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England and Wales High Court (King's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (King's Bench Division) Decisions >> Shaw v The Estate of Martin Wood (Rev1) [2023] EWHC 975 (KB) (27 April 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/KB/2023/975.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 975 (KB) |
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KING'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(sitting as a Deputy Judge of the King's Bench Division)
____________________
MARK SHAW |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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THE ESTATE OF MARTIN WOOD |
Defendant |
____________________
Rebecca Sleeman (instructed by JMW Solicitors) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 1st, 2nd and 3rd February 2023
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
His Honour Judge Simpkiss:
Introduction
i. Were the loans made under oral or written contracts?
ii. Who were the parties to the loan agreements?
iii. Were earlier loan agreements superseded by a written agreement dated 15th or 16th April 2019 ("the Superseding Agreement")?
iv. What is the total of the loans to be repaid by the Defendant as executor of Martin's estate?
v. What is the total of the loans to be repaid by the Defendant as executor of Martin's estate?
vi. How should interest be calculated?
The Witnesses
The background facts
No |
Date |
Amount |
Repayment date |
Comment |
1. |
24/11/2011 |
£200,000 |
31/5/2012 extended to 31/5 2013 |
Written Repaid in full December 2013 |
2. |
19/06/2012 |
£120,000 |
31/07/2012 plus interest £1,500 |
Written Repaid in full August 2012 with the interest |
3. |
10/09/2012 |
£50,000 |
None specified £500 cash interest |
Oral No repayments |
4. |
30/11/2012 |
£50,000 |
31/01/13 plus interest 10% pa Oral extension |
Written No repayments
|
5. |
?/11/2013 |
£275,000 |
None specified No interest specified |
Oral No repayments |
6. |
25/09/2014 |
£425,000 |
None specified No interest specified |
Written No repayments
|
7. |
01/07/2016 |
200,000 |
01/09/16 |
Written No repayments |
8. |
22/11/2016 |
£50,000 |
|
Oral Repaid in full in 12/2016 Admitted a personal loan |
9. |
04/05/2018 |
£50,000 |
|
Oral Repaid in full on 06/09/18 |
10. |
06/03/2019 |
£160,000 |
None specified |
Oral £30,000 repaid on 17/11/20 Admitted a personal loan |
a. It is drawn up on MWH headed paper and is headed "AGREEMENT".
b. There are 2 parties: Party (1) is Mr. Wood and Party (2) is the Claimant.
c. It expressly states: "It is agreed that Party 2 will loan party 1 the sum of £200,000 by way of bank transfer to the account of …"
d. The specified account for payment is MWH's account with National Westminster Bank ("MWH account").
e. The purpose of the loan is stated as being to enable the purchase of 3 ex MOD gazelle helicopters for subsequent sale.
f. Party (1) agreed to pay interest at 10% pa monthly in arrears.
g. Party (1) agreed to service any additional requirements of Party (2) in respect of helicopter usage over and above existing arrangement.
h. The loan was to be repaid by 31st May 2012 and "Party 1 may settle the total debt at any time prior to [that date] without penalty".
i. Party 1 agreed to provide security in the form of 2 cars and the 3 gazelle helicopters which were going to be purchased.
19th June 2012 (£120,000)
10th September 2012 (£50,000)
30th November 2012 (£50,000)
November 2013 (£275,000)
24th September 2014 (£475,000)
June 2016 (£200,000)
22nd November 2016 (£50,000)
4th May 2018 (£50,000)
6th March 2019 (£160,000)
The purchase of the Gazelle helicopter G-OLDH
The April 2019 superseding agreement
The Issues
The Law
"When the parties are dealing face to face there is a strong presumption that the mistaken party intends to deal with the person physically present or, to put it in other words, there is a presumption that the offer is made to the person present".
"Where there is some form of personal contact between individuals who are conducting negotiations, this approach gives rise to problems. In such a situation I would favour the application of a strong presumption that each intends to contract with the other with whom he is dealing. Where however the contract is exclusively conducted in writing there is no need for the presumption".
a. In a situation where parties agree terms (orally or in correspondence) and then record them formally in a document which they then sign, if there is a discrepancy between the two then the remedy is rectification but this does not mean that there isn't a contract (Chitty para 4-40). In the present case there is no claim for rectification by the Defendant.
b. Where there is a written contract, the parol evidence rule provides that oral evidence cannot be received to add to, subtract from or vary the written terms save in some exceptional circumstances. There is a comprehensive analysis of the legal principles in the judgment of Jackson LJ in Hamid v Francis Bradshaw Partnership [2013] EWCA Civ 470 at para 46 onwards. At paragraph 57 he says:
"In my view the principles which emerge from this line of authorities are the following. (i) Where an issue arises as to the identity of the contracting party referred to in a deed or contract, extrinsic evidence is admissible to assist resolution of that issue. (ii) In determining the identity of the contracting party, the court's approach is objective, not subjective. The question is what a reasonable person, furnished with the relevant information, would conclude. The private thoughts of the protagonists concerning who was contracting with whom are irrelevant and inadmissible. (iii) If the extrinsic evidence establishes that a party has been misdescribed in the document, the court may correct that error as a matter of construction without any need for formal rectification. (iv) where the issue is whether the party signed the document as principal or as agent for someone else, there is no automatic relaxation of the parol evidence rule. The person who signed is the contracting party unless (a) the document makes clear that he signed as agent from a sufficiently identified principal or as the officer of a sufficiently identified company, or (b) extrinsic evidence establishes that both parties knew he was signing as agent or company officer."
c. A similar issue arose in relation to a charter party in Internaut Shipping GmbH v Fercometal Sarl [2003] EWCA Civ 812:
"the signature is, as it were, the party's seal upon the contract … Prima facie a person does not sign a document without intending the be bound under it, or, to put that thought in the objective rather than subjective form, without properly being regarded as intending to be bound under it. If therefore he wishes to be regarded as not binding himself under it, then he should qualify his signature or otherwise make plain that the contract does not bind him personally."
d. Finally, Mr. Coppel referred to Purbrick v Cruz [2020] EWCA Civ 1494 (QB). This was not a trial, but the hearing of an application for a freezing injunction, so that the issue was whether the claimant had a good arguable case based on his claim that the defendant had signed a contract intending to be personally bound. Knowles J decided that there was, placing particular weight on the fact that the defendant was named personally with no qualification identifying him as agent or officer of the company – even though the contract was on the company's headed note paper with its registration and VAT numbers. The money had also been paid into the company's account.
Who were the contracting parties
a. The Claimant intended to contract with Mr. Wood and vice versa;
b. The Claimant intended to contract with MWH and Mr. Wood, acting on behalf of MWH, intended to contract with the Claimant;
c. The Claimant intended to contract with Mr. Wood but Mr. Wood intended to contract with the Claimant, but on behalf of MWH.
The superseding Agreement 15th - 16th April 2019
Other points
Interest
Conclusion