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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 >> Sukhlall v Bansoodeb [2013] EWHC 952 (Ch) (10 April 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2013/952.html Cite as: [2013] EWHC 952 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
7 Rolls Buildings London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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MRS. SIEWBASSEE SUKHLALL |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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MR. GOOROODEV BANSOODEB |
Defendant |
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1st Floor, Quality House, 6-9 Quality Court
Chancery Lane, London WC2A 1HP.
Tele No: 020 7067 2900, Fax No: 020 7831 6864, DX: 410 LDE
Email: [email protected]
Website: www.martenwalshcherer.com
MR. TIM COWEN appeared for the Defendant
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Crown Copyright ©
MR. JUSTICE ARNOLD:
"6. In or about late May 2007 the defendant approached the second claimant concerning the property. The defendant stated in the conversation that it would be a great shame if it were to be sold outside the family. He went on to explain that he wished to help his son Ravi Bansoodeb to purchase the family home as he was soon to return from the USA and as yet had nowhere to live. The defendant made an offer to buy the property for £1.1 million.
7. The second claimant discussed this proposal with the husband of the first claimant and they were persuaded by the defendant's arguments. The first and second claimants consequently accepted the defendant's offer to purchase the property from them for £1.1 million, notwithstanding this offer was significantly less than was apparently available on the open market.
8. Shortly thereafter the defendant notified the first claimant that he was only going to be able to raise £750,000 from the bank. He therefore asked whether the transaction could proceed with £750,000 being paid immediately and with the remainder of the purchase price, namely £350,000, being left outstanding upon completion. The defendant stated that his wife was due to receive £80,000 upon retirement in September 2007 and that this sum would be used to pay off the outstanding balance of £350,000. The defendant promised that the remainder of the outstanding balance would then be paid off at the rate of £50,000 per month.
9. The first and second claimants agreed to the defendant's proposal described at paragraph 8 above. They did so as they felt that they had agreed to the sale for £1.1 million and because they both wished to help their nephew Ravi Bansoodeb .... The agreement was oral and not reduced to writing. The first and second claimants therefore decided not to proceed with the sale to Mr. And Mrs. MacAndrew and, accordingly, removed property from the open market.
10. Notwithstanding the agreement described at paragraph 8 above, the agreement for sale from SAR1V and all other documentation pertaining to the sale, including correspondence from solicitors, stated the sale price as being £750,000. Throughout the sale the first and second claimants were represented by solicitors suggested to them by the defendant, Messrs. Stringvasans. Those solicitors did not explain the potential consequences of the omitting agreed terms from the contract of sale. Contracts were subsequently exchanged which wrongly stated the sale price was £750,000 when it had in fact been agreed at £1.1 million. ...
11. On 8th August 2007 Ravi Bansoodeb was registered as the new freehold owner of the property with the sale price being recorded as £750,000."
"We have no problem in selling the property to the Defendant but at the agreed price of £1.1 million, of which £350,000 was to be paid by the Defendant after completion. In our naivety and with misplaced trust we did not ask that the loan, for that is what it was, be recorded in writing."
Save that she refers to the outstanding sum as being a loan, rather than an outstanding balance to be paid off, that evidence is essentially consistent with what is pleaded in paragraphs 8 and 9 of the Amended Particulars of Claim.
"It is averred that the defendant entered into a collateral contract with the first and second claimants ('the collateral contract'). The terms of that contract were that if the first and second claimants were to sell the property to Ravi Bansoodeb for £750,000, then the defendant would pay the first and second claimants £350,000. This was to be paid by one instalment of £80,000 in September 2007 and at the rate of £50,000 per month thereafter."
"A contract for the sale or other disposition of and interest in land can only be made in writing and only by incorporating all the terms which the parties have expressly agreed in one document or where contracts are exchanged in each."
"33. Mr. Mainwearing [counsel then appearing for Mrs. Sukhlall] submits that it is possible, as in the case where one has a finder's fee, for one person to be paid a sum in consideration of somebody else entering into a contract for the purchase of property. That is recognised in part in the judgment of Briggs J in North Eastern Properties Ltd v Coleman & Quinn [2010] EWCA Civ 277, which concerned a claim for specific performance of a contract for sale of 11 flats where there was, in addition to the contract price for the properties, an agreement between the same parties, namely vendor and purchaser, for a finder's fee equal to 2% of the list price of the flats.
34. The judge at first instance held that the finder's fee did not form part of the contract and ordered specific performance. On appeal the Court of Appeal upheld him. In paragraph 54 Briggs J said:
'In my judgment, the apparent disharmony constituted by the dicta on this point' — having referred to the various authorities on collateral contract in section 2 of the Law of Property (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1989 — 'may be reconciled as follows:
(i) Nothing in section 2 of the 1989 Act is designed to prevent parties to a composite transaction which includes a land contract from structuring their bargain so that the land contract is genuinely separated from the rest of the transaction in the sense that its performance is not made conditional upon the performance of some other expressly agreed part of the bargain.'
35. He then sets out some facts from the case of Grossman v Hooper.
'(ii) By contrast, the parties to a composite transaction are not free to separate into separate document expressly agreed terms, for example as to the sale of chattels or the provision of services, if upon the true construction of the whole of the agreement, performance of the land sale is conditional upon the chattel sale or service provision. That that would, albeit for reasons which seem to me to frustrate rather than serve the purpose for which the 1989 Act was passed, fall foul of section 2(1), however purposively construed. So would a series of separate contracts for the sale of separate parcels of land, if each was conditional upon the performance of the other.'
36. Bearing those comments in mind, Mr. Cowen submits, and I accept, that the effect of the alleged contract in this case is not to give rise to a separate transaction. The reality is that it is part of the original transaction and conditional on it. He relies in particular on the fact that in paragraph 12, in the second sentence, the words 'if and 'then' appear. In other words:
'In the terms of the contract whether if the first and second claimants were to sell the property to Ravi Bansoodeb for £750,000, then the defendant would pay the first and second claimants £350,000.'
37. Mr. Mainwearing says, with some force, that that is the same with the finder's fee. The reality in this case, however, is that because this is all part of the same transaction it is not like a finder's fee. The £350,000, as is apparent from the earlier paragraphs that I have referred to, is part of the original purchase price of the property and not a collateral agreement. Nowhere do the pleadings set out, as I mentioned when considering the earlier paragraphs, separate obligations on each of the defendant and Ravi and the consideration for each obligation.
38. In any event, as Mr. Cowen rightly submits, the factual scenario that would necessarily have to be posited for the claim made in paragraph 12 to succeed, is in direct conflict with what appears elsewhere. This is not a case where, on the same set of facts, an alternative argument is being run. This is an alternative set of facts, only one of which can be correct. For those reasons it seems to me that this allegation has no real prospect of success and I would likewise strike it out."
"In the event that the defendant denies that an agreement was ever reached in the terms alleged in paragraphs 8 and 9 above, the second claimant alleges a fraudulent intention on the part of the defendant to obtain the property at a gross undervalue. It is averred that the defendant persuaded the first and second claimants to enter into an agreement which he knew or believed could not be enforced and which he never had any intention to honour. The claimant will accordingly beg the court's assistance in reversing the effects of that fraudulent scheme."
"42. However sympathetic the court might be to a fraud said to have been committed against the claimants, the starting point in considering the viability of the plea has to be whether it is properly pleaded, sufficiently particularised and supported by the appropriate evidence. Both the pleader and the court, as Mr. Cowen reminds me, bear a heavy burden in considering the sustainability of a plea of fraud.
43. The elements of a claim in deceit are not to be found in this paragraph. While it might be possible, as I posited to Mr. Cowen in argument, to construct a plea of fraud against the defendant in this case, one does not see it in paragraph 15.
44. The representation of the statement of fact made by the defendant has to be set out in full: It is not. The respects in which that representation is deliberately made and deliberately untrue have to be set out and they are not. The elements of reliance and damage then have to be pleaded and they are not.
45. The core of the averment in this paragraph is that the defendant persuaded the first and second claimants to enter into an agreement which he knew or believed could not be enforced and which he never had any intention to honour. If it were the claimants' case that the defendant had persuaded the claimants to enter into a written agreement for £750,000 and an oral agreement for £350,000 and to tell their solicitors only that they had agreed a contract price of £750,000 and mentioned nothing of the £350,000 and at the time he had no intention of honouring his unenforceable promise to pay £350,000 there might be some substance in the claim, but the claim is not in fact put that way. In some circumstances it might be possible to infer the above version of the facts but it seems to me that this plea is a long way from enabling me to do so. So in those circumstances, as currently framed, I have come to the conclusion that it also has no real prospect of success."