BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just Β£1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Ampalam v Karthik [2020] EWHC 3407 (QB) (11 December 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2020/3407.html Cite as: [2020] EWHC 3407 (QB) |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
(sitting as a Deputy Judge of the High Court)
____________________
SIVANANDAN AMPALAM |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
||
ARASARATNAM KARTHIK |
Defendant |
____________________
Mark Tempest (instructed by Genga & Co, Solicitors) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 1-3 December 2020
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Charles Morrison (sitting as a Deputy of the High Court):
Introduction
a) whether there was a partnership between the C and the D;
b) what were the terms of the partnership; and
c) whether there had been a breach of the partnership terms.
Evidence
The Law
4. The Claimant and the Defendant are the said partners pursuant to an oral partnership agreement made in 2015.
5. The following were inter alia express terms of the agreement:
The Claimant would pay £50,000 to the Defendant towards the freehold purchase by the Defendant of the Property;
The Defendant would buy the property, which was to be registered in his sole name;
The Claimant would pay £10,000 to the Defendant towards renovations at the property and installation of CCTV in the Property;
The Business and the Property would be sold after 6 months purchase and the profit being calculated by deducting all expenses including the Claimant's moving and living costs would be divided equally;
The Property was to be named 'Downham Supermarket'.
The Claimant would leave his position as Manager at Shell Patrol Station and work full time as the Manager at the Business.
The Claimant would move from his residence in Hampshire to Bromley for eight months, so as to be available to manage the business.
"If two persons jointly export their individual goods for sale as a joint adventure, dividing the profits of the transaction in specified shares, there is no partnership as regards the separate parcel of goods provided by each until they are brought into the common stock. Conversely, if they are jointly concerned in the purchase, they are not partners unless they are also jointly concerned in the future sale. Where, however, they agree to embark in a joint adventure for the purchase and sale of goods, there is a partnership as regards all the goods bought in pursuance of the agreement, and each is liable for the price of the goods bought by the other; and, if goods bought for a joint adventure by two persons are wholly paid for by one of them, while the other contributes skill and labour in return for a share of the profits, there may be a partnership between them of such a nature that the goods are partnership property".
"Persons may be partners, either generally or in some particular business or isolated transaction, even though all or part of the property used for the purposes of that business transaction may not be the subject of joint ownership but may belong to some or one of them individually."
"The existence of a partnership may be established by oral evidence even when a written partnership agreement is in existence. Admissions made by a person in a former claim, or in an income tax return, that he is a partner, or a verdict on an issue directed to try whether a person is a partner, or even the advertisement of a dissolution may be used as evidence to establish a partnership. A partnership agreement may probably be proved by oral evidence, even if the partnership is to deal with land, but such an agreement, for example an alleged agreement of partnership in the profits of land alone, when the parties have not acted as partners so that the existence of a partnership is in doubt, is probably subject to the general statutory provisions relating to contracts for the sale or other disposition of an interest in land . As to whether there is or is not a partnership, the court will look at the statements of the parties as one factor in order to consider the substance of the agreement, but the use by the parties of the word 'partner' is not conclusive evidence of partnership."
"A partnership agreement, like any other agreement, must be construed according to the normal rules of construction, although these have not remained static over the years. Formerly, greater reliance was, perhaps, placed on a number of so-called "canons of construction", but the courts increasingly proved unwilling to develop unnecessarily rigid rules or to apply those canons in a wholly mechanical way. Thus, as long ago as 1928, it was held that there was no general principle that the same meaning had to be assigned to a particular expression wherever it occurred in a partnership agreement, and that resort to such a device was only justifiable in cases of particular difficulty or ambiguity. Use of the contra proferentem rule has been similarly restricted.
The modern approach, which has, inevitably, seen a steady move away from mechanical rules in favour of a more purposive interpretation of documents, has now culminated in what might be styled the "commonsense" rule of construction. Although this new liberal attitude has swept away much of the baggage of the past, there are still limits to the court's power to look at the parties' intentions and, more importantly, to use a point of construction to circumvent the need for rectification of an agreement."
"This principle does not, however, enable the court to enquire into the negotiations which preceded the agreement or the subjective intentions of the parties. It naturally follows that an earlier draft of the agreement will not be admitted into evidence as an aid to construction, even though regard may be had to the partners' conduct under a previous agreement and, where appropriate, to "without prejudice" exchanges prior to the agreement in question. The deletion of words or clauses in the course of negotiations are unlikely to be relevant to the construction of the agreement as executed, save in a case of ambiguity when they may be indicative of what has not been agreed.
What the court also cannot do is take into account subsequent conduct as an aid to construction, although that conduct may assist the court to reach a view as to whether agreement on a certain point had in fact been reached. However, a subsequent change in the factual matrix which was not anticipated by the parties and was, on a true analysis, "unthinkable" at the time they concluded their contract, can be taken into account and may justify construing that contract so as to accord with their original (assumed) intentions rather than conferring a wholly unjustified and fortuitous benefit on one of them."
The Evidential Conflict
Discussion
Deciding the Issues