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The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions >> Stoeckert v. Margie Geddes (Jamaica) [1999] UKPC 52 (13th December, 1999) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKPC/1999/52.html Cite as: [1999] UKPC 52 |
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Privy Council Appeal No. 66 of 1998
Helga Stoeckert Appellant
v. Margie Geddes RespondentFROM THE COURT OF APPEAL OF JAMAICA
---------------
JUDGMENT OF THE LORDS OF THE JUDICIAL COMMITTEE OF THE PRIVY COUNCIL, Delivered the 13th December 1999 ------------------Present at the hearing:-
Lord Browne-WilkinsonLord Steyn
Lord Hoffmann
Lord Saville of Newdigate
Lord Hobhouse of Woodborough
[Delivered by Lord Saville of Newdigate] ------------------
1. This
is an appeal brought with the leave of the Court of Appeal of Jamaica from a
judgment of that Court dated 18th June 1997, which allowed an appeal from a
judgment of Clarke J. dated 19th December 1995 in the Supreme Court of
Judicature of Jamaica.
2. By his judgment Clarke J. held that
Helga Stoeckert was entitled to a one sixth share of the assets of Paul Geddes
as at 16th April 1991. The Court of Appeal reversed this decision which Helga
Stoeckert now seeks to restore. Mr. Geddes died in June of this year at the age
of 89 and his widow and executrix has been substituted as respondent to Helga
Stoeckerts appeal.
3. Mr. Geddes was a successful Jamaican
businessman. Helga Stoeckert was born in Germany but in 1958 at the age of 27
went to Jamaica and the following year met Mr. Geddes, who was married but
separated from his wife. The relationship between Helga Stoeckert and Mr. Geddes
appears to have become intimate soon after they met. Mr. Geddes divorced his
wife in 1962 and from 1973 he cohabited with Helga Stoeckert in a house at 1A
Braywick Road, St. Andrew. Mr. Geddes told Helga Stoeckert that because his
marriage had been unhappy he did not want to remarry.
4. According to Helga Stoeckert, whose
evidence the judge accepted, the relationship remained loving and stable until
16th April 1991, when Mr. Geddes wrote a letter to Helga Stoeckert bringing it
abruptly to an end. Shortly afterwards Mr. Geddes married the respondent and
removed Helga Stoeckerts belongings from the house.
5. Helga Stoeckert was also in business.
When the couple met, she was operating a meat processing business with her
sister in Jamaica but in 1967 (with financial assistance from Mr. Geddes) she
and her sister acquired the Four Seasons Hotel in Kingston, which they have been
operating ever since. Mr. Geddes also made Helga Stoeckert a director of Geddes
Refrigeration Limited, one of his companies, though she received no remuneration
for serving on the board of this company.
6. Helga Stoeckerts claim is based on
the proposition that there was an agreement, arrangement, understanding or
common intention between her and Mr. Geddes, arising from express discussions
between them, that she should have a beneficial interest in his assets. Her case
was that she acted in reliance on this state of affairs with the result that she
became the beneficiary under a constructive trust of a share in those assets.
She did not suggest that she had made any direct or indirect financial
contribution to the acquisition of any of the assets.
7. At the trial counsel for Mr. Geddes
called no evidence, relying instead on a submission that Helga Stoeckert could
not be entitled to an interest in any of Mr. Geddes assets because the
evidence adduced by her could not establish a trust in her favour.
8. Clarke J. rejected this submission and
held that Helga Stoeckert had established a constructive trust in her favour,
since she had satisfied the criteria stated in the following terms by Sir
Nicolas Browne-Wilkinson V.C. (as he then was) in Grant v. Edwards [1986] Ch 638, 654:-
"If the legal estate in the joint home is vested in only one of the parties (the legal owner) the other party (the claimant), in order to establish a beneficial interest, has to establish a constructive trust by showing that it would be inequitable for the legal owner to claim sole beneficial ownership. This requires two matters to be demonstrated: (a) that there was a common intention that both should have a beneficial interest; (b) that the claimant has acted to his or her detriment on the basis of that common intention."
"What is that evidence of common intention and is that evidence sufficient? I accept Miss Stoeckerts evidence in this connection as follows:
(a) that just before the General Election in 1980 and, prior to Mr. Geddes leaving for Mexico, he verbally assured her that she would be totally in charge of all his possessions and business, if the Labour Government had lost the election;
(b) that on a number of occasions in the 1980s after the Jamaica Labour Party had won the General Election and after Mr. Geddes had returned to Jamaica, he verbally assured her that she should not worry about any financial matters as she would be the richest corpse in Jamaica;
(c) that Mr. Geddes used the expression richest corpse in the context of their talk about her financial security, assuring her that until she died he would make her wealthy and would provide for her in his will equally with his two daughters;
(d) that Mr. Geddes assurances to her that she would have a beneficial interest in his assets stood until their relationship ended on 16th April 1991;
(e) that those assurances found written expression in his will which, in her presence, he instructed his lawyer to prepare; the will was drawn up by his lawyer and duly executed by Mr. Geddes in 1985 only after she was taken to the lawyer by him. By the will (as yet unrevoked) a copy of which he gave her that same year, he appointed her one of his executrices and bequeathed to her a life interest in one third of the income from his residuary estate;
(f) on or about 15th June 1988 he gave her 23,300 shares in Desnoes and Geddes Ltd. in which he then held 9.2 million shares: And between 1983 and about 1989 he established respectively in their joint names and for their benefit and not for convenience three not insubstantial bank accounts of interest bearing status, namely in Royal Bank of Canada, Europe Ltd. in London, England; Barnette Bank, Florida, USA; and Cayman National Bank in Cayman Islands.
On those facts I find that there was an express oral agreement as contended for by Mr. Miller. Those facts are, in my view, of great cumulative force. When taken together, as they must in the circumstances of this case, they provide, in my opinion, sufficient direct evidence of the oral agreement pleaded by Miss Stoeckert of a common intention between herself and Mr. Geddes that both would have beneficial interests in the assets vested in him. Such a common intention remains effectual in spite of the sudden and devastative ending of the relationship by him on 16th April 1991 and the revocation of his will by his subsequent marriage to someone else on or about 22nd April 1991."
10. It should be noted at this point that
the "assurances" to which the judge referred in paragraph (d) of his
list of the matters upon which he relied must be a reference to what he
described as the verbal assurances listed in paragraphs (a) to (c), since the
evidence does not reveal any other relevant assurances, nor was Mr. Mahfood Q.C.,
counsel for Helga Stoeckert, able to demonstrate the contrary. This paragraph,
therefore, contains not merely a finding of fact (namely that the assurances
stood until the relationship ended) but also the conclusion of the judge that
these assurances amounted to an assurance that Helga Stoeckert would have a
beneficial interest in Mr. Geddes assets.
11. Clarke J. also decided that Helga
Stoeckert had acted to her detriment on the basis of this common intention, by
providing, as he put it, "services which took the form of encouragement,
discussion and advice given by her at Mr. Geddes request and without
remuneration. They were given in relation to his business and aspects of the
construction and improvement of premises at 1A Braywick Road". After
detailing the services provided, the judge found that Helga Stoeckert had, as
pleaded by her, served as "a confidante and business supporter to the
defendant at every level, and was a sounding board in and about his business
interests and decisions". He concluded that, since Helga Stoeckert had
rendered these services in reliance on the common intention that she would have
a beneficial interest in Mr. Geddes assets existing during the period of
their cohabitation, she satisfied the conditions for the creation of a trust in
her favour in the assets of Mr. Geddes as they existed down to 16th April 1991.
12. The Court of Appeal (Rattray P., Gordon
and Bingham J.J.A.) took a different view and so do their Lordships.
13. Assuming for the purposes of the
argument that the legal criteria called in aid by the judge are theoretically
applicable to the sort of circumstances found in this case, their Lordships
agree with the Court of Appeal that no agreement, arrangement, understanding or
common intention that Helga Stoeckert should have a beneficial share in Mr.
Geddes assets can be spelt out of the facts and matters relied upon by the
judge, whether viewed separately or cumulatively. The fact that Mr. Geddes told
Helga Stoeckert that if he did not return from Mexico she would be in charge of
all his possessions and business does not suggest that she owned or was to own a
share in those assets, any more than telling her on a number of occasions that
she would be the "richest corpse" in Jamaica, whatever that meant.
Assuring her that until she died he would make her wealthy and would provide for
her in his will equally with his two daughters; and making a will in which she
was bequeathed a life interest in one third of the income from his residuary
estate, are in truth matters that are inconsistent with the suggested common
intention, for were that intention to exist, her wealth would survive her death
and so far from being confined to a share of income, she was or would be
entitled to a share in the capital. The gift of shares in Desnoes and Geddes
Ltd. and the establishment of joint accounts again are not matters that suggest
that Helga Stoeckert was or was to be the beneficial owner of a share in Mr.
Geddes assets. On the contrary, as Rattray P. pointed out in the course of
his judgment, these actions showed that when Mr. Geddes wanted to provide for
Helga Stoeckert, he made her an outright gift or facilitated her ability to draw
on some, but by no means all, of his accounts.
14. Mr. Mahfood sought to criticise the
Court of Appeal for, as he put it, reversing the findings of fact of the judge,
notwithstanding that Mr. Geddes had called no evidence to rebut the evidence of
his client. Their Lordships take the view that this criticism is unjustified.
The Court of Appeal did not reverse any findings of fact. What that Court did
and in the view of their Lordships rightly did was to reverse the conclusion of
the judge that the facts found established as a matter of law the alleged
agreement, arrangement, understanding or common intention.
15. In these circumstances questions of
detriment, reliance and the like do not arise for consideration by their
Lordships, who for the reasons given will humbly advise Her Majesty that this
appeal should be dismissed with costs.