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 >> Vivian v Koningsveld & Ors [2010] EWHC 3961 (Ch) (29 October 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2010/3961.html Cite as: [2010] EWHC 3961 (Ch) |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]
CHANCERY DIVISION
Royal Courts of Justice Strand, London WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
(Sitting as a Deputy Judge of the High Court)
BETWEEN:
____________________
VIVIAN |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
||
KONINGSVELD and 2 others |
Defendants |
____________________
Wordwave International, a Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, 8th Floor, London, EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7421 4046 Fax No: 020 7422 6134
Web: www.merrillcorp.com/mls E-mail: [email protected]
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MR JOHN RANDALL QC:
"…This will involve severing the joint ownership of some of the assets so that they were held as tenants in common…"
Beyond that conventional advice, the letter went on to recommend a somewhat elaborate trust structure which, in the event, as I shall shortly explain, was not something that the claimant chose to pursue.
"The deeds of variation clearly would enable the nil rate band attributable to each of the estates to be utilised based on the nil rate band available at the date of each respective death…"
Mr Yalden went on to advise, in essence, that he felt that the trust structure which had been recommended by Miss Jackson was, firstly, unnecessary and, secondly, potentially disadvantageous; his advice was in due course accepted by the claimant.
"Mrs Vivian now intends to vary her mother's will so that her share [her 50% share in residue under her mother's will] should fall back into her late husband's estate, thereby achieving a saving of inheritance tax on Mrs Adams' estate. She also wishes to vary her father's will [so as to include] gifts to her son, two grandchildren and stepdaughter. The value of these gifts is unknown at the present."
"The additional £265,000 which will form the specific bequests in Mr Adams' varied will can all come from funds in his sole name, being more than £329,000 – see the typewritten schedule of his assets including joint assets which would have passed to Mrs Adams by survivorship."
"I was also always clear that this could only be achieved by severing the joint tenancy of certain assets owned by the deceased and Mrs Adams."
Then towards the end of her witness statement, having quoted from counsel's e- mail of 23 January 2007 (as I have already done), she states as follows (at paragraph 12):
"As a result of the misunderstanding as to the size and nature of the deceased's estate, the deed of variation relating to the deceased's estate did not effect the severance of the joint tenancy by which the deceased and Mrs Adams held any of their property."
"Although the deceased's estate was extremely modest, I understood from Miss Jackson that it would be possible to increase this estate by effecting a severance of some of the assets which the deceased had owned jointly with my stepmother."
Then later in her witness statement, speaking of when the two deeds of variation settled by counsel were placed before her, she says (in paragraph 13):
"As far as I was concerned I believed that they achieved the objectives I desired, namely the reduction of inheritance tax payable on the two estates by passing an amount of money back into the deceased's estate and for a number of additional specific bequests to be made to my son, stepdaughter and grandsons, and reducing the amount of the bequests which I received …"
Then in the following paragraph she states:
"I now understand that the deeds did not sever the joint tenancy by which the deceased and my stepmother owned the majority of their property and therefore did not have the effect which I had instructed RHY to achieve, namely of reducing the amount of inheritance tax payable on the two estates. Had I known or realised that the deeds of variation were defective, I would not have signed them and would have required them to be altered."
I am quite satisfied that that is cogent evidence which I can and should accept, clearly fitting in, as it does, with the various contemporaneous documents from which I have already quoted. I therefore turn to the legal principles which I must apply.
"… rectification may be ordered where the words which the party chose to use did not give effect to their intention… It is not necessary that the party should at the material time have formulated the words which it is sought to insert by rectification so long as they had the necessary common intention as to the substance of what would be achieved by the rectification sought."
Those propositions are supported by the cases of Grand Metropolitan plc v The William Hill Group Ltd [1997] 1 BCLC 390, and Swainland Builders Ltd v Freehold Properties Limited Ltd [2002] EWCA Civ 560, the latter of which Mr John has placed before me. Snell continues (on page 338):
"Usually the mistake is one of fact but rectification may also be granted where the mistake is as to the legal effect of the language used."
One passage later in Snell which would potentially pose a serious obstacle for the claim before me is at paragraph 14-18, where it is stated, under the side heading "Rectification unnecessary by reason of subsequent agreement":
"If all those concerned voluntarily rectify the instrument, the court will not decree rectification even if such a decree would, by operating retrospectively, have fiscal advantages which the voluntary rectification lacks."
Footnoted is the case of Whiteside v Whiteside [1950] Ch 65 (CA).
"The true principles governing these matters I conceive to be as follows. (1) The court has a discretion to rectify where it is satisfied that the document does not carry out the intention of the parties. This is the basic principle. (2) Parties are entitled to enter into any transaction which is legal, and, in particular, are entitled to arrange their affairs to avoid payment of tax if they legitimately can. The Finance Acts 1969 and 1975 tell them explicitly how they can do so in the case of estate duty and capital transfer tax. (3) If a mistake is made in a document legitimately designed to avoid the payment of tax, there is no reason why it should not be corrected. The Crown is in no privileged position qua such a document. It would not be a correct exercise of the discretion in such circumstances to refuse rectification merely because the Crown would thereby be deprived of an accidental and unexpected windfall. (4) As counsel for the trustees submitted, neither Whiteside v Whiteside nor any other case contains anything which compels the court to the conclusion that rectification of a document should be refused where the sole purpose of seeking it is to enable the parties to obtain a legitimate fiscal advantage which it was their common intention to obtain at the time of the execution of the document."
"In my judgement, the effect of the authorities is that the court cannot rectify a document merely because it fails to achieve the fiscal objectives of the parties to it… The specific intention of the parties as to how the fiscal objective was to be achieved must be shown if the court is to order rectification."
As he had earlier referred to in paragraph 13 of his judgment, this is linked to the well-known dictum of Millett J in Gibbon v Mitchell [1990] 1 WLR 1304 at 1309D-F, where that distinguished judge drew the important distinction between a mistake as to the effect of the transaction and a mistake which merely goes to the consequences or advantages to be gained from entering into it.
"that the Deed of Variation fails to give effect to the true agreement of the parties. So long as a mistake relates to the meaning or effect of a document…relief may be available even though the actual words of the document were deliberately adopted by the parties. It is now firmly established that the fact that the parties intended to use a particular form of words in the mistaken belief that it was achieving their common intention does not prevent the court from giving effect to their true intention…where (as here) the mistake results from the inadvertent omission of a word or phrase from a document, and it is sought to introduce additional words into the document to cure that mistake, it may, in practice, prove easier to discharge the evidential burden of establishing the existence of a mistake than in the case where words have been inadvertently included in the document which it is sought to rectify."
"…my task is to evaluate the uncontradicted evidence, and to decide whether it is good enough to discharge the standard of cogent proof required in order to satisfy the requirements of a claim for rectification. In the present case, I am satisfied on the evidence, to the required standard of proof, that the true intention of the parties to the Deed of Variation was not in any way to alter the incidence of the burden of the inheritance tax chargeable upon the deceased's estate but merely to reduce the amount of tax payable to HMRC."
At paragraph 20, again dealing with his conclusion on those facts (which I quote in this judgment because there appears to me to be a clear parallel with the present case), he said:
"I am satisfied that this is not a case where the parties merely proceeded under a misapprehension as to the true fiscal consequences of the Deed of Variation as actually drafted. Rather, the Claimant has demonstrated a specific common intention as to how the parties' fiscal objectives were to be achieved; and he has established that, owing to a mistake in the way in which that intention was expressed in the Deed of Variation, effect has not been given to that intention."
"That was said to be sufficient to enable the court to entertain a claim for rectification when, unlike the situation in the earlier case of Whiteside v Whiteside [1950] Ch 65, there had been no supplemental deed of rectification. [Counsel] recognised that, in the present case, a deed of rectification had been executed; but he submitted that the existence of a deed of rectification could only preclude the court from exercising its powers of rectification where, as a result of the deed, there was no longer an issue between the parties which was capable of being contested (as in Whiteside v Whiteside itself). That was not the situation here because HMRC refused to accept the efficacy of the Deed of Rectification for inheritance tax purposes; and the Claimant had not sought to challenge the correctness of that position."
A few paragraphs after expressing his acceptance of counsel's submissions, Judge Hodge added these further observations at paragraph 22:
"I am also satisfied that, notwithstanding the 2007 Deed of Rectification, there still remains an issue, capable of being contested between the parties, which will be addressed by an order for rectification. HMRC's letter…makes it clear that HMRC cannot accept the Deed of Rectification as having any effect for Inheritance Tax purposes unless the parties obtain a Court Order [for …] rectification. The Claimant does not seek to challenge HMRC's position; and, since HMRC are not a party to this litigation, it is not open to me to do so… Conversely, by their letter of 29th May 2010, HMRC confirm that if the Court orders rectification of the Deed of Variation, HMRC will be bound by that. It follows that an order for rectification will have practical consequences, in terms of altering HMRC's treatment of the ultimate incidence of the inheritance tax chargeable in respect of the pecuniary legacy to the two children effected by clause 2.1(a) of the Will, as varied by the Deed of Rectification."
"It had been argued that the only effect of refusing rectification would be to deprive the husband of a benefit from the point of view of payment of surtax, but, as Lord Cohen pointed out at page 77, there was no evidence that it was the common intention to secure him that benefit… As I read Whiteside v Whiteside, it may well be an authority for saying that if the only result of the rectification of an error, which was due to the plaintiff himself, will be to give the plaintiff a tax advantage, then that may well be a good reason for refusing to exercise the equitable jurisdiction. Where, on the other hand, the document is found not to carry out the true intention of the parties, and rectification, whilst enabling that intention to be carried out, incidentally gives or may give one of the parties a tax advantage, the case is not an authority for saying that such presence or possibility of such tax advantage is a bar to relief."
"the question of tax [i.e. surtax] was never present in the mind of the plaintiff's former wife so that rectification was being asked for, when, owing to the execution of the supplementary deed, there was no issue between the parties.
I do not find the decision very easy to follow [i.e. the decision in Whiteside v Whiteside], but it seems clear, contrary to the facts in the present case, that the court in Whiteside v Whiteside was not satisfied that it was the intention of both parties at the date of the original deed that the wife should receive the £1,000 free of tax, so as to enable the husband to claim a benefit from the point of view of surtax. Cohen LJ, for example, states: '… there is no evidence that it was the common intention of the parties to secure him that benefit.'"
Note 1 Subsequently reported at [2010] STC 2544 and [2010] WTLR 1675. [Back]