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Judgment
Title:
Lawlor -v- Ross & ors
Neutral Citation:
[2001] IESC 110
Supreme Court Record Number:
316/00
High Court Record Number:
2000 No. 3920p
Date of Delivery:
11/22/2001
Court:
Supreme Court
Composition of Court:
Keane C.J., Geoghegan J., Fennelly J.
Judgment by:
Keane C.J.
Status:
Approved
Result:
Allow And Vary
Judgments by
Link to Judgment
Concurring
Keane C.J.
Geoghegan J.
Fennelly J.
Geoghegan J.


THE SUPREME COURT
Keane C.J.
Geoghegan J.
Fennelly J.
316/00
    BETWEEN
    LIAM LAWLOR
PLAINTIFF/RESPONDENT
AND
SEAMUS ROSS MENOLLY HOMES LIMITED AND MENOLLY PROPERTIES LIMITED
DEFENDANTS/APPELLANT
    JUDGMENT delivered the 22nd day of November, 2001 by Keane C.J.
    The facts in this case are comprehensively stated in the judgment which will be delivered by Fennelly J and need not be set out by me.

    The applicable legal principles are not in doubt. This is not a case, as Mr. Frank Clarke SC conceded on behalf of the appellants, in which it could be successfully contended that the statement of claim itself disclosed no reasonable cause of action or one that was frivolous or vexatious. The appellants say, however, that the proceedings should have been struck out in the exercise of the inherent jurisdiction of the High Court to take that course where it is clear that the plaintiff’s claim must fail.

    That such a jurisdiction exists is beyond doubt. However, as was made clear by Costello J, as he then was, in Barry -v- Buckley [1981] IR 306 and by this court in Sun Fat Chan -v- Osseous Limited [1992] 1 IR 425, it is a jurisdiction which should be sparingly exercised by the High Court. As McCarthy J observed in the latter case :


      “Experience has shown that the trial of an action will identify a variety of circumstances perhaps not entirely contemplated at earlier stages of the proceedings ; often times it may appear that the facts are clear and established but the trial itself will disclose a different picture.”

    Since the defendant who brings such a motion must satisfy the court that, even assuming that all the facts pleaded and relied upon by the plaintiff in his statement of claim are established in evidence, his or her action will nonetheless inevitably fail, the burden resting on the defendant in bringing such a motion is undoubtedly a heavy one.

    It remains to consider the application of those principles to the facts of the present case. As I understand the statement of claim and particulars, the plaintiff claims that he entered into what he describes as “a joint venture partnership agreement” with the defendants and a Mr. Peter Dwyer under which a company was to be formed for the purpose of acquiring and developing certain lands known as “ The Guinness lands” in West County Dublin. If the lands in question could be acquired for £8 million, the project was to go ahead and the shareholding in the company and the distribution of profits which, it was hoped, would result from the venture were to be divided in the proportions of 40% to the defendants, 40% to Mr. Dwyer and the remaining 20% to the plaintiff. If it transpired that the purchase price of the lands was in excess of £8 million, the parties would not be bound to proceed with the acquisition and development of the lands. If, however, the parties were willing to proceed with the acquisition of the lands, even though the purchase price was in excess of £8 million, the company would then be formed with the shares held in the agreed proportions. The plaintiff’s case is that the lands were subsequently acquired for a sum admittedly significantly in excess of £8 million, i.e., £19 million, but that, in breach of the agreement he had arrived at with the defendants and Mr. Dwyer, he was given no opportunity of participating in their further development through the medium of the proposed new company.

    It is undoubtedly the case that, as pleaded in the statement of claim, certain aspects of the alleged agreement remain remarkably vague. There was no agreement as to the details of the development to be carried out on the lands and the entire question of how the project was to be financed seems to have been left in the air. It may be that at the trial of the action, if it is allowed to proceed, the plaintiff will be able to establish that there was an agreement between himself, the defendants and Mr. Dwyer that the company in question was to be formed, that the lands when acquired were to be vested in the company and that the profits of any development were to be divided in the agreed proportions. It is conceded on behalf of the plaintiff, however, that there was no agreement as to how the project was to be financed and that the details of the proposed development were also, in effect, left for further agreement. Accordingly, even making every assumption in favour of the plaintiff as to the stage which negotiations had reached, they remained negotiations. None of the parties would be in a position to hold the other parties to whatever arrangements in principle were envisaged, if it was not possible to reach agreement on matters such as finance and the nature of the proposed development. In these circumstances, it seems to me that this constitutes one of those cases in which, making every assumption in favour of the plaintiff, the contract relied on could not possibly constitute a concluded contract between the parties which would give rise to any action at law.

    I would allow the appeal and substitute for the order of the High Court an order dismissing the plaintiff’s claim.











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