Gordon v Havener

JurisdictionUK Non-devolved
JudgeLord Burrows
Judgment Date04 October 2021
Neutral Citation[2021] UKPC 26
Docket NumberPrivy Council Appeal No 0017 of 2020
Year2021
CourtPrivy Council

[2021] UKPC 26

Privy Council

before

Lord Lloyd-Jones

Lord Kitchin

Lord Burrows

Lord Stephens

Lady Rose

Privy Council Appeal No 0017 of 2020

Gordon
(Appellant)
and
Havener
(Respondent) (Antigua and Barbuda)

Appellant

Tom Poole QC

Sara Ibrahim

(Instructed by Simons Muirhead Burton LLP (Newman Street))

Respondent

Dane Hamilton QC

(Instructed by Dane Hamilton & Associates)

Heard on 8 July 2021

Lord Burrows
1. The essential facts and an overview of the dispute
1

This appeal is concerned with three plots of land at Dian Bay, Antigua. Contracts for the sale of those plots of land were made between a sister and her brother. The sister, the seller, is Mrs Jacqueline Havener and she is the defendant and the respondent in this appeal. The brother, the purchaser, is Mr Gregory Gordon and he is the claimant and the appellant in this appeal. Following the death of their mother, Margaret Ruth McNutt (also known as Ruth Gordon Livingston), Mrs Havener became the sole owner of the three plots of land. Mrs Havener lives in the United States. Although of no direct relevance to the matters on this appeal, in November 2005 Mrs Havener gave Mr Gordon a power of attorney to act on her behalf in certain matters but she revoked that in September 2009.

2

Mr Gordon alleges that, in breach of contract, Mrs Havener has failed to transfer the plots of land to him and that he should therefore be granted specific performance or damages for breach of contract. She alleges that he is in breach of contract by failing to pay the agreed purchase price under any of the three contracts. Mr Gordon further alleges that, if his claim for breach of contract fails, he should be awarded a remedy under the doctrine of proprietary estoppel as he has detrimentally relied on Mrs Havener's promise to transfer to him the legal title in the plots of land.

3

The three plots of land are referred to as plot 117 (being part of parcel 59), plot 116 (being the other part of parcel 59) and plot 82B (being part of parcel 82). It is not in dispute that Mr Gordon already owns plot 83, which is next to plot 82, and already owns Gordon House, which is next to plot 117. It is also submitted on his behalf that, at the time of the contracts of sale, he was already the lessee of plots 116 and 117 under a 99-year lease granted by his mother and sister, dated 12 January 1979.

4

The first contract of sale, dated 15 June 2001, was for plot 117 and the agreed contract price was US$1,000. The second contract of sale, dated 27 August 2007, was for plot 116 and the agreed contract price was US$10. The third contract of sale, also dated 27 August 2007, was for plot 82B and the agreed contract price was also US$10. All three contracts were written, signed and dated. In relation to all three contracts, the purchase price was to be paid on the signing of the contract; and “closing” (that is, completion) was defined as the settlement of the obligations of the seller to deliver to the purchaser a deed transferring ownership of the respective plot of land and the purchaser paying the purchase price to the seller.

5

Mr Gordon alleges that he paid Mrs Havener the agreed price for all three contracts by the payment by a cheque in the sum of US$3,000 on or around 24 January 2006. Mrs Havener disputes that and alleges that that sum was paid to enable her to obtain legal services in relation to a dispute with a tenant, Charles Fernandez, which involved her issuing proceedings for eviction against Mr Fernandez in 2006.

6

Mr Gordon also alleges that, in reliance on the title being transferred to him, he expended a total sum of EC$192,125 maintaining, repairing, and improving the three plots of land; and that he also paid the property taxes on those plots for the years 2008, 2009 and 2010.

2. The decisions and reasoning of the lower courts
7

At first instance, in the Eastern Caribbean Supreme Court (Antigua and Barbuda), Cottle J, in a judgment dated 6 August 2015, dismissed Mr Gordon's claims. His central reasoning was as follows:

(i) The contracts for the sale of the plots of land were not valid and enforceable for two reasons. First, there was no intention to create legal relations. These were family arrangements. Secondly, there was an “absence of consideration” (para 17 of Cottle J's judgment) because the agreed purchase price was not paid. The payment of US$3,000 in 2006 was not related to the contract made five years earlier in 2001. Nor was it intended to be the consideration for the two contracts made one year later.

(ii) Mrs Havener did not request or encourage Mr Gordon to expend money in relation to the plots of land so that there was no basis for an equitable estoppel. In any event, he claimed to have a long lease of plots 116 and 117, and he could not therefore “be relying on a promise by the defendant to give him lands which he effectively owns” (para 19 of the judgment). The requirements for the doctrine of equitable estoppel were therefore not made out.

8

Mr Gordon appealed to the Court of Appeal of the Eastern Caribbean Supreme Court (Antigua and Barbuda). While critical of some aspects of the trial judge's reasoning, the Court of Appeal dismissed Mr Gordon's appeal for the following main reasons:

(i) The trial judge had been incorrect in deciding — and his conclusion on this was irrational — that there was no intention to create legal relations. Even if one started from the presumption that there was no intention to create legal relations, because these were agreements made in a family context, that presumption was comfortably rebutted. This was because, for example, the agreements had been reduced to formal written and signed contracts with consideration payable.

(ii) The trial judge was clearly entitled to find that the payment of US$3,000 was not the payment of the consideration for the three contracts of sale. The amount paid did not match the amount owing and the time when the US$3,000 was paid did not align with the date of the contracts. In the words of Gonsalves JA, at para 35, in giving the leading judgment in the Court of Appeal, with which Baptiste JA and Blenman JA agreed:

“Bearing in mind the timelines specified for payment of the consideration in each of the contracts, the dates when the $3,000 was paid, the amount paid, and the circumstances of payment, the judge was, on the evidence, clearly entitled to reject the evidence of the appellant that the $3,000 was effective to provide the consideration for the contracts.”

However, the fact that the US$3,000 was not the payment of the consideration did not mean that the contracts were invalid for “absence of consideration”. The non-payment meant that there was a defect in Mr Gordon's performance not that there was a defect in the formation of the contract.

(iii) It was not now open to Mr Gordon to argue that he was ready, able and willing to pay the contract price. That was not how his case had been pleaded and it would be manifestly unfair to the defendant for that new argument to be considered. In any event, having incorrectly alleged that he had already paid the contract price, Mr Gordon would not be coming to the court with clean hands. For these reasons, the trial judge had been correct not to grant specific performance.

(iv) Turning to proprietary estoppel, the various promises and representations alleged were inextricably bound up with the promise or representation made in the contracts of sale in 2001 and 2007. As there were valid contracts between the parties, one could not found a separate proprietary estoppel argument on those valid contracts. Rather, Mr Gordon's remedy lay in contract only. As Gonsalves JA said, at para 41:

“[W]hat the appellant describes as representations … are inextricably tied up with the promise said to emanate from the contracts. The difficulty that this causes is that, this Court having found that the promises contained in the contracts were enforceable, the matter then lay in contract and not in proprietary estoppel.”

Having cited two cases, one from Australia and another from New Zealand, and some academic writing in support of the proposition that the law of contract, not proprietary estoppel, applied, Gonsalves JA continued at para 43:

“[I]f the matter lies in contract, no proprietary estoppel can be established, at least when the promise or assurance being relied upon arises exclusively out of the contract. Having determined that a valid contract existed between the parties, as between contract and proprietary estoppel, it is to the contract that the appellant must look for his remedy.”

3. The appeal to the Board
9

Mr Gordon has now appealed to the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council. Tom Poole QC, counsel for Mr Gordon, with considerable skill, submitted that, because of legal errors by the Court of Appeal, following the errors exposed in the trial judge's reasoning by the Court of Appeal, Mr Gordon has not had his claims properly considered. He therefore invited the Board to remit the matter to the High Court for Mr Gordon's case to be reheard both on his contractual claims and, in the alternative, on his claim for proprietary estoppel.

10

More specifically, Mr Poole submitted that, as regards the non-payment of consideration, the Court of Appeal had erred in regarding the contractual term as a condition and in treating the non-payment as being fatal to the contractual claim. The consideration for each of the three contracts should have been looked at separately. Moreover, the trial judge had been influenced in his approach to consideration by his erroneous approach to the intention to create legal relations. In addition, not all the relevant evidence had been taken into account by the lower courts in deciding that the US$3,000 payment was not the payment of consideration for the three contracts. It followed that specific performance was an appropriate remedy and, in any...

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