: 19 May 2022; Ref: scu.80091

Crantrave Ltd (In Liquidation) v Lloyd’s Bank Plc: CA 18 May 2000

The bank received a garnishee order nisi, but acted before it was made absolute to pay the judgment creditor.
Held: The bank had no defence against the customer claiming restitution relying on the equitable doctrine that one person paying the debts of another without authority was allowed the benefit of the payment. To establish that, the bank would have to show that the act had been subsequently ratified, or that it had been made on his behalf. The mere absence of loss to the customer is insufficient.
‘ in the absence of authorisation or ratification by the company of the bank’s payment to the third party, the ‘mere fact’ that the bank’s payment enured to the benefit of the company does not establish an equity in favour of the bank against the company.’

Citations:

Times 24-Apr-2000, Gazette 18-May-2000, [2000] EWCA Civ 127, [2000] QB 917, [2000] 4 All ER 473, [2000] 3 WLR 877

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

LimitedCB Liggett (Liverpool) Limited v Barclays Bank Limited 1928
The defendant bank had paid cheques drawn on the plaintiff’s account in breach of a mandate requiring two signatories. The plaintiff brought an action for money had and received.
Held: The action failed. The bank was entitled to the benefit of . .

Cited by:

See AlsoCrantrave Ltd (In Liquidation) v Lloyd’s Bank Plc CA 2002
A payment made by a person without compulsion, intending to discharge another’s debt, will not discharge that debt unless he acted with that other’s authority or if that other subsequently ratifies the payment. . .
CitedEarles v Barclays Bank plc Merc 8-Oct-2009
earles_barclaysQBD2009
The claimant had lost his claim against the bank, but resisted the amount of costs claimed.
Held: The trial had been of a simple factual dispute, and the bank had failed adequately to disclose electronically held material in its possession. . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract, Banking, Equity

Updated: 19 May 2022; Ref: scu.79598

Corporacion Nacional Del Cobre: ChD 13 Dec 1996

No defence of contributory negligence was to be allowed against a claim involving an allegation of corruption by means of bribery. The defendants had bribed one of the plaintiff’s employees. The plaintiff claimed restitution, and an account from the defendants as constructive trustees for profits. The defendants wanted to assert that there was an equivalent to contributory negligence within the law of equity. There was no proper reason for distinguishing deceit by bribery from other forms of deceit. There had to be something to have put the plaintiff on notice of the deceit, and that was absent here.

Citations:

Gazette 13-Dec-1996

Damages, Equity

Updated: 19 May 2022; Ref: scu.79515

Brinks Ltd v AbuSaleh and Others (No 3): ChD 23 Oct 1995

A person must know of the existence of an obligation of trust to be liable as an accessory to an act in breach of that trust. A person cannot be liable for dishonest assistance in a breach of trust unless he knows of the existence of the trust or at least the facts giving rise to the trust.

Judges:

Rimer J

Citations:

Times 23-Oct-1995, [1996] CLC 133

Citing:

See AlsoBrinks Ltd and Another v AbuSaleh and Others ChD 6-Mar-1995
A delay in issuing Order 14 proceedings is not in itself relevant. . .

Cited by:

Not approvedBarlow Clowes International Ltd and Another v Eurotrust International Ltd and others PC 10-Oct-2005
(Court of Appeal of the Isle of Man) Defendants appealed a finding of dishonest assistance in the activities of Barlow Clowes.
Held: The judge had been able to reach the conclusions on the basis of the evidence. The appeal of the deemster . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Equity

Updated: 18 May 2022; Ref: scu.78584

Fox et al v Royal Bank of Canada et al: 7 Oct 1975

Canlii Supreme Court of Canada – Guarantee -Surety and sub-surety – Co-sureties – Sub-surety guaranteeing liability of surety – Surety paying creditor-Right of sub-surety to indemnity from the co-sureties.

Judges:

Martland, Judson, Ritchie, Spence and Dickson JJ

Citations:

[1976] 2 SCR 2, 1975 CanLII 150 (SCC)

Links:

Canlii

Cited by:

CitedDay v Shaw and Another ChD 17-Jan-2014
Mr and Mrs Shaw had granted a second charge over their jointly-owned matrimonial home to secure the personal guarantee given by their daughter and by Mr Shaw in respect of a bank loan to a company (Avon). Their daughter and Mr Shaw were the . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Commonwealth, Equity

Updated: 18 May 2022; Ref: scu.567254

Official Trustee in Bankruptcy v Citibank Savings Ltd: 1995

(New South Wales) Mr and Mrs P owned and controlled W Ltd. W Ltd borrowed monies from Citibank which took security for repayment in the form of a charge over the home of Mr and Mrs P and also a charge over the home of the parents of Mr P. On the face of the documents, Mr and Mrs P and the parents of Mr P were co-sureties for the debt of W Ltd. W Ltd defaulted and Mr and Mrs P were made bankrupt. Their trustee in bankruptcy sold their home and repaid the debt to Citibank. The trustee then claimed an equal contribution from Mr P’s parents on the basis that they were co-sureties with Mr and Mrs P and that the default position was that the co-sureties were equally liable to contribute to the payment of the debt.
Held: The claim by the trustee in bankruptcy was dismissed. Mr P’s parents had entered into the charge at the request of Mr and Mrs P and therefore Mr and Mrs P were liable to indemnify Mr P’s parents and, accordingly, were not entitled to claim a contribution from them. A right of contribution may not arise where two persons borrow money but that money is applied for the purposes of only one of them, or if one guarantor enjoys the whole benefit of the guarantee in another capacity to the exclusion of his co-surety.
In considering whether common intention is essential to rebut contribution, Bryson J said: ‘The position taken by the plaintiff’s counsel before me was to the effect that the prima facie right of contribution can only be rebutted if a common intention to the contrary is clearly proved by evidence of some agreement or arrangement. No doubt it is very usual that rebuttal takes that form, but in my opinion it is not necessary that there should be a common intention or a bilateral arrangement, and it is not necessary that there should be any expression of an intention or arrangement, as circumstances can occur in which an intended outcome is so clear and obvious that it must be imputed to the parties that they intended it. Quite apart from any intention held by the parties or imputed to them, circumstances can occur in which, without there being any expression of intention or actual advertence to the subject of contribution, it is clear that equity does not require that an obligation to make contribution should be imposed on a party. The court should not lose sight of the origin of the right to contribution in the equitable principle that equity is equality, or forget that facts may exist in which it is not appropriate to treat parties under a common liability as in an equal position, or in which some other equitable principle ought to be given effect.’

Judges:

Bryson J

Citations:

[1999] BPIR 754, (1995) 38 NSWLR 116

Cited by:

CitedDay v Shaw and Another ChD 17-Jan-2014
Mr and Mrs Shaw had granted a second charge over their jointly-owned matrimonial home to secure the personal guarantee given by their daughter and by Mr Shaw in respect of a bank loan to a company (Avon). Their daughter and Mr Shaw were the . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Commonwealth, Equity

Updated: 18 May 2022; Ref: scu.567255

Burke v LFOT Pty Ltd: 18 Apr 2002

(High Court of Australia) Trade and commerce – Damages – Equitable contribution – Liability to pay damages under ss 75B, 82, 87 of Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth) for breach of s 52 of the Act – Whether solicitor who gave negligent advice should contribute to the loss suffered by his client as a consequence of another’s misrepresentation which loss could have been avoided by careful advice by the solicitor – Whether equitable maxims prevent requirement of contribution.
Equity – Equitable contribution – Scope of – Requirement of co-ordinate liability – Whether solicitor who gave negligent advice should contribute to loss suffered by client as a consequence of another’s representation where the loss could have been avoided by careful advice by the solicitor.
Contribution – Equitable contribution – Scope of and availability – Co-ordinate liability – Requirements of – Whether compatible with the obligations imposed by Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth) for breach of s 52 of the Act.
Words and phrases – ‘co-ordinate liability’, ‘natural justice’.

Judges:

Gaudron ACJ, McHugh, Kirby, Hayne, Callinan JJ

Citations:

187 ALR 612, [2002] HCA 17

Links:

Austlii

Cited by:

CitedZurich Insurance Plc UK Branch v International Energy Group Ltd SC 20-May-2015
A claim had been made for mesothelioma following exposure to asbestos, but the claim arose in Guernsey. Acknowledging the acute difficultis particular to the evidence in such cases, the House of Lords, in Fairchild. had introduced the Special Rule . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Commonwealth, Damages, Equity, Natural Justice

Updated: 18 May 2022; Ref: scu.566220

Theobald Butler v Sir Thomas Prendergast And Others: PC 13 May 1720

A. agreed with B. for the purchase of timber, and together with C. entered
into a bond, that A. his executors and administrators, should not cut any
timber under a particular size; but, A.’s name was only made use of in this
agreement for C. C. cuts down timber under the size stipulated; but as
there could be no remedy against C. upon the bond, it was held to be a
fraud upon B. the selleir, and therefore relievable in equity.

Citations:

[1720] EngR 49, (1720) 4 Bro PC 174, (1720) 2 ER 119

Links:

Commonlii

Jurisdiction:

Commonwealth

Equity, Contract

Updated: 18 May 2022; Ref: scu.390475

Craythorne v Swinburne: 1789

Citations:

[1789] EngR 449, (1789-1817) 2 Ves Jun Supp 363, (1789) 34 ER 1133 (E)

Links:

Commonlii

Cited by:

See AlsoCraythorne v Swinburne 23-Jul-1807
No contribution in favour of one Surety against another : his engagement, according to the bond, and parol evidence, which was held admissible, being, not as Co-surety, but, without the privity of the other, as a distinct collatteral secnrity, . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Equity

Updated: 18 May 2022; Ref: scu.366080

Dering v Earl of Winchelsea: 8 Feb 1787

The doctrine of contribution amongst sureties is not founded in contract, but is the result of general equity on the ground of equality of burthen and benefit, Therefor where three sureties are bound by different instruments, but for the same principal and the same engagement, they shall contribute.

Judges:

Lord Chief Baron Eyre, Baron Hotham

Citations:

[1787] EngR 39, (1787) 1 Cox 319, (1787) 29 ER 1184

Links:

Commonlii

Equity

Updated: 18 May 2022; Ref: scu.368713

Craythorne v Swinburne: 23 Jul 1807

No contribution in favour of one Surety against another : his engagement, according to the bond, and parol evidence, which was held admissible, being, not as Co-surety, but, without the privity of the other, as a distinct collatteral secnrity, limited to default of payment by the Principle and the other surety.

Judges:

Lord Eldon LC

Citations:

[1807] EngR 343, (1807) 14 Ves Jun 160, (1807) 33 ER 482

Links:

Commonlii

Citing:

See AlsoCraythorne v Swinburne 1789
. .

Cited by:

CitedDay v Shaw and Another ChD 17-Jan-2014
Mr and Mrs Shaw had granted a second charge over their jointly-owned matrimonial home to secure the personal guarantee given by their daughter and by Mr Shaw in respect of a bank loan to a company (Avon). Their daughter and Mr Shaw were the . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Equity

Updated: 18 May 2022; Ref: scu.340514

Pryor v Pryor: CA 29 Apr 1864

Parents having a power of appointing an estate to all or any of their children appointed it absolutely to two of their sons, upon the understanding that the appointments should resettle the estate upon certain trusts for the benefit of all the children then living during their respective lives, and subject thereto for the benefit of the children of the sons. This resettlement was made by a contemporaneous deed. Held, that the transaction could not be supported by analogy to the common case of an appointment to a daughter in contemplation of her marriage, accompanied by a contemporaneous settlement of the appointed fund, but that the appointment was void in equity, as made upon a bargain for the benefit of persons not objects of the power,

Judges:

Knight Bruce LJ

Citations:

[1864] EngR 412, (1864) 3 De G J and S 205, (1864) 46 ER 353

Links:

Commonlii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedEclairs Group Ltd and Glengary Overseas Ltd v JKX Oil and Gas Plc SC 2-Dec-2015
Company Director not Trustee but is Fiduciary
The Court was asked about an alleged ‘corporate raid’, an attempt to exploit a minority shareholding in a company to obtain effective management or voting control without paying what other shareholders would regard as a proper price.
Held: The . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Trusts, Equity

Updated: 18 May 2022; Ref: scu.282126

Lupton v White: 19 Dec 1808

Whatever alteration of form any property may undergo, the true owner is entitled to seize it in its new shape if he can prove the identity of the original material.

Citations:

(1808) 15 Ves 442, [1808] EngR 429, (1808) 15 Ves Jun 432, (1808) 33 ER 817

Links:

Commonlii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedFoskett v McKeown and Others HL 18-May-2000
A property developer using monies which he held on trust to carry out a development instead had mixed those monies with his own in his bank account, and subsequently used those mixed monies to pay premiums on a life assurance policy on his own life, . .
CitedIndian Oil Corporation v Greenstone Shipping SA 1988
A ship had on board some oil of the shipowners and it was mixed with oil, the property of the receivers, and transported to India. The mixture could not be separated for practical purposes and the question was how much of the oil were the receivers . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Equity

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.220693

Plowright v Lambert: 1885

The courts of equity have recognised that a fiduciary relationship can exist ‘in almost every shape’.

Judges:

Field J

Citations:

(1885) 52 LT 646

Cited by:

CitedHedley Byrne and Co Ltd v Heller and Partners Ltd HL 28-May-1963
Banker’s Liability for Negligent Reference
The appellants were advertising agents. They were liable themselves for advertising space taken for a client, and had sought a financial reference from the defendant bankers to the client. The reference was negligent, but the bankers denied any . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Equity

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.216364

Pilcher v Rawlins: 1872

Equity has an interest in and a power over a purchaser’s conscience. Good faith is a separate test which may have to be passed even though absence of notice is proved.

Judges:

James LJ

Citations:

(1872) LR 7 Ch App 259

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedR Griggs Group Ltd and others v Evans and others (No 2) ChD 12-May-2004
A logo had been created for the claimants, by an independent sub-contractor. They sought assignment of their legal title, but, knowing of the claimant’s interest the copyright was assigned to a third party out of the jurisdiction. The claimant . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Equity

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.199509

Pankhania v The London Borough of Hackney: ChD 2002

A brochure listing properties to be sold at auction decribed the property as being subject to a terminable licence. In fact it was a secure tenancy. The question arose as to whether a misrepresentation of law could found a cause of action.
Held: ‘I have concluded that the ‘misrepresentation of law’ rule has not survived the decision in Klienwort Benson Ltd. Its historical origin is as an off-shoot of the ‘mistake of law’ rule, created by analogy with it, and the two are logically inter-dependent. Both are grounded in the maxim ‘ignorantia juris non excusat’, a tag whose dubious utility would have been enhanced, had it gone on to explain who was not excused and from what. As it stands, it means no more than that ignorance of the general law does not excuse anyone from compliance with it, a proposition with which criminal lawyers are familiar. In translation, it has become distorted and amplified meaning, in such expressions as ‘everyone’ is taken to know the Law’, from which follow two further propositions (underpinning the ‘mistake of law’ and ‘misrepresentation of law’ rules respectively) (i) ‘ as you are taken to know the law, it is your fault if you are mistaken as to it, even if I have misrepresented it to you, and because of that you should have no relief’. Those two propositions bear little relation to, and do not follow logically from, the maxim ‘ignorantia juris non excusat’, but save for its Latin roots, no basis for the ‘misrepresentation of law’ rule is to be found, as Lane L.J. remarked in Andre. The distinction between fact and law in the context of relief from misrepresentation has no more underlying principle to it than it does in the context of relief from mistake. Indeed, when the principles of mistake and misrepresentation are set side by side, there is a stronger case for granting relief against a party who has induced a mistaken belief as to law in another, than against one who has merely made the same mistake himself. The rules of the common law should, so far as possible, be congruent with one another, and based on coherent principle. The survival of the ‘misrepresentation of law’ rule following the demise of the ‘mistake of law’ rule would be more than a quixotic anachronism. Its demise rids this area of the law of a series of distinctions, such as the ‘private rights’ exception, whose principal function has been to distinguish the ‘mistake of law’ rule, and confine it to a very narrow compass, albeit not to extinguish it completely.’

Judges:

Rex Tedd QC

Citations:

[2002] EWHC 2441 (Ch)

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

AppliedKleinwort Benson Ltd v Lincoln City Council etc HL 29-Jul-1998
Right of Recovery of Money Paid under Mistake
Kleinwort Benson had made payments to a local authority under swap agreements which were thought to be legally enforceable when made. Subsequently, a decision of the House of Lords, (Hazell v. Hammersmith and Fulham) established that such swap . .
CitedStreet v Mountford HL 6-Mar-1985
When a licence is really a tenancy
The document signed by the occupier stated that she understood that she had been given a licence, and that she understood that she had not been granted a tenancy protected under the Rent Acts. Exclusive occupation was in fact granted.
Held: . .

Cited by:

CitedMargaret Brennan v Bolt Burdon, London Borough of Islington, Leigh Day and Co QBD 30-Oct-2003
The claimant had sought relief for the injury to her health suffered by condition of her flat. The legal advisers had settled the matter, thinking that the claim had not been timeously served. The defendant appealed an order that the compromise was . .
CitedBrennan v Bolt Burdon and Others, London Borough of Islington, Leigh Day and Co CA 29-Jul-2004
The claimant sought damages for injury alleged to have been suffered as tenant of a house after being subjected to carbon monoxide poisoning, and also from her former solicitors for their delay in her claim. The effective question was whether the . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Equity, Contract

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.187291

David Securities Pty Ltd v Commonwealth Bank of Australia: 1992

(High Court of Australia) Moneys paid away as a result of a causative mistake of law are recoverable: ‘the payer will be entitled prima facie to recover moneys paid under a mistake if it appears that the moneys were paid by the payer in the mistaken belief that he or she was under a legal obligation to pay the moneys or that the payee was legally entitled to payment of the moneys. Such a mistake would be causative of the payment.’ but ‘It is a defence to a claim for restitution of money paid or property transferred under a mistake of law that the defendant honestly believed, when he learnt of the payment or transfer, that he was entitled to receive and retain the money or property.’

Judges:

Brennan J

Citations:

(1992) 175 CLR 353

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

LimitedKleinwort Benson Ltd v Lincoln City Council etc HL 29-Jul-1998
Right of Recovery of Money Paid under Mistake
Kleinwort Benson had made payments to a local authority under swap agreements which were thought to be legally enforceable when made. Subsequently, a decision of the House of Lords, (Hazell v. Hammersmith and Fulham) established that such swap . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Commonwealth, Equity

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.187274

Classic International Pty Ltd v Lagos: 2002

(New South Wales Supreme Court) ‘I am satisfied that both parties believed that the agreement for lease would validly take effect according to its terms and that had they known of the substantial variation which the Retail Leases Act 1994 would impose upon the agreement, they would not have entered into it’ and ’42. I do not need to consider the vexed question of whether the mistake in the present case is one of fact or one of law. As to whether, in the law of Australia, the doctrine of common ‘mistake applies to’ a mistake of law, I need do no more that set out the following passage from Cheshire and Fifoot’s Law of Contract 8th Aust Ed., para 12.8: ‘Operative mistake traditionally has been confined to mistakes of fact and not of law. This distinction has always been blurred and has been notoriously difficult to apply. It appears that equity did not draw a clear line between mistakes of fact and law. If there was such a rule, it was often honoured in the breach. In Western Australia the law/fact distinction has been abolished by legislation (with certain safeguards). The whole question has now almost certainly been laid to rest by the decision of the High Court in David Securities Pty Ltd v Commonwealth Bank (1992) 175 CLR 353. In that case the distinction between mistake of law and mistake of fact was rejected in the light of a very considerable body of judicial and academic criticism of the distinction. . . . the rule precluding recovery of moneys paid under a mistake of law should be held not to form part of the law in Australia.’

Judges:

Palmer J

Citations:

[2002] NSWSC 115

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedMargaret Brennan v Bolt Burdon, London Borough of Islington, Leigh Day and Co QBD 30-Oct-2003
The claimant had sought relief for the injury to her health suffered by condition of her flat. The legal advisers had settled the matter, thinking that the claim had not been timeously served. The defendant appealed an order that the compromise was . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Commonwealth, Equity, Contract

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.187292

A Schroeder Music Publishing Co Ltd v Macaulay: 1974

Assignments of copyright which were manifestly inequitable and oppressive could be void or unenforceable on grounds of public policy.

Citations:

[1974] 1 WLR 1308

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedPeer International Corporation Southern Music Publishing Company Inc Peermusic (UK) Limited v Termidor Music Publishers Limited Termidor Musikverlag Gmbh and Co Kg -And-Editoria Musical De Cuba CA 30-Jul-2003
Peer sought declarations that they were the owners, or licensees, of the UK copyright in musical works composed by Cuban nationals, relying on assignments in writing by the composers and in some instances by their heirs. The defendants claimed under . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Intellectual Property, Equity

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.186117

Goddard v Nationwide Building Society: CA 1986

A solicitor had acted for both purchaser and lender in a purchase transaction. The purchaser later sought to recover from the defendant for a negligent valuation. The solicitor had however discussed the issue with the plaintiff before the purchase, and he disclosed his note of the attendance on the plaintiff to the defendant. The note was protected by legal professional privilege. The defendant referred to the note in its defence, which was subsequently the subject of litigation between them, sent to the defendant a copy of his file note of the information which he had given to the plaintiff prior to the completion of the transaction. The defendant pleaded the substance of the contents of the note in its Defence. The plaintiff sought to restrain its use. The defendant now appealed against an order striking out those elements of its defence.
Held: The defendant’s appeal succeeded. In the circumstances in which the file note was made, the privilege attaching to it belonged exclusively to the plaintiff. Orders were made requiring the defendant to deliver up the document and restraining him from using it.
Nourse LJ said: ‘The second question has confronted us, in a simple and straightforward manner, with the task of reconciling the decisions of this court in Calcraft v. Guest [1898] 1 Q.B. 759 and Lord Ashburton v. Pape [1913] 2 Ch. 469. I agree that those decisions are authority for the proposition which May L.J. has stated. However unsatisfactory its results may be thought to be, that proposition must hold sway unless and until it is revised by higher authority.
. . Although, for the reasons given by May LJ, I am in no doubt that our decision must be governed by Lord Ashburton v. Pape [1913] 2 Ch. 469, the confusion which the existing authorities have caused in this case and are liable to cause in others has prompted me to deal with the matter at somewhat greater length than would otherwise have been necessary.’
It was crucial that the holder of the privilege should seek relief before the party to whom the confidential communication was disclosed has adduced it in evidence or otherwise relied on it at trial. Second, this equitable jurisdiction can prevail over the rules of evidence relating to privilege. Thirdly, the right of the party seeking equitable relief ‘does not in any way depend on the conduct of the third party into whose possession the record of the confidential communication has come’ Fourth, once the equitable jurisdiction in Ashburton has arisen, there is no discretion to rely upon views of the materiality of the communication or the justice of admitting or excluding it or like considerations: ‘The injunction is granted in aid of the privilege which, unless and until it is waived, is absolute. In saying this, I do not intend to suggest that there may not be cases where an injunction can properly be refused on general principles affecting the grant of a discretionary remedy, for example on the ground of inordinate delay.’
Fifth, even if the equitable jurisdiction can no longer apply, public policy (rather than the exercise of discretion) may nevertheless preclude a party who has acted improperly in the proceedings from using the communication. Last, there should be no distinction in the exercise of the equitable jurisdiction in relation to civil and criminal proceedings.
The court discussed the requirement for confidence in the protection given by legal professional privilege: ‘A lawyer must be able to give his client an unqualified assurance, not only that what passes between them shall never be revealed without his consent in any circumstances, but that should he consent in future to disclosure for a limited purpose those limits will be respected.’
May LJ said: ‘I think that the ratio of the decision in Lord Ashburton v. Pape was founded upon the confidential nature of the content of the letters written by Lord Ashburton to Nocton. The Court of Appeal was concerned to protect that confidence, in the same way for instance, as the courts protect the trade secrets of an employer against the unauthorised use of them by an employee, both while he remains such as well as after he has left the employment . . I confess that I do not find the decision in Lord Ashburton v. Pape logically satisfactory, depending as it does upon the order in which applications are made in litigation. Nevertheless I think that it and Calcraft v. Guest [1898] 1 Q.B. 759 are good authority for the following proposition. If a litigant has in his possession copies of documents to which legal professional privilege attaches he may nevertheless use such copies as secondary evidence in his litigation; however, if he has not yet used the documents in that way, the mere fact that he intends to do so is no answer to a claim against him by the person in whom the privilege is vested for delivery up of the copies and to restrain him from disclosing or making any use of any information contained in them.’

Judges:

Nourse, May LJJ

Citations:

[1987] 1 QB 670, [1986] 3 WLR 734

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

AppliedLord Ashburton v Pape CA 1913
Pape’s bankruptcy discharge was opposed by Lord Ashburton. He subpoenaed Brooks, a clerk to Lord Ashburton’s solicitor and obtained privileged letters written by Lord Ashburton to Mr Nocton, which Pape proposed to use. Pape and Brooks had colluded. . .
AppliedCalcraft v Guest CA 1898
A trial had taken place in which the principal issue was the upper boundary of the plaintiff’s fishery. On appeal the defendant proposed to rely on new evidence discovered among the papers in another action tried over a hundred years before. The . .
ConsideredButler v Board of Trade ChD 1970
Goff J discussed the criterion for admissibility of evidence:’If one rejects the bare relevance test, as I have done, then what has to be shown prima facie is not merely that there is a bona fide and reasonably tenable charge of crime or fraud but a . .

Cited by:

CitedDerby and Co Ltd v Weldon (No 8) CA 27-Jul-1990
There had been a lengthy and contentious process of discovery. Certain documents with legal professional privilege had also been handed over inadvertently. The plaintiff sought their return and an order against them being used.
Held: The . .
CitedL v L and Hughes Fowler Carruthers QBD 1-Feb-2007
The parties were engaged in ancillary relief proceedings. The Husband complained that the wife had sought to use unlawfully obtained information, and in these proceedings sought delivery up of the material from the wife and her solicitors. He said . .
CitedEnglish and American Insurance Co Ltd and Others v Herbert Smith ChD 1987
Where documents with the benefit of legal professional privilege come into the hands of the opposing side, the court should be ready to grant an injunction to prevent their misuse. . .
CitedStiedl v Enyo Law Llp and Others ComC 18-Oct-2011
The applicant, defendant in the main proceedings, sought an injunction to restrain the solicitors from acting for the claimant and from making any use of documents which had come into their privileged possession whilst acting for him. . .
CitedGuinness Peat Properties Ltd v Fitzroy Robinson Partnership CA 1987
Property developers (‘GPR’) were suing their architects (‘FRP’) in negligence. The claim against FRP was covered by a professional indemnity insurance policy. Once FRP was notified of GPR’s claim, FRP sent a ‘notification of claim’ to its insurer . .
CitedWebster v James Chapman and Co 1989
An expert’s report prepared for the plaintiff was by mistake enclosed along with a letter to the defendant’s solicitors. When informed of the mistake the plaintiff’s solicitors sought its return with an undertaking to make no use of it. The . .
CitedBell Cablemedia Plc etc v Simmonds CA 29-Apr-1997
Any person who is legitimately in premises may refer any material found there to the police. . .
CitedISTIL Group Inc, Metalsukraine Corporation Limited v Zahoor, Reventox Consulting Limited ChD 14-Feb-2003
Lawrence Collins J reviewed the authorities, and held that, where a privileged document had been seen by an opposing party through fraud or mistake, the court has power to exercise its equitable confidentiality jurisdiction, and ‘should ordinarily . .
CitedTrevorrow v State of South Australia (No 4) 16-Feb-2006
(Supreme Court of South Australia – full Court) Appeals against two decisions – Whether legal professional privilege applies to eleven documents discovered by the defendant – if privilege existed whether it had been waived – Whether defendant . .
CitedIn Re A Firm of Solicitors ChD 9-May-1995
A solicitor moving from a firm acting on one side of a dispute to the firm on the other side must be able to show that no conflict of interest would arise. The court should intervene unless it is satisfied that there is no risk of disclosure. It . .
CitedBBGP Managing General Partner Ltd and Others v Babcock and Brown Global Partners ChD 20-Aug-2010
Norris J held:
‘Although the case law refers to crime or fraud or dishonesty (such as fraudulent breach of trust, fraudulent conspiracy, trickery or sham contrivances) it is plain that the term ‘fraud’ is used in a relatively wide sense: Eustice’s . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Legal Professions, Litigation Practice, Equity

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.182250

Nant-y-glo and Blaina Ironworks Co v Grave: 1878

Shares in a company had been given by a promoter to the defendant to induce him to become a director.
Held: They belonged to the company.

Judges:

Sir James Bacon V-C

Citations:

(1878) 12 Ch D 738

Cited by:

CitedFHR European Ventures Llp and Others v Cedar Capital Partners Llc SC 16-Jul-2014
Approprietary remedy against Fraudulent Agent
The Court was asked whether a bribe or secret commission received by an agent is held by the agent on trust for his principal, or whether the principal merely has a claim for equitable compensation in a sum equal to the value of the bribe or . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Company, Equity

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.551506

Libertarian Investments Ltd v Hall: 6 Nov 2013

(Hong Kong) A trustee owes a duty to hold trust funds and apply them for the purposes of the trust (a stewardship or custodial duty). He is bound to answer for his stewardship when called on by the beneficiary to do so. If for any reason he misapplies the trust fund, or part of it, he must immediately reconstitute the trust fund in full. If he fails to do so, the court will order him to reconstitute the fund in specie, if that is possible, or pay the equivalent sum in money so as to produce the same result in financial terms.
Millett NPJ said that the relevant principle, in a case of unauthorised dissipation of trust funds is that: ‘Where the defendant is ordered to make good the deficit by the payment of money, the award is sometimes described as the payment of equitable compensation; but it is not compensation for loss but restitutionary or restorative. The amount of the award is measured by the objective value of the property lost determined at the date when the account is taken and with the full benefit of hindsight.’
Ribeiro PJ carried out a valuable review of the authorities concerned with equitable compensation in the context of a commercial relationship. He noted that where a relationship was fiduciary, there might be obligations which were not fiduciary in nature; and, equally, even in a commercial relationship, there might be aspects which engaged fiduciary obligations.
‘Once the trust or fiduciary relationship is established or conceded the beneficiary or principal is entitled to an account as of right. Although like all equitable remedies an order for an account is discretionary, in making the order the court is not granting a remedy for wrong but enforcing performance of an obligation.’

Judges:

Millett NPJ, Ribeiro PJ

Citations:

[2014] 1 HKC 368, [2013] HKCFA 93

Links:

Hklii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedAIB Group (UK) Plc v Mark Redler and Co Solicitors SC 5-Nov-2014
Bank not to recover more than its losses
The court was asked as to the remedy available to the appellant bank against the respondent, a firm of solicitors, for breach of the solicitors’ custodial duties in respect of money entrusted to them for the purpose of completing a loan which was to . .
CitedHenchley and Others v Thompson ChD 16-Feb-2017
The Claimants sought an order directing the Defendant to provide a full account of his dealings with the assets of the two trusts as a trustee or as a de facto trustee.
Held: The court has a discretion whether or not to make an order for an . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Equity, Trusts

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.553779

Canson Enterprises Ltd v Boughton and Co: 21 Nov 1991

Canlii Supreme Court of Canada – Canada – Damages — Breach of fiduciary duty — Solicitor preparing conveyance not advising purchasers of secret profit made on a flip — On agreed facts, purchasers fully apprised of situation would not have entered the transaction — Action arising because inability of other professionals found liable in tort for faulty construction of building on subject lands to pay damages — Whether or not damages recoverable.
The claim was brought by developers of land against the lawyers who had acted for them in the purchase of the land. The lawyers acted in breach of their fiduciary duty by failing to disclose their knowledge that a third party was making a secret profit from the purchase. The development proved to be a failure as a result of the negligence of the engineers and contractors involved. The appellants sought to recover the loss incurred on the development from the lawyers, on the basis that they would not have proceeded with the purchase if they had known of the secret profit. Recognising that the loss would not be recoverable in an action founded on breach of contract, negligence or deceit, the appellants instead sought equitable compensation for breach of fiduciary duty, arguing that such compensation was unlimited by principles of causation, remoteness or intervening acts.
La Forest J (majority) distinguished between the breach of a trustee’s obligation to hold the object of the trust, where ‘on breach the concern of equity is that it be restored . . or, if that cannot be done, to afford compensation for what the object would be worth’, and on the other hand ‘a mere breach of duty’, where ‘the concern of equity is to ascertain the loss resulting from the particular breach of duty.’ In the former situation the difference between restoration and damages was abundantly clear, but in the latter situation ‘the difference in practical result between compensation and damages is by no means as clear’. He went on to observe in relation to claims of the latter kind: ‘The truth is that barring different policy considerations underlying one action or the other, I see no reason why the same basic claim, whether framed in terms of a common law action or an equitable remedy, should give rise to different levels of redress.’
McLachlin J dissented as to the way the result was obtained but not as to the result. She rejected the argument that the starting point, when quantifying compensation for breach of fiduciary duty, should be an analogy with tort or contract. In her view, that approach overlooked the unique foundation and goals of equity. In negligence and contract the parties were taken to be independent and equal actors, concerned primarily with their own self-interest. Consequently, the law sought a balance between enforcing obligations by awarding compensation, and preserving optimum freedom for those involved in the relationship. The essence of a fiduciary relationship, by contrast, was that one party pledged herself to act in the best interests of the other. The freedom of the fiduciary was diminished by the nature of the obligation she had undertaken. The fiduciary relationship had trust, not self-interest, at its core.
She concluded: ‘In summary, compensation is an equitable monetary remedy which is available when the equitable remedies of restitution and account are not appropriate. By analogy with restitution, it attempts to restore to the plaintiff what has been lost as a result of the breach, ie, the plaintiff’s loss of opportunity. The plaintiff’s actual loss as a consequence of the breach is to be assessed with the full benefit of hindsight. Foreseeability is not a concern in assessing compensation, but it is essential that the losses made good are only those which, on a common sense view of causation, were caused by the breach.’

Judges:

Lamer CJ and Wilson, La Forest, L’Heureux-Dube, Sopinka, Gonthier, Cory, McLachlin and Stevenson JJ

Citations:

[1991] 3 SCR 534, 1991 CanLII 52 (SCC), (1991) 85 DLR (4th) 129, [1992] 1 WWR 245, 1 BCLR (2d) 1

Links:

Canlii

Jurisdiction:

Commonwealth

Cited by:

CitedAIB Group (UK) Plc v Mark Redler and Co Solicitors SC 5-Nov-2014
Bank not to recover more than its losses
The court was asked as to the remedy available to the appellant bank against the respondent, a firm of solicitors, for breach of the solicitors’ custodial duties in respect of money entrusted to them for the purpose of completing a loan which was to . .
CitedMichael Wilson and Partners Ltd v Emmott ComC 8-Jun-2011
The claimant challenged an arbitration award made concerning the agreement under which the defendant had been admitted to partnership. MWP contended that the Tribunal were guilty of a large number of serious irregularities in their conduct of the . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Equity, Damages

Updated: 16 May 2022; Ref: scu.553778

In Re Alton Corporation: 1985

Sir Robert Megarry V-C, said in relation to a loan accompanied by the deposit of title deeds: ‘I have to remember that the basis of an equitable mortgage is the making of an agreement to create a mortgage, with the deposit of the land certificate and, since Steadman v. Steadman [1976] AC 536 . . probably the paying of the money as well, ranking as sufficient acts of part performance to support even the purely oral transaction. But some contract there must be.’

Judges:

Robert Megarry VC

Citations:

[1985] BCLC 27

Citing:

CitedSteadman v Steadman HL 1976
A mere payment of a sum of money might amount to an act of part performance, as might the act of a purchaser instructing solicitors to prepare and submit a draft conveyance or transfer, so as to leave asituation capable of enforcement in equity. . .

Cited by:

CitedUnited Bank of Kuwait Plc v Sahib and Others CA 2-Feb-1996
The bank appealed against a decision that the simple deposit of deeds with a bank did not take effect as an equitable charge.
Held: Depositing deeds with a bank is not sufficient to create a charge over them. The old law as to the creation of . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land, Equity

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.434816

Burchell v Thompson: CA 1920

A printed form of bill of sale set out that in consideration of andpound;250 being ‘now paid by the grantees to’ and then identifying a third person ‘at the request of the grantor’ chattels were assigned by way of security for the repayment of the loan with interest at andpound;55 per cent per annum. The printed form originally stated the interest to be at ‘one shilling in the pound per month’ with the printed words being struck out. The words ‘per annum’ were omitted in what was said to be a true copy of a the bill when lodged in relation to the rate of interest, and no receipt was given within the bill.
Held: The omission of the words ‘per annum’ did prevent the filed version being a true copy.
However, not all omissions would prevent the copy being a true copy. The expression ‘true copy’ in the bills of sale legislation indicates that the copy need not be an exact one and immaterial differences between the original and the copy which do not mislead the reader as to the contents can be ignored: ‘mere mis-spellings, mere failures to fill up blanks which can be filled up from other parts of the deed – matters which do not in any way affect the purpose for which the true copy is required – will not prevent the document registered from being a ‘true copy’ within the meaning of the Act.’
The former notion that a receipt contained in a deed gave rise to an estoppel whereas one not in a deed did not had long been discarded. It derived from times when a greater distinction was made between practice in courts of equity and of common law. The fact of a receipt being in a deed had not since days prior to the 1873 Act, given rise to no greater presumption. A party to a deed was not estopped from setting up the truth.

Judges:

Scrutton LJ, Lush J

Citations:

[1920] 2 KB 80, (1920) LJKB 533, (1920) 122 LT 758, (1920) 38 TLR 257, (1920) 64 Sol Jo 68, [1920] BandCR 7

Statutes:

Supreme Court of Judicature Act 1873

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedCarey v HSBC Bank plc, Yunis v Barclays Bank plc and similar QBD 23-Dec-2009
(Manchester Mercantile Court) The court considered the effects in detail where a bank was unable to comply with a request under section 78 of the 1974 Act to provide a copy of the agreement signed by the client.
Held: The court set out to give . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract, Equity

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.384473

Hurst v Picture Theatres Ltd: CA 1915

The plaintiff had paid to enter the cinema, but was asked to leave by the manager who said he had not paid. He was forcibly removed. The jury found as a fact that he had paid the entrance fee. The defendant argued that the plaintiff had only a revocable licence to enter the premises, and had no interest which would entitle him to stay after revocation of the licence.
Held: The Court of Appeal rejected this argument holding that in the circumstances the contract provided him with a licence plus a grant of an interest which was enforceable in equity and which after the judicature Acts clearly provided not withstanding the absence of a legal interest (created by deed).
Buckley LJ said: ‘We have listened in this case to a very ingenious and interesting argument from Mr. Mackinnon, but, if I may borrow the words of Lord Esher in Butler v. Manchester, Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway (1888) 21 Q.B.D. 207, 211, it may have been quite right for the appellants’ counsel to suggest the point, but when considered it is contrary to good sense. I may add that I think it is not only contrary to good sense, but contrary also to good law as administered since the Judicature Act in this Court. The proposition Mr. McKinnon sets out to affirm is that if a man has paid for his seat at the opera, or the theatre, and has entered and taken his seat, and is behaving himself quite properly, it is competent to the proprietors of the theatre, merely because they choose so to do, to call him to withdraw before he has seen the performance for the enjoyment of which he has paid; that what he has obtained for his money is a mere revocable licence to come upon the land of the proprietor of the theatre, and that the proprietor may, simply because he chooses, say ‘I revoke your licence; go.’ If that proposition be true, it involves startling results.
Kennedy LJ has suggested one. Suppose that there be sitting in the stalls a man who is a constant patron of the opera or the thentre, to whom the management pay great deference, whether from his rank or his habit of attendance: he goes to the management and says, ‘I do not like the person sitting in front of me or next to me; ask him to go.’ It would be competent to the management to go to that person and say: ‘Please go; you cannot have your money back, go.’ Further, if the proposition is right, it follows that, having let the seat to A., the management may come to A. at the end of the first act or before and say, ‘I revoke your licence, go,’ and he has to go. The management may let the seat to B. for the rest of the performance, and at the end of the second act or sooner they may come to B. and say, ‘I revoke your licence, go.’ He will have to go, and they may let the seat a third time to C. Those consequences ensue from this proposition if it be well founded.
It was for that reason I said at the outset of my remarks that it seems to me, when the point comes to be considered, it is contrary to good sense. Next it is to my mind contrary also to good law. The proposition is based upon the well-known decision in Wood v. Leadbitter 13 M. and W. 838.
Let me at the outset say what Wood v. Leadbitter seems to me to have decided. It affirmed that a mere licence, whether or not it be under seal, by which I mean a, licence not coupled with an interest or a gra.nt whether it be under seal or not, is revocable. It affirmed also that if there be a licence coupled with an interest or coupled with a grant, it is not, or at any rate in general it is not, revocable. For those two propositions I read these two sentences from the case of Wood v. Leadbitter at p. 844: ‘A mere licence is revocable; but that which is called a licence is often something more than a licence; it often comprises or is connected with a grant, and then the party who has given it cannot in general revoke it, so as to defeat his grant, to which it was incident. It may further be observed, that a licence under seal (provided it be a mere licence) is as revocable as a licence by parol; and, on the other hand, a licence by parol, coupled with a grant, is as irrevocable as a licence by deed, provided only that the grant is of a nature capable of being made by parol.’
Those are propositions with which, as it seems to me, no one quarrels or can quarrel. Wood v. Leadbitter rested, I think, upon one of two grounds-I will indicate them both-but I think it was the second of those which I am going to mention. The first ground is that the man who bought his ticket for the race meeting not obtained any grant of the right to come during the currency of the meeting to see any particular spectacle from its commencement to its termination. If that were the ground, it would, I think, be erroneous. I conceive he had the right to see what was to be seen during the days covered by his ticket. But I do not think that was the ground on which the Court decided it. They decided it upon the ground, which will be found at p. 842 and onwards, that no incorporeal inheritance affecting land can be created or transferred otherwise than by deed, a proposition which was discussed with some elaboration in the course of the judgment.
What Alderson B. was saying there was: this man has got no deed; he has got nothing under seal; he has therefore not got a grant; he cannot in this Court be heard to say he is a grantee, and because he is not a grantee he is a mere licensee, and being a mere licensee (whether it is under seal or not under seal does not make any difference) the licence is revocable.
Let me for a moment discuss this present case upon the footing that Wood v Leadbitter stands as good law at this date. I am going to say presently that to my mind it does not, but suppose it does, stand as good law at this date. What is the grant in this case? The plaintiff in the present action paid his money to enjoy the sight of a particular spectacle. He was anxious to go into a picture theatre to see a series of views or pictures during I suppose, an hour or a couple of hours. That which was granted to him was the right to enjoy looking at a spectacle, to attend a performance from its beginning to its end. That which was called the licence, the right to go upon the premises, was only something granted to him for the purpose of enabling him to has e that which had been granted him, namely the right to see, he could not see the performance unless he went into the building His right to go into the building was something given to him in order to enable him to have the benefit of that which had been granted to him, namely, the right to hear the opera, or see the theatrical performance, or see the moving pictures as was the case here. So that here there was a licence coupled with a grant. If so, Wood v. Leadbitter does not stand in the way at all. A licence coupled with a grant is not revocable; Wood v. Leadbitter affirmed as much.
So far I have been treating it as if Wood v Leadbitter were law as now administered in every Court. Let us see how that matter stands. Wood v Leadbitter was a case decided in a Court of law before the Judicature Act; it was a case to be decided, therefore, simply upon the principles which are applicable in a Court of law as distinguished from a Court of Equity. What was the principle which would have been administered in a Court of Equity in the year 1845, the date of Wood v. Leadbitter, or subsequently. For that I look at the decision of Wood V.C. in Frogley v. Earl of Lovelace (1859) John. 333. Other cases have been cited to us; I select this one because it seems to me to be the most pertinent, and to state the proposition in the most plate manner. The facts in Frogley v. Earl of Lovelace were these: the defendant was lessor to the plaintiff of certain lands for twenty-one years; he had executed a lease to him, but preciously to the execution of the lease this was [the lessee] but was not under seal: ‘It is hereby agreed that [the lessee] shall have the exclusive right of sporting over, and killing the game upon, the lands included in the withinwritten lease, and also upon the lands adjacent thereto belonging to the said Earl’ (describing such adjacent lands) ‘during the continuance of the said term, if the said Ralph Frogley shall so long live; he undertaking to keep and leave a fair stock of game thereupon, and not to keep such an excessive quantity of hares and rabbits as to do damage to the said Earl or his under-tenants in the neighbourhood.’ On February 9, 1859, the lessor served the lessee with a notice that after that date he revoked, rescinded, and put an end to that agreement. The question was whether he could do so or not. The suit was brought in a Court of Equity for specific performance for the execution of a proper instrument under seal giving effect to the document which was not under seal. The plaintiff moved for an injunction as prayed by his bill, namely, an injunction to give effect to his rights until that deed had been executed, and that was the matter which came before the Vice Chancellor. At p. 339 the Vice-Chancellor says this: ‘ The memorandum is a mere writing not under seal and the case of Wood v. Leadbitter has decided that, in order to acquire a right such as that which is here claimed by the plaintiff an instrument under seal is necessary; and that, at law, an instrument purporting to grant such a right, though given for a valuable consideration, is revocable at all:- time, and without paying back the money. At law, therefore, the plaintiff has no remedy until the defendant shall have executed a deed containing a proper and legal grant of the exclusive right of sporting in accordance with the terms of the agreement.’ Finding, therefore, that the plaintiff’s interest was incapable of being supported at law upon the footing of Wood v. Leadbitter, he gave him relief in equity, and in so doing so, he says: ‘It appears to me that the plaintiff is clearly- entitled to an injunction in the interval until the defendant shall has-e executed proper legal grant of the right claimed bethe plaintiff.’ What could be plainer ? According to Wood v. Leadbitter the plaintiff would have been dismissed from a Court of Law; he would have had no case. He comes into a Court of Equity and he obtains relief in equity because he would have no remedy at law, and his remedy is given until he has been clothed with such rights under a proper instrument as that he has a remedy at law, and then he is left to his legal rights. I will read a few words from the judgment of Kay J. in McManus v Cooke 35 Ch. D. 681, Kays J. says: ‘Hewlins v Shippam 5 B. and C. 221, Wood v Leadbitter 13 M. and W. 838, and other authorities at common law were cited, and it was argued that the right claimed could only be granted by deed, and that therefore the licence was revocable; but this common law doctrine was not allowed to prevail in equity.” As I have shown in Frogley v. Earl of Lovelace John. p.333 it was not allowed to prevail in equity.
The position of matters now is that the Court is bound under the Judicature Act to give effect to equitable doctrines. The question we have to consider is having regard to equitable considerations, Wood v Leadbitter is now law, meaning that Wood v Leadbitter is a decision which can be applied in its integrity in a Court which is bound to give effect to equitable considerations. In my opinion, it is not. Cozens Hardy J, as he then was, the present Master of the Rolls, in the case of Lowe v Adams [1901] 2 Ch 598, at p. 600, said this: ‘Whether Wood v. Leadbitter is still good Iaw having regard to Walsh v. Lonsdale’ 21 Ch. D. 9 -which is a decision of the Court of Appeal-‘is very doubtful.’ The present Lord Parker, then Parker J., in the case of Jones v. Earl of Tankerville [1909] 2 Ch 440, at p. 443 says this: ‘An injunction restraining the revocation of the licence, when it is revocable at law, may in a sense be called relief by way of specific performance, but it is not specific performance in the sense of compelling the vendor to do anything. It merely prevents him from breaking his contract, and protects a right in equity which but for the absence of a seal would be a right at law, and since the Judicature Act it may well be doubted whether the absence of a seal in such a case can be relied on in any Court.’ What was relied on in Wood v. Leadbitter, and rightly relied on at that date, was that there was not an instrument under seal, and therefore there was not a grant, and therefore the licensee could not say that he was not a mere licensee, but a licensee with a grant. That is now swept away. It cannot be said as against the plaintiff that he is a licensee with no grant merely because there is not an instrument under seal which gives him a right at law.
There is another way in which the matter may be put. If there be a licence with an agreement not to revoke the licence, that, if given for value, is an enforceable right. If the facts here are, as I think they are, that the licence was a licence to enter the building and see the spectacle from its commencement until its termination, then there was included in that contract a contract not to revoke the licence until the play had run to its termination. It was then a breach of contract to revoke the obligation not to revoke the licence, and for that the decision in Kerrison v. Smith [1897] 2 QB 445 is an authority. So far I have dealt with the law.
‘I will say a few words as to what were the facts in this case. The plaintiff entered this picture theatre and paid 6d. for his admission. The defendants denied that he had paid, and that was the question for the jury in the case. The jury have given the plaintiff a verdict; they have found that he did pay his 6d., and that fact is not now in contest before us. Alleging that the plaintiff had not paid, the attendant at the theatre, and then the manager, called upon him to go out of the theatre, treating him as a fraudulent person, a person who had come in without payment. There was some conversation with, I think, one attendant and a second attendant, and then the manager came, and the manager called upon him to go out. A police constable was then called in, and in the presence of the audience the man was again called upon to come out. The police constable was asked to take him out, but declined and said the doorkeeper could take him out if he were so minded. Thereupon the doorkeeper laid hands upon him to remove him by force, and the plaintiff, as a reasonable man, yielded at once to the man and went out. There was in law an assault, and an assault of a grievous kind. He was exposed to indignity, and it is for that indignity, I suppose, that the jury have given him a verdict for 150l.’
‘The defendants had for value contracted that the plaintiff should see a certain spectacle from its commencement to its termination. They broke that contract and it was a tort on their part to remove him. They committed an assault upon him in law. It was not of a violent kind, because, like a wise man, the plaintiff gave way to superior force and left the theatre. They sought to justify the assault- by saying, that they were entitled to remove him because he had not paid. He had paid, the jury have so found. Failing on that question of fact, they say: that they were entitled to remove him because his licence was revocable. In my opinion it was not. There was, I think, no justification for the assault here committed. Under the circumstances it was for the jury to give him such a sum as was right for the assault which was committed upon him, and for the serious indignity to a gentleman of being seized and treated in this way in a place of public resort. The jury have found that he was originally in the theatre as a spectator, that the assault was committed upon him, and that it was a wrongful act.
I think that the appeal which has been brought before us, and which is founded simply upon the question of law which I have discussed at the beginning of this judgment, fails and must be dismissed with costs.’
Kennedy LJ said: ‘I am of the same opinion. The facts as well as the law have been very fully dealt with, and I do not propose to add much. We have heard a very careful and interesting argument chiefly affecting the character of Wood v. Leadbitter. Personally, I am indifferent as to whether that case has or has not been subjected to some slight imputations upon its character. It was decision of a great Court, and I desire to treat it myself with the utmost respect, but I do not think it governs this case. The plaintiff was in this picture theatre and was assaulted and subjected to indignities which were entirely unjustifiable by those who handled him and compelled him to go out. What is his position? He says ‘I was there by right; I was occupying a sent for which I had paid in a place of public entertainment,’ he says that if you pay a certain price you must be entitled to the possession of the seat. The seat, I understand, is one which he may choose; it is not a reserve seat, but a seat which he entered. He did enter that seat, and they took him out again practically, in the eyes of the law, by force. Now the defendants have to justify that, and they justify it by saying that there is a point of law apart from the defence in fact which failed, namely that he was not there by right because he had not fulfilled the condition of payment. The defendants say through their counsel, ‘In point of law, even if you did pay, we had a right to turn you out, although you were behaving in the way in which those who go into places of public entertainment are bound (by implied contract at any rate) to behave.’ They say, ‘In law we are justified because all that you had was a revocable licence. When we use the words ‘revocable licence,’ ‘ say the defendants, ‘we mean that we can at will require you to leave this building, and you are bound to obey. Therefore, as we can legally require you to do so, you must go quietly, and if you do not go quietly we are right, using no more force than is necessary, in putting you out.’ For the reasons I ventured to refer to in the course of the argument by way of illustration (which have been still better illustrated by Buckley L.J. in his judgment) such an astounding conclusion is one which one would require as a matter of law, I think, and as a matter of common sense, to be strictly justified. The justification is hung entirely on the peg of the doctrine which is said to be the doctrine established by the considered decision of the Court of Exchequer in the year 1845. With regard to that decision, I am not going myself to say, and I should feel I was presumptuous in saying, that it was not at the time a perfectly good decision. It has been quoted frequently with respect, and I am not going to say a word in dimiution of that respect. But what was the decision ? It is stated, and I think with perfect correctness, at the bottom of p. 838: ‘A right to come and remain for acertain time on the land of another can be granted only by- deed; and a parole licence to do so, though money be paid for it is revocable at any time, and without paying back the money.’
‘Now I hold that this case, as Buckley LJ has intimated, the contract would not be correctly expressed by saying that it was a right to come and remain for a certain time on the land of another. In this case I think there was, if you were to put the contract into terms, a contract that there should be an irrevocable right to remain until the conclusion of the performance. I do not lay stress upon that point, and for this reason, that in the case of Wood v. Leadbitter, the plaintiff, who ho was in a particular part of the racecourse, might have said that he had the same sort of contract, but he did not say it, and therefore I will leave the matter alone. What was decided by the case was that the grant, to be effectual and irrevocable, must be a grant valid in law, and such a grant could only he made by deed. Passages have already been quoted from that judgment, and I am not going to take up time by quoting them again, but I think that it is important to remember that at the very commencement of the judgment of Alderson B. he points out that the question arose upon the plea and its replication, and the replication, he points out, is that: ‘At the time of such removal, the plaintiff was in the said close by the leave and licence of Lord Eglintoun.’ It was not there suggested by the plaintiff, ‘My right to remain is not merely by leave and licence of Lord Eglintoun; I have an implied contract that I should be there and that contract is not subject to revocation.’ Therefore, as I say, one must deal with that case upon the pleading, and upon that pleading the judgment of the Court cannot be put more specifically or more correctly than in the passage I have quoted from the headnote. There must be a grant by deed; if you show only a parol licence, you have no case. There are several passages which show that. When the learned Alderson B. is commenting on the case, from the decision in which the Court differed, of Talyer v. Waters (1817) 7 Taunt. 374, he says at p. 854: ‘It was taken for granted that, if the statute of Frauds did not apply, a parol licence was sufficient, and the necessity of an instrument under seal, by reason of the interest in question being a right in nature of an easement, was by some inadvertence kept entirely out of sight.’ There is language used in the passage on p. 845 which has been already cited by Buckley L.J. to the same effect, and which states this in one sentence: ‘But where there is a licence by parol, coupled with a parol grant, or pretended grant, of something which is incapable of being granted otherwise than by deed, there the licence is a mere licence; it is not an incident to a valid grant, and it is therefore revocable.’ Does that apply now? Since the Judicature Act there is no doubt we have to apply the principles of equity, and according to those principles there was in this case that which was not granted by a deed, and which need not be granted by deed, and therefore there was that which is valid now in equity as a good title upon which this gentleman, the plaintiff, being in possession of a seat, had a right to stay and say ‘It is no use your saying to me I am obliged to go because I have not got in the language of Wood v. Leadbitter (l) a grant by deed; this is an interest which, whether you call it an easement or not, is an interest which I can now acquire in equity by parol, and I have that interest.’
‘The passage which has been quoted from Parker J.’s judgment in Jones v. Earl of Tankerville states that which I believe to be right, namely, that an injunction restraining the revocation of the licence, when it is revocable at law, may in a sense be called relief by way of specific performance, but it is not specific performance in the sense of compelling the Vendor to do anything. It merely prevents him from breaking his contract, and protects a right in equity which, but for the absence of a seal, would be a right at law. There is also the judgment of Kay .J. in McManus v. Cooke 35 Ch. at p. 697. The learned judge sets out number of propositions established by the authorities in regard to these questions, and amongst other things he says that the equity applies ‘wherever the defendant has obtained and is in possession of some substantial advantage under a parol agreement which, if in writing, should be such as the Court would direct to be specifically performed. The doctrine applies to a parol agreement for an easement, though no interest in land is intended to be acquired.’
‘I have come to the conclusion, therefore, putting,’ aside altogether the question what the contract was in this case, that in fact to treat it upon the basis of Wood v. Leadbitter, being good law is wrong because of more modern legislation. It is no longer good law to do such act as the defendants have done here.
I think I ought to add that that which we are now asserting in this Court has been recognised in the passage to which I referred in the course of the argument from Sir Frederick Pollock’s work upon Torts. He points out carefully at p. 390, referring to Wood v. Leadbitter and Tayler v Waters, which was there overruled, that even in such a case, where there had been part performance, specific performance is sometimes decreed, and equitable rights are now enforced by all the Courts. (See also Roscoe’s Nisi Prius, vol. ii., p. 930.) It seems to me that there was here a good equitable right which rendered the act of the defendants in the present case bad in law.’

Judges:

Buckley LJ, Kennedy LJ, Phillimore LJ

Citations:

[1915] 1 KB 1

Citing:

CitedWood v Leadbitter ExcC 22-Feb-1845
The plaintiff complained of being assaulted. He had been on Doncaster Race Course with a ticket. The owner’s servant requested him to leave, and when he refused gently laid his hands on the plaintiff to remove him. The plaintiff said that his . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Contract, Equity, Land

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.377908

Brown v Gregson: HL 1920

Viscount Haldane explained the doctrine of election: ‘The doctrine of election . . is a principle which the Courts apply in the exercise of an equitable jurisdiction enabling them to secure a just distribution in substantial accordance with the general scheme of the instrument. It is not merely the language used to which the Court looks. A testator may, for instance, have obviously failed to realise that any question could arise. But the Court will none the less hold that a beneficiary who is given a share under the will in assets, the total amount of which depends on the inclusion of property belonging to the beneficiary himself which the testator has ineffectively sought to include, ought not to be allowed to have a share in the assets effectively disposed of, excepting on terms. He must co-operate to the extent requisite to provide the amount necessary for the division prescribed by the will, either by bringing in his own property, erroneously contemplated by the testator as forming part of the assets, or by submitting to a diminution of the share to which he is prima facie entitled, to an extent equivalent to the value of his own property if withheld by him from the common stock.’

Judges:

Viscount Haldane

Citations:

[1920] AC 860

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedFrear v Frear and Another CA 2-Dec-2008
Claim for interest in land
The claimant asserted an interest in the house in his mother’s estate and claimed against the personal representatives. He had lived in the house with his mother. He had previously assisted in the purchase of an earlier family home after being . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Equity

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.278398

Armstrong v Sheppard and Short Ltd: CA 1959

The plaintiff had a path at the rear of his property. The defendant constructed a sewer under the path, and asked the plaintiff for permission. He gave it informally, not knowing at the time that he owned the land. The sewer was constructed. Though suffering no inconvenience, on discovering his ownership, the plaintiff requested the removal of the sewer and its manhole, and an associated injunction. The judge at trial found a trespass, but gave only nominal damages and refused an injunction.
Held: The plaintiff was not debarred from objecting when his acquiescence arose through ignorance. However the trespass was trivial, and no injunction was granted.
As to the cross appeal, though the trespass was forgiven by the consent, that could not answer the claim as to the continuing discharge since that would amount to an easement which would require a formal grant.
Lord Evershed MR said: ‘it is true to say that if a man, having a proprietary right, proves an infringement of that right, prima facie he is entitled to an injunction: but that needs some qualification. It is not a matter of unqualified right; and one ground for denying an injunction would be that the wrong done is, in the circumstances, trivial. That proposition is founded on the well-known case of Imperial Gas Light and Coke Co. (Directors) v. Broadbent . . The judge was here dealing with the claim as I have formulated it: and he came to the conclusion that the circumstances of this case were special, and, as his judgment shows, that the damage was trivial . . But there were other good grounds, and formidable grounds (as I think) for refusing the plaintiff an injunction. That he misled the defendants is beyond a peradventure. It is no less clear that he attempted to mislead the court. He asserted – contrary to the fact – that he had never had any conversation with the defendants about the matter at all; and in his evidence in chief he so swore, untruly. It is not, therefore, surprising that the judge came to the conclusion that he should grant no equitable relief; and in my judgment, on the facts of this case, he was well entitled to take that view.’

Judges:

Lord Evershed MR

Citations:

[1959] 2 QB 384, [1959] 2 All ER 651, [1959] 3 WLR 84, (1959) 123 JP 401, (1959) Sol Jo 508

Citing:

CitedImperial Gas Light and Coke Company v Broadbent HL 4-Aug-1859
If a Plaintiff applies for an injunction in respect of a violation of a common law right, and the existence of that right, or the fact of its violation is denied, he must establish his right at law, but having done that, he is, except under special . .

Cited by:

CitedPelling v Families Need Fathers Ltd CA 1-Aug-2001
The claimant, a member of the company, a charitable company limited by guarantee, sought a list of the company’s members. This was refused, and the court used a discretion not to order the list to be produced. The applicant sought to lead a group . .
CitedSt Pancras and Humanist Housing Association Ltd v Leonard CA 17-Dec-2008
The claimant sought possession of a garage. The defendant claimed adverse possession.
Held: The defendant’s appeal against an order for possession failed. The defendant had attended a meeting where his behaviour had allowed other parties to . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Estoppel, Equity, Nuisance, Torts – Other, Land

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.278877

William Brandt’s Sons and Co v Dunlop Rubber Co: HL 1905

The court was asked whether instructions given by the bank’s customer to purchasers of rubber to make payment to its bank directly, amounted to an equitable assignment of debts, so that the bank could sue for their recovery. The bank sued the purchasers directly without joining its customer, the assignor.
Held: Though the assignor was not a party, there had been an equitable assignment. An equitable assignment of a chose in action requires no more than an expression of intention to assign, coupled with notice to the debtor, to impose on the latter an obligation to pay the assignee.
Lord Macnaghten said that an equitable assignment need not take any particular form and continued: ‘It may be addressed to the debtor. It may be couched in the language of command. It may be a courteous request. It may assume the form of mere permission. The language is immaterial if the meaning is plain. All that is necessary is that the debtor should be given to understand that the debt has been made over by the creditor to some third person. If the debtor ignores such a notice, he does so at his peril. If the assignment be for valuable consideration and communicated to the third person, it cannot be revoked by the creditor or safely disregarded by the debtor.’
No action should be dismissed for want of parties: ‘Strictly speaking, [the sellers], or their trustee in bankruptcy, should have been brought before the Court. But no action is now dismissed for want of parties, and the trustee in bankruptcy had really no interest in the matter. At your Lordships’ bar the Dunlops disclaimed any wish to have him present, and in both Courts below they claimed to retain for their own use any balance that might remain after satisfying Brandts.’

Judges:

Lord Lindley, Lord Macnaghten

Citations:

[1905] AC 454

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedScribes West Ltd v Relsa Anstalt and others CA 20-Dec-2004
The claimant challenged the forfeiture of its lease by a freeholder which had acquired the registered freehold title but had not yet registered its ownership. The second defendant had forfeited the lease by peacable re-entry for arrears of rent, and . .
CitedRoberts v Gill and Co Solicitors and Others SC 19-May-2010
The claimant beneficiary in the estate sought damages against solicitors who had acted for the claimant’s brother, the administrator, saying they had allowed him to take control of the assets in the estate. The will provided that property was to be . .
CitedRoberts v Gill and Co Solicitors and Others SC 19-May-2010
The claimant beneficiary in the estate sought damages against solicitors who had acted for the claimant’s brother, the administrator, saying they had allowed him to take control of the assets in the estate. The will provided that property was to be . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Equity, Litigation Practice

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.276786

Collins v Jones and Others: ChD 3 Feb 2000

A unilateral document could not be rectified to make it into something which it was not intended to be at the time it was executed, even if the alteration would give better effect to the general intention of the parties. The choice of different means to achieve the same object was not to be allowed by rectification.

Citations:

Times 03-Feb-2000

Equity

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.79281

Challoner v Robinson: 1908

A landlord entitled to distrain for rent, could seize all goods and chattels found on the tenant’s premises whether they were the property of the tenant or a stranger.

Citations:

[1908] 1 Ch 49

Cited by:

CitedRhodes v Allied Dunbar Pension Services Ltd CA 1989
The intermediate tenant had charged the lease to the bank, which appointed receivers. Both the sub rent and the head rent fell into arrears. The head landlord then served a notice direct on the subtenant requiring him to pay the rent direct to the . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Equity

Updated: 15 May 2022; Ref: scu.264577

R E Jones Ltd v Waring and Gillow Ltd: HL 1926

In the case of a confidence man whose plan might have been frustrated by an unexpected contact between the two innocent parties; the House of Lords were divided as to whether that equivocal contact amounted to a representation. Viscount Cave LC thought that the court should find a way of preventing a party so using estoppel as to make a profit.

Judges:

Lord Shaw, Viscount Cave LC, Lord Carson, Lord Sumner

Citations:

[1926] AC 670

Statutes:

Bills of Exchange Act 1882 29(1)

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedLipkin Gorman (a Firm) v Karpnale Ltd HL 6-Jun-1991
The plaintiff firm of solicitors sought to recover money which had been stolen from them by a partner, and then gambled away with the defendant. He had purchased their gaming chips, and the plaintiff argued that these, being gambling debts, were . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Equity, Estoppel, Banking

Updated: 14 May 2022; Ref: scu.259531

In Re Carne’s Settled Estates: 1899

A right to occupy for life, arising by settlement gives to the occupier an equitable interest in the land.

Judges:

North J

Citations:

(1899) 1 Ch 324

Cited by:

CitedCrancour Ltd v Da Silvaesa and Another CA 26-Feb-1986
The plaintiff sought possession of two rooms in a house occupied by the defendants separately. The agreements stated that they were licences. The agreements excluded the occupiers between 10:30am and noon on each day. The occupiers claimed to be . .
CitedBerrisford v Mexfield Housing Co-Operative Ltd SC 9-Nov-2011
The tenant appealed against an order granting possession. The tenancy, being held of a mutual housing co-operative did not have security but was in a form restricting the landlord’s right to recover possession, and the tenant resisted saying that it . .
CitedBinions v Evans CA 27-Jan-1972
The plaintiffs had bought a cottage subjecty to a tenancy to the defendant. They sought possession saying that she held under a tenancy at will. It was a renancy for her life but described as a tenancy at will. The judge had held that the other . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Landlord and Tenant, Equity

Updated: 14 May 2022; Ref: scu.259542

Marsh v Keating: HL 1834

Keating owned 12,000 pounds interest or share in joint stock reduced 3 per cent annuities, standing to her with the Bank of England, where the accounts were entered in the form of debtor and creditor accounts in the ledgers of the bank. Under what claimed to be a power of attorney given by Mrs. Keating to the law firm of Marsh, Sibbard and Co., on which her signature was in fact forged by Henry Fauntleroy, a partner in Marsh, Sibbard and Co., an entry was made in the books of the Bank of England to transfer andpound;9,000 of the interest or share in the stock to William Tarbutt, to whom, on the instructions of Henry Fauntleroy, the stock had been sold for the sum of 6,018 l 15s. In due course, the broker who conducted the sale accounted for 6,013l 2s.6d. (being the sale price less commission) by a cheque payable to Marsh and Co. Upon the discovery of the forgery, Mrs. Keating made a claim upon the Bank of England; and the bank requested Mrs. Keating to prove in the bankruptcy of the partners in Marsh and Co. in respect of the sum so received by them. Mrs. Keating then commenced an action, pursuant to an order of the Lord Chancellor, to try the question whether the partners in Marsh and Co. were indebted to her, in which she claimed the sum so received by Marsh and Co. as money had and received to her use. The opinion of the judges was taken, and their opinion was to the effect that Mrs. Keating was entitled to succeed in her claim.
Held: Her claim succeeded.

Citations:

[1834] EngR 879, (1834) 1 Bing NC 198, (1834) 131 ER 1094

Links:

Commonlii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

See alsoWilliam Marsh, Josias Henry Stracey, And George Edward Graham v Ann Keating 1833
. .

Cited by:

CitedLipkin Gorman (a Firm) v Karpnale Ltd HL 6-Jun-1991
The plaintiff firm of solicitors sought to recover money which had been stolen from them by a partner, and then gambled away with the defendant. He had purchased their gaming chips, and the plaintiff argued that these, being gambling debts, were . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Equity

Updated: 14 May 2022; Ref: scu.259439

Ministry of Health v Simpson; In re Diplock dec: HL 1950

The will of Cable Diplock purported to make a gift to charity, and was distributed accordingly. The house however found the gift to be invalid.
Held: A personal remedy existed for the recovery of amounts wrongly paid in the distribution of an estate.
Lord Simonds was clear that the principles with which he was dealing related to the administration of assets of a deceased person, and: ‘The broad fact remains that the Court of Chancery in order to mitigate the rigour of the common law or to supply its deficiencies established the rule of equity which I have described and this rule did not excuse the wrongly paid legatee from repayment because he had spent what he had been wrongly paid.’
Lord Simonds did not accept that a claim should not lie against a person who had received a legacy in good faith and then spent it, without knowledge of any flaw in his title: ‘My Lords, I find little help in such generalities. Upon the propriety of a legatee refusing to repay to the true owner the money that he has wrongly received I do not think it necessary to express any judgment. It is a matter on which opinions may well differ. The broad fact remains that the Court of Chancery, in order to mitigate the rigour of the common law or to supply its deficiencies, established the rule of equity which I have described and this rule did not excuse the wrongly paid legatee from repayment because he had spent what he had been wrongly paid. No doubt the plaintiff might by his conduct and particularly by laches have raised some equity against himself; but if he had not done so, he was entitled to be repaid. In the present case the respondents have done nothing to bar them in equity from asserting their rights. They can only be defeated if they are barred at law by some Statute of Limitations.’

Judges:

Simonds L

Citations:

[1951] AC 251, (1950) 2 All ER 1137

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

Appeal fromIn re Diplock’s estate CA 1948
After considering a situation in which trust money had been applied in making alterations to the property of an innocent third party but had not added to the value of the property,
Held: The origin of the equitable rules of tracing were . .

Cited by:

CitedLipkin Gorman (a Firm) v Karpnale Ltd HL 6-Jun-1991
The plaintiff firm of solicitors sought to recover money which had been stolen from them by a partner, and then gambled away with the defendant. He had purchased their gaming chips, and the plaintiff argued that these, being gambling debts, were . .
MentionedGomez and others v Vives CA 3-Oct-2008
The claimant appealed a finding that the court did not have jurisdiction over income payable to a trust governed by English law under which the claimant was beneficiary.
Held: The appeal failed in part. Because Article 5 is in derogation from . .
CitedGreen and others v Gaul and Another; In re Loftus deceased ChD 18-Mar-2005
The claimants began an action in January 2003 to seek to set aside the appointment of an administrator from December 1991, and to have set aside transfers of property made within the estate.
Held: The limitation period against a personal . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Equity, Wills and Probate

Updated: 14 May 2022; Ref: scu.259533

United Motor Service v Tropic-aire: 1932

(Court of Appeals for the 8th Circuit USA) The defendant said that he had suffered greater damage than the amount set down in a bond provided for security when the plaintiff requested an interim injunction. The action had failed.
Held: Judge Kenyon said: ‘Restitution of the amount received under a decree, afterwards reversed, will be ordered in equity, and will sustain an action at law. But the condition of the restoration is always that the party against whom restitution is sought shall have received, by virtue of the decree, what he is asked to restore. There is no support in reason or authority for an extension of the doctrine of restitution to cover an award of damages, which the restorer never received, and so in no true sense could restore.’
‘There is nothing certain as to the amount of damages suffered by defendant by reason of the improvident granting of the preliminary injunction. Nothing was taken from it by the injunction and given to the plaintiff. We see no room for the application of the doctrine of restitution here.’

Judges:

Judge Kenyon

Citations:

(1932) 57 F 2d 479

Jurisdiction:

United States

Cited by:

CitedSmithkline Beecham Plc Glaxosmithkline UK Ltd and Another v Apotex Europe Ltd and others (No 2) CA 23-May-2006
The parties to the action had given cross undertakings to support the grant of an interim injunction. A third party subsequently applied to be joined, and now sought to take advantage of the cross undertakings to claim the losses incurred through . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Litigation Practice, Equity

Updated: 14 May 2022; Ref: scu.242621

Henderson v Folkestone Waterworks Co: 1885

The plaintiff had paid water rates to the defendant calculated in accordance with the law as it was held to be by the Court of Appeal. After payment, the House of Lords in the Dobbs case changed the law, and if calculated under the changed law the plaintiff had overpaid, and he sought to recover the overpayments on the ground that he had paid under compulsion and under a mistake of law.
Held: The Court accepted that if both compulsion and mistake of law were present, the overpayment could be recovered. Counsel having submitted that the payments had been made in ignorance of the law, Lord Coleridge CJ said: ‘Of what law? I was ignorant of it before the decision of the House of Lords. I had held to the contrary, and two eminent judges agreed with me. Can that be put as ignorance of law? Just see what consequences would follow–that wherever there has been a reversal of judgment all the money that has been paid under the previous notion of the law can be recovered back! Has that ever been held? Can it be that every reversal of a decision may give rise to hundreds of actions to recover back money previously paid?’ Lord Coleridge dismissed the plaintiff’s claim on the grounds both that there was no element of compulsion in the payment and that there was no relevant mistake of law, saying: ‘But here at the time the money was paid, which was before Dobbs case, the law was in favour of the company, and there was no authority to show that it could be recovered back on account of a judicial decision reversing the former understanding of the law.’

Judges:

Lord Coleridge CJ

Citations:

(1885) 1 TLR 329

Cited by:

CitedKleinwort Benson Ltd v Lincoln City Council etc HL 29-Jul-1998
Right of Recovery of Money Paid under Mistake
Kleinwort Benson had made payments to a local authority under swap agreements which were thought to be legally enforceable when made. Subsequently, a decision of the House of Lords, (Hazell v. Hammersmith and Fulham) established that such swap . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Equity

Updated: 14 May 2022; Ref: scu.236526

In re Roberts: 1905

A compromise made under a mistake of law can be set aside.

Citations:

[1905] 1 Ch 704

Cited by:

CitedDerrick v Williams CA 1939
The plaintiff had accepted a payment into court on a basis that a Court of Appeal decision declared the law in a form which precluded the recovery of certain types of damages. Subsequently the House of Lords reversed the Court of Appeal decision and . .
CitedKleinwort Benson Ltd v Lincoln City Council etc HL 29-Jul-1998
Right of Recovery of Money Paid under Mistake
Kleinwort Benson had made payments to a local authority under swap agreements which were thought to be legally enforceable when made. Subsequently, a decision of the House of Lords, (Hazell v. Hammersmith and Fulham) established that such swap . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Equity

Updated: 14 May 2022; Ref: scu.236528

In re Condon, Ex parte James: 1874

The Trustee in bankruptcy has relevant duties as the Trustee as an officer of the Court. Such a Trustee would not engage in conduct which could be seen to involve an unfair use of that position, and ‘where it would be unfair’ for a trustee in bankruptcy ‘to take full advantage of his legal rights as such, the court will order him not to do so’. The court will permit a mistake of law rule to be invoked to prevent repayment of sums paid under an error of law to or by a trustee in bankruptcy as an officer of the court.

Citations:

(1874) LR 9 Ch App 609, [1874-80] All ER 388

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedKleinwort Benson Ltd v Lincoln City Council etc HL 29-Jul-1998
Right of Recovery of Money Paid under Mistake
Kleinwort Benson had made payments to a local authority under swap agreements which were thought to be legally enforceable when made. Subsequently, a decision of the House of Lords, (Hazell v. Hammersmith and Fulham) established that such swap . .
CitedIn re Nortel Companies and Others SC 24-Jul-2013
The court was asked as to the interrelationship of the statutory schemes relating to the protection of employees’ pensions and to corporate insolvency.
Held: Liabilities which arose from financial support directions or contribution notices . .
CitedIn re Multi Guarantee Ltd CA 1987
Nourse LJ said of the Condon Case: ‘The principle of cases such as those is that the court will direct a trustee in bankruptcy not to insist on his full legal rights if it would be unacceptable for him to do so. The principle is subject to . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Equity, Insolvency

Updated: 14 May 2022; Ref: scu.236545

Cantor v Cox: 1975

An unmarried couple had lived together, and now disputed its ownership. It had been purchased in the sole name of the woman. The executrix of the will of the woman claimed possession of the house, in which the man was still living. He counterclaimed for a declaration that he was beneficially entitled to it.
Held: The presumption of advancement does not apply as between an unmarried couple living together as husband and wife, where the claimant cannot be heard or allowed to assert his claim to an equitable interest. ‘Here the legal estate was in the testatrix, and the defendant came to the court seeking equitable relief. The equitable presumption of a resulting trust which arose where the purchase-money was provided by someone other than the person taking the legal estate was always rebuttable by evidence of actual intention. The evidence in this case was perfectly plain. The defendant put the house into the name of the testatrix in order to be out of reach of his creditors.’

Judges:

Plowman V-C

Citations:

(1975) 239 EG 121

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedMuckleston v Brown 8-May-1801
‘Let the estate lie where it falls.’ . .

Cited by:

CitedLowson v Coombes CA 26-Nov-1998
A house was purchased by an unmarried couple to live together, but conveyed into the female partner’s sole name. Her partner was still married, and she feared that on his death his wife would inherit.
Held: ‘the case being one of illegality, I . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Trusts, Equity

Updated: 13 May 2022; Ref: scu.236575

Lowson v Coombes: CA 26 Nov 1998

A house was purchased by an unmarried couple to live together, but conveyed into the female partner’s sole name. Her partner was still married, and she feared that on his death his wife would inherit.
Held: ‘the case being one of illegality, I am of the opinion that the defendant holds one half of the beneficial interest in 1 Queenswood Road on a resulting trust for the plaintiff. ‘

Judges:

Nourse LJ, Henry LJ, Walker LJ

Citations:

Times 02-Dec-1998, Gazette 03-Jun-1999, [1998] EWCA Civ 1849, [1999] 2 WLR 720, [1999] 1 FLR 799, [1999] Fam Law 91, [1999] Ch 373, [1999] 2 FCR 731

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedCantor v Cox 1975
An unmarried couple had lived together, and now disputed its ownership. It had been purchased in the sole name of the woman. The executrix of the will of the woman claimed possession of the house, in which the man was still living. He counterclaimed . .
CitedTinker v Tinker CA 1970
The husband bought a business in Cornwall and a house for his family. At first he intended to buy the house in his own name, but was advised that if the venture failed, the house could be taken by his creditors as part of his business assets. It was . .
CitedTinsley v Milligan HL 28-Jun-1993
Two women parties used funds generated by a joint business venture to buy a house in which they lived together. It was vested in the sole name of the plaintiff but on the understanding that they were joint beneficial owners. The purpose of the . .
CitedMuckleston v Brown 8-May-1801
‘Let the estate lie where it falls.’ . .

Cited by:

CitedCollier v Collier CA 30-Jul-2002
Fraudulent Intent Negated Trust
The daughter claimant sought possession of business premises from her father who held them under leases. He claimed an order that the property was held in trust for him. The judge that at the time the properties were conveyed, the father had been . .
CitedSQ v RQ and Another FD 31-Jul-2008
The home in which the family had lived was held in the name of a brother. Each party claimed that it was held in trust for them. Chancery proceedings had been consolidated into these ancillary relief applications. The home had been in the husband’s . .
CitedJones v Kernott SC 9-Nov-2011
Unmarried Couple – Equal division displaced
The parties were unmarried but had lived together. They now disputed the shares in which they had held the family home. It had been bought in joint names, but after Mr Kernott (K) left in 1993, Ms Jones (J) had made all payments on the house. She . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land, Trusts, Equity

Updated: 13 May 2022; Ref: scu.145328

Collier v Collier: CA 30 Jul 2002

Fraudulent Intent Negated Trust

The daughter claimant sought possession of business premises from her father who held them under leases. He claimed an order that the property was held in trust for him. The judge that at the time the properties were conveyed, the father had been fearful of a potential substantial liability and it had been done to protect the property against those creditors.
Held: Equity will not permit a transferor of property by way of gift in order to perpetrate a fraud to pray in aid the existence of that illegal purpose in order to rebut a presumption of advancement. ‘the leases ‘were shams as between father and daughter’. The daughter ‘should at most be his nominee and effectively the lease should be available to be used only if required in order to deceive’. He made the grants to the daughter ‘with the intention that if it served his interest he should treat the grants as gifts, but if it did not he would claim that the grant was subject to his beneficial interest.’ The transfers were carried out ‘with the object of defrauding the respective mortgagees of their security’. There had been no voluntary withdrawal from the transaction. To recover the property the father needed to rely upon the agreement which set up the trust. That agreement provided that the trust should be concealed from creditors and the Inland Revenue. The result is that the father cannot dispute the effect of the transfers of the property without relying upon his illegality. The property must lie where it rests. ‘

Judges:

Lord Justice Aldous, Mance LJ

Citations:

[2002] EWCA Civ 1095, [2002] BPIR 1057, [2002] 6 ITELR 270

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

See AlsoCollier v Kramer CA 1-Apr-2004
Appeal from a refusal to allow an amendment to join further parties to an action by Mr Michael Collier against solicitors . .
CitedSnell v Unity Finance Company Ltd CA 1964
The court must not permit itself to be the instrument by which an illegal contract is enforced. Points such as to illegality should be taken by the court irrespective of the wishes of the parties; and if not taken by the judge at trial, should be . .
CitedTinker v Tinker CA 1970
The husband bought a business in Cornwall and a house for his family. At first he intended to buy the house in his own name, but was advised that if the venture failed, the house could be taken by his creditors as part of his business assets. It was . .
CitedMuckleston v Brown 8-May-1801
‘Let the estate lie where it falls.’ . .
CitedTinsley v Milligan HL 28-Jun-1993
Two women parties used funds generated by a joint business venture to buy a house in which they lived together. It was vested in the sole name of the plaintiff but on the understanding that they were joint beneficial owners. The purpose of the . .
CitedTribe v Tribe CA 26-Jul-1995
Illegal intent alone rebutted presumption
The plaintiff held 499 of the 500 issued shares of a company. In 1986 he wished to retire and transferred 30 shares to his son, one of four children, who was to take over the business. In 1988 he was worried about a bill for dilapidations, and, to . .
CitedSnook v London and West Riding Investments Ltd CA 1967
Sham requires common intent to create other result
The court considered a claim by a hire-purchase company for the return of a vehicle. The bailee said the agreement was a sham.
Held: The word ‘sham’ should only be used to describe an act or document where the parties have a common intention . .
CitedA G Securities v Vaughan; Antoniades v Villiers and Bridger HL 10-Nov-1988
In Antoniades, the two tenants occupied an attic, living together. Each had at the same time signed identical agreements purporting to create licences. The landlord had reserved to himself the right to occupy the property and to allow others to . .
MentionedHolman v Johnson 5-Jul-1775
ex turpi causa non oritur actio
A claim was made for the price of goods which the plaintiff sold to the defendant in Dunkirk, knowing that the defendant’s purpose was to smuggle the goods into England. The plaintiff was met with a defence of illegality.
Held: The defence . .
CitedChettiar v Chettiar PC 14-Feb-1962
(Malaya) A father, in registering shares in the names of his children, had transferred the beneficial interest in those shares to them. Many years later the father had treated the shares as his own. The question arose as to whether this fact . .
CitedGissing v Gissing HL 7-Jul-1970
Evidence Needed to Share Benefical Inerests
The family home had been purchased during the marriage in the name of the husband only. The wife asserted that she had a beneficial interest in it.
Held: The principles apply to any case where a beneficial interest in land is claimed by a . .
CitedLowson v Coombes CA 26-Nov-1998
A house was purchased by an unmarried couple to live together, but conveyed into the female partner’s sole name. Her partner was still married, and she feared that on his death his wife would inherit.
Held: ‘the case being one of illegality, I . .

Cited by:

CitedLavelle v Lavelle and others CA 11-Feb-2004
Property had been purchased in the name of of the appellant by her father. She appealed a finding that the presumption of advancement had been rebutted.
Held: The appeal failed. The presumption against advancement had been rebutted on the . .
CitedLavelle v Lavelle and others CA 11-Feb-2004
Property had been purchased in the name of of the appellant by her father. She appealed a finding that the presumption of advancement had been rebutted.
Held: The appeal failed. The presumption against advancement had been rebutted on the . .
See AlsoCollier v Kramer CA 1-Apr-2004
Appeal from a refusal to allow an amendment to join further parties to an action by Mr Michael Collier against solicitors . .
CitedSQ v RQ and Another FD 31-Jul-2008
The home in which the family had lived was held in the name of a brother. Each party claimed that it was held in trust for them. Chancery proceedings had been consolidated into these ancillary relief applications. The home had been in the husband’s . .
CitedPatel v Mirza SC 20-Jul-2016
The claimant advanced funds to the respondent for him to invest in a bank of which the claimant had insider knowledge. In fact the defendant did not invest the funds, the knowledge was incorrect. The defendant however did not return the sums . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Equity, Trusts

Leading Case

Updated: 13 May 2022; Ref: scu.175225

Shearer and Others v Spring Capital Ltd and Others: ChD 4 Nov 2013

The court considered various applications for interim orders and directions in the cause.

Judges:

Danel Alexander QC

Citations:

[2013] EWHC 3373 (Ch)

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedThe Earl of Oxford’s Case In Chancery ChD 1615
Chancellor may relieve common law oppression
The claim was made under a lease. judgement have been entered in default at common law in favour of the plaintiff. the defendant began a suit in the Chancery Court. a common-law injunction was then issued against the original plaintiff, and he was . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Litigation Practice, Equity

Updated: 13 May 2022; Ref: scu.517374

Meinhard v Salmon: 1928

(New York Court of Appeals) Cardozo J said: ‘Equity refuses to confine within the bounds of classified transactions its precept of a loyalty that is undivided and unselfish’ and ‘[a] constructive trust is, then, the remedial device through which preference of self is made subordinate to loyalty to others.’

Judges:

Cardozo J

Citations:

(1928) 164 NE 545

Cited by:

CitedFassihim, Liddiardrams, International Ltd, Isograph Ltd v Item Software (UK) Ltd CA 30-Sep-2004
The first defendant (F) had been employed by a company involved in a distribution agreement. He had sought to set up a competing arrangement whilst a director of the claimant, and diverted a contract to his new company.
Held: A company . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Equity

Updated: 13 May 2022; Ref: scu.215871

Lord Cranstown v Johnston: 1796

Lord Cranstown was the absentee owner of a valuable estate in a Caribbean island, but he owed the defendant Johnston a modest amount of money. Johnston sued for the money to be brought in the local court, whose laws permitted a form of substituted service. He nailed the writ on a post and on the courthouse door. Thus, as Johnston had intended all along, Lord Cranstown received no actual notice of the proceedings. Judgment was given by default, the estate was put up for auction to satisfy the judgment, and Johnston, who was the only bidder, acquired the property for the amount of the debt, which was far less than the value of the estate. From beginning to end Johnston uttered no false representation to anyone, nor did he violate any law of the island, nor did he owe any contractual obligation to Lord Cranstown; but he did know that he was going behind Lord Cranstown’s back in getting the estate for a pittance. Lord Cranstown brought suit in England to recover the estate.
Held: Although he would not question the jurisdiction of the foreign court, or the regularity of its proceedings, and although he would not presume that the local laws would set aside the transaction, it was a fraud all the same according to English rules of equity, and that the defendant Johnston must restore the estate upon being repaid the original debt and expenses.

Judges:

Arden MR

Citations:

(1796) 3 Ves 170

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedR Griggs Group Ltd and others v Evans and others (No 2) ChD 12-May-2004
A logo had been created for the claimants, by an independent sub-contractor. They sought assignment of their legal title, but, knowing of the claimant’s interest the copyright was assigned to a third party out of the jurisdiction. The claimant . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Equity

Updated: 13 May 2022; Ref: scu.199521

Bank of Montreal v Sweeny: PC 1887

(Canada) A bank received property from a trustee knowing it to be trust property, although they knew not that the trustee was acting improperly, nor anything else, and made no enquiries. The bank was ordered to restore the property to the rightful beneficiary: ‘Their Lordships are led to this conclusion by the ordinary rules of justice as between man and man, and the ordinary expectations of mankind in transacting their affairs.’

Judges:

Lord Halsbury LC

Citations:

(1887) 12 App Cas 617

Jurisdiction:

Canada

Cited by:

CitedR Griggs Group Ltd and others v Evans and others (No 2) ChD 12-May-2004
A logo had been created for the claimants, by an independent sub-contractor. They sought assignment of their legal title, but, knowing of the claimant’s interest the copyright was assigned to a third party out of the jurisdiction. The claimant . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Equity, Banking

Updated: 13 May 2022; Ref: scu.199516

Norris v Chambres: 1862

A company director had advanced part of a loan for the purchase of a mine in Prussia. He died, and because of lack of funds, his estate risked losing everything. His estate sought its recovery.
Held: ‘With respect to this advance, I think that, upon the authority of Penn v. Lord Baltimore, which has often been acted upon, the Plaintiff would have been entitled to succeed if he could have proved that the claim for a declaration of the proposed charge or lien on the Maria Anna mine was founded on any contract or privity between him or the deceased [director] and the Defendants, the purchasers of the mine, and if there had not been a suit in the Prussian Courts, in which the same question was raised and had been decided in the Plaintiff’s favour. But I agree in thinking with the Master of the Rolls that the Plaintiff has failed to shew any such contract or privity. Upon the evidence adduced the purchasers of the mine, whom he sues, are to be considered as mere strangers, and any notice which they may have had of the transactions between [the deceased director] and [the old company] (which has now ceased to exist) cannot give this Court jurisdiction to declare the proposed lien or charge on lands in a foreign country. An English Court ought not to pronounce a decree, even in personam, which can have no specific operation without the intervention of a foreign Court, and which in the country where the lands to be charged by it lie would probably be treated as a brutum fulmen. I do not think that the Court of Chancery would give effect to a charge on land in the county of Middlesex so created by a Prussian Court sitting as Dusseldorf or Cologne. But another objection is lis alibi pendens, a suit pending before the proper tribunal in Prussia, and that by this tribunal, a decree has actually been pronounced in favour of the Plaintiff, giving him what he seeks . . We must suppose that the Court at Dusseldorf has ample means to enforce the whole of its decree, and that the Plaintiff will have the full benefit of that decree, which may be considered as creating a debt for which the opposite parties are personally liable and a charge upon the property sold.’

Judges:

Lord Campbell LC

Citations:

(1862) 3 De G.F. and J. 583

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

Appeal fromNorris v Chambres 1861
A company director had committed suicide; the claim was brought by his estate. The company had been established in England to work a Prussian coal mine, and the director had personally advanced a large sum towards its purchase. The company agreed to . .
CitedPenn v Lord Baltimore 1750
The court compelled Lord Baltimore to comply with the obligations he had assumed to the Penn family, by setting the Mason-Dixon line, demarcating boundaries between the privately-owned territories of Maryland, Pennsylvania and Delaware, and . .

Cited by:

CitedR Griggs Group Ltd and others v Evans and others (No 2) ChD 12-May-2004
A logo had been created for the claimants, by an independent sub-contractor. They sought assignment of their legal title, but, knowing of the claimant’s interest the copyright was assigned to a third party out of the jurisdiction. The claimant . .
CitedDeschamps v Miller 1908
The parties disputed land in India. A French couple, had married in France in community of property. So according to the French marriage contract the wife was supposed to be entitled to one half of the husband’s after-acquired property. The husband . .
ExplainedMacmillan Inc v Bishopsgate Investment Trust Plc and Others (No 3) ChD 1-Jul-1993
Bona fide chargees for value of shares situated in New York and held on trust for Macmillan were able, by application of New York law, to take the shares free of Macmillan’s prior equitable interest of which the chargees had had no notice. Where . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Equity, Jurisdiction

Updated: 13 May 2022; Ref: scu.199520

Berwick and Co v Price: 1905

A court of equity may enquire into the state of mind of a purchaser to see if he bought in good faith.

Citations:

[1905] 1 Ch 632

Cited by:

CitedR Griggs Group Ltd and others v Evans and others (No 2) ChD 12-May-2004
A logo had been created for the claimants, by an independent sub-contractor. They sought assignment of their legal title, but, knowing of the claimant’s interest the copyright was assigned to a third party out of the jurisdiction. The claimant . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Equity

Updated: 13 May 2022; Ref: scu.199510

Pallant v Morgan: ChD 1952

The agents of two neighbouring landowners orally agreed in the auction room that the plaintiff’s agent would refrain from bidding at auction and that the defendant, if his agent’s bid was successful, would divide the land according to an agreed formula, the details of which were to be agreed later. The defendant’s agent was successful, but when the parties failed to agree on the details of division the defendant retained the whole of the land for himself.
Held: Although the agreement was incomplete in its detail and too uncertain to be specifically enforceable, the defendant held the land on trust for himself and the plaintiff jointly, since his agent had made the bid on behalf of himself and the plaintiff’s agent on the basis of an agreement for division and it would amount to sanctioning a fraud on the defendant’s part to allow him to retain it.
Harman J said: ‘The plaintiff and the defendant have failed to agree on a division, and the court cannot compel them to agree. The best it can do is to decree that the property is held by the defendant for himself and the plaintiff jointly, and if they still fail to agree on a division the property must be resold, either party being at liberty to bid, and the proceeds of sale divided equally after repaying to the defendant the andpound;1,000 which he paid.’

Judges:

Harman J

Citations:

[1953] Ch 43, [1952] 2 All ER 951

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

ExaminedBanner Homes Group Plc v Luff Developments and Another CA 10-Feb-2000
Competing building companies agreed not to bid against each other for the purchase of land. One proceeded and the other asserted that the land was then held on trust for the two parties as a joint venture.
Held: Although there was no formal . .
CitedThames Cruises Limited v George Wheeler Launches Limited, Kingwood Launches Limited ChD 16-Dec-2003
The parties had previously worked to gether to provide ferry services on the Thames. A new tender to operate the services was not submitted. It was alleged that the Defendants had inequitably seized for themselves a business opportunity which the . .
CitedLondon and Regional Investments Ltd v TBI Plc and Others CA 22-Mar-2002
TBI was a property investor and developer with several subsidiaries. It agreed to sell some to London and Regional. The agreement provided for the vendor and the purchaser to use reasonable endeavours to agree the terms of a joint venture agreement . .
CitedKilcarne Holdings Ltd v Targetfollow (Birmingham) Ltd, Targetfollow Group Ltd ChD 9-Nov-2004
The defendant entered into an agreement for lease, incurring substantial obligations. When it could not meet them it sought assistance from the claimant, who now claimed to have an interest in a joint venture. The draft documentation originally . .
CitedParagon Finance Plc (Formerly Known As National Home Loans Corporation Plc v D B Thakerar and Co (a Firm); Ranga and Co (a Firm) and Sterling Financial Services Limited CA 21-Jul-1998
Where an action had been begun on basis of allegations of negligence and breach of trust, new allegations of fraud where quite separate new causes of claim, and went beyond amendments and were disallowed outside the relevant limitation period. . .
CitedSainsbury’s Supermarkets Ltd v Olympia Homes Limited, Hughes etc ChD 17-Jun-2005
The claimant sought rectification of the land register. In a development deal, an option agreement had not been registered, and the land sold on. The land was required to allow the building of a roundabout necessary for the intended store. An . .
CitedYeoman’s Row Management Ltd and Another v Cobbe HL 30-Jul-2008
The parties agreed in principle for the sale of land with potential development value. Considerable sums were spent, and permission achieved, but the owner then sought to renegotiate the deal.
Held: The appeal succeeded in part. The finding . .
CitedKilcarne Holdings Ltd v Targetfollow (Birmingham) Ltd and Another CA 16-Nov-2005
The defendant had brought in the claimant in order to assist in satisfying its own obligations under a lease. The joint venture was not recorded in a formal agreement. The appellant asserted that a constructive trust had been created. The judge had . .
CitedClarke and Another v Corless and Another ChD 8-Jul-2009
The parties disputed whether one could retain for his own benefit land on an estate reserved for an estate road. A trust was claimed under Pallant saying that the parties had made an informal agreement before the property was purchased.
Held: . .
CitedClarke and Another v Corless and Another CA 31-Mar-2010
The claimants appealed against refusal of a declaration that a neighbouring access road and land was held on a constructive trust. They said that an agreement bewteeen the parties should have been effective to impose a trust on the defendants. The . .
CitedBenedetti v Sawiris and Others SC 17-Jul-2013
The claimant appealed against reduction of the sum awarded on his claim for a quantum meruit after helping to facilitate a very substantial business deal for the defendants.
Held: The correct approach to the amount to be paid by way of a . .
CitedBenedetti and Another v Sawiris and Others ChD 15-Jun-2009
The claimant sought payment for his services to the defendants for his work in facilitating a substantial buy out of an Italian energy company.
Held: The claim succeeded on a quantum meruit basis to the extent of 75m euros but not otherwise. . .
CitedGenerator Developments Ltd v Lidl UK Gmbh CA 8-Mar-2018
Generator appealed from a refusal of an equitable interest in land acquired by the responent . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Trusts, Equity

Updated: 13 May 2022; Ref: scu.195993

Ghana Commercial Bank v Chandiram: PC 1960

The bank made an advance to the owner of property in Accra which was used to pay off his indebtedness to Barclays (DC and O) Ltd, secured by an equitable mortgage. The owner executed a legal mortgage in favour of the Ghana Bank, but this was invalidated by a previous attachment of the property by a creditor.
Held: The Ghana Bank was entitled to be subrogated to the equitable mortgage which had been paid off. ‘It is not open to doubt that where a third party pays off a mortgage he is presumed, unless the contrary appears, to intend that the mortgage shall be kept alive for his own benefit.’

Judges:

Lord Jenkins

Citations:

[1960] AC 732

Jurisdiction:

Commonwealth

Citing:

CitedButler v Rice 1910
The wife owned a Bristol property and a Cardiff property subject to a andpound;450 charge in favour of a bank with whom the title deeds had been deposited. The husband asked the plaintiff to lend him andpound;450 to pay off the mortgage. The . .

Cited by:

CitedUCB Group Ltd v Hedworth CA 4-Dec-2003
The defendant challenged the claimant’s right to possession under a legal charge. She appealed a finding that she had not established the undue influence of her husband, a solicitor.
Held: A lender who received a voidable security was entitled . .
CitedBoscawen and Others v Bajwa and Others; Abbey National Plc v Boscawen and Others CA 10-Apr-1995
The defendant had charged his property to the Halifax. Abbey supplied funds to secure its discharge, but its own charge was not registered. It sought to take advantage of the Halifax’s charge which had still not been removed.
Held: A mortgagee . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land, Equity

Updated: 13 May 2022; Ref: scu.190508