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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 >> Rued v Dormer & Anor [2023] EWHC 3118 (Ch) (05 December 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2023/3118.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 3118 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
ULRICH RUED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) LLOYD DORMER (2) GABRIELLA DORMER |
Defendant |
____________________
MARK GALTREY (instructed by CLARK WILMOTT LLP) for the First Defendant
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
CHIEF MASTER SHUMAN:
"3. The First Defendant shall account for the income, expenses and profits of the partnership to date on the basis that:"
(i) the First Defendant was entitled to bill and withdraw £100 per day from the business for his work in the business from 1997 to 22 November 2000;"
(ii) the First Defendant was entitled to bill and withdraw £1,000 per week from the business for his work in the business from 23 November 2000 to 4 September 2005;
(iii) the First Defendant was entitled to a salary of £5,000 per month from the business from 5 September 2005 to 30 November 2016 for his work in the business;
(iv) the First Defendant was in addition entitled to overtime from 29 January 2000 for any work carried out at the weekend on an hourly rate pro rata to the weekly or monthly rate applicable at the material time;
(v) the First Defendant was entitled to commission for his sole benefit all materials acquired and used in the business (but not labour nor any associated costs) at 10% from 5 September 2005;
(vi) as at 31 March 2003, there were no wages (including any overtime) due to the First Defendant following his purchase of Kingston Hall from the partnership;
(vii) the First Defendant has received his wages, overtime and commission up to 2006 but there may be such sums due to him from 2008 up to 30 November 2016. The First Defendant will give credit in the account for any sums received by him as wages, overtime and commission him from 2008 up to 30 November 2016;
(viii) the First Defendant is given credit in relation to any capital sums introduced by him into the business
(ix) The First Defendant is given credit for any sums expended by him personally in relation to work carried out for the Partnership from 1 December 2016 to date, provided that such sums have not been demanded or recovered from the owners of the sold plots and/or any other third parties. The First Defendant shall give disclosure in this respect. If the First Defendant establishes by evidence that he has worked in the business after 1 December 2016, he will be given credit at the account hearing.
4. The Defendants shall account to the Claimant and First Defendant as partners in the partnership for the value of Plot 9 (as built) on the basis that:
(i) the value of Plot 9 is £850,000 as at 18 July 2019;
(ii) Plot 9 was developed to damp proof course level by 31 March 2014 with substructure costs of £55,805. The account will determine the build cost of Plot 9 and whether the business bore those costs.
EVIDENCE
THE ISSUES
"Perhaps the most fundamental obligation which the law imposes on a partner is the duty to display complete good faith towards his co-partners in all partnership dealings and transactions, even if its precise content may be somewhat elusive."
"Partners are bound to render true accounts and full information of all things affecting the partnership to any partner or his legal representatives."
"If ?duciary relation means anything I cannot conceive a stronger case of ?duciary relation than that which exists between partners. Their mutual con?dence is the life blood of the concern. It is because they trust one another that they are partners in the ?rst instance; it is because they continue to trust each other that the business goes on."
"Where a discretion is conferred on the management of the ?rm or on a majority of partners, a partner will normally be entitled to expect that it will be exercised rationally and in good faith and not arbitrarily or capriciously or, indeed, irrationally. … Equally, if the discretion is genuinely exercised in good faith and in the best interests of the ?rm, the fact that it may disadvantage a minority of the partners is not per se objectionable. Similarly, if the exercise of the discretion results in an incidental bene?t to one or more of the other partners, although in such a case the court is likely to scrutinise the circumstances with care. The position will, naturally, be otherwise where the decision is proved to be motivated by a collateral and improper purpose."
"In other contexts, the courts have recognised that breach of a duty of good faith connotes an intentional act, borne out of dishonesty or some other improper motive and that, whilst recklessness may be the equivalent of intent, mere negligence is not suf?cient. The current editor considers that this approach is equally applicable to partnerships and is, indeed, consistent with the scope of a partner's implied duty not to expose his ?rm to avoidable risks. …Suf?ce it to say that any conduct which is motivated by a desire to damage the ?rm or the other partners' interests therein must necessarily involve such a breach."
"I do not think that the concept of good faith should be diluted by treating it as capable of being breached by conduct that is not dishonest or otherwise tainted by bad faith. It is sometimes said that recklessness is equivalent to intent. Shutting one's eyes deliberately to the consequences of what one is doing may make it impossible to deny an intention to bring about those consequences. Thereapart, however, the concepts of negligence on the one hand and fraud or bad faith on the other ought, in my view, to be kept strictly apart. Equity has not always done so. The equitable doctrine of "fraud on a power" has little, if anything, to do with fraud. Lord Herschell in Kennedy v. De Trajford [1897] AC 180 gave an explanation of a lack of good faith that would have allowed conduct that was grossly negligent to have qualified notwithstanding that the consequences of the conduct were not intended. In my judgment, the breach of a duty of good faith should, in this area as in all others, require some dishonesty or improper motive, some element of bad faith, to be established."
End 1997 | Mr Rued and Mr Dormer enter into business together, trading commenced 1.12.97. |
1997-2000 | Mr Dormer was entitled to withdraw £100 per day for his work in the business. |
1.98 | Contracts exchanged for the purchase of Hill farm. |
24.3.98 | Completion of purchase of Hill farm comprising a farmhouse, Kingston Hall, and two listed barns sited on 3.8 acres of land at Kingston St Mary, near Taunton. |
5.98 | Contracts exchanged for the purchase of Wellington. |
7.98 | Completion of purchase of Wellington, also situated near Taunton. |
26.11.98 | Conditional planning approval to convert the outbuilding at Hill farm to form a single dwelling plot. |
27.8.99 | Planning approval granted for 12 dwellings on the Wellington land. |
23.12.99 | First developed plot in Wellington sold, plot 3. |
From 29.1.00 | Mr Dormer could additionally bill the business for work that he carried out at weekends, this was the only overtime agreed by the parties to be paid. The rate due is an hourly rate pro rata to the weekly or monthly rate applicable at the material time. |
18.7.00 and 14.11.00 |
Conditional planning approved for changes to Wellington development. |
23.11.00 -4.9.05 |
Mr Dormer was entitled to a salary of £1,000 per week, for his work in the business. |
23.11.01 | Last developed plot in Wellington sold, plot 12. |
31.3.03 | No outstanding wages including any overtime due to Mr Dormer. Kingston Hall and 2 listed barns on Hill farm sold to Mr Dormer for the price of £188,000. Mr Dormer erroneously considered that the business ended and that thereafter he worked as a self-employed contractor. |
Sometime 2003 | Ray Dormer stopped working for the business, but thereafter prepared accounts for Mr Dormer on the basis that he was self-employed. |
1.8.03 | Mr Dormer sold the barn at Hill farm for £190,000. The net proceeds were used to restore Kingston Hall where Mr Dormer and his family lived. |
3.3.05 | Planning permission granted for the Hill farm development. |
5.9.05-30.11.16 | Mr Dormer entitled to a salary of £5,000 per month for his work in the business. Mr Dormer entitled to commission on all materials acquired and used in the business, but this did not include labour or any associated costs. |
8.12.06 | First sale of a development in Hill farm, 1 Kingston Court. |
2.5.07 | Second sale of a development in Hill farm, 2 Kingston Court. |
As at 1.1.08 | No outstanding wages, overtime or commission due to Mr Dormer |
2008- 30.11.16 | Mr Dormer seeks sums due but must give credit for wages, overtime and commission paid during this period. |
4.08 | Mrs Dormer carries out internal bookkeeping for Mr Dormer. Amherst and Shapland (Mark Sanders) carried out external accounting. |
31.3.14 | Mr Dormer transferred Plot 9 into the names of Mr Dormer and Mrs Dormer. Conditional planning permission granted to alter the layouts of plots 8 and 9. |
1.6.15 | Business bank account payment out to Mr Dormer £177,624.67. |
1.12.16 – date | Mr Dormer seeks sums expended by him personally in respect of his work for the business. |
2016/2017 | Mr Dormer and his family move to the property built on Plot 9. |
30.9.17 | Mr Dormer invoiced himself and Mrs Dormer for the construction of the house at plot 9 £264,450 plus 10% margin of build costs amounting to £290,895. |
i) To prepare up to date business accounts for the land and developments that were undertaken by the Claimant and the First Defendant between 1997 and 31 December 2021.
ii) To determine the build cost of Plot 9 and whether the business bore those costs.
iii) Pursuant to the instructions detailed above, to assess the final profits and/or losses of the land developments undertaken for the period between December 1997 and 31 March 2021. The final amounts owing to/from each party has been determined as at 31 December 2021, subject to several issues to be determined by the Court.
""Good faith requires that a partner shall not obtain a private advantage at the expense of the ?rm. He is bound in all transactions affecting the partnership, to do his best for the common body, and to share with his co-partners any bene?t which he may have been able to obtain from other people, and in which the ?rm is in honour and conscience entitled to participate; Semper enim non id quod privatim interest unius ex sociis servari solet, sed quod societati expedit."
The passage from the Digest which Lord Lindley quoted may be translated as follows: "The invariable practice being not to have regard to the private interest of one of the partners but to the advantage of the ?rm."
"90. There is considerable Australian authority on the meaning of good faith in this context. In particular there is a helpful review of authority in Automasters Australia Ptv Ltd v Bruness Ptv Ltd [2002] WASC 286. In that case Hasluck J cites the observation of Barrett J in Overlook v Foxtel (2002) Aust Contract R 90-143 at [65 -67]:
"It must be accepted that the party subject to the obligation is not required to subordinate the party's own interests, so long as pursuit of those interests does not entail unreasonable interference with the enjoyment of a benefit conferred by the express contractual terms so that the enjoyment becomes (or could become) … 'nugatory, worthless or, perhaps, seriously undermined' … the implied obligation of good faith underwrites the spirit of the contract and supports the integrity of its character. A party is precluded from cynical resort to the black letter. But no party is fixed with the duty to subordinate self- interest entirely which is the lot of the fiduciary … The duty is not a duty to prefer the interests of the other contracting party. It is, rather, a duty to recognise and to have due regard to the legitimate interests of both the parties in the enjoyment of the fruits of the contract as delineated by its terms."
91. Thus good faith, whilst requiring the parties to act in a way that will allow both parties to enjoy the anticipated benefits of the contract, does not require either party to give up a freely negotiated financial advantage clearly embedded in the contract."
Recoverable expenses up to 30 November 2016
Recoverable expenses after 30 November 2016, Plot 9 and the undeveloped land
Other issues
Next Steps
Note 1 Known as The Chambers, 9 Kingston Court. [Back] Note 2 Mr Sinai’s analysis taken from Mr Dodge’s P&L, balance sheets and summary of profits. [Back] Note 3 Although Mark Sanders at Amherst and Shapland carried out some external accounting work. [Back] Note 4 Appendix 7.1, table 1, 14th line. [Back] Note 6 2008 £69,634, 2009 £68,482, 2010 £69,982, 2011 £69,808: table B. [Back] Note 7 The construction of the dwellings alone, so not including the construction of garages, external works and professional fees. [Back]