Wednesday 25 July 1990

Tricanipillay Canarapen v Jubilee Insurance Company Limited

Tricanipillay Canarapen

Appellant

v.

Jubilee Insurance Company Limited

Respondent

Appeal from the Supreme Court of Mauritius

Composition of the Board:

Lord Keith of Kinkel

Lord Templeman

Lord Griffiths

Lord Lowry

Sir Robin Cooke

Judgment delivered on the 25th July 1990

by Lord Griffiths

Cur. adv. vult.

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Cases referred to in judgment

Hornal v. Neuberger Products Limited [1957] 1 Q.B. 247

Jeffreys v. Jeffreys (1873) MR 36

Thomas v. Thomas [1947] A. C 484

Watkins and Davis Limited v. Legal and General Insurance company Limited [1981] 1 Lloyd's Rep. 675

Legislations referred to in judgment

The following judgment was delivered by the Board:

The appellant was the owner of a building at Avenue John Kennedy, Vacoas. The respondent insured the building and the appellant's stock in trade against fire. On 15th October 1977 at about 3.30 p.m. a fine started which destroyed the building and the stock in trade. The appellant claimed the sum of Rs100,000 from the respondent which was the sum for which the building and the stock in trade were insured under the policy of insurance issued by the respondent.

The respondent refused to pay and so the appellant commenced an action to recover the sum of Rs100,000 to which he claimed to be entitled under the policy. The loss was agreed between the parties at Rs98, 356.45; but the respondent disputed liability upon two grounds, first that the fine had been occasioned by the wilful act and/or with the connivance of the appellant and accordingly he was net entitled to any benefit under the policy, and second that the appellant had net commenced the action within three months of the rejection of his claim by the respondent and accordingly was net entitled to any benefit under the policy.

The judge rejected bath defences and gave judgment for the appellant for the agreed sum. The Court of Appeal allowed the appeal of the respondent insurance company holding that it had discharged the burden of proving that the appellant had at least connived at the setting of the fine. Having arrived at this conclusion the Court of Appeal did net consider it necessary to consider the second ground of defence based upon the alleged failure to commence proceedings timeously.

The appellant now appeals against the judgment of the Court of Appeal on the first ground of defence and the respondent does net now challenge the judge's rejection of the second ground of defence.

The appellant occupied part of the building as a furniture shop and he let part to a Mr. Coopamah as a bar restaurant on the ground floor with residential accommodation on the first floor. The respondent's case was that the appellant, in order to rid himself of Mr. Coopamah as a tenant, had instigated a young employee Idriss Gopal to burn down the building. It was net suggested that the motive was to defraud the insurance company with whom the defendant had insured ail his properties for the previous fifteen to twenty years without ever having made a prier claim; non was it disputed that the appellant, who was aged 61, was a man of previous good character.

There had been an earlier judicial enquiry into the cause of the fine conducted between 18th May 1978 and 9th May 1979 and a record of those proceedings was put in evidence at the trial. That report concluded: -

"From the evidence adduced at the hearing, I suspect that there has been foul play - and that it was Idriss Boodhoo Gopal who set fine to the premises in question."

However, no criminal proceedings were brought against Gopal or any other person.

The evidence called before the judge was very much a re-run of the evidence called at the enquiry seven years earlier. Perhaps net wholly surprisingly there were some discrepancies in the recollections of the witnesses. The judge found the following facts:-

"The Defendant company adduced evidence as to the circumstances in which this fine broke out and destroyed the building. From such evidence I find that the fine started and spread throughout the building at an alarming speed. It must have been what Scientific Officer Beeharry called 'an assisted fine'. I find also that the conduct of worker Idriss Gopal immediately prier to the fine was such that it can be reasonably inferred that he played an active part in setting it.

The name of Idriss Gopal was mentioned on the day of the fine itself, and later, on the same day the Plaintiff helped the police to trace him out. On the same evening he was arrested for purposes of the enquiry, by then he had had a bath, a shave and a hair cut. At the relevant time Gopal was working for the Plaintiff who had instructed him to repair the roof of the building, as such the Plaintiff had bought and had caused to be conveyed there, 100 shingles. According to the Plaintiff, Gopal had been working for him for 7 to 8 years ; and, earlier, on the day of the fine, between 12.00 noon and 1 p.m., he had checked the latter's work and talked to him. According to witness Coopamah, Gopal had started working for the Plaintiff when the latter bought the building, which would be around 1966.

The plaintiff denied having done the needful for the release of Gopal from police custody, but Assistant Superintendent of Police Ramjooawan said the plaintiff had contacted him for Gopal's release.

I find also from the evidence on record that the relationship between the plaintiff and his tenant Coopamah were difficult and that the plaintiff who, at a certain stage, wanted to self, or to erect a new building, would net have been free to do so without safeguarding the rights of his tenant.

Counsel for the Defendant submitted that upon those facts, the Court should draw inference that Gopal had set fire to the Plaintiff's building with the latter's connivance, to get rid of Mr.Coopamah's tenancy.

It may very well be that the Plaintiff wanted Mr. Coopamah to vacate his building but to go so far as to say that he gave secret approval to Gopal to set fine to his own building, with ail its consequences, is a proposition which, as the evidence stands, has net been proved; non would it be warranted on my part to draw such an inference. The second ground fails as well."

In arriving at his conclusion the judge had the advantage of seeing the appellant subjected to a long and searching cross-examination during which it was directly suggested to him that Gopal had set fine to the premises on his instructions to get rid of his tenant. This was an allegation of the utmost gravity for it involved setting fire to the building with petrol or a similar substance at a time when there were bath staff and customers in the bar. There was net a shred of direct evidence to support this allegation which was based upon the supposed motive to get rid of his tenant. There had been no proceedings between the appellant and his tenant for the last seven years and the judge had the chance to evaluate the sincerity of the appellant's denial of such a motive when it was put to him in the witness box. The judge also had the opportunity to evaluate the apparent credibility of the appellant in his denial of the charge of arson.

Despite these advantages enjoyed by the trial judge the Court of Appeal felt justified in drawing the inference of arson, that the judge refused to draw after seeing and hearing ail the witnesses.

The Court of Appeal accepted the primary facts found by the judge as set out in the extract from his judgment cited above. They commented upon the fact that the judge had apparently net accepted certain parts of the appellant's evidence, namely his opinion that Gopal had net set fine to the building and that he had net instructed him to repair the roof but only to repair a water closet outside the building. The judgment then continued:-

"In the light of the findings of fact, counsel for the appellant has urged that the learned Judge was wrong to draw the conclusion he did even on a balance of probabilities.

Counsel for the respondent has argued that the standard of proof applicable to the appellant in a case of this nature where a criminal act or else complicity in a criminal act is alleged against the respondent, the standard of proof which the appellant had to discharge would have been that which applies in a criminal prosecution. And counsel prayed in aid the case of Jeffreys v. Jeffreys (1873) MR 36 regarding proof of adultery in divorce cases. Divorce is a matter of public order and cannot be assimilated to other civil proceedings. We agree with counsel for the appellant that the standard of proof which lay on bath parties for their respective contentions always remained that applicable in civil proceedings, that is to say a standard that is based net on conclusive proof but rather on a balance of probabilities.

It seems to us that, given the fact that it was the appellant which had, either by cross-examination or else by independent testimony, elicited ail the facts found and which we have highlighted seriatim above and, further, given the nature of the burden of proof applicable in the proceedings, the balance of probabilities was clearly in favour of the appellant in his defence that the respondent had at least connived at the setting of the fire. It is difficult to imagine what kind of further proof the appellant could, in the circumstances, be reasonably expected to produce."

The Court of Appeal were right to reject the submission that the burden on the insurance company was the criminal standard of proof. But, nevertheless, bearing in mind the gravity of the allegation, which was arson of an occupied building, a high degree of probability was required to discharge the civil burden of proof see Hornal v. Neuberger Products Limited [1957] 1 Q.B. 247 and Watkins and Davis Limited v. Legal and General Insurance company Limited [1981] 1 Lloyd's Rep. 675. The Court of Appeal make no reference in their judgment to the higher degree of probability required before a court accepts so grave an allegation as proved non do they make any reference to the advantage that a trial judge enjoys in resolving such a dispute after having seen and heard the witnesses for himself , see Thomas v. Thomas [1947] A. C 484.

The Court of Appeal do net say what particular matters weighed with them in coming to a different conclusion from the judge and which justified disregarding the obvious advantage the judge enjoyed as a result of seeing and hearing the witnesses. It may perhaps be inferred that they doubted the credibility of the appellant because they commented that the judge did net accept his opinion that Gopal had net started the fine and his denial that he instructed Gopal to repair the roof. But it is a common experience in the courts that those accused of crime, even if innocent, will sometimes tell untruths in an attempt to distance themselves from the accusations. The judge heard this evidence and it was for him to decide upon its significance.

What else justifies the inference that the appellant told Gopal to set fire to the building? The fact that an employee commits an apparently motiveless act of arson on the employer' s premises is manifestly insufficient to justify the inference that he did it at the request of the employer. What else can support the inference in this case - only the suggested motive to get rid of the tenant? There are a number of obvious objections to this suggested motive. Firstly the fire would net achieve the objective, for the appellant would remain under an obligation to rehouse the tenant in any reconstructed building; secondly there had been no proceedings between the tenant and the appellant for seven years; and thirdly the inherent improbability that a man of good character and mature years would resort to such a wicked act as to order his employee to set fire to an occupied building for such a motive.

The judge was fully justified in refusing to find that the insurance company had discharged the burden of establishing arson on such evidence and their Lordships are unable to perceive any ground which would entitle an appellate court to interfere with his finding.

Accordingly their Lordships will humbly advise Her Majesty that this appeal should be allowed with costs in the Court of Appeal. The respondent must pay the appellant's costs before their Lordships' Board.

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Monday 23 July 1990

M. O. Nazir v A. A. Bundhoo

M. O. Nazir

Appellant

v.

A. A. Bundhoo

Respondent

Appeal from the Supreme Court of Mauritius

Composition of the Board:

Lord Keith of Kinkel

Lord Templeman

Lord Griffiths

Lord Lowry

Sir Robin Cooke

Judgment delivered on the 23rd July 1990

by Lord Templeman

Cur. adv. vult.

______________________________________________________________

The following judgment was delivered by the Board:

On 2nd April 1958 the appellant, Mr. Nazir, purchased 14 perches of land from Hamid Gokhool ( "the vendor"). On the same day the respondent, Mr.Bundhoo, purchased an adjoining 15 perches of land from the vendor.

Mr. Nazir's land, according to his transfer, had a frontage of 32 feet to a public road and it was bounded:-

"Du troisième côté par Mamode Issa Gokhool - un chemin de six pieds de large entre sur 175 pieds."

Mr. Nazir's land was therefore defined partly by reference to a track 6 feet wide. The question is whether that 6 foot track lies between the land granted to Mr. Nazir and the land of the adjoining neighbour Mamode Issa Gokhool ("the neighbour") or whether the 6 foot track is within the land granted to Mr. Nazir. The importance of' the 6 feet wide track ("the access road") in these proceedings is that the access road provides the only means of access from the public road to the land conveyed to Mr. Bundhoo. The transfer to Mr. Bundhoo contained no express grant of a right of way. But it is clear that the vendor had no power to grant a right of way over the land of the neighbour in 1980 the access road on the site which had been enjoyed by Mr. Bundhoo was obstructed by Mr. Nazir who built a watt where the access road as then enjoyed debouched onto the public road. in 1983 Mr. Nazir built another watt where the access road enters the land of Mr. Bundhoo. Mr. Bundhoo applied to the Intermediate Court for an order directing Mr. Nazir to remove the obstructing watts which he had built and for damages. The magistrates (Mrs. P. Balgobin and Chui Yew Cheong) dismissed the application.

It appears that Mr. Bundhoo had built a house on his land and he gave evidence that following the obstructions by Mr. Nazir:-

"I had many difficulties. Police had even to bring my letters to my residence. Î have a neighbour Suchita and 1 obtained his permission to pass on his land. Suchita gave me permission to pass on his land. Suchita said to me that he would henceforth obstruct his road. if Suchita refuse his permission 1 would be encircled and have no access to the road."

It also appears that sometime or other the neighbour built a wall intended to mark the boundary between the neighbour's land and the access road. A surveyor called by Mr. Nazir testified as follows:-

"(The neighbour) has erected a watt outside Mr.

Nazir's land and there is no indication why the watt should be round there and not much further ... l know that in the title deed of Nazir between the property of Nazir and the neighbour) there is a 6 feet wide road over a length of 175 feet ... and if we measure 175 feet from that road it finishes with the land of (Mr. Bundhoo). In my opinion that 6 feet wide road should not be on the land of (Mr. Nazir)."

When asked whether in his opinion the access road mentioned in Mr. Nazir's title deeds should be round on the land of the neighbour he said he could not answer yes or no. He had read the description of the land of Mr. Nazir and understood that there was a road 6 feet wide between his land and the land of the neighbour. "in my opinion the road is not in the land of Mr. Nazir. The road is between the two lands."

In their judgment the magistrates considered the evidence of a surveyor called on behalf of Mr. Bundhoo who said that:-

"... it is the custom in Mauritius that when the words 'un chemin entre' are mentioned in a title deed, the road should be taken from the land to which the title deed relates. in the present case therefore, the road of 6 ft should be taken from [Mr. Nazir's] land which should therefore be reduced to a width of 26 feet instead of 32 feet."

The magistrates preferred the evidence of Mr. Nazir's surveyor that the word "entre" meant "between" and rejected the evidence of Mr. Bundhoo's surveyor that the word "entre" meant "within". They concluded in the light of ail the evidence adduced that Mr. Bundhoo did not have a right of way over Mr. Nazir's land by title.

On appeal the Supreme Court (Moollan C.J. and Proag J.) set aside the order of the magistrates and granted injunctions and damages to Mr. Bundhoo. The judges of the Court criticised the evidence of Mr.Nazir's surveyor and preferred the evidence of Mr.Bundhoo's surveyor. The Court observed that there was no mention of any access road in the title deeds of the neighbour (which title deeds have been inspected) and no mention of any access road in the title deeds of the vendor until 2nd April 1958 when the access road was mentioned for the first time in bath the transfers of Mr. Nazir's land and Mr. Bundhoo's land. The Court pointed out that the vendor could not create a right of way over land belonging to the neighbour. In these circumstances the word "entre" could not mean "between". Their Lordships do not overlook that the latter proposition is a non sequitur. The Court said that when one finds that the access road starts from the public road and stops with the land of Mr. Bundhoo it becomes obvious that it was meant to give to Mr.Bundhoo a right of access to the public road, an essential requisite to enable him to enjoy his land. in 1958 the vendor caused to sell simultaneously a portion of land to Mr. Bundhoo and to Mr. Nazir with a mention in each deed of sale of a road of 6 feet wide on the length of one of their boundaries. "No doubt the object was to give a right of way to the immediate neighbour or neighbours".

Their Lordships would be reluctant to interfere with the conclusions of the Supreme Court dealing with documents and oral evidence in the language of Mauritius and with conveyancing law and practice of Mauritius. The Board would be reluctant to be driven to a conclusion which would result in the land of Mr. Bundhoo being landlocked. On behalf of Mr. Nazir counsel submitted that Mr. Bundhoo could in that case sue Mr. Nazir for a right of way of necessity, offering compensation or could sue the neighbour for a declaration that there was an access road which had been enclosed by the neighbour. But Mr. Bundhoo is only claiming to exercise the rights which he formerly exercised. if the neighbour's watt encroaches on Mr.Nazir's land then it is for Mr. Nazir to sue and prove the encroachment. in ail jurisdictions a discrepancy between boundaries as described in title deeds and their accompanying plans and maps on the one hand and the boundaries as they appear on the ground frequently leads to doubts and difficulties and in many, if not most cases, the best course is to uphold the status quo on the ground prior to any challenging obstruction or trespass. In the present case the Supreme Court has, for the reasons which they have set out disapproved of the action taken by Mr. Nazir forcibly to interfere with the access enjoyed by Mr. Bundhoo to the public road in 1980 and their Lordships see no reason for interfering.

Their Lordships w111 humbly advise Her Majesty that this appeal ought to be dismissed.

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