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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 >> Roshan v Singh & Ors [2017] EWHC 176 (Ch) (13 February 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2017/176.html Cite as: [2017] 2 P &CR DG2, [2017] 4 WLR 46, [2017] EWHC 176 (Ch), [2017] WLR(D) 96 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Fetter Lane, London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
KULWINDER SINGH ROSHAN |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) SOHAN SINGH (2) JASWANT SINGH BHARJ (3) AMRIK KAUR BHARJ (4) HER MAJESTY'S ATTORNEY GENERAL |
Defendants |
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Mr Stephen Boyd (instructed on a Public Access basis) for the Second and Third Defendants
Hearing dates: 14 and 15 December 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr S Monty QC:
Introduction
The ownership claim and related proceedings
The present claim
i) The ownership claim and the TOLATA claim be transferred to the High Court;
ii) All proceedings in the TOLATA claim be stayed until further order;
iii) A declaration that Mr Roshan, as member of the charity known as the Gurdwara Miri Piri Sahib and as a representative of all of the members thereof (except for Mr Sohan Singh and Mr & Mrs Bharj), is not bound by the declarations I had made in the ownership claim as to the ownership of the Property;
iv) Further or alternatively, an order setting aside my order of 2 February 2015 in the ownership claim as having been procured by the fraud of Mr Sohan Singh and/or Mr Bharj and/or Mrs Bharj;
v) Further or alternatively, an order setting aside HHJ Gerald's order of 1 June 2016 in the TOLATA claim as having been obtained by Mr & Mrs Bharj in reliance on their fraud in the ownership claim;
vi) A declaration that Mr Sohan Singh holds the Property on trust to be used for charitable purposes of the Gurdwara and that it is charity property.
i) Mr Sohan Singh falsely claimed and asserted that he was the sole beneficial owner of the Property and falsely claimed in evidence that he had made substantial payments towards its purchase.
ii) Mr & Mrs Bharj falsely claimed and asserted that they, together with Mr Sohan Singh, were the beneficial owners of the Property.
iii) Mr Bharj falsely gave evidence that he had contributed towards the purchase of the Property £20,000 in cash and a further £60,000 by releasing a debt, and that Mrs Bharj had contributed £30,000.
The relevant principles
"The following themes emerge from these cases that are relevant to the present appeal.
(1) In cases where there is no res judicata or issue estoppel, the power to strike out a claim for abuse of process is founded on two interests: the private interest of a party not to be vexed twice for the same reason and the public interest of the state in not having issues repeatedly litigated; see Lord Diplock in Hunter v. Chief Constable, Lord Hoffmann in the Arthur Hall case and Lord Bingham in Johnson v. Gore Wood. These interests reflect unfairness to a party on the one hand, and the risk of the administration of public justice being brought into disrepute on the other, see again Lord Diplock in Hunter v. Chief Constable. Both or either interest may be engaged.
(2) An abuse may occur where it is sought to bring new proceedings in relation to issues that have been decided in prior proceedings. However, there is no prima facie assumption that such proceedings amount to an abuse, see Bragg v. Oceanus; and the court's power is only used where justice and public policy demand it, see Lord Hoffmann in the Arthur Hall case.
(3) To determine whether proceedings are abusive the Court must engage in a close 'merits based' analysis of the facts. This will take into account the private and public interests involved, and will focus on the crucial question: whether in all the circumstances a party is abusing or misusing the court's process, see Lord Bingham in Johnson v. Gore Wood and Buxton LJ in Taylor Walton v. Laing.
(4) In carrying out this analysis, it will be necessary to have in mind that: (a) the fact that the parties may not have been the same in the two proceedings is not dispositive, since the circumstances may be such as to bring the case within 'the spirit of the rules', see Lord Hoffmann in the Arthur Hall case; thus (b) it may be an abuse of process, where the parties in the later civil proceedings were neither parties nor their privies in the earlier proceedings, if it would be manifestly unfair to a party in the later proceedings that the same issues should be relitigated, see Sir Andrew Morritt V-C in the Bairstow case; or, as Lord Hobhouse put it in the Arthur Hall case, if there is an element of vexation in the use of litigation for an improper purpose.
(5) It will be a rare case where the litigation of an issue which has not previously been decided between the same parties or their privies will amount to an abuse of process, see Lord Hobhouse in In re Norris.
To which one further point may be added.
(6) An appeal against a decision to strike out on the grounds of abuse, described by Lord Sumption JSC in Virgin Atlantic Airways Ltd v. Zodiac Seats UK Ltd [2014] AC 160 at [17] as the application of a procedural rule against abusive proceedings, is a challenge to the judgment of the court below and not to the exercise of a discretion. Nevertheless, in reviewing the decision the Court of Appeal will give considerable weight to the views of the judge, see Buxton LJ in the Taylor Walton case, at [13]."
"I actually consider that it is helpful that, to adopt the words of Langley J in Sphere Drake at 186, it is the same Judge who is considering whether the fresh evidence would have entirely changed the way in which I approached and came to my decision. The important caveat is that I must ensure that I follow the course laid down by David Steel J in Perjury II at 198 (and repeated and adopted by the Court of Appeal in RBS v Highland at 106) that "the question of materiality [of the fresh evidence] is to be assessed by reference to its impact on the evidence supporting the original decision, not to its impact on what might be the decision if the matter were retried on honest evidence". The question is the impact, if any, upon my decision if in cross-examination of the Defendant it had been put that he was the owner of Aurdeley, and if I had disbelieved him."
The issues
i) The claim has been brought by Mr Roshan as a representative claim on behalf of the members of the Gurdwara. The claim is actually that the Property was at all times held on trust by Mr Sohan Singh for the Gurdwara. Is the claim properly constituted, or should it have been a claim by the trustees rather than by the members?
ii) Can a person bring fresh proceedings to set aside a judgment in earlier proceedings to which that person was not a party where that judgment was obtained by fraud?
iii) If so, is there any basis for characterising those fresh proceedings as an abuse of process and as such are they liable to be struck out?
iv) If they are not an abuse of process, do the fresh proceedings have a realistic prospect of success, and if they do not, should they be struck out?
The proper claimant
i) The Gurdwara is described as a non-registered organisation; it was not a registered charity.
ii) In March 2004, the Commission received a complaint from a solicitor acting for a number of individuals connected to the Gurdwara complaining that funds from the community had been used towards the deposit with the intention that the Property be held on charitable trust. However, the Property was in fact held in the name of a private individual with no indication that it was held on trust nor were there any restrictions on sale.
iii) There were cautions entered against the Property in November 1996 and December 1997. The cautioners attested that those donating funds intended that a charitable trust should be set up. They claimed that it was not until after the registration of the land in the name of the proprietor (Mr Sohan Singh) that they had realised that this had not occurred.
iv) The cautioners provided a copy of a notice in the Punjabi Times dated 31 July 1996, which was the only written evidence of the intended purpose of the Temple. However, the notice referred to the centre and not the land and whilst it stated that it was proposed that a trust be formed, this would not conclusively meet charitable criteria.
v) When the Commission visited the Temple in July 2004, the representatives they met outlined the purposes of the Temple, which appeared not to be exclusively charitable.
vi) The Commission considered that while there is evidence to suggest the existence of a trust with respect to the donated funds, there is no conclusive evidence to suggest that this was a charitable trust, and that none of the evidence obtained conclusively supports the existence of an organisation with exclusively charitable purposes.
i) In the Commission's strong view, the governing document of the charity is the 1995 Rules.
ii) The organisation is likely to be a charity, but that would be a matter to be determined by registration should an application be made.
iii) Registration is not optional and failure to register means that the trustees are in default.
iv) "Unincorporated associations are characterised by the existence of a membership who elect from among themselves a group of trustees to manage the organisation. Unincorporated associations typically have AGM's at which the trustees are regularly elected. In an unincorporated association the ultimate power rests with the membership as they can usually remove the trustees. In this Charity there is no membership and no AGM. Instead there are officers and trustees. The governing document is not well drafted and if the organisation applies for registration I would expect that we will require that amendments are made to rectify the problems. …The rules indicate that there should be a committee but no names are entered on the deed and the rules do not say what role the committee will play."
i) The issue was whether three plots of land were acquired beneficially for the legal owners or were they acquired beneficially under a charitable trust for the Muslim community of Walsall as a place of worship and education.
ii) Section 53(1)(c) of the Law of Property Act 1925 provides that a declaration of trust of land must be in writing, although there is an exception for implied, resulting or constructive trusts.
iii) The question was whether an intention to benefit the community through the purchase was translated into a legal commitment to hold the Property only for the benefit of the community.
iv) There was no convincing evidence that there was an intention to create a charitable trust in 2003 as opposed to acquiring the premises privately and operating them for the benefit of the community.
v) If a sufficiently large section of the community is induced to contribute by representations or promises that the product of their contributions will be held for charitable purposes benefitting a significant section of the community, that may be sufficient to give rise to a constructive trust of a charitable kind. However, as that would, in this particular case, result in a change of the beneficial ownership of the first plot once acquired, clear and convincing evidence was obviously needed.
vi) "None of the defendants, or of the members of the congregation outside the Rehman family, knew of the private trust. Nevertheless, at least some of them knew that the mosque was in the name of the claimants. Some of them, whilst ultimately admitting this, said the opposite in their witness statements. If they did not know this one must enquire: who did they think owned the mosque when they contributed to the purchase of the next two plots? If they did not enquire, then as I have found that the owners of the mosque were the persons shown as such on the title deeds, that is why they must be taken (taken objectively, which is the correct test for the purpose of constructive trusts) to have intended when contributing to the acquisition of the additional plots for the mosque. If one goes to a mosque or other similar institution which takes collections, one is giving one's money to the institution, whatever its legal status and whoever may own it. One expects one's money to be disbursed for the benefit of that institution. That is what happened in this case. As it happens, the mosque was privately owned. [54] … those who donate their money unconditionally to a mosque or other religious institution do so, whatever the formal structure of the mosque or other institution may be, intending to part with ownership of their money and can therefore have no claim under a resulting trust nor, in the absence of a properly formulated and coherent representation, promise or assurance, under a constructive trust or an estoppel". [56]
Setting aside on the grounds of fraud
"…first, there has to be a 'conscious and deliberate dishonesty' in relation to the relevant evidence given, or action taken, statement made or matter concealed, which is relevant to the judgment now sought to be impugned. Secondly, the relevant evidence, action, statement or concealment (performed with conscious and deliberate dishonesty) must be 'material'. 'Material' means that the fresh evidence that is adduced after the first judgment has been given is such that it demonstrates that the previous relevant evidence, action, statement or concealment was an operative cause of the court's decision to give judgment in the way it did. Put another way, it must be shown that the fresh evidence would have entirely changed the way in which the first court approached and came to its decision. Thus the relevant conscious and deliberate dishonesty must be causative of the impugned judgment being obtained in the terms it was. Thirdly, the question of materiality of the fresh evidence is to be assessed by reference to its impact on the evidence supporting the original decision, not by reference to its impact on what decision might be made if the claim were to be retried on honest evidence."
"it is not permissible to call further evidence which was available at the trial or could by reasonable diligence have been obtained and the fresh evidence must be likely to have been decisive."
See Hunter, in the speech of Lord Diplock, at page 545.
"69. Where a court is reaching its conclusions on the basis of witness evidence, and that evidence is challenged on grounds of fraud, or the like, it will be a rare case where any part of the judgment can survive.
...
70. As was pointed out in Jonesco v Beard at 310, 'Fraud is an insidious disease and if clearly proved to have been used so that it might deceive the court it spreads to and infects the whole body of the judgment'. To rely on a somewhat more up-to-date authority, in Hamilton v Al Fayed [2000] EWCA Civ 3012, Lord Phillips MR said at paragraph 34(2) that:
'Where it is clearly established by fresh evidence that the court was deliberately deceived in relation to the credibility of a witness, a fresh trial will be ordered where there is a real danger that this affected the outcome of the trial.'"
"a judgment obtained by perjured evidence is, like any judgment obtained by fraud, liable to be set aside but there must be apparently credible evidence as to the fraud or perjury which not only was not available at the trial and could not have been obtained with reasonable diligence for use at the trial but which is such as entirely changes the aspect of the case in the sense that it must be likely to be decisive of the outcome of the case in question."
"We viewed multiple properties, but the Property at 253-263 The Broadway, Southall, was unanimously approved because the location was a corner plot on the main Southall Broadway and had a large square footage. Initially Mr Walia wanted £300,000 for the Property but we asked him to reduce the sale price and agree to be paid in instalments on the basis that this was to build a Gurdwara for the Sikh Community with contributions from the community. Mr Walia was himself a religious Sikh. Mr Walia therefore agreed in about June or July 1995 following months of negotiations to sell the Property for £185,000 in instalments. Immediately thereafter we commenced a fundraising campaign.
The people leading the 253-263The Broadway initiative were: Jaswant Singh Bharj, Mahender Singh Rathour, myself, Sohan Singh and Bhagwan Singh. Besides us, there were many others involved who had also given interest-free loans, donations and building supplies for buying the land and building the Gurdwara. … The land was always meant to be held in a trust for the gurdwara.
The contributions were recorded contemporaneously on a piece of paper … these pages record that a total of £20,000 was collected as the initial amount to lodge the first £20,000 deposit with Mr Walia. I then copied my contemporaneous note into English in my personal hardback red book which I have kept in my possession since 1995 to date."
"I…gave evidence that there was a rift in the management committee. I did not give any evidence of ownership of the Property. My evidence was limited to the subject of management. I did not support either side's claim of personal entitlement to the Property and was not asked any questions about ownership or contributions. At that time, I did not have access to my old contemporaneous books which I found in about April 2015 when I cleared out my entire garage looking for them. …
Until the county court trial in the matter, I and the other community members, were not aware of any trust deeds between Mr Sohan Singh and Mr Bharj or re-mortgages on the Property, which appear to have been created and taken out to defraud the community and those who have contributed to the Gurdwara project."
i) Mr Sukhwinder Singh refers to the nomination of 5 trustees, but in fact there were 2 trustees with Mr Singh as a nominee to sort out any differences.
ii) In his witness statement of 6 December 2016, paragraph 5, Mr Singh says that the purchase price was originally £300,000, but this had not been mentioned by him before (see his witness statement of 22 May 2015).
iii) I have already mentioned Mr Singh's evidence about the use of a pro- forma document to record interest-free loans (paragraph 43 above). In the Further Information provided by the Claimant, it is said that similar documents were in the possession of Mr Rathour. In Mr Rathour's evidence at the trial, he said that donations were made for the purpose of running the Gurdwara, the proposed extension and other building work. He did not exhibit the pro-forma document. He was the treasurer of the Gurdwara. It would have to be Mr Roshan's case that Mr Rathour also gave false evidence at trial, yet Mr Rathour was one of the new trustees appointed after the trial, together with Mr Bhogal (another of the defendants in the ownership claim). Had Mr Rathour and Mr Bhogal been untruthful witnesses about ownership, and had Mr Sukhwinder Singh truly believed that the court had been deceived, surely these appointments would not have been made.
iv) When Mr Singh left the Gurdwara in 2004, it was because of the falling out with Mr Bharj over his refusal to have the Property transferred to the trustees. Mr Sukhwinder Singh was brought back in to support Mr Rathour in 2012, and was party to the decision to make Mr Sohan Singh, Mr Boghal and Mr Rathour (amongst others) trustees on 6 February 2016. Why would this have been done if Mr Sohan Singh Mr Rathour and Mr Bhogul had acted dishonestly in relation to the ownership of and dealings with the Property?
v) Mr Singh was one of the attorneys appointed by Mr Sohan Singh under the Special Power of Attorney dated 22 July 1996. This document was in evidence at the trial. A General Power of Attorney by Mr Sohan Singh dated 22 July 1996 (also in evidence at the trial) appointed Mr Jaswant Singh and Mr Sukhwinder Singh as his attorneys. Why did Mr Sukhwinder Singh do nothing to challenge what was going on, if he believed that a fraud was being committed? Mr Bartlett says that the obvious explanation for the Special Power of Attorney is that it was a recognition by Mr Sohan Singh that he had made the purchase on behalf of the Gurdwara. If that is so, why wasn't this raised in the course of the trial?
vi) The Property was let to Mr Rathour. Paragraph 15 of the Particulars of Claim says: "…and Mr Rathour permitted the Gurdwara to use and occupy it". If the Property was, or was supposed to be, held on trust, I agree with Mr Boyd that it seems odd that Mr Bharj would enter into a lease with Mr Rathour who would allow the Gurdwara to use and occupy it. This seems to me to be consistent with the Property not being held on trust, but rather being owned privately with a view to allowing it to be used as a Gurdwara.
vii) The involvement of the Charity Commission in 2004 and 2013 shows that the ownership of the Property, and whether it was held on trust, was a contentious matter long before the trial of the enforcement action. That this was so must have been known to the community as a whole and in my view was known to Mr Roshan and Mr Sukhwinder Singh.
i) The fresh evidence brought by the Claimant does not satisfy the reasonable diligence test.
ii) Even if that is wrong, the Claimant has not made out a credible case that the judgment in the ownership claim was obtained by fraud, and the evidence is less than clear and convincing.
iii) Applying the test summarised by Burton J in Chodiev at [25] (paragraph21 above), I do not believe that the fresh evidence would have entirely changed the way in which I approached the issues in the ownership claim. The fresh evidence in essence goes to the provision of loans and gifts for the purchase of the Property, but in the ownership claim this was a live issue. I was satisfied that the loans and gifts were for the building works and not for the purchase. There is nothing in the evidence now presented on behalf of the Claimant to make me think that I would have reached a different conclusion had that evidence been presented in the course of the trial.
iv) In my judgment, the evidence now put forward, for the reasons I have summarised above, is simply not credible: see Langley J in Sphere Drake (paragraph 37 above),
Abuse of process
i) The fact that the present claimant was not a party to the previous proceedings was not conclusive that the claim was not an abuse [54].
ii) It was in that case plainly right that the present claimant should be allowed to proceed simply because he had had no proper opportunity to establish his claim to the Property. He had had no opportunity to call such evidence as he saw fit on that issue, put in documents or make submissions on the evidence. There was now available evidence which had not been before the judge on the previous occasion which cast doubt on his findings [47-51].
iii) A key point made by Lord Hobhouse in Re Norris [2001] 1 WLR 1388, cited in Shalabayev at [57-60], was that the interests of the husband and wife were different and indeed opposed to each other. They had competing rights in the Property. "It will be a rare case where the litigation of an issue which has not previously been decided between the same parties or their privies will amount to an abuse" (Lord Hobhouse at [26]).
Striking out
Other issues
Conclusion