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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 >> Bonvilston Vale Ltd v Amser Building Ltd & Ors [2023] EWHC 1519 (Ch) (23 June 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2023/1519.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 1519 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
BUSINESS LIST (ChD)
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
(1) BONVILSTON VALE LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) AMSER BUILDING LIMITED (2) JAMES MICHAEL HILL (3) JANE VICTORIA HITCHEN |
Defendants |
____________________
Mr Harry Smith (instructed by Acuity Law) for the Defendants
Hearing date: 27 April 2023
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
This judgment will be handed down remotely by circulation to the parties' representatives by email and release to The National Archives. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 10 am on 23 June 2023
Master McQuail:
Introduction
Evidence
History
(i) On 25 March 2021, Amser issued invoice 210390 in respect of RPA's valuation no.29, in the sum of £402,325.43;
(ii) On 9 April 2021, Bonvilston paid Amser £140,000 against invoice 210390;
(iii) On 14 April 2021, Bonvilston paid Amser £177,133.73 against invoice 210390;
(iv) On 25 April 2021, Amser issued invoice 210496 in respect of RPA's valuation no.30, in the sum of £252,152.70;
(v) On 14 May 2021, Bonvilston stated that it did not intend to pay the sum due as per valuation no.30. However, on 20 May 2021, Bonvilston did pay Amser £135,303.49.
"Given the above, it's deemed that no further sums are due to be paid to [Amser], nor is there provision in the terminated contract for an application for payment or valuation. Therefore, no notices (payment or otherwise) will be issued against your application number 32 received on 16th September 2021, nor are there any monies due to be paid to [Amser]."
And concluded:
"once all costs are known and within 3 months of the making good of defects within the works, [Bonvilston] will prepare and issue to [Amser] a statement of account confirming the sum they believe to be due to either party".
The Claim
Position of the Parties at the Hearing
Strike out/summary judgment
"If a defendant is entitled to summary judgment because the claimant has no realistic prospect of success, then the statement of case discloses no reasonable grounds for bringing the claim and so should be struck out."
"those which contain a coherent set of facts but those facts, even if true, do not disclose any legally recognisable claim against the defendant."
Teare J said [18]:
"The purpose of a pleading or statement of case is to inform the other party what the case is that is being brought against him. It is necessary that the other party understands the case which is being brought against him so that he may plead to it in response, disclose those of his documents which are relevant to that case and prepare witness statements which support his defence. If the case which is brought against him is vague or incoherent he will not, or may not, be able to do any of those things. Time and costs will, or may, be wasted if the defendant seeks to respond to a vague and incoherent case. It is also necessary for the Court to understand the case which is brought so that it may fairly and expeditiously decide the case and in a manner which saves unnecessary expense. For these reasons it is necessary that a party's pleaded case is a concise and clear statement of the facts on which he relies..."
"4.8 Paragraph 8.2 of PD 16 requires the claimant specifically to set out any allegation of fraud relied on. Parties must ensure that they state:
(a) full particulars of any allegation of fraud, dishonesty, malice or illegality; and
(b) where any inference of fraud or dishonesty is alleged, the facts on the basis of which the inference is alleged.
"4.9 A party should not make allegations of fraud or dishonesty unless there is credible material to support the contentions made. Setting out such matters without such material being available may result in the particular allegations being struck out and may result in wasted costs orders being made against the legal advisers responsible."
Summary Judgment
(i) the defendants have a real prospect of establishing that the Payment was not made by mistake;
(ii) the defendants have a real prospect of establishing that the Payment was made for good consideration;
(iii) the defendants have a real prospect of establishing that Amser changed its position in good faith following receipt of the Payment;
(iv) the defendants have a real prospect of establishing that Amser is entitled to a set-off under the Contract against any liability to Bonvilston;
(v) Mr Hill and Ms Hitchen have a real prospect of establishing at trial that they did not dishonestly assist Amser acting in breach of trust in dissipating or retaining the Payment; or
(vi) there is some other compelling reason for trial.
Mistake
(i) it was plain from the terms of Mr Eriksson's 23 February 2021 email that his intention was to pay the new contractor, his instruction being accompanied by instructions as to how future payments were to be made;
(ii) the 'Subject' of the email was 'Bonvilston drawdowns', which was nothing to do with paying Amser;
(iii) Mr Eriksson's "No" response demonstrates his immediate reaction to discovering that a mistaken payment had been made;
(iv) the evidence of Bonvilston's immediate and concerted attempts to recover the money support the case that a mistake was made;
and
(viii) if Mr Eriksson had suddenly wanted on 23 February 2022 to pay Amser, his email to Ms Paun would have been in very different terms and there would have been no rational reason to suddenly change his mind almost immediately as evidenced by the attempts to persuade the defendants and Amser's bank to repay the money.
(i) Mr Erikson, the person who it is said made the mistake has not put in a witness statement. There is therefore no direct evidence as to his state of knowledge or intentions when he sent the email of 23 February 2022 to Ms Paun;
(ii) Brook Martin's letters to the defendants on 25 February 2022 refer to the mistake occurring as a result of instructions given in writing to pay the contractor the sum of £202,060.91, which is the pleaded case. This was understood by the defendants initially to refer to a curious coincidence that Bonvilston happened to owe another contractor the same amount as the balance outstanding to Amser. In fact this seems to have been a misunderstanding of Bonvilston's initial instructions as no amount was mentioned in Mr Erikson's email. The amount was simply that shown in the Bonvilston ledger as due to Amser;
(iii) Bonvilston has not provided full documentary evidence of the contract with WK Plasterers, or of the state of that company's account with Bonvilstonas at 23 February 2022. Ms Paun's evidence is that the only invoice on the ledger from a contractor was that from Amser. There is, therefore, a lack of material evidencing the factual position said to underlie the mistake;
(iv) Ms Paun's evidence that Bonvilston's ledger showed "a balance due of £202,060.91" to Amser is, on the face of it, inconsistent with Bonvilston's case that it did not believe any further sums to be due to Amser and there is no explanation in the evidence;
(v) Ms Paun states that her belief that the Payment was due to Amser was "encouraged" by the fact that Bonvilston had just received a substantial payment from its lender which suggests a possible explanation for Bonvilston's conduct in delaying payments to Amser was cashflow, rather than a genuine belief that the sum shown on Bonvilston's ledger was not due;
(vi) Mr Martin's second-hand account of making the Payment is inconsistent, and conflicts with the evidence of Ms Paun.
He says:
(a) in his first statement, that Bonvilston paid Amser on 20 May 2021 "in error". The defendants' skeleton argument for the hearing of 2 December 2022, pointed out this would mean that Bonvilston had made two mistaken payments against the same invoice
(b) in his second statement, that the May 2021 payment was made, not in error, but because Bonvilston "wished to help [Amser] in difficult circumstances";
(c) in his first statement, that Ms Paun made several telephone calls to Amser over the course of 24-25 February 2022.
Whereas Ms Paun:
(d), makes no reference to any telephone calls and says that Mr Eriksson's email of 09:28 on 24 February 2022 was "the end of my direct involvement in the matter".
Mistake - Analysis
Good Consideration
" certain simple principles can, in my judgment, be deduced: (1) If a person pays money to another under a mistake of fact which causes him to make the payment, he is prima facie entitled to recover it as money paid under a mistake of fact. (2) His claim may however fail if (a) the payer intends that the payee shall have the money at all events, whether the fact be true or false, or is deemed in law so to intend; or (b) the payment is made for good consideration, in particular if the money is paid to discharge, and does discharge, a debt owed to the payee (or a principal on whose behalf he is authorised to receive the payment) by the payer or by a third party by whom he is authorised to discharge the debt; or (c) the payee has changed his position in good faith, or is deemed in law to have done so."
In the following paragraph the judge added by way of footnote to his numbered proposition (1): that if the money was due under a contract there can be no recovery unless the contract itself is void or is rescinded; and to his numbered proposition (2)(b): that even if the payee accepts the payment in discharge of a debt that transaction may be set aside if the mistake was induced by the payee or perhaps where the payee being aware of the mistake did not receive the money in good faith.
Good Consideration - Analysis
Change of Position in Good Faith
Set-Off
Case against Mr Hill and Ms Hitchen
(i) Amser held the Payment on trust, but dissipated it by satisfying the charge over Partridge Road;
(ii) Mr Hill and Ms Hitchen agreed, authorised, directed and/or facilitated that dissipation;
(iii) their conduct was dishonest, because:
(a) they were aware by 25 February 2022 when they received Brook Martin's letters that the Payment had been made to Amser by mistake.
(b) they had no honest belief that the money had been paid in settlement of sums properly due to Amser.
(iv) it is also pleaded that Mr Hill "pretended that he was on annual leave" until 7 March 2022.
(i) the only fact alleged to constitute dissipation is the use of the Payment in satisfaction of the Partridge Road Charge, which case has been acknowledged to be wrong for over a year, accordingly the case that Mr Hill and Ms Hitchen assisted Amser in any such dissipation must also be wrong;
(ii) the allegation of dishonesty relied on by Bonvilston relates to the Partridge Road Charge and is not sustainable;
(iii) there is no credible material to support the allegation that Mr Hill and Ms Hitchen did not honestly believe the Payment to have been paid in settlement of sums properly due to Amser. The evidence is that:
(a) as at 20 May 2021, Bonvilston owed Amser £202,060.92.
(b) although Bonvilston stated on 1 June 2021 that it disputed that sum, it had previously paid a disputed a sum. In its pay less notice of 14 May 2021 it confirmed a balance due of nil after deductions, but followed that with a payment of £135,303.49 on 20 May 2021;
(c) Amser made an application on 15 July 2022 for £1,187,794.59.
(d) the possibility of a further payment to Amser by Bonvilston was expressly left open by the concluding paragraph of RPA's letter of 1 October 2021.
(iv) the further allegation that "it is to be inferred" that Mr Hill and Ms Hitchen directed the use of the Payment held on trust to pay down Amser's bank borrowings is not adequately pleaded:
(a) apart from the incorrect Partridge Road allegations, it is not particularised, contrary to Towler v Wills and paragraph 4.8(a) of the Chancery Guide;
(b) if the Court is to be asked to infer dishonesty, the facts on which the inference might be based are not pleaded, contrary to paragraph 4.8(b) of the Chancery Guide.
(v) the allegation that Mr Hill "pretended he was on annual leave until 7 March 2022" does not go directly to the case of dishonest assistance and lacks reasonably credible supporting material (contrary to paragraph 4.9 of the Chancery Guide). Paragraph 31 of Mr Martin's first witness statement makes clear that he is simply inferring that Mr Hill must have known Bonvilston wished to speak to him on 24 or 25 February and inferring from Mr Hill's failures to respond to the 24 and 25 February letters and emails that the defendants were fully aware of the mistaken payment. No facts supporting either inference are pleaded, contrary to paragraph 4.8(b) of the Chancery Guide. Mr Hill's evidence is that he had taken the time off to help family with renovation works to their home and was not checking his emails regularly.
.
(i) Mr Hill's evidence that he thought the Brook Martin letter of 25 February 2022 was a "try on" is incredible;
(ii) Mr Hill's failure to respond to Mr Eriksson's email or the Brook Martin letters of 24 and 25 February or otherwise engage and his failure to deal in any detail in his evidence with his reaction to those communications is not honest; and
(iii) that it is notable that Ms Hitchen has put in no evidence, at al
Dishonesty - Analysis
(i) the termination of the Contract, for what Mr Hill considered to be impermissible reasons;
(ii) a history of Bonvilston stating that it would not make any further payment but nonetheless making payment shortly thereafter in May 2021
(iii) the amount of over £1m that had been sought by Amser's application no.32 following termination of the Contract;
(iv) the manner in which RPA's October letter left matters open; and
(v) a lack of any further contact from Bonvilston in the months that followed.
Conclusions