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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Stevenson & Anor v Singh & Ors [2012] EWHC 2880 (QB) (06 November 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2012/2880.html Cite as: [2012] EWHC 2880 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(sitting as a Judge of the High Court)
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JULIAN RICHARD STEVENSON SOPHIA TAMSIN STEVENSON |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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SURJIT SINGH RICHARD MICHAEL PHILLIPS TERENCE ZAMMIT AL-AMIN RAHMAN KASHIM BUKAR SHETTIMA HAQUE & HAUSMANN (A FIRM) MRS. S. K. SANGERA LESLEY ANNE MASON DONNA MARIE ROBSON FREEDEX LIMITED |
Defendants |
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William Willson (instructed by L. P. Evans) for the eighth defendant for the first two days of the trial only
The first defendant appeared in person
The second defendant appeared in person on the first two days of the trial only
The third, fourth, fifth, sixth, seventh, ninth and tenth defendants did not appear and were not represented.
Hearing dates: 9, 10 and 11 October 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
His Honour Judge Richard Seymour Q.C. :
Introduction
"Unless the Fourth Defendant do by 4 pm on Monday 12th March 2012 give standard disclosure by list in compliance with the Order of Master Fontaine dated 25 November 2011, his Defence herein be struck out and the Claimant be at liberty to enter judgment in the sum of £1,250,000 plus interest to be assessed."
The pleaded case against the first, second, third, fourth, fifth, eighth, ninth and tenth defendants
"To the best of the Claimant's knowledge and belief and upon the admission of the Third Defendant, made in writing on about 20 June 2011 the sum of £565,000 was paid by the Second Defendant to the Third Defendant, who has further claimed he has paid the same less £96,085 to the Fifth Defendant."
"The Fifth Defendant fraudulently represented to the Claimant through his solicitor and agent the Sixth Defendant that he was the registered freehold owner of the Property and entitled to sell the same. In so doing, he conspired with the First, Second, Third and Fourth Defendants or some of them, to defraud the Claimant of the purchase price paid for the Property, namely £1,250,000.
Further, the sale of the Property by the Fifth Defendant and receipt of the purchase monies by each of the First, Second, Third, Fourth and Fifth Defendants and Seventh, Eighth, Ninth and Tenth Defendants as set out above amounted to a dishonest assistance in a breach of trust.
Further or in the alternative, the purchase monies were paid under a mistake of fact and the Claimant is entitled to be repaid the same as monies had and received to the use of the Claimant."
The law in relation to conspiracy and dishonest assistance
"107. It is common ground that there are two types of actionable conspiracy, conspiracy to injure by lawful means and conspiracy to injure by unlawful means. The first is sometimes described simply as a conspiracy to injure and the second as a conspiracy to use unlawful means (see eg Clerk and Lindsell on Torts (17th edn, 1995) pp 1267-1268, paras 23-76). In our view they are both conspiracies to injure and their ingredients are the same, with one crucial difference. In both cases there must be conspiracy to injure the claimant, but in the first case (in which the means employed would otherwise be lawful) the predominant purpose of the conspiracy must be to injure the claimant whereas in the second case, although the defendant must intend to injure the claimant, injury to the claimant need not be his predominant purpose.
108. We shall treat them as different torts, although, as it seems to us, they are better regarded as species of the same tort. It matters not. For present purposes we would define them as follows. (1) A conspiracy to injure by lawful means is actionable where the claimant proves that he has suffered loss or damage as a result of action taken pursuant to a combination or agreement between the defendant and another person or persons to injure him, where the predominant purpose of the defendant is to injure the claimant. (2) A conspiracy to injure by unlawful means is actionable where the claimant proves that he has suffered loss or damage as a result of unlawful action taken pursuant to a combination or agreement between the defendant and another person or persons to injure him by unlawful means, whether or not it is the predominant purpose of the defendant to do so. We shall call them a 'lawful means conspiracy' and an 'unlawful means conspiracy' respectively.
109. Those principles seem to us to be consistent with the authorities, including in particular Lonrho Ltd v Shell Petroleum Co Ltd (No 2) [1981] 2 All ER 456, [1982] AC 173 and Lonrho plc v Fayed [1991] 3 All ER 303, [1992] 1 AC 448, which analyse the leading cases. (See also for example Rookes v Barnard [1964] 1 All ER 367 at 400, [1964] AC 1129 at 1209 where Lord Devlin drew a clear distinction between the two types of conspiracy.)
110. It is important to note that the tort of conspiracy to injure by unlawful means is different in significant respects both from the crime of conspiracy and from the law of contract. A criminal conspiracy is in essence an agreement to commit a crime and, as such, is complete when the agreement is made, whether or not it is carried out. For this reason care must be taken in considering decisions in criminal cases where (as here) the question is whether the tort of conspiracy was committed. Lord Diplock put it in this way in the Shell Petroleum case:
'Regarded as a civil tort, however, conspiracy is a highly anomalous cause of action. The gist of the cause of action is damage to the plaintiff; so long as it remains unexecuted, the agreement, which alone constitutes the crime of conspiracy, causes no damage; it is only acts done in execution of the agreement that are capable of doing that. So the tort, unlike the crime, consists not of agreement but of concerted action taken pursuant to agreement.' (See [1981] 2 All ER 456 at 463, [1982] AC 173 at 188.)
In that passage Lord Diplock appears to have been referring to both types of conspiracy. The essence of the unlawful means conspiracy is injury to the claimant as a result of an unlawful act or acts where two or more people have combined to cause the injury. It is not necessary that every overt act is done by every conspirator, but the act must be done pursuant to the conspiracy or combination.
111. A further feature of the tort of conspiracy, which is also found in criminal conspiracies, is that, as the judge pointed out (at p 124), it is not necessary to show that there is anything in the nature of an express agreement, whether formal or informal. It is sufficient if two or more persons combine with a common intention, or, in other words, that they deliberately combine, albeit tacitly, to achieve a common end. Although civil and criminal conspiracies have important differences, we agree with the judge that the following passage from the judgment of the Court of Appeal Criminal Division delivered by O'Connor LJ in R v Siracusa (1990) 90 Cr App R 340 at 349 is of assistance in this context:
'Secondly, the origins of all conspiracies are concealed and it is usually quite impossible to establish when or where the initial agreement was made, or when or where other conspirators were recruited. The very existence of the agreement can only be inferred from overt acts. Participation in a conspiracy is infinitely variable: it can be active or passive. If the majority shareholder and director of a company consents to the company being used for drug smuggling carried out in the company's name by a fellow director and minority shareholder, he is guilty of conspiracy. Consent, that is agreement or adherence to the agreement, can be inferred if it is proved that he knew what was going on and the intention to participate in the furtherance of the criminal purpose is also established by his failure to stop the unlawful activity.'
Thus it is not necessary for the conspirators all to join the conspiracy at the same time, but we agree with the judge that the parties to it must be sufficiently aware of the surrounding circumstances and share the same object for it properly to be said that they were acting in concert at the time of the acts complained of. In a criminal case juries are often asked to decide whether the alleged conspirators were 'in it together'. That may be a helpful question to ask, but we agree with Mr Brodie that it should not be used as a method of avoiding detailed consideration of the acts which are said to have been done in pursuance of the conspiracy.
112. In most cases it will be necessary to scrutinise the acts relied upon in order to see what inferences can be drawn as to the existence or otherwise of the alleged conspiracy or combination. It will be the rare case in which there will be evidence of the agreement itself. Curiously this is such a case, although it appears to us that in crucial respects it is also necessary to draw inferences as to the extent of the agreement from what happened after it. Thus the essential nature of the agreement can be seen in part from the evidence of Mr Al Bader and Captain Stafford, although, especially in the case of Captain Stafford, the extent of the agreement will depend upon inferences to be drawn both from the surrounding circumstances and subsequent events."
"Before leaving cases where there is real doubt, one further point should be noted. To inquire, in such cases, whether a person dishonestly assisted in what is later held to be a breach of trust is to ask a meaningful question, which is capable of being given a meaningful answer. This is not always so if the question is posed in terms of "knowingly" assisted. Framing the question in the latter form all too often leads one into tortuous convolutions about the "sort" of knowledge required, when the truth is that "knowingly" is inapt as a criterion when applied to the gradually darkening spectrum where the differences are of degree and not kind."
"These examples suggest that what matters is the state of mind of the third party sought to be made liable, not the state of mind of the trustee [that is, the person owing the fiduciary obligation]. The trustee will be liable in any event for the breach of trust, even if he acted innocently, unless excused by an exemption clause in the trust instrument or relieved by the court. But his state of mind is essentially irrelevant to the question whether the third party should be made liable to the beneficiaries for the breach of trust. If the liability of the third party is fault-based, what matters is the nature of his fault, not that of the trustee. In this regard dishonesty on the part of the third party would seem to be a sufficient basis for his liability, irrespective of the state of mind of the trustee who is in breach of trust. It is difficult to see why, if the third party dishonestly assisted in a breach, there should be a further prerequisite to his liability, namely that the trustee also must have been acting dishonestly. The alternative view would mean that a dishonest third party is liable if the trustee is dishonest, but if the trustee did not act dishonestly that of itself would excuse a dishonest third party from liability. That would make no sense."
"Before considering this issue further it will be helpful to define the terms being used by looking more closely at what dishonesty means in this context. Whatever may be the position in some criminal or other contexts (see, for instance, Reg. v. Ghosh [1982] QB 1053), in the context of the accessory liability principle acting dishonestly, or with a lack of probity, which is synonymous, means simply not acting as an honest person would in the circumstances. This is an objective standard. At first sight this may seem surprising. Honesty has a connotation of subjectivity, as distinct from the objectivity of negligence. Honesty, indeed, does have a strong subjective element in that it is a description of a type of conduct assessed in the light of what a person actually knew at the time, as distinct from what a reasonable person would have known or appreciated. Further, honesty and its counterpart dishonesty are mostly concerned with advertent conduct, not inadvertent conduct. Carelessness is not dishonesty. Thus for the most part dishonesty is to be equated with conscious impropriety. However, these subjective characteristics of honesty do not mean that individuals are free to set their own standards of honesty in particular circumstances. The standard of what constitutes honest conduct is not subjective. Honesty is not an optional scale, with higher and lower values according to the moral standards of each individual. If a person knowingly appropriates another's property, he will not escape a finding of dishonesty simply because he sees nothing wrong in such behaviour.
In most situations there is little difficulty in identifying how an honest person would behave. Honest people do not intentionally deceive others to their detriment. Honest people do not knowingly take others' property. Unless there is a very good and compelling reason, an honest person does not participate in a transaction if he knows it involves a misapplication of trust assets to the detriment of the beneficiaries. Nor does an honest person in such a case deliberately close his eyes and ears, or deliberately not ask questions, lest he learn something he would rather not know, and then proceed regardless. "
"There remains to be considered the position where third parties are acting for, or dealing with, dishonest trustees. In such cases the trustees would have no claims against the third party. The trustees would suffer no loss by reason of the third party's failure to discover what was going on. The question is whether in this type of situation the third party owes a duty of care to the beneficiaries to, in effect, check that a trustee is not misbehaving. The third party must act honestly. The question is whether that is enough.
In agreement with the preponderant view, their Lordships consider that dishonesty is an essential ingredient here. There may be cases where, in the light of the particular facts, a third party will owe a duty of care to the beneficiaries. As a general proposition, however, beneficiaries cannot reasonably expect that all the world dealing with trustees should owe them a duty of care lest the trustees are behaving dishonestly."
The evidence of the defendants
"I deny all allegations against me.
I purely brokered a transaction from a sale of a house and the money from a solicitor's account, with an undertaking and permission consent for use of money.
I first met Ali and Saddiq Khan in Jan 09 in Dubai. They work for the Royal Family.
They told me returns on yields in banks at 1 or 2 per cent, stock, shares, bonds, saving were poor returns and buying gold was the way forward.
He proved to be correct. £941 an ounce to £1660 an ounce was very good business.
I had simple instructions to send £585,000 to Coutts Bank and keep my commission and buy at £941 an ounce.
I spoke to Paul Beasley and made the order. I kept my commission and never heard anything."
"I deny all allegations against me.
I received all funds from a solicitors with solicitors undertaking and instructions see enclosed copies attach e mail.
I purely brokered a transfer for clients from proceeds of a property transaction.
Attach e mail to Coutts Bank
I met Ali and Saddiq Khan in Dubai approx Jan 09. They worked for the Royal Family. Mr. Khan advised me he has sold a property in North London and with stocks and shares low and bank interest low gold would be a good investment and to transfer £585,000 to Coutts. My commission was £40,000.
The solicitors would give me consent, undertaking and permission to use funds documents enclosed.
I told Mr. Khan I would require a undertaking that the funds were for the sale of a property which he promised from solicitors Haque & Hausmann solicitors. My instructions were to speak to Mr. Paul Beasley at Baird & Co. which I did comply with."
"£585,000 received via CHAPS on 10/06/11
£11,372.50 to be refund on 13/06/11 by CHAPS "
"I spoke to Mr. Paul Beasley at Baird & Co. and made order.
I kept my £40,000 commission. Saddiq was given the bullion and everything was fine."
"4. You say in your statement: "I kept my commission. Saddiq was given the bullion and everything was fine." Please explain what has become of the £40,000 which you received, and the balance of the monies (including the £11,000 which was refunded to you by Baird & Co.).
5. Please explain as fully as possible the circumstances in which you handed the gold bullion to Mr. Khan, including a copy of all instructions and correspondence relating to the matter, the location of the hand-over, any receipt that you received and full contact details for Mr. Khan."
"QUESTION 4 The commission was due to me after I did a transaction. I paid creditors.
QUESTION 5 Just down the road from Baird & Co. As you can appreciate I had been paid my commission and did not want to [be] in control of such large sums. His home address was around Dubai Marina."
"kashim,
i have instructed my banks to forward the proceeds from the sale to your all nominees, as per your instructions. they should be recieving funds by the end of today's working day. once gain thnak you for instructing us and we look forward to working for you in future."
"Further to our telephone conversation about the account details to remit the sum of £625,000.
I hereby confirm in writing the instruction to send £625,000 (six hundred and twenty five thousand pounds only) to the following personal account:
Mr SURJIT SINGH
SORT CODE: 07-10-40
ACCOUNT NO: 52792740"
"Re: Mr Shettima's of 5 MANOR HOUSE DRIVE, BRONDESBURY PARK LONDON NW6 7DE Investment in Malta
My negotiations and Agreement with Mr. Shettima regarding his investment in Malta have now come to an end and tomorrow the 8th of June his solicitor will pay into your Barclay's account the sum of £583,000 (Five Hundred and Eighty Three Thousand GB Pounds) less professional fees, which you are receiving on my behalf. Please find hereunder Mr. Shettima's solicitor's details for your perusal:
Name: HAQUE & HAUSMANN SOLICITORS
Address: 124 Whitechapel Road
Whitechapel
London E1 1JE
I will be in touch with you tomorrow by phone with details of the disbursement of this sum. Once I will receive the official copies of the Loan/Investment Agreement between Mr. Shettima and myself, I will provide you with a copy for your Tac purposes.
Thank you once again for providing me with this service as after the trouble I had with my bank, I can't risk that these funds get blocked by my bank."
"2. I am a self-employed sales consultant for a company called Jasom Ltd. trading as "Rough Sawn Warehouse". The company imports furniture from Malta for sale in The U.K. My remuneration from the company is based entirely on commission. I receive 5% of the value of all orders which I obtain from U.K. customers. I have worked in this capacity since November 2011. The furniture sold by this company is manufactured in Malta by a company called Cubic Pine (Malta) Ltd. I am an agent for this company in The United Kingdom.
3. In 2010 I was working in association with a company called Culzean Ltd. This company traded in timber from various countries and supplied timber to saw-mills based mainly in Eastern Europe and The United States. There was significant potential in this business and in particular it was my intention to invest in saw-mills in Romania which would supply timber to The U.K. market. However, for this investment to take place I needed capital and therefore made approaches to various people and companies that I was actively seeking investors in this venture.
4. In about April 2011 I was approached by a man by the name of Kashim Bukar Shettima. As far as I am able to recall the initial contact was made when Mr. Shettima telephoned me on my mobile number. He informed me that he had heard that I was seeking capital to invest in saw-mills in Romania and then import timber to The U.K. and Malta. Following that call various meetings took place between myself and Mr. Shettima in various locations in the London area. He expressed a positive interest in investing in the timber venture. In all my meetings with Mr. Shettima he gave the impression that he was an experienced businessman and appeared to be quite affluent. In the course of our discussions Mr. Shettima told me that he was intending to sell his home at 5, Manor House Drive, Brondesbury Park, London NW6 7DE for a sum in excess of £1,000,000.00. He did not provide details of the exact amount of the sale price of the property. The money he intended to invest in the timber business would be derived from the sale of the property and Mr. Shettima informed me that he was prepared to invest a sum of between £565,000 and £600,000 in the venture. It was decided between myself and Mr. Shettima that the investment would be expressed as a loan with the rate of interest fixed at 20% per annum but paid by monthly instalments. Alternatively, it was agreed that the 5th Defendant would receive 50% of any profits generated by the business. At the request of Mr. Shettima the instalments were to be paid to his solicitors Haque and Hausmann.
5. I had no reason to doubt the fact that Mr. Shettima was the lawful owner of the property at 5, Manor House Drive. I have never actually entered the property but as I recall on one occasion we actually met outside the house. I also had no reason to doubt the fact that Mr. Shettima was selling the property for a sum in excess of £1,000,000.00. On more than one occasion, Mr. Shettima showed me letters and e-mails relating to sale of the property. These included e-mails and correspondence originating from the 6th Defendants, Haque and Hausmann Solicitors who were the solicitors representing Mr. Shettima in the sale of the property.
6. Mr. Shettima informed me that the sale of his property was due to take place on the 8th June 2011. He also informed me that it was his intention to open a business account purely for this venture. However, Mr. Shettima failed to open a business account and as I did not have a business account, I requested that the money which Mr. Shettima agreed as a loan or investment in the timber business was to be transferred to the account of a friend of mine by the name of Michael Phillips (R.M. Phillips) the Second Defendant. I explained all of the details of the transaction to Michael Phillips who agreed to receive the money on my account but purely on the basis that the money would be transferred from a solicitor's account. Accordingly, on the 9th June 2011 the sum of £565,000 was transferred to the account of the Second Defendant at Barclays Bank Romford Branch, account number: 90041335. Mr. Phillips had agreed that he would hold the money to my order and pending my instructions.
7. About 4 days after the money was transferred to the account of the Second Defendant, I received a telephone call from Mr. Shettima. He sounded quite alarmed and stressed and he told me that he had a serious financial problem and urgently needed the money which had been transferred on his instructions to the account of Mr. Phillips at Barclays Bank in Romford to be returned to him and that he would have no choice but to withdraw from our agreement. He sounded very desperate. Mr. Shettima also informed me that he would require most of the money to be repaid to him in cash.
8. Therefore, I made arrangements to repay the money to Mr. Shettima less the sum of £96,085.00 which Mr. Shettima agreed would be retained by me to cover compensation for cancellation of the contract and costs involved in arranging for the refund of the money to him. The money was returned to Mr. Shettima in cash on the dates as set out in the Document dated 18th June 2011 and headed: "Re: Mr. Shettima's Withdrawal From The JV\Loan Agreement between Shettima and Zammit" On each occasion the money was handed personally to Mr. Shettima in cash by either myself or someone acting on my behalf. Therefore between the 14th and the 18th June 2011 a total of £468,240.00 was returned to Mr. Shettima in cash. The sum of £150,000 was transferred on instructions by Mr. Shettima to a Hong Kong company called Lucky Falcon Ltd."
"I the undersigned Mr. Kashim Shettima, holder of British Passport No. 934517633 am hereby giving receipt of £564,325.00 (five hundred and sixty four thousand, three hundred and twenty five pounds) in cash, which sum I hadi [sic] instructed my law firm Haque & Hausmann of Whitechapel to pay to Mr. Terence Zammit at the co-ordinates supplied, such sum had been intended by me to be an investment from my side in the Timber Trade suggested by Mr. Zammit for a period of 6 months.
I received the money as follows:
£229,000 Tuesday 14th of June
£39,240 Wednesday 15th of June
£50,000 Friday 17th of June
£150,000 Today
£96,085 Cashing Up Costs and Abortive Fees due to Mr. Zammit
Declaration
I had intended to use the proceeds of my property sale as an investment with Mr. zammit [sic] to purchase timber from Rumania and sell it to the UK and Malta. Due to a family emergency i [sic] had to decline and ask for the investment back immediately."
"11. The Second Defendant had approached Freedex on 13 June 2011 and he informed me that he needed to have immediate access to substantial sums of cash over a short period in order to pay builders who were carrying out house renovation works for him. The Second Defendant wanted to withdraw lump sums of cash over one month. However, I informed the Second Defendant that whilst Freedex would be able to provide large sums of cash, Freedex could not hold client monies for more than 1 or 2 days. Therefore, it was agreed that the Second Defendant would transfer the sum of £200,000 to Freedex's bank account by way of telegraphic transfer on 13 June 2011 and he would collect the same on the following day, less Freedex's commission of 1%. The transfer from the Second Defendant (in the name of Mr. Richard Michael) to Freedex's bank account is exhibited at page 13.
12. Thereafter, the Second Defendant attended Freedex's premises on 14 June 2011, as agreed, to collect the cash. The Second Defendant was accompanied by a white male on arrival. The Second Defendant provided me with proof of his identity upon which I handed him £198,000 in £20 notes. Freedex retained the sum of £2,000 for its 1% commission. Once the Second Defendant and the other male left Freedex's premises, I recall seeing them getting into a Land Rover which was being driven by a third white male. They drove away and this was the last occasion I saw the Second Defendant or had any contact with him."
Damages
" The principle is that nobody should recover more damage than he has in fact suffered. In no circumstances should anyone recover a sum exceeding the amount of damage he has suffered from the events giving rise to that cause of action.
We have been referred to a number of cases where there are two defendants, and the plaintiff recovers damages against both defendants. In all such cases it has been held that he is not entitled to execution for more than the total loss he has suffered. (See, for example, Morris Ltd v. Perrott and Bolton [1945] 1 All ER 567 per Lord Goddard at 570) And Imperial Bank of Canada v. Begley [1936] 2 All ER 367, where Lord Maugham, at page 375 said:
"It is clear that in the circumstances the respondent was not put to her election to sue either McElroy or the appellants; she could sue both or either, subject of course to this, that she could not recover more than the total sum due to her."
If, therefore, the plaintiff has recovered any sum in satisfaction of a cause of action arising out of circumstances which also give rise to a different cause of action against another, but where the damages coincide, then he must give credit for that sum in proceedings involving that second cause of action.
It is for the defendant to show, in the first place, a prima facie case that the plaintiff has been wholly or partially compensated for the loss he has suffered. In my opinion, however, once there is a prima facie case that the plaintiff has received a sum of money which reduces the loss he has suffered from that particular event, it is for him to show, if it be the case, that some part of that sum was for another, unrelated, cause of action.
In this case, in my opinion, there can be no possible doubt that some part of the £30,000 paid into Court and taken out by the plaintiffs comprised damages which were for injuries for which damage was also being claimed against the defendant in this action. It was then for the plaintiff to show which, if any, parts of the £30,000 were not so attributable. The judge found that some of the bad workmanship of Laings was not attributable to the defendants, and that the major part of the loss of amenity was not attributable to the defendants. The judge deducted these two sums from the £30,000 and held that the balance was for items attributable to both Laings and the defendants and, insofar as it covered the items attributable to the defendants, would reduce their liability. I agree that he was right to do so."
"Now in the first place there were, in the instant case, clearly two possible approaches, but as I think only two possible approaches. One is that taken by the learned judge, namely, that inasmuch as, at the hearing, the money has actually been received by the plaintiffs, one has to ascertain the amount for which credit has to be given and then enter judgment for the balance. The alternative would be to enter judgment for the whole amount for which, without any credit, the defendants could have been sued, but to provide in the judgment that execution shall not issue for more than whatever is the appropriate amount, having regard to the moneys accepted on the payment in.
The latter course is the one which I think Mr. Price has adumbrated, and is theoretically a possible course, but since it would involve, in effect, an inquiry which, in the end as I see it, would appropriately be conducted by an official referee, and since the matter was already before an official referee, the course which the learned judge took was not only, as it seems to me, the right and sensible course; it was the only course, and I entirely reject the suggestion that he ought not to have taken it. He having then decided to take the only sensible course, the next question is: Did he approach the task before him in the right way?"
"The first live issue, as between Chemical and Skandia, is whether the costs of the action against Notcutt ought to be deducted from the credit to be given. Notcutt was liable to Chemical on the ground of Notcutt's vicarious responsibility for the fraud of an employee. I am satisfied that Notcutt would have been held liable in full for the agreed costs if the matter had proceeded to trial against Notcutt. The principle appears to be that if a plaintiff who receives payment from one tortfeasor establishes an additional separate claim against that tortfeasor, the payment is allocated first to that claim, and credit must be given in favour of the second tortfeasor only for the excess necessarily referable to the overlapping claim. That seems to me the approach indicated by the Court of Appeal judgments in Townsend v. Stone Toms & Partners (a firm) [1984] CA Transcript 260 and by the actual decision of the Court of Appeal in The Morgengry, The Blackcock [1900] P 1, a decision which was not cited in Townsend v. Stone Toms & Partners. It also appears to me to be the approach which is required by an application of first principles. Prima facie therefore the costs of Chemical's action should be deducted from the credit to be given for the receipt of money under the Notcutt settlement."
"But what is the measure of the damages? Is it the costs which they might have recovered from a competent and solvent next friend if they had succeeded in the action, or is it the expense to which they have been put in consequence of the futile proceeding? Swinfen Eady J., in dealing with the case of an agent falsely representing he has authority which in fact he has not, adopts in Yonge v. Toynbee the following statement of the law by Lord Esher MR: "The principle of Collen v. Wright extends further than the case of one person inducing another to enter into a contract. The rule to be deduced is, that where a person by asserting that he has the authority of the principal induces another person to enter into any transaction which he would not have entered into but for that assertion, and the assertion turns out to be untrue, to the injury of the person to whom it is made, it must be taken that the person making it undertook that it was true and he is liable personally for the damage that has occurred." The damage which has occurred to these two defendants is represented by the costs which they have incurred in defending the action, and, in my opinion, it is these costs, including the costs of this application, to be taxed as between solicitor and own client, which the plaintiff's solicitors are liable to pay, and I make an order accordingly."
"In truth as I see it, the question whether a warranty of authority has been given rests on a proper analysis of the facts in any given situation, and not on any preconceived notions as [to] what is essential as part of the factual analysis. Of course there is no issue that to establish a warranty of authority as with any other collateral warranty there must be proved a contract under which a promise is made either expressly or by implication to the promisee, for which promise the promisee provides consideration. But consideration can be supplied by the promisee entering into some transaction with a third party in a warranty of authority case just as it can in any other collateral warranty case. Furthermore, the promise can be made to a wide number of people or simply to one person, again all depending on the facts. It follows, as Mr. Jackson has submitted, that the plaintiff, whether as one of the wide number of people to whom the offer is made or by virtue of being the only person to whom the offer is made, has to establish that the promise was made to him. There is also no doubt that what he has to establish is that a promise was made to him by the agent, to the effect that the agent had the authority of the principal, and that he provided consideration by acting in reliance on that promise."
"Mr. Brill undoubtedly represented throughout the negotiations with Mr. Thorley of Gartons that he was authorised to act for Mrs. Penn. It is accepted by Mr. Jackson that if Mr. Wilson had not had knowledge of the fraud, he, as Garton's principal, would have been entitled to rely on the warranty being given by implication by Mr. Brill. This is a concession properly made in my view, but it is important to recognise that the facts of Suleman v. Shahsavari [1988] 1 WLR 1181, referred to by Mr. Jackson in his skeleton argument in making the concession, were different in one material respect. In that case the solicitor actually signed the contract purporting to act for his client. In the instant case it is the negotiations up to the point of signature, and the acting in the exchange of documents which produces the representation on which reliance was placed by Gartons. During the negotiation, following which a number of documents were to be executed in order to bring the transaction to fruition, and in completing the transaction, Mr. Brill knew that Gartons were also acting for the building society. He knew that Gartons would be arranging the completion of the purchase, including arranging for Mr. Wilson to execute a mortgage so as to obtain from the building society the purchase price and secure the building society's interest in the house. Thus he knew that Gartons, in their capacity as the solicitors for the building society, would rely on his having the authority of Mrs. Penn to bring the transaction to fruition, just as much as they relied on the same as the purchaser's solicitors. What is more, Bristol & West through Gartons relied on Mr. Brill having the authority of Mrs. Penn to bring the matter to fruition, in that having obtained from Mr. Wilson execution of a charge, money was advanced and available for the purpose of completing the transaction. If at any stage Mr. Brill had said that he did not have the authority of Mrs. Penn the result would have been that Bristol & West would have proceeded no further.
There was a debate at the trial as to whether Mr. Brill knew the actual name of the building society. The judge found that it did not matter whether he knew the actual name or not, but was of the view on balance that it was likely that the actual name had been given by Mr. Thorley to Mr. Brill. I am clear that it matters not whether the actual name of the building society was known to Mr. Brill. I should however also add that, on the oral evidence to which we were referred, if it had mattered I would have been doubtful if the judge's finding that Mr. Thorley had told Mr. Brill the actual name could have been upheld.
In my view all the necessary ingredients are present for establishing a warranty by Mr. Brill in favour of Bristol & West enforceable by Bristol & West, that warranty being that Mr. Brill had the authority of Mrs. Penn."
"The premise which on the above analysis was made, was that Mr. Brill had the authority of Mrs. Penn to negotiate and complete the transaction on her behalf. It was that warranty that was broken. If Mr. Brill had actually obtained Mrs. Penn's instructions, either the transaction would never have gone as far as completion, and Bristol & West would not have advanced any money, or (and this is not very likely) the transaction would have been completed properly without forged signatures and they would have had security for their loan. The question is simply whether Bristol & West can establish that Mr. Brill's failure to have authority which he promised he had, caused them the loss they suffered. It seems to me clear on the basis outlined above that they can."
"The warranty which a solicitor gives is that he has a client who has instructed him to assert or deny the claims made in the proceedings against the opposing party. We do not think he warrants that the client has the name by which he appears in the proceedings. As a matter of principle it would not be right to impose strict liability upon a solicitor for incorrectly naming his client. Otherwise solicitors could be made liable for any case of misnomer including, for example, typographical errors or change of corporate name without a change of rights."
"I see no reason to give any of these cases, all of them in this court, any prominence over any other. They all turn on their own particular facts. They nevertheless allow the following conclusions: (1) that the default obligation is one limited to the taking and exercise of reasonable care; (2) that it requires special facts or clear language to impose an obligation stricter than that of reasonable care; (3) that a professional man will not readily be supposed to undertake to achieve a guaranteed result; and (4) that if he is undertaking with care that which he was retained or instructed to do, he will not readily be found to have nevertheless warranted to be responsible for a misfortune caused by the fraud of another. It follows from the jurisprudence and from these conclusions to be derived from them, however, that it is not possible to support a blanket approach whereby, even in the absence of an express warranty, a professional's responsibility is nevertheless always limited to the taking of reasonable care."
"We hereby certify that the contents of this document have been fully explained to Constance Jean Dukes that she fully understands the portent and has signed this document of her own free will."
"The question is, did the bank intend to ask for and did the solicitors intend to give a promise to answer for the fraud of the customer even if that fraud could not be detected by exercising all proper care? In my view the answer to the question should be no, unless the language used compellingly indicates otherwise."
"The letter was a retainer by the bank of a firm of solicitors to perform professional services of an advisory and ministerial kind for the bank. Professional services provided by the solicitors would not normally involve the guaranteeing of a result by them, such as verifying the identity of Mrs. Dukes, let alone providing the bank with what would amount to an insurance policy against the risk of fraud occurring in a transaction entered into by the bank with its customer, Mr. Dukes; a transaction about which the solicitors were told little by the Bank and in which they had no input or influence."
"For my part, I do not think that questions of this kind can be answered in the abstract or at a high level of generality. A warranty of authority is an implied obligation arising as a matter of contract in appropriate circumstances. Whilst the core nature of the warranty is well established, its precise limits in any particular case must, in my judgment, be determined by reference to the specific circumstances which have given rise to the warranty. That is an objective question to be determined by reference to the circumstances prevailing and known to the parties at the time when the warranty is deemed to have arisen and not in the light of subsequent developments. It is in this context that considerations similar to those expressed by the Court of Appeal in Midland Bank plc v. Cox McQueen [1999] PNLR 593 are likely to be of considerable relevance, particularly since the Court is dealing with the extent of an implied obligation rather than with the construction of a written document."
"I need not repeat the considerations set out, perhaps most clearly, in Midland Bank plc v. Cox McQueen [1999] PNLR 593. But, as I have previously indicated, they seemed to have a particular relevance both to the facts of this case and as to the boundaries of the implied warranty of authority in such circumstances. They strongly suggest that the court should not readily impose upon a person rendering professional services an absolute, unqualified obligation amounting, in effect, to a guarantee of his client's identity and title. The risk that the law has sought to address by the implication of a warranty of authority is that the agent may not have the authority which he claims; and the justification for such an allocation of risk is that the agent is in much the better position to know or ascertain whether he has the requisite authority. But the risks against which Excel is seeking to be protected in these proceedings are the commercial risks involved in lending to a person who may not be all that he claims to be. For my part, I can see no justification why risks of this kind should be transferred from the shoulders of a commercial concern such as Excel on to those of a professional firm such as BM Solicitors."
"The Sixth Defendant warranted that it was authorised and instructed by its client who held himself out to be the registered proprietor of the Property and whom the Sixth Defendant had reasonably satisfied itself was the person he held himself out to be."
Conclusions