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High Court of Australia |
CHANG v. REGISTRAR OF TITLES [1976] HCA 1; (1976) 137 CLR 177
Vendor and Purchaser
High Court of Australia
Barwick C.J.(1), Mason(2) and Jacobs(3) JJ.
CATCHWORDS
Vendor and Purchaser - Sale of land - Payment of purchase money - Application by purchaser for vesting order - Whether vendor constructive trustee - Government of China registered proprietor of land in Victoria - Sale by Government of China - Change in recognition of Government of State of China between date of contract and due date for completion - Purchase money paid to vendor's solicitors named in contract - Whether vesting order procedure appropriate - Trustee Act 1958 (Vict.), s. 51 (1), (2) (o)*.
* Section 51 (1) of the Trustee Act 1958 (Vict.) invests power in the
Supreme Court to make vesting orders. Sub-section (2) provides that a vesting
order may be made in any
of a number of cases, including "(o) where property
is vested in a trustee and it appears to the Court to be expedient to make a
vesting order."
HEARING
Melbourne, 1975, October 8, 9.DECISION
1976, February 11.
2. On 21st December 1972, a contract for the sale of this land was signed by
duly authorized agents of the registered proprietor.
Mr. and Mrs. J. Chang,
who were the purchasers, are the appellants in this appeal. The contract
provided for a deposit of $5,000,
the assumption by the purchaser of liability
under the mortgage to which the land was then subject and payment of
$6,222.74, being
the balance of the total price, on 10th January 1973. Clause
5 of the contract provided that all moneys falling due under this contract
might be paid free of exchange to the vendor's solicitors, Messrs. David Ting
and Byrne, 414 Lonsdale Street, Melbourne. By the contract,
the purchaser
attorned tenant to the vendor from week to week at a rental equivalent to the
interest and instalments from time to
time due by the purchaser. However, the
contract did not provide either for interest or for instalments. The third
special condition
of the contract provided as follows:
"3. The parties hereby mutually acknowledge that all
moneys paid hereunder with the exception of the amount
paid to discharge the Mortgage at present secured over the
property in favour of the A.N.Z. Bank Limited will be
retained in the trust account of the Vendor's Solicitor until
such time as the Purchasers have obtained registration of the
Transfer to themselves at the Office of Titles provided
however that the benefit of this condition shall apply to the
Purchasers only insofar as they fulfil their undertaking to
make all usual and necessary steps as may be required of
them to obtain registration of the said Transfer at the Office
of Titles at the earliest possible date. In the event of the
Purchaser being unable to obtain registration of the Transfer
on or before the 28th day of February 1973 the deposit and
any other moneys paid in excess of the amount secured by
the Mortgage to the A.N.Z. Bank Ltd., shall be refunded and
the Purchaser shall cease to be liable for any sum or sums
unpaid in respect of the said Mortgage and this Contract
shall be at an end. Provided however that the Purchaser
shall be entitled at his option to a further extension of one
month from the 28th day of February 1973 in order to obtain
registration." (at p179)
3. The appellants paid the sum of $5,000 on the date of the execution of the
contract and paid the balance of $6,222.74 to the named
solicitors for the
vendor. The appellants went into possession of the property on 5th March 1973
and have remained in possession
ever since. Apparently they have been willing
to assume liability for the amount secured to the A.N.Z. Bank under mortgage
of the
land. Presumably meantime they have paid all interest and other moneys
falling due thereunder. But no indemnity has been executed
by the appellants
in favour of the vendor, nor has there been any novation of the liability of
the personal covenant under the mortgage.
No doubt, on registration of the
transfer of the land subject to the mortgage, an indemnity would come into
existence by reason of
the provisions of the Transfer of Land Act and the
liability for the payment of the mortgage would have been assumed by the
appellants.
(at p180)
4. On 21st December 1972 and 3rd January 1973, respectively, two memoranda of
transfer of land were executed on behalf of the vendor
in favour of the
appellants and were handed over to them. The execution of the transfers would
appear to have been authorized on
the part of the vendor: but, of course,
their delivery before payment of the price would mean that they were delivered
in escrow.
However, the price would appear to have been paid to the vendor's
solicitors according to the contract. But it is at best doubtful
whether it
has been received by the vendor. What effect, if any, the changes in political
recognition had on the availability of
these memoranda of transfer remains a
question. (at p180)
5. However, these were presented to the Registrar of Titles for registration
but he refused to register either of them. An application
was made to the
Registrar under s. 47 of the Transfer of Land Act for a vesting order: but, as
I gather from discussion with counsel
for the Registrar in the course of the
argument of this matter, the application has not yet been finally disposed of,
though the
Registrar so far has been disinclined to grant it. (at p180)
6. On 21st December 1972, the government of Australia recognized the Peking
government as the government of the People's Republic
of China and withdrew
its recognition of the government of Taiwan as the government of the Republic
of China. So far as appears,
the Peking government has not adopted any
specific attitude towards the sale of the land to the appellants and has not
been asked
by the appellants to perform the contract or to facilitate the
registration of the memoranda of the transfer of the land to the appellants.
(at p180)
7. On 3rd April 1975, the appellants, by summons, sought in the Supreme Court
of Victoria an order vesting the land in them and
an order that the Registrar
of Titles make the necessary entry in the Register Book to give effect to such
vesting order when made.
Apparently the summons sought the exercise by the
Court of the power given to it by s. 51 of the Trustee Act 1958 (Vict.). The
appellants relied on those parts of the section which empower the making of a
vesting order where it is convenient or
expedient for the order to be made;
and where a trustee refuses or neglects to convey any property: see s. 51 (2).
No notice of this application was served on any person other than the
Registrar of Titles. Apparently the Peking government
became aware of the
application and counsel sought the relisting for hearing of the application
before judgment was delivered. Subsequently,
however, it abandoned any further
participation in the proceedings. (at p181)
8. The Supreme Court of Victoria (Jenkinson J.) dismissed the summons on the
ground that the vendor of the land was not a trustee
thereof within the
meaning of the Trustee Act. From this order of dismissal, the present appeal
is brought. (at p181)
9. The appellants submit that upon the execution of the contract for the sale
of the land they became its equitable owners and that
the vendor's interest in
the land was limited to its security for the balance of purchase money. It was
submitted that the appellants
had paid the balance of the purchase money as
provided by the contract and that therefore the vendor had become their
trustee of
the land with no other right or duty than to convey it to them. The
appellants then submitted that it was expedient or convenient
to make a
vesting order in the circumstances because of the difficulties which they
would experience in obtaining the concurrence
of the vendor to the
registration of the memorandum of transfer which had been executed on 21st
December 1972. (at p181)
10. However, I see many flaws of reasoning in these submissions. In the first
place, it is only true that the purchaser of land
under a contract of sale of
land becomes it equitable owner if the contract is specifically enforceable.
Here, by the appellants'
own submissions, there are very serious questions to
be decided in favour of the appellants before it can be said that this
contract
is specifically enforceable. Leaving aside the effect of the changed
attitude on the part of the Australian government to the governments
of Peking
and Taiwan, there must at best be serious doubt as to whether the appellants
could have sued the Republic of China whilst
the government in Taiwan was
recognized by the Australian government. The appellants' counsel advances by
repetition the arguments
of McKenna Q.C. in the Sultan of Johore v. Abubakar
Tunku Aris Bendahar (1952) AC 318 , submitting that in the case of an
immovable
within the jurisdiction acquired by a foreign sovereign for
commercial purposes the courts can give a citizen relief in respect of
the
immovable. These submissions were neither accepted nor denied by the members
of the Privy Council in the case in 1952. The questions
they raised remain
open for decision. Clearly, for want of appropriate parties, they are not
matters which could be decided in the
present application. (at p182)
11. Then there is the question of the proper construction of the special
condition 3 which I have set out in these reasons. It may
be, as the
appellants submit, that the clause is wholly for the benefit of the purchaser
and that the lapse of time within which
the transfer has been unregistered
will not inure for the benefit of the vendor. But, again, in the absence of
the vendor, this is
not a matter which can be decided in this application. (at
p182)
12. There remains the question as to who is the right party. The effect of
the change of attitude as to recognition by the Australian
government needs
exploration. This, in my opinion, cannot be done ex parte. Clearly enough, the
Registrar of Titles was not a proper
party to the application. He had no
interest therein: and the order sought against him was otiose having regard to
the provisions
of s. 58 (1) of the Transfer of Land Act. (at p182)
13. Finally, there remains a question whether the appellants have paid the
balance of the price. Quite apart from the absence of
any novation of or
indemnity in respect of the covenants of the mortgage, there is the question
whether the vendor has received the
cash balance due under the contract.
Again, that question cannot be so decided in this matter. Further there is the
question whether
the payment made by the appellants to the solicitor amounted
in the circumstances to payment to the vendor. (at p182)
14. In the result, the application to the Supreme Court presents itself as an
ex parte application and as an attempt to avoid proceedings
for specific
performance. I could not conclude in these proceedings for the reasons I have
given that the appellants became entitled
to an equitable estate in the land
on the execution of the contract or that the price for the land had been duly
paid. Further, it
seems to me that an unpaid vendor, as the vendor here may
prove to be, cannot be regarded as a trustee under the Trustee Act: and
it may
be that a paid vendor cannot be so regarded where there is any doubt as to the
enforceability of the contract of sale.
(at
p182)
15. In my opinion, the order of the Supreme Court was right. It was not shown
that there was a trustee who had refused or neglected
to convey. Indeed, it
may be doubted whether the provisions of s. 51 of the Trustee Act may ever be
used as a substitute for specific
performance. It may well be that in any case
until a vendor has been fully paid and
acknowledged the validity of the
contract of
sale and the receipt of the purchase price, he does not assume any
duties of a trustee
with respect to land. (at p183)
16. However, the reasons I have given are sufficient to support the order of
the Supreme Court. Consequently, I have no need to
go further into other
questions which might otherwise have arisen. (at p183)
17. I would dismiss the appeal. (at p183)
MASON J. In my opinion this appeal should be dismissed. (at p183)
2. The circumstances in which the appellants entered into a contract to
purchase a property at North Balwyn, near Melbourne, and
made an application
for a vesting order under s. 51 of the Trustee Act 1958 (Vict.), in relation
to that property have been recited by Jacobs J. and I need not recount them.
Whether the appellants could succeed
in obtaining a decree for specific
performance of the contract in a suit against the sovereign State of China
depends upon a number
of issues none of which are easy to resolve. (at p183)
3. First, there is the question whether proceedings could be brought against
the sovereign State of China without infringing the
rule that the courts of
this country cannot implead a foreign sovereign. The application of the rule
to a foreign sovereign who is
trustee of property within the jurisdiction has
been the subject of much discussion: see, e.g., Rahimtoola v. Nizam of
Hyderabad
(1958) AC 379, at p 401, and esp at pp 416-417 , where Lord Denning
suggested that a foreign sovereign which has "a legal title without
any
equitable right" may not be entitled to the immunity. (at p183)
4. Secondly, there is the question whether in the circumstances of this case,
apart from the problem of sovereign immunity, a court
would grant specific
performance of the contract. Special condition 3 of the contract provides that
if the appellants were unable
to obtain registration of the transfer before
28th February 1973 the contract would be at an end. The condition conferred on
the
appellants at their option an entitlement to an extension of one month
from 28th February 1973 to obtain registration. Whether they
attempted to
secure this extension we do not know. A possible answer to the appellants'
failure to secure registration within the
time initially specified or the
extended time is to say that the condition was inserted for the exclusive
benefit of the purchasers
and that they waived it. (at p184)
5. In the absence of argument on behalf of the vendor I am not prepared to
assume that either of these questions should necessarily
be answered
favourably to the appellants. The importance of this observation is that the
availability of the remedy of specific performance
is itself relevant to the
appellants' entitlement to a vesting order. (at p184)
6. Section 51 of the Trustee Act 1958 enables the Supreme Court to make
vesting orders in various circumstances. One such circumstance
is "where
property is vested in
a trustee and it appears to the Court to be expedient to
make a vesting order" (s. 51 (2) (o)).
By s. 3 of the Act it is provided that
"the expressions 'trust' and 'trustee' extend to implied and constructive
trusts". It has
long been
established that a vendor of real estate under a
valid contract of sale is a trustee of the property sold for the purchaser.
(at
p184)
7. However, there has been controversy as to the time when the trust
relationship arises and as to the character of that relationship.
Lord Eldon
considered that a trust arose on execution of the contract (Paine v. Meller
[1801] EngR 400; (1801) 6 Ves 349 (31 ER 1088) ; Broome v.
Monck (1805) 10 Ves 597, at p 606
[1805] EngR 110; (32 ER 976, at pp 979-980) ). Plumer M.R. thought that until it is known
whether the agreement
will be performed the vendor "is
not even in the
situation of a constructive trustee; he is only a trustee sub modo, and
providing
nothing happens to prevent it.
It may turn out that the title is not
good, or the purchaser may be unable to pay" (Wall v. Bright
(1820) 1 Jac & W
494, at p 501 [1820] EngR 472; (37 ER 456, at p 459) ). Lord Hatherley said that the vendor
becomes a trustee for the purchaser
when
the contract is completed,
as by
payment of the purchase money (Shaw v. Foster (1872) LR 5 HL 321 ). Jessel
M.R. held that a
trust
sub modo arises on execution
of the contract but that
the constructive trust comes into existence when title is made out by
the
vendor
or is accepted by the purchaser
(Lysaght v. Edwards (1876) 2 Ch D 499
). Sir George Jessel's view was accepted by the
Court of Appeal
in Rayner v.
Preston (1881)
18 Ch D 1 . (at p184)
8. It is accepted that the availability of the remedy of specific performance
is essential to the existence of the constructive
trust which arises from a
contract of sale. The difficulty of determining upon a petition for a vesting
order under the English Trustee
Act 1850 whether specific performance would be
granted led Page Wood V.C. to hold that a constructive trust must first be
declared
by decree in a suit before the statutory concept of "trust" in the
Trustee Act was satisfied. However, in In re Cuming (1869) 5 Ch
App 72 ,
Giffard L.J. distinguished the contract which remains unperformed on either
side (when a precedent decree is necessary)
and the contract which has been
executed by payment of the purchase money and a formal covenant to surrender
(when no such decree
is required as a preliminary to the making of the vesting
order). (at p185)
9. Whether this distinction was correctly taken need not presently be
decided. It is enough to say that it has been accepted in
decisions in England
and Australia that at least when the purchaser has paid the purchase money the
vendor becomes a constructive
trustee of the property sold and that he is a
trustee of property within the meaning of the provisions of the Trustee Act
relating
to vesting orders (In re Colling (1886) 32 Ch D 333 ; Re Campbell; Ex
parte Muir (1861) SCR (Q) 39 ; Weigall v. Barber [1884] VicLawRp 12; (1884) 10
VLR (E) 90 ; Re
Clarke and Solomon's Agreements Trusts (1905) 5 SR (NSW) 498 It may be safely
concluded, then, that the Supreme Court
can exercise the power to make a
vesting order conferred by s. 51 when the vendor of real estate who has been
paid the purchase money
refuses or declines to execute a transfer or is
disabled from so doing. (at p185)
10. The appellants paid to the solicitors named in the contract the balance
of the purchase price payable in cash. Whether the solicitors
are holding this
money for the account of the People's Republic of China we do not know. Nor do
we know whether the appellants have
by document or otherwise made arrangements
to assume liability under the existing mortgage to the exclusion of the
vendor's liability.
(at p185)
11. Accordingly, there is in my view a serious question to be determined,
namely whether in the events which have transpired the
sovereign State of
China is a constructive trustee of property for the appellants so that a
vesting order should be made in favour
of them. This question, as it seems to
me, cannot be decided in the absence of the vendor, the sovereign State of
China. It was not
made a party to the application by means of its intervention
before Jenkinson J., an intervention from which it subsequently withdrew.
It
is not enough that it had notice of the application; as the party in whom the
outstanding estate vested it should have been made
a respondent to the
application. The failure to make it a respondent is in my opinion a fatal
defect. (at p185)
12. Perhaps the procedure by way of application for a vesting order was
devised to avoid the difficulty otherwise posed in a suit
for specific
performance by the rule that a foreign sovereign cannot be impleaded. If this
be so, the application was misconceived.
The vesting order procedure was not
designed to obviate difficulties which would be encountered in a suit for
specific performance.
It was intended as a summary procedure for clear cases
in which recourse to traditional procedures would have been time-consuming.
Had the sovereign State of China been joined as a respondent to this
application or as a defendant in a suit for specific performance
it would have
been possible to determine whether the rule relating to the impleading of a
sovereign had any operation in this case.
It is undesirable, if not
impossible, to decide that question in the absence of the foreign sovereign.
(at p186)
13. In the result I would dismiss the appeal on the ground that the sovereign
State of China, a necessary party to the application,
was not joined as a
respondent. (at p186)
JACOBS J. From the conclusion of 21st December 1972, Australia recognized
the government of the People's Republic of China as the
sole legal government
of China and withdrew recognition of the government in Taiwan. Some three
years previously the Republic of
China had been registered as the proprietor
of an estate in fee simple in land in Melbourne situated at 18 Millicent
Avenue, North
Balwyn. During the day of 21st December 1972, an agreement was
made for the sale of this land to the appellants. There were two copies
of the
agreement. One of them was under a seal of the Republic of China which was
impressed upon this copy in the presence of the
Consul-General and the
Vice-Consul, who were representatives of the Taiwan government, and the
sealing was attested by them. The
other copy of the agreement was signed by
the appellants during that day. On the same day a deposit of $5,000 was paid
to Messrs.
David Ting & Byrne, solicitors acting on the instructions of the
Consul-General as solicitors for the Republic of China. The
sealed
copy of the
agreement was delivered to the first-named appellant on that day and the copy
signed by the appellants was retained
in
those solicitors' offices. (at p186)
2. The contract provided for the sale of the land and certain furniture for a
sum in all of $43,800. There was provision for the
deposit of $5,000, and the
balance of $38,800 was to be paid as to the sum of $6,222.74 on 10th January
1973 and as to the balance
by the purchaser assuming liability under a certain
registered mortgage over the land to the English Scottish & Australian Bank
Ltd.
(at p187)
3. Clause 5 provided as follows:
"All moneys falling due under this Contract may be paid
free of exchange to the Vendors Solicitors, David Ting &
Byrne, 414 Lonsdale Street, Melbourne." (at p187)
4. Special condition 3 provided as follows:
"The parties hereby mutually acknowledge that all monies
paid hereunder with the exception of the amount paid to
discharge the Mortgage at present secured over the property
in favour of the A.N.Z. Bank Limited will be retained in the
trust account of the Vendors Solicitor until such time as the
Purchasers have obtained registration of the Transfer to
themselves at the Office of Titles provided however that the
benefit of this condition shall apply to the Purchasers only
insofar as they fulfil their undertaking to make all usual and
necessary steps as may be required of them to obtain
registration of the said Transfer at the Office of Titles at the
earliest possible date. In the event of the Purchaser being
unable to obtain registration of the Transfer on or before the
28th day of February 1973 the deposit and any other moneys
paid in excess of the amount secured by the Mortgage to the
A.N.Z. Bank Ltd., shall be refunded and the Purchaser shall
cease to be liable for any sum or sums unpaid in respect of
the said Mortgage and this Contract shall be at an
end. Provided however that the Purchaser shall be entitled
at his option to a further extension of one month from the
28th day of February 1973 in order to obtain registration." (at p187)
5. On that same day, 21st December 1972, an instrument of transfer was
executed under seal in favour of the appellants. It would
appear that this
instrument of transfer was delivered on that same day. (at p187)
6. On 3rd January 1973, a further instrument of transfer was executed under
the seal of the Republic of China which seal was affixed
in the presence of
the Consul-General and Vice-Consul appointed by the previously recognized
government. On 19th January 1973, the
appellants paid to Messrs. David Ting &
Byrne the balance of the purchase price which was payable in cash, and on 5th
March,
took
possession of the land. (at p187)
7. The first instrument which had been executed on 21st December 1972, was
not formally lodged, but the second instrument of transfer
was lodged for
registration. The Registrar of Titles refused to register it. (at p187)
8. On 3rd April 1975, the appellants applied to the Supreme Court for a
vesting order. It may be assumed that the order was sought
under s. 51 of the
Trustee Act 1958. The appellants joined the Registrar of Titles as a
respondent, but the application was in truth
an ex parte application. The
Registrar
of Titles had no interest in the proceedings. The joining of him as
a party gave a spurious
appearance of forensic regularity to
the proceedings
but no more than this. If a vesting order had been made, it would have been
the duty of the Registrar of Titles to
make the appropriate entries in
accordance with the provisions of the Transfer of Land Act
1958 and, in the
most unlikely event that he had refused so to do, application could have been
made to the Supreme Court under s.
116 of the last-mentioned Act. Likewise,
application could have been made under that section requiring the
Registrar-General to register
the transfer which he had refused to register.
However, he had no interest whatsoever in the question whether or not a
vesting order
should be made. The party interested in the application was the
Republic of China. No attempt was made to join the latter as a respondent
and
the reason frankly stated was that to do so would have raised difficulties in
establishing the right to relief. (at p188)
9. It happened that after reservation of judgment by Jenkinson J. of his
decision on the application for the vesting order, application
was made to him
in the Practice Court by counsel on behalf of the presently recognized
government of the Republic of China. A request
was made that the matter be
listed again for hearing. Subsequently this request was withdrawn. I do not
think that these events affect
the issue. They amount to no more than evidence
that the present government of the Republic of China had notice of the
application
for a vesting order. At no stage was the Republic of China made a
party to the application. (at p188)
10. Jenkinson J. dismissed the summons upon the ground that no occasion had
been shown for the exercise of the power to make a vesting
order. I am of the
opinion that this was a correct conclusion. I should, however, first mention
that, in my view, a serious question
arises whether this appeal is competent.
If no more is involved than the perfection of a title by the making of a
vesting order,
then the judgment was not one which involved directly or
indirectly any claim demand or question to or respecting any property
amounting
to or of the value of $3,000 (Judiciary Act 1903-1973, s. 35 (1) (a)
(2) ). No question would arise on this approach whether or not
the appellants
are in contract or in equity entitled to the land. The application would be
limited to a claim demand or question
respecting perfection of title to the
land not respecting the land itself. The appeal would be incompetent and
should be struck out.
(at p188)
11. On the other hand, if not only perfection of title but also the right to
title and ownership of the land was involved, then
the proceedings were
defective for want of a necessary party interested in the substance of the
application and the rights thereby
sought to be established. That party is the
vendor of the land, the Republic of China, against whom the relief, on this
approach
equivalent to specific performance of the contract of sale, was
sought. Upon this view of the application, substantive relief was
sought
against the Republic of China by extinguishing its title to the land and
vesting its title in the appellants. The appellants
frankly concede that there
may be a dispute about who is entitled to the purchase money but say that this
is not their concern. However,
the title to the land is the security of the
vendor that it, and nobody else, will obtain that purchase money. The Republic
of China,
which can now only be represented by its government recognized by
Australia, must necessarily be heard on the question whether it
should be
divested of its title before it has actually received the purchase money. (at
p189)
12. The appeal must necessarily fail either because it is incompetent or
because Jenkinson J. was correct in refusing substantive
relief in the
circumstances. That is a dilemma from which the appellants cannot escape. (at
p189)
13. The ground upon which Jenkinson J. refused relief was that no
circumstances existed which justified the making of a vesting
order. In my
opinion he was correct in this conclusion. (at p189)
14. The only case under s. 51 (2) conceivably applicable to the present
circumstances is provided in par. (o), namely, where property
is vested in a
trustee and it appears to be expedient to make a vesting order. However, a
vesting order is not a substitute for an
action for specific performance. Such
an order consequent upon an order for specific performance of a contract
concerning any interest
in land may in particular circumstances be made under
s. 57 of the Act. Before such a vesting order can be made, the Court must
declare
that the party to the action for specific performance against whom the
order is made is a trustee of the land within the meaning
of the Trustee Act.
So long as the rights of the respective parties to a contract for the sale of
land rest in contract, that is
to say before payment
of purchase price on a
settlement after which the vendor has no rights of his own outstanding but is
a bare
holder of the legal estate,
none of the provisions of the Trustee Act
in relation to vesting orders is a substitute for an action
for specific
performance. (at p189)
15. Moreover, it is doubtful whether a vendor under a contract of sale can
properly be described as a trustee within the meaning
of the Trustee Act
unless settlement has taken place and all that remains to be done is to
transfer or convey an outstanding legal
estate. It is true
that a vendor at
the stage of contract where the contract is enforceable by specific
performance has at times
been described as a
trustee: see, e.g. Shaw v. Foster
(1872) LR 5 HL 321 ; Lysaght v. Edwards (1876) 2 Ch D 499 ; and if by that
no
more is meant than
that the purchaser is regarded by equity as the beneficial
owner of the estate of which the vendor is the legal
owner then there
is no
difficulty in describing the vendor as a trustee. However, if by such a
description it is sought to transpose
into the law
of vendor and purchaser the
law governing the rights and duties of trustees, statutory or otherwise,
considerable difficulties
arise.
The present case is an example of the
confusion which can arise from giving this description to a party to a
contract for
the sale
of land assumed to be capable of specific performance
simply because he has the obligation under the contract to transfer
property
to the other party on completion of the contract and because equity regards
the other as beneficial owner. Where there are
rights
outstanding on both
sides, the description of the vendor as a trustee tends to conceal the
essentially contractual relationship
which,
rather than the relationship of
trustee and beneficiary, governs the rights and duties of the respective
parties. (at p190)
16. I say nothing upon the question whether the instrument of transfer
executed on 21st December 1972, and apparently delivered
in escrow on that
date was one which the transferees were entitled to have registered. No
application was made to the Registrar of
Titles to register it. However, if it
should have been so registered, then as Jenkinson J. observed that is an
additional reason
why a vesting order should not be made. (at p190)
17. I think that it is important in the present case not to embark upon any
of the questions which may arise if the appellants now
take other steps or
institute other proceedings. This applies not only to any application to
register the first instrument of transfer
but also to questions which might
arise if action be commenced for specific performance of the contract against
the Republic of China.
One can see that matters of considerable complexity
could arise not only in the field of private international law but also upon
the question whether the contract is still on foot and whether, if so, the
appellants are bound to offer payment of that part of
the purchase money
payable in cash or any part thereof to the Republic of China as a condition
precedent to their right to an order
for specific performance. I would dismiss
this appeal without any determination of questions which may arise in later
proceedings.
(at p191)
ORDER
Appeal dismissed with costs.
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