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Mo v Yang [2021] NZHC 1792 (15 July 2021)
Last Updated: 30 August 2021
IN THE HIGH COURT OF NEW ZEALAND AUCKLAND REGISTRY
I TE KŌTI MATUA O AOTEAROA TĀMAKI MAKAURAU ROHE
|
|
BETWEEN
|
QINGHUA MO and YU HUANG
Plaintiffs
|
AND
|
ZHE YANG and JACKSON ING WEI LAW
Defendants
|
|
CIV-2018-404-002619
|
BETWEEN
AND
|
QINGHUA MO and YU HUANG
Plaintiffs
TAMAKI HOMES LIMITED
First Defendant
|
|
ZHE YANG and JACKSON ING WEI LAW
Second Defendants
Contd/...2
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Hearing:
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10 – 28 May 2021
|
Appearances:
|
G D Wiles and R P Kaur for Ms Mo, Mr Huang and DH and PM Ltd
I M Hutcheson and R Y Bae for Mr Yang, Mr Law, Ms Yang and Tamaki Homes
Ltd
|
Judgment:
|
15 July 2021
|
JUDGMENT OF WOOLFORD J
This judgment was
delivered by me on Thursday, 15 July 2021 at 4:00 pm pursuant to r 11.5 of the
High Court Rules.
Registrar/Deputy Registrar
MO v YANG [2021] NZHC 1792 [15 July 2021]
CIV-2019-404-000506
|
ZHE YANG and JACKSON ING WEI LAW
Plaintiffs
|
AND
|
DH and PM LIMITED
First Defendant
QINGHUA MO and YU HUANG
Second Defendants
|
|
CIV-2019-404-000997
|
BETWEEN
|
QINGHUA MO and YU HUANG
First Plaintiffs
|
AND
|
DH and PM LIMITED
Second Plaintiff
ZHE YANG
First Defendant
YAN YANG
Second Defendant
|
Table of Contents
Para No.
Introduction [1]
3 Huxley
Place, Glen Innes [6]
Issues
[16]
Analysis
[17]
Result on
Huxley Place project [37]
12 Ropata Avenue, Point
England [54]
Disputed contributions to Ropata Avenue project
[67]
Issues
[78]
Analysis
[79]
Result on
Ropata Avenue project [101]
47 Union Road, Howick
[109]
Issues [119]
Analysis
[120]
Result on
Union Road project [136]
8 Taurima Avenue, Point
England [138]
Disputed contributions to Taurima Avenue
project [148]
Issues
[150]
Analysis
[151]
Result on
Taurima Avenue project [172]
Lot 4, 342 Bawden Road,
Dairy Flat [178]
Issues [184]
Analysis
[185]
Result on
Bawden Road project [199]
Conclusion
[203]
Introduction
- [1] By order of
Associate Judge Bell, these four proceedings were heard together with a
direction that the evidence at the hearing
would be used for all
proceedings:
(a) CIV-2018-404-001927 (Huxley Place proceeding);
(b) CIV-2018-404-002619 (Ropata Avenue proceeding);
(c) CIV-2019-404-000506 (Union Road and Taurima Avenue
proceeding); and
(d) CIV-2019-404-000997 (Bawden Road proceeding).
- [2] The
proceedings involve wide ranging disputes about a number of property
developments in which funds have been invested without
formal
documentation.
- [3] Zhe (Calvin)
Yang and Jackson Wei Ing Law are property developers. Their projects included
the purchase and redevelopment of properties
at 3 Huxley Place, Glen Innes; 12
Ropata Avenue, Point England; 47 Union Road, Howick; 8 Taurima Avenue, Point
England; and Lots
3 and 4, 342 Bawden Road, Dairy Flat (now 61 and 63 Follies
Way). Mr Yang and Mr Law are the defendants in three of the proceedings,
but are
plaintiffs in the Union Road and Taurima Avenue proceeding. In the Ropata Avenue
proceeding, the first defendant, Tamaki
Homes Limited, is a company Mr
Yang and Mr Law established to carry out the development. They also have a
project management
company, Vinjax Limited, of which they are both directors and
shareholders. Mr Yang has a sister, Yan (Emily) Yang, who had some
involvement
in the developments.
- [4] Qinghua
(Pat) Mo and her husband Yu (David) Huang provided funds for these projects and
others. In the Union Road and Taurima
Avenue proceeding, the first defendant, DH
and PM Limited, is a company Ms Mo and Mr Huang set up to take title to the
Union Road
property. Yoke Foong Yong, a friend of the developers, also provided
funds for three of the developments — Huxley Place, Ropata
Avenue and
Taurima Avenue.
- [5] As
summarised by Associate Judge Bell:1
- [5] The parties
did not record their arrangements in writing. They do not agree on all the
terms. It is not clear that their agreements
are enforceable under contract law.
Some may be too uncertain to be given effect. They do not agree on the amounts
of the financiers'
funding. The developers say that the financiers have
overstated their claims by more than $1m. Some payments were made through
intermediaries.
Some were in cash. Records of transactions are poor. The parties
disagree which projects some payments were for. Not all the projects
were
completed as originally planned. Overall, the financiers say that they are
substantially out of pocket and have not received
what they were promised. The
developers acknowledge some liability, but not as much as the financiers
claim.
3 Huxley Place, Glen Innes
- [6] In
November 2015, Mr Yang entered into an agreement to purchase 3 Huxley Place,
Glen Innes, for $860,000 with settlement due on
19 February 2016. Mr Yang and Mr
Law planned to subdivide the property and build four units on it. Following
discussions with Mr
Yang, Ms Mo and Mr Huang agreed to invest in the project.
They contributed $260,000 in three separate payments prior to
settlement.
- [7] On 19
February 2016 the purchase was settled, and the title transferred into the name
of Ms Yong, another investor in the project,
as Mr Yang’s nominee. The
property was then rented to tenants. On 14 April 2016, Ms Mo and Mr Huang
contributed a further $90,000
to the project, making their total investment
$350,000. These contributions are not disputed. Mr Yang proceeded to apply for
resource
consent for the subdivision, which was approved on 5 April
2017.
- [8] On 21 August
2017, without the knowledge of Ms Mo and Mr Huang, Ms Yong entered into an
agreement to sell the undeveloped property
for $1.2 million with settlement due
on 25 August 2017. On settlement, the net proceeds of sale were split between Mr
Yang, Mr Law
and Ms Yong. Mr Yang and Mr Law have not repaid
the
$350,000 to Ms Mo and Mr Huang because of what they say was a subsequent
agreement with them to transfer their contributions to another
project.
- [9] There are
three causes of action in the statement of claim.
1 Mo v Tamaki Homes Ltd [2020] NZHC 2492 at
[5].
(a) Breach of contract in terms of which Ms Mo and Mr Huang contributed
$350,000 to the project, failure to subdivide or develop the property, failure
to consult prior to selling the property, and failure
to account for
contributions and/or profits upon sale;
(b) Breach of a resulting trust in terms of which Ms Yong, as
the nominee of Mr Yang, held title to the property for the benefit of
Ms Mo and
Mr Huang to an extent in proportion with their contribution to its purchase
price; and
(c) Breach of the Fair Trading Act 1986 alleging Mr Yang and Mr
Law engaged in misleading or deceptive conduct by making false representations
to Ms Mo and Mr Huang, failure to consult with or inform them about the sale of
the property and failure to account to them for the
proceeds of sale.
- [10] Ms Mo and
Mr Huang say the terms of the oral investment agreement
included:
(a) They would provide funding in various sums as requested by
Mr Yang and Mr Law up to a total sum of $350,000;
(b) Mr Yang and Mr Law would use their contributions as part
payment of the purchase price of the property and/or to fund in part
the
proposed building development on the property, as they saw fit;
(c) Mr Yang and Mr Law would obtain mortgage finance sufficient
to complete the purchase and fund the subdivision and building development;
(d) The subdivision would result in four titles on the
property;
(e) Ms Mo and Mr Huang’s contribution would remain
unsecured against the property;
(f) Mr Yang and Mr Law would complete the purchase of the property and the
subdivision and carry out the building development at their
own cost with a
targeted completion date of mid-2017, but no later than December 2017;
(g) Upon completion of the subdivision and building
development, Mr Yang and Mr Law would convey the unencumbered title to a
completed three-bedroom unit on one of the four lots in the subdivision to Ms Mo
and Mr Huang.
- [11] In
response, Mr Yang and Mr Law say there was no discussion or agreement as to how
they would use or apply the initial contributions
paid by Ms Mo and Mr
Huang. Although not discussed or agreed, it was implicit in the agreement that
they would otherwise fund
the subdivision and building development. In general
discussion, the expectation that construction work would take about a year
(after
both resource consent for the subdivision and building consent were
granted) was mentioned, but there was no discussion about when
the construction
work would begin and no specific agreement that it would be completed by
December 2017.
- [12] Furthermore,
Mr Yang and Mr Law say it was always understood and agreed that Ms Mo and Mr
Huang would purchase the unit on the
smallest lot in the proposed subdivision at
cost price by paying the balance of the cost price over and above the
contributions made
by them to the project, on the proviso that if the resource
consent allowed for a three-bedroom unit on the smallest lot, then Ms
Mo and Mr
Huang would increase their contributions to $410,000. There was admittedly no
discussion of cost price and how it might
be calculated.
- [13] Mr Yang and
Mr Law say that they were successful in obtaining resource consent for a
three-bedroom unit on the smallest lot,
but that Ms Mo and Mr Huang failed to
pay the additional $60,000 as agreed.
- [14] Mr Yang and
Mr Law further say that on or about 7 August 2017 (about two weeks before the
property was sold), Ms Mo approached
Mr Law and asked if she and Mr Huang could
transfer their interest in the Huxley Place project to
another
development project being undertaken by Mr Yang and Mr Law (the Taurima Avenue
project) in order to realise the return on their investment
sooner. Mr Law says
that he agreed to that request on condition that Ms Ho and Mr Huang would pay
the agreed further initial contribution
of $60,000 and that they would
transfer the title for 8 Taurima Avenue (which was held by Ms Mo and Mr Huang
together with
Ms Yang) back to Mr Yang and Mr Law to enable them to complete
that development.
- [15] Ms Mo says
that she only considered the proposal to transfer their contributions from the
Huxley Place project to the Taurima
Avenue project much later, when there
appeared to be no other option available to secure their funds. However, she
also says that
there was no concluded agreement to such a
transfer.
Issues
- [16] The issues
for the Court to determine in respect of 3 Huxley Place, Glen Innes,
are:
(a) What were the agreed terms on which Ms Mo and Mr Huang
invested
$350,000 towards the purchase and development of the property at 3 Huxley
Place?
(b) Did Mr Yang and Mr Law breach any of the agreed terms?
(c) Did the parties enter into an agreement in or about August
2017 whereby Ms Mo and Mr Huang’s investment of $350,000 was
transferred
to the Taurima Avenue project on condition that Ms Mo and Mr Huang were to pay a
further $60,000 and transfer title for
8 Taurima Avenue back to Mr Yang and Mr
Law to enable them to complete that development?
Analysis
- [17] The first
issue is the terms of the agreement, if any. There is no dispute that Ms Mo and
Mr Huang paid the following amounts
to Mr Yang, Mr Law or Ms Yong as an
investment in the Huxley Place
project:
Payment Date
|
Amount NZ$
|
From A/c Name
|
From A/c #
|
Received A/c Name
|
Received A/c #
|
26 Nov 15
|
50,000.00
|
Qinghua Mo & Yu Huang
|
xx-xxxx- xxxxx66-00
|
Zhe Yang
|
xx-xxxx- xxxxx97-00
|
30 Nov 15
|
50,000.00
|
Qinghua Mo & Yu Huang
|
xx-xxxx- xxxxx66-00
|
Zhe Yang
|
xx-xxxx- xxxxx97-00
|
18 Feb 16
|
160,000.00
|
Tianyou Shi
|
xx-xxxx- xxxxx06-00
|
Y F Yong
|
xx-xxxx- xxxxx88-00
|
14 Apr 16
|
90,000.00
|
Tianyou Shi
|
xx-xxxx- xxxxx06-00
|
J I Law & M Yeh
|
xx-xxxx- xxxxx62-00
|
Total
|
350,000.00
|
|
|
|
|
- [18] There is,
however, a fundamental dispute as to the terms on which Ms Mo and Mr Huang
invested the money. The $350,000 paid was
40.7 per cent of the purchase price of
$860,000, although only $260,000 was paid prior to settlement. Ms Mo and Mr
Huang say that,
in return for their contribution, Mr Yang agreed to give them
the unencumbered title to a new three-bedroom unit to be built on Lot
1 of the
four subdivided lots. They would pay nothing further for their unit. On the
other hand, Mr Yang and Mr Law acknowledge
offering Ms Mo and Mr Huang the
smallest lot with a two-bedroom unit on it, at cost. Ms Mo and Mr Huang would
therefore pay, say,
another $350,000 for their unit. They also say that if
resource consent allowed for a three-bedroom unit then it was agreed that
Ms Mo
and Mr Huang would increase their initial contribution to
$410,000.
- [19] There is no
contemporaneous documentation evidencing the agreed terms of the investment.
There are no WeChat messages or emails
recording the agreement.2 The
negotiations were entirely oral. The bank statements evidencing the payment of
the four sums of money totalling $350,000 do not
assist in ascertaining the
basis on which the money was paid.
- [20] The main
protagonists, Ms Mo, Mr Yang and Mr Law each gave evidence and were
cross-examined. No one varied from their brief of
evidence. Their positions were
and remain dramatically opposed. No one gave detailed evidence of the date, time
and place of any
of the discussions which led to the agreement. Ms Mo merely
said:
In mid-November 2015, Calvin invited David and I
to invest in that property
... In return we would own a 3-bedroom, new residential unit
on Lot 1 of the proposed subdivision of the property. It was agreed
that we
would provide
2 WeChat is a popular Chinese social media
application used for messaging and video calling.
funding in different amounts, as requested by Calvin and Jackson, up to a
total sum of $350,000.
- [21] Similarly,
Mr Yang said:
Pat and David were offered the smallest lot with a two-bedroom
house at cost in return for her proposed $350,000 contribution, but
we proposed
and Pat agreed that if resource consent allowed for a three bedroom unit on her
lot, then Pat would increase her initial
contribution to $410,000.
- [22] In the
circumstances, I do not believe that any of the parties are lying, but they
obviously all proceeded on a mistaken understanding
of the agreement. Ms Mo and
Mr Huang thought they were getting a new three-bedroom unit for $350,000. Mr
Yang and Mr Law thought
they were providing a new three-bedroom unit at cost,
say,
$700,000.
- [23] Courts will
always seek to uphold a common contractual intention embodied in an agreement
despite the absence of provision as
to some matters, or ambiguous or uncertain
wording, if the nature of the obligations intended to be assumed can be
established and
given effect.3
- [24] Mr Bruce
Sheppard, the accountant who gave evidence on behalf of Mr Yang and Mr Law, says
that the conduct of the parties may
be analysed as leading to a number of
different possible commercial arrangements:
(a) Ms Mo entered into a progressive payment agreement or
pre-sale contract on oral terms, making payments to a builder pursuant to
that
arrangement; or
(b) Ms Mo entered into an option to purchase, albeit the option
price was not settled. Alternatively, it was simply a first right
of refusal to
purchase; or
(c) Ms Mo was a lender to Mr Yang on oral terms; or
3 Jeremy Finn, Stephen Todd and Matthew Barber
Burrows, Finn and Todd on the Law of Contract in New Zealand (6th
ed, LexisNexis, Wellington, 2018) at [3.7.6].
(d) Ms Mo purchased an interest in the whole project in return for a profit
share on oral terms.
- [25] Unfortunately,
in the absence of any contemporaneous documentation or any relevant business
practice from which inferences can
be drawn, it is not possible to establish the
exact nature of the commercial arrangement. Although the arrangement involved
the ownership
of a new unit on a subdivided lot, Ms Mo is also seeking
a
40.7 per cent share of the net profit on sale of the unsubdivided property, even
though some of the funds contributed by Ms Mo were
paid to Mr Yang after Ms Yong
had purchased the property as nominee for Mr Yang. In the circumstances, it is
not possible to establish
a clear and common intention as to the nature of the
commercial arrangement and, in particular, the terms of any return on the
$350,000
investment. I am reluctantly drawn to the conclusion that no contract
was therefore ever concluded.
- [26] The second
issue is whether the terms of the agreement were breached. In light of my
finding that there is no concluded contract,
it is unnecessary to determine
whether, as part of the contract, Mr Yang and Mr Law undertook to complete
construction of the new
three bedroom unit of Ms Mo and Mr Huang by December
2017. If it was necessary to determine this issue, I would find that Mr Yang
and Mr Law did not give any such undertaking. While they obviously did discuss
timeframes with Ms Mo and Mr Huang, discussion
of such timeframes does not,
without more, impose a binding obligation on Mr Yang and Mr Law. Ms Mo and Mr
Huang are unable to
point to anything beyond discussion of such timeframes which
may result in a binding obligation.
- [27] The third
and final issue is whether Ms Mo and Mr Huang’s contribution
of
$350,000 was transferred to the Taurima Avenue project at about the time that
the sale of 3 Huxley Place was settled on 25 August
2017. They point to a WeChat
exchange between Ms Mo and Mr Law on 7 August 2017 at a time when Mr Yang was
not talking to Ms Mo because
of a falling out and was not in regular
communication with Mr Law because he was overseas in China. Ms Mo was obviously
keen to close
off all property financing agreements with Mr Yang and Mr Law
because their relationship had broken down.
- [28] Ms Mo
messaged Mr Law:
Also I have paid another house cash to u both one and half year
ago Haley [Huxley] I think. But I think it will have long way to go.
I am
thinking if Trauma [Taurima] is under my name shall we change the house to
trauma.
I remember. U have half of Huxley ... Ok. Let me talk to Calvin.
He need to respond to me on this.
- [30] Towards the
end of the WeChat exchange, Ms Mo reminds Mr Law:
Can u also please check with Calvin that the deal with 580k and
also the haxley [Huxley] cash we paid, can we transfer to Trauma [Taurima]
project n we can make the deal finish.
- [31] There was
no concluded agreement on the basis of this WeChat
exchange.
- [32] In
evidence, Mr Yang said that Mr Law told him that Ms Mo had proposed, and he had
agreed, to transfer her interest in the Huxley
Place project to the Taurima
Avenue project on condition that she and Mr Huang would pay a further $60,000
for the bigger house at
cost price in the Taurima Avenue project and transfer
the title for Taurima Avenue back to them so they could complete that
development.
He further said he was not involved in this discussion, but
“since I understood and believed Jackson had already agreed to
this with
Pat, I did not make any issue out of it.”
- [33] Mr Yang and
Mr Law appear to rely on an email sent by Ms Mo to them on 13 February 2018 in
which she states:
At the end of 2015, we paid 350,000 dollars in cash to you to
purchase a new house from the construction project at 3 Huxley Place,
Glen
Innes, Auckland.
... Because all three parties agree to transfer the new house at 3 Huxley
Place, Glen Innes, Auckland, to the project on 8 Taurima
Avenue, Pt England,
Auckland, then after the construction of the 5 townhouses at 8 Taurima Avenue,
Point England, Auckland is completed
Calvin and Jackson will pay the profit
which is made from selling one new house and our principal investment at 3
Huxley Place, Glen
Innes, Auckland, back to us in cash. The estimated repayment
date is August of this year. If the progress of the project is delayed,
both
sides will negotiate a new agreement.
- [34] Ms Mo
explains this on the basis that the email was sent well after their relationship
had broken down and at a point in time
when she and her husband
felt
pressured to make concessions in relation to the various property investment
projects they were involved in, to try and recover the
huge sums of money they
had invested.
- [35] The email
is, in any event, inconsistent with the position taken by Mr Yang four days
later, on 17 February 2018. In a WeChat
group chat with Ms Mo and Mr Law,
Mr Yang states:
5. I have never discussed with you about transferring [your
interest in] Huxley to Taurima. This is completely impracticable. If transferred
to Taurima, then Taurima is done for nothing, and I am better off stopping
now.
6. The capital of Huxley that I mentioned only referred to the capital which,
as I have said, would be repaid as soon as possible.
I have spoken about this
matter many times and will not repeat again.
- [36] In those
circumstances, it has not been proven that Ms Mo and Mr Huang’s
contribution of $350,000 was transferred to the
Taurima Avenue project at about
the time that 3 Huxley Place was sold in August 2017. Even if there was some
sort of proposal to
treat their contribution as having been made to the Taurima
Avenue project, the terms of the proposed transfer were just so vague
that there
cannot be any concluded contract binding on the parties.
Result on Huxley Place
project
- [37] As to
breach of contract, I have determined that there is no concluded contract in
relation to the payment of $350,000 by Ms
Mo and Mr Huang to Mr Yang and Mr
Law in four instalments between 26 November 2015 and April 2016. There can
therefore be no breach
of contract.
- [38] As to
breach of resulting trust, Ms Mo and Mr Huang argue, in the alternative, that
their contribution to the purchase price
generated trustee obligations imposed
on Mr Yang and Mr Law, and their nominee Ms Yong. Counsel submits that the
rationale for finding
a resulting trust in the present case is explained in
Equity and Trusts in New Zealand, as
follows:4
Where A (the transferor) pays for property and
transfers it into the name of B (the transferee), who has given no valuable
consideration,
B holds the property for A on a resulting trust. This is because
equity presumes, in the absence of
4 Andrew Butler (ed) Equity and Trusts in New
Zealand (2nd ed, Thomson Reuters, Wellington, 2009) at [12.3.1(1)].
a contrary intention, that A, who paid for the property, intended to retain
beneficial ownership. Similarly, if B has made a partial
contribution to the
purchase of property put into his or her sole name, B holds A’s fractional
share in the property on a resulting
trust for A. Again, it is presumed that A,
who contributed to part of the purchase money, intends to retain ownership in
the property
to the extent of that contribution. This has been the case for
centuries.
- [39] Counsel
also cites Equity and Trusts, as
follows:5
Purchase price resulting trusts arise so as to recognise that a
person who has contributed to the purchase price of property acquires
an
equitable interest in the property in proportion to the size of her contribution
to the total of her purchase price.
- [40] The
difficulty with this approach is that a substantial portion of the contributions
by Ms Mo and Mr Huang were made after settlement
of the purchase of the
property. Furthermore, the pleadings do not allege that the contributions made
prior to settlement were to
be exclusively applied to the purchase of the
property. The statement of claim alleges that the oral investment agreement
included
a term that:
The Defendants would use the Plaintiffs’ contributions as
part-payment of the purchase price of the property and/or to cover
the proposed
building development on the property, as they saw fit.
...
The Plaintiffs’ contribution would remain unsecured against the
title(s) to the property.
Ms Mo, in her brief of evidence, confirms this agreement and acknowledges that
their contributions remained unsecured against the
title to the property.
- [41] In those
circumstances, a presumption of a resulting trust cannot arise. There has been
no tracing of where the contributions
made by Ms Mo and Mr Huang were applied.
There is no certainty that any of the contributions were in fact applied to the
purchase
of the property, although it appears likely that the sum of $160,000
transferred into the account of another investor in the project,
Ms Yong (who
became the registered proprietor of the property on settlement as nominee for Mr
Yang), the day before settlement, was
utilised in settlement of the purchase
price.
5 Alistair Hudson Equity and Trusts (9th ed,
Routledge, London, 2016) at 448.
- [42] In the
further alternative, Ms Mo and Mr Huang allege that Mr Yang and Mr Law are in
breach of the Fair Trading Act by falsely
representing that the property
remained available for development as an asset notwithstanding its sale to a
third party, failing
to consult with them before deciding to sell the property
and failing to account to them following the sale of the
property.
- [43] This cause
of action was not vigorously pursued by counsel, who described its inclusion as
being a “belts and braces”
approach. While I accept that Mr Yang and
Mr Law are ‘in trade’ in terms of the definition of the Fair Trading
Act, Ms
Mo and Mr Huang have not proven that Mr Yang and Mr Law engaged in
conduct that was misleading or deceptive or likely to mislead
or deceive within
the meaning of the Act.
- [44] As to the
allegations of falsely representing that the property remained available for
development, Ms Mo and Mr Huang rely on
a secretly recorded telephone call
between Ms Mo and Mr Law on 24 February 2018 conducted in Mandarin. In
particular, they rely on
the following translated passage:
Ms Mo: So, with Huxley, do you guys intend to build?
Mr Law: We ... well ... I of course wish to build. However, I
and ... [in light of] of such cooperation relationship among the three
of us, of
course shouldn’t build, lest more problems from longer delays.
Ms Mo: Yeah.
Mr Law: Call it off, yes, call it off. Ms Mo: Yeah.
Mr Law: About this, I ... I ... I, and Calvin Yang ... In a minute I’ll
call him once we hang up. Regarding this, as far as
I’m concerned, I feel
– “Yes”, if we can dispose of it or whatever, at least we have
to include your interest,
ok? This I can ...
Ms Mo: Right, because you ... because I can ...
Mr Law: On my part, I can. For me, I don’t see a problem.
I can’t blame anyone for being involved.
Ms Mo: Right, right. Because ... because I feel ... because I
feel ... because Calvin Yang told me that it was because of relationship
issues
between him and you that you guys were not building. However you guys took ...
did take our 350,000 in 2015. So during the
three years, you can’t say
that this
350,000 ... we also incurred interest ourselves on this 350,000, and we
missed so many opportunities. And previously you agreed that
...
Mr Law: Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, ok, ok, ok, ok.
- [45] Mr Law said
that he told Ms Mo that he “wanted to build” rather than “wish
to build”. The translator
acknowledged that what Mr Law said could be
translated as in the past tense. Furthermore, Ms Mo also acknowledges in the
conversation
that she had been told by Mr Yang that they were not building
because of relationship issues (between him and Mr Law).
- [46] Mr Yang and
Mr Law admit to failing to consult with or advise Ms Mo and Mr Huang at the time
that they were selling the property
and failing to account to them for their
$350,000. However, they say that there was an agreement that the funds would be
transferred
to the Taurima Avenue project; I have not found this arrangement to
have been established.
- [47] Although
remaining silent or failing to disclose information can constitute misleading or
deceptive conduct, a failure to consult,
advise or account to Ms Mo and Mr Huang
in the present case is not misleading or deceptive conduct, which would entitle
them to damages
under the Fair Trading Act. There was no concluded contract
between the parties into which a requirement to consult, advise or account
could
be implied. Ms Mo and Mr Huang also did not alter their position to their
detriment as a consequence of these failures.
- [48] As to
relief, I find that even though there was no concluded contract between the
parties, each of whom proceeded on a radically
different understanding of the
basis of the commercial arrangement, there is nonetheless a remedy available to
Ms Mo and Mr Huang
to restore them to their original position. That is the
restitutionary remedy of money had and received.
- [49] In
Napier v Torbay Holdings Ltd,6 the Court of Appeal confirmed
that the remedy of money had and received is available in circumstances where
there has been a payment
of money which would not have been paid but for a
mistake of fact made.
6 Napier v Torbay Holdings Ltd [2016] NZCA
608.
The crediting of a sum from one account to another account is the equivalent of
payment. A claim for money had and received is a
personal claim rather than a
proprietary claim over the thing itself. It does not turn on an ability to trace
funds. Whether the
funds went directly into an account that was in overdraft or
not is irrelevant. It also does not depend on proof of any wrongdoing
or
impropriety on the part of the recipient. It does not turn on the continued
existence or retention of the money received. Although
unjust enrichment may be
seen as underpinning a claim for money had and received, there is no actual
requirement of unjust enrichment.
- [50] Mr Yang and
Mr Law have always acknowledged, subject to the alleged variation transferring
the investment to the Taurima Avenue
project, that they received sums totalling
$350,000 from Ms Mo and Mr Huang for the Huxley Place project. Counsel therefore
responsibly
accepts, while opposing Ms Mo and Mr Huang’s claim to a 40.7
per cent interest in the sale proceeds of Huxley Place, that Mr
Yang and Mr
Law could not, in conscience, resist an order for repayment of the funds
advanced on the basis of monies had and received.
- [51] Ms Mo and
Mr Huang seek not only the return of their contribution of
$350,000, but also a 40.7 per cent share of the profits on the sale of Huxley
Place (which they calculate at $117,240.29). They also
seek interest on both
their contributions and profit share. Under the Interest on Money Claims Act
2016, interest is calculated at
$170,706.87. Alternately, under the Reserve Bank
of New Zealand SME business lending rates, calculated interest is $174,080.59.
They
therefore seek a total sum of either $520,706.87 or $524,080.59.
- [52] The claim
for money had and received cannot, however, include a claim for profits on the
utilisation of the money advanced. It
is purely a restitutionary remedy. If a
payer is entitled to any profit on the funds advanced, then logically he or she
is also responsible
for any losses. That cannot be the case. Interest in terms
of the Interest on Money Claims Act is also more appropriate than the
SME
business lending rates.
- [53] There will
accordingly be judgment in CIV 2018-404-001927 for Ms Mo and Mr Huang against Mr
Yang and Mr Law in the sum of $350,000
plus interest of
$39,019.83 in terms of the Interest on Money Claims Act from the date of the
sale of 3 Huxley Place, Glen Innes, (25 August 2017)
to the date of commencement
of this trial (10 May 2021), making a total of $389,019.83.
12 Ropata Avenue, Point England
- [54] On
19 May 2015, Mr Law entered into an agreement to purchase 12 Ropata Avenue,
Point England, for $1.15 million with settlement
due on 31 July 2015. Mr
Law and Mr Yang planned to subdivide the property and build five units on it.
Following discussions with
Mr Yang, Ms Mo and Mr Huang agreed to invest in the
project.
- [55] On 31 July
2015 the purchase was settled, and the title transferred to Tamaki Homes
Limited, a company formed by Mr Yang and
Mr Law to carry out the development. Mr
Yang and Mr Law obtained a loan from FM Custodians Limited
for
$1,803,385.75 to settle the purchase and for construction funding.
- [56] Mr Yang and
Mr Law proceeded to apply for resource consent and building consent. Once both
consents were obtained, construction
commenced. Between 30 September 2015
and 19 April 2016, Ms Mo and Mr Huang say they made initial contributions
totalling $409,173,
as follows:
|
Amount NZ$
|
From A/c Name
|
From A/c #
|
Received A/c Name
|
Received A/c #
|
30 Sep 15
|
55,787.00
|
Qinghua Mo & Yu Huang
|
xx-xxxx- xxxxx37-095
|
Y F Yong
|
xx-xxxx- xxxxx21-
025
|
30 Sep 15
|
160,000.00
|
DH & PM Limited
|
xx-xxxx- xxxxx18-000
|
Jackson Ing Wei Law & Y hiko Chen
|
xx-xxxx- xxxxx33-25
|
21 Dec 15
|
9,000.00
|
Qinghua Mo & Yu Huang
|
xx-xxxx- xxxxx66-00
|
Yan Yang
|
xx-xxxx- xxxxx15-00
|
21 Dec 15
|
49,000.00
|
Qinghua Mo & Yu Huang
|
xx-xxxx- xxxxx50-50
|
Yan Yang
|
xx-xxxx- xxxxx15-00
|
21 Dec 15
|
12,000.00
|
Qinghua Mo & Yu Huang
|
xx-xxxx- xxxxx37-095
|
Yan Yang
|
xx-xxxx- xxxxx15-00
|
26 Jan 16
|
15,000.00
|
Qinghua Mo & Yu Huang
|
xx-xxxx- xxxxx37-095
|
JI Law & M Yeh
|
xx-xxxx- xxxxx62-00
|
28 Jan 16
|
45,000.00
|
Qinghua Mo & Yu Huang
|
xx-xxxx- xxxxx37-095
|
JI Law & M Yeh
|
xx-xxxx- xxxxx62-00
|
16 Mar 16
|
13,386.00
|
Qinghua Mo & Yu Huang
|
xx-xxxx- xxxxx66-00
|
Yenku hiko Chen
|
xx-xxxx- xxxxx47-01
|
19 Apr 16
|
50,000.00
|
DH & PM Limited
|
xx-xxxx- xxxxx18-000
|
Yan Yang
|
xx-xxxx- xxxxx15-00
|
Total
|
409,173.00
|
|
|
|
|
- [57] They also
say that between 4 May 2015 and 26 June 2017 they made further contributions
totalling $995,000.00, as
follows:
Payment date
|
Amount NZ$
|
From A/c Name
|
From A/c #
|
Received A/c Name
|
Received A/c #
|
04 May 15
|
70,000.00
|
Qinghua Mo & Yu Huang
|
xx-xxxx- xxxxx66-00
|
Jackson Law
|
xx-xxxx- xxxxx62-00
|
04 May 15
|
180,000.00
|
Qinghua Mo & Yu Huang
|
xx-xxxx- xxxxx66-00
|
Jackson Law
|
xx-xxxx- xxxxx62-00
|
04 May 15
|
130,000.00
|
Qinghua Mo & Yu Huang
|
xx-xxxx- xxxxx66-00
|
Jackson Law
|
xx-xxxx- xxxxx62-00
|
10 Oct 16
|
50,000.00
|
Qinghua Mo & Yu Huang
|
xx-xxxx- xxxxx50-00
|
Yan Yang
|
xx-xxxx- xxxxx15-00
|
17 Oct 16
|
100,000.00
|
Qinghua Mo & Yu Huang
|
xx-xxxx- xxxxx66-00
|
Yan Yang
|
xx-xxxx- xxxxx15-00
|
17 Oct 16
|
100,000.00
|
Friend’s ANZ cheque
|
Not provided
|
N.A.
|
N.A
|
24 Oct 16
|
10,000.00
|
Qinghua Mo & Yu Huang
|
xx-xxxx- xxxxx50-50
|
Yan Yang
|
Not provided
|
14 Nov 16
|
8,000.00
|
Qinghua Mo & Yu
Huang
|
xx-xxxx-
xxxxx66-01
|
Yan Yang
|
Not
provided
|
14 Nov 16
|
35,000.00
|
Lei Zhao
|
xx-xxxx- xxxxx98- 000
|
Yan Yang
|
Not provided
|
14 Nov 16
|
15,000.00
|
DH & PM Limited
|
xx-xxxx- xxxxx24-00
|
Yan Yang
|
xx-xxxx- xxxxx15-00
|
14 Nov 16
|
42,000.00
|
Qinghua Mo & Yu Huang
|
xx-xxxx- xxxxx50-00
|
Yan Yang
|
xx-xxxx- xxxxx15-00
|
06 Feb 17
|
50,000.00
|
For. M Trading
|
Not provided
|
Yan Yang
|
xx-xxxx- xxxxx93-00
|
14 Feb 17
|
74,500.00
|
For. M Trading
|
Not provided
|
Vinjax Ltd
|
xx-xxxx- xxxxx69-00
|
15 Feb 17
|
75,500.00
|
For. M Trading
|
Not provided
|
Tamaki Homes Ltd
|
xx-xxxx- xxxxx70-00
|
26 Jun 17
|
55,000.00
|
DH & PM Limited
|
xx-xxxx- xxxxx24-00
|
Jackson Law
|
xx-xxxx- xxxx55-00
|
Total
|
995,000.00
|
|
|
|
|
Ms Mo and Mr Huang acknowledge receipt of three repayments from Mr Yang and Mr
Law in October 2017 amounting in total to $105,000,
leaving a remaining balance
outstanding of $890,000.
- [58] Finally,
they say that they made cash contributions towards the Ropata Avenue project
totalling $112,200, as follows:
Payment date
|
Amount NZ$
|
From A/c Name
|
From A/c #
|
To A/c
|
03 Nov 16
|
3,300.00
|
DH & PM Limited
|
xx-xxxx-xxxxx24-00
|
N.A.
|
15 Nov 16
|
20,000.00
|
Various Accounts
|
Various Accounts
|
N.A.
|
19 Dec 16
|
30,000.00
|
DH & PM Limited
|
xx-xxxx-xxxxx24-00
|
N.A.
|
23 Dec 16
|
2,000.00
|
Qinghua Mo & Yu Huang
|
xx-xxxx-xxxxx50-50
|
N.A.
|
23 Jan 17
|
10,500.00
|
DH & PM Limited
|
xx-xxxx-xxxxx24-00
|
N.A.
|
10 Mar 17
|
10,000.00
|
DH & PM Limited
|
xx-xxxx-xxxxx24-00
|
N.A.
|
16 Mar 17
|
10,000.00
|
DH & PM Limited
|
xx-xxxx-xxxxx24-00
|
N.A.
|
17 Mar 17
|
9,000.00
|
DH & PM Limited
|
xx-xxxx-xxxxx24-00
|
N.A.
|
20 Mar 17
|
7,000.00
|
DH & PM Limited
|
xx-xxxx-xxxxx24-00
|
N.A.
|
28 Mar 17
|
2,400.00
|
DH & PM Limited
|
xx-xxxx-xxxxx24-00
|
N.A.
|
10 Apr 17
|
8,000.00
|
DH & PM Limited
|
xx-xxxx-xxxxx24-00
|
N.A.
|
Total
|
112,200.00
|
|
|
|
- [59] A large
number of these contributions are disputed in some way.
- [60] The Ropata
Avenue development has now been completed, and three units have been sold to
members of the public at the market price.
A fourth unit has been sold at cost
to Ms Yong, who contributed $380,000 to the project. The cost price was assessed
as $800,000,
of which Ms Yong owes $420,000. Ms Mo and Mr Huang have a caveat
over the fifth unit, claiming an interest in it. It is valued at
$1.1
million.
- [61] There are
three causes of action in the statement of claim.
(a) Breach of contract in terms of which Ms Mo and Mr Huang
contributed
$1,516,373 to the property, failure to subdivide or develop the property,
failure to consult prior to obtaining mortgage finance
over the property,
failure to consult prior to listing the subdivided lots for sale, and failure to
repay contributions;
(b) Breach of a resulting trust in terms of which Tamaki Homes
Limited held title to the property for the benefit of Ms Mo and Mr
Huang to the
extent of their full contribution of $1,411,373 (being their total contribution
of $1,516,373 less $105,000 repaid);
and
(c) Breach of the Fair Trading Act alleging Mr Yang and Mr Law
engaged in misleading or deceptive conduct as follows: failure to disclose
a
loan of approximately $1.8 million from FM Custodians Limited secured by the
property and funding in an undisclosed amount from
Ms Yong, failure to disclose
their obligations to Ms Mo and Mr Huang as investors in the Ropata Avenue
project to their loan-provider,
failure to consult and obtain consent prior to
diverting funds advanced for the Ropata Avenue project to other projects and
failure
to consult prior to listing the lots for sale.
- [62] Ms Mo and
Mr Huang say the terms of the oral investment agreement
included:
(a) They would provide funding in various sums as requested by
Mr Yang and Mr Law amounting to approximately $400,000;
(b) By contributing approximately $400,000, Ms Mo and Mr Huang
would acquire an immediate equitable ownership interest in the property
and in
due course an unencumbered title to one of the allotments to be created
following subdivision of the property, being Lot 1;
(c) Mr Yang and Mr Law undertook to obtain all necessary
consents and carry out at their own cost construction of five townhouses
on the
property with each townhouse, including that to be built on Lot 1, to have its
own separate title; and
(d) Mr Yang and Mr Law undertook to complete the subdivision and
construction of the townhouses by the end of December 2016.
- [63] Ms Mo and
Mr Huang also say that they provided further contributions totalling $995,000 on
condition that Mr Yang and Mr Law
would not seek to obtain a bank loan or offer
any mortgage security over the property. In addition to the initial investment
contributions
and the further contributions made by Ms Mo and Mr Huang, they say
that the cash contributions of $112,200 were loans repayable on
demand.
- [64] In
response, Mr Yang and Mr Law admit entering into an oral agreement with Ms Mo
and Mr Huang in terms of which Ms Mo and Mr
Huang would
contribute
$400,000 to assist in development of the property. In return, Ms Mo and Mr Huang
would receive one of the lots after subdivision
with a unit built on it at cost
price. Mr Yang and Mr Law also say that at the time they entered into the oral
agreement, they did
not discuss or agree which lot was to be allocated to Ms Mo
and Mr Huang and there was no agreement as to any specific lot to be
allocated
to them. Mr Yang and Mr Law also say that they did not discuss or agree with Ms
Mo and Mr Huang how the cost price was
to be calculated, but now say that it
should be calculated to include subdivision costs, development costs,
construction costs, management
costs,
holding costs and interest where applicable. They also say that there was no
agreement that the subdivision and construction of the
townhouses would be
completed by the end of December 2016.
- [65] Tamaki
Homes Limited counterclaims against Ms Mo and Mr Huang. It says that in breach
of the oral agreement between the parties,
Ms Mo and Mr Huang have refused to
pay the balance owing calculated as being the difference between the cost price
of Lot 1 and the
initial contributions made by them. It therefore seeks judgment
for the difference between the cost price of Lot 1 and the initial
contributions
made by Ms Mo and Mr Huang.
- [66] Mr Law also
counterclaims against Ms Mo. He says that Ms Mo remains indebted to him in the
sum of $105,000 in respect of the
unpaid balance of the purchase price of Lot 3,
342 Bawden Road, Dairy Flat. Mr Law therefore seeks judgment in the sum of
$105,000
plus interest.
Disputed contributions to Ropata
Avenue project
- [67] Ms Mo and
Mr Huang say that their initial contributions to the Ropata Avenue project
totalled $409,173.7 They refer to nine transactions in which funds
were transferred from their company’s or their own account to five
different
accounts associated with Mr Yang and Mr Law.
- [68] As to the
first payment of $55,787 on 30 September 2015, Mr Yang and Mr Law
acknowledge that $40,000 was a contribution
to the Ropata Avenue project, but
say that the remaining $15,787 was a part payment to Mr Law of the purchase
price for Lot 3, 342
Bawden Road. They also say that the eighth payment of
$13,386 is a contribution to the purchase of a property at 40 Wimbledon
Crescent,
Glen Innes, while the ninth payment of $50,000 was a personal loan to
Mr Yang that has been repaid with interest.
- [69] If these
adjustments are made, Mr Yang and Mr Law acknowledge that Ms Mo and Mr Huang
made initial investment contributions to
the Ropata Avenue
project
7 See above, para [56].
totalling $330,000. However, Mr Yang and Mr Law say that the sum of $57,096.70
should be added to that total. The sum of $57,096.70
was applied to the purchase
of 8 Taurima Avenue, Glen Innes, but is properly accounted for as a contribution
to the Ropata Avenue
project. If the two sums are added together, the initial
investment contributions totalled $387,096.70 or approximately $400,000,
which
Ms Mo and Mr Huang say they agreed to initially invest in return for a unit in
the completed subdivision.
- [70] There is
fundamental disagreement over the further contributions
totalling
$995,000 and cash contributions totalling $112,200. As to the further
contributions totalling $995,000,8 Mr Yang and Mr Law note that the
first three payments of
$70,000, $180,000 and $130,000 totalling $380,000 were made on 4 May 2015 and so
cannot relate to the Ropata Avenue project as the
agreement for sale and
purchase of 12 Ropata Avenue was not signed until over two weeks later, on 19
May 2015. Mr Yang and
Mr Law say that the total sum of $380,000 relates to
the purchase of Lot 3, 342 Bawden Road, by Ms Mo and Mr Huang.
- [71] Mr Law had
purchased Lot 3, 342 Bawden Road, in early December 2014
for
$725,000 with delayed settlement as the title had not yet issued. He paid a
deposit of
$105,000. Mr Law says he subsequently reached an agreement with Ms Mo and Mr
Huang to sell Lot 3 to them for $1,125,000. As the
purchase by Mr Law had not
yet settled, Ms Mo and Mr Huang agreed to pay Mr Law $400,000, refund him his
deposit of $105,000 and
then pay the balance of the purchase price of $620,000
($725,000 minus the deposit of $105,000) on settlement after title had been
issued. Because it was agreed that Mr Law would nominate Ms Mo and Mr Huang as
the purchaser under the sale and purchase agreement
which he had signed, no
separate sale and purchase agreement for sale and purchase was completed.
- [72] Mr Law
further says that Ms Mo agreed to pay him $400,000 in two instalments —
$250,000 on 4 May 2015 and $150,000 on 28
September 2015.
- [73] Although Ms
Mo and Mr Huang made three payments totalling $380,000 to Mr Law on 4 May 2015,
the total sum received was split
into two for the purposes
of
8 See above, para [57].
a term loan agreement entered into between the parties. The first amount was
$250,000, which Ms Mo had agreed to pay on 4 May 2015 as part payment for Lot 3.
It was to be treated as a loan pending settlement
on which no interest was
payable in case the property did not settle for some reason. The second amount
was $130,000 and was a separate
personal loan upon which interest was
payable.
- [74] Mr Law says
that Ms Mo had agreed to pay a second sum of $150,000 on 28 September 2015 as
part payment for Lot 3. Mr Law further
says that the personal loan of $130,000
was instead offset against the second instalment of $150,000 payable by Ms Mo
and Mr Huang
on or about 28 September 2015. This left a shortfall
of
$20,000. In discussions with Ms Mo, Mr Law says he agreed to fix interest on
the
$130,000 personal loan and legal fees at $4,213, which left a balance owing by
Ms Mo and Mr Huang of $15,787. Mr Law says that this
sum was then paid to him by
Ms Mo and Mr Huang as part of the larger payment of $55,787 on 30 September
2015.9
- [75] As to the
remaining sums claimed by Ms Mo and Mr Huang as further contributions to the
Ropata Avenue project, Mr Yang and Mr
Law deny receiving a bank cheque for
$100,000 from Ms Mo and Mr Huang on 17 October 2016. They also say that the sum
of $55,000 received
by Mr Law on 26 June 2017 was a personal loan to him, which
was fully repaid in two lump sum payments of $28,737.50 on 24 and 25
October
2017.
- [76] Mr Yang and
Mr Law therefore acknowledge receiving $460,000, but say that these were
contributions to the Taurima Avenue project.
Specifically, these
were:
Payment date
|
Amount NZ$
|
From A/c Name
|
From A/c #
|
Received A/c Name
|
Received A/c #
|
10 Oct 16
|
50,000.00
|
Qinghua Mo & Yu Huang
|
xx-xxxx- xxxxx50-00
|
Yan Yang
|
xx-xxxx- xxxxx15-00
|
17 Oct 16
|
100,000.00
|
Qinghua Mo & Yu Huang
|
xx-xxxx- xxxxx66-00
|
Yan Yang
|
xx-xxxx- xxxxx15-00
|
24 Oct 16
|
10,000.00
|
Qinghua Mo & Yu Huang
|
xx-xxxx- xxxxx50-50
|
Yan Yang
|
Not provided
|
14 Nov 16
|
8,000.00
|
Qinghua Mo & Yu Huang
|
xx-xxxx- xxxxx66-01
|
Yan Yang
|
Not provided
|
14 Nov 16
|
35,000.00
|
Lei Zhao
|
xx-xxxx-
xxxxx98- 000
|
Yan Yang
|
Not provided
|
14 Nov 16
|
15,000.00
|
DH & PM Limited
|
xx-xxxx- xxxxx24-00
|
Yan Yang
|
xx-xxxx- xxxxx15-00
|
9 See above, para [56].
14 Nov 16
|
42,000.00
|
Qinghua Mo & Yu Huang
|
xx-xxxx- xxxxx50-00
|
Yan Yang
|
xx-xxxx- xxxxx15-00
|
06 Feb 17
|
50,000.00
|
For. M Trading
|
Not provided
|
Yan Yang
|
xx-xxxx- xxxxx93-00
|
14 Feb 17
|
74,500.00
|
For. M Trading
|
Not provided
|
Vinjax Ltd
|
xx-xxxx- xxxxx69-00
|
15 Feb 17
|
75,500.00
|
For. M Trading
|
Not provided
|
Tamaki Homes Ltd
|
xx-xxxx- xxxxx70-00
|
Total
|
460,000.00
|
|
|
|
|
- [77] Mr Yang and
Mr Law also deny receiving any of the cash sums totalling
$112,200, which Ms Mo says she or Mr Huang personally handed to Mr Yang, Mr Law
or Ms Yang.10
Issues
- [78] The issues
for the Court to determine in respect of 12 Ropata Avenue, Point England,
are:
(a) What were the terms on which Ms Mo and Mr Huang made an
initial contribution of approximately $400,000 towards the purchase and
development of the property at 12 Ropata Avenue?
(b) How much exactly was the initial investment?
(c) Did Mr Yang and Mr Law undertake to carry out the
subdivision and complete the construction of the five units planned for the
property no later than December 2016?
(d) Did Ms Mo and Mr Huang make further contributions to the
Ropata Avenue project totalling $995,000 between May 2015 and June 2017?
(e) Were the further contributions made on condition that Mr
Yang and Mr Law would not obtain a bank loan or offer any mortgage security
over
the property to a bank or other lender?
10 See above, para [58].
(f) Did Ms Mo and Mr Huang make cash contributions totalling $112,200 to the
Ropata Avenue project as requested by Mr Yang and Mr
Law between November 2016
and April 2017?
Analysis
- [79] The first
issue is the terms on which Ms Mo and Mr Huang made the initial contribution of
approximately $400,000. There is again
a fundamental dispute as to these
arrangements. Ms Mo and Mr Huang say that, in return for their initial
contribution of $400,000,
Mr Yang agreed to give them the unencumbered title to
a new unit to be built on Lot 1 of the five subdivided lots. They would pay
nothing further for their unit. On the other hand, Mr Yang and Mr Law
acknowledge offering Ms Mo and Mr Huang one of the units when
complete, at cost.
Ms Mo and Mr Huang would therefore pay, say, another $400,000 for their
unit.
- [80] Again,
there is no contemporaneous documentation evidencing the agreed terms of the
investment. There are no WeChat messages
or emails recording the agreement. The
negotiations were entirely oral. The bank statements evidencing the payment of
sums of money
totalling approximately $400,000 do not assist in ascertaining the
basis on which the money was paid.
- [81] The main
protagonists, Ms Mo, Mr Yang and Mr Law each gave evidence and were
cross-examined. Again, no one varied from their
brief of evidence. Their
positions were, and remain, dramatically opposed. No one gave detailed evidence
of the date, time and place
of any of the discussions which led to the
agreement. Ms Mo merely said:
In around July 2015 Calvin persuaded David and I to invest in
the property at 12 Ropata Avenue. Calvin told us that by investing about
$400,000 in the proposed building project, we would receive title to our own
brand-new townhouse at Lot 1 of the property (out of
the five lots) within one
year, and no later than December 2016. Jackson and Calvin agreed to be
responsible to obtain all necessary
consents and carry out at their own cost
construction of the five townhouses on the property, with each townhouse to have
its own
separate title.
...
Jackson told me that by having access to cash outside of a
normal financier, him and Calvin would have the cashflow to get the project
going immediately.
I believe the investment agreement was a win for both sides as I could get a
brand-new townhouse for my parents: and Jackson would
have received funding to
start this development project.
- [82] Similarly,
Mr Yang said:
Pat ... agreed to contribute funds to the development and the
agreed understanding was that they would ... receive one lot at cost
in return.
This means that when the development and the houses were completed, they would
receive title to one lot after they paid
the cost price of developing that lot
and building the house on that lot.
There was no discussion or agreement as to how the cost price of
the completed unit would be calculated. My expectation was that the
cost price
would include all costs relating to the subdivision and development, including
management costs and interest where applicable.
But as I say, this was not
discussed or agreed.
- [83] In the
circumstances, I do not believe that any of the parties are lying, but they
obviously all proceeded on a mistaken understanding
of the agreement. Ms Mo and
Mr Huang thought they were getting a new unit for approximately $400,000. Mr
Yang and Mr Law thought
they were providing a new unit at cost, say $800,000.
This was acknowledged by Ms Mo in a secretly recorded telephone conversation
with Mr Law on 24 February 2018, in which the following exchange took
place:
Mr Law: It’s impossible that the house was [purchased for]
$400,000.
Ms Mo: I know, I know. Hey Jackson, Jackson, here is the thing
– I don’t have any issue now, I understand that there might
truly
have been some misunderstanding at the time, so you guys ... we can now go by
your cost price, for example, yours was
$700,000 or $750,000 and any event, it’s okay as long as we can take
back our capital of $400,000, plus all the profit, right,
this is what we all
agreed, right?
- [84] In those
circumstances and for the same reasons as expressed in relation to the Huxley
Place project, I am again reluctantly
drawn to the conclusion that no contract
was ever concluded in relation to the Ropata Avenue
project.
- [85] As to the
second issue — the amount of the initial investment, I accept that Ms Mo
and Mr Huang made an initial contribution
of $330,000 towards the Ropata Avenue
project in various sums between 30 September 2015 and 19 April 2016. I also
accept the evidence
of Mr Law that the sum of $15,787, being part of the payment
of
$55,787 on 30 September 2015, was part of the sum of $400,000 paid by Ms Mo
and
Mr Huang towards the purchase of Lot 3, 342 Bawden Road. There are WeChat
messages between Ms Mo and Mr Law, which taken together
establish the
arrangements for payments that were made between them.
- [86] Furthermore,
I also accept on the basis of WeChat messages and screenshots that the sum of
$13,386 advanced on 16 March 2016
was not paid towards the Ropata Avenue
project, but rather towards the Wimbledon Crescent project, in respect of which
there is no
claim. The payment was for 20 per cent of the architect’s
quote for
$49,500 plus GST, which he required before starting work ($11,385 (inclusive of
GST)) and $2,001 towards a CCTV system for the property.
- [87] Finally, I
also accept on the basis of bank statements and a reconciliation prepared by Mr
Huang that the sum of $50,000 which
was advanced on 19 April 2016 was a personal
loan to Mr Yang, which carried an interest rate of 5.5 per cent and which was
fully
repaid with interest (a total of $54,137.27) on 18 October
2017.
- [88] Mr Yang and
Mr Law say that the sum of $57,096.70 should be added to the initial
contributions made by Ms Mo and Mr Huang to
the Ropata Avenue project. It was,
however, utilised to settle the purchase of 8 Taurima Avenue and so should be
accounted for in
the Taurima Avenue project. I therefore find that the initial
contributions made by Ms Mo and Mr Huang to the Ropata Avenue project
totalled
$330,000.
- [89] Again, if
necessary, I would find that Mr Yang and Mr Law did not give an undertaking that
they would carry out the subdivision
and complete the construction of the five
units planned for the property no later than December 2016. While they obviously
did discuss
timeframes with Ms Mo and Mr Huang, discussion of such timeframes
does not, without more, impose a binding obligation on Mr Yang
and Mr Law. Ms
Mo and Mr Huang are unable to point to anything beyond discussion of such
timeframes which may result in a binding
obligation.
- [90] As to the
fourth issue — the amount of further contributions, Ms Mo and Mr Huang
say they advanced various sums totalling
$995,000 between May 2015 and June
2017.
- [91] Of these
further contributions, a total of $380,000 paid in three instalments
of
$70,000, $180,000 and $130,000 on 4 May 2015 is disputed. Mr Yang and Mr Law say
that these sums (together with $15,787, which was
part of a payment of $55,787
on 30 September 2015) represent the sum of $400,000 (less legal fees and
interest on a personal loan
of $130,000 from 4 May 2015 to 30 September 2015),
which Ms Mo had agreed to pay to Mr Law in order to be nominated as
purchaser
of Lot 3, 342 Bawden Road on settlement on 22 May 2017. Therefore,
they say that these contributions were not made to the Ropata
Avenue
project.
- [92] On the
other hand, Ms Mo says that although she did have discussions with Mr Law about
purchasing Lot 3, she walked away from
the deal when she realised that Mr Law
would make $400,000 profit on the original purchase price of $725,000, which he
had agreed
to pay in December 2014. She says that the $380,000 paid to Mr Law on
4 May 2015 was a personal loan for six months to enable him
to purchase the
property located at 12 Ropata Avenue. Mr Law and Mr Yang did not repay the loan
on time and told Ms Mo that the sum
of $380,000 had been “rolled
into” that property.
- [93] On this
issue, I prefer the evidence of Mr Law and Mr Yang for the following
reasons:
(a) On 17 May 2017, Mr Law formally nominated Ms Mo and Mr Huang
as purchasers of Lot 3, 342 Bawden Road, in terms of the agreement
for sale and
purchase dated 2 December 2014. Ms Mo and Mr Huang then settled the purchase of
Lot 3, 342 Bawden Road on 22 May 2017.
This indicates that Ms Mo and Mr Huang
had not walked away from the deal but had reached an agreement with Mr Yang to
purchase Lot
3.
(b) Even before settlement, Ms Mo had reached agreement to sell
a half share of Lot 3 to Li Zhang Lu for $600,00, which valued the
lot at
$1.2 million. Ms Lu had in fact paid approximately $400,000 to Ms Mo before
Ms Mo was formally nominated by Mr Yang as the purchaser
of Lot 3. After
settlement, Ms Mo and Mr Huang signed a
property sharing agreement and deed of declaration of trust acknowledging that
they held a one-half share of Lot 3 for Ms Lu.
(c) Prior to the sale of a one-half share to Ms Lu, Mr Yang
discussed the price to be paid by Ms Lu with Ms Mo in a WeChat exchange
dated 19
April 2017:
Ms Mo: Because this land of ours has been held for more than one year,
nearly two years, yes, two years [payment of $380,000 on 4
May 2015]. How would
you feel if I quoted her 1.3 or
1.4 million? Is it ok? Do you think it’s reasonable? Because I was told
by the valuer that the land price could be up to 1.5
to 1.6 million. Do you
think I am quoting too high at 1.3 or
1.4 million, considering I have invested so much cash in holding this land
for two years?
Mr Yang: She wants half. 1.3 might be too high.
Mr Yang: I’ve told her that you paid Jackson 400 thousand. So, she can
estimate the cost.
Think about how long ago you paid Jackson the 400 [thousand] and add on the
bank interest (for the time you have held the land) then
add on some profit [for
the selling price to Ms Lu].
(d) After the WeChat exchange with Mr Yang on 19 April 2017, Ms
Mo received a valuation report on Lot 3 dated 5 May 2017, valuing
the property
at $1.3 million.
(e) Less than a month after settlement and after having sold a
one-half share of Lot 3 to Ms Lu, Ms Mo attempted to renegotiate the
terms under
which she had been nominated as purchaser of Lot 3. In a WeChat message to Mr
Law on 14 June 2017, she says:
This was the offer for the lot – two years ago in May, we
gave you $400,000 in cash, when you agreed to sell the lot to us at
$1,125,000, which you have bought at $725,000 and paid the deposit of
$105,000. I understand you are short of cash this year. I’m
tight on my
side too, because of the loan for Union Road and Trauma [Taurima] from ASB. If
you are pulling out, I have to repay $355,000
to the bank, and Ropata is not
building as fast as expected. Plus, you need more cash for Trauma [Taurima] too,
so I’m selling
half of this lot to Zhuzhu [Ms Lu] at the price of
$1,200,000. I know that we have made a deal already. Thanks for giving us the
chance to renegotiate. Among the $400,000 I gave you
for the lot, $200,000 is my
mother’s. I guaranteed her that it would go up to 1.5-1.6 million dollars,
so I will pay her
back the profit of selling at the price of 1.5 million dollars as well as the
interest of her $200,000. We are partners now. I would
like to ask you, is it
possible for us to divide the profits of this lot like this? You bought it at
the price of $725,000, and Lily
has paid $600,000 to buy half of it now. Half of
your cost price is
$362,500, [meaning your profit is] 600 – 362.5 = 237.5. Can you take
this $237,500 as your profit on this lot, not to earn from
me on the other
half?
I mean that I have paid the previous $400,000 plus $20,000 to
settle on this lot, while you paid $105,000 in cash. I have put in
$420,000, and half of your cost is $362,500, that is, I have paid
$57,500 more. I know you have done a lot of work to be able to get the price
of $725,000, but from my point of view, I have been doing
my best to cooperate
with you. And I didn’t ask you to pay me back the money I can spare
whenever possible. For all the money
I paid in advance, I also need to pay
interest to the bank. I dare not touch Lily’s $600,000 because I promised
to lend you
money when you needed it for Trauma [Taurima] later. Please think
about it.
Because to date, I haven’t asked you to pay me the
interest of the
$400,000. Your profit is $237,500 + $50,000 (two years’ interest of the
$400,000) = $287,500. Now, as you know in this market,
I have to hold this land
and the price is still dropping, and I’ll need to pay back the loan in a
year. I can’t get any
profit in the short term. The interest is now very
high, 5.6%.
This is inconsistent with Ms Mo walking away from the deal to purchase Lot 3 for
$1,125,000, but later agreeing with Mr Law to accept
nomination as purchaser
without any form of payment to Mr Law. If Ms Mo had bought the property for
$725,000 there would not have
been any profit to Mr Law and no reason to ask
him, “Can you take this
$237,500 as your profit on this lot, not to earn from me on the other
half?” Ms Mo also specifically refers to cash payments
of $400,000,
“two years ago in May”, which is consistent with the payments of
$70,000, $180,000 and $130,000 on 4 May 2015 (albeit with a difference of
$20,000).
(f) Ms Mo acknowledges telling Ms Lu that she had paid $400,000
to Mr Law to secure the property and be nominated as the purchaser.
Ms Mo
says she lied to Ms Lu. I do not believe her — she told the truth to Ms
Lu.
- [94] There are
two other payments which have not been proven to be further contributions by Ms
Mo and Mr Huang to the Ropata Avenue
project — the sum
of
$100,000 in the form of a friend’s ANZ Bank cheque on 17 October 2016 and
the sum of $55,000 advanced by DH and PM Limited
to Mr Law on 26 June 2016.
- [95] Ms Mo says
the funds for the ANZ Bank cheque were sourced from their friend Leo
Yang’s account and that she herself deposited
the bank cheque into Ms
Yang’s bank account. Ms Yang denies receiving the money and has provided
her bank statements to confirm
her denial. Ms Mo says that Leo Yang has closed
his account and returned to China and acknowledges being unable to trace the
money.
- [96] Furthermore,
I accept that the sum of $55,000 paid to Mr Law on 26 June 2016 was a personal
loan, which was paid back with interest
at 6.8 per cent in two instalments of
$28,737.50 on 24 and 25 October 2017. Here I again rely on bank statements and a
reconciliation
prepared by Mr Huang.
- [97] Taking away
the sums of $380,000 paid on 4 May 2015, $100,000 paid on 17 October 2016 and
$55,000 paid on 26 June 2017, leaves
the sum of $460,000 as further proven
contributions.
- [98] However, Mr
Yang and Mr Law say that the sums totalling $460,000 were contributions not to
the Ropata Avenue project, but to
the Taurima Avenue project. On balance I think
that is right. Mr Yang and Mr Law had received construction funding from FM
Custodians
Limited for the Ropata Avenue project. Furthermore, Ms Mo
acknowledged that the contributions related to the Taurima Avenue project
in an
email dated 10 May 2018 to which she attached a table of her and Mr
Huang’s contributions to the Taurima Avenue project.
It included the sums
of $50,000, $100,000, $10,000,
$42,000, $74,500, $50,000 and $75,500, totalling $402,000, which largely
correlate with those claimed in the third amended statement
of claim as relating
to the Ropata Avenue project. In cross-examination, Ms Mo was unsure whether
their further contributions were
utilised in the Ropata Avenue project or the
Taurima Avenue project.
- [99] The further
contributions were not made on condition that Mr Yang and Mr Law would not
obtain a bank loan or offer any mortgage
security over the property to a bank or
other lender. I accept that it was always understood and agreed that the
contributions from
Ms Mo and Mr Huang and from Ms Yong would not be sufficient
to cover the subdivision and building development costs. Ms Mo says she
was told
that the cost would be $2.4 - $2.5 million. It would have been impossible for Mr
Yang and Mr Law to complete the development
without further funding, which must
have been expected and understood.
- [100] The final
issue is whether Ms Mo and Mr Huang made cash contributions totalling $112,200
to the Ropata Avenue project as requested
by Mr Yang and Mr Law between November
2016 and April 2017. Mr Yang, Mr Law and Ms Yang vigorously deny either
requesting or receiving
the alleged cash contributions. They have produced
personal and company bank records for seven days after the alleged cash
payments.
There are no deposits shown which may correlate to such payments. In
the absence of any corroborating evidence, Ms Mo and Mr Huang
are unable to
prove these cash contributions on the balance of
probabilities.
Result on Ropata Avenue
project
- [101] I have
determined that there is no concluded contract in relation to the contributions
totalling $330,000 by Ms Mo and Mr Huang
to Mr Yang and Mr Law in various sums
between 30 September 2015 and 28 January 2016. There can therefore be no breach
of contract.
- [102] In the
alternative, Ms Mo and Mr Huang argue for a purchase price resulting trust. They
seek orders in equity analogous to those
available under the Property Law Act
2007,11 setting aside dispositions which prejudice creditors. For the
same reason as expressed in relation to the Huxley Place project, I
find that a
presumption of a resulting trust cannot arise. All the contributions made by Ms
Mo and Mr Huang to the Ropata Avenue
project were made after settlement of the
purchase of the property on 31 July 2015. Ms Mo says she viewed the
contributions as “seed
funding”, which would enable the development
to get off the ground.
11 Property Law Act 2007, p 6, subpt 5, ss
344-350.
- [103] In the
further alternative, Ms Mo and Mr Huang allege that Mr Yang and Mr Law are in
breach of the Fair Trading Act for,
in effect, failing to disclose to them and
to a third party lender all the financial arrangements put in place to fund the
development.
Again, I am of the view that Ms Mo and Mr Huang have not proven
that Mr Yang and Mr Law engaged in conduct that was misleading or
deceptive or
likely to mislead or deceive within the meaning of the Act. There was no
concluded contract between the parties into
which a requirement to advise Ms Mo
and Mr Huang of other investors in the project could be implied. Ms Mo and Mr
Huang also allege
that FM Custodians Limited were not advised, but they are not
parties to the proceeding and make no such claim
themselves.
- [104] Ms Mo and
Mr Huang seek, firstly, an order for specific performance of the contract they
say they entered with Mr Yang and Mr
Law to receive a completed unit on Lot 1 of
the development or, alternatively, a declaration of unencumbered ownership of
the unit.
Secondly, they seek judgment for their further contribution
of
$890,000 ($995,000 less admitted repayments of $105,000) and cash contributions
of
$112,200, together with interest. An order for specific performance or
declaration is unavailable given my finding that there is
no concluded contract
between the parties.
- [105] There is,
however, a remedy available to Ms Mo and Mr Huang to restore them to their
original position and that is the restitutionary
remedy of money had and
received, as applied in the Huxley Avenue project. There will, therefore, be
judgment in CIV 2018-404-002619
for Ms Mo and Mr Huang against Mr Yang and Mr
Law in the sum of $330,000 plus interest of $32,446.59 in terms of the Interest
on
Money Claims Act from when the development was substantially completed (31
December 2017), to the date of commencement of this trial
(10 May 2021), making
a total of
$362,446.59.
- [106] The
counterclaim by Tamaki Homes Limited against Ms Mo and Mr Huang for the
difference between the cost price of the unit on
Lot 1 and the contributions
made by the plaintiffs must also be dismissed in light of my finding that there
was no concluded contract
between the parties. In light of my finding, there is
also no basis for the continuation of the caveat over the property.
- [107] As to the
counterclaim by Mr Law in relation to the sum of $105,000, being the unpaid
balance of the purchase price of Lot 3,
342 Bawden Road, Ms Mo and Mr Huang
have always acknowledged owing that sum to Mr Law. Ms Mo and Mr Huang are
the registered
proprietors of Lot 3, having paid the balance of the purchase
price (approximately $620,000) on 22 May 2017. Mr Law is, however,
yet to be
reimbursed for the deposit of $105,000, which he paid upon agreeing to buy the
property in December 2014. There will,
accordingly, also be judgment
in CIV 2018 404-002619 for Mr Law against Ms Mo and Mr Huang in the sum
of
$105,000 plus interest of $12,738.28 in terms of the Interest on Money Claims
Act from settlement of the property purchase (22 May
2017) to the date of
commencement of this trial (10 May 2021), making a total of $117,738.28.
- [108] Leave is
granted to apply for any further orders necessary for sale of the property and
the preservation of the proceeds of
sale to enable both judgments to be
satisfied.
47 Union Road, Howick
- [109] On
14 March 2015, Mr Law entered into an agreement to purchase 47 Union Road,
Howick, for $1,240,000 with settlement due on
25 September 2015. Mr Yang and Mr
Law planned to subdivide the property into three lots and build two houses on it
while retaining
the existing house as Lot 1. Following discussions with Mr Yang
and Mr Law, Ms Mo and Mr Huang agreed to invest in the
project.
- [110] On 25
September 2015, the purchase was settled and the title transferred to DH and PM
Limited, a company set up by Ms Mo and
Mr Huang to take title to the property.
The purchase price was paid as follows:
Deposit paid by Mr Yang and Mr Law
|
$124,000
|
Mortgage funds obtained by Ms Mo and Mr Huang from the ASB Bank secured
against the property
|
$850,000
|
Balance paid by Mr Yang and Mr Law
|
$268,133
|
Total
|
$1,242,133
|
- [111] Mr Yang
and Mr Law proceeded to apply for resource consent and building consent.
Earthwork commenced in February 2018. The foundations
for Lot 2
were
dug and poured and waste and stormwater pipelines were 90 per cent completed
before work stopped. Mr Yang and Mr Law say they have
been unable to secure
finance and continue development of the property due to the failure of Ms Mo and
Mr Huang to transfer the title
back to them. Although initially tenanted, the
existing house is now vacant because it is part of a building site which was
fenced
off when work on the property stopped.
- [112] Mr Yang
and Mr Law say that since settlement, the mortgage and other outgoings on the
Union Road property have been serviced:
(a) Using rental income received by DH and PM Limited;
(b) Applying the rebate of $7,000 received from the ASB Bank on
drawdown of the mortgage;
(c) Multiple lump sum payments made to Ms Mo and Mr Huang by
Mr Yang and Mr Law when requested by them for reimbursement of invoices;
and
(d) Monthly automatic payments of $5,000 from about March 2017
and continuing to date.
- [113] There are
three causes of action relating to the Union Road project in the statement of
claim:
(a) Breach of contract by Ms Mo and Mr Huang’s failure to
execute a deed of trust and transfer the property to Mr Yang and Mr
Law;
(b) Breach of an express/implied/resulting trust pursuant to
which DH and PM Limited holds the property on behalf of Mr Yang and Mr
Law;
and
(c) Breach of fiduciary duty alleging that Ms Mo and Mr Huang
and their company, DH and PM Limited, owed duties as fiduciaries to
Mr Yang and
Mr Law to avoid unauthorised personal profit or benefit from the
relationship and avoid conflict between personal interest and duties to the
beneficiaries, and to avoid divided loyalties.
- [114] Mr Yang
and Mr Law say the terms of the oral investment agreement
included:
(a) DH and PM Limited would be nominated as purchaser to hold
the property on trust for Mr Yang and Mr Law;
(b) DH and PM Limited would arrange a bank loan of $850,000
which would be applied towards the purchase price;
(c) They would pay the balance of the purchase price and all
outgoings on the property, including mortgage and insurance payments;
(d) DH and PM Limited would advise them of any shortfall in the
monthly automatic payments, which shortfall they would pay; and
(e) DH and PM Limited would transfer the property to them upon
refinance of the original ASB Bank loan.
- [115] In
response, Ms Mo and Mr Huang say that DH and PM Limited’s retention of
title to the property would also be regarded
as a form of security for the
separate advance by them to Mr Yang and Mr Law of the sum of approximately
$400,000, being the agreed
purchase price of a unit in the Ropata Avenue
project. They also say the property financing agreement was limited to a maximum
period
of six months from settlement date within which period Mr Yang and Mr Law
undertook to arrange alternative finance and provide appropriate
replacement
security for their advance of
$400,000 to the Ropata Avenue project. Finally, Mr Yang and Mr Law undertook to
pay all outgoings on the Union Road property.
- [116] Ms Mo and
Mr Huang say Mr Yang and Mr Law breached the property financing agreement by
failing to pay all outgoings on the Union
Road property. They itemise various
outgoings totalling $25,749.86, which they say have not been paid. They also say
Mr Yang and
Mr Law failed to arrange the refinancing of the ASB
Bank
loan, or take appropriate steps to take the title back, or complete the
development in a timely manner.
- [117] However,
based on subsequent analysis by their accountant, Arran Boote, Ms Mo and Mr
Huang have agreed to the application of
the sum of $25,749.86 from unidentified
lump sum repayments made by Mr Yang and Mr Law so as to treat the outstanding
outgoings as
having been paid. They also acknowledge receiving net rental income
from the house on the property from 1 March 2016 to 3 July 2017
totalling
$32,441.61, which they have deducted from their claim for
reimbursement.
- [118] Ms Mo and
Mr Huang therefore counterclaim against Mr Yang and Mr Law seeking a declaration
that they hold an equitable lien
over the property securing
their
68.55 per cent proportionate ownership interest in the property and an order
directing the sale of the property or, alternatively,
judgment for $850,000 plus
any outstanding outgoings and interest.
Issues
- [119] The issues
for the Court to determine in respect of 47 Union Road, Howick,
are:
(a) What were the terms on which Ms Mo and Mr Huang’s
company, DH and PM Limited, became the legal owners of 47 Union Road and
secured
an $850,000 loan from ASB Bank?
(b) Did Mr Yang and Mr Law contribute to the servicing of the
ASB Bank loan and any other outgoings in respect of the property? If
so, to what
extent?
(c) Did Mr Yang and Mr Law act in breach of their agreement with
Ms Mo and Mr Huang by failing to (i) arrange refinancing of the ASB
Bank loan
and (ii) produce alternative security for the contribution of
$400,000 made by Ms Mo and Mr Huang to the Ropata Avenue
project?
(d) Did Ms Mo and Mr Huang wrongfully refuse to sign a
deed of trust and/or transfer title to the property to Mr Yang and Mr Law?
Analysis
- [120] It should
be noted at the outset that apart from arranging the mortgage advance, Ms Mo and
Mr Huang did not contribute any funds
towards either settlement of the purchase
of the Union Road property or towards the subdivision and building development.
They have
paid outgoings, including interest on the mortgage, for which they
have been and continue to be reimbursed. I agree with Mr Sheppard,
the
accountant who gave evidence on behalf of Mr Yang and Mr Law, that the mortgage
advance arranged by Ms Mo and Mr Huang cannot
be regarded as an equity
investment or contribution by them, which would give them a proportionate
ownership interest in the property
(68.55 per cent) based on a claimed
contribution to the purchase price. If the mortgage advance had been an
equity investment
by Ms Mo and Mr Huang, there is simply no basis upon
which Mr Yang and Mr Law would have been called upon to pay the interest
on
it.
- [121] Again,
there is no contemporaneous documentation evidencing the agreed terms on which
DH and PM Limited became the legal owners
of the property and secured the
$850,000 loan from ASB Bank. There are no WeChat messages or emails recording
the agreement. The
negotiations were entirely oral. The mortgage documentation
does not assist in ascertaining the basis on which it was
obtained.
- [122] Ms Mo and
Mr Huang say that a primary reason why they were registered as owners of the
property was to provide them with some
security in relation to the unsecured
funds they had contributed to the Ropata Avenue project. That is denied by Mr
Yang and Mr Law.
Ms Mo and Mr Huang also say that Mr Yang and Mr Law agreed to
take the title to the property back in six months. That is also
denied.
Mr Yang and Mr Law say the agreement was that once the subdivision had been
completed the existing house on the property
would be sold and the proceeds
would repay the mortgage.
- [123] Again, in
the absence of any contemporaneous documentation or relevant practice from which
inferences can be drawn, it is not
possible to establish the
exact
nature of the commercial arrangement. The only arrangements the parties agree
upon are that Mr Law would nominate DH and PM Limited
as purchaser of the
property; Ms Mo and Mr Huang would obtain a loan of $850,000 to be secured
against the property; Mr Yang and
Mr Law would pay all outgoings on the property
including interest on the mortgage advance; Mr Yang and Mr Law would proceed to
subdivide
the property and build two units on the subdivided property; and the
title would be transferred back to Mr Yang and Mr Law at some
stage during the
development process.
- [124] As to the
second issue, it has been established that Mr Yang and Mr Law have contributed
and continue to contribute to the servicing
of the ASB Bank loan and other
outgoings in respect of the property. When there was a measure of cooperation
between the parties,
a reconciliation schedule for both the Union Road and
Taurima Avenue properties was prepared by Mr Huang and provided to Mr Yang
and
Mr Law. On the basis of this schedule, both lump sum and regular payments have
been made by Mr Yang and Mr Law to Ms Mo and Mr
Huang for reimbursement of
outgoings.
- [125] Subsequent
to the trial, counsel for Ms Mo and Mr Huang provided an updated costs schedule
for the Union Road and Taurima Avenue
properties. It discloses outgoings between
1 December 2020 and 31 May 2021 totalling $26,804.99 and reimbursements of
$25,000, leaving
a shortfall of $1,804.99 to be paid by Mr Yang and Mr Law to Ms
Mo and Mr Huang.
- [126] As to the
third issue, it has not been established that Mr Yang and Mr Law are in breach
of their agreement with Ms Mo and Mr
Huang by failing to either arrange
refinancing of the ASB Bank loan after six months or produce alternative
security for their contribution
of $400,000 made to the Ropata Avenue project.
That is because the exact terms of the commercial arrangement between the
parties
are uncertain. If the allegation of a limited six month duration is
correct, then it was clearly varied by the parties as evidenced
by the 23 May
reconciliation (and prior reconciliations) and a WeChat message on 24 August
2016 from Ms Mo proposing to re-fix the
mortgage for 24 months. The highwater
mark of Ms Mo and Mr Huang’s case that Mr Yang and Mr Law agreed to title
being held
by Ms Mo and Mr Huang as security for advances made by them to the
Ropata Avenue project. Ms Mo relies on a WeChat exchange
between herself and Mr Law dated 25 September 2015, in which they discuss
dispensing with the need for a lawyer to document the basis
for an advance
of
$150,000. Mr Law is recorded as saying: “Besides, it should be fine
because you are the holder of our property and have such
big equity”. I
consider that this statement is quite equivocal and does not establish any
concluded agreement.
- [127] Finally,
as to whether the commercial arrangement amounts to a trust, Ms Mo seems to
acknowledge that she and Mr Huang hold
title to the property on trust for Mr
Yang and Mr Law. In an email to Mr Yang and Mr Law on 13 February 2018, Ms Mo
stated:
1. Regarding 40 Union Road
This house is in my name. The company owns the house on behalf
of the two of you. In terms of the property right, three of us will
sign the
Deed of Trust prepared by you.
Because this land includes a house on the front section and two
divided sections on the back section, I understand that you plan to
sell the
house on the front section first. I will coordinate the sale of the house. After
you determine the buyer, I will transfer
the ownership of the property to the
buyer through a Sale & Purchase Agreement. After it is sold off, the money
will be used
to square up the 850,000-dollar ASB loan. We will also transfer the
ownership right of the two divided lands on the back section
to your appointed
entity through normal legal approaches.
- [128] A deed of
trust was then prepared, but never signed. Ms Mo wanted to reach a global
settlement with Mr Yang and Mr Law rather
than settle each project
individually.
- [129] In this
proceeding, Ms Mo and Mr Huang made application for summary judgment (which was
refused). However, in an affidavit sworn
on 19 November 2018, Ms Mo acknowledged
the trust relationship when she stated:
David and I have no interest in this property [47 Union Road]
except through our company DH & PM Limited, which retains title
of the
property as trustee.
- [130] Notwithstanding
the stance taken during negotiations between the parties and in Ms Mo’s
affidavit dated 19 November 2018,
Ms Mo and Mr Huang dispute the claim that they
were, through their company DH & PM Limited, simply bare
trustees
holding the property on behalf of Mr Yang and Mr Law. At trial, they pointed to
the following factors:
(a) Their substantial contribution to the purchase cost
($850,000) of the property, representing 68.55 per cent of the overall purchase
cost. They submit that a contribution of this magnitude clearly gives them a
substantial personal debt exposure beyond that contemplated
by a bare
trustee.
(b) The concession by Mr Yang that the property could be
regarded as a form of security for the advances made by them of $409,173
to the
Ropata Avenue project.
(c) Their having been left to personally carry expenses
associated with their legal ownership of the property for a period prior to
the
commencement of the regular $5,000 payments in March 2017.
- [131] Ms Mo and
Mr Huang further submit that when the six month period during which the property
had to be refinanced expired, the
arrangement altered character in the sense
that they thereafter became entitled to an equitable charge over the property
(in addition
to the company’s legal interest) to the extent of their
original investment in its purchase. Combined with their existing legal
ownership, Ms Mo and Mr Huang submit that they were thus entitled to look to
their position at the date of purchase and to claim
a proportionate interest in
the property.
- [132] These
submissions are misconceived. The scale of the mortgage advance does not alter
the nature of the relationship between
DH & PM Limited and Mr Yang and Mr
Law. Nor does the expiry of six months without refinancing alter the character
of the arrangement.
I have not found it established that the property was to be
held as security for advances on the Ropata Avenue project. Further,
although
there were times when the reimbursement of outgoings was not up to date, Mr Yang
and Mr Law accept the need for reimbursement
and have done so when presented
with appropriate evidence of outgoings. Finally, counsel for Ms Mo and Mr Huang
did acknowledge
in her closing submissions that the property was held on trust on behalf of Mr
Yang and Mr Law.
- [133] In all the
circumstances, I find it established on the balance of probabilities that DH
& PM Limited does indeed hold the
property on trust for Mr Yang and Mr Law.
It does not however necessarily follow that Ms Mo and Mr Huang have wrongly
refused to
sign a deed of trust and/or transfer title to the property to Mr Yang
and Mr Law in the circumstances at the time the transfer request
was
made.
- [134] As to the
terms of the trust, there is certainty of intention, subject matter and objects.
No particular form or words are required.
The word “trust” need not
be used. Any language that shows an intention to create a trust will
do.
- [135] DH &
PM Limited holds and will continue to hold the property on trust for Mr Yang and
Mr Law. The terms of the trust are
as follows:
(a) At the request and cost of Mr Yang and Mr Law, DH & PM
Limited will transfer the property to Mr Yang and Mr Law as and when
they
require.
(b) Until the property is transferred to Mr Yang and Mr Law, DH
& PM Limited will deal with the property as Mr Yang and Mr Law
require.
(c) The mortgage repayment amount shall be repaid to DH & PM
Limited upon the transfer.
(d) In the meantime, Mr Yang and Mr Law are to provide
sufficient funds to DH & PM Limited to meet all outgoings in respect of
the
property as and when necessary.
(e) Mr Yang and Mr Law will keep DH & PM Limited indemnified
at all times against all loss and liability of any kind arising out
of DH &
PM Limited acting as trustee in respect of the property.
(f) Finally, if the property or any part of it is sold, DH & PM Limited
will receive the proceeds of sale and, after payment of
the mortgage repayment
amount together with all outgoings and expenses in respect of the disposal, will
hold the net proceeds of
sale in trust for Mr Yang and Mr Law.
Result on Union Road
project
- [136] There will
therefore be a declaration in CIV 2019-404-000506 that DH & PM Limited
holds 47 Union Road on trust for Mr Yang
and Mr Law.
- [137] I also
make an order that DH and PM Limited transfer the property at 47 Union Road,
Howick, to Mr Yang and Mr Law or their nominee
on condition
that:
(a) The ASB Bank mortgage advance is repaid in full and
discharged as part of the transfer;
(b) Ms Mo and Mr Huang are reimbursed for any outgoings on the
property which they have paid as trustees and not been reimbursed.
If the sums
to be paid, if any, cannot be agreed between the parties, the amount is to be
jointly determined by the parties’
accountants, Mr Sheppard and Mr
Boote.
8 Taurima Avenue, Point England
- [138] On
9 September 2015, Mr Law entered into an agreement to purchase 8
Taurima Avenue, Point England, for $1,190,000
with settlement due
on 18 December 2015. Mr Yang and Mr Law planned to demolish the existing house,
subdivide the property
and build five townhouses on it. Following discussions
with Mr Yang and Mr Law, Ms Mo and Mr Huang agreed to invest in the
project.
- [139] On 18
December 2015, the property was settled and the title transferred to Ms Mo, Mr
Huang and Mr Yang’s sister, Yan
Yang. The purchase price was paid as
follows:
Deposit paid by Mr Yang and Mr Law
|
$119,000
|
Mortgage funds obtained by Ms Mo and Mr Huang from the ASB Bank secured
against the property
|
$715,000
|
Funds advanced by another investor, Ms Yong
|
$300,000
|
Funds advanced by Ms Mo for the Ropata Avenue project, but utilised to meet
shortfall on settlement
|
$57,096
|
Total
|
$1,191,096
|
- [140] Mr Yang
and Mr Law proceeded to apply for resource consent and building consent. The
house on the property was utilised as an
office by Mr Yang and Mr Law’s
project management company, Vinjax Limited, until it was demolished in July
2017. Mr Yang and
Mr Law then commenced construction of the five townhouse
development. The development reached the point where three of the five units
were covered in, one unit partly constructed (75 per cent covered in) and the
fifth unit at the stage where foundations, ground floor
framing, steel beams and
first floor flooring were complete. Mr Yang and Mr Law say they were unable to
obtain further funding in
order to complete the construction as the title to the
property was not in their names. The development has been stalled since October
2018 and remains incomplete.
- [141] Mr Yang
and Mr Law say that since settlement the mortgage and other outgoings on the
Taurima Avenue property have, like those
on the Union Road property, been
serviced:
(a) Applying the rebate of $4,000 received from the ASB Bank on
drawdown of the mortgage;
(b) Multiple lump sum payments made to Ms Mo and Mr Huang by
Mr Yang and Mr Law when requested by them for reimbursement of invoices;
and
(c) Monthly automatic payments of $5,000 from about March 2017
and continuing to date.
- [142] There are
three causes of action relating to the Taurima Avenue project in the statement
of claim:
(a) Breach of contract by Ms Mo and Mr Huang’s
failure to execute a deed of trust and transfer the property to Mr Yang and Mr
Law;
(b) Breach of an express/implied/resulting trust in terms of
which Ms Mo and Mr Huang (and Ms Yang) hold the property on behalf of
Mr Yang
and Mr Law; and
(c) Breach of fiduciary duty alleging that Ms Mo and Mr Huang
owed duties as fiduciaries to Mr Yang and Mr Law to avoid unauthorised
personal
profit or benefit from the relationship, avoid conflict between personal
interest and duties to the beneficiaries, and to
avoid divided loyalties.
- [143] Mr Yang
and Mr Law say that the terms of the oral investment agreement
included:
(a) Ms Mo and Mr Huang together with Ms Yang would be nominated
as purchasers to hold the property on trust for Mr Yang and Mr Law;
(b) Ms Mo and Mr Huang would arrange finance to enable the
purchase of the property;
(c) Mr Yang and Mr Law would commence multi-unit development
works on the site;
(d) Ms Mo and Mr Huang (and Ms Yang) would transfer the title to
them in the middle stages of the development in order that they could
obtain
further construction funding to finish the construction and development; and
(e) Ms Mo and Mr Huang would receive 50 per cent of the
after-tax profit from the sale of one lot in return for all of their
contributions
to the project, including the funds that they provided.
- [144] In
response, Ms Mo and Mr Huang say that they agreed to provide mortgage finance of
$715,000 on terms that they would retain
title to the property, that Mr Yang and
Mr Law would provide the balance of the purchase price and complete at their own
cost a subdivision
of the property into five townhouses. In return for their
investments Ms Mo and Mr Huang would be entitled to repayment of the investment
and an equal share with Mr Yang and Mr Law of any profits realised upon the sale
of all five townhouses, not just one of them.
- [145] Ms Mo and
Mr Huang say Mr Yang and Mr Law breached the property financing agreement by
failing to pay all outgoings on the Taurima
Avenue property. They itemise
various outgoings for insurance, water and rates totalling $13,414.78, which
they say Mr Yang and Mr
Law have not paid. They also say that Mr Yang and Mr Law
have failed to pay other costs associated with the development, which they
have
paid as follows:
Date
|
Paid to
|
Due $ Amount
|
3 Nov 15
|
Mak & Associate Ltd
|
8,021.25
|
17 Dec 15
|
Anotonio Civil
|
1,897.50
|
20 Apr 16
|
Auckland Council
|
280.00
|
6 May 16
|
Auckland Council
|
961.00
|
7 Jun 16
|
Focus Environmental Services Limited
|
3,622.50
|
29 Jun 16
|
Mak & Associate Ltd
|
19,471.69
|
30 Jun 16
|
Anchor
|
8,222.50
|
18 July 16
|
A I Bates & Associate (2004) Ltd
|
1,351.25
|
19 July 16
|
Auckland Council
|
2,500.00
|
29 July 16
|
Focus Environmental Services Limited
|
1,380.00
|
19 Oct 16
|
Mak & Associate Ltd
|
3,006.73
|
29 Nov 16
|
Buildable Layouts
|
1,437.50
|
8 Dec 16
|
Auckland Council
|
500.00
|
8 Dec 16
|
Auckland Council
|
1,500.00
|
9 Dec 16
|
Auckland Council
|
3,483.50
|
15 Dec 16
|
Auckland Council
|
6,348.00
|
15 Dec 16
|
Auckland Council
|
323.00
|
16 Dec 16
|
Mak & Associate Ltd
|
25,263.09
|
16 Dec 16
|
EDC Engineering Design Consultants
|
2,300.00
|
20 Dec 16
|
Auckland Council
|
2,000.00
|
20 Mar 17
|
Mak & Associate Ltd
|
2,749.94
|
27 Mar 17
|
Auckland Council
|
8,778.29
|
3 Apr 17
|
Unknown
|
836.74
|
10 Apr 17
|
Auckland Council
|
5,479.85
|
20 June 17
|
Mak & Associate Ltd
|
233.16
|
21 June 17
|
Focus Environmental Services Limited
|
3,795.00
|
20 July 17
|
Mak & Associate Ltd
|
445.25
|
31 Aug 17
|
Unknown
|
701.26
|
30 Sep 17
|
A I Bates & Associates (2004) Ltd
|
1,437.50
|
20 Nov 17
|
Mak & Associate Ltd
|
300.82
|
20 Feb 18
|
Mak & Associate Ltd
|
196.04
|
3 Mar 18
|
DHC Consulting Ltd
|
2,966.43
|
20 Mar 18
|
Mak & Associate Ltd
|
126.73
|
20 Sep 18
|
Mak & Associate Ltd
|
2,255.53
|
|
Total Amount
|
124,172.05
|
- [146] Ms Mo and
Mr Huang acknowledge receipt from Mr Yang and Mr Law of various sums by way of
partial reimbursement of expenses of
$100,268.06 or early repayment of capital
of $215,000, totalling $315,268.06. The net contributions remaining are
therefore $594,415.47,
calculated as follows:
Contribution
|
$
|
Initial contribution towards the purchase price
|
772,096.70
|
Insurance, water, rates and development costs
|
137,586.83
|
Total investment contribution
|
909,683.53
|
Less reimbursements
|
100,268.06
|
Less early repayments
|
215,000.00
|
Claim for outstanding investment contribution
|
594,415.47
|
- [147] Mr Yang
and Mr Law point to reconciliation statements prepared by Ms Mo and Mr Huang in
March and October 2017. Mr Yang and
Mr Law say they responded by preparing an
amended statement on 23 November 2017, which Mr Huang accepted as accurate. In
accordance
with the amended statement, Mr Yang and Mr Law paid Ms Mo and Mr
Huang the sum of $44,135.59. Mr Yang and Mr Law say that Ms Mo and
Mr Huang have
not prepared reconciliation statements since May 2018 and have failed to advise
them of any outstanding amounts. They
have, nonetheless, continued to pay them
$5,000 per month, which they say should be sufficient to meet any ongoing
costs.
Disputed contributions to Taurima
Avenue project
- [148] The
accountant for Mr Yang and Mr Law, Bruce Sheppard, cannot verify the existence
of payments for $13,414.78, other than relying
on Mr Boote’s review of
invoices, payments and bank account statements. Mr Sheppard notes the parties
dispute whether Ms Mo
did indeed make these payments.
- [149] Of the
other claimed payments of $124,172.04, Mr Sheppard records that Ms Mo was
reimbursed for invoices totalling $103,934.48,
invoices
totalling
$14,056.45 were paid by Mr Yang or his associates, a payment of $5,479.85
related to a different project (Wimbledon), while there
was no invoice
supporting another claimed payment of $701.26. Further, no account has been
taken by Mr Boote of the continuing payments
of $5,000 a month since September
2020.
Issues
- [150] The issues
for the Court to determine in respect of 8 Taurima Avenue, Point England,
are:
(a) What were the terms on which Ms Mo and Mr Huang, together
with Ms Yang, become the legal owners of 8 Taurima Avenue and secured
a loan of
$715,000 from ASB Bank?
(b) What further contributions did Ms Mo and Mr Huang make for
the purpose of settling the purchase of the property or the construction
of five
units on the property?
(c) Did Mr Yang and Mr Law contribute to the servicing of the
ASB Bank loan and any other outgoings in respect of the property? If
so, to what
extent?
(d) Did Mr Yang and Mr Law act in breach of their agreement with
Ms Mo and Mr Huang by failing to complete the development and disclose
the costs
associated with the partial completion of the project?
(e) Did Ms Mo and Mr Huang wrongfully refuse to sign a deed of
trust and/or transfer title to the property to Mr Yang and Mr Law?
Analysis
- [151] The
arrangements regarding the Taurima Avenue project appear to combine features of
the Union Road project and the Ropata Avenue
project. As for the
Union
Road project, the property was transferred into the names of Ms Mo and Mr Huang
(or their company) together with Ms Yang and a loan
was secured from the ASB
Bank ($850,000 for Union Road and $715,000 for Taurima Avenue) to assist with
settlement of the purchase
of the property. As for the Ropata Avenue project,
Ms Mo and Mr Huang made further contributions to assist in the construction
of the units on the property in return for a profit share of some sort in the
completed development, either through ownership of
one of the units at a reduced
cost or through a monetary return.
- [152] For the
same reasons articulated in respect of the Union Road project, the mortgage
advance arranged by Ms Mo and Mr Huang cannot
be regarded as an equity
investment or contribution by them, which would give them a proportionate
ownership interest in the property
based on a claimed contribution to the
purchase price. Again, there is no contemporaneous documentation evidencing the
agreed terms
on which Ms Mo and Mr Huang became the legal owners of the
property (together with Ms Yang) and secured the $715,000 loan from
ASB Bank.
There are no WeChat messages or emails recording the agreement. The negotiations
were entirely oral. The mortgage documentation
does not assist in ascertaining
the basis on which it was obtained.
- [153] It is
therefore not possible to establish the nature of the commercial relationship.
The only matters of which one can be certain
are that Mr Law agreed to and did
nominate Ms Mo and Mr Huang (together with Ms Yang), as purchasers of the
property; that Ms Mo
and Mr Huang would obtain a loan of $715,000 to be secured
against the property; that Mr Yang and Mr Law would pay all outgoings
on the
property including interest on the mortgage advance; that Mr Yang and Mr Law
would proceed to subdivide the property and build
five units on the subdivided
property; and that the title would be transferred back to Mr Yang and Mr Law at
some stage during the
development process.
- [154] As to
further contributions, it is accepted that funds of $57,096, which were
allegedly advanced by Ms Mo and Mr Huang for the
Ropata Avenue project, were
utilised on settlement of the purchase of 8 Taurima Avenue. It is also accepted
that Ms Mo and Mr Huang
contributed $460,000 in various sums between 10 October
2016
to February 2017,12 which were utilised in the Taurima Avenue
project. These two sums total $517,096.
- [155] This sum
can be contrasted with Ms Mo and Mr Huang’s claim for “outstanding
investment contribution” of $594,415.47.
This figure wrongly includes the
mortgage advance of $715,000, which cannot be classified as an equity
contribution when Mr Yang
and Mr Law were responsible for the payment of the
mortgage interest and other outgoings. Ms Mo and Mr Huang’s “initial
contribution towards the purchase price” was $57,096. Ms Mo and Mr Huang
should, however, then have included the sum of $460,000
as their further
contributions to the Taurima Avenue project.
- [156] This was
recognised by Ms Mo in her secretly recorded telephone conversation with Mr Law
on 24 February 2018:
Ms Mo: And then one more thing ... my mum ... well, in 2016, I
gave you nearly 300,000 in several instalments, and in February 2017
I gave a
further $200,000. And at the time, Calvin discussed with me in private ...
Calvin also confirmed that he had discussed with
you that for the 400,000 we put
in, you guys would pay us half of the profit on one house in Taurima as the
return. This was ok too,
right?
Mr Law: Half the profit on one house ... right, that’s the
equivalent of your having half, yep, I remember this.
The nearly $300,000 was a total of $260,000 in seven instalments between October
and November 2016, while the further $200,000 was
paid in instalments of
$50,000,
$74,500 and $75,500 between 6 and 15 February 2017.
- [157] The total
contributions made by Ms Mo and Mr Huang towards the Taurima Avenue project
were $517,096 leaving aside the mortgage
advance of
$715,000, which was not an equity contribution.
- [158] Again, I
am of the view that the commercial arrangement amounts to a trust. In a WeChat
message to Mr Law on 14 June 2017, Ms
Mo said:
There are several points I want to make clear.
12 See above, at [76].
1. for Trauma [Taurima], I am just doing you a favour for the loan; I do not
own the house.
- [159] In an
email to Mr Yang and Mr Law on 13 February 2018, Ms Mo
stated:
4. Regarding the construction investment project at 8 Taurima
Ave, Point England, Auckland.
The house is now in my company and Emily’s name. It is
being held on behalf of both of you. In terms of the ownership, we, three
parties, will sign the Deed of Trust that is prepared by you.
Because you will build 5 new houses at 8 Taurima Ave, Point
England, Auckland, we will cooperate with you on the sale of the houses
and
other matters concerning the transfer of the ownership. After you confirm a
buyer of a new entity, we will transfer the property
through a Sale &
Purchase agreement or other legal ways in accordance with the result of our
negotiation. The money which is
obtained from selling the property will be used
to settle the 715,000 dollars ASB loan.
- [160] Again, a
deed of trust was then prepared, but never signed. Ms Mo wanted to reach a
global settlement with Mr Yang and Mr Law,
rather than settle each project
individually.
- [161] In Ms
Mo’s affidavit sworn on 19 November 2018, she stated that the arrangement
was that as security for the contribution
[to pay part of the settlement monies]
she and Mr Huang would retain title to the property together with Mr
Yang’s sister,
who did not contribute, but was included as Mr Law’s
nominee. Ms Mo further says:
After 6 months (ie by June 2016) the Defendants would arrange
alternative finance and construction funding and take title to the property.
- [162] In all the
circumstances, I find it established on the balance of probabilities that Ms Mo
and Mr Huang together with Ms Yang
hold the property on trust for Mr Yang and Mr
Law. Again, it does not however necessarily follow that Ms Mo and Mr Huang have
wrongly
refused to sign a deed of trust and/or transfer title to the property to
Mr Yang and Mr Law in the circumstances as they existed
at the time of any
request to do so. As to the terms of the trust, I find that there is sufficient
certainty to imply the same terms
as the trust in relation to the Union Road
property.
- [163] As with
the Union Road property, Mr Yang and Mr Law have paid for the servicing of the
ASB Bank loan and any other outgoings
in respect of the property. The
reconciliations which have been prepared by Mr Huang relate to both the Union
Road and Taurima Avenue
properties. The costs record provided by counsel for
Ms Mo and Mr Huang subsequent to the trial also relates to both properties
and
attached invoices for maintenance or remedial work done at both properties. It
records total expenditure of $26,804.99 for both
properties from 1 December 2020
to 31 May 2021 and reimbursements of $25,000, leaving a shortfall of
$1,804.99.
- [164] The
accountant for Ms Mo and Mr Huang, Mr Boote, acknowledges payments made to Ms Mo
and Mr Huang of $126,017.92 plus $215,000.
He classified these payments as
“in the nature of an early return of the capital” contributed by Ms
Mo and Mr Huang.
Mr Boote took this approach because the $5,000 monthly payment
(from March 2017 to September 2020) from Mr Yang and Mr Law’s
company,
Vinjax Limited, were recorded as “owners’ drawings” in
Vinjax’s financial records. However it is
classified, it is clear that the
regular monthly payment of $5,000, together with the irregular lump sum payments
totalling $126,017.92,
have been used and are available for use by Ms Mo and Mr
Huang to pay mortgage interest and other outgoings on the property. As noted
earlier, Mr Boote has arbitrarily classified $25,749.86 as relating to the Union
Road property in order to eliminate any liability
for the payment of outgoings
on Union Road “due to lack of details provided on the bank
statements”.
- [165] There is
again a fundamental dispute as to the terms on which Ms Mo and Mr Huang made
the contributions of $517,096. Ms Mo
and Mr Huang say that they agreed to
provide mortgage finance of $715,000 in return for an equal share of profit from
the sale of
the five townhouse units to be built on the property. As to the
extra
$57,096.70 provided on settlement, Ms Mo says that Mr Law told her he would pay
her back. Ms Mo does not specify what the agreement
was in relation to further
contributions of $460,000 made by herself and Mr Huang. In her brief of
evidence, Ms Mo says this sum
was part of a $995,000 which she and Mr Huang
provided to Mr Yang and Mr Law to complete development of the Ropata Avenue
project.
She merely says:
The project was subject to significant
delay, Calvin said that if we did not provide these sums, the project would not
be completed,
and our investment would be put at risk.
- [166] At trial,
Notwithstanding Ms Mo gave evidence that the agreement was that she and Mr Huang
would receive an equal share of profit
from the sale of the five townhouses.
However, she had earlier said in a WeChat message to Ms Yang on 11 February
2018:
Fifthly, regarding the loan of over five hundred thousand
[dollars] my mother lent to your elder brother [and Mr Law]. [We need to]
confirm the date of repayment and the interests in a loan receipt. [The
repayment] should also include half of the profit from one
of the houses in
Trauma [Taurima]. (Your elder brother mentioned that the amount is about one
hundred thousand [dollars]).
- [167] Furthermore,
in an affidavit sworn on 19 November 2018, Ms Mo said:
... and so it was proposed by Calvin that David and I would
provide part of the settlement monies. The agreement was that David and
I would
receive either one of the completed units in the development or the equivalent
monetary value calculated as a percentage
of our contribution against the
overall cost of the completed project.
- [168] On the
other hand, Mr Yang and Mr Law say that the funding that Ms Mo proposed was just
for settlement of the purchase of the
property. It did not extend to cover the
necessary financing required to complete the construction of the intended five
townhouse
development. They say the oral agreement with Ms Mo and Mr Huang was
that they would receive 50 per cent of the after tax profit
from the sale of one
lot in return for their contribution to the project (after repayment of the
funds provided).
- [169] Again,
there is no contemporaneous documentation evidencing the agreed terms of the
investment. There are no WeChat messages
or emails recording the agreement. The
negotiations were entirely oral. The bank statements which evidence the payment
of sums of
money totalling $517,096.70 do not assist in ascertaining the basis
on which the money was paid. The parties obviously all proceeded
on a mistaken
understanding of the agreement, including whether it applied only to the
provision of the mortgage advance or to the
provision of the contributions
totalling $517,096.70 as well.
- [170] Various
options have been put forward. Ms Mo and Mr Huang would receive one of the
completed units in the development or the
equivalent monetary value calculated
as a percentage of the contribution against the overall cost of the completed
project, or fifty
per cent of the profit from the sale of the five townhouse
units to be built on the property or fifty per cent of the profit from
the sale
of one unit.
- [171] In those
circumstances and for the same reasons as expressed in relation to the Huxley
Place and Ropata Avenue projects, I am
again reluctantly drawn to the conclusion
that no contract was therefore ever concluded in relation to the contributions
made by
Ms Mo and Mr Huang to the Taurima Avenue project. Because there is no
concluded contract, Mr Yang and Mr Law therefore did not act
in breach of their
agreement with Ms Mo and Mr Huang by failing to complete the development and
disclose the costs associated with
partial completion of the
project.
Result on Taurima Avenue
project
- [172] As
pleaded, Ms Mo and Mr Huang have sought orders for the taking of accounts to
determine the costs actually and properly
incurred by Mr Yang and Mr Law
in completing the units up to the present stage and the “value of the
equity which [Ms Mo
and Mr Huang] are entitled to recover calculated having
regard to their entitlement under the investment agreement” with
consequential
directions. In addition, they seek orders directing a sale of the
property under the Property Law Act 2007 and directions for the
disbursement of
the net proceeds of sale.
- [173] At trial,
counsel advised that his instructions were to indicate to the Court
that
- provided Ms Mo and Mr Huang were permitted leave to amend their claim at this
stage - they would prefer to avoid the inconvenience
of taking accounts and
obtaining a sale order. Instead, Ms Mo and Mr Huang claim damages as assessed by
Mr Boote, and rely on Mr
Boote’s investigations, evidence, and
calculations as set out in Table 7 of his reply brief. Those calculations start
off with
the agreed estimated value of the property, as noted by Mr Sheppard in
his brief, of $3 million.
- [174] On this
basis Ms Mo and Mr Huang were prepared, if necessary by a formal pleading
amendment, to restrict their claim to the
outstanding contribution ($574,415.47)
and for the reasons given by Mr Boote, 50 per cent of profit
share
($336,450.31), or alternatively and subject to the Court’s determination
on the merits, the 33.7 per cent profit share ($227,137.34)
referred to in Mr
Boote’s Tables 7 and 8.
- [175] In light
of the finding that there is no concluded contract, the claim as pleaded or as
varied must fail. There is, however,
a remedy available to Ms Mo and Mr Huang to
restore them to their original position and that is the restitutionary remedy of
money
had and received, as applied in the Huxley Place and Ropata Avenue
projects. For similar reasons, it is appropriate to apply this
remedy to the
Taurima Avenue project also.
- [176] Accordingly,
there will be judgment in CIV 2018-404-000506 for Ms Mo and Mr Huang in the sum
of $517,096.70 plus interest of
$41,389.11 in terms of the Interest on Money
Claims Act from when construction work ceased (30 June 2018) to the date of
commencement
of this trial (10 May 2021), making a total of
$558,485.81.
- [177] There will
also be a declaration that Ms Mo and Mr Huang together with Ms Yang hold 8
Taurima Avenue, Point England, on trust
for Mr Yang and Mr Law. I also make an
order that Ms Mo, Mr Huang and Ms Yang transfer the property at 8 Taurima
Avenue, Point
England, to Mr Yang and Mr Law or their nominee on condition
that:
(a) The ASB Bank mortgage advance is repaid in full and
discharged as part of the transfer;
(b) Ms Mo and Mr Huang are reimbursed for any outgoings on the
property which they have paid as trustees and not been reimbursed.
If the sums
to be paid, if any, cannot be agreed between the parties, then the amount is to
be jointly determined by the parties’
accountants, Mr Sheppard and Mr
Boote.
Lot 4, 342 Bawden Road, Dairy Flat
- [178] On
2 December 2014, Mr Yang entered into an agreement to purchase Lot 4, 342 Bawden
Road, Dairy Flat, for $750,000 with settlement
due 10 working days after issue
of a new Certificate of Title. Mr Yang duly paid a deposit of $105,000.
He
originally intended to build a house for himself on the property but says that
following discussions with Ms Mo and Mr Huang he offered
them the opportunity to
invest in the property. A new Certificate of Title to the property was issued on
4 May 2017 and Ms Mo and
Mr Huang provided a bank cheque for $656,334.08 on 20
May 2017 to enable settlement of the purchase of the property.
- [179] On 22 May
2017, the purchase was settled, and the title transferred into the name of Mr
Yang’s sister, Yan Yang. A dispute
subsequently arose between the parties
over the terms of the agreement by which Ms Mo and Mr Huang invested in the
property and proceedings
were issued. There has, however, been a measure of co-
operation between the parties and Lot 4 was sold to a third party on 26 March
2021 for $1,015,000. The parties have subsequently had their capital
contributions returned with the balance being held in trust
pending the outcome
of this proceeding, as follows:
|
$
|
Net sale proceeds
|
983,146.52
|
Repayment of deposit to Mr Law
|
105,000.00
|
Repayment of balance to Ms Mo and Mr Huang
|
654,906.58
|
Balance held on trust
|
223,239.94
|
- [180] There are
two causes of action in the statement of claim:
(a) Breach of contract in terms of which Mr Yang had agreed to
register the property title in the name of Ms Ho and Mr Huang’s
company,
DH and PM Limited and instead registered it in his sister’s name as his
nominee;
(b) Breach of a resulting trust in terms of which the second
defendant, Ms Yang, held title to the property for the benefit of
Ms Mo and
Mr Huang to an extent in proportion with their contribution to its purchase
price.
- [181] Ms Mo and
Mr Huang say that the oral agreement included the following
terms:
(a) They or their company would receive formal nomination under
the purchase agreement as purchasers of the property;
(b) They would acquire ownership of the property to the extent proportionate
with their contribution to its purchase price under the
purchase agreement;
and
(c) They would obtain title to the property upon settlement.
They say that Mr Yang had approached them because, as he told them, Mr Yang was
unable to access the funds to settle the purchase
of the property and was at
risk of losing his deposit of $105,000.
- [182] In
response, Mr Yang says in the interests of fostering a long term relationship
with Ms Mo and Mr Huang and in the knowledge
that the property had substantially
increased in value since he had bought it, he offered them a one-third share in
the property
in exchange for providing the balance of the funds required for
settlement. At the same time, he offered a one-third share to his
business
partner, Mr Law. The balance paid by Ms Mo over and above her agreed one-third
share cost ($250,000) amounting to approximately
$395,000 ($750,000 less
deposit of $105,000 and Ms Mo’s share of $250,000) would be treated as
loans to Mr Yang and Mr
Law, which would be repaid upon completion of the
Taurima Avenue project.
- [183] Mr Yang
and Mr Law also say it was agreed that the title to the property would be held
by them or their nominee. Prior to settlement,
they say that Ms Mo advised them
that she needed a deed of nomination in order to obtain bank finance to settle
the payment of the
balance of the purchase price. A deed of nomination was duly
prepared and signed. However, on the Friday before settlement (Friday,
19 May
2017), Ms Mo advised them that she had raised sufficient cash funds to settle
the payment of the balance of the purchase price
and had therefore declined the
bank loan. Mr Yang and Mr Law say that the purchase was therefore settled in the
name of Ms Yang with
the knowledge and agreement of Ms Mo. They say that Ms Yang
acknowledges holding the property on trust for Ms Mo and Mr Huang, Mr
Yang and
Mr Law in equal shares.
Issues
- [184] The issues
for the Court to determine in respect of Lot 4, 342 Bawden Road, Dairy Flat,
are:
(a) What was the agreement reached, if any, between the parties
in respect of the ownership of the property?
(b) If there was an agreement, should the proceeds of sale be
divided in accordance with that agreement?
(c) If there was no agreement, on what basis should the proceeds
of sale be divided?
Analysis
- [185] There is a
stark disagreement between the parties as to the basis on which Ms Mo and Mr
Huang contributed the balance of
the purchase price for Lot 4, 342 Bawden
Road. There is no doubt that a deed of nomination was executed by Mr Yang
nominating
Ms Mo and Mr Huang’s company, DH and PM Limited, as purchaser.
However, this factor is not conclusive. Mr Yang and Mr Law were
quite flexible
about the person or entity on the title. In the Huxley Place project, a minority
investor, Ms Yong, took title. In
the Ropata Avenue project, it was Mr Yang
and Mr Law’s development company, Tamaki Homes Ltd, which took title. In
the
Union Road project, it was Ms Mo and Mr Huang’s development company,
DH and PM Limited. In the Taurima Avenue project, it was
Ms Mo and Mr Huang
themselves, together with Mr Yang’s sister, Ms Yang (who had in reality
nothing to do with the project)
who took title. Again, in the Lot 4, 342 Bawden
Road project, Ms Yang took title, this time by herself notwithstanding she again
had nothing to do with the project.
- [186] Similarly,
Ms Mo cautions against attaching any weight to WeChat messages or emails between
her and Mr Yang after their relationship
had broken down in about June 2017 at a
time when there was no paperwork to confirm their arrangements and her and Mr
Huang’s
money was at risk. She says she felt she had to agree with what Mr
Yang and Mr Law wanted so they could get their money back. Any
references to
concluded agreements has to be seen in that light.
- [187] As I say,
the contrast between the parties’ positions is stark. There is no
agreement as to whether Ms Mo and Mr Huang
received a 33.3 per cent
equitable
interest (as a one-third owner), or a 87.3 per cent equitable interest (as
provider of the settlement funds) when the sale and purchase
agreement settled
on 22 May 2017.
- [188] In all the
circumstances, I prefer the evidence of Mr Yang, Mr Law and Ms Yang to that
of Ms Mo. First, the property had
substantially increased in value since Mr Yang
had contracted to buy it for $750,000 in December 2014. Ms Mo was in possession
of
a valuation report dated 5 May 2017 relating to the neighbouring Lot 3, which
valued that lot at $1.3 million. She had sold a half
share of Lot 3 to Ms Lu
for $600,000 prior to settlement on 22 May 2017.
- [189] Assuming
Lot 4 was of similar value,13 Ms Mo and Mr Huang would receive a huge
windfall if they became equitable owners of 87.3 per cent of Lot 4 following
settlement of
the purchase. If it had immediately sold for $1.3 million, that
would have been a profit of $480,150 (87.3 per cent of $550,000 increase
in
value). As it was, Lot 4 was subsequently sold for $1.015 million, an increase
in value of $265,000. Ms Mo and Mr Huang say they
are therefore entitled to
$231,345 (87.3 per cent of
$265,000 increase in value), which is still a substantial windfall. If Ms Mo
and Mr Huang are only entitled to a 33.3 per cent
equitable share, their share
of the
$265,000 increase in value still amounts to $88,333.
- [190] Secondly,
although initially Ms Mo and Mr Huang required a deed of nomination naming
themselves as purchasers of the property
to enable them to secure the bank loan
required to settle the purchase, their position changed prior to settlement. On
Friday, 19
May 2017, three days before settlement on Monday, 22 May 2017, Ms
Mo messaged Mr Yang by way of WeChat:
The bank has approved [our loan] I said we don’t need it
any more. Do you want me to talk to Ben [the solicitor acting on the
purchase]
about Emily? [Ms Yang].
Mr Yang then sent an audio message back to Ms Mo:
I have sent an email to him with my younger sister’s
detail[s]. I asked him to prepare a Deed of Nomination. He said that he
will
send me a settlement figure later. Then we can make a bank draft.
13 The lots had sold in 2014 for $725,000 (Lot 3) and
$750,000 (Lot 4).
- [191] Ms Mo
responded “Good”. Ms Mo, however, disputes the translation and says
she used the Chinese word to mean “Ok”,
rather than
“Good”. She says she did not approve the solicitor’s
preparation of a Deed of Nomination for Ms Yang.
Rather, she acknowledged Mr
Yang’s proposal, but did not specifically agree. She says she had to
discuss the matter with Mr
Huang and get back to Mr Yang. She says she still
understood that the purchase would proceed in the name of DH and PM Limited
because
she had not been asked to waive the company’s rights to become the
purchaser of the property. To my mind, however, the words
“Good” and
“OK” have the same meaning in the context in which the word was
used. Ms Mo did not tell Mr Yang
she needed to talk to Mr Huang or that she
disagreed with what Mr Yang had proposed. Mr Yang was clearly reasonably able to
think
that Ms Mo agreed to a Deed of Nomination being prepared in the name of Ms
Yang.
- [192] Then, on
23 May 2017, the day after settlement, in a WeChat exchange with Mr Yang and Mr
Law, Ms Mo confirmed that she paid
cash to settle and then
said:
Since after did da number,
Cash settle can help Emily [Ms Yang] increased her serving
[servicing].
This comment recognises the fact that Ms Yang had an opportunity to increase her
borrowing now that she had unencumbered title to
Lot 4.
- [193] Thirdly,
Ms Mo and Mr Huang settled the purchases of Lot 3 and Lot 4 on the same day, 22
May 2017, having paid Mr Law almost
$400,000 to be nominated as purchasers of
Lot 3. Three weeks after the settlement of the purchase of both properties, Ms
Mo sought
to renegotiate the terms of the sale of Lot 3. In the course of an
email dated 14 June 2017, Ms Mo confirmed the essential terms
of the sale of Lot
4:
3. You said the other lot [Lot 4] was sold to me at cost price.
I’m grateful for that. But I settled that lot with $650,000
in cash.
Deducting the $250,000 I should pay [one-third of purchase price of $750,000]. I
lent you $400,000 of which $200,000 you
said you will pay me interest and the
other $200,000, I didn’t ask anything for that. But I paid an interest
rate of 5.6% to
the bank myself.
- [194] Further,
during the course of settlement negotiations in February 2018, Ms Mo sent a
WeChat message dated 11 February 2018 to
Ms Yang as
follows:
Fourthly, regarding the land on DF Lot 4 which is held by you on
behalf of us, we need to prepare a Deed of Trust that proves your
elder brother
owns one third, I own one third and Jackson owns one third, and I lent two third
of the money to them. We need to specify
the date of repayment and the agreed
interests. [We] also need to add a clause in the title that the [property] can
only be sold
when all three parties reach an agreement. In this case you will
not be a developer. Your elder brother agreed to buy my third at
market value in
the future. After he completes the purchase, [we can] simply withdraw this Deed
of Trust.
- [195] Then in an
email two days later, on 13 February 2018, to Mr Yang and Mr Law, Ms Mo
says:
2. Regarding the investment project of Lot 4, 342 Bawden Road,
Dairy Flat, Auckland.
We settled the land by paying cash on 20 May 2017. It is in
Calvin and sister Emily’s name. Calvin owns 1/3 of the property;
Jackson
owns 1/3 of the property; and Pat’s Mother Mrs. Huang owns 1/3 of the
property. When the land was purchased, the three
parties agreed that Calvin and
Jackson borrow money from Mrs. Huang to pay their 1/3 share of the property.
Calvin and Jackson will
repay the principal (the money for buying their 1/3
shares of the property) and the interest to Mrs Huang, when the 5 newly built
houses of the first construction investment projects at 12 Ropata Ave, Point
England, Auckland are sold. The estimated repayment
date is around May 2018. If
the repayment is delayed, both sides will negotiate a new date.
By the end of 2018, around October, Calvin and Jackson will
purchase Mrs. Huang’s 1/3 share of the land at the market value.
In terms of ownership of property on this land and other
relevant investment matters, we will find a lawyer to draw up a Deed of
Declaration
of Trust. Calvin, Jackson, Emily and Mrs. Huang will then sign it
(the reason why we will ask Emily to sign the document is the land
is in
Emily’s name).
- [196] Although
Ms Mo says that in referring to a one-third share each, she was only repeating
Mr Yang and Mr Law’s position,
I am of the view that she has in this
correspondence admitted the essential terms of the agreement. She is referring
to historical
fact, which is easily distinguished from the proposals she is
putting forward for settlement of the dispute. Nowhere does she say
to Mr Yang
and Mr Law that she and Mr Huang are entitled to 87.3 per cent of the value of
the property, as she now claims. The position
she now adopts can be contrasted
to the position she took at the time of the transaction. At that time, Ms Mo
gave tacit approval
to the nomination of
Ms Yang as purchaser of Lot 4 before settlement and soon after acknowledged the
sum of $250,000 (one-third of the purchase price)
to have been properly payable
by her.
- [197] Fourthly,
the registered proprietor of the property, Ms Yang, acknowledged having held the
property on trust for the three parties.
She says the proposal that she take
title to the land for her brother Mr Yang, Mr Law and Ms Mo, was put to her by
her brother in
October 2016. She says Ms Mo told her that because the land
purchase was being settled in cash, she might later be able to use her
income to
refinance the land to obtain a further mortgage facility from the bank. Ms Yang
categorically denies the assertion by Ms
Mo that she did not know that the
property would be settled in Ms Yang’s name. Further, in a lengthy WeChat
message on 11 February
2018, Ms Mo said:
I did not put my name on the title because I trust you 100%,
right? It proves my trust in you better than signing any kind of document
does.
- [198] I find
established that the property was held on trust by Ms Yang for Mr Yang, Mr Law
and Ms Mo and Mr Huang in one-third shares.
Ms Mo and Mr Huang’s one-
third share ($250,000) was intended to represent a proprietary interest, but the
remainder of the
settlement monies paid by Ms Mo and Mr Huang was clearly
intended and acknowledged to be a loan to Mr Yang and Mr Law. The clearly
stated
acknowledgement of a loan is inconsistent and incompatible with a resulting
trust for the full amount of the settlement monies
paid by Ms Mo and Mr Huang.
Counsel for Mr Yang and Mr Law strongly oppose the claim for 87.3 per cent, but
responsibly concedes
that a resulting trust to the extent of one-third of the
purchase price is difficult to oppose.
Result on Bawden Road
project
- [199] As noted
earlier, the property was sold by agreement of the parties with settlement of
the purchase on 26 March 2021.
The net sale proceeds
were
$983,146.52. After repayment of the deposit paid by Mr Yang of $105,000 and the
settlement monies paid by Ms Mo and Mr Huang of $654,906.58,
a balance of
$223,249.44 is held in a solicitor’s trust account pending directions by
this Court.
- [200] There is
no dispute that expenses totalling $14,577.30 should be reimbursed to Mr Yang
and Mr Law, as follows. This reduces
the balance available for distribution to
$968,569.22.
Date
|
|
$
|
19 Sep 17
|
Council rates
|
565.85
|
28 Nov 17
|
Council rates
|
565.85
|
28 Feb 18
|
Council rates
|
565.85
|
14 Jun 18
|
Council rates
|
622.44
|
31 Aug 18
|
Council rates
|
965.54
|
27 Nov 18
|
Council rates
|
965.54
|
5 Feb 19
|
Council rates
|
965.54
|
29 May 19
|
Council rates
|
965.54
|
2 Sept 19
|
Council rates
|
987.90
|
29 Nov 19
|
Council rates
|
987.90
|
9 Mar 20
|
Council rates
|
987.90
|
23 Mar 20
|
Property listing ad
|
398.00
|
31 Aug 20
|
Council rates
|
2,010.68
|
13 Nov 20
|
Follies Way Management Ltd
|
2,000.00
|
30 Nov 20
|
Council rates
|
1,022.77
|
|
Total
|
14,577.30
|
- [201] Counsel
has helpfully put forward the following proposed
distribution:
|
$
|
Ms Mo and Mr Huang one-third share
|
322,856.40
|
Plus loan repayment by Mr Law
|
250,000.00
|
Plus loan repayment by Mr Yang
|
145,000.00
|
Subtotal
|
717,856.40
|
Less interim payment
|
654,906.58
|
Balance payable to Ms Mo and Mr Huang
|
62,949.82
|
|
|
Mr Law one-third share
|
322,856.40
|
Less loan repayment to Ms Mo and Mr Huang
|
250,000.00
|
Balance payable to Mr Law
|
72,856.40
|
|
|
Mr Yang one-third share
|
322,856.40
|
Less loan repayment to Ms Mo and Mr Huang
|
145,000.00
|
Less repayment already made
|
105,000.00
|
Balance payable to Mr Yang
|
72,856.40
|
- [202] There will
accordingly be the following orders in CIV 2019-404-000997 in relation to the
monies held in a solicitor’s
trust account pending order of this
Court:
(a) Mr Yang and Mr Law are to be reimbursed the sum of
$14,577.30 in respect of Council rates from September 2017 to November 2020,
a
management fee and a property listing advertisement.
(b) Ms Mo and Mr Huang are to be paid the sum of $62,449.83 as
their one-third share.
(c) Mr Yang is to be paid the sum of $72,856.40 as his one-third
share.
(d) Mr Law is to be paid the sum of $72,856.40 as his one-third
share.
(e) Proportional adjustments can be made to these amounts by the
solicitor holding the monies to account for either expenses or interest
properly
and reasonably incurred.
Conclusion
- [203] Leave
is reserved generally for the parties to apply for or vary any orders in order
to give effect to this judgment.
- [204] If costs
cannot be agreed, the parties are to file memoranda within two months after the
date of this judgment.
Woolford J
Solicitors: DX Law Ltd, Auckland
Croftfield Law Limited, Auckland
Counsel: I Hutcheson, Auckland G D Wiles, Auckland R Kaur,
Auckland
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