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 £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 (Chancery Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Campden Hill Ltd v Chakrani & Ors [2005] EWHC 911 (Ch) (13 May 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2005/911.html Cite as: [2005] EWHC 911 (Ch) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
CAMPDEN HILL LIMITED |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
||
(1) FAZIL CHAKRANI (2) SAIRA KARIM (3) IMRAN KARIM (4) ZAHIDA BALOCH (5) SHAHIDA BALOCH (6) MOHAMMED IQBAL (7) SHAMIM AKHTAR KARIM (8) HM LAND REGISTRY |
Defendants |
____________________
Mr Sean Brannigan (instructed by Messrs. Davies Arnold Cooper) for the 2nd, 3rd and 7th Defendants.
Miss Claire Andrews (instructed by Messrs. BKS Solicitors) for the 1st, 4th and 5th Defendants.
Hearing dates: 19,20,21,22,25,26,27,28 April 2005
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr. Justice Hart :
i) a withdrawal of caution form apparently duly signed by the cautioner's solicitors;ii) the loan agreement apparently duly signed by Mr Chakrani and witnessed by Mrs Karim;
iii) a legal charge apparently signed as a deed by Mr Chakrani and witnessed by Mrs Karim;
iv) Mr Chakrani's land certificate in respect of the property.
The first of those documents contained an error which was noticed by Mr Dawson but corrected in an amended copy document faxed later that day.
The claimant's case against Mr Chakrani
The claimant's case against the "Karim" defendants
The Karim defendants' Part 20 claim against Mr Chakrani
The payments made by Mrs Karim to Mr Chakrani and Mr Iqbal
i) On 30th April £175,875.62 was paid to Mr Collins' solicitors. This was done in order to remove the caution. The background to this was that Karim Solicitors had earlier received, as stakeholder, a sum of £160,000 from Mr Collins as a 5% deposit under a contract, conditional on obtaining a particular planning permission, to acquire the property from Mr Chakrani for £3.2m. This was, on the face of it, a personal liability of Karim Solicitors Indeed Mr Collins had sued Karim Solicitors for this money and by a consent order to the terms of which Mrs Karim had agreed on or about 29th April 2003 Karim Solicitors had agreed to pay it.ii) On 2nd May Mrs Karim gave Mr Chakrani three cheques, each for £80,000, in favour of himself and the two Baloch sisters drawn on the Karim Solicitors client account. All were presented for payment but that in favour of Shahida Baloch was returned unpaid.
iii) On 12th May £50,000 was paid to Mr Chakrani's NatWest bank account.
iv) On 15th May a further £20,000 was paid to Mr Chakrani's account.
v) On 23rd May a banker's draft in the sum of £68,000 was given by Mrs Karim to Mr Iqbal.
Mr Chakrani's explanation for his receipts
i) a letter dated 8th May from Mrs Karim to him which outlined the terms of a contract for sale for £2.4m under which a 10% deposit was payable. I return to this below. It read:"Further to our meeting of today as advised:1) The Sale price is £2.4 million2) Contracts will be exchanged unconditionally and 10% deposit is payable3) Completion to be on 30th September or earlier4) You to repay the personal loan of £50,000 to Mrs. Karim."ii) a letter dated 19th May from Karim Solicitors apparently signed by Mrs Karim which read:
"RE: CHARGE – 120 TANNERS HILL LONDON SE8This is to confirm that the above charge created in respect of the above property will be redeemed by Mrs. Karim personally on Friday the 23rd May.The redemption of the charge is the responsibility of Mrs. Karim entirely."iii) a further letter from Karim Solicitors signed by Mrs Karim dated 19th May 2003 which read:
"RE: CHARGE – 120 TANNERS HILL LONDON SE8This is to state that Mrs. Karim will sell the property for 2 million pounds but due to the various circumstances she has agreed to pay the balance of £400,000 on or before completion.You have been paid £235,00.00 already the balance of £2.165,000.00 will be paid upon completion."iv) an undated sale agreement apparently signed by Mrs Karim whereby Karim Solicitors agreed to buy the property from Mr Chakrani for £2.4m with a 10% deposit.
v) a cheque dated 23rd May 2003 (originally dated 29th May) drawn by the Karim Solicitors client account and signed by Mrs Karim in favour of the Baloch sisters for £500,000.
vi) a manuscript letter signed by Mrs Karim and dated 22nd June 2003 which read:
"Re:- Tanners HillI have been authorised to sell the above property for a sum over £2.4 Million.Upon sale of the same the balance outstanding in respect of the mortgage proceeds will be paid by me together with the facility fee. Thereafter the sale proceeds less amount already paid to you will be will be [sic] accounted by you.The mortgage will be re-deemed fully.[signed] Mrs. Karim22-06-03£100,000 will be paid to you if the fund are released."vii) an undated manuscript document written by Mrs Karim (and intended by her to be signed by Mr Chakrani) in the following terms:
"The legal charge was authorised. I have received substantial amount of the proceeds. There are issues of outstanding fees only to be resolved.I have withdrawn instructions from my other solicitors.Karims have dealt with my affairs for 17 years. There have been no problems with them. I was involved with parties who wished to purchase my property at any cost. Roy Gaye is not my agent.Due to various family difficulties certain developments have arisen but Karims are not at fault."
The Karim's failure to provide an explanation
The cogency of Mr Chakrani's explanation
"As exchange had not taken place on 2nd May I was asked by Mrs Karim to return on 8th May. When I went to see her again, she amended the dates from 2nd to 8th."
Conclusions on the forgery issue
Measure of the Karim defendants' liability
Section 2 of the Law Reform (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1989
"2 Contracts for sale etc of land to be made by signed writing
(1) A contract for the sale or other disposition of an interest in land can only be made in writing and only by incorporating all the terms which the parties have expressly agreed in one document or, where contracts are exchanged, in each.
(2) The terms may be incorporated in a document either by being set out in it or by reference to some other document.
(3) The document incorporating the terms or, where contracts are exchanged, one of the documents incorporating them (but not necessarily the same one) must be signed by or on behalf of each party to the contract.
(4) Where a contract for the sale or other disposition of an interest in land satisfies the conditions of this section by reason only of the rectification of one or more documents in pursuance of an order of a court, the contract shall come into being, or be deemed to have come into being, at such time as may be specified in the order."
"…
2. Agreement for advance and grant of mortgage
2.1 Agreement for advance
If the preconditions contained in clause 2.4 have by then been satisfied and subject to the Borrower having complied with his obligations under clauses 3, 4 and 5 of this agreement, then on the Completion Date:
2.1.1 the Lender will make the Advance
2.1.2 the Borrower will pay the Facility Fee and
2.1.3 the Borrower will make and execute a charge by way of first legal mortgage of the Property in favour of the Lender by way of security for the repayment of the Advance and all other sums due in the form annexed to this agreement.
…
2.4 Preconditions
The preconditions referred to in clause 2.1 are that by the Completion Date:
2.4.1 the Borrower must have shown and proved to the satisfaction of the Lender's Solicitors a good, marketable and unencumbered title to the Property,
2.4.2 the Borrower has paid the Facility Fee to the Lender and
2.4.3 the Borrower has procured the withdrawal of the caution registered against the title"
"In consideration of Five Hundred Thousand pounds (£500,000) receipt of which is acknowledged I Fazil Chakrani of Clerkenwell House 67 Clerkenwell Road London EC1R 5BH ("the Borrower") with full title guarantee charge by way of legal mortgage the land comprised in the title above referred to with the payment of the principal sum of Five Hundred Thousand pounds (£500,000) and all other monies now or in future due ("the loan") to Campden Hill Limited the registered office of which is at Cosmur House, 27 Emperor's Gate, London, SW7 4HS (company registration number 01343774) ("the Lender") from the Borrower to the Lender and the discharge of all other obligations and liabilities in this deed covenanted to be paid or discharged by the Borrower or otherwise secured by this deed."
"… Section 2 is of relevance only to executory contracts. It has no relevance to contracts which have been completed. If the parties choose to complete an oral land contract or a land contract that does not in some respect or other comply with section 2, they are at liberty to do so. Once they have done so, it becomes irrelevant that the contract they have completed may not have been in accordance with section 2"
Section 137 of the Consumer Credit Act 1974
"137 Extortionate credit bargains
(1) If the court finds a credit bargain extortionate it may reopen the credit agreement so as to do justice between the parties.(2) In this section and sections 138 to 140—(a) "credit agreement" means any agreement [(other than an agreement which is an exempt agreement as a result of section 16(6C))] between an individual (the "debtor") and any other person (the "creditor") by which the creditor provides the debtor with credit of any amount, and(b) "credit bargain"—(i) where no transaction other than the credit agreement is to be taken into account in computing the total charge for credit, means the credit agreement, or(ii) where one or more other transactions are to be so taken into account, means the credit agreement and those other transactions, taken together.
138 When bargains are extortionate
(1) A credit bargain is extortionate if it—(a) requires the debtor or a relative of his to make payments (whether unconditionally, or on certain contingencies) which are grossly exorbitant, or(b) otherwise grossly contravenes ordinary principles of fair dealing.(2) In determining whether a credit bargain is extortionate, regard shall be had to such evidence as is adduced concerning—(a) interest rates prevailing at the time it was made,(b) the factors mentioned in subsections (3) to (5), and(c) any other relevant considerations.(3) Factors applicable under subsection (2) in relation to the debtor include—(a) his age, experience, business capacity and state of health; and(b) the degree to which, at the time of making the credit bargain, he was under financial pressure, and the nature of that pressure.(4) Factors applicable under subsection (2) in relation to the creditor include—(a) the degree of risk accepted by him, having regard to the value of any security provided;(b) his relationship to the debtor; and(c) whether or not a colourable cash price was quoted for any goods or services included in the credit bargain.(5) Factors applicable under subsection (2) in relation to a linked transaction include the question how far the transaction was reasonably required for the protection of debtor or creditor, or was in the interest of the debtor.
139 Reopening of extortionate agreements
(1) A credit agreement may, if the court thinks just, be reopened on the ground that the credit bargain is extortionate—(a) on an application for the purpose made by the debtor or any surety to the High Court, county court or sheriff court; or(b) at the instance of the debtor or a surety in any proceedings to which the debtor and creditor are parties, being proceedings to enforce the agreement, any security relating to it, or any linked transaction; or(c) at the instance of the debtor or a surety in other proceedings in any court where the amount paid or payable under the credit agreement is relevant.(2) In reopening the agreement, the court may, for the purpose of relieving the debtor or a surety from payment of any sum in excess of that fairly due and reasonable, by order—(a) direct accounts to be taken, or (in Scotland) an accounting to be made, between any persons,(b) set aside the whole or part of any obligation imposed on the debtor or surety by the credit bargain or any related agreement,(c) require the creditor to repay the whole or part of any sum paid under the credit bargain or any related agreement by the debtor or a surety, whether paid to the creditor or any other person,(d) direct the return to the surety of any property provided for the purposes of the security, or(e) alter the terms of the credit agreement or any security instrument.……
140 Interpretation of sections 137 to 139
Where the credit agreement is not a regulated agreement, expressions used in sections 137 to 139 which, apart from this section, apply only to regulated agreements, shall be construed as nearly as may be as if the credit agreement were a regulated agreement."
The claim against Mr Chakrani
i) the two cheques dated 2nd May for £80,000 each;ii) the subsequent payments of £50,000 and £20,000 which replaced, in part, the third cheque for £80,000 which did not clear;
iii) the sum of £10,000 which Mrs Karim credited to him against her loan to him of £50,000 (a transaction which made up the balance of the cheque which did not clear); and
iv) the sum of £60,000 received by him from Mr Iqbal.
i) a proprietary claim against assets identifiable in Mr Chakrani's hands as representing the sums paid to him out of the client account. This claim involved, first, an "equitable" tracing of the claimant's monies into the sums received by Mr Chakrani out of the client bank account, and, secondly, a tracing of those sums into replacement assets;ii) a personal claim against Mr Chakrani as a knowing recipient of trust monies. This claim involved tracing only at the first stage;
iii) a personal claim against Mr Chakrani for monies had and received ("the restitutionary claim"). Mr Rubin submitted that tracing was unnecessary to make this claim good. In his final speech it, therefore, figured as his primary case.
The restitutionary claim
"The principle on which the plaintiff bases his claim is that stated by Lord Selborne in Blackburn Building Society v. Cunliffe Brooks & Co. [22 Ch D 61 at 71], cited and adopted in his judgment by Rigby L.J. in the case of In re Wrexham, Mold and Connah's Quay Ry. Co. [[1899] 1 Ch 440 at 451]. The Lord Chancellor said: "I think the consistency of the equity allowed in the Cork and Youghal Ry. Co.'s Case [LR 4 Ch 748] with the general rule of law that persons who have no borrowing powers cannot, by borrowing, contract debts to the lenders, may be shewn in this way. The test is, has the transaction really added to the liabilities of the company? If the amount of the company's liabilities remains in substance unchanged, but there is, merely for the convenience of payment, a change of the creditor, there is no substantial borrowing in the result, so far as relates to the position of the company. Regarded in that light, it is consistent with the general principle of equity, that those who pay legitimate demands which they are bound in some way or other to meet, and have had the benefit of other people's money advanced to them for that purpose, shall not retain that benefit so as, in substance, to make those other people pay their debts." That is the principle that is said to give the plaintiff the remedy which he seeks in this case, and it certainly appears to me that, on the facts before us, a strong prima facie case has been established. Some money has found its way into the coffers of the firm in this sense - that it was credited to their account at the bank, and has been applied on their behalf in payment of their liabilities. Whether or not it could be recovered at common law by the lender it is not necessary to decide, though I should think that it could not; but we have to apply the general law, legal and equitable, and it appears to me that, so far as the money can be shewn to have been applied for the benefit of the defendants, in paying claims for which they were legally liable, it can be recovered upon equitable grounds. If so, the plaintiff has a right to an account, and to recover such sums as are found to be due upon that account."
"I think this case is governed by the general principle which I am about to state. That principle is one that is well recognized in the present day; and is binding upon us. Where money is borrowed on behalf of a principal by an agent, the lender believing that the agent has authority though it turns out that his act has not been authorized, or ratified, or adopted by the principal, then, although the principal cannot be sued at law, yet in equity, to the extent to which the money borrowed has in fact been applied in paying legal debts and obligations of the principal, the lender is entitled to stand in the same position as if the money had originally been borrowed by the principal. That limitation, and its true bearing upon the position of the lender, shewing that he is not exactly in the position of a person who is entitled to stand in the shoes of the creditor in all respects and therefore entitled to the benefit of any securities of the creditor paid off, is clearly put in the decision of the case of In re Wrexham, Mold and Connah's Quay Ry. Co."
"The principle to which I have referred clearly governs this case. The facts speak for themselves, and it cannot be said that this is a mere speculative application on behalf of the plaintiff in the hope that he may be able to shew that some legal debts of the defendants have been paid off by means of money lent by the plaintiff. The bankers' account is in evidence before us, and it appears that the money first borrowed went to the credit of the firm's account at their bankers, which was kept by the agent of the branch establishment. It further appears that immediately after the money was paid in some legal debts of the firm were, in fact, paid off at a time when there was nothing in the bank to meet them except the money which had been borrowed of the plaintiff.
In these circumstances the proper course to be taken is that suggested by my Lord - to direct an inquiry to ascertain what debts and legal obligations of the firm were, in fact, paid off by means of the borrowed money. The point that arose in Clayton's Case [I Mer 572], which was referred to in the course of the argument, will have to be borne in mind in ascertaining what debts were paid off; that is to say, what the plaintiff has to prove is actual payment of the debts, and not what I may call a payment by means of an adjustment of accounts. It was suggested that the equitable principle which, in my opinion, governs this case, ought not to be applied if it turns out that, although the borrowed money was, in fact, applied in payment of debts of the firm, the account of the agent with his principals, if it were continued up to the time when this action was brought, would shew that the agent was not a creditor of the firm. It appears to me that this consideration is not relevant. It might be relevant if the plaintiff were seeking to enforce a different equity, that is, the right to stand in the shoes of the agent as against his principal. That is not the equity which the plaintiff is seeking to enforce in this action." [italics supplied]
The "equitable" claims
"There is not, in my judgment, any rigid rule to be applied as to whether a defendant can ever plead a sort of equitable jus tertii in this type of case. It must, in my judgment, depend on circumstances. I will take an example from the field of family trusts. Suppose that a tenant for life's interest is charged in equity with two annuities, one payable to A of £700 a year and the other payable to B of £300 a year, but subject to an overall restriction that the total annuities payable should not exceed half the annual income of the trust property, and that half the annual income is for the time being only £500. If, after there has been no annuity payment to anyone for over a year, A sues the tenant for life for £500, B not being a party to the proceedings, should A get judgment for £500 or £350? Normally the answer would be that he should get only his proper proportion, that is £350, but if it appeared from strong (though not conclusive) evidence that B had disappeared and might be dead and that before he disappeared he had indicated that he had no wish to receive his annuity, the position would be different. In those circumstances the court might well order the tenant for life to pay to A the full amount available for the annuities on A giving him a suitable indemnity against any possible claim by B.
The court's inclination to take such a course must be considerably stronger if the defendant in question is not, like the tenant for life in my example, a beneficiary and simultaneously a fiduciary under a properly constituted trust, but a mere constructive trustee found to have been in knowing receipt of the proceeds of fraud and so a person who has no claim to retain the traceable money subject to the equitable charges. I note that the conclusion which I have reached seems to be that to which Millett J inclined (as indicated in the last paragraph of his judgment) although, as I have said, Millett J reached no final conclusion on this point and was indeed willing earlier this year to permit further evidence to be adduced before the point was decided (see [1993] 3 All ER 717 at 747)."
"tracing depends not on the actual imposition of an equitable charge but an equity's capacity to impose such a charge…. The charge itself is notional."
"bound to choose between them. Whatever may be the position as between the victims inter se, as against the wrongdoer his victims are not required to appropriate debits to credits in order to identify the particular account to which their money has been paid. Equity's power to charge a mixed fund with the repayment of trust moneys (a power not shared by the common law) enables the claimants to follow the money, not because it is theirs, but because it is derived from a fund which is treated as if it were subject to a charge in their favour."
Stage 2 tracing
i) On 12th May 2003 he forwarded a sum of £54,112.55 (5m Rupees) to Pakistan as the first instalment on the purchase of the Pakistan land. That payment was acknowledged by a "Sale Receipt" dated 12th May 2003 which recorded that a further 5m Rupees was payable in the first week of June 2003 and the final instalment of 18m Rupees payable on 30th October 2003. The document recorded that "the above sale will be effective on payment of RS. 10.00 million on Date Mentioned Otherwise above Sale Receipt will be cancelled and Payment of its Instalment Rs. 5.00 Million will be Seized."ii) On 30th May 2003, he forwarded a further £53,558.19 to Pakistan in respect of the second instalment of that purchase. A formal sale agreement, dated 12th June 2003, seems then to have been entered into which provided, inter alia, for the two initial instalments to be forfeit if the final payment was not made.
iii) On 30th June 2003 £135,000 was paid by him with his solicitors' client account, and pursuant to an order of Patten J dated 3rd July 2003, a further £47,329 was so paid on that day (a total of £182,329).
iv) By a subsequent arrangement between the parties the £182,329 was released from his solicitors' client account to enable Mr Chakrani to complete the acquisition of the Pakistani land. Mr Chakrani then executed a second charge of 120 Tanners Hill to secure the claimant's tracing claim up to a value of £290,000.
i) that the equitable right to trace will be barred where it would be inequitable to allow it. It will be inequitable where a defendant has, to his detriment, changed his position. That change of position defence is the same as that applicable to restitutionary claims;ii) Mr Chakrani did change his position to his detriment when he committed to the purchase of the Pakistani land on 12th May 2003;
iii) Irrespective of i) and ii) it would be inequitable to allow the claimant to trace at all since it had, from the outset, been insisting on its rights against Mr Chakrani under the Loan Agreement and Charge which were now known to have been forged.
"An innocent recipient of stolen money may not be enriched at all; if Cass had paid £20,000 derived from the solicitors to a car dealer for a motor car priced at £20,000, the car dealer would not have been enriched. The car dealer would have received £20,000 for a car worth £20,000. But an innocent recipient of stolen money will be enriched if the recipient has not given full consideration. If Cass had given £20,000 of the solicitors' money to a friend as a gift, the friend would have been enriched and unjustly enriched because a donee of stolen money cannot in good conscience rely on the bounty of the thief to deny restitution to the victim of the theft. Complications arise if the donee innocently expends the stolen money in reliance on the validity of the gift before the donee receives notice of the victim's claim for restitution. Thus if the donee spent £20,000 in the purchase of a motor car which he would not have purchased but for the gift, it seems to me that the donee has altered his position on the faith of the gift and has only been unjustly enriched to the extent of the secondhand value of the motor car at the date when the victim of the theft seeks restitution. If the donee spends the £20,000 in a trip round the world, which he would not have undertaken without the gift, it seems to me that the donee has altered his position on the faith of the gift and that he is not unjustly enriched when the victim of the theft seeks restitution. "
The claim against Mr Iqbal