Probate Revoked For Improper Service

Probate Revoked For Improper Service

Al- Sabah Estate 2016 BCSC 1781 both have a probate revoked and removed the administrator for both failing to disclose important information to the court as well as sending the required probate notice to her close relatives at addresses that were mostly incorrect and could have easily been corrected.

The court held that   equity favoured the revocation of grant of letters of administration and followed the decision of Desbiens v Smith Estate 2010 BCCA 394 where a grant of probate was set aside in order to allow a wills variation action brought” out of time”, but the defendants had not received notice of the probate application due to an incorrect address used by the executor who should have been more diligent.

40      Moreover, I am satisfied that, at the time she applied for the grant of letters of administration of the estate, Sheikha Salem failed to disclose to the court pertinent information that ought to have been disclosed.

41      Where the evidence discloses that the person who is obliged to give notice failed to exercise sufficient diligence to ascertain the correct address to which the notice was to be mailed, the notice requirements of the Act are not complied with, and the court has a general discretion to revoke a grant of letters of administration: Desbiens v. Smith Estate 2010 BCCA 394 (B.C. C.A.) at paras. 21 to 35 inclusive. I do note that that decision dealt with the Act’s predecessor, the now-repealed Estate Administration Act, which was replaced by the Act. However, the general principles of law remain applicable.

42      When it is alleged that an administrator should be removed because he or she is not acting in the best interests of the estate, the main factor to be considered is the welfare of the beneficiaries: Veitch v. Veitch Estate, 2007 BCSC 952 (B.C. S.C.) at para. 22

Tracing Converted Assets

Tracing Converted Assets

Converted assets can be traced and reclaimed under certain circumstances if they can be identified.

For example a bank account of cash can be converted into a stock portfolio which in turn is used to buy a house that is subsequently sold and put into bonds. As long as the funds can be identified , they can be traced and accounted for and where appropriate by the court, re transferred into the name of the rightful owner.

The law on tracing funds was discussed inter alia in Jasmur Holdings Ltd.v Taynton Developments Inc. 2016 BCSC 1902.

169      With respect to tracing funds , In Tracy (Guardian ad litem of) v. Instaloans Financial Solution Centres (B.C.) Ltd., 2010 BCCA 357 (B.C. C.A.), the Court of Appeal stated

[41] . . . Although tracing is available both at law and in Equity (see Maddaugh and McCamus, supra, at chapters 6 and 7), the right which the plaintiffs are entitled to trace in this case is the constructive trust, an equitable property right. I agree with Professor Lionel Smith (The Law of Tracing (1997)) that the establishment of this proprietary right, which he refers to as the “proprietary base”, is sufficient to establish an entitlement to trace. It is not necessary, as was once argued, to demonstrate a pre-existing fiduciary relationship: see Citadel General Assurance Co. v. Lloyds Bank Canada, [1997] 3 S.C.R. 805 at para. 57.

[42] Of course, it may be difficult to identify the funds or other property into which the claimed Charges have been transformed or with which they have been mingled; and the process will come to a halt in certain conditions, including where the balance in an account has fallen below the amount being traced. (See generally Maddaugh and McCamus, supra, at Chapter 7, and Smith, supra, at Chapter 8.) As the Court stated in McTaggart v. Boffo (1975) 64 D.L.R. (3d) 441 (Ont. H.C.J.):

Tracing is only possible so long as the funds can be followed in a true sense, i.e., so long as, whether mixed or unmixed, it can be located and identified. It presupposes the continued existence of the money either as a separate fund or as part of a mixed fund or as latent in property acquired by the means of such a fund.

Two things will absolutely prevent the tracing of trust monies:

  1. If, on the fact of any individual case, such continued existence of the identifiable trust fund is not established, equity is helpless to trace it;
  2. the chain for tracing is also broken where the trust fund either in its initial form or a converted

A History of Constructive Trust

A History of Constructive Trust

The BC Court of Appeal in BNSF Railway v Teck Metals Ltd 2016 BCSC 350 the court delivered the following brief summary of the history of constructive trust as an equitable remedy:

Constructive trust. Academic writers seem to agree that this type of trust developed in an ad hoc fashion from the 17th century. D.W.M. Waters, M.K. Gillen and L.D. Smith, the authors of Waters’ Law of Trusts (4th ed., 2012), note that the types of obligations enforced by means of this trust “reflected the whole spectrum of remedies that were available in the equity jurisdiction”, although they were mainly concerned with what we would call fraud (very broadly defined), mistake and fiduciary relationships. (At 480.) Such trusts were invoked, for example, where necessary to preclude employees from retaining secret profits made by abusing their positions; to prevent the Statute of Frauds from being used to effect a fraud; or for ensuring that a stranger who intermeddled with a trust or assisted in a breach of trust would be required to account for any profits so obtained. The authors go on to state:

Effectively … English courts did not seriously examine what the constructive trust as a concept was for, and, without the direction that this inquiry would have given, they fell into describing what the position of a person is like, who is vested with property the benefit of which he is obligated to hold for another. It was like the express trust; there was a trustee and a beneficiary, there was trust property and duties with regard to that property which fell upon the trustee. The name, constructive trust, described the existence of an independent obligation; it neither created that obligation, nor was it itself a remedy. This was the approach taken to the constructive trust and it has survived to the present day in the more traditional common law jurisdictions of the Commonwealth. [At 481.]
25      In the twentieth century, however, courts in the U.K. began to take notice of the American trend, sparked by the publication of the 1937 Restatement on Restitution, towards the recognition of a “new head of restitutionary obligation”. (Waters’, at 484.) Beginning in the 1960s, the English Court of Appeal invoked the constructive trust in new situations to redress unconscionable or inequitable conduct. These cases culminated in Hussey v. Palmer, [1972] 3 All E.R. 744 (C.A.), to which I will return below.
26      In Canada, the development of the remedy of “constructive trust” began when the Supreme Court first turned to it as a proprietary device that could resolve, at least in some cases, the injustice inherent in the common law of matrimonial property. (See, e.g., Pettitt v. Pettitt, [1970] A.C. 777 (H.L.), Gissing v. Gissing, [1971] A.C. 886 (H.L), and the dissenting judgment in Murdoch v. Murdoch, [1975] S.C.R. 423.) Again, I do not propose to embark on an exposition of the voluminous academic and judicial writing on this subject in the 1980s and 1990s. I refer the reader to D.W.M. Waters, “The Constructive Trust in Evolution: Substantive and Remedial”, (1990-91) 10 Est. & Tr. J. 334; Waters’ Law of Trusts, supra, at ch. 11; Maddaugh and McCamus, supra, at §5:200; a case comment by Professor A.J. McClean on Pettkus v. Becker in (1982) 16 U.B.C. L. Rev. 155; M.M. Litman, “The Emergence of Unjust Enrichment as a Cause of Action and a Remedy of Constructive Trust”, (1988) 26 Alta. L. Rev. 407; David M. Paciocco, “The Remedial Constructive Trust: A Principled Basis for Priorities Over Creditors”, (1989) 68 Can. B. Rev. 315; John L. Dewar, “The Development of the Remedial Constructive Trust”, (1982-4) 6 Est. & Tr. Q. 312; Leonard I. Rotman, “Deconstructing the Constructive Trust”, (1999) 37 Alta. L. Rev. 133; Stuart Hoegner, “How Many Rights (or Wrongs) Make a Remedy? Substantive and Unified Constructive Trusts”, (1997) 42 McGill L.J. 437; and more recently, John Greiss, “Causes of Actions Supporting a Constructive Trust”, (2011) 38 Advoc. Q. 249.
27      The process began in earnest when Laskin J. (as he then was) dissented in Murdoch, forsaking “the often unconvincing search for a mythical common intention” to create property rights justifying an in rem remedy to Mrs. Murdoch. His approach was adopted by two others in Rathwell v. Rathwell, [1978] 2 S.C.R. 436. There, Dickson J. (as he then was), with Chief Justice Laskin and Spence J. concurring, reasoned:
The constructive trust, as so envisaged, comprehends the imposition of trust machinery by the court in order to achieve a result consonant with good conscience. As a matter of principle, the court will not allow any man unjustly to appropriate to himself the value earned by the labours of another. That principle is not defeated by the existence of a matrimonial relationship between the parties; but, for the principle to succeed, the facts must display an enrichment, a corresponding deprivation, and the absence of any juristic reason — such as a contract or disposition of law — for the enrichment … [At 455.]
28      Dickson J. also observed that in cases of this kind, the plaintiff must demonstrate a “causal connection” between his or her contributions (whether financial or otherwise) and the acquisition or existence of the disputed assets. That requirement had been met in Rathwell:
Analyzing the facts from the remedial perspective of constructive trust, it is clear that only through the efforts of Mrs. Rathwell was Mr. Rathwell able to acquire the lands in question. Assuming, arguendo, that Mrs. Rathwell had made no capital contribution to the acquisitions, it would be unjust, in all of the circumstances, to allow Mr. Rathwell to retain the benefits of his wife’s labours. His acquisition of legal title was made possible only through “joint effort” and “team work” as he himself testified; he cannot now deny his wife’s beneficial entitlement. [At 461.]
29      Finally, in Pettkus v. Becker, [1980] 2 S.C.R. 834, the minority view became that of the majority and the availability of a constructive trust as a remedy for unjust enrichment was put beyond doubt. I need quote only this paragraph from Dickson J.’s reasons:
The principle of unjust enrichment lies at the heart of the constructive trust. “Unjust enrichment” has played a role in Anglo-American legal writing for centuries. Lord Mansfield, in the case of Moses v. Macferlan put the matter in these words: “… the gist of this kind of action is, that the defendant, upon the circumstances of the case, is obliged by the ties of natural justice and equity to refund the money”. It would be undesirable, and indeed impossible, to attempt to define all the circumstances in which an unjust enrichment might arise …. The great advantage of ancient principles of equity is their flexibility: the judiciary is thus able to shape these malleable principles so as to accommodate the change in needs and mores of society, in order to achieve justice. The constructive trust has proven to be a useful tool in the judicial armory …. [At 847-8.]
(See also Sorochan v. Sorochan, [1986] 2 S.C.R. 38 at 47-50.)

Proprietary Estoppel

Promissory Estoppel Revisited

NOTE:   This Court of Appeal Decision was over turned by the Supreme Court of Canada 2017 SCC 61 and the claim was allowed

 

See blog entry dated  February 2,2018

 

The BC Appeal Court in Cowper-Smith v Morgan 2016 BCCA 200 allowed an appeal in part to over turn the successful  the claim brought for proprietary estoppel at trial by finding that the claim should not be allowed where a non owner of property gave assurances and a reliance thereon with respect to her future intentions based on the assumption she would inherit from her mother the owner., when she might not.  Since the sister  had no enforceable equitable or legal right to the property at the critical time being when the representation was made, the brother should not have relied upon it.

The deceased mother transferred her house into joint tenancy with her daughter in 2001. In 2002 the mother made a will leaving her estate equally to her three children. The mother’s investment accounts were over several years transferred into joint names with the daughter.

A declaration of trust for the house and bank assets was signed in 2001.

The defendant sister told her siblings that the house was put into her name only so she could assist in their mother’s affairs and would all eventually go to her mother’s estate.

The defendant daughter promised to sell one of her brothers her anticipated 1/3 share in the house to lure him back to Canada to take care of his mother.

The trial and appeal courts over turned the transfers and distributed her estate equally as per her will on the basis of undue influence  but the appeal over turned the portion of the judgement that allowed the brother to succeed on the basis that he relied upon the promise made by his sister, he took care of his mother for years, but the sister reneged on her promise to transfer to him her 1/3 of the house as she did not own it when she promised it.

The Appeal Court stated in part:

Commerce International Bank Ltd., [1982] Q.B. 84 (Eng. C.A.) at 122:

When the parties to a transaction proceed on the basis of an underlying assumption (either of fact or of law, and whether due to misrepresentation or mistake, makes no difference), on which they have conducted the dealings between them, neither of them will be allowed to go back on that assumption when it would be unfair or unjust to allow him to do so. If one of them does seek to go back on it, the courts will give the other such remedy as the equity of the case demands.

70      While the principles of fairness and flexibility have informed the modern approach to the application of proprietary estoppel, as adopted by this Court in its jurisprudence (see Idle-O Apartments Inc. v. Charlyn Investments Ltd., 2014 BCCA 451 (B.C. C.A.) at para. 49; Sabey v. von Hopffgarten Estate, 2014 BCCA 360 (B.C. C.A.); Scholz v. Scholz, 2013 BCCA 309 (B.C. C.A.) at para. 31; Sykes v. Rosebery Parklands Development Society, 2011 BCCA 15 (B.C. C.A.) at paras. 44-46; Erickson v. Jones, 2008 BCCA 379 (B.C. C.A.) at paras. 52-57; Trethewey-Edge Dyking (District) v. Coniagas Ranches Ltd. [2003 CarswellBC 657 (B.C. C.A.)] at paras. 64-73; Zelmer v. Victor Projects Ltd. (1997), 34 B.C.L.R. (3d) 125 (B.C. C.A.) at paras. 36-37), there remains a necessary balancing between an overly broad application of the doctrine under the general guise of “unfairness” and an overly narrow application of the doctrine that places excessive weight on the technical requirements of the doctrine. See Lord Scott’s observations in Cobbe v. Yeoman’s Row Management Ltd., [2008] UKHL 55 (U.K. H.L.) in contrast to Lord Neuberger’s comments in Thorner v. Major, [2009] UKHL 18 (U.K. H.L.).

71      These underlying rationales and explanations for the evolution of the doctrine have led to its modern iteration as enunciated by Madam Justice Bennett in Sabey and affirmed by Madam Justice Newbury in Idle-O Apartments Inc. at para. 49:

[49] From the foregoing I infer that although proprietary estoppel is, like most equitable remedies, flexible and aimed at doing justice, and although the basic elements of the doctrine are not to be technically confined, those elements must still be made out and an equity established. I reproduce again the encapsulation of the doctrine provided recently in Sabey:

Is an equity established? An equity will be established where:

There was an assurance or representation, attributable to the owner, that the claimant has or will have some right to the property, and

The claimant relied on this assurance to his or her detriment so that it would be unconscionable for the owner to go back on that assurance.

If an equity is established, the court must determine the extent of the equity and the remedy appropriate to satisfy the equity.

72      As was noted by Bennett J.A. in Sabey, the bulk of the analysis occurs at the first stage, where “findings with regard to assurances, reliance and detriment are made” and where the court must determine whether it would be unconscionable for the person “to fail to make good on a promise to create a legal right in favour of someone else” (at para. 27).

73      Thus, the elements of the modern doctrine of proprietary estoppel require:

(i) an assurance or representation by the defendant that leads the claimant to form a mistaken assumption or misapprehension that he or she has an interest in the property at issue;

(ii) a causative connection between the assurance or representation and the claimant’s reliance on the assumption such that the claimant changes his or her course of conduct; (

iii) a detriment suffered by the claimant that flows from his or her reliance on the assumption, which causes the unfairness and underpins the proprietary estoppel; and

(iv) a sufficient property right held by the defendant that could be transferred to satisfy the right claimed by the claimant.

 

The Majority of the Court held:

98      There is no doubt that the applicable standard of review in this case is that described by Newbury J.A. in Idle-O Apartments Inc. as follows (at para. 72):

[72] At the outset, I note that the granting of a remedy for proprietary estoppel is a discretionary matter that attracts a high degree of appellate [deference]. The classic statement of the applicable standard of review may be found in Friends of the Old Man River Society v. Canada (Minister of Transport), [1992] 1 S.C.R. 3, where the Court quoted with approval the following passage from Charles Osenton & Co. v. Johnston, [1942] A.C. 130 (H.L.):

The law as to the reversal by a court of appeal of an order made by the judge below in the exercise of his discretion is well-established, and any difficulty that arises is due only to the application of well-settled principles in an individual case. The appellate tribunal is not at liberty merely to substitute its own exercise of discretion for the discretion already exercised by the judge. In other words, appellate authorities ought not to reverse the order merely because they would themselves have exercised the original discretion, had it attached to them, in a different way. But if the appellate tribunal reaches the clear conclusion that there has been a wrongful exercise of discretion in that no weight, or no sufficient weight, has been given to relevant considerations such as those urged before us by the appellant, then the reversal of the order on appeal may be justified…(See also Wenngatz v. 371431 Alberta Ltd., 2013 BCCA 225 at para. 9; Stone v. Ellerman, 2009 BCCA 294 at para. 94; and Harper v. Canada (Attorney General), 2000 SCC 57at para. 26.)

99      In considering whether there has been a wrongful exercise of discretion, I begin by noting that in Uglow v. Uglow, [2004] EWCA Civ 987 (Eng. & Wales C.A. (Civil)) at para. 9, the Court of Appeal described the following general principle:

The overriding concern of equity to prevent unconscionable conduct permeates all the different elements of the doctrine of proprietary estoppel; assurance, reliance, detriment and satisfaction are all intertwined.

100      In my view, the assurance given by Gloria to Max in this case was so based on uncertainty as to undermine any claim based on proprietary estoppel and that uncertainty goes to the root of reliance. The uncertainty arises from the fact that both at the time the assurance was given by Gloria and at the time Max acted upon the assurance, the Property was owned by Elizabeth; that is, Gloria had no beneficial interest in the Property and was uncertain what interest she would eventually inherit, if any. In the circumstances, Max cannot have been reasonably certain Gloria could do what she represented she would do. His hope and belief, initiated and encouraged by her, that he would likely be given the opportunity to buy whatever interest Gloria might inherit does not give rise to an interest in his mother’s estate. With respect, I do not agree with Smith J.A.’s view that Gloria’s “clear entitlement to a one-third interest in the Property at the time of the judge’s order” is relevant to whether an estoppel arose when Max acted upon the assurance given to him.

101      In relation to reliance as an essential element of a claim founded upon proprietary estoppel, Snell’s Equity, 31st ed (London: Sweet and Maxwell, 2005) says, at §10-18:

A must have acted in the belief either that he or she already owned a sufficient interest in O’s property to justify the expenditure or that he or she would obtain such an interest although it is not necessary for A to establish that he or she had an expectation in relation to a specific or clearly identified piece of property. But if A has no such belief, and improves land in which he knows he has no interest or merely the interest of the tenant, or licensee or as an occupier who incurs expenditure in the hope of obtaining planning permission and then entering into a contract to buy the land, he or she has no equity in respect of his expenditure. It is not sufficient that A believes he will obtain an interest over O’s property if he is also aware that O may change his mind.

[Emphasis added.]

102      Snell’s Equity proposes that in order to establish the estoppel it is necessary for A to show that O “created or encouraged the belief or expectation on the part of A that O would not withdraw from the agreement in principle”. That is a description of a present and ongoing obligation.

103      The circumstances in the case at bar resemble those in the many reported inheritance cases, including In re Basham and Thorner v. Major, with an important exception: the assurance here did not come from the beneficial owner of the property interest. In my view, the interest found by the judge to have been wrongly obtained through undue influence in respect of the land transfer and Declaration of Trust cannot be regarded as sufficient interest to permit Gloria to make representations or give assurances that might give rise to a proprietary estoppel. The assurance Gloria gave to Max had nothing to do with an interest in the Property created by the transfer or Declaration of Trust (both of which she thought, at the time, to be intended to simply facilitate the handling of the estate). The interest she promised to Max was the right to buy her expected inheritance. She did not yet own that inheritance and might never have come into it.

104      Walker L.J., in the passage from Thorner cited by Smith J.A., was of the view that in order to constitute proprietary estoppel, “the assurances given to the claimant (expressly or impliedly, or, in standing-by cases, tacitly) should relate to identified property owned (or, perhaps, about to be owned) by the defendant” (emphasis added).

105      Walker L.J. does not expand upon his view that an estoppel may arise from assurances made by one who is about to be the owner of the property. Neither the source nor the extent of that qualification to simple ownership is described, other than by a reference later in the paragraph to Crabb v. Arun District Council, in which there is no discussion of property about to be owned by the Council that made the representation in that case. In fact, in Crabb there are repeated references to the legal rights of the person making the representation. Denning M.R. states: “Short of an actual promise, if he, by his words or conduct, so behaves as to lead another to believe that he will not insist on his strict legal rights — knowing or intending that the other will act on that belief — and he does so act, that again will raise an equity in favour of the other; and it is for a court of equity to say in what way the equity may be satisfied” (emphasis added). Scarman L.J., citing Willmott, notes: “the defendant, the possessor of the legal right, must have encouraged the plaintiff in his expenditure of money or in the other acts which he has done, either directly or by abstaining from asserting his legal right” (emphasis added). In short, there is nothing expressly stated in Crabb that contemplates an estoppel arising with respect to property that is other than legally owned by the person making the representation.

106      Even assuming there to be some basis for the view that proprietary estoppel might arise as a result of an assurance given by one about to be the owner of property, I would not expand that class of persons so far as to include a potential beneficiary who gives an assurance to another, years before the death of a testator, with respect to what she will do with an inheritance that she merely anticipates receiving, if the person receiving the assurance acts as requested in the meantime. Not only is there uncertainty, in such a case, with respect to the promisor’s ability to deliver a proprietary interest to the promisee at the time the assurance is given, the uncertainty is not resolved when the promisee acts in reliance upon the promise.

107      Leaving aside, for the moment, the question whether Gloria was in a position to exert undue influence upon her mother, there was uncertainty with respect to the property interest Max was being promised. First, there was uncertainty whether Gloria would inherit anything from her mother. She might have predeceased her mother. Her mother might have changed her will and left Gloria more or less than a one-third interest in the property. Her mother might have sold the house and moved into accommodation more suited to her declining health. Simply by liquidating her property Elizabeth Cowper-Smith would have precluded Max from asserting a right to buy anything from Gloria. Certainly it is not suggested that Elizabeth was in any way restricted in her dealings with the property simply because her daughter made assurances to Max about what she would do on Elizabeth’s death.

108      Without exerting undue influence upon her mother, Gloria was not in a position to determine what property interest Max would receive in exchange for his move to Victoria. The fulfilment of Gloria’s promise was entirely conditional on her mother’s actions, which were outside her control.

109      Further, an obligation on Gloria’s part cannot have arisen before she inherited an interest in the Property. In this case, unlike the inheritance cases, no obligation arose simply as a result of the reliance upon the assurance. Where the assurance comes from the testator, the estoppel arises because there has been such reliance, making it inequitable to permit the testator to resile from the promise. A remedy is available before the testator’s death. As noted by Mummery L.J. in Uglow, proprietary estoppel may be relied upon to prevent a testator from making a will giving specific property to one person, if by his conduct he has previously created the expectation in a different person that he will inherit it:

The testator’s assurance that he will leave specific property to a person by will may thus become irrevocable as a result of the other’s detrimental reliance on the assurance, even though the testator’s power of testamentary disposition to which the assurance is linked is inherently revocable.

110      As Professor MacDougall observes in Estoppel at §6.38, there is a temporal element to proprietary estoppel. The demands of equity and how they are properly satisfied may change over time; but the equity arises when there is reliance. That is the foundation for what he describes at §6.73 as a “more orthodox approach” to the question we face than that which is taken by Smith J.A.:

… [P]roprietary estoppel will not apply where the owner in fact has no existing rights with respect to the property in question when the equity would otherwise arise — i.e., at the time of the detrimental reliance.

111      Uncertainty with respect to the promisor’s ability to fulfill the promise is closely related to the concept of reliance. Key to the acquisition of a proprietary interest by estoppel is the principle that it is unconscionable to permit a person to fail to keep a promise made and reasonably relied upon by the promisee. How can there be reasonable reliance upon a promise to convey an interest in property made by one who does not have such an interest or whose interest is uncertain?

112      Like my colleague, I recognize the evolution of the law of proprietary estoppel has been marked by tensions between, on the one hand, broad principles of flexibility and fairness, and on the other hand, narrow technical requirements. While the jurisprudence tells us that proprietary estoppel is no longer a “Procrustean bed constructed from some unalterable criteria” (see Idle-O Apartments Inc. at para. 23), the Court in Crabb nonetheless insisted the exercise of equitable jurisdiction be rooted in identifiable principles. To that end, the Court adopted the words of Harman L.J. in Bridge v. Campbell Discount Co., [1961] 1 Q.B. 445 (Eng. C.A.) at 459:

Equitable principles are … perhaps rather too often bandied about in common law courts as though the Chancellor still had only the length of his own foot to measure when coming to a conclusion. Since the time of Lord Eldon the system of equity for good or evil has been a very precise one, and equitable jurisdiction is exercised on well-known principles.

113      I do not read this Court’s judgment in Idle-O Apartments Inc. as suggesting that uncertainty that undermines reliance on a representation may be disregarded. To the contrary, when the Court considered whether an equity was established (at para. 23) it required the claimant to establish he believed in the existence of “a right created or encouraged by the words or the actions of the other party such that it would be unfair, unjust or unconscionable to allow the representor to set up its undoubted rights against the claimant”. At para. 57, the Court referred with approval to the trial judge’s recognition that detrimental reliance on the part of the claimant “underpins the claim and establishes the unfairness or unjustness that ought to be addressed by equity. Without such, … the doctrine may become ‘somewhat pointless’ and a ‘circumlocution for doing justice’.”

114      Newbury J.A., after describing the evolving conception of the scope of proprietary estoppel, noted:

[48] This court has adopted the “broader” approach to proprietary estoppel: see Zelmer at para. 49, Erickson at paras. 55-7, and most recently in Sabey at paras. 28-9. This approach is consistent with the judgment of Lord Denning in the seminal English case of Crabb v. Arun District Council, [1976] 1 Ch. D. 179 at 187-9; Oliver J. in Taylor Fashions; Buckley L.J. in Shaw v. Applegate, [1978] 1 All E.R. 123 at 130-1; and various other English authorities. On the other hand, English and Australian courts (and to some extent Canadian courts) have in recent years been at pains to emphasize that proprietary estoppel does not arise simply out of conduct that a court finds to be unconscionable. As observed by Lord Scott in Yeoman’s Row Management Ltd v. Cobbe, [2008] UKHL 55:

… unconscionability of conduct may well lead to a remedy but, in my opinion, proprietary estoppel cannot be the route to it unless the ingredients for a proprietary estoppel are present. These ingredients should include, in principle, a proprietary claim made by a claimant and an answer to that claim based on some fact, or some point of mixed fact and law, that the person against whom the claim is made can be estopped from asserting. To treat a “proprietary estoppel equity” as requiring neither a proprietary claim by the claimant nor an estoppel against the defendant but simply unconscionable behaviour is, in my respectful opinion, a recipe for confusion. [At para. 16.]

[Emphasis added.]

115      Professor MacDougall, at §6.34, echoes Lord Scott’s concerns, suggesting the doctrine of proprietary estoppel “should not be seen as a generalized remedial doctrine for unfairness.” Unfairness, in MacDougall’s view, is merely a general description of what the doctrine seeks to combat. Unfairness is not, in itself, an “overarching principle” that allows proprietary estoppel to be applied even in the absence of the typical requirements.

116      The Court in Idle-O Apartments Inc. further noted that the test for establishing a proprietary estoppel had recently been collapsed, in Sabey, into two components (see para. 30):

There was an assurance or representation, attributable to the owner, that the claimant has or will have some right to the property, and

The claimant relied on this assurance to his or her detriment so that it would be unconscionable for the owner to go back on that assurance.

[Emphasis added.]

117      While the criteria that define the limits of proprietary estoppel are not unalterable, I see no reason in principle why the cause of action should be expanded to permit a person to acquire an interest in property by reliance upon an assurance by a non-owner that falls short of a contractual obligation. Such an expansion would be problematic, untying entirely from its ties to property the only estoppel that can be used as a sword. I would not so extend the cause of action.

118      In my view, the fact Gloria used undue influence to obtain de facto control over the Property and Investments does not affect that conclusion. Max did not, in fact, rely upon that undue influence as assurance that Gloria would deliver on her promise. Even if he had known of the influence exerted by Gloria, equity should not come to the assistance of one who says he arranged his affairs in reliance upon a promise made by a person exerting improper control over a testator with respect to what she would do with the inheritance assured by the exercise of that control. In fairness to him it should be said that Max is not advancing that argument. Even so, the logic of that argument lies at the root of the proposition that undue influence distinguishes this case from others where a non-owner makes assurances about what rights an owner will exercise over property.

Conclusion

119      In the result, I would allow the appeal on this aspect of the order only and set aside the Order made in Max’s favour. In all other respects, I agree with my colleague’s reasons and conclusions.

Saunders J.A.:

I AGREE:

Appeal allowed in part.

Value of Contribution

Value of Contribution

The Value of Contribution of a parties to the acquisition or improvement of  an asset does not have to be in money and can take  various individual forms as was discussed in Mac v Mak 2016 BCSC 1140.

The Courts have to scrutinize the relationship and history of the parties and come to a conclusion on a case by case basis as to what if anything each party contributed little or no monies but instead did other things like free  labour in expectation of being put on title.

Mac v Mak was a dispute over ownership of a home that was previously held in joint tenancy by Sau Har Mak and her two daughters.

Sau Har Mak died in August 2012, and full title of the home passed to her daughters on her death.

Two of Sau Har Mak’s sons sought  a declaration that their sisters hold the property on resulting trust for Sau Har Mak’s estate and do not have beneficial ownership of the home.

[92]        The central issue before the Court is whether a joint tenancy was created between Sally Mak, Mary Mak and Sau Har Mak when the Mahon property was purchased on June 17, 1993.

Specifically, the Court must determine whether the transfer was gratuitous, and therefore the presumption of a resulting trust applies, or whether beneficial ownership is governed by the presumption of indefeasible title in favour of Sally and Mary Mak.

 

VALUE

[119]     In Virk v. Pannu, 2006 BCSC 921, aff’d Bajwa v. Pannu, 2007 BCCA 260, Baljit Kaur Bajwa and her mother, Balwant Kaur Virk, together with the defendant, Rupinder Pannu, purchased a property as joint tenants for $249,000.  Ms. Bajwa and Ms. Virk as plaintiffs had provided the down payment of $35,000, and the balance of the purchase price came from a mortgage with their financial institution.  Mr. Pannu did not contribute any money towards the purchase, but became a covenanter on the mortgage.  He assisted in searching for the property and engaging a realtor.  The court held that the onus was on the plaintiffs seeking to displace the presumption of indefeasible title created by s. 23(2) of the Land Title Act and there was no cogent evidence doing so.  The court held that the presumption of resulting trust did not apply because Mr. Pannu had given “value” for his interest, and he was not unjustly enriched if he retained a one-third interest in the property.

[120]     As noted by the Court of Appeal in Bajwa, “[w]hether value is given is a question of fact to be determined on the evidence in each case”: para. 16.  As the facts in Bajwa indicate, value does not necessarily involve the contribution of money: para 16.  The court stated:

[16]      The Virks rely on Professor Waters’ text, Law of Trusts in Canada, 2d. ed. (Toronto: Carswell, 1984) at 299. The passage on that page of the text says that for a resulting trust to be inferred the person said to be a trustee must have given no value for his legal interest. It follows that if it is found as a fact that the person whose equitable interest is challenged did give value, there can be no resulting trust. Whether value was given is a question of fact to be determined on the evidence in each case. …

See also Chuang, paras. 10 and 11:

[10]      Whether a transfer is found to be gratuitous, and therefore whether the presumption of resulting trust arises, is a question of fact, and even the exchange of money is not determinative (Modonese) [Modonese v. Delac Estate, 2011 BCSC 82]. In this case, although the Claimant did pay some money towards the purchase of the Property, the registration as a 50% owner, as opposed to the 15% she contributed, was based on the parties’ intention to have a life together. There may be cases where unequal contributions leading to equal ownership will not be gratuitous (if for example the deal could not be completed without the lesser contributing party’s contacts), but those would seem to be different from the present case. In Miller v. Walker, 2006 ABQB 424 [Miller], the court found that unequal contributions to a property that was immediately registered as a joint tenancy raised the presumption of resulting trust (although the presumption was rebutted in that case). Further, the Claimant herself argues (and not merely in the alternative) that the presumption of advancement applies, and since the presumption of advancement only arises on gratuitous transfers, her position would seem to implicitly concede that the transfer was gratuitous.

[11]      The presumption of resulting trust can itself be rebutted by the presumption of advancement, and either presumption can be defeated by evidence of a contrary intention on the part of the donor.

See also Klein v. Wolbeck, 2016 ABQB 28 at para. 176:

Put aside the difficulty that Mr Klein did not transfer the Lands to Ms Wolbeck since the transferors were Mr Klein’s parents. The doctrine of resulting trust has no purchase because Ms Wolbeck did provide value. She was also a mortgagor. Her acquisition of her joint interest was not a gratuitous transaction: Lutz v Lutz, 2013 ABCA 159 at para 12. Mr Klein did not put up the entire down payment himself and gratuitously cause the certificate of title to reflect a joint interest for Ms Wolbeck.

[121]     The courts have occasionally found that unequal contributions leading to equal ownership may be considered a gratuitous transfer: Chuang at paras. 10 and 11.

Legal v. Beneficial Title, The Difference

Legal v. Beneficial Title, The Difference

The legal principles of the registered owner of legal title versus the beneficial title of the property is poorly understood .

It is very simple, especially given how common it appears to be that  property truly or beneficially owned by one party , but registered at the land title office  in the legal name of the other. The land title act deems the registered owner of the property to be the legal owner, but the word ” legal ” is misleading.

The leading case of Pecore v Pecore 2007 SCC 17 stated inter alia about the difference between the two:

4. It is not disputed that the daughter took legal ownership of the belts in the accounts through the right of survivorship. Equity, however, recognizes the distinction between legal and beneficial ownership. The beneficial owner of property has been described as the real owner of property, even though it is in someone else’s name Csak v. Auman ( 1990) 69 DLR (4th) 567 ( Ont. HC) at p 570.