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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Berkley v Poulett & Ors [1976] EWCA Civ 1 (29 October 1976) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/1976/1.html Cite as: (1977) 241 EG 911, [1976] EWCA Civ 1, [1977] 1 EGLR 86 |
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B e f o r e :
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BERKLEY | ||
V | ||
POULETT AND OTHERS |
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Fixtures and fittings. Fixtures and fittings usually denominated tenant's fixtures and fittings belonging to the vendor shall be taken by the purchaser, according to an inventory to be prepared by the auctioneers and paid for at a valuation to be made in the usual way and the decision of the valuer or umpire as to what are tenant's fixtures and fittings shall be conclusive in the event of any dispute. Certain items are however specifically excluded from the Sale--see Special Conditions of Sale No 14.
According to the well known rule in equity, when the contract of sale was signed by the parties Sir William Foster became a trustee of the estate for Pooley, and Pooley a trustee of the purchase-money for Sir William Foster; and it was competent to Pooley to assign the benefit of his contract, or to charge his equitable interest in the property in favour of another person, and upon notice given to Sir William Foster of such assignment or charge, he would have been bound to protect and give effect to it.
Under these circumstances I apprehend there cannot be the slightest doubt of the relation subsisting in the eye of a court of equity between the vendor and the purchaser. The vendor was a trustee of the property for the purchaser; the purchaser was the real beneficial owner in the eye of a court of equity of the property subject only to this observation, that the vendor, whom I have called the trustee, was not a mere dormant trustee, he was a trustee having a personal and substantial interest in the property, a right to protect that interest, and an active right to assert that interest if anything should be done in derogation of it. The relation, therefore, of trustee and cestui que trust subsisted, but subsisted subject to the paramount right of the vendor and trustee to protect his own interest as vendor of the property.
My Lords, in that state of things Mr Pooley, the purchaser, being the real and beneficial owner, I apprehend that there cannot be any doubt of the rights of Mr Pooley with regard to the property of which he had thus become the beneficial owner. He had a right to devise it; he had a right to alienate it; he had a right to charge it. There are various ways which might be suggested in which, for valuable consideration, he might have created a charge more or less affecting the property. I apprehend that he might have contracted, for valuable consideration, with any person to whom he was indebted, that he (Pooley) would complete the purchase, and that when the purchase was completed and the property assigned to him, he would then make it over to the person to whom he was thus indebted. That would have been one way of dealing with his interest. Another way might have been this--he might have contracted with any person to whom he was indebted that he would pay the purchase-money remaining unpaid, and that then, the purchase-money being thus paid, and the time for the assignment having arrived, he would authorise and require the vendor to assign, not to him, Pooley, but to the person to whom he was indebted. A third and a simpler way in which he might have effected his interest would have been to contract with any one to whom he was indebted to assign to him the contract which he had entered into in whole, making the person to whom he was indebted assignee of the contract. Any one of those modes might, in my opinion, have been resorted to; and the only qualifications to which all or any of them would have been subject are these: first, that by none of these modes could anything have been done by Mr Pooley derogating from, or impeding, or delaying the rights of the vendor to require the fulfilment of his contract according to its terms; and, secondly, whatever course was taken by Mr Pooley and any person with whom he contracted to charge his interest, notice of the particulars of that charge, and the mode and form of the charge, would be required to be given to the vendor, in order that the vendor might shape his course according to the notice he had thus received.
Some of the said fixtures have been removed from Hinton House aforesaid or as the case may be the said grounds without the authority or consent of the Assignor or the Assignee and some of the same have suffered damage and for the purpose of better enabling the Assignee to take all such proceedings in respect of such fixtures as aforesaid as he may be advised or desire to take the Assignor has agreed with the Assignee in manner hereinafter appearing Now This Deed Witnesseth that in consideration of the premises the Assignor as Beneficial Owner hereby assigns unto the Assignee All That the benefit of the Agreement and Conveyance hereinbefore first recited together with all the Estate and interest of the Assignor in the fixtures which at any material time were annexed to Hinton House aforesaid and the said grounds and all rights of action choses in action and other rights benefits advantages or demands which the Assignor has or may have in the same or with respect thereto or with respect to any matter or thing pertaining thereto arising thereto or connected therewith To Hold all the same unto the Assignee absolutely.
One firm fact is that the pictures had mirror plates attached to the back of their frames, the number and position of those plates depending on the size of the picture. There are then three theories as to how these mirror plates were attached to the walls. One is that pictures and panelling were assembled on the floor, the mirror plates being screwed first to the back of the picture frames and then to the back of the panelling, the pictures and panelling together then being affixed to studs in the lath-and-plaster walls. A second is that the pictures, with their mirror plates already affixed to the frames, were screwed to the walls and the panelling erected around them. The third is that the mirror plates on the frames were secured to the front of the panelling. I reject the third theory, principally for the reason that, except in a single instance, no screw holes were to be found in front of the panelling, but as between the first two, there is little to choose and the evidence is inconclusive.
If a finding were essential to the determination of this case. I should conclude that on the balance of probability the second theory is the correct one.
The result, however, whichever theory may be right, was that the pictures, when hung, hung in recesses in the panelling, made to fit the pictures, and in one of the cases the lath and plaster had been slightly cut away to accommodate the stretchers of the picture frames.
Clearly one end of each mirror plate must have been screwed to the back of the picture which it served before the picture found itself with its back to the wall; and having given the evidence the best consideration I can I am quite unable to conclude that the Vice-Chancellor erred when he found that on the balance of probability the other end of the mirror plate was affixed by screws in the wall. Had the other end been screwed to the back of the panelling the removal of the pictures could not as I see it have been accomplished in the way it was but would have required the removal of the panelling, which was not done, so as to get at the heads of the screws, or a degree of force which I would have thought would have broken up the picture frames.
Although the precise method of affixation of the pictures is obscure, the evidence about their removal is less so. Mr Browning, of the firm of Rogers, who removed the pictures which Sothebys were taking, said that he and his men (of whom there were about half a dozen) got them down in, he supposed, half to three-quarters of an hour--a time substantially confirmed by Lady Poulett--using only a 10- or 12-in screwdriver and pincers, except in the case of one screw the head of which had to be sawn off. He denied that it was necessary to use force, and was obviously aggrieved by the suggestion that a skilled picture-remover with a very high class firm like Rogers would contemplate such a thing.
Mr Ash who, with two men, removed 'The Return' and the portraits of the 7th Earl and his wife, said that it took them between two and three hours to get 'The Return' down because it was hard to find out how it was fixed. This is understandable because the panelling was over the screws; eventually he found that it was fixed by mirror plates to the wall, not to the panelling. The other two pictures, he thought, took about three-quarters of an hour each to remove and resulted in some minor damage. Lady Poulett, who watched those two pictures being removed said that they came down very easily and took about 15 minutes each. I prefer her evidence about this to that of Mr Ash.
How Mr Browning and Mr Ash got at the screws in the wall to unscrew them must remain something of a mystery. The evidence was, I must assume, inconsistent with the simple explanation that the heads of the latter screws were sufficiently small to enable the eyes of the mirror plates to be hooked over them after they had been screwed in. The heads of the screws which were handed up to the Bench were larger than the eyes of the plates.
The appeal was dismissed with costs.
The electronic text of this judgment was provided by Estates Gazette, whose assistance is gratefully acknowledged.