Lawson and Lawson v Tupe and Masson HC Ak CIV 2007-404-8051

Case

[2009] NZHC 2414

11 November 2009

No judgment structure available for this case.

IN THE HIGH COURT OF NEW ZEALAND

AUCKLAND REGISTRY

CIV-2007-404-8051

BETWEEN  KENNETH FRANCIS LAWSON AND

AKINESA TAURANGIE LAWSON Plaintiffs

ANDFRANCIS TAUALAI TUPE First Defendant

ANDGREGORY BODAY MASSON Second Defendant

Hearing:         9, 10, 11 November 2009

Appearances:  G Illingworth QC and G Wiles for Plaintiffs

J Samuel for First Defendant
G Masson, Second Defendant, appearing on his own behalf

Judgment:      11 November 2009

JUDGMENT OF ASHER J

L Duncan, Duncan Horrocks Law, PO Box 26688, Epsom, Auckland

JG Connell, PO Box 28 172, Greenwoods Corner, Epsom, Auckland 1347

G Masson, 6/68 Ferndale Road, Mt Wellington, Auckland

Copy:
G Illingworth QC, PO Box 7205, Auckland Central

GD Wiles, PO Box 7292, Wellesley Street, Auckland 1141

Introduction

[1]      The plaintiffs, Kenneth Francis Lawson and Akinesa Taurangie Lawson, live

at  19 Ambury  Road,  Mangere  Bridge,  Auckland.         Their  former  neighbour  is  the second defendant, Gregory Bodan Masson, who lived at 21 Ambury Road.

LAWSON V TUPE AND ANOR HC AK CIV-2007-404-8051  11 November 2009

[2]      On 12 November 2003, the Lawsons entered into an agreement to buy part of what  was  then  Mr Masson’s  land.  In  this  proceeding  the  Lawsons  claim  that Mr Masson has failed to meet his obligations under that agreement.   They paid for the  land,  but  Mr Masson’s  entire  property  has  now  been  sold  to  a  third  party, including that land.   The Lawsons seek compensation for what they say they would have gained as a consequence of performance of the agreement or, in the alternative, they seek the recovery of what they have paid, and their wasted expenditure.

Background

[3]      Ambury Road  is  situated  in  the  residential  suburb  of  Mangere  Bridge.   Mr and Mrs Lawson have owned 19 Ambury Road since 1996. Their property looks up

to Mangere Mountain, and is not far from the Manukau Harbour.  It is set back from Ambury Road and is accessed by a driveway.   The driveway goes past 21 Ambury Road,  which  fronts  onto  the  road.  Behind  the  rectangular  area  of  land  around Mr Masson’s  house,  there  is  a  wide  panhandle  of  land  extending  alongside  the Lawsons’ property, which was part of 21 Ambury Road.   That panhandle could be cut  off  without  damaging  the  natural  curtilage  around  Mr Masson’s   property. Running  as  it  did  alongside  the  Lawsons’  property,  it  was  potentially  able  to constitute a natural extension of their property.

[4]      In  2003,  this  panhandle  of  Mr Masson’s  property became  of  interest  to  the Lawsons. For  some  time  properties  in  Ambury  Road  had  been  zoned  under  the Manukau  City  Council  for  three  dwelling  units,  provided  certain  conditions  were met.   The Lawsons formed the view that if they could acquire the panhandle at the back  of  Mr Masson’s  land  thereby  increasing  the  size  of  their  property,  it  would considerably  improve  its  subdivisional  potential  and  value. The  strip  of  land  in question involved approximately  600 square metres in area. The size of the Lawsons’ existing section was 1,652   square metres, and the acquisition of Mr Masson’s panhandle would   have   increased the size of   their   property   to 2,252 square metres.  It seemed to them to be an attractive investment.

[5]      Through 2003, there was a considerable train of negotiation in relation to the acquisition of the land between the Lawsons and Mr Masson, with offer and counter-

offer being made.  At one stage another neighbour  was  involved  as  an  interested purchaser. Ultimately  those  negotiations  led  to  the  Lawsons  and  Mr Masson reaching  an  agreement  to  purchase  part  of  Mr Masson’s  land  for  $90,000.   On  12 November 2003, they entered into a written agreement.

[6]      The  legal  description  referred  to  approximately  600 square metres  “…  as shown edged red on the  attached plan hereto, which shall also include the strip of land to give the purchaser a 4.8 metre driveway.”  A $9,000 deposit was payable on execution of the agreement, and the balance of the purchase price was to be paid in one  lump  sum  within  10 working  day’s  of  resource  consent  issuing  from  the Manukau City Council.  The agreement was on the standard Auckland District Law Society form.   There  was  a  page  of  extra  conditions,  which  reflected  the  fact  that there  had  to  be  a  resource  consent,  a  subdivision,  and  a  new  title,  to  effect  the purchase.

[7]      The deposit of $9,000 was paid on 12 November 2003.   The Lawsons were given  possession  of  the  property for  the  purpose  of  carrying  out  work  required  to effect the subdivision.  On 10 January 2004, the Lawsons filed a form of application for  resource  consent. Resource  consent  was  obtained  from  the  Manukau  City Council on 6 September 2004.

[8]      Mr Masson gave evidence that  he  had  anticipated  that  resource  consent would be obtained within a short period of time of the signing of the agreement on 12 November 2003, and that he had committed himself to certain expenditure on that basis. He  sought advance  payments  from  the  Lawsons  prior  to  settlement. The Lawsons made a payment to Mr Masson of $4,000 on 3 December 2003. They paid further sums of $5,000 on 22 January 2004, $9,000 on 5 February 2004 and $5,000 on  28 March 2004. Thus,  prior  to  settlement  following  the  resource  consent  they had paid Mr Masson $32,000 including the deposit.

[9]      After resource consent was obtained, it was then necessary for Mr Masson’s lawyers, Daniel Overton & Goulding, to obtain a   mortgage   discharge   from Mr Masson’s mortgagee, TEA Custodians Limited.  Prior to settlement the Lawsons obtained an approval of the survey plan under s 223 of the Resource Management

Act 1991. Ultimately settlement took place on 11 November 2004, with the balance

of  the  settlement  moneys  of  $58,000  being paid.   A  partial  discharge  of  mortgage was  provided  by  TEA  Custodians  Limited,  together  with  a  transfer  executed  by Mr Masson and an order for a new certificate of title.

[10]     The agreement was unusual in that although there had been full settlement it was necessary following that settlement for the Lawsons to complete the subdivision

by  meeting  the  Council  requirements,  arranging  for  the  plan  to  be  deposited,  and arranging for a new title to be issued by the District Land Registrar.  This meant that following settlement the work required by the resource consent was still to be carried out   by   the   Lawsons,   so   that   the   certificate   under   s 224(c)   of   the   Resource Management Act could be obtained.

[11]     The Lawsons engaged a surveyor, Mr Ivan Siu.  He indicated what had to be done.          A  drainage  contractor  had  to  be  retained,  and  with  the  approval  of  the appropriate Council officers the necessary drainage work and other works necessary for  the  resource  consent  had  to  be  completed. In  the  end  this  task  took  over 18 months to complete.

[12]     Mr Lawson  has given reasons  for the delays.  In  late  2004  and  early 2005

Mr Lawson  says  there  was  a  building  boom,  and  it  was  not  possible  to  get  a contractor initially.  Contractors who were approached wanted unreasonable sums of money   or   proposed   unacceptable   delays. Finally   a   drainage   contractor   was organised but work could not start until May 2005.   It took some four to six weeks through to the end of June or July 2005 to lay the piping.  Winter conditions created further  delays.   It  was  then  necessary to  have  the  drainage  works  tested,  with  the involvement of the Manukau City Council engineers.   This was ultimately not done until  January 2006.          There  were  then  some  further  delays,  which  are  not  fully explained.  On 20 April 2006, Mr Siu finally certified completion of the subdivision work  and  as-built  plan  for  the  sanitary sewer.   Final  inspection  and  testing  of  the drainage   was   carried   out   and   approved   by   the   Manukau   City   Council   on 26 July 2006.

[13]     It  seems  that  by  around  the  middle  of  2006  it  had  become  clear  that  the Council had lost the original survey plans and that it was necessary to replace them. Mr Lawson approached Mr Masson in late July 2006 and asked him to sign-off the replacement  plans  that  had  been prepared  following  the  loss  of  the  original  plans. He  understood  it  was  necessary  to  get  them  signed-off  by  Mr Masson  so  that  the s 224(c)  certificate  could  issue. Mr Masson  said  he  was  not  prepared  to  sign  the plans because Mr Lawson had not put a fence between the subdivided property and his  property. He  also  said  that  he  had  refinanced the property and would need  to consult with his solicitors and mortgagee.

[14]     Following  this  the  Lawsons  set  about  erecting  a  fence  on  the  common boundary.  After doing so they approached Mr Masson again and asked him to sign the plans.  That approach ended up in something of an argument, the details of which are not material to the issues.  The result was that the documents were not signed.

[15]     On  22 August 2006,  Mr Lawson  wrote  directly  to  Mr Masson’s  lawyers asking  for  the  documents  to  be  signed,  and  referring  to  the  new  mortgage. On 28 August 2006,  Mr Masson’s  lawyer,  Mr Guy  Newlove,  wrote  to  the  Lawsons’ lawyer,  Duncan  Horrocks  Law.   Mr Newlove  stated  that  he  had  given  the  plan  to Mr Masson together with his file as he was no longer acting for him in the matter.

[16]     Mr Lawson then looked  into registering a  caveat  against Mr Masson’s  title. There  was  a  clause  in  the  agreement  stating  that  the  purchaser  would  not  lodge  a caveat  against  the  vendor’s  title  prior  to  the  deposit  of  the  purchaser’s  plan  of subdivision. Mr Lawson  gave  evidence,  having  waived  privilege,  that  he  was advised  that  he  should  not  lodge  a  caveat  given  the  presence  of  that  clause. No caveat was registered.

[17]     On  1 September 2006,  Duncan  Horrocks  Law  wrote  to  Mr Masson  direct pointing out the requests made for him to sign the replacement plans and his refusal to do so.   Mr Masson was again requested to do so and notice was given that if he did not co-operate the Lawsons would pursue their legal remedies.

[18]     On 15 September 2006, Mr Masson replied.  He stated that:

Mr Lawson’s continual lax attitude towards completing the necessary steps

to obtain clear title has placed me in an untenable and unresolved situation that   has   gone  on  from  Oct 2003  to   August 2006  causing  unnecessary financial/emotional stress.

He concluded the letter as follows:

Our contract for the purchase of the property of approx. 600sqm has gone beyond  the  boundary  of  being  a  working  document.   And  as  such  I  give notice that the Sale and Purchase signed by both parties is now null and void.

I give notice that I am preparing a report outlining costs and damages to be claimed  against  the  moneys  paid  and  the  balance  to  be  returned  to  your clients.   If  you  could  [bear]  with  me  I  shall  complete  the  assessment  and forward it to you in the next 20 working days.

[19]     No such assessment appears to have been forwarded, but an undated notice was  given  by  Mr Masson  requiring  the  Lawsons  to  stop  using  the  back  part  of 21 Ambury Road, and referring to their obligation to pay the rates.

[20]     Mr Masson    had   in    fact   refinanced   the   property   on  30 March 2005, approximately  four  months  after  the  November 2004  settlement,  some  17 months before  declaring  the  contract  null  and  void.  This  new  mortgage  was  with  an associated  but  different  company  to  the  original  mortgagee, the  new  mortgagee being TEA Custodians (Pacific) Limited.  The mortgage was over all of the property. Given   the   fact   that   the   plan   had   not   been   deposited   this   meant   that   all   of Mr Masson’s land, including the land to be transferred to the Lawsons, was subject to the new mortgage.  The discharge of the original mortgage that had been provided on settlement thus became inapposite.

[21]     Mr Masson  says  that  he  did  not  deliberately  mortgage  the  land  to  be transferred to the Lawsons when he entered into this further mortgage.   He says he assumed that the title change had already occurred.  The Lawsons became aware of the existence of the new mortgage in late 2005.  However, they also say they did not appreciate the implications of this at the time.

[22]     In the letter of 1 September 2006, Duncan Horrocks Law had sought confirmation that at the time of the  refinancing  with  TEA  Custodians  (Pacific) Limited the agreement for the boundary adjustment was disclosed to that company,

and that they had consented  to  registration  of  the  new  title. In  his  reply  of

15 September 2006 Mr Masson did not address this issue.

[23]     Following  the  letter  from  Mr Masson  on  15 September 2006,  there  were further  exchanges  where  efforts  were  made  to  have  the  mortgage  discharged  in relation to the land to be transferred to the Lawsons, and to obtain Mr Masson’s co- operation  in  relation  to  the  subdivision. Ultimately  proceedings  were  issued  in December 2007.

[24]     Mr Masson got into default with his mortgage.  A facsimile from the lawyers who were involved in the mortgage for the mortgagee, dated 18 December 2006, in response to an email from Duncan Horrocks Law, recorded:

Thank you for your letter of 14 December 2006 which we have referred to the lender in order to obtain consent to the release of 600 sq.m. as described

in the agreement for sale and purchase.

It was stated that when that advice was received they would send a partial discharge

of mortgage for execution.

[25]     An  email  dated  31 January 2007  that  had  been  obtained,  in  seems   on discovery,  was  put  to  Mr Masson,  where  the  approval  officer  for  a  company associated with the mortgagee stated:

I have got this one.   However, I have talked to Mr Masson.  [H]e asked me

to hold on and not action until he said so.   I think he is one of our Wizard people.

Wizard  was  the  name  of  a  finance  company  associated  with  the  mortgagee,  and Mr Masson was doing work for it as a mortgage broker.  It was put to Mr Masson in cross-examination  that  he  had  instructed  the  approval  officer  not  to  action  the request.  Mr Masson’s reply avoided the question.

[26]     In  February 2007,  Mr Masson  wrote  to  the  Lawsons  asking  for  $2,100  for rates for three-and-a-half years’ on the land at issue “without prejudice” to his claim that the sale and purchase agreement had now become invalid.

[27]     On  21 October 2007, Mr Masson entered into  an  agreement  for  sale  and purchase with Mr Francis Tupe for the sale of all his property, including the land to

be transferred to the Lawsons. That sale was in due course settled and the transfer registered. The agreement records that of the purchase price of $860,000, $301,000 was gifted by Mr Masson. There  was  a deed of  acknowledgement of debt, which shows Mr Masson as a creditor for $301,000. It records that that sum will be gifted

at  the  rate  of  $27,000  per  annum,  and  that  Mr Masson  would  forgive  and  release Mr Tupe  from  repayment  at  a  rate  of  $27,000  per  annum. It  also  records  that Mr Tupe  will  repay the  advance  to  Mr Masson  on  demand.   There  are  other  more detailed provisions.

[28]     Mr Tupe  was  initially joined  as  a  first  defendant,  but  at  the  outset  of  these proceedings that claim was discontinued against Mr Tupe.

[29]     The  original  statement  of  claim  sought  a  registered  title  to  the  subdivided portion of land.  Given the discontinuance against Mr Tupe that remedy is no longer pursued.  The claim now is for damages.

The proceedings

[30]     The  statement  of  claim  contains  two  causes  of  action  against  Mr Masson. The first is for breach of contract, alleging a breach of express or implied contractual obligations.   The  alleged  breaches  included  the  taking out  of  the  further  mortgage and the refusal to release that mortgage.

[31]     The second cause of action is for breach by Mr Masson of his fiduciary duty

as  a trustee. The allegation there   is   that   from   the   date   of   settlement   of

10 November 2004  Mr Masson  became  the  constructive  trustee  of  the  subdivided portion of land, holding it on behalf of the Lawsons.   The breaches of trust include the taking out of the further mortgage, and the refusal to release it.

[32]     Mr Masson’s statement of defence has been prepared without legal assistance. The effect of it, though, is to assert that he was entitled to cancel the contract on 15 September 2006. It is a theme of the document that the Lawsons did

not  act  in  a  timely  manner  and  were  guilty  of  unacceptable  delays.       It  was  also apparent from his brief and from his submissions that he considered that he had been misled,  or  indeed  defrauded,  in  relation  to  the  width  of  the  driveway  from  the reconstituted  Lawson  property  going  past  his  land,  by  it  being  widened  from 4.57 metres to 4.88 metres.

[33]     Mr Masson has represented himself in these proceedings. On 27 August 2008,   a   conference   Minute   of   Associate Judge Doogue records a discussion  about  possible  legal  representation  for  him. It was emphasised to Mr Masson that he should seek counsel and to that end should make an application for legal aid as quickly as possible. I raised this issue again with Mr Masson at the outset of the trial.I have given  him  the  Court  memorandum  for  unrepresented litigants.  It has been necessary to accommodate the ordinary Court procedures for the fact that Mr Masson is representing himself.   This has included giving him the right  at  the  conclusion  of  cross-examination,  to  make  any further  response  that  he wished to points that had been made in the course of that cross-examination.

[34]     I propose proceeding to first consider the two causes of action.   I will then turn to the two broad defences affirmatively put forward by Mr Masson.

Claim in contract

[35]     A  number  of  express  and  implied  terms  of  the  agreement  for  sale  and purchase  are  relied  on.        It  is  necessary  for  the  Lawsons  to  rely  on  implied  terms given the fact that the agreement for sale and purchase did not cover in any detail what would happen after the resource consent was obtained and settlement effected. The pleaded implied term that I consider of relevance is an implied term set out at 11(b) of  the statement of claim that the plaintiffs “generally take all such steps as may  be  necessary  to  enable  the  plaintiffs  to  obtain  an  unencumbered  title  to  the subdivided portion”.

[36]     To  consider  this  implied  term  it  is  necessary to  consider  the  agreement  for sale  and  purchase  in  greater  detail. Clause  14.2  of  the  extra  conditions  of  the agreement for sale and purchase provides:

14.2The   purchaser   undertakes,   with   all   due   diligence,   and   at   the purchaser’s  expense,  to  lodge  with  the  Manukau  City  Council   an application for resource consent to complete the subdivision in the form   attached   (the   “Subdivision   Plan”). The   purchaser   shall forthwith  take  all  such  steps  as  may  be  reasonably  required  to satisfy  the  conditions  of  the  resource  consent  and  complete  the survey of the property and the issue of the new certificate of title for the property.   Upon resource consent being issued by the Manukau City Council, this agreement shall be unconditional and the purchase price shall be due and payable in full.

(emphasis added)

This clause places an obligation on the Lawsons, not Mr Masson, but it shows that the parties clearly contemplated that after obtaining the resource consent, the survey

of the property and the issue of a new certificate of title for the property were still tasks to be carried out under the agreement.

[37]     The plan that is attached to the agreement contains some handwritten words which,  although  not  wholly  decipherable,  contain  a  reference  to  their  being  “six sections”.  This appears to be an optimistic view as to the subdivision potential of the property  given  the  fact  that  the  valuer  called  by  the  Lawsons,  Anthony  Gardner, could  only  confirm  that  the  property  would  be  subdividable  into  three  sections. Nevertheless, it shows that subdivision was clearly the goal of the Lawsons.

[38]     In his evidence Mr Masson did not readily  accept  that  he  was  expressly advised  of  the  Lawsons’  wish  to  subdivide,  although  he  did  concede  that  he  was generally aware that this was their goal.   I record that given the reference to the six sections on the plan, it is my view that it must have been openly understood between the parties that subdivision was the Lawsons’ intention.

[39]     It  is  also  necessary  to  refer  to  clause 3.7  of  the  agreement  for  sale  and purchase, which is one of the standard form clauses.  Clause 3.7(2) provides:

3.7      On the settlement date:

….

(2)      The vendor shall concurrently hand to the purchaser:

(a)the   memorandum   of   transfer   of   the   property provided  by  the  purchaser  under  subclause  3.5,  in registrable form; and

(b)all other instruments in registrable form required for the purpose of registering the memorandum of that's right; and

(c)      all instruments of title,

the obligations in subclauses 3.7(1) and 3.7(2) being interdependent.

[40]     Given these clauses in the agreement it is implicit that there will be a process

of  doing  all  things  that  are  necessary  to  obtain  a  new  certificate  of  title  for  the property.   It is implicit that the purchasers will forthwith take such steps, and it is implicit  that  the  defendant  will  co-operate  in  relation  to  such  steps.   It  is,  indeed, expressly provided at clause 3.7(2)(b) that Mr Masson will provide all instruments in registrable form required for the registering of the memorandum of transfer, and that, therefore,  any  documents  that  a  vendor  would  normally  provide  to  enable  title  to issue  will  be  so  provided. However,  this  express  obligation  only  relates  to  the settlement date.

[41]     In considering the implication of terms  I  am  guided  by  the  statement  of

Cooke P in Vickery v Waitaki [1992] 2 NZLR 58 at 64, where he stated from line 10:

It has been said that there are varieties of implications in contracts, that they are  categories  or  shades  in  a  continuous  spectrum:  see  Liverpool  City Council v Irwin [1977] AC 239, 253-254 per Lord Wilberforce. Discussions on the subject are legion, and it may be doubted whether tabulated legalism will ever produce an exhaustive or a rigidly discrete classification. But three broad classes are obviously terms implied by rules of law in certain kinds of contract (eg sale of goods), terms deduced by implication or interpretation from the express terms of the contract, and terms held to be implied to give business efficacy to the contract …

[42]     Considering cumulatively the features and provisions of the agreement that I have traversed and having regard to its whole purpose, I conclude that it was an implied term that Mr Masson should take all such steps which might be necessary to enable the Lawsons to obtain an unencumbered title  to  the  subdivided portion of land. The implication of such a term arises naturally from the wording of the agreement, and in particular the need for the issue of a new certificate of title. This

could only be done after settlement, and could be expected to involve co-operation from Mr Masson.

[43]     I also record that on the approach set out in Devonport Borough Council v Robbins [1979] 1 NZLR 1, following the judgments in BP Refinery  (Westernport) Pty Ltd v Shire of Hastings (1977) 16 ALR 363, that the five probanda required for implication of a term set out in that case would also have been met. Such a term would have to be implied to give business efficacy to the agreement. That term, as pleaded, was to take all steps as may be necessary to enable the plaintiffs to obtain an unencumbered title to the subdivided portion.

[44]     I  will  consider  Mr Masson’s  two  defences  later  in  this  decision,  and  in particular  the  issue  of  whether  he  was  entitled  to  cancel  on  the  grounds  of  delay. Putting them to one side for the time being, it is necessary to consider whether the term was breached.   The two pleaded breaches that I focus on in particular are the failure on Mr Masson’s part to execute and return the subdivision plans delivered to him in July 2006, and his failure or refusal to deliver to the Lawsons the necessary partial discharge of the mortgage.

[45]     I will consider the events in 2005/2006 in more detail when I deal with delay. However, for the purposes of this breach of contract pleading I find that Mr Masson did refuse to execute and return the subdivision plans, and did refuse to provide a partial release of the mortgage despite requests to do so.  They were breaches of the implied term that he take all steps necessary for the title to be issued.

[46]     I also observe that Mr Masson’s letter of 15 September 2006 where he stated that  he  regarded  the  agreement  for  sale  and  purchase  as  null  and  void  was  a repudiation  of  the  agreement,  and  in  itself  a  breach  of  contract. It  was  a  clear statement by Mr Masson that he did not intend to be bound further by its terms, and would not co-operate in any way to enable the title to the newly constituted property to be obtained.   This is not a pleaded breach of contract, although it has been a key part of the plaintiffs’ case from the outset of the trial.  I do not consider it necessary to deal with any issue of formal amendment given my findings as to other pleaded breaches of the term.

The claim for breach of fiduciary duty

[47]     It is clear that in New Zealand the purchaser under a specifically enforceable contract  is  treated  in  equity  as  the  owner  of  the  property,  and  the  vendor  as constructive trustee: Bevan v Smith [1994] 3 NZLR 648 at 659. It is also clear that an equitable interest in land can pass under a conditional contract even if specific performance of the contract in the strict sense is not available: Bevan  at 665. Whether the equitable interest has passed must always depend on the terms of the contract itself. The equitable interest is commensurate with the availability in a given case to afford the purchaser the protection of a specific remedy: Vostock Shipping Co Limited v Confederation Limited  [2000] 1 NZLR 37 at [28].

[48]     This case is unusual in that the purchaser had actually settled the purchase. However, there remained outstanding obligations and, once the  s 224(c)  certificate was obtained and all necessary things done by the Lawsons to obtain title, specific performance  was  available. This  was  very  much  a  situation  where  the  Lawsons, having paid over all the moneys owed but still having to do certain things to perfect the  transaction  and  obtain  the  land,  were  trusting  Mr Masson  to  hold  the  land  for them and to make the land available to them when these tasks were completed.   In this situation there was a constructive trust.

[49]     The mortgaging of Mr Masson’s land by him in March 2005, after they had paid for it, was a breach of trust by Mr Masson.   This is so even if he had wrongly assumed, as he claims, that the land he was mortgaging did not include the land to be transferred  to  the  Lawsons. The  lack  of  any  intention  to  defeat  the  Lawsons’ interests does not make his action any less a breach of trust.  It was his responsibility to hold the land for them.  His refusal to co-operate with the Lawsons in signing the plans and his ultimate refusal to provide a discharge of mortgage over that land were also breaches of his fiduciary duty to hold the land for the Lawsons.  It could also be added that his disavowal of his obligation in his letter of 15 September 2006 was a breach of trust.

[50]     I, therefore, find the cause of action based on breach of a constructive trust to

be made out.

The defences

[51]     I have referred to the two broad heads of defence put forward by Mr Masson:

his claim that the driveway width should not have been 4.88 metres, and his claim that there were unacceptable delays.  His statement of defence is worded on the basis that he was entitled to cancel the contract by his letter of 15 September 2006 because of the delay.   In his submissions during the trial he backed away from treating his letter of 15 September 2006 as a cancellation, and indicated that it should be better regarded simply as a recognition of a matter of fact; that because of the gross delays the agreement had ceased to have any legal meaning.

The width of the driveway

[52]     This defence was not expressly pleaded and is somewhat difficult to articulate in legal terms. Doing the best I can, Mr Masson appears to be asserting that there was a misrepresentation or error which led to the width of the driveway being shown on the plans at 4.88 metres. The original width of the driveway prior to the agreement being entered into was 4.57 metres. The agreement for sale and purchase expressly stated that the land to be transferred “shall also include the strip of land to give the purchaser a 4.8 m driveway.” The plan that was attached to the agreement contained a statement in writing that the total width of the driveway was to be 4.8 metres.

[53]     As best I can understand Mr Masson’s submission on this, it is that despite what the agreement said, it would have been possible to have complied with Council requirements and leave the boundary width at 4.57 metres. He relied in this regard

on  a  plan  prepared  on  28 July 2004  for  water  and  wastewater  approval,  which showed “the existing driveway” and a width of 4.57 metres.

[54]     However, the actual plan that was prepared and was the subject of the resource consent was a different plan, which showed a width of 4.88 metres. This plan was dated 23 September 2004. It was the plan that was sent by the Lawsons’ lawyer to Mr Masson’s lawyer on 28 October 2004. It is the plan that was clearly going to be the basis for the new title. In fact, the width of the driveway shown on

this plan at 4.88 metres only varied by 8 centimetres in width from the width referred

to in the agreement for sale and purchase.

[55]     Clause 14.3 of the agreement for sale and purchase provided:

14.3All   measurements   and   areas  are  subject  to  checking  by  Land Information  New  Zealand,  and  to  any  variation  which  may  be required  as  a  result  of  such  check,  or  which  may  be  required  by Land Information New Zealand or the Manukau City Council or the District Land Registrar.

It is clear then that all measurements and areas were subject to any variation which may be required by, amongst others, the Manukau City Council.

[56]     Mr Lawson gave  evidence that he was  required  to  provide  for  this  extra

8 centimetres of width by Mr Craig Moriarty of the Manukau City Council. Mr Lawson  produced a letter  he had sent to Mr Moriarty of the Manukau  City Council recording that the width of the driveway had been changed to 4.88 metres, and  there  was  a  handwritten  note  on  the  document,  apparently  from  Mr Moriarty, recording the  altered  driveway width  “to reflect  the  above  changes  and  altered  lot dimensions”.  It was Mr Lawson’s evidence that he was required to make this change by the  Council. He was  not expressly challenged on this by Mr Masson  in cross- examination.  However, Mr Masson clearly doubts his motives on the change.

[57]     I accept Mr Lawson’s account of what happened.   The change is small, the width being increased only by 8 centimetres.  I do not accept that Mr Lawson would have tried to trick Mr Masson on the topic by pretending that the Council wanted the increased width.   I find that the Council did require the width of the driveway to be increased to 4.88 metres.  I also find that this variation fell within clause 14.3 of the agreement for sale and purchase, and was therefore a permissible variation.

[58]     It is also relevant that the change was shown in the plan sent to Mr Masson before settlement, and his receipt of the balance of the purchase price.  I am of the view that Mr Masson must have been aware of the dimensions of the driveway prior to settlement, despite his unwillingness to expressly concede this knowledge.  He is a mortgage broker and impressed me as being intelligent and  commercially  aware. Therefore, the fact that his lawyers were given this plan and my conclusion that he

would  have,  therefore,  been  aware  of  the  change,  makes  his  lack  of  protest  at  the time relevant.  It indicates to me that the increased width was regarded by him at the time as being within the ambit of the agreement for sale and purchase.  There might also be an issue of estoppel on his part having settled with the  Lawsons, when he already  had  a  copy  of  the  plan  showing  the  actual  width. It  is  not  necessary  to determine this issue further given my other findings.

[59]     I conclude, therefore, that it was always understood that the driveway would widen from 4.57 metres.  The variation to the width of the driveway from 4.8 metres

as stated in the agreement to 4.88 metres was not a breach of contract, and did not involve  any  misrepresentation.  It  was  not  fraudulent  as  Mr Masson   has,  on occasions, stated.   I also note that even if it was a breach of contract, it would not have  been  a  breach  sufficient  to  warrant  cancellation.  It  was  not  a  breach  that substantially reduced the benefit of the contract to Mr Masson, or made the contract substantially   different   from   that   contracted   for   in   terms   of   s 7(4)(b)   of   the Contractual Remedies Act 1979.

Delay

[60]     I have outlined the delays that took place.  The delay between the settlement

of November 2004 and the ultimate presentation of the plans and requests to settle in July/August 2006   was   in   excess   of   19 months.  Mr Lawson complained   that Mr Masson caused some of this delay.   There is a difference between them on this point.  Mr Lawson asserts that on four or five occasions through 2005 he sought co- operation  from  Mr Masson  on  various  matters and that it was  not  forthcoming. Mr Masson  denies  this  and  says  that  he  had  no  contact with  Mr Lawson  through 2005. There is a dispute   about an incident involving work   being   done   on Mr Masson’s  property  by  a  drainlayer. It is  common  ground  that  at  some  stage Mr Masson  stopped  this  work  being  done,  although  shortly  after  he  allowed  it  to resume.  Mr Masson  says  that  this  incident  took  place  in  about  August  2004, whereas Mr Lawson says it took place during 2005.

[61]     I consider that the incident regarding the drainlayer would have been during

2005.   This is because the work was being done in pursuit of the resource consent,

and the resource consent was not available until September 2005 after the time when Mr Masson says the incident occurred.  Actual settlement and the commencement of the  work  to  obtain  the  s 224(c)  certificate  did  not  start  until  after  settlement  on 11 November 2004.

[62]     I find that there were incidents during 2005 where Mr Masson was showing some   hostility  towards   Mr Lawson   and   his   activities   in   trying  to   pursue   the subdivision. Nevertheless,   the   delay   has   not   been   adequately   explained   by Mr Lawson, and certainly as time progressed, on an objective test, the delays could have  been  a  source  of  legitimate  concern  to  a  vendor.  It  is  to  be  noted  that clause 14.2 of the agreement required the purchaser to “forthwith” take such steps as might be necessary to obtain the issue of a new certificate of title for the property.

[63]     No actual time was fixed for the fulfilment of this requirement. Where no time  has  been  fixed  for the  fulfilment  of  a  condition, the time for  completion is  a question of fact to be determined with regard to  all the circumstances of the case. Generally where no time is fixed the law will imply obligation to perform or fulfil that condition within a “reasonable time”: Steele v Serepisos [2007] 1 NZLR 1, [47]-[61], (Tipping J - majority decision). It was stated by Tipping J in Mt  PleasantEstates Co Ltd v Withell [1996] 3 NZLR 324 at 329:

What is a reasonable time must be determined upon all the circumstances of the case.   Repudiation is not to be lightly inferred from an action.   In order for  there  to  be  repudiation  from  delay,  the  delay  must  generally  be  so substantial that  it can reasonably be inferred from the  delay alone that  the party concerned does not intend to perform its contractual obligations.

[64]     The  general  approach  now  is  that  time  is  prima  facie  not  of  the  essence adopting the approach of equity rather than the approach of the common law: Steele v Serepisos, Tipping J at [60].  The party faced with delay cannot normally hold the other party in substantial breach of the contract so as to entitle the innocent party to cancel, until an appropriate notice has been  given making time of the  essence and requiring performance by a stated date, and there has been a failure to so perform: Mt Pleasant Estates Co Ltd v Withell at 330, Steele v Serepisos at [61]. It was stated in Steele v Serepisos at [61]:

The  purpose  of  the  notice  which  equity  required  in  that  situation  was  to make  it  clear  to  the  recipient  that  the  giver  regarded  a  reasonable  time  as having elapsed and that, in this light, the giver regarded the proposed date as the date by which it was reasonable for the recipient’s contractual obligation to be performed.

Lord Simon’s comment in United Scientific Holdings Ltd v Burnley borough Council

[1978] AC 904 at 946 was noted; that the notice was designed to tell the recipient that he would be regarded as being in repudiation unless he performed by the stated date. In equitable terms it can be said that it is unfair to cancel an agreement on the grounds of delay when no time has been specified for the completion and the obligation. This is because the person upon whom the obligation is placed will not know the time by when it must be fulfilled. Clause 14.2 contains no date for completion.

[65]     Clause 14.2 (see at [36]) does contain the word “forthwith”, but this is not the provision of an express date.  The word “forthwith” applies to all steps, including the original obtaining of  the  resource consent. It cannot mean  “immediately”  in  its normal sense. The clause must be seen in its factual matrix. The task of obtaining new certificates of title is notoriously fraught. The difficulties outlined by Mr Lawson in finding drainlayers to carry out the work, getting it done in a timely manner,  completing  necessary  Council  requirements  and  then  finding  that  the Council had lost the relevant plans, could not, unfortunately, be regarded as unique. For  instance,  in  Parsot  v  Greig  Developments  Ltd  [2009]  NZCA  241  where  there was a provision for subdivision and transfer back, titles were issued four-and-a-half years  after  the  agreement  was  entered  into.             The  facts  were  different  from  the present, but it is to be noted that the Court of Appeal accepted that a notice making time  of  the  essence  in  those  circumstances  was  given  prematurely. The  word “forthwith” may impart the expectation of speed, and be relevant as to when a notice making time of the essence could issue, and the duration of that notice.  But I do not consider that the word displaces the need for some express notice to be given making time of the essence.

[66]     In the circumstances, I conclude that a notice making time of the essence had

to be given before Mr Masson was in a position to cancel on the grounds of delay.

No  notice  was  given. For  that  reason  I  find  that  the  delays  did  not  constitute  a repudiation by the Lawsons, entitling Mr Masson to cancel.

[67]     It is possible that in some circumstances the delay may be so protracted that it

is  obvious  that  the  condition  has  not  been  fulfilled,  and  that  no  notice  at  all  is required:  Blanchard  A  Handbook  for  the  Sale  and  Purchase  of  Land  (4  ed  1988), quoted  in  Steele  v  Serepisos  at [64]. I record that the delay in itself, while long, could not in terms of s 7(4) of the Contractual Remedies Act 1979 be regarded as a substantial breach. There were reasons for the delay, which although not a full explanation, put it in context. Such reasons arising after the contract can be considered: Parsot  v Greig Developments Ltd  at [22].   The delay was  not causing any particular inconvenience to Mr Masson in that he had been paid in full.   There was  no  work  proceeding  on  the  property  to  be  subdivided  save  for  some  minor works and the drain-laying work, causing him no significant inconvenience.

[68]     The only real inconvenience to Mr Masson was that he was paying the rates

on the property that he was to transfer.  He has estimated the amount of rates he had

to  pay  at  $2,100  on  a proportional basis over a period of delay of  approximately three-and-a-half years. The Lawsons, when the issue of rates was raised, indicated immediately a willingness to pay their share. The delay did not reduce the benefits or add to the burden of the contract sufficient to warrant cancellation.

[69]         I record that I do consider that Mr Masson did not co-operate with Mr Lawson through 2005. This contributed to the delays.  Through 2006 he decided that he did not wish to provide the discharge of mortgage, which would enable the new  title to issue. Where there  is  a  conflict  between  Mr Lawson’s evidence and Mr Masson’s evidence in this regard, I prefer the evidence of Mr Lawson. I found Mr Masson’s evidence at times  to be quite inconsistent  with  the documentary evidence that was available. I found his answers to questions to often be evasive and meaningless.  On the other hand, I find Mr Lawson’s evidence to be credible.

[70]         Nevertheless, I do not  regard  Mr Masson’s  actions  as  having  been  the primary cause of the delay through to mid-2006.   However, they were the cause of the delay from the point when Mr Lawson was seeking final sign off for the plans

and, later, release of the mortgage to enable a new title to issue, and Mr Masson was not co-operating.

[71]     It is against this background that I turn to the submission of Mr Illingworth that Mr Masson cannot in any event rely on his 15 September 2006 letter as having cancelled the agreement because he was not ready, willing and able to settle himself

at the relevant time. He relied in this regard on the statement of the Court of Appeal

in Noble  Investments  Limited  v  Keenan  [2006] NZAR 594, where it was stated at [44]:

[44]     A   series   of   cases,   however,   have   assumed,   albeit   with   little discussion,  that,  despite  the  Contractual  Remedies  Act,  a  party  must  be ready, willing and able to proceed to completion in order to be able validly to cancel a contract

[72]     The Court of Appeal observed that the purpose of the common law rule was

to ensure that a party does not benefit from its  own  wrong:  Noble  Investments Limited  v Keenan  at  [47]. A party can be  seen  as  benefiting from  its  own  wrong where it seeks to cancel a contract in circumstances where that party’s own actions in breach of contract have caused the other party’s breach. I respectfully accept this as a correct basis on which to approach the issue of whether the principle is applicable.

[73]     The  Lawsons  were  in  a  position  where  they had  satisfied  all  the  Council’s requirements and could obtain a s 224(c) certificate by late July 2006.  At this stage Mr Lawson started to actively seek Mr Masson’s sign-off on the new plan that had had  to  be  prepared  because  the  Council  lost  the  original  plan.  In  his  letter  of 22 August 2006  to  Daniel  Overton  &  Goulding,  Mr Lawson  recorded  that  all  the work had been completed, and that Mr Masson had informed him that he wished to consult  with  a  lending  institution  before  he  signed  the  papers  off. He  asked  for Mr Masson to sign the papers and to give a clearance of the title.  The response was the  letter  from  Daniel  Overton  &  Goulding  stating  that  they  not  longer  acted  for Mr Masson.   Mr Lawson’s requests were stated again in the Duncan Horrocks Law letter  of  1 September 2006,  where  sign  off  on  the  plans  and  confirmation  that  the

mortgagee consented to the registration was required.

[74]     At this point Mr Masson had a contractual obligation pursuant to the implied term, referred to earlier in this judgment, to co-operate. He was contractually obliged to sign the plans and to provide a discharge of mortgage or consent from the mortgagee. He refused to do so. He was in default.  By then purporting to cancel on

15 September 2006 on the grounds of delay, he was seeking to take advantage of his own  wrong.  While  his  actions  had  only  caused  the  most  recent  delays,  he  was, nevertheless,  the  party  in  default  at  the  time  that  he  purported  to  cancel,  and  had been for some months.   I consider, therefore, that he was seeking to take advantage of his own wrong.   For that reason, also, I find that the agreement was not validly cancelled and that Mr Masson was in breach.

[75]     It  is  also  relevant  that  he  had  been  in  breach  of  his  obligations  as  a constructive trustee in March of the previous year when he had entered into the new mortgage over the land he was to transfer to the Lawsons.   His refusal to meet the obligations in August and September 2006 reflected that earlier breach of trust.   In cancelling he was seeking to take advantage of that breach of trust.

Conclusion on liability

[76]     I find that the causes of action based on breach of an implied term and breach

of trust made out.

Relief

[77]     The  Lawsons  seek  compensation  for  their  expectation  losses,  namely  the difference between the value of their land without the additional area, and the value of their land with the additional area.   They called a valuer, Mr Gardner.   He gave evidence  that  the  valuation  of  19 Ambury  Road  as  at  October 2006  without  the additional land of 1,652 square metres was $450,000, and with the additional land of 2,244 square metres was $660,000.

[78]     In the alternative they seek  restitution  damages,  for  their  payments  to

Mr Masson, and the costs of endeavouring to effect the subdivision of $90,000 and

$12,077 respectively.

[79]     This  claim  for  damages  is  entirely  orthodox.   The  Lawsons  are  entitled  to compensation  for  the  loss  of  their  bargain,  and  to  be  financially  restored  to  the position  that  they would  have  been  in  if  the  contract  had  been  performed.   If  the contract had been performed they would have owned the property in October 2006 worth $210,000 more than what  it was  actually worth without the additional land. There is no need to vary from the unusual rule that the loss is assessed at the date when the contract was breached.

[80]     I,  therefore,  fix  damages  in  the  sum  of  $210,000.   The  Lawsons  also  seek interest at the statutory rates from 1 September 2006 to 1 July 2008 at 7.5 percent per annum, and from then to today’s date at 8.4 percent per annum.   I have pointed out that  8.4 percent  per  annum  is  considerably  higher  than  current  bank  rates,  and Mr Illingworth has been content to leave the issue of interest to my discretion.

[81]     I   consider   that   looking   at   the   period   from   1 September 2006   from   an overview,  from  an  interest  perspective,  the  appropriate  rate  of  interest  to  be  paid from 1 September 2006 is 6 percent per annum.  I consider 1 September 2006 to be a reasonable start point for interest, as it was a little later than that when Mr Masson failed to meet his obligations to take the necessary steps to enable the plaintiffs to obtain their unencumbered title.

Result

[82]     The plaintiffs have succeeded in their  claims  against  the  second  defendant and are awarded damages in the sum of $210,000, together with interest to today’s date from 1 September 2006 to be calculated at the rate of 6 per cent per annum.

Costs

[83]     I award costs in favour of the plaintiffs to be paid by the second defendant on

a 2B basis.

…………………………..

Asher J

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O'Keefe v Williams [1910] HCA 40