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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> OEM Plc v Schneider & Ors [2005] EWHC 1072 (Ch) (26 May 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2005/1072.html Cite as: [2005] EWHC 1072 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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OEM PLC |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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The Estate of Brian Schneider (deceased) Teresa Anne Schneider Andrea Schoefeler-Lubbock Diana Craigs |
Defendants |
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Mr Romi Tager QC and Mr Hugh Jackson (instructed by Class Law) for the Second Defendant
Ms Deborah Taylor (instructed by Rubinstein Philips) for the Third Defendant
Hearing dates: 18th & 19th May 2005
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Crown Copyright ©
Peter Smith J :
INTRODUCTION
i) An application by the Claimant pursuant to directions given by Deputy Master Rhys on 4th March 2005 requiring it to serve any application notice to amend its particulars of claim by 11th March 2005, which was duly done.
ii) An application by the Second Defendant Mrs Theresa Anne Schneider issued as recently as Monday 16th May 2005 for an order requiring the Claimant to provide certain information sought by-part 18 requests for further information served on 8th March 2005 and 16th May 2005. It will be observed that the Second Defendant issued her application on the same day a letter requesting the information was sent.
iii) An application by the Third Defendant issued on 5th May 2005 for an order that the Claimant supplies within seven days from the date of the Court Order clarification and information as requested by the Third Defendant in its further request for information and in default that the Claimant's claim can be struck out and 3 further heads of relief which I shall say nothing more about save to observe that Ms Taylor who appears for the Third Defendant conceded that the relief sought was ambitious.
BACKGROUND
THE CLAIMANT'S CASE AGAINST THE SECOND DEFENDANT
"This view is in harmony with a principle which I take from Lloyd v Grace Smith & Co. [1912] AC 716, at p.727:
He that employs and puts a trust and confidence in the deceiver should be a loser. The defendant may also possibly be able to pray in aid the principle that when one of two innocent persons must suffer a loss, he whose negligence is the cause of the loss must bear it. In Farquharson v King [1902] AC 325, and Macmillan v The Joint Stock Bank [1918] A.C. 777, the conditions for the application of this principle are laid down very clearly."
OBJECTIONS BY SECOND DEFENDANT
"Where a husband and wife open a joint account at a bank on terms that cheques may be drawn on the account by either of them, then, in my judgment, in the absence of facts or circumstances which indicate that the account was intended, or was kept, for some specific or limited purpose, each spouse can draw upon it not only for the benefit of both spouses but for his or her own benefit. Each spouse, in drawing money out of the account, is to be treated as doing so with the authority of the other and, in my judgment, if one of the spouses purchases a chattel for his own benefit or an investment in his or her own name, that chattel or investment belongs to the person in whose name it is purchased or invested: for in such a case there is, in my judgment, no equity in the other spouse to displace the legal ownership of the one in whose name the investment is purchased. What is purchased is not to be regarded as purchased out of a fund belonging to the spouses in the proportions in which they contribute to the account or in equal proportions, but out of a pool or fund of which they were, at law and in equity, joint tenants. It also follows that if one of the spouses draws on the account to make a purchase in the joint names of the spouses, the property purchased, since it is purchased in joint names, is, prima facie, joint property and there is no equity to displace the joint legal ownership".
"That case seems to me to establish the principle that in the absence of some circumstances or some evidence of intention that the joint account was to have a limited operation or was set up and kept up for some special purpose, each spouse has power to draw on the joint account not only for the benefit of the spouses but for his or her own benefit. In the absence of some circumstances from which one infers an agreement to the contrary, one must treat the joint account as truly a joint account, a joint account on which each party has power to draw to take the money out of the ambit of the joint account and to employ it as he or she thinks fit either for his own purpose or not, and if he does draw money out and invests it in his own name I see no room for any inference that he holds that investment on trust for himself and his wife either in equal shares or in any other shares".
"It is clear law that prima facie the person to whom money has been paid under a mistake of fact is liable to refund it, even though he may have paid it away to third parties in ignorance of the mistake. He has had the benefit of the windfall and must restore it to the true owner. On the other hand, it is equally clear that an intermediary who has received money for the purpose of handing it on to a third party, and has handed it on, is no longer accountable to the sender. In such case he is a mere conduit pipe, and has not had the benefit of the windfall".
And page 586 as follows:-
"I am satisfied in this case that the defendant did not receive money for her own benefit or personal enrichment, but merely as her husband's agent. The husband was not a thief in order to benefit her but himself, and so far as she was concerned the money came not from the plaintiffs but from her husband on the terms that part was at once to be returned, and that household and her personal expenses (for which as a husband he would be bound to provide) were to be paid out of the rest. Regular payments from his salary were later made into the account, and it is plain that she was in truth but her husband's agent for the distribution of the money. Where is the unjust enrichment in this case? What are the circumstances which make it ex aequo et bono that the defendant ought to refund? I can see none. The position, therefore, is that it is impossible to imply a promise to repay, that it would be unjust to imply such a promise even if it were possible, and that there are no circumstances which make it unconscientious for the defendant to resist a personal judgment against her, and I think the defendant is entitled to judgment".
"In Transvaal & Delagoa Bay Investment Co Ltd v Atkinson [1944] 1 All E.R. 579, money stolen from a company was paid by the thief into a bank account of his wife. All the money was expended, mostly by being returned to the husband. The difficult questions which arise when a donee innocently disposes of stolen money do not arise in the present case where the stolen money has been retained by the club".
OBJECTIONS BY THE THIRD DEFENDANT