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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Brook Properties (Birmingham) Ltd v Alton & Co (A Firm) [2015] EWHC 3622 (Ch) (14 December 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2015/3622.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 3622 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
BIRMINGHAM DISTRICT REGISTRY
Priory Courts, 33 Bull Street Birmingham, B4 6DS |
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B e f o r e :
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BROOK PROPERTIES (BIRMINGHAM) LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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ALTON & CO (a firm) |
Defendants |
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Mr Alex Hall Taylor (instructed by DWF LLP) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 10-13 November 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Newey :
Narrative
"Meeting arranged whereby client will attend with ID and sign Money Laundering Declaration for tomorrow morning."
"I … contacted the Defendant's offices by telephone … and spoke to Martin Wilcock …. I explained the loan transaction to him and that Brook Properties wished to instruct him to act on its behalf."
"Further to our telephone conversation today, the information and instructions you require are as follows, we are arranging finance for Mr. Nisar Afzal, clients of Levy Solicitors as you are aware. This is to redeem the mortgage that Mr. Afzal has with Bank of Scotland. You are also aware that Eversheds are acting for B.O.S. We need you to firstly get the redemption figure of Eversheds. Also get all necessary documents in place for completion ASAP."
"Accordingly I spoke with Asim at Levy's offices to ascertain some more detail as to the transaction;
1. He tells me that Brook Properties Birmingham Ltd is a company formed for the specific purpose of providing the advance referred to in the attached fax.
2. He further tells me that he has told Mr. Irfan, (the Lender) that he will need to attend these offices with the requisite ID documents and enter into a Money Laundering declaration."
"My recollection is that the solicitor discussed the restraint order at the meeting, but that Mr Irfan did not need to worry, because the legal charge which he and Mrs Parveen were to have would be a first legal charge, such that they would be able to recover the loan by a sale of the property, in the event that Mrs Parveen's uncle did not pay."
"Under a restraint order made under The Proceeds of Crime Act 2002 on 24 July 2006 no disposition by the proprietor of the registered estate is to be registered without the consent of the Director of the Serious Fraud Office … or under a further order of the Court."
The restraint order in question had been made in respect of Mr Afzal by Judge Elwen, sitting in the Southwark Crown Court.
"Who is S.Ahmed? Power of Attorney to be produced via Levys."
When giving evidence, Mr Wilcock said that he thought that he had made the note because it was the first time that he had heard the name. At all events, at 12.19 pm on 10 December Levys faxed to Mr Wilcock a power of attorney that Mr Afzal had granted to Mr Saghir Ahmed Afzal.
"Thank you for your fax of 7th December 2007.
Firstly, we still await a response from you in regards whether you have relayed our request to your client to produce a disclosure statement in accordance with his restraint order. Please respond to this urgently. We find it of concern that you are not willing to provide us with this confirmation as your client is now in contempt and we are dealing with restraint assets.
Secondly, we are grateful for the indication that there is no familial link between Mr and Mrs Parveen and Mr. Afzal.
We reiterate our position, that this is a matter for your client, Brook Properties (Birmingham) Limited … and the Bank of Scotland as to how the repayment of the mortgage arrangements takes place. As such we do not want to and are not in a position to prevent this redemption provided it is satisfactory to the Bank of Scotland. Please be advised that post redemption of the Bank of Scotland loan this property and or any proceeds of sale remain restrained and still form part of Mr. Afzal's realisable assets.
We are grateful for the indication that Messrs Alton & Co has informed you that Brook Properties have complied with all of their money laundering checks and regulations.
Finally, we would request that your client could undertake to forward to us in due course the loan agreement in its final form."
"The monies which I currently hold on your behalf amount to £499,970.00 …. You tell me that a further £150,000.00 … is in transit."
Mr Wilcock then said this:
"The Serious Fraud Office, who have an existing investigation into Mr. Afzal's affairs have given consent for the redemption of the Bank of Scotland mortgage subject to the conditions referred to in the attached letter addressed to Levys. The conditionality, however, gives me something of a problem in that following redemption of the Bank of Scotland mortgage, the restriction placed on the property by the S.F.O. (shown highlighted on the enclosed Office Copy Entries) will still remain and effectively precede your own charge on the property. I should advise, therefore, that unless you instruct me to the contrary you should not proceed with the re-mortgage as your title post-redemption would be tainted"
Mr Wilcock went on to say that he was making further inquiries in relation to the charging order in favour of Mr Olley and that, as he now had notice of the SFO's involvement, he was required to ask for, among other things, confirmation that the money paid into his client account was from Brook's own resources and "from bona fide lenders or investors not connected in any way with Mr. Afzal, directly or indirectly".
"The only fax service we provide in my business is send only, we do not [receive] fax here for customers, if a fax is to come to our machine we will usually shred the document."
"I think I did speak to Mr Wilcock on 11 December 2007; I remember a brief conversation about the issue of Alton & Co sending the money it held on its client account to the solicitors acting for Mr Afzal. I do not recall any discussions about the Serious Fraud Office or that the legal charge to be granted to Brook … would not carry into effect the company's instructions to the Claimant (that is, that Brook … would effectively be stepping into the shoes of the Bank of Scotland, such that it would have the usual powers of the holder of a first legal charge …)."
To my mind, however, it became apparent in cross-examination that Mrs Parveen had no real recollection of her conversation with Mr Wilcock.
"The present situation is that I am currently awaiting the following from my client before I can proceed:
i. Signed authority to proceed with re-mortgage having been informed of the title restrictions.
ii. Certified copy of the sale contract for Land in Pakistan from the proceeds of which the re-mortgage monies are being drawn."
Brook's case
"46 [Counsel for the defendant] also [cited] Yager v Fishman & Co [1944] 1 All E.R. 552 and Carradine Properties v DJ Freeman & Co [1999] Lloyd's Rep PN 48 in support of the proposition that the solicitor's duty to explain matters to his client takes account of the client's own experience; the solicitor is not required to explain matters that should be obvious to a person with the client's experience or background.
47 This is particularly relevant in considering the extent to which a solicitor should explain matters such as the risks involved in taking a particular step. An inexperienced client, or one dealing in matters he is not familiar with, may require more explanation before he can sufficiently understand the risk he is about to take. An experienced client may need less explanation, or even none at all. When an explanation is given, the solicitor may appropriately tailor it to fit his knowledge of the client's understanding. Of course if the client asks for more explanation or appears not to understand, the solicitor may have to go into more detail. But the solicitor is not a guarantor of his client's subjective understanding, and will have fulfilled his duty if he gives an explanation in terms the client reasonably appears to him to be able to understand, and to have understood, even if the client later alleges that he did not in fact understand what was said.
48 In the present case, in my judgment the risks were adequately explained to a person of [the claimant's] experience ….
49 I have found above that [the claimant] did in fact understand the advice he was given. Even if I had found he did not subjectively understand that advice, it would have been fatal to his claim that the advice was given in terms suitable for a person of his experience and that he gave [the solicitor] the impression at the time that he had understood it."
The primary case
The alternative case
Conclusion