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England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions >> Teasdale v Carter & Anor [2023] EWHC 490 (Fam) (07 March 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2023/490.html Cite as: [2023] 2 FCR 656, [2023] EWHC 490 (Fam) |
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FAMILY DIVISION
On appeal from HHJ Shelton sitting in the Family Court in Leeds
Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Pamela Jane Teasdale |
Appellant |
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-and- |
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Rebecca Sarah Carter |
First Respondent |
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-and- |
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Daniel James Teasdale |
Second Respondent |
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Mr Nicholas Fairbank (instructed by Gardner Leader LLP) for the First Respondent
Mr Charles Hale KC (instructed by Denney King Consultants Ltd) for the Second Respondent
Hearing dates: 16th and 17th January 2023
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE MOOR:-
The relevant history
"It is recorded that the parties are not in agreement as to the extent of Rebecca's ownership and entitlement in respect of Cow House and the curtilage boundary, access, parking use of stables and manège and other access rights, covenants and easements in respect fo (sic) the property and or personally."
"1. That subject to the recital above, Rebecca Carter is the beneficial owner of Cow House and the First Respondent agrees that Rebecca is permitted to use and enjoy peaceful occupation of the stables, manège and pasture, together with such access rights and easements as are reasonably necessary for the current use and enjoyment of Cow House.
2. That the Applicant and Respondent shall, at a time to be agreed, transfer to Rebecca Carter all their legal and beneficial interest in the property known as Cow House, situated within Burne Farm, Todwick, on the basis that to the extent that the parties cannot agree the matters contained in the recital above, such matters shall be determined by the Court:
(a) Upon such terms as are necessary to provide Rebecca Carter with a good and marketable title to the property and
(b) Together with all necessary rights and easements over Burne Farm as are determined to be reasonably necessary for the current use and enjoyment of Cow House and
(c) Until such time as Rebecca Carter has paid to the Applicant the required amount pursuant to paragraph 3 below subject to Rebecca Carter indemnifying the Applicant (as mortgagor) on a monthly basis a sum in respect of the AMC mortgage secured upon the land known as 'Handkerchief' registered under title no SYK65883.
3. Following completion of the transfer if (sic) the legal estate in Cow House the Intervenor will undertake to pay the Applicant a sum equal to the amount required to redeem the AMC mortgage."
"Inevitably any case based on proprietary estoppel is fact sensitive; but before I come to a discussion of the facts, let me set out a few legal propositions:
i) Deciding whether an equity has been raised and, if so, how to satisfy it is a retrospective exercise looking backwards from the moment when the promise falls due to be performed and asking whether, in the circumstances which have actually happened, it would be unconscionable for a promise not to be kept either wholly or in part: Thorner v Major [2009] UKHL 18, [2009] 1 WLR 776 at [57] and [101].
ii) The ingredients necessary to raise an equity are (a) an assurance of sufficient clarity (b) reliance by the claimant on that assurance and (c) detriment to the claimant in consequence of his reasonable reliance: Thorner v Major at [29].
iii) However, no claim based on proprietary estoppel can be divided into watertight compartments. The quality of the relevant assurances may influence the issue of reliance; reliance and detriment are often intertwined, and whether there is a distinct need for a "mutual understanding" may depend on how the other elements are formulated and understood: Gillett v Holt [2001] Ch 210 at 225; Henry v Henry [2010] UKPC 3; [2010] 1 All ER 988 at [37].
iv) Detriment need not consist of the expenditure of money or other quantifiable financial detriment, so long as it is something substantial. The requirement must be approached as part of a broad inquiry as to whether repudiation of an assurance is or is not unconscionable in all the circumstances: Gillett v Holt at 232; Henry v Henry at [38].
v) There must be a sufficient causal link between the assurance relied on and the detriment asserted. The issue of detriment must be judged at the moment when the person who has given the assurance seeks to go back on it. The question is whether (and if so to what extent) it would be unjust or inequitable to allow the person who has given the assurance to go back on it. The essential test is that of unconscionability: Gillett v Holt at 232.
vi) Thus the essence of the doctrine of proprietary estoppel is to do what is necessary to avoid an unconscionable result: Jennings v Rice [2002] EWCA Civ 159; [2003] 1 P & CR 8 at [56].
vii) In deciding how to satisfy any equity the court must weigh the detriment suffered by the claimant in reliance on the defendant's assurances against any countervailing benefits he enjoyed in consequence of that reliance: Henry v Henry at [51] and [53].
viii) Proportionality lies at the heart of the doctrine of proprietary estoppel and permeates its every application: Henry v Henry at [65]. In particular there must be a proportionality between the remedy and the detriment which is its purpose to avoid: Jennings v Rice at [28] (citing from earlier cases) and [56]. This does not mean that the court should abandon expectations and seek only to compensate detrimental reliance, but if the expectation is disproportionate to the detriment, the court should satisfy the equity in a more limited way: Jennings v Rice at [50] and [51].
ix) In deciding how to satisfy the equity the court has to exercise a broad judgmental discretion: Jennings v Rice at [51]. However the discretion is not unfettered. It must be exercised on a principled basis, and does not entail what HH Judge Weekes QC memorably called a "portable palm tree": Taylor v Dickens [1998] 1 FLR 806 (a decision criticised for other reasons in Gillett v Holt)."
"(Rebecca) also produced a spreadsheet of payments, supported by documentary evidence, in respect of the work to Cow House. It shows a little over £81,000 came from (Rebecca and Andrew's) personal accounts and £118,000 from the Lloyds account into which the AMC loan was paid. The total spent was around £200,000. (The Wife) identified a duplicate entry of £235 for tiles and disputed other items amounting to £18,500. Even on (the Wife's) approach, in excess of £180,000 worth of expenditure is not disputed, although the point was left open as to whether this was met, not by (Rebecca) but by (the Husband)".
"They had paid eight months' rent for Cow House on (the Wife's) case between March 2009 and November 2009 when they were not living there. Why? (The Wife) said she could not explain why. The question would have to be put to (the Husband".
"(a) Despite the references to rent, both in (Rebecca's) bank statements and the Husband's cash book and accounts, (Rebecca) did not occupy Cow House as its tenant. There was never any tenancy agreement, rent book or work undertaken by the Husband and the Wife to Cow House as its landlord since (Rebecca) took up occupation in early November 2009.
(b) I accept (Rebecca) and (Andrew's) evidence that they would never have moved to Cow House as its tenants.
(c) The Husband gave an unambiguous promise that Cow House would be (Rebecca's) if she met the cost of the conversion, including the payment of the AMC loan. Legal title would be transferred on the redemption of the loan. The promise was made with the Wife's full knowledge and authority. It was also promised that Cow House would be left to (Rebecca) by will in the event the Husband and the Wife died before the loan was repaid in full.
(d) It was a promise upon which (Rebecca) might reasonably expect to rely and did rely.
(e) In reliance on the Husband's promise I find (Rebecca) met the cost of the conversion as is set out in her spreadsheet of just over £200,000. The Wife disputes £18,598.79 of the payments. It is a significant sum even on the Wife's account. I reject the suggestion that the Husband met the cost of the conversion, notwithstanding the absence of the Lloyds Bank accounts and (Rebecca's) savings accounts. (Rebecca) put in significant money, time and effort into the conversion.
(f) I reject the Wife's evidence that such monies as (Rebecca) spent on Cow House amounted to no more than Rebecca 'putting her stamp on the property'. It went far beyond that, as my findings made clear.
(g) It would be unconscionable for either the Husband or the Wife to go back on their promise.
(h) I prefer the evidence of (Rebecca), the Husband and (Rebecca's) witnesses on the issue of Cow House to that of the Wife.
(i) I am satisfied (Rebecca) has established a proprietary estoppel as to the beneficial ownership of Cow House. I shall deal below as to the minimum award necessary to do justice to (Rebecca's) claim".
"(i) The context in which the manège was constructed is entirely different to that of Cow House.
(ii) The statutory formalities were not complied with to render any gift effective.
(iii) The Husband did not part with an isolated piece of land at the centre of the farm. It is not, on my assessment of the evidence, what happened or was ever his intention.
(iv) The Husband was happy to build the manège provided (Rebecca) contributed. He made no promise about (Rebecca) having any beneficial interest or licence to use it or the paddock. The expectation was that (Rebecca) and Penelope would inherit the farm in due course.
(v) (Rebecca) made no reference to the manège at the time of her intervention into these proceedings. Her claim related solely to Cow House. I do not accept her explanation in evidence that she was concerned to secure Cow House first, especially when horses are said to be the centre of her life.
(vi) The claim for the manège was advanced once it became known the Wife was pursuing her case to develop a commercial livery yard within the financial remedy proceedings."
The Law on Appeals
"(7) – Permission to appeal may be given only where –
(a) The court considers that the appeal would have a real prospect of success; or
(b) There is some other compelling reason why the appeal should be heard".
(1) Every appeal will be limited to a review of the decision of the lower court unless –
(a) an enactment or practice direction makes different provision for a particular category of appeal; or
(b) the court considers that in the circumstances of an individual appeal it would be in the interests of justice to hold a re-hearing.
(2) Unless it orders otherwise, the appeal court will not receive –
(a) oral evidence; or
(b) evidence which was not before the lower court.
(3) The appeal court will allow an appeal where the decision of the lower court was –
(a) wrong; or
(b) unjust because of a serious procedural or other irregularity in the proceedings in the lower court.
"First, the appellate court must bear in mind the advantage which the first instance judge had in seeing the parties and the other witnesses. This is well understood on questions of credibility and findings of primary fact. But it goes further than that, It applies also to the judge's evaluation of those facts. If I may quote what I said in Biogen Inc v Medeva Plc [1997] RPC1 at 45:
"The need for appellate caution in reversing the trial judge's evaluation of the facts is based upon much more solid grounds than professional courtesy. It is because specific findings of fact, even by the most meticulous judge, are an inherently incomplete statement of the impression which was made upon him by the primary evidence. His expressed findings are always surrounded by a penumbra of imprecision as to emphasis, relative weight, minor qualification and nuance…of which time and language do not permit exact impression, but which may play an important part in the judge's overall conclusion."
"make use of the building blocks of a reasoned judicial process by identifying the issues to be decided and by marshalling (however briefly and without needing to recite every point) the evidence which bears on those issues, and giving reasons why the principally relevant evidence is either accepted or rejected as unreliable" and
"fairness requires that a judge should deal with apparently compelling evidence where it exists which is contrary to the conclusion that he proposes to reach and explain why he does not accept it".
My conclusions – Ground 1
Ground 2 – minimum equity to do justice
Ground 3 – costs order in favour of Rebecca
Ground 4 – costs order in favour of the Husband
Conclusion
Mr Justice Moor
2 February 2023