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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 >> Tee-Hillman v Heppenstalls (A Firm) [2001] EWCA Civ 1947 (29 November 2001) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2001/1947.html Cite as: [2001] EWCA Civ 1947 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
(HIS HONOUR JUDGE BRADBURY, Sitting as a Judge of the High Court)
Strand London WC2 Thursday, 29th November 2001 |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
BRIGITTE ILSE TEE-HILLMAN | Claimant | |
- v - | ||
HEPPENSTALLS (A Firm) | Defendant |
____________________
Smith Bernal Reporting Limited
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Telephone No: 020 7421 4040
Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
The Defendant did not attend and was unrepresented
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Thursday, 29th November 2001
"A mass of... proceedings to which Mrs Tee has been a party since 1994... described by Thorpe LJ... as 'furious adversarial litigation scarcely controlled by the court.'"
"If the husband so elected, there would be no real net effect on his economy, because the capital sum liberated would have then to be devoted to replacing the lost income. His income needs clearly do not permit him the luxury of converting any part of his pension income into capital."
"My conclusion on these submissions is as follows. This is, in the terms of an ancillary relief specialist, about as appalling a litigation history as it would be possible to discover. On any objective view, by 1994 there was only one material capital asset, Gorse Meadow. It was obviously joint property. Clearly, if the wife could not afford to buy the husband out, a sale was inevitable. Litigation seems hardly appropriate in those circumstances. Negotiation or mediation should have sufficed. If it had to be litigation, relevant evidence could easily be found and one day in court should have been ample."
"It is better, of course, that I assess the accuracy, or lack of accuracy of Mrs Tee's recollection in the light of all her evidence. She gave her evidence against a background of assertions that her English, which for her is a third language, was a handicap to her and that she lacked business experience and that she was dominated by Mr Tee in business and legal matters. My impression of her is that she is now, and probably was in 1986 an astute business woman. Her occasional interjections in this case, and the regular assistance she has given to Mr Hillman in the course of six past days of hearing suggest to me no lack of English speaking ability or of an understanding of English, and a considerable awareness of the flow of this case.
In her oral evidence she gave varying accounts in comparison with past affidavits and statements, and the evidence before the District Judge. She gave varying versions as to ownership, or entitlements and contributions in relation to the interest that she had in relation to Casa Brigite, Bison Lodge, and the French property. She said for the very first time it seems in the course of these proceedings - there is no record of it anywhere else - that Bison Lodge was acquired in her name for tax reasons.
As to Gorse Meadow she said that Mr Tee wanted that property to be vested in and owned by her alone, despite the contributions from the savings fund, and at a time some years after the marriage had commenced breaking down. That Mr Tee should want Gorse Meadow in her sole name in such circumstances seems improbable.
She said she had no idea that Gorse Meadow was not in her name, and that later she did not remember agreeing to being in joint names, and that when Mr Tee did tell her that it was in joint names she never asked him why. She said she did not see letters addressed by the defendants to both herself and Mr Tee, and yet she did act on request in those letters for matters to be done in relation to Bison Lodge.
She remembered, she said, the comment made by Mrs Stanley, but in the end was driven to say that she could not recollect when it might have been said. She denied receiving any explanations from Mr Robinson. She agreed she knew the survivor of herself and Mr Tee would normally have inherited the property. She did not know where she got that knowledge from. She knew when she signed the deed relating to exchange of land in 1987 that Mr Tee was a joint owner, and knew she (and he) had to sign the mortgage documents in 1989 and 1990.
She accepted that her counsel in the Trusts of Land Act case application before District Judge Ainsworth in 1997 had said that she had consented to Gorse Meadow being in joint names. She agreed there were discussions involving Mr Tee and draft sets of agreement in the early 1990s in which there were references made to her half share in Gorse Meadow. She agreed her own solicitor, Mr Sutton, had written to Mr Tee's solicitor on 7th November, 1996 saying:
'We obviously appreciate your client is a
half owner of the legal estate in Gorse
Meadow'.
She denied doing a volte-face in the last year as to her beliefs and knowledge, and denied trying to rebuild her case on the strength of the wording in the 1986 contract. It was put to her by Mr Cohen that her evidence was all over the place, because it was not based on a foundation of truth. Mrs Tee denied that. I am satisfied that the suggestion made by Mr Cohen is correct. There was no foundation of truth to some of Mrs Tee's more crucial assertions.
I have to go further. I make a finding that on financial and property aspects of her marriage to Mr Tee and her and his common intentions that she has been devious and deceitful. The finding of the copy contract has been a straw to clutch on to to try to regenerate previous failed claims. Mrs Tee, I am satisfied, is astute and business like, and well knew in 1986 that there was to be an intention that Gorse Meadow was to be purchased as a joint acquisition in all respects beneficial and legal, and that her entitlement with Mr Tee was to be on a 50:50 basis.
I agree she did not receive advice from the defendants - she did not need to. By the date of the completion she had given joint instructions with Mr Tee to the defendants. She knew and understood the instructions, the defendants complied with the instructions.
In consequence, while I consider the defendants' conveyancing records for this transaction to be flimsy, they did proceed appropriately and on the basis of joint instructions and they were not in breach of their duty. I also find as a fact that Mrs Stanley did not make the remark attributed to her, and the suggestion that she did has developed over a period of time as a figment of Mrs Tee's imagination."
"An ordinary contract of sale is not only to convey to the purchaser, but to convey as the purchaser shall direct."
"Prime facie a transfer of the legal estate carries with it the absolute beneficial interest in the property transferred. No separate transfer of the beneficial interest is necessary. The presumption may be rebutted by evidence to show the transfer of the beneficial interest to the transferee of the legal estate would constitute a breach of trust by the transferor.'"
"... but I cannot help saying that I think it is very important, according to my view of the law of contracts, both at Common Law and in Equity, that if parties have made an executory contract which is to be carried out by a deed afterwards executed, the real completed contract between the parties is to be found in the deed, and that you have no right whatever to look at the contract, although it is recited in the deed, except for the purpose of construing the deed itself. You have no right to look at the contract either for the purpose of enlarging or diminishing or modifying the contract which is to be found in the deed itself."
"I accept Mr Phipps' submissions as accurately representing the current state of law on this topic. The extracts from Halsbury to which Mr Hillman referred me represent the legal position on merger of estates, but the case law to which I have been referred accurately reflects how a contract dealing with equitable interests can be subsumed by a subsequent transfer. This is what happened with Gorse Meadow.
Of course this court must treat the contract as a serious part of the evidence to be weighed in the balance with all the other evidence. The defendants have not offered a precise explanation as to how the contract came to be in Mrs Tee's name alone. There are, of course, a number of alternative possibilities of which one is that because title to Bison Lodge was held in Mrs Tee's name, it may have been originally thought the same was to apply to Gorse Meadow. But then Bison Lodge and certainly the Spanish property were always regarded by Mr and Mrs Tee as joint assets.
I have no doubt at all that on the whole weight of the evidence, including statements and affidavits in previous proceedings, the oral evidence before the District Judge, all the evidence that I have heard in this case, that Mr & Mrs Tee had a clear intention that the legal and beneficial interest in Gorse Meadow should be held by them in equal shares, and that following that intention it was their joint wish to the equitable interest in the contract merged on completion of the purchase with the legal title vested in Mr & Mrs Tee in equal shares. In making that finding I reject and make it clear if I have not already done so any suggestion that Mrs Tee had at any material time forgotten that she had signed a contract or was unaware and did not support the implications of the later Transfer.
These findings are sufficient to enable me to dismiss this action, but I have been asked to make findings on other matters and will do so."
"An ordinary contract of sale is not only to convey to the purchaser, but to convey as the purchaser shall direct."