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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Hughes & Ors v Richards (t/a Colin Richards & Co) [2004] EWCA Civ 266 (09 March 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2004/266.html Cite as: [2004] PNLR 35, [2004] EWCA Civ 266 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION
Birmingham District Registry
His Honour Judge Norris Q.C. (sitting as a High Court Judge)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE JACOB
and
SIR WILLIAM ALDOUS
____________________
HUGHES AND OTHERS (BY THEIR LITIGATION FRIEND) |
Respondents |
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- and - |
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COLIN E. G. RICHARDS (TRADING AS COLIN RICHARDS & CO.) |
Appellants |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Peter Gibson L.J.:
The Amended Particulars of Claim
(a) had the £75,000 royalty payments been invested in 1991 and 1992 in accordance with competent advice, that sum would have increased in value to approximately £220,000 - £225,000 as at 1 January 2002;
(b) alternatively, had Mr. Richards advised the parents to wind up the trust and/or Cedrus and transfer the assets to the parents for investment for the benefit of the children at any material time prior to the complete loss of the capital, the parents would have accepted that advice and the children would have retained the benefit of such part of the assets as then remained.
The first of those two heads has been referred to as the investment claim, the second as the salvage claim.
(c) (as an alternative to (a) in para. 14 above) the parents claim the monies paid to the trust and Cedrus (but would give credit for the sums they received totalling £26,000 and for a further sum of £2,848 paid at Mr. Hughes' request in July 1993 to a named person);
(d) alternatively, the parents claim £64,000 paid by them in school fees for the children and £145,000 which they say will be paid in future fees; and
(e) the sums totalling £13,046.74 paid to Mr. Richards by the parents.
The judge's judgment
"56 I am not going to strike out the children's claim. First I regard Mr. Hill-Smith's submissions as extremely strong in relation to the investment retainer, and as in accord with orthodox learning. But I am impressed by Miss Shaldon's submission that all of the observations cited have been obiter, admittedly from the highest authority, but given at a time when the basic principles themselves were just being ascertained and established. There is no decided case drawn to my attention where these obiter observations have in fact been applied to defeat a claim.
57 Secondly, certainly part of the reasoning in White v Jones proceeds on the footing that it lies in the power of the donor to put right the intended gift which has failed, either because the original transaction has never effectively proceeded, or on the footing that if it has, the intending donor can, by proceeding against the solicitor, recoup the property and redirect it. It may make a difference that in the present case the transaction (the establishment of the trust) was an effective one and it is the nature of the investment (as it has been called) that has failed (ie the preservation of the capital). Or it may be that a court at trial would determine that the third party claim by the children should not in law depend on whether or not the parents as donors can afford to sue the solicitor to recoup damages and to make the gift which they originally intended.
58 I have reached the clear conclusion that it would be wrong on this summary application to express a concluded view on those difficult questions, particularly since I am satisfied that the "monitoring claim" is by no means straightforward, and that I cannot say in relation to that claim that there are no reasonable grounds for bringing it. The monitoring claim arises from a retainer entered into after the parents had disposed of the relevant property. It was a retainer, if established, which was for the benefit of the children. It seems to me that the decision of the Court of Appeal in Dean v Allin & Watts [[2001] PNLR 921] provides at least an apparent foundation for saying that where a retainer was intended specifically to confer a benefit on a third party, that third party may sue on it where the client has suffered no ascertainable loss. That seems to me to accord also with the decision in [Woodward v Wolferstans 20 March 1997, a decision of Mrs. Martin Mann Q.C. sitting as a deputy judge of the Chancery Division]. Since I am satisfied that that claim must go to trial, I see no advantage in striking out the claim based on the investment retainer. I shall therefore refuse the relief sought in the application …."
The rival submissions
(1) the judge, while correctly accepting that the submissions made below on behalf of Mr. Richards in relation to the investment retainer reflected orthodox learning, failed to give effect to those submissions in refusing to strike out the children's claim;
(2) the judge should have struck out the children's investment claim on the basis that the loss was that of the parents who had provided the funds and not that of the children; the parents by their claim for damages could remedy the breach of duty by Mr. Richards;
(3) the judge erred in not giving effect to the obiter views of Lord Goff and Lord Browne-Wilkinson in White v Jones;
(4) the right of the parents to recover damages in respect of the sums invested in the scheme is fully consistent with the principles governing the right of the promisee to recover damages in a building contract for the benefit of a third party; the fact that the promisee has transferred the property the subject of the contract does not prevent the promisee from recovering damages (see the decisions of the House of Lords in Linden Gardens Trust v Lenesta Sludge Disposal [1994] 1 AC 85 and Alfred McAlpine Construction Ltd. v Panatown Ltd. [2001] 1 AC 518);
(5) the judge was wrong to treat the monitoring claim as subject to different considerations;
(6) the judge in exercising his discretion should have taken account of the fact that the children's claim is supported by legal aid; that it is in the public interest that a claim with little prospect of success brought on behalf of a legally aided claimant should not be allowed to proceed to trial, and that it is most unlikely that a costs order could be enforced against the children.
(1) the judge has not been shown to have made any error in the exercise of his discretion or to have reached a decision falling outside the ambit of reasonable disagreement;
(2) the judge was right for the reasons which he gave to refuse to strike out a claim in an area of the law which is uncertain and developing when the facts have not been found;
(3) the judge should have held that the loss was that of the children, the parents by an effective transaction having divested themselves of the £30,000 paid to the trust and their right to the royalty payments; the loss was suffered by the failure of the investment which took place over a period of years, and the measure of damages claimed is the value of the fund which, if properly invested, would have been held on trust for the children.
Discussion
"[I]n an area of the law which was uncertain and developing (such as the circumstances in which a person can be held liable in negligence for the exercise of a statutory duty or power) it is not normally appropriate to strike out. In my judgment it is of great importance that such development should be on the basis of actual facts found at trial not on hypothetical facts assumed (possibly wrongly) to be true for the purpose of the strike out."
Conclusion
Jacob LJ :
Sir William Aldous: