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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 >> Englewood Properties Ltd v Patel & Anor [2005] EWHC 188 (Ch) (16 February 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2005/188.html Cite as: [2005] WLR 1961, [2005] EWHC 188 (Ch), [2005] 1 WLR 1961 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT
CHANCERY DIVISION
(MASTER MONCASTER)
Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
Between
____________________
ENGLEWOOD PROPERTIES LIMITED |
Claimant (Respondent) |
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and |
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(1) SHAILESH PATEL (2) CORNBERRY LIMITED |
Defendants (Appellants) |
____________________
Mr Mark Warwick (instructed by Jeffrey Green Russell) for the Defendants/Appellants
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Lawrence Collins:
I The background
"6. Liability of Bidder
6.1 If you bid at the Auction, you will be personally liable in respect of any accepted bid. This will be the case even if you bid as agent or other representative for another party.
6.2 If you bid as agent or representative then you and the person or organisation on whose behalf you have bid will be jointly and severally liable under the contract of sale …"
"if YOU make a successful bid for a LOT
YOU are personally liable to buy it even if you are acting as an agent. …
….
If the BUYER does not comply with its obligations under the CONTRACT YOU are personally liable to buy the LOT and must indemnify the SELLER in respect of any loss the SELLER incurs as a result of the BUYER's default."
II The title
III The covenants
"The Lessors will not during the term hereby granted sell or let any of their shops numbers 233, 243, 246, 247, 249 and 251/253 …to any person corporation or firm (except S.W. Woolworth [sic] …) whose primary business is that of a fixed price store and in particular but without limitation to the foregoing will not sell or let any such shops or any part thereof to [certain named companies] … and the Lessors will in every conveyance or lease of any such shops or any part thereof insert an appropriate covenant to prevent the purchaser or the lessee as the case may be from selling or letting any such shops to any person corporation or firm … whose primary business is that of a fixed price store or to [named companies] …"
IV The special conditions of sale
"The Transferee and its successors in title hereby covenant with the Transferor at all times hereafter to observe and perform all the covenants conditions and stipulations on the part of the Landlord and Tenant contained or referred to in the Lease dated 30th June 1939 made between the London City Council [sic] (1) and Wigram Family Settled Estates Limited (2) and to indemnify the Transferor and its successors in title from and against all proceedings costs claims demands and expenses arising out of any future breach or non-observance or non-performance thereof."
V The problem arises
VI The present proceedings
(1) on the sale of Lots 10, and 12 to 16, Englewood, in breach of clause 5(c) of the October 1939 lease and therefore in breach of its covenant with Woolworths in the November 1991 underlease, did not insert an appropriate covenant against competition with Woolworths as required by the October 1939 lease, and by that failure and breach of covenant Englewood had made themselves liable to Woolworths for damages, should Woolworths choose to sue them;
(2) although Englewood was liable to Woolworths, he was very doubtful whether the defendants after completion of their contract could be under any liability to Woolworths for that one-off breach by their predecessor landlord, and they were not liable for any future breaches by reason of the limitation in the covenant of liability to the period of ownership of the burdened premises;
(3) but because that point was not fully explored, he proceeded on the basis that there was a possible liability on the defendants if they completed the contract;
(4) if the effect of the sales of the other shops in the parade without the imposition of the covenant was to expose the buyer to potential liability for future breaches of contract, then to do that on a separate sale after the date of the contract would be a breach of the seller's duty to manage and preserve the property up to the date of completion; and that duty was not limited to preserving the physical state of the Property but extended to matters which affected the value of the Property, e.g. the withdrawal of a planning permission which reduced the value, or the re-letting of the property; such cases could not be distinguished from a case where the seller between contract and completion committed a breach of the lease, subject to and with the benefit of which the property was sold, if that breach diminished the value of the reversion sold. Where the subject matter of the sale was a reversion on a lease, a deliberate breach of the covenants in the lease must be a breach of the seller's duty, whether the breach related to the demised premises or to adjoining premises;
(5) if there had been a separate sale subsequently of the other properties in the parade there would have been a breach of duty and an abatement of the purchase price would be necessary, but it was wholly artificial and unreal to apply that analysis to the facts of the present case, since the whole parade of shops was included in the auction in seven Lots, and the transaction could not be sensibly analysed as being a series of separate sales in temporal order because a minute or two separated the sale of each of the Lots. The reality was that all the shops were being put up simultaneously for sale, and it was fortuitous that the Property was the second Lot rather than the first Lot or (say) the seventh Lot. There was therefore no breach of the duty of Englewood as a trustee for its purchaser;
(6) the terms of the Common Auction Conditions and Notices to Prospective Buyers made it impossible for Mr Patel to escape from personal liability under the contract. It did not matter that all of the auctioneers at Allsop & Co knew that he was an agent and did not purchase properties on his own account.
VII Conclusions
The agency issue
"6.5 The day after the Auction (on 4th December 2003) Alan Ross & Partners ('Alan Ross') wrote to Neil MacKilligan. The letter began 'Dear Neil' and identified the Second Defendant as the Buyer of the Property and enclosed a solicitor's cheque in respect of the deposit. No one at Allsops had asked the First Defendant for any deposit because they were aware he was only acting as agent and the deposit would be provided by his principal.
6.6 As and from the receipt of the said letter from Alan Ross the identity of the First Defendant's principal was known (namely the Second Defendant) and thereafter all the Claimant's dealings with respect to the Property (prior to this case being begun) were on the basis that the Second Defendant was the sole Buyer."
The breach of duty issue
The vendor as trustee
(a) In Lysaght v Edwards (1876) 2 Ch 499 Sir George Jessel MR said (at 506):
"It appears to me that the effect of a contract for sale has been settled for more than two centuries; certainly it was completely settled before the time of Lord Hardwicke, who speaks of the settled doctrine of the Court as to it. What is that doctrine? It is that the moment you have a valid contract for sale the vendor becomes in equity a trustee for the purchaser of the estate sold, and the beneficial ownership passes to the purchaser, the vendor having a right to the purchase-money, a charge or lien on the estate for the security of that purchase-money, and a right to retain possession of the estate until the purchase-money is paid, in the absence of express contract as to the time of delivering possession."and (at 510):
"It must, therefore, be considered to be established that the vendor is a constructive trustee for the purchaser of the estate from the moment the contract is entered into."(b) In Egmont v Smith (1877) 6 Ch D 469 Sir George Jessel MR said (at 475-6):
"He is certainly a trustee for the purchaser, a trustee, no doubt, with peculiar duties and liabilities, for it is a fallacy to suppose that every trustee has the same duties and liabilities; but he is a trustee. For that I have the decision of the House of Lords in Shaw v Foster, which only re-stated what had been the well-known law of the Court of Chancery for centuries."(c) In Shaw v Foster (1872) LR 5 HL 321, 338 (in which Sir George Jessel appeared as Solicitor-General), Lord Cairns had said:
"… there cannot be any 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."(d) In Clarke v Ramuz [1891] 2 QB 456 (CA) Lord Coleridge CJ said (at 459-460):
"… in the case of a contract for the sale and purchase of land, although the legal property does not pass until the execution of the conveyance, during the interval prior to completion the vendor in possession is a trustee for the purchaser, and as such has duties to perform towards him, not exactly the same as in the case of other trustees, but certain duties, one of which is to use reasonable care to preserve the property in a reasonable state of preservation, and, so far as may be, as it was when the contract was made."
(a) In Berkely v Poulett [1977] 1 EGLR 86, 93 (C.A.) Stamp LJ said:
"These duties and rights [of a purchaser] arise from the contract of sale and it is because of their existence that the vendor is said to be a constructive trustee, or a trustee sub modo, of the estate for the purchaser from the time when the contract is constituted. But to say that it is the duty of the vendor as trustee for the purchaser to care for the property is to put the cart before the horse and may lead you into error. He is said to be a trustee because of the duties which he has, and the duties do not arise because he is a trustee but because he has agreed to sell the land to the purchaser and the purchaser on tendering the price is entitled to have the contract specifically performed according to its terms. Nor does the relationship in the meantime have all the incidents of the relationship of trustee and cestui que trust. That this is so is sufficiently illustrated by the fact that prima facie the vendor is until the date fixed for the completion entitled to receive and retain the rents and profits and that as from that date the purchaser is bound to pay interest. And you may search the Trustee Act 1925 without obtaining much that is relevant to the relationship of vendor and purchaser. Thus, although the vendor because of his duties to the purchaser is called a trustee, it is wrong to argue that because he is so called he has all the duties of or holds the land on a trust which has all the incidents associated with the relationship of a trustee and his cestui que trust."
(b) In Heronsgate Enterprises Ltd v Harman (Chesham) Ltd, January 21, 1993, transcript (C.A.) Sir Donald Nicholls VC said (at 13-14):
"It is well-established law that, subject always to the terms of the particular contract, a seller of property under a specifically enforceable contract is to be regarded after the contract has been made as holding the property as a trustee for the buyer. However, he is not a bare trustee. His trust obligations are limited in certain respects. For example, if, as is usually the case, he is entitled to remain in possession for the period after the contract has been made pending the date fixed for completion, he is entitled to keep and retain for his own benefit the rents and profits of the land arising during that period … The seller must take care not to damage the property or to prejudice the buyer's interest in the property of which, on completion, he will become the legal owner. But in general, within those limits he is entitled to the ordinary rents and profits, and for him to take steps to obtain them after contract and before the date fixed for completion, either by occupying and using the property himself or by permitting another to occupy and work the property in return for a rent, is not a breach of his duties as seller under a contract for sale."
(1) "something between what has been called a naked or bare trustee, or a mere trustee (that is, a person without beneficial interest), and a mortgagee who is not, in equity (any more than a vendor), the owner of the estate, but is, in certain events, entitled to what the unpaid vendor is, viz, possession of the estate": Lysaght v Edwards (1876) 2 Ch D 499, at 506, per Sir George Jessel;
(2) "a constructive trustee": Lysaght v Edwards (1876) 2 Ch D 499, at 510, per Sir George Jessel; or "constructively a trustee": Shaw v Foster (1872) LR 5 HL 321, 349, per Lord O'Hagan;
(3) "a trustee, no doubt, with peculiar duties and liabilities": Egmont v Smith (1877) 6 Ch D 469, at 475, per Sir George Jessel;
(4) "a trustee in a qualified sense only, and is so only because he has made a contract which a Court of Equity will give effect to by transferring the property sold to the purchaser, and so far as he is a trustee he is so only in respect of the property contracted to be sold": Rayner v Preston (1881) 18 Ch D 1, 6, per Cotton LJ;
(5) having duties "not exactly the same as in the case of other trustees": Clarke v Ramuz [1891] 2 QB 456, 459, per Lord Coleridge CJ; and
(6) "a quasi-trustee": Cumberland Consolidated Holdings Ltd v Ireland [1946] KB 264, at 269, per Lord Greene MR.
"2.7 The trust concept has been particularly valuable in imposing duties on the vendor in the interim period between the date the contract is made and the date it is completed. He is liable for physical damage resulting from his not exercising reasonable care [citing Lucie-Smith v Gorman [1981] CLY 2866], including such damage inflicted by trespassers [citing Davron Estates Ltd v Turnshire Ltd (1982) 133 NLJ 937]. His responsibility also extends beyond physical damage. For example, he must continue to perform lease covenants [citing Dowson v Solomon (1859) 1 Drew & Sm 1] and must not relet in a way which would prejudice the purchaser [citing Abdulla v Shah [1959] AC 124 (PC)].
2.8 While the application of the term 'trustee' to describe the vendor's position may sometimes be a cause of confusion, because some rules applicable to trustees have no application here, there is clearly a need for some restraint on the vendor's exercising the power of a legal owner and for the imposition for the benefit of the purchaser of some positive duty of care. The trust concept which has developed is a useful, flexible tool enabling a degree of control over the vendor to be exercised in the very varied situations which arise. The possible option of abolishing this trust was put forward in the working paper [Law Commission, Transfer of Land: Passing of Risk from Vendor to Purchaser, Working Paper No. 109 (1988)] although we did not favour it. None of those who responded supported the suggestion we therefore conclude that the trust should remain undisturbed."
The consequences
(1) to keep the property in a proper state of cultivation, reasonable regard being had to incurring a liability on his part: Egmont v Smith (1877) 6 Ch D 469;
(2) to use reasonable care to keep the property in a reasonable state of preservation, and, so far as may be, as it was when the contract was made: Clarke v Ramuz [1891] 2 QB 456, 459-460; Raffety v Schofield [1897] 1 Ch 937, at 944;
(3) to take care to prevent removal of the soil by a trespasser: Clarke v Ramuz [1891] 2 QB 456 (CA), where Kay LJ also put the decision on the ground that the purchaser had not got the whole of what he had contracted to buy;
(4) to keep the property in its then condition and state, and at any rate, to take reasonable care of it and see that its condition did not deteriorate during that time: Davron Estates Ltd v Turnshire Ltd. (1982) 133 NLJ 937 (failure to prevent damage by squatters);
(5) not to abandon rubbish on the property: Cumberland Consolidated Holdings Ltd v Ireland [1946] KB 264;
(6) in a case where there was a contract for the sale of premises together with the goodwill of the business carried on from the premises, not to let the business lapse, and to inform the purchaser with reasonable promptitude of what he was doing: Golden Bread Co. v Hemmings [1922] 1 Ch 162.
"It was not suggested that a term to keep the planning application in being should be implied. Nor could it be said that a planning application could properly be regarded as part of property passing on sale in the same way and for the same reasons as the roses in the front garden. If it were the principle of trusteeship on the part of the vendor could be applied without any hesitation. … Under modern conditions, where all potential building land is subject to planning consents of various kinds, and where local authorities are likely to have large numbers of such applications before them, it is obvious that a high rather than a low place in the queue was of value to a speculative bidder … It follows that the vendor in such circumstances is in my judgment under an obligation after the contract has been signed, not to withdraw a planning application which must be assumed to be of value to the purchaser, at any rate without obtaining the purchaser's consent to such withdrawal."