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(COROZAL
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RESPONDENT
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Supreme
Court
Action No. 223 of 1997
18th April, 2000.
Shanks, J.
Mr. Denys
Barrow, S.C. for the Applicant.
Mr. Dons Waithe, for the Respondent.
Assessment
of current value of piece of land - Value of land to be
best price available for the land - Section 134 of the Land
Registration Act - Assessment of compensation for placing
caution on land wrongfully and without reasonable cause
- Meaning of "wrongfully and without reasonable cause"
- Quantum of compensation.
J
U D G M E N T
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I
heard on the 6th of April, 2000 a number of applications
arising out of the judgment I delivered in this matter
on 24th January, 2000. Since that judgment Mr. Dons Waithe
has replaced Mr. Michael Young, S.C., as the Respondent's
attorney and on 7th April, 2000 I made an order fixing
this hearing and requiring the Parties to file affidavit
evidence in support of their contentions by 31st March,
2000 and evidence in reply by 4th March, 2000 and to notify
each other by 4th April, 2000 if they required any deponent
to attend for cross-examination. Neither side gave any
such notice and I have dealt with the applications on
the affidavit evidence before me.
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The
first matter is an assessment of the current value of
Lot 325 which the Applicant ought to have been in a position
to restore to the Respondent (CFZDL) when the contract
was declared by me to be at an end. Mr. Arnold in an Affidavit
dated 30th March, 2000, contends for a figure of $88,000
(or $40 per acre) based on the price paid by purchasers
of Lots 369 and 370 in January which was $47 per square
foot. Mr. Burks, the Plaintiff's agent, swore an affidavit
on 4th April, 2000 stating that Lot 325 was actually sold
in August, 1999 for $32,000 and produced a receipt and
the auctioneer, Mr. Castillo, swears that Lots 399, 412,
413, 414 and 415 were put up for auction on 3rd April,
2000 and the highest offer received was $20,000. It seems
to me that the best evidence of the value of lot 325 is
the price it actually obtained and I can see no reason
why the Plaintiff would not have tried to get the best
price available. Lots 369 and 370 may for all I know,
have different features to those of 325. I therefore assess
its value at $32,000.
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I
next deal with the Plaintiff's application for damages
under section 134 of the Land Registration Act arising
out of the placing of a caution over parcel 353 by CFZDL
on 9th September, 1996. Mr. Waithe's first point in relation
to this was that CFZDL was not liable under the section
because, although in the end it has been found that they
had no rights over the land, they placed and maintained
the caution because there was a genuine dispute. Section
134 provides that compensation is payable where a caution
has been lodged or maintained "wrongfully and without
reasonable cause." My understanding of this provision
is that it is designed to operate in the same way as an
undertaking in damages when an interlocutory injunction
is granted; if it turns out that the injunction was wrongly
granted, regardless of how reasonable the application,
the person obtaining the interlocutory injunction is potentially
liable to compensate the person whose activities have
been restrained in the meantime. Mr. Waithe did not come
equipped with any authority to contradict my understanding
and I therefore find CFZDL liable to pay compensation
under section 134. I should say in case I am wrong in
thinking that it is sufficient to found liability under
the section for the counterclaim by CFZDL to have been
rejected that for all the reasons set out in my judgment
of 24th January, 2000 I am quite satisfied that the caution
was placed without any "reasonable cause", however
those words are construed.
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I
turn to the quantum of compensation. Mr. Burks' affidavit
of 31st March, 2000 gives uncontradicted evidence of an
offer to purchase the whole of parcel 353 in two sections
by Belize Interest Group Ltd made in August, 1998 for
a total of U.S. $550,000 subject to the removal of a caution
placed on the land by Godfrey Blades which Mr. Burks states
the company estimated would have cost less than U.S. $50,000
to have removed. However, the CFZDL caution prevented
this deal materializing. In January 2000 the Plaintiff
was able to contract to sell the land for U.S. $400,000
conditional on the CFZDL and Blades cases being dismissed.
The Plaintiff therefore claims the loss of U.S. $100,000
capital sum and lost interest of U.S. $84, 200.
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Mr.
Dons Waithe drew my attention to the fact that the caution
was formally lifted on 15th October, 1998 after the initial
judgment on the Originating Summons which was appealed
and implied that CFZDL were not preventing any sale by
the Plaintiff after that date. This point, contained in
an affidavit of Michael Arnold sworn on the 6th April,
2000, not surprisingly took Mr. Barrow somewhat by surprise.
Having learnt a little more of the procedural history
and been referred to a letter from Mr. Arnold to the Commissioner
of Lands and Surveys of 16th December, 1998 and a letter
from the Registrar General of the Supreme Court to the
Lands Registry dated 9th December, 1998, I am satisfied
that CFZDL took all steps they could as soon as the caution
had been lifted and their appeal had been instituted to
prevent any dealings with the land by the Plaintiff, and
that they were successful in so doing. In my judgment,
in view of this, it simply does not lie in their mouths
to rely on the fact that the caution was not formally
reinstated when everyone proceeded on the basis that it
was in effect and I therefore treat their application
for all purposes (if it makes any difference on the facts)
as if the caution remained in place until my judgment
in January, 2000.
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Mr.
Dons Waithe also stated that there was nothing to substantiate
who the Belize Interest Group Ltd were or that they had
assets to purchase the land (although it appeared they
were in fact Mr. Waithe's clients) and challenged the
statement that Godfrey Blades could be bought off for
$50,000. These points may or may not have some validity
but there was no evidence put in answer to Mr. Burks'
and no notice given to cross-examine him and I therefore
proceed on the basis of his evidence. On that basis, I
award the Plaintiff damages of US$184,200 or $368,400
BZE under section134.
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In
my judgment of 24th January, 2000 I ordered that the Plaintiff
repay the advance of U.S.$86,000 paid by CFZDL for the
land. I failed to award any interest on this sum. Mr.
Barrow raised no formal objection to me reviewing this
matter at this stage but he said it was inappropriate
for me to award interest since it was CFZDL who had caused
the delay in resolving matters by opposing the Plaintiff's
Originating Summons. I see some force in that but, equally,
the Plaintiff has had the use of the money for nearly
four years when it ought to have been refunded at the
moment of rescission. I think that fairness dictates that
they pay interest at 10% for three and three quarter years,
giving a total sum to be repaid of U.S.$86,000 + U.S.$31,533
= U.S.$117,533, or BZE$235,066.
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The
net financial position between the parties is therefore
that CFZDL now owes the Plaintiff $101,400 BZE ($368,400
- $235,066 - $32,000). In the circumstances, I order that
the cautions placed by CFZDL be removed immediately pursuant
to Mr. Barrow's Summons dated the 4th April, 2000. Having
heard further submissions, I also order that CFZDL pay
the costs of these Applications to be taxed if not agreed.
[NOTE:
This is the third version of this judgment. The problem
has been caused by my confusion over US and BZE $. I apologize
to the parties. This is now the authoritative version.]
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