with in this paper, namely the circumstances in which tracing is not available.

Similar documents
EQUITABLE REMEDIES IN COMMERCIAL LITIGATION: Concurrent session 1A Constructive trust

Unjust enrichment? Bank secures equitable charge where it failed to get a legal charge: Menelaou v Bank of Cyprus [2015] UKSC 66

Property Litigation Association Property Bar Association Joint Seminar London, 19 September 2012

FIRST PUBLISHED IN THE JERSEY AND GUERNSEY LAW REVIEW, OCTOBER 2014

Tracing, Restitution and Innocent Donees: Who Wants to be a Volunteer Anyway?

Maximising Recovery for Victims of Fraud. David Galbally AM. QC. Andrew Tragardh Shane Ringin

THE PAULINE ACTION IN JERSEY. by Sinéad Agnew

King s Research Portal

IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE BETWEEN ROMATI MARAJ CLAIMANT AND ASHAN ALI TIMMY ASHMIR ALI DEFENDANTS

QUANTUM MERUIT SOME PITFALLS

Rajah & Tann LLP 30 May Professor Yeo Tiong Min, SMU School of Law

RESPONSES TO QUESTIONS ON CLASS ACTIONS AND GROUP LITIGATION

LAW OF TRUSTS A SUMMARY CONTENTS

SURETY TODAY PRESENTATION. Given by Michael A. Stover and George J. Bachrach Wright, Constable & Skeen, LLP Baltimore, MD December 11, 2017

COURT OF APPEAL (Civil Division) (On appeal from the Royal Court of Guernsey Ordinary Division) 27 June 2014

THE EQUITABLE LIEN: NEW LIFE IN AN OLD REMEDY? 1. Introduction

A critique of the rule in Clayton s case.

JUDGMENT. BPE Solicitors and another (Respondents) v Gabriel (Appellant)

Enforcement of Foreign Judgments. The Usual Rules Apply (no exception for insolvency)

Contents. Foreword by Professor Andrew Robertson Preface xvii Table of cases xix Table of statutes lvi

EXTENDING THE SCOPE OF PROPRIETARY REMEDIES TO RECOVERY OF PURE PROFITS FROM SUCCESSFUL INVESTMENT OF BRIBES: THE ENDGAME IN LISTER V STUBBS

THE EASTERN CARIBBEAN SUPREME COURT IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE ANTIGUA AND BARBUDA AND. THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF ANTIGUA AND BARBUDA Defendant

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF BRITISH COLUMBIA. Oral Reasons for Judgment July 14, 2005

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL BETWEEN STEVE JAIPERSAD AND

BEDDOE ORDERS: ADEQUATE COSTS PROTECTION FOR TRUSTEES AND PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVES? Jennifer Seaman

RESTITUTION REMEDIES. Westdeutsche Landesbank Girozentrale v Islington London Borough Council and Other Cases JONATHAN ROSS

Contents. Page 1 of 5

Jersey & Guernsey Law Review February 2008 RESTITUTIONARY WEAPONS IN THE FIGHT AGAINST FRAUD

Port of Tilbury (London) Ltd v Stora Enso Transport & Distribution Ltd [2008] Int.Com.L.R. 05/07

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF BELIZE A. D., 2013

v. Record No OPINION BY JUSTICE CYNTHIA D. KINSER JUNE 7, 2002 LINDA D. SHAFER

PART 5 DUTIES OF DIRECTORS AND OTHER OFFICERS CHAPTER 1 Preliminary and definitions 219. Interpretation and application (Part 5) 220.

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF FLORIDA. RED REEF, INC 4 th DCA Case Number: 4DO D L.T. Case No.: CL (AF) Plaintiff/Petitioner

U-TURN ON RIGHTS OF WAY

Case Note. PIERCING THE CORPORATE VEIL AS A LAST RESORT Prest v Petrodel Resources Ltd [2013] UKSC 34; [2013] 2 AC 415; [2013] 3 WLR 1

GUTSCHE FAMILY INVESTMENTS (PTY) LIMITED

CAVEATS AGAINST DEALINGS IN LAND WHEN TO LODGE AND HOW TO REMOVE PRESENTED ON 14 FEBRUARY 2014 NICHOLAS JONES, BARRISTER

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL BETWEEN THE CHIEF FIRE OFFICER THE PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION AND SUMAIR MOHAN

NORTHERN STAR RESOURCES LTD (ACN )

SEVEN WEST MEDIA LIMITED

THE BALTIC STRAIT FOOD FOR THOUGHT IN RELATION TO CARGO CLAIMS

No. 5 of 1992 VIRGIN ISLANDS DRUG TRAFFICKING OFFENCES ACT, 1992

COURT OF APPEAL FOR BRITISH COLUMBIA

IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA (WESTERN CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)

A CONSIDERATION OF RESTITUTION OF UNJUST ENRICHMENT, WITH PARTICULAR REFERENCE TO ITS APPLICATION TO PROPRIETARY REMEDIES AND THE LAW OF TRUSTS

Any number of claimants or defendants may be joined as parties to a claim.

Chose in Action-Gilt-Novation 01 Contract-Dillwyn v. Llewellyn2

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF NEW ZEALAND CA553/2010 [2011] NZCA 368. Appellant. SOUTH CANTERBURY FINANCE LIMITED Respondent

Before : THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE SUPPERSTONE Between :

SUPREME COURT OF QUEENSLAND

A breach of contract occurs where a party does not comply with one or more of the terms of contract, express or implied.

REMEDIES Spring Term Syllabus

Issues in Unjust Enrichment

A CHANGING LANDSCAPE IN CONSUMER CLASS ACTIONS IN BRITISH COLUMBIA (AND BEYOND)

IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA (NORTH GAUTENG HIGH COURT) WATERKLOOF MARINA ESTATES (PTY) LTD...Plaintiff

A BILL. i n t i t u l e d. An Act to amend the Labuan Offshore Trusts Act 1996.

Proprietary Remedies in Insolvency: A Comparison of the Restatement Third on Restitution and Unjust Enrichment with English and Commonwealth Law

Family Law Property Settlements

THE SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA

APPLICATION FOR COMMERCIAL CREDIT ACCOUNT TRADING TERMS AND CONDITIONS

IN THE HIGH COURT OF TANZANIA AT DAR ES SALAAM. COMMERCIAL CASE No 72 OF 2017 EQUITY BANK TANZANIA LIMITED PLAINTIFF

Four Pillars Enterprises Co Ltd v Beiersdorf Aktiengesellschaft

SUPREME COURT OF QUEENSLAND

REPUBLIC OF TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO IN THE COURT OF APPEAL BETWEEN AND

EMPEROR ENERGY LIMITED

SUPREME COURT OF QUEENSLAND

Injunction Applications in complex cases. Recent cases and some points to think about

Constitution. Quaker Service Australia Limited, ACN A Public Company Limited by Guarantee

Change of Position: The View from England

(company number 2065) - and - (company number SC )

TURKS AND CAICOS ISLANDS TRUSTS BILL 2015 ARRANGEMENT OF CLAUSES

LIMITATION OF ACTIONS ACT

IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE GARY LEGGE AND MAUREEN LEGGE. Between CHRIS RAMSAWACK AND WESTERN SHIP AND RIG SUPPLIES LIMITED

CONSTITUTION ABN:

Construction Law: Recent Developments of Importance

BELIZE LIMITED LIABILITY PARTNERSHIP ACT CHAPTER 258 REVISED EDITION 2011 SHOWING THE SUBSTANTIVE LAWS AS AT 31 ST DECEMBER, 2011

REFORM OF THE LAW RELATING TO DIRECTORS DUTIES IN MALAYSIA. Sujata Balan Faculty of Law, University of Malaya, Malaysia. ABSTRACT

TRACING ASSETS: A CASE FOR THE

Although simplistic views of jurisprudence may be an invitation to error, an insight into Equity can be obtained be remembering that:

Version 2 of 2. Trustee Act c. 29

Credit Ombudsman Service. Guidelines to the. Credit Ombudsman Service Rules

Australia. Mike Hales. MinterEllison Perth. Law firm bio

In the contractual context partial failure of consideration is concerned with. Partial Failure of Consideration JOHN TARRANT *

ILLEGAL TRANSACTIONS: THE EFFECT OF ILLEGALITY ON CONTRACTS AND TRUSTS

No. 76 of Land (Ownership of Freeholds) Act Certified on: / /20.

THIRD PARTY LIABILITY FOR KNOWING RECEIPT AND KNOWING ASSISTANCE POST-GRIMALDI v CHAMELEON MINING NL (NO 2) Claire McGowan

Expectation, Reliance and Detriment. What is it the essential aim of the remedy of proprietary estoppel?

Houlden & Morawetz On-Line Newsletter

SUPREME COURT OF NOVA SCOTIA Citation: Wamboldt Estate v. Wamboldt, 2017 NSSC 288

DISHONEST ASSISTANCE. Gilead Cooper QC 3 Stone Buildings, Lincoln s Inn

COMPANY LAW CIVIL PROCEDURE Held: [1] [2]

MOVABLE PROPERTY SECURITY RIGHTS ACT

Page: 1 PROVINCE OF PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND COURT OF APPEAL. JOHN McGOWAN and CAROLYN McGOWAN THE BANK OF NOVA SCOTIA

THE EASTERN CARIBBEAN SUPREME COURT IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE ANTIGUA AND BARBUDA

FINANCIAL SERVICES AND MARKETS REGULATIONS 2015

No THE REPUBLIC OF KENYA HIS EXCELLENCY THE PRESIDENT UHURU KENYATTA. President

Timing Is Everything: New Rules for Enforcing Medical Plan Reimbursement Rights. James P. Baker and Emily L. Garcia-Yow

v No Washtenaw Probate Court

Declaration of Trust Establishing, Nominee Trust

COURT OF APPEAL (Civil Division) (On appeal from the Royal Court of Guernsey Ordinary Division) 29 October 2014

Transcription:

Tracing The Loss of the Right to Trace 1. Introduction: The Nature of Tracing 1.1 Consistently with the conceptual and linguistic difficulties associated with the topic of tracing, there is no uncontroversial way of framing the title of the subject that is dealt with in this paper, namely the circumstances in which tracing is not available. 1.2 The difficulties referred to centre on trying to understand the true juridical nature of tracing. In Snell s Equity [33 rd Edition: page 792] the word used to describe the circumstances in which tracing can be said to be unavailable is, one, well known to litigators, namely defences. However defence properly describes the basis on which a respondent to a claim can successfully resist the claim. Thus the use of the word defences presupposes that tracing is itself a claim. 1.3 The proposition that tracing amounts to a claim would appear to be no longer sustainable. The corrective analysis was provided by Lord Millett in the following well-known passage at page 128D of Foskett v McKeown [2001] 1 AC 102: Tracing is thus neither a claim nor a remedy. It is merely the process by which a claimant demonstrates what has happened to his property, identifies its proceeds and the persons who have handled or received them, and justifies his claim that the proceeds can properly be regarded as representing his property. Tracing is also distinct from claiming. It identifies the traceable proceeds of the claimant s property. It enables the claimant to substitute the traceable proceeds for the original asset as the subject matter of his claim. But it does not affect or establish his claim. 1.4 This passage was repeated almost verbatim (but not formally cited) by Chao Hick Tin J, delivering the judgment of the Singaporean Court of Appeal in Caltong (Australia) Pty Ltd v Tong Tien See Construction Pte Ltd [2002] 2 SLR (R) 94 at paragraph 53.

2 Foskett v McKeown and Caltong are both, correctly, cited as stating the current legal position in Halsbury s Laws of Singapore [Volume 9[4]: 2012 Reissue: Equity and Trusts, at paragraph [110.1006] on page 372, under the heading The nature of tracing ]. 1.5 Given that tracing is neither a claim nor a remedy but merely a process of identification of recoverable assets, it is submitted that, properly speaking, there are no defences to tracing. On, the contrary, what can be discerned from the authorities are a number of definable circumstances in which tracing ceases to be available to a prospective claimant. Accordingly this paper refers, in its title, to The loss of the Right to Trace, the author gratefully adopting the same heading as appears above paragraph [110.1011] of Halsbury s Laws of Singapore [supra]. The deprecation of the use of the word defences is also to be found in Tan Yock Lin s Personal Property Law [Academy Publishing: 2014] where, at page 749, paragraph 15.101, the following is stated: The reference [to defences ] is unfortunate. The terminology of defences misleadingly suggests that the contents of the so-called defences are relevant to the extinguishment of the property rights to be claimed However, these defences are in truth limits to the identification in equity of a substitution. 1.6 Though there are some obvious cross-overs and similarities between the circumstances in which the right to trace is lost, nevertheless four broad sub-headings can be identified, as follows: (1) where the property is in the hands of a bona fide purchaser for value without notice: (2) where the property has been dissipated:

(3) where it would be inequitable to allow the claimant to trace his property: and (4) where the property is in the hands of a person who can show that, following receipt, he has changed his position in good faith. Each of these four is considered, briefly, below. 2. Bona Fide Purchaser 2.1 The origin of this inhibition on the right to trace is to be found in the judgment of Lord Greene MR in In Re Diplock [1948] 1 Ch 465 where the following is stated, at page 539: Where the moneys are handed by way of transfer to a person wo takes for value without notice, the claim of the owner of the moneys is extinguished just as all other equitable estates or interests are extinguished by a purchase for value without notice. 2.2 It is to be noted that the for value element is usually construed widely. It is not limited to new value but includes the discharge of a pre-existing debt. Thus the exception can be relied on by a bank which receives money in discharge of an overdraft or some other debt, [see Bishopsgate Investment v Homan [1995] 1 All ER 347, cited in Snell [supra at page 792, paragraph 30-064, footnote 275, and the detailed analysis in Lionel D. Smith s The Law of Tracing [Clarendon Press: 1997] at 386 to 396. Dr Smith s work is, incidentally, cited with approval by Lord Millett in Foskett McKeown [supra] at page 129A]. 2.3 The application of the bona fide purchaser inhibition in Singapore has been established by the Court of Appeal in Caltong [supra] where, at para 57, Chao Hick Tin JA said:

4 if a particular asset has gone into the hands of a bona fide purchaser for value without notice of the breach, then in so far as that asset is concerned, the tracing must end, and no claim may be made by the beneficiary against that bona fide purchaser This passage is cited by Tan Yock Lin in Personal Property Law [supra] at page 747, paragraph 15.102, footnote 172. 3. Dissipation 3.1 Dissipation, which is a conceptual sibling to acquisition by a bona fide purchaser, is recognised as being fatal to tracing both in Halsbury s Laws of Singapore [supra: at paragraph 110.1011] and in Snell [supra]. 3.2 The relevant passage in Snell is to be found at page 792, paragraph 30.064 and is in the following terms: Failure of identification and dissipation of proceeds. If it is established by the rules of following and tracing that the specific proceeds of the claimants property have been dissipated then there will be no foundation for a proprietary remedy against the assets of the trustee. In the absence of such specific identification, the claimant may not assert a general lien over the trustee s assets to reflect the extent to which they might have been swollen by the contribution of the claimant s money. Accordingly the effect of the trustee s paying the claimant s money into an overdrawn bank account is generally to render the money untraceable. 4. Inequitability 4.1 This heading covers, together, the two points referred to in paragraph 1.6 (3) and (4) above as, in reality, the unconscionability, or inequity, of an outcome, whether as regards a claimant to, or a recipient of, property, are two sides of the same coin. 4.2 Both the leading Singaporean and UK authorities (respectively, Personal Property Law [supra: at pages 749-750, paragraph 15.103] and Snell [supra: at pages 792-,

paragraph 30-066] acknowledge that the scope and range of the inhibition that inequitability places on the process of tracing remain uncertain and not yet fully explored by the Courts in either jurisdiction. 4.3 In Snell it is contended that inequitability, consequent upon a property recipient s change of position, does halt the tracing process in respect of prospective restitutionary claims founded on unjust enrichment; the rationale is that the liability of a person should be reduced or extinguished if his position has been so changed by the receipt of the claimant s money that it could be inequitable for him to make restitution of all or part of the money received. The defence is not available to a wrongdoer. This includes a person who changes his position knowing the facts of the claimant s cause of action against him. Accordingly the defence is unlikely to be available to a claim for knowing receipt. The pre-condition to liability in that action is the defendants knowledge of the facts making his receipt of the money s unconscionable. 4.4 Where, according to Snell, the position remains uncertain is as to the extent to which want of equity restricts the process of tracing in prospective breach of trust claims. As is explained, The authorities are divided on whether change of position should be available as a defence to a claim to a proprietary remedy founded on tracing or following. In general, the enforcement of a proprietary right against a third party does not depend on questions of inequitability to the third party, and the enforcement of a property right against a substituted asset is said to depend on questions of unjust enrichment. In an earlier case [this is a reference to In Re Diplock: supra], however, it was held that an innocent volunteer who used the claimant s money to improve buildings on his land or to repay a loan secured by a charge should not be liable to a proprietary remedy enforceable against the land since enforcement of the remedy would be inequitable.

6 It is anticipated that these uncertainties as to the current scope of tracing as an aid to breach of trust claims will be considered and debated in the session, at the Singapore Conference, that is scheduled for the morning of Thursday 5 March 2015. MARK CUNNINGHAM QC Maitland Chambers Lincoln s Inn London February 2015