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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 >> Goodchild v Bradbury & Ors [2006] EWCA Civ 1868 (15 December 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2006/1868.html Cite as: [2006] EWCA Civ 1868 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL
(CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CHANCERY
DIVISION
(HIS HONOUR JUDGE ELLERAY QC)
Strand London, WC2 | ||
B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE MAY
LADY JUSTICE
SMITH
____________________
GOODCHILD | CLAIMANT/APPELLANT | |
- v - | ||
BRADBURY & ORS | DEFENDANT/RESPONDENT |
____________________
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to the Court)
MR J LEVINSON & MR M BEAUMONT (instructed by Bruce, Lance
& co) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
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Crown Copyright ©
"66. The planned wedding was the catalyst for the gift of the Orchard by Les to Shane as a wedding present. Mr Hiller became involved. As he has pleaded and asserted, Les in telling him of the gift said 'The field was no good to me and I have got enough land, boy." Mr Hiller tells me he acted in effect for Les and Shane in arranging the transfer of the Orchard. As he saw it, Shane was no more able than Les, to arrange a legal matter such as a transfer of land.
"67. Following a phone call, on 30 October 2000, Mr Hiller wrote to Blaisers Mills Winter Taylors ('Blaisers'), High Wycombe solicitors. He wrote, 'Uncle Les wishes to transfer over one acre of land to my friend Shane as a wedding gift at the start of December latest'. He enclosed the deed which Les and Shane had given him. It is not obvious why Blaisers were chosen by Mr Hillier. They had not acted for him before. If they had acted for Les, that had been well in the past.
"68. At Blaisers, the file was handed to an assistant solicitor Mr Seager. On 6 November 2000 Mr Hillier visited him. Mr Hillier again said that the matter was a wedding gift. He told Mr Seager that Shane would probably try to build a house on the land. Mr Seager noted the need for a site meeting to decide matters such as access and covenants restrictive of building. He identified the need for a plan.
"69. The site meeting took place on 13 November 2000. Mr Seager's unchallenged account of it is backed by his attendance note. He was met outside the farmhouse by Les, Shane and Mr Hillier. Mr Seager took Les into the sitting room by himself. He describes his having to fight for Les's attention over the sound of the television, which was on. His meeting alone with Les he thinks took two minutes. He was satisfied that Les knew what he was doing from his own free will and that duress was not involved. Mr Seager then walked the Orchard with Shane and Mr Hiller. They returned to Les. Mr Seager repeated the need for a plan, which Mr Hillier was to arrange. Upon access, Les recalled some past discussions with the County Council concerning a possible separate access, a matter which Mr Hillier was to check: otherwise there would have to be shared access along the Mill House drive. Les was noted as saying that it would be possible to get two houses on the Orchard, subject to planning. Mr Seager noted the need for restrictive covenants against nuisance and annoyance and industrial use.
"72. On 5 December 2000, Mr Seager wrote a retainer letter to Les at Mill House, setting out his fees. He commented on the need for better plans dealing with the access. On 7 and 12 of December 2000, Mr Hillier made further telephone calls to Mr Seager. On 18 December 2000 Mr Hillier obtained better plans from surveyors which he had retained for the purpose and which he sent to Seager on 22 December 2000. The marriage in the meanwhile had taken place.
"73. On 1 January 2001, Les countersigned a copy of the retainer letter. On 8 January 2001, Mr Seager wrote to Les c/o Mr Hillier at Mr Hillier's address enclosing a draft transfer. He drew attention to clause 13.5 which restricted residential development to two houses. On 12 January 2001, Mr Hillier reported that the restrictive covenant should increase the limit to six dwellings and informed Mr Seager of an approximate value of the Orchard of £1,800. On 17 January 2001, Mr Seager sent Les again c/o Mr Hillier an amended copy of the draft transfer. He sought specific confirmation that Les was happy that the restrictive covenant should be limited to six houses. He was to receive a letter signed by Les to that effect on 24 January 2001, the letter being written for Les by I think Mr Hillier. In fact Les had suffered a stroke at the Red Cross on 15 January 2001 and was in hospital. He presumably signed that confirmatory letter there.
"74. On 25 January 2001, Mr Seager wrote again to Les, this time at Mill House, chasing a signed copy of the plan that was to be incorporated in the transfer. The letter observed that the covenant limiting residential use to six houses 'could obviously have an impact on the value of Mill House Farm itself'.
"75. On 9 January 2001, Les signed a cheque for Blaisers' fees. On 19 February 2001, Mr Seager confirmed to Shane and Les that he had completed the transfer which he had dated 15 February 2001 saying he would complete the transfer for Shane."
The judge does not refer, in those paragraphs, to the occasion on which the appellant signed the transfer; but it is clear that he must have done so at some point between 17 January 2001, when the amended draft transfer was sent by Mr Seager, and 15 February 2001, the date which Mr Seager inserted in the transfer. As I have indicated, on 15 January 2001 the appellant had suffered a stroke and was in hospital.
"78. I have no doubt that in conversations over that Christmas, the question was raised between Mr Hillier and Shane as to the value of the Orchard, hence the £1,800 figure given by Mr Hillier to Mr Seager. Importantly where this trial is concerned, I have no doubt of the following. Shane had no money or the possibility himself of developing the Orchard. Both Shane and Mr Hillier knew that Shane wanted the gift to realise some cash, and always intended to sell the Orchard, Mr Hillier offering what Shane then thought was a fair value.
"79 I have little doubt but that Mr Hillier was investing in what he hoped one day would prove a profitable plot of land. Further, I consider that throughout the arrangement of the transfer of the Orchard to Shane as a wedding gift, the understanding between Shane and Mr Hillier was that for cash Shane would sell on the Orchard to Mr Hillier."
The judge found that, on 27 February 2001, Mr Hillier instructed solicitors to prepare a transfer of the property from Mr Shane Bradbury to himself at a consideration of £1,800, and that second transfer was registered on 14 June 2001.
"128. it does appear to me that the relationship between Les and Shane can properly be described as one of trust and confidence, and one in which Shane had an ascendancy, with potential for abuse."
"133. But objectively, the transfer of the Orchard is not, in my judgment, readily explicable by the relationship of Les and Shane at Mill House. It substantially damaged the residual value of Mill House in that the drive was to be shared with a site, which appeared to have a potential, subject to planning permission, for up to six houses. It was not simply in the context of the disposal of a field for which Les no longer had a need, as he had indicated to Mr Hillier. Further and perhaps even more pertinently it was of no real benefit to Shane. It was fanciful to suppose that Shane would be in any financial position or have the nouse to develop a home for himself on the Orchard, or otherwise to ensure its successful development of residential profit. Les had no reason to suppose for example that Shane would even extract the value of the Orchard as accommodation land. I do not think that Les any more than Shane had any proper concept of the value of the Orchard. The objective reality was that subject to Shane winning the lottery, the Orchard would immediately be realised for cash."
"137. I consider that Mr Hillier, whom I have noted to be an intelligent business minded man, would have realised that the selling of the Orchard would have an adverse financial effect on Mill House because of the sharing of the drive and the potential for neighbouring houses on the other side of the drive. Further, I have noted that Mr Hillier's view that Shane was no more able than Les to arrange the transfer of the land and so he stepped in, as he told me, in effect as agent for both Les and Shane.
"138. In those circumstances I consider Mr Hillier had full notice of the matters from which undue influence can be presumed. Moreover on the particular facts of this case, and the involvement of Mr Hillier in arranging the gift to Shane I consider that he was privy to the facts material to the presumption of undue influence."
"143. Although Mr Seager was an independent solicitor, I do not consider in the circumstances that his evidence shows that the gift was the result of full, free and informed thought. Brief reference almost as an afterthought in the letter of 25 January 2001 to the possible impact of the gift on the value of Mill House does not of itself suggest that Les had any such impact in mind or the need to seek independent financial advice relating to it."
"19. In late 2000, Shane announced he was going to marry Vikki and I thought it would be a nice idea to give him an acre of land as a wedding present. I don't think Shane didn't put me under any pressure at all to give him the land. I was conscious of the fact that he was my family and I wanted to give him a wedding present.
"22. However I also understand that within two months of that on 5 June 2001, Shane sold the land to Stephen Hillier who was a Developer. Shane told me he sold the land although he didn't say how much for. However I wasn't concerned because it was up to him to do what he wanted with it once I had given it to him."
In that context, the "two months of that" is two months from the completion of the first transfer. The judge commented at paragraph 144 of this judgment that:
"144. Les as the Claimant says that he does not think that Shane put him under any pressure to make the gift."
"145. I suspect that from the independence of life at Hill View, Les might now think, if questioned, that the gift was a mistake, particularly if directed to full and informed views as to the effect on the value of Mill House and the want of any real benefit beyond a modest sum of cash from Shane. But that is speculation. The claimant in a presumed undue influence case does not have to give evidence of actual pressure or as to what he would have done if fully informed. But in this case, and most unusually, the Claimant states that he was not put under any pressure at all. In those circumstances, I should not speculate as to what Les might have done if fully informed as to the objective problems with the gift. Further, I do not need evidence that the gift was the result of full and informed thought, when it is clear on the Claimant's own evidence that it was the result of free thought, in the context of being unpressured, and thus that Mr Seager had been right in his assessment."
"My notice considerations as well against Mr Hillier as against Shane."
(1) The appellant was not able to look after himself in his own home. He had, as the judge found, no domestic skills at all. He needed someone to look after him on a day-to-day basis -- paragraph 53.
(2) The appellant was very anxious not to be moved into a nursing home or care home where he could be looked after professionally. He had visited his sister Doris in a nursing home to which she had in moved in 1998 and had expressed a strong dislike of it -- paragraph 43.
(3) Mr Shane Bradbury and his future wife Victoria were the only persons who were in a position to and were willing to look after the appellant in his own home, Mill House -- paragraph 55.
(4) The appellant had strong motives for doing whatever he thought he needed to do in order to ensure, so far as he could, that Mr Shane Bradbury and his new wife remained at Mill House -- paragraph 61.
(5) There was every reason why the appellant should give Mr Shane Bradbury a generous wedding gift, but;
(6) Mr Shane Bradbury's need was for cash and it was obvious that he would sell land given to him in order to raise cash -- paragraph 133; and
(7) There was no reason why the appellant should wish to give Mr Shane Bradbury a generous wedding gift in a way which would cause him detriment by way of a devaluation of his property which was out of all proportion to the benefit which would be conferred on Mr Shane Bradbury.
"Even if it is correct to say that Mrs Osborne's conduct was unimpeachable and that there was nothing sinister in it, that would be no answer to an application of the presumption. As Cotton LJ said in Allcard v Skinner, the court does not interfere on the ground that any wrongful act has in fact been committed by the donee, but on the ground of public policy which requires it to be affirmatively established that the donor's trust and confidence in the donee has not been betrayed or abused."
"The fact that the conduct of a person exercising influence is unimpeachable is not by itself an answer to a claim in undue influence, though the presumption of undue principle can be rebutted in many ways."
"I suspect that from the independence of life at Hill View, Les might now think if questioned that the gift was a mistake, particularly if directed to full and informed views as to the effect on the value of Mill House and the want of any real benefit beyond a modest sum of cash to Shane."
Order: 1) Refused. 2) Appeal allowed.