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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 >> Beasant v Lexicon Holdings Ltd & Anor [2006] EWHC 3160 (Ch) (12 December 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2006/3160.html Cite as: [2006] EWHC 3160 (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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STEVEN PAUL BEASANT |
Claimant/ Part 20 Defendant |
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- and - |
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LEXICON HOLDINGS LIMITED (2) BRYAN MYER FUGLER |
Defendant/ Part 20 Claimant Defendant |
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Jonathan Brock QC and Andrew Lenon (instructed by Fuglers) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 21st 25th July 2006
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Pumfrey :
Introduction
Background
"Bryan undertakes to procure within the next few weeks the Joint Venture Agreement with Lexicon Limited ("Lexicon") . The parties undertake to procure that Pegasus will enter into the Joint Venture Agreement with Lexicon . The Joint Venture Agreement shall be in the form attached".
"The parties have agreed to enter into this Agreements to regulate their respective liabilities and obligations with regard to the Property (as hereinafter defined) and the profit shares due to Mr Fugler and Mr Beasant arising out of their having introduced Lexicon to the Property."
It is not necessary to refer to the definitions, but I note in passing that the definition of "the Property" is incomplete, although apparently sufficient to identify the Castle Cary land. The option is granted by Clause 2:
"2.1 In consideration of the sum of £1 now paid by Mr Fugler and Mr Beasant to Lexicon ("the receipt of which Lexicon hereby acknowledges") Lexicon hereby grants to Mr Fugler and Mr Beasant jointly and severally but subject to the provisions of Clause 2.2 an option to require Lexicon to sell the Property for an estate in fee simple in possession in consideration of the following payments:-
2.1.1 such sum as shall equal the repayment of the Purchase Price together with interest on the Purchase Price until the Completion Date at the rate of one per cent (1%) above Barclays Bank Plc base rate from time to time
2.1.2 the sum of £300,000.
2.2 The Option granted pursuant to Clause 2.1 shall be exercisable at any time on or before 17th October 2000 by either Mr Fugler or Mr Beasant or Mr Fugler and Mr Beasant jointly (as the case may be) giving 30 days written notice to Lexicon and Lexicon shall sell and Mr Fugler and Mr Beasant shall purchase the Property for the said estate for the sums set out in Clause 2.1. Provided always that either Mr Fugler or Mr Beasant may exercise the option subject to the following terms
2.2.1 on or before the exercise of the option either Mr Fugler or Mr Beasant (as the case may be) shall notify the other party of proof of funds;
2.2.2 within 7 days following such notification either Mr Fugler or Mr Beasant (as the case may be) shall notify the party intending to exercise the option that he wishes the option to be exercised jointly
2.3
2.4 The Standard Conditions of Sale (3rd Edition) shall apply to the option exercised hereunder so far as they are applicable to a sale by private treaty provided always that:-
2.4.1 no deposit is to be paid
2.4.2 Lexicon shall sell with full title guarantee
2.4.3 the Property shall be sold with vacant possession
2.4.4 the title of Lexicon to the Property has been deduced prior to the signing of this Agreement and Mr Fugler and Mr Beasant shall not be entitled to raise any requisition or an objection to it
2.4.5 in the event of both Mr Fugler and Mr Beasant exercising the option set out in this Clause then the Property shall be owned by them as tenants in common in direct equal shares or otherwise in the proportions of the consideration contributed by them."
"5.1 In consideration of the introduction of the Property by Mr Fugler and Mr Beasant to Lexicon it is agreed between them that in the event that the option granted pursuant to Clause 2.1 should not be exercised and Mr Fugler and Mr Beasant agree that the Property is sold within the period of the option granted pursuant to Clause [2.1] the Sale Proceeds shall be paid in the following priority:-
5.1.1 to pay the legal costs and disbursements
5.1.2 to pay to Lexicon such sum as shall equal the repayment of the Purchase Price together with interest on the Purchase Price
5.1.3 to pay the sum of £300,000 to Lexicon
5.1.4 to repay to BMI any sums that have been agreed to be paid by it in respect of obtaining the Planning Consent
and the balance (if any) shall be divided between the parties as to 50% to Mr Fugler and 50% to Mr Beasant .
5.2 In the event that the amount of the Sale Proceeds whenever the Property is sold is insufficient to repay the sums referred to in Clause 5.1.1 to Clause 5.1.3 inclusive then Mr Fugler and Mr Beasant shall indemnify and hold harmless Lexicon against any losses damages costs and expenses and fees incurred or suffered by Lexicon in failing to recover the monies due in respect of the sums referred to in Clause 5.1.1 to Clause 5.1.3 inclusive provided always that this indemnity shall no longer apply after the expiry of twelve months after the date of the expiry of the Option.
5.3
5.4 As security for the Option granted in Clause 2.1 and for the payments to Mr Fugler and Mr Beasant herewith they shall have the right to register a Caution or Charge over the Property preventing the transfer of the Property during the period of the Option without the written consent of Mr Fugler and Mr Beasant provided always that in the event that the Property is sold pursuant to Clause 5.1 Mr Fugler and Mr Beasant shall consent to the removal of the said Caution."
"The parties hereto mutually agree and confirm that no party shall in any way be constituted the agent of the other and that no party shall without the consent of the other party incur any expenditure in relation to the Property without the prior consent in writing of the other party (such consent not to be unreasonably withheld) and that the relationship of the parties hereunder shall be that of independent principals combining together in a joint venture for the purpose hereinbefore specified. Each of the parties shall take such steps as for the time being lawfully lie within its power as may be necessary from time to time to obtain completion of the objects of the joint venture."
"49. In July, August and September I met the Managing Director (Rob Alford) and the Property Buyer (Steve Rossiter) of Prowting Homes South West Limited ("Prowting") at their offices in Bridgewater and negotiated the sale of the Property to them. Marketing and selling the Property was something I was obliged to use best endeavours to do under the terms of the 5th June 2000 agreement. I also negotiated the build package with them on behalf of Chantry, as Chantry had offered to do the building works at the Property. I was informed that Prowting had agreed to purchase the Property. I was also informed that Prowting had reserved funding for this particular purchase and, as they were a well known company with substantial assets [.] I instructed my solicitors to begin the formalities with their solicitors. I have been provided with a copy of this Profit & Loss Account and the Balance Sheet for Prowting for the year ending 28 February 2001 by my solicitors. Prowting was clearly in a position to finance the purchase of the Property.
50. I was advised that the solicitors for Prowting were Clarke Willmott & Clarke and they wrote to my solicitors, Porter Dodson, on 13 September 2000 confirming that they had received instructions to act for Prowting and had "reserved funding to purchase the site at a price of £2,250,000". At the time, Prowting was a very substantial multi-million pound company and its solicitors are of impeccable reputation. Such a solicitor's letter was evidence enough that the funds to purchase were secured."
"I have not communicated with you since my fax dated 10 August but I confirm that I have attempted to fully co-operate as requested in your faxes of 10 and 11 August. It is becoming increasingly difficult in fact almost impossible due to Barry Coopers actions. I enclose a copy of a letter sent to Mr Cooper today.
However, I have been actively attempting to find interested parties in numerous sites and can confirm offers are being submitted to Barry Cooper direct from their appointed agents.
I believe these offers are for three sites and are unconditional.
One offer is for BMI Castle Cary and I confirm that Solicitors have proof of funds and suggest we accept the offer (2 million pounds).
If you agree we need to instruct Lexicon to sell if not we will need to exercise option, clause 2.1."
"With regard to the above named property under JV agreement dated 5 June 2000 between Lexicon Holdings Limited, Bryan Myer Fugler, Steven Beasant and BMI Property Management Ltd, under clause '2.2. The Option' the undersigned confirms 30 day written notice to Lexicon Holdings Ltd to sell said property for the sums set out in clause 2.1."
"In your letter dated 14 September 2000 you refer to two offers on BMI. Please let us have the copies that were not enclosed together with evidence that the funds are available to proceed from each purchaser. It seems clear to our client from your letter that you have funds available to purchase the BMI site. By our clients calculations a sum of approximately £450,000 has been diverted away from our clients and surely the right thing to do will be to repay these monies forthwith. We will be contacting you for recovery of these sums."
Mr Beasant was notified by Lexicon's Jersey solicitor that his purported exercise of the option was rejected and on 13th October he asked why, receiving the answer that he had not complied with the provisions of Clause 2.2.1 of the Agreement. He did not give, and has not given, notice to complete, but on 10th February 2003 he registered a caution against the Property. The application to vacate the caution was made on 30th June 2004, and the subsequent adjudication proceedings were slow, Mr Beasant finally being instructed to serve proceedings in the High Court by 2nd September 2005, a direction with which he complied on 12th September 2005.
a) compliance with the provisions of Clause 2.2 is a condition precedent to the exercise of the option under Clause 2.1 of the Agreement;
b) it follows that, prior to the exercise of the option by Mr Beasant, Mr Beasant "shall notify [Mr Fugler] of proof of funds".
"It was my understanding that Lexicon would only have been holding the Property on the basis of a loan. It was only myself and Mr Fugler who wanted to buy and develop the Property. I did not believe that Lexicon had any real interest in buying the Property, merely obtaining a return on the investment. There was always the intention to give Pegasus the right to buy the Property back at a higher price as per the Reply to the Request for Further Information. I believe it is extremely important to note, that at the time, Pegasus was seen to be the entity that would be purchasing the Property and that in fact it would be buying the Property "back"."
"Finally I believe this may end up being a dispute therefore we need to arrange full position etc., as he will try every trick in the book to get his own way."
Before the signing of the Joint Venture Agreement, there was extensive negotiation between Fuglers, acting on Mr Fugler's behalf, and Porter Dodson. The agreement with Lexicon is one of two (the other one concerning Erindale Finance Limited) and is part of a transaction which included the Heads of Agreement to which I have referred and a loan agreement. Of the Joint Venture Agreement, Mr Beasant says this:
"It was only right at the end of the negotiations that Fuglers suggested to my solicitors that a provision relating to notice of funds be inserted in the Agreement. ... Mr Fugler was well aware of the potential profit for the Property, and that I was discussing a potential sale as well as a further joint venture to develop the Property with a well-established property developer. One important area was to secure planning consent as this would instantly enhance the value of the Property and enable us to either borrow what we required for development from a bank or to sell at a higher price with the benefit of planning. It would have been obvious to everyone, including Mr Fugler, that once the value of the Property had risen (whether by market rises, by planning permission or by the imminent prospect of securing planning permission) that the funds needed to purchase the Property from Lexicon upon exercising the option could be obtained by borrowing from banks on the security of the Property or by finding a buyer willing and able to purchase the Property at an enhanced price. Therefore it must have been obvious that one of the possible sources of funds would be a substantial purchaser ready willing and able to purchase the Property as part of a "back to back" transaction."
a) The intention from the outset was that Lexicon was the source of the financing and that the profits from the disposal of the Property would accrue on a 50/50 basis to Mr Fugler and Mr Beasant after repaying Lexicon for the purchase price plus an element of return on its investment.
b) The one thing that none of the parties intended was that Lexicon would be permitted to retain the entire beneficial interest in the Property against the will of Mr Fugler or Mr Beasant and retain all the profit on its sale to the exclusion of Messrs Beasant and Fugler.
c) The Property was introduced to Lexicon by the Fugler/Beasant joint venture on the basis that Lexicon would not be entitled to treat that Property entirely as its own beneficial asset. The introduction was on the basis that Lexicon would be obliged to share the profits on disposal with Mr Fugler and Mr Beasant either as individuals or through the medium of their joint venture vehicle, Pegasus.
d) The Property was acquired by Lexicon on the basis that it or its proceeds of sale would be held on Pallant v. Morgan constructive trusts that recognised the interests of Mr Fugler and Mr Beasant.
" the expressions 'constructive trust' and 'constructive trustee' have been used by equity lawyers to describe two entirely different situations. The first covers those cases where the defendant, though not expressly appointed as trustee, has assumed the duties of a trustee by a lawful transaction which was independent of and preceded the breach of trust and is not impeached by the plaintiff. The second covers those cases where the trust obligation arises as a direct consequence of the unlawful transaction which is impeached by the plaintiff.
A constructive trust arises by operation of law whenever the circumstances are such that it would be unconscionable for the owner of property (usually but not necessarily the legal estate) to assert his own beneficial interest in the property and deny the beneficial interest of another. In the first class of case, however, the constructive trustee really is a trustee. He does not receive the trust property in his own right but by a transaction by which both parties intend to create a trust from the outset and which is not impugned by the plaintiff. His possession of the property is coloured from the first by the trust and confidence by means of which he obtained it, and his subsequent appropriation of the property to his own use is a breach of that trust. Well known examples of such a constructive trust are McCormick v. Grogan (1869) LR 4 HL 82 (a case of a secret trust) and Rochefoucald v. Boustead [1897] 1 Ch 196 (where the defendant agreed to buy property for the plaintiff but the trust was imperfectly recorded). Pallant v. Morgan [1953] Ch 43 (where the defendant sought to keep for himself property which the plaintiff trusted him to buy for both parties) is another. In these cases the plaintiff does not impugn the transaction by which the defendant obtained control of the property. He alleges that the circumstances in which the defendant obtained control make it unconscionable for him thereafter to assert a beneficial interest in the property."
"The plaintiff's claim rested on the fact that his agent had been kept out of the bidding by the arrangement which the defendant later repudiated. Since it was too late to restore the plaintiff to his former position, the defendant was held to the arrangement he had made."
"(1) A Pallant v. Morgan equity may arise where the arrangement or understanding on which it is based precedes the acquisition of the relevant property by one party to that arrangement. It is the pre-acquisition arrangement which colours the subsequent acquisition by the defendant and leads to his being treated as a trustee if he seeks to act inconsistently with it. Where the arrangement or understanding is reached in relation to property already owned by one of the parties, he may (if the arrangement is a sufficient certainty to be enforced specifically) thereby constitute himself trustee on the basis that "equity looks on that as done which ought to be done;" or an equity may arise under the principles developed in the proprietary estoppel cases.
(2) It is unnecessary that the arrangement or understanding should be contractually enforceable. Indeed, if there is an agreement which is enforceable as a contract there is unlikely to be any need to invoke the Pallant v. Morgan equity; equity can act through the remedy of specific performance and will recognise the existence of a corresponding trust.
(3) It is necessary that the pre-acquisition arrangement or understanding should contemplate that one party ("the acquiring party") will take steps to acquire the relevant property; and that, if he does so, the other party ("the non-acquiring party") will obtain some interest in that property. Further, it is necessary that (whatever private reservations the acquiring party may have) he has not informed the non-acquiring party before the acquisition (or, perhaps more accurately, before it is too late for the parties to be restored to a position of no advantage/no detriment) that he no longer intends to honour the arrangement or understanding.
(4) It is necessary that, in reliance on the arrangement or understanding, the non-acquiring party should do (or omit to do) something which confers an advantage on the acquiring party in relation to the acquisition of the property; or is detrimental to the ability of the non-acquiring party to acquire the property on equal terms. It is the existence of the advantage to the one, or detriment to the other, gained or suffered as a consequence of the arrangement or understanding, which leads to the conclusion that it would be inequitable or unconscionable to allow the acquiring party to retain the property for himself, in a manner inconsistent with the arrangement or understanding which enabled him to acquire it. Pallant v. Morgan [1953] Ch. 43 itself provides an illustration of this principle .
(5) That leads, I think, to the further conclusions: (i) that although, in many cases, the advantage/detriment will be found in the agreement of the non-acquiring party to keep out of the market, that is not a necessary feature; and (ii) that although there will usually be advantage to the one and correlative disadvantage to the other, the existence of both advantage and detriment is not essential either will do. What is essential is that the circumstances make it inequitable for the acquiring party to retain the property for himself in a manner inconsistent with the arrangement or understanding on which the non-acquiring party has acted. Those circumstances may arise where the non-acquiring was never "in the market" for the whole of the property to be acquired; but (on the faith of an arrangement or understanding that he shall have a part of that property) provides support in relation to the acquisition of the whole which is of advantage to the acquiring party. They may arise where the assistance provided to the acquiring party (in pursuance of the arrangement or understanding) involves no detriment to the non-acquiring party; or where the non-acquiring party acts to his detriment (in pursuance of the arrangement or understanding) without the acquiring party obtaining any advantage therefrom."
"Proof of Funds"
"Clause 2.2.1 states that prior to exercising the Option notice must be given to Fuglers that you have the funds. While there is an indication that you have a buyer to inject funds that is not the same thing, particularly as there is no binding contract. Then clause 2.2.2 states that the seven days prior notice must be given before then any individual exercises the option on their own. If then you cannot get Mr Fugler to agree to exercise the option there is a problem and he could look to block you. There is the additional problem that you would be effectively contracting to acquire the site but without having secured the binding exchange with Prowting that means you would sell to them. You only have 30 days from exercising the option to produce the balance of the purchase price. This is clause 2.3. At present we do not have the title or the ability to deal with the enquiries which any prudent purchaser would raise and it will take at least two weeks for them to put through the requisite searches."