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[2011] NSWCA 139
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Hearse v Staunton [2011] NSWCA 139 (3 June 2011)
Last Updated: 6 June 2011
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Decision Date:
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Before:
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McColl JA at [1]; Young JA at [2]; Whealy JA at
[9].
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Decision:
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Appeal dismissed with costs. [Note: The
Uniform Civil Procedure Rules 2005 provide (Rule 36.11) that unless the Court
otherwise orders, a judgment or order is taken to be entered when it is recorded
in the Court's computerised
court record system. Setting aside and variation of
judgments or orders is dealt with by Rules 36.15, 36.16, 36.17 and 36.18.
Parties should in particular note the time limit of fourteen days in Rule
36.16.]
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Catchwords:
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Vendor and purchaser- husband on contract as sole
purchaser- purchaser's solicitor tells vendors' solicitor that wife will be
joint
transferee and to alter contract- vendors' solicitor does so- wife never
intends that she be party to contract- purchaser's solicitor
sued for breach of
warranty of authority- verdict for defendant upheld on appeal.
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Parties:
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Phillip Baden Hearse (First Appellant) Robyn
Mignon Hayes Hearse (Second Appellant) Dennis Michael Staunton (First
Respondent) Bruce Lochart Thompson (Second Respondent) Andrew Richard
Corish (Third Respondent)
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Representation
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D H Murr SC (Appellants) G Curtin SC
(Respondents)
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- Solicitors:
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Lander & Lander Lawyers (Appellants) Henry
Davis York Lawyers (Respondents)
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Judgment
- McCOLL
JA: I agree with Whealy JA and his reasons and the orders his Honour
proposes. I also agree with the remarks of Young JA.
- YOUNG
JA: I agree with Whealy JA and with his reasons, but I wish to add a couple
of observations.
- I
am concerned that conveyancing solicitors would so easily agree with another
solicitor's suggestion that a contract should be amended
by simply writing in
the name of a second purchaser.
- I
am not sure what is meant by the simple request to "amend" the contract.
Normally once a contract is made, it can only be "amended"
formally by
variation, rescission and replacement with a new contract or novation. Assuming
that the solicitors intended a variation,
complications arise when the variation
is adding a party. What probably happens is that a new contract is made to
replace the former
contract.
- However,
the argument proceeded on the basis that this was not the appropriate analysis.
If that is correct, then the appellants'
case runs foul of what Pape J said in
Lee v Irons [1958] VicRp 71; [1958] VR 436, 447 that a party seeking to rely on the cause
of action of wrongful warranty of authority must show that he or she entered
into the contract relying on the warranty of authority.
- On
the other hand, if my analysis is correct, both solicitors must be taken to have
known the law that solicitors, save in exceptional
cases, have no authority to
make a contract on behalf of a client (let alone a non-client). Pianta v
National Finance & Trustees Ltd [1964] HCA 61; 180 CLR 146 reinforces
this view taken both by the primary judge and Whealy JA.
- The
reference to s 18(3) of the Duties Act 1997 is a red herring. That
section has nothing to say about varying contracts. Before the section, if there
was a transfer by direction
or the like, a second lot of ad valorem duty may
have been payable. The subsection operates so that, in cases within it, that
duty
is reduced to a nominal amount. The section does not alter the effect in
the law of conveyancing of either contracts or transfers.
- I
am not criticising the solicitors in the present case as I do not have enough
material to make a fair assessment. However, I must
state the general
proposition that the Court expects that conveyancers will not take short cuts in
conveyancing transactions without
a full appreciation of what they are doing,
ensuring that what they do will not cause loss to the client.
- WHEALY
JA: This an appeal from the decision of Hall J (the primary judge) given on
1 st September 2010. The decision is expressed as follows:-
In light of the conclusions, namely:
(1) that the defendant solicitors did not warrant or represent as alleged
that they had the authority of Mrs Pallister to act for
her as purchaser of the
property;
(2) that they did not warrant or represent that they had Mrs Pallister's
authority to make a binding contract on her behalf for the
purpose of making her
a co-purchaser of the property;
(3) that the evidence does not establish that the parties had an intention to
create contractual relations for the purchase of the
property by Mrs Pallister;
there should be judgment in favour of the third, fourth and fifth defendants
and I so order.
- The
plaintiffs were the owners of a property at 83 Culter Road, Clontarf. The
dispute arose out of a conveyancing transaction, in
which the plaintiffs sold
the property to a man named Mark Pallister. There was a Contract for Sale
executed and exchanged between
the plaintiffs on the one hand, and Mr Pallister
on the other. The first respondent, Dennis Staunton, was a member of the firm,
Staunton
& Thompson Lawyers. He was Mr Pallister's solicitor. Lander &
Lander were (and are) the solicitors for the plaintiffs.
- The
sale was not completed and the plaintiffs thereupon terminated the contract and
sued both Mr and Mrs Pallister for the deficiency
on resale. There were
complications in the proceedings, but the end result was that the plaintiffs
maintained an action against the
firm of solicitors (Staunton and Thomson)
alleging breach of warranty of authority. In the original proceedings, Mr
Pallister himself
had become a worthless defendant by virtue of his bankruptcy.
Mrs Pallister had achieved the setting aside of a judgment obtained
against her
on the basis that there had been no contact between the plaintiffs and herself.
It was in those circumstances, as I have
said, that the plaintiffs proceeded
against the partners of Staunton & Thompson as defendants, alleging against
them a breach
of warranty of authority to act for Mrs Pallister.
- The
circumstances in which this claim was alleged to have arisen may be very briefly
stated. The Contract for Sale of the Clontarf
property had initially been
prepared showing Mrs Pallister as the purchaser. Her name was subsequently
deleted prior to exchange.
The name of Mark Pallister was added as the purchaser
of the property. The contract was thereupon exchanged, and Mr Pallister was
stated to be the sole purchaser of the property.
- There
were two pieces of correspondence that became central to the issues in the
present proceedings. They consisted of two letters,
written by Staunton &
Thompson to Mr Lander, the solicitor for the plaintiffs. The author of each of
the letters was the first
respondent, Mr Staunton.
- The
first letter (relevantly) was in the following terms:-
Letter dated 16 December 2004:-
"...
We are ready to exchange subject to the following:
1. Additional Inclusions: Curtains, fixed floor coverings, insect screens,
air conditioning
2. Special Condition 6: As previously discussed please add the following
alterations and amendments:
a) On the fifth line delete 'and stamp duty';
b) Add a sentence at the end - 'the Vendor may direct payment of the deposit
only to the trust account of the stakeholder in the at
purchase contact which
may be invested in accordance with Clause 3 hereof'.
3. Purchaser: Vanessa Joan Pallister will probably be added as a joint
purchaser pursuant to Section 18(3) of the Duties Act prior to completion.
We await your advices.
..."
- The
second letter was dated 19 th January 2005, as follows:-
Letter dated 19 January 2005:-
"...
We enclose an unstamped Transfer for execution by the Vendors. Please return
the Transfer to us for stamping purposes.
Please note that we have added Mrs Pallister as a joint purchaser pursuant to
s.18(3) of the Duties Act, 1997. Please amend the counterpart Contract
accordingly.
..."
- Mr
Lander gave evidence that he made handwritten notations on the letter of 16 th
December 2004, as follows:-
Mr Staunton -
1. Insect screens and air conditioning included but there are no curtains or
carpets.
2 & 3. All agreed.
- Mr
Lander said that he then faxed a copy of the letter of 16 th December 2004 with
the handwritten notations he had made to Staunton
& Thompson.
- The
decision of the primary judge had led to two issues being debated before this
court. The first issue relates to appeal grounds
1 and 2. It may be expressed as
follows: Did Staunton & Thompson represent that they had Mrs Pallister's
authority?
- As
to this, Mr Murr SC who appeared for the appellants, argued that, upon the
proper construction of the documents to which I have
made reference, and in the
surrounding circumstances, the letter of 19 th January 2005, despite its
internal inconsistencies and
possible ambiguity, constituted a request to amend
the counterpart contract by adding Mrs Pallister as purchaser. It was argued
that
this was consistent with the apparent intention of the letter that both Mr
and Mrs Pallister were to be parties to the contract itself.
If that were so, it
was argued, the request clearly evinced an intention to alter the contract in a
way that would affect the rights
and obligations of Mrs Pallister. As such, it
could be seen as an implied representation of authority, carrying with it the
implication
that the solicitors had Mrs Pallister's authority to request the
amendment of the contract.
- It
was submitted by the appellant that due weight had not been given to the actual
words of the January 2005 letter from the solicitors,
and that, in giving the
letter an alternative construction based on inferences that were neither
necessary nor appropriate, the trial
judge was wrong in his conclusions on this
issue.
- The
second issue (appeal ground 3) was expressed in these terms: would Mrs Pallister
have thereby become a party to the contract?
- The
simple argument here was that formal contracts for the sale of land had already
been exchanged between the appellants and Mr Pallister
on 16 th December 2004.
Staunton & Thompson, it was plain, acted for Mr Pallister in that
transaction.
- Mr
Murr argued that therefore there was already in existence a contract for the
sale of land by virtue of this exchange. In those
circumstances, a further
contract for the sale of land was superfluous. He submitted that the situation
was akin to a first category
Masters v Cameron case [1954] HCA 72; 91 CLR
353.
- In
Peter Warren (Properties) Pty Ltd v Jalvoran Pty Ltd [2004] NSWSC 1149;
12 BPR 22,649, White J had set out the rationale for selling real estate in New
South Wales, by way of formal exchange of contracts.
Mr Murr argued that the
requirements mentioned by White J were satisfied by simply adding Mrs Pallister
as a purchaser to the existing
contract, with her husband. There was no need for
a further exchange of written contracts.
- Mr
Curtin of counsel appeared for the respondents in the court below and on the
hearing of the appeal. He argued that the primary
judge was perfectly entitled
to find that there was no representation, either express or implied, that a
contract would be entered
into. Rather, the representation was that Mrs
Pallister would be added as a transferee. At no stage had the solicitors
asserted,
expressly or by implication, an authority to bind Mrs Pallister to a
contract, and no enforceable contract otherwise arose.
- In
relation to grounds 1 and 2, Mr Curtin SC submitted that the arguments advanced
by Mr Murr could not be accepted. In essence, he
argued that the concession made
by the appellants that there was an internal inconsistency in the letter of 19
th January 2005, could
not stand with their submission that there was an
unambiguous representation to amend the contract of sale by the addition of Mrs
Pallister. In other words, counsel submitted that the letter could not be both
internally inconsistent and yet unambiguous, as argued
by the appellants. The
primary judge's search for the correct meaning, and his conclusions in that
regard, should not be disturbed.
- In
relation to ground 3, Mr Curtin submitted that the question that arose in the
correspondence was whether the respondents implied
that they had Mrs Pallister's
authority to the effect that they could effectively bind her to the Contract for
Sale (without her
signature and without an exchange of contracts). In this
regard, Mr Curtin relied on the fact that, in New South Wales, solicitors
do not
have implied authority to make a contract on behalf of a client, a principle
which the primary judge had found to be known
to the appellants' solicitors.
Further, counsel argued that ordinary conveyancing practice in New South Wales
requires an exchange
of contracts to give rise to enforceable contractual
rights. The rationales suggested by White J in Peter Warren (Properties) Pty
Ltd included the fact that the form of contract ordinarily used contained
important provisions for the protection of the parties, and
that a court would
not lightly attribute to knowledgeable parties an intention to forego the
protection in this regard that the exchange
of contracts afford. It could not be
accepted that these important matters could be satisfied by simply adding Mrs
Pallister as a
purchaser to the existing contract with Mr Pallister, without the
proper formal matters as to signature and exchange occurring. The
primary judge,
it was submitted, had been correct in his view that the evidence did not amount
to an agreement that a binding contract
(between the vendors and Mrs Pallister)
would come into existence other than by way of exchange of contracts. The
ordinary presumption,
that parties to a conveyance do not intend to be bound
until the formal exchange of contract occurs, had not been displaced. Counsel
argued that the plain fact was that Mrs Pallister was never a party to the
existing and exchanged Contract for Sale.
Resolution
- I
have come to the conclusion that the appeal should be dismissed. It is clear, in
my opinion, that the appeal does not raise any
question of general principle.
Consequently, the reasons I will give for my conclusion may be expressed in
short form. They are that,
firstly, the submissions for the appellants have not
raised any doubt as to the correctness of the primary judge's decision. The
inconsistencies noted in the letter of 19 th January 2005 correctly suggested,
as the primary judge found, that the request in the
letter was intended to refer
to the amendment of the Transfer, on the basis that Mrs Pallister had been added
as a joint transferee,
pursuant to section 18(3) of the Duties Act 1997
(" the Act "). This was supported by the fact that the letter
enclosed a draft Transfer in which Mrs Pallister had been named as
co-transferee.
The principal purport of the letter, as the primary judge found,
was the action of adding Mrs Pallister's name to the Transfer on
the basis
outlined in the letter. It was done with the intent and for the purpose of
attracting or evoking the exemption available
under the provisions of section
18(3) of the Act, on the basis that Mrs Pallister was not a co-purchaser. This
view of the central inconsistency represented by the last
sentence in the
letter, was, in fact, consistent with the earlier suggestion that had been made
in the letter of 16 th December 2004,
written before exchange of contracts
between the appellants and Mr Pallister. The probable future action foreshadowed
in that letter
was, once again, for the specific purpose of invoking the
provisions of section 18(3) of the Duties Act 1997 , prior to completion
of the contract. The expression, "please amend the counterpart contract
accordingly" in the second letter, cannot
be viewed in isolation from the
correspondence as a whole, and though perplexing, cannot overwhelm the real
basis of the correspondence.
- Secondly,
I do not think any sufficient doubt has been raised as to his Honour's finding
that the terms of the letter of 19 th January
2005 did not contain an express
representation or warranty by Mr Staunton that he had Mrs Pallister's authority
to contract on her
behalf. Nor do I think sufficient doubt has been raised to
his Honour's subsequent finding that, taking the letter of 19 th January
2005 as
a whole and in context, including, in particular, the letter of 16 th December
2004, the second letter was neither an express
or implied unqualified assertion
by Mr Staunton that he was authorised by Mrs Pallister to act as her agent, for
the purpose of making
her a party to the Contract for Sale. Accordingly, the
primary judge was correct to conclude that the letter written by Mr Staunton
on
19 th January 2005 did not constitute either an express or implied
representation that the solicitor had authority for Mrs Pallister
to act on her
behalf, so as to bind her as a party to the contract for the sale of the
Clontarf property.
- Finally,
I am satisfied that the primary judge was correct to conclude, in relation to
the further issue relied upon by the appellants,
that they have not (apart from
the question of Mr Staunton's authority) established that an enforceable
contract otherwise arose.
His Honour was not satisfied that the parties had, by
their words and actions, intended to create contractual relations binding as
between the appellants on the one hand, and Mrs Pallister on the other. Given
that the Contract for Sale in this case related to
a very valuable residential
property, his Honour was right to conclude that, if it had been the intention of
the parties to make
Mrs Pallister a party to the contract, that intention would
have likely to have been effected by means by either a fresh exchange
of
contracts, or by way of a formal agreement to vary the existing contract.
Neither course had been adopted, with the consequence
that no binding contract
arose between the appellants and Mrs Pallister.
- In
my opinion, the appeal should be dismissed with costs.
**********
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