Back
Legal

Lucas and another v Gilbert and another

Joint venture – Fiduciary duty – Undue influence – Parties entering into joint venture for purchase and development of property – Claimants providing purchase monies and defendants agreeing to develop property – Issues arising as to terms of agreement – Whether parties entering settled agreement on terms – Whether agreement vitiated by first claimant’s alleged breaches of fiduciary duty or undue influence – Claim allowed

The first claimant was a commercial property solicitor who provided the sum of £401,483 to the defendants for the purchase of a freehold property at 12 Palmerston Road, London, E17. The property was acquired in the name of the second defendant, of which the first defendant was sole director and shareholder. The sum of £335,483 came from the personal bank account of the first claimant and the remaining £66,000 from the second claimant, a company controlled by his wife as majority shareholder.

The first claimant’s firm acted in the conveyancing. Between 2011 and 2020, improvement works to the property were carried out and it was divided into several parts including residential accommodation and two business units. It was sold in 2020 for £1.3m. The parties said they were “in it” together, equally, to their mutual financial advantage. There was no written contract.

Start your free trial today

Your trusted daily source of commercial real estate news and analysis. Register now for unlimited digital access throughout April.

Including:

  • Breaking news, interviews and market updates
  • Expert legal commentary, market trends and case law
  • In-depth reports and expert analysis

Up next…