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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 >> Mirza (t/a Hamza Travel) v Dayman [2016] EWCA Civ 699 (24 February 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2016/699.html Cite as: [2016] EWCA Civ 699 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
(HIS HONOUR JUDGE YELTON sitting as a deputy High Court judge)
Strand London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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MIRZA T/A HAMZA TRAVEL |
Applicant |
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- and – |
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DAYMAN |
Respondent |
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8th Floor, 165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 704 1424
Web: www.DTIGlobal.com Email: [email protected]
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr Nicholas Cox (instructed by the Government Legal Department) appeared on behalf of the Respondent
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Moylan:
"It seems to me, having thought about it with care, that the concept of a resulting trust is quite inapplicable to the facts that I have set out. A resulting trust arises when A pays for property which is put in the name of B."
"In this case A pays B (in other words, the hawaladar) to change and remit his money at an agreed rate to C. A resulting trust is not usually applied, though it can in certain circumstances, to a commercial transaction, but in the circumstances that I have just set out I am satisfied that neither B nor indeed C, the ultimate recipient in Pakistan, are trustees for A."
"It is a transfer for consideration. In other words, as I have said, he or she handed the money over to the hawaladar, the consideration being that the money would be changed into rupees and delivered or remitted to the ultimate recipient in Pakistan."
"I am satisfied and, in my judgment it is clear, that the claimants are not beneficiaries under a trust but were rather unsecured creditors of Mr Iqbal."
"21. In Paragon Finance PLC v DB Thakerer & Co [1999] 1 All ER 400, May LJ (at page 416) considered the case of Nelson v Rye, the case of the solo musician who appointed the defendant manager to collect his fees and royalty and pay him annually in relation to a case concerning mortgage lenders and borrowers in relation to purchase and mortgage of a number of flats. Millett LJ (as he then was) said of the manager of Nelson and Rye as follows:
'Whether he was in fact a trustee of the money may be open to doubt. Unless I have misunderstood the facts or they were very unusual it would appear that the defendant was entitled to pay receipts into his own account, mix them with his own money, use them for his own cash-flow, deduct his own commission, and account for the balance to the plaintiff only at the end of the year. It is fundamental to the existence of a trust that the trustee is bound to keep the trust property separate from his own and apply it exclusively for the benefit of his beneficiary. Any right on the part of the defendant to mix the money which he received with his own and use it for his own cash flow would be inconsistent with the existence of a trust. So would a liability to account annually, for a trustee is obliged to account to his beneficiary and pay over the trust property on demand.'
This brief citation of the principles, pursuant to which a trust may be identified, demonstrate how far removed any suggestion can be that the money which Mr Akhtar received in return for the obligation to make available for collection Pakistan rupees is impressed with a trust. The money was mixed with his own. He was free to deal with it how he wished. His only obligation, as I have said, was to make available an agreed sum for collection in a foreign currency.
22. In those circumstances, and having regard to the features of the system which I have already identified, not least of which was the fact that there was no obligation to transfer any particular sum of money to any particular person, and indeed the opportunity to earn a turn by varying exchange rates demonstrates to my complete satisfaction that none of the claimants could possibly have had any priority interest in any of those sums."
"28. In these circumstances, I endorse Moses J's view that the hawala system, as practised both by Mr Hussain in Re H and by the claimant in the present case, is totally inconsistent with the existence of a trust. It is unnecessary to repeat the authorities cited by Moses J, but I should mention Re Chelsea Cloisters Ltd (1980) 41 P&CR 98, which was an additional authority referred to by Mr Cunningham. A company managing a block of flats had got into financial difficulties. Wishing to protect the tenants' deposits, the supervisor of the company opened a separate bank account for their deposits. The company subsequently went into liquidation and the liquidator asked the court for a determination whether the deposits should be divided among the company's creditors, or whether they were held on trust for the tenants. The Court of Appeal held that there was a trust. Lord Denning MR cited Channell J in Henry v Hammond:
'It is clear that if the terms upon which the person receives the money are that he is bound to keep it separate, either in a bank or elsewhere, and to hand that money so kept as a separate fund to the person entitled to it, then he is a trustee of that money and must hand it over to the person who is his cestui que trust.'
29. Bridge LJ said that the opening of the separate bank account:
'... was a practical step, designed to ensure that the deposits would not be spent as part of the company's general cash flow.' That is entirely consistent with an intention to keep these funds from the general funds of the company in order that they should not be swallowed up by the general funds of the company." (page 108)
30. Mr Wilby pointed out that the separate account contained the deposits of a number of tenants. Thus, it was not necessary for the existence of a trust for the claimant's £12,000 to have been kept, on its own, in a separate account apart from the sums paid by the other customers of Madina Express. I agree. In theory, one could envisage a business with a separate account into which all of the customers' payments were made, which account was kept distinct from 'the general funds of the company'. However, arrangements that might theoretically be possible in the case of a hypothetical business do not overcome the fundamental obstacle to the existence of a trust in this and other hawala cases: it is inherent in the hawala system, as described by Dr Ballard, that the sums paid by customers wishing to transfer money are not kept in a separate account distinct from 'the general funds of the company". On the contrary, they are "the general funds of the company', out of which business expenses are paid and from which the hawaladar makes his profit by manipulating exchange rates at various stages of the transfer process. While it may not be strictly accurate to describe the hawaladar as a banker, as a 'value transfer agent' he is a trader (in currency, using his customers' money for the purposes of his trade) and not a trustee of his customers' money. It follows that the second question does not arise and it is unnecessary to consider whether the necessary fiduciary relationship existed between the claimant and the second defendant, and whether the second defendant had notice of the facts which might have given rise to a resulting trust."
"The claimants' case in those cases now was that the hawaladar, whether Iqbal or the claimants, was not free to do what he wanted with the money handed over, but as the evidence in this case shows, the claimants did not know what was going to happen to the money once it got into the hands of Mr Iqbal. In fact, of course, as the claimants accepted, the system works because of the ability of money traders to consolidate. In other words, the claimants got better rates than their customers would have done and Madina, who were trading and remitting millions of pounds to Pakistan, had access to even better rates."
Order: Application refused