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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Shovlin v Site Civils and Surfacing Ltd & Anor [2024] EWCA Civ 585 (24 May 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2024/585.html Cite as: [2024] EWCA Civ 585 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS IN MANCHESTER
His Honour Judge Cawson KC (sitting as a Judge of the High Court)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE SNOWDEN
and
LADY JUSTICE FALK
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MARY SHOVLIN (as sole surviving trustee of the SPH Trust) |
Appellant/ Claimant |
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- and – |
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(1) SITE CIVILS AND SURFACING LIMITED (2) GEORGE CROSBY |
Respondents/Defendants |
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David Uff (instructed by public access) for the Respondents
Hearing dates : 20 and 21 February 2024
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Snowden :
Introduction
The background in outline
The parties' cases in outline
The Judgment
"… on consideration of the evidence as a whole, I consider it more likely than not that Mr. Crosby's genuine belief was that Austin Fergus was advancing his own funds, and that he did not give any thought as to there being any third party involvement until the possibility of the use of third-party funds subsequently arose, most likely in the context of a discussion subsequent to the purchase of [Mercury Way] as to how the project involving the development of the land into a number of units was to be funded, with a funding requirement of £1.2 million being identified at that stage. Even then, I consider it more likely than not an appreciation by Mr. Crosby that the initial monies advanced might have come from third-party funds only arose at a later stage, sometime after Austin Fergus's cancer diagnosis, and possibly even after Austin Fergus's death."
"Stepping back, and considering what Mr. Crosby said in his evidence, and during the course of the telephone conversation on 11 February 2020, about implicitly trusting Austin Fergus, and regarding him as an honest and righteous man, I have come to the firm conclusion that Mr. Crosby did not contemporaneously consider Austin Fergus to be the sort of person capable of involving himself in illicit or unauthorised deals involving the misapplication of the money of others without their consent in the manner alleged in the present case. I have therefore come to the firm conclusion that Mr. Crosby neither believed nor suspected that the monies that SCS and Aughton Ainsworth received were tainted in this way, or that he was assisting in any way in the misappropriation or misapplication of money by Austin Fergus."
"If, as seems clearly to have been the case, Austin Fergus was contemplating a joint venture with Mr. Crosby concerning the development of the Mercury Way Land, then, apart from the alleged instruction with regard to investing in stocks and shares, that might well have been the sort of investment, if made with monies belonging to the SPH Trust, that could have provided for a good return on a fairly safe and secure basis consistent with a rate of return better than that achieved by the accountants in Warrington. During the course of the telephone conversation on 11 February 2020, Mr. Crosby referred to Austin Fergus looking at the relevant figures concerning the development of the Mercury Way Land."
"(vi) I consider it highly significant that copies of the bank statements relating to the SPH Trust's bank account were sent to Mrs Shovlin:
(a) Firstly, I consider it significant because if Mrs Shovlin's instruction had been for the monies to be invested in investments such as stocks, shares and bonds, then one might have expected a "switched on lady" such as Mrs. Shovlin, who paid attention to detail, had been responsible for [the Shovlin family company's] financial affairs, and who met regularly with Austin Fergus to have noticed entries in the bank statements inconsistent with investment simply in stocks, shares and bonds, and to have queried why she was not receiving other information in relation to what ought to have been an investment portfolio in investments such as stocks, shares and bonds.
(b) Secondly, I consider it significant because it is accepted that Austin Fergus would have known that Mrs. Shovlin was receiving the bank statements, and if Austin Fergus had been keeping a dishonest misappropriation of monies belonging to the SPH Trust close to his chest as alleged, then I consider it unlikely that he would have arranged matters so that Mrs. Shovlin received the bank statements.
(vii) It is, I consider, in relation to this particular aspect of the case particularly important to bear in mind that if serious allegations of fraud are being made, then whilst the standard of proof remains the civil standard, stronger evidence is required to overcome the inherent unlikelihood of fraud, in particular on the part of a professional person who, as in the present case, everybody [has] otherwise regarded as being an honest man. An additional consideration in this context is the acceptance by Mr. Shovlin that Austin Fergus had been somebody who sought instructions before acting in the past."
"I take on board the lack of documentation concerning the loans to SCS, and indeed to the other borrowers, and also the somewhat derisory rate of interest contemplated with regard to the specific loans to SCS and that the loans were made on an unsecured basis, and that it might be said that these advantageous terms were intended to benefit Mr. Crosby rather than the SPH Trust. However, given in particular my concerns regarding the absence of evidence from Mrs. Shovlin and as to the unreliability of Mr. Shovlin's evidence, I consider the evidence as to the circumstances and basis upon which the SPH Trust was established and funds were entrusted to Austin Fergus to be so unclear and uncertain that I cannot safely conclude on the balance of probabilities that the monies were entrusted to Austin Fergus to invest in investments such as stocks and shares, or otherwise upon a basis that would have prevented Austin Fergus from lending monies to Mr. Crosby on the terms that he did in anticipation of, for example, being involved, on behalf of the SPH Trust, in the development of the Mercury Way Land for the benefit of the SPH Trust, and doing so with Mrs. Shovlin's informed consent."
The appeal
Grounds 1 and 2
The other Grounds of Appeal
Disposal
Lady Justice Falk:
Lord Justice Males:
(1) When Mr Philip Shovlin first made contact with Mr Crosby, he decided to record their telephone call. The transcript of the call, which took place on 11th February 2020, shows that Mr Philip Shovlin made a number of extraordinary claims: that he had been to Colombia to meet some 'nasty people', knowing 'there was a good chance that I was gonna get killed'; that he 'knew if I went down to Sydney I was gonna be shot dead because what I was gonna do down there was just gonna be horrific'; that his life had been threatened by people who were 'as extreme as it can get'; and that he had threatened to throw someone in Japan out of a second-floor window because he had 'ripped me off'.
(2) The telephone call was followed by a lengthy meeting at Mr Crosby's house on 12th February 2020. The judge found that during that meeting Mr Philip Shovlin claimed to have connections to the Manchester underworld and to the IRA, and threatened to sell Mr Crosby's debt to debt collectors within the Manchester underworld or to the IRA and leave it to them to enforce it if he was not paid a return on the loan of between 30% and 50%.
(3) Another meeting took place on 28th February 2020 at a Costa Coffee café. On this occasion Mr Philip Shovlin was accompanied by an unidentified man, giving Mr Crosby the impression that the two of them were there to threaten him. However, they backed off when they saw that Mr Crosby had his dog with him. Apparently Mr Crosby, as well as running his business, is a trainer of German Shepherds, which he describes as 'protection dogs'.