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Privy Council Appeal No 57 of 2004
Blue Haven Enterprises Limited Appellant
v.
(1) Dulcie Ermine Tully
(2) Eric Clive Robinson Respondents
FROM
THE COURT OF APPEAL OF
JAMAICA
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-
REASONS FOR DECISION OF THE LORDS OF THE
JUDICIAL COMMITTEE OF THE PRIVY COUNCIL, OF THE
21st February 2006, Delivered the 29th March 2006
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Present at the hearing:-
Lord Nicholls of Birkenhead
Lord Steyn
Lord Hope of Craighead
Lord Scott of Foscote
Lord Brown of Eaton-under-Heywood
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[Delivered by Lord Scott
of Foscote]
1. The issue on this appeal is whether in
the events which have happened the appellant,
Blue Haven Enterprises Ltd (“Blue Haven”), can
succeed in its claim for unjust enrichment
against the 2nd respondent, Mr Robinson. Their
Lordships have concluded, in agreement with the
trial judge, Langrin J, and the majority in the
Court of Appeal, Downer JA and Walker JA
(Harrison JA dissenting), that it cannot. To
explain why that is so it is necessary to start
by recounting the essential facts which led to
the claim being made.
The facts
2. The 1st respondent, Mrs Tully, is the
executrix of the deceased owners of an estate in
the Blue Mountains region of Jamaica. The estate
is about 95 acres in extent. In 1985, when the
story begins, the estate was undeveloped (its
condition was described as “ruinate”) and its
title was unregistered. But it was eminently
suitable for development as a coffee plantation
and Mrs Tully wanted to sell it.
3. By a contract dated 14 November 1985 Mrs
Tully contracted to sell the estate to Mr
Robinson for the sum of $260,000 (references to
$s in this judgment are references to Jamaican
$s – their Lordships have been told that in 1985
the rate of exchange was roughly $10 to £1 but
that rampant inflation has taken the rate to
around $113 to £1). Mr Robinson wanted to
develop the estate as a coffee plantation. The
estate was described in the contract as
containing 130 acres or thereabouts. The
discrepancy between 130 acres and 95 acres led
not surprisingly to a dispute between Mrs Tully
and Mr Robinson. Mr Robinson contended that he
was entitled to an abatement of the price to take
account of the substantially reduced acreage that
Mrs Tully could sell. Mrs Tully disagreed and,
after serving a notice to complete, purported to
terminate the contract. She put the estate on
the market again. Mr Robinson responded by
commencing proceedings (No E160 of 1987) for a
declaration that he was entitled to a pro rata
abatement of the purchase price and for an
injunction to restrain Mrs Tully from selling to
anyone else.
4. Mr Robinson’s proceedings were
successful. On 11 January 1989 Gordon J gave
judgment in his favour allowing him a price
abatement of $71,000 and granting an injunction
restraining Mrs Tully from selling the estate
otherwise than in accordance with the 1985
contract “or from pursuing further any existing
contract of sale in relation to the said land
otherwise than to [Mr Robinson]”. Mrs Tully
appealed but on 13 July 1992 the Court of Appeal
dismissed her appeal and on 10 March 1993 the
Privy Council dismissed her petition for leave to
appeal. So the injunction granted on 11 January
1989 was confirmed.
5. Unfortunately Mrs Tully had already
entered into a contract dated 5 January 1988 to
sell the estate to a Dr Oswald White “or his
nominee” for the sum of $450,000. Blue Haven, a
company controlled by Dr White, was his nominee.
But it is convenient to continue to refer to Dr
White as the intending purchaser of the estate.
Dr White, like Mr Robinson, wanted to develop the
estate as a coffee plantation. Mrs Tully had
told him nothing, and he knew nothing, of her
1985 contract with Mr Robinson or of the
litigation regarding that contract.
6. The 1988 contract required the $450,000
purchase price to be paid in three stages:
$67,500 was to be paid as a deposit on the
signing of the contract, a further $112,500 was
to be paid upon the production of a survey plan
of the estate, and the balance of $270,000 was to
be paid on completion. Completion was to take
place “on the issue of a Registered Title for the
lands” in the name of Dr White or his nominee.
It is interesting to notice that the contract
contained a price abatement provision allowing a
price reduction if the survey should disclose
that the estate contained less than 100 acres.
The reduction was to be $3000 per acre for the
shortfall. It appears that Mrs Tully and her
attorney, Mr Fraser, had learnt something from
their experience with Mr Robinson.
7. The $67,500 and $112,500 together
constituted 40 per cent of the purchase price of
$450,000. The contract provided that upon the
payment by Dr White of 40 per cent of the
purchase price (whether the full price or an
abated price) he would become entitled to take
possession of the estate and on or about 29
September 1988 Dr White was allowed to take
possession. Paragraph 9 of the agreed statement
of facts says that -
“Dr White paid the purchase price under the
[1988] contract and was put into possession of
the land by letter dated 29 September 1988…”
The “letter” was signed by Mr Fraser, Mrs Tully’s
attorney, and was expressed to certify that Dr
White was “entitled as from the date hereof to
possession …” of the estate. The document, and
Dr White’s entry into possession, predated the
grant by Gordon J of the injunction. Their
Lordships infer that by 29 September 1988 Dr
White had paid 40 per cent of the purchase
price. He was under no obligation to pay more
than that until completion and there is no
evidence or reason to believe that he did so.
8. Once in possession Dr White set about
developing the estate as a coffee plantation. He
cleared land for planting and planted some 60
acres with coffee plants. He also put in place
some of the necessary infrastructure of a coffee
plantation, including the building of workers’
cottages, a coffee house and offices and
constructing a road. By 1992 the coffee plants
were sufficiently mature for a crop to be taken
and in 1992/1993 and 1993/1994 Dr White harvested
and sold a coffee crop.
9. Critical factual issues in this case are
when Mr Robinson became aware of Dr White’s
activities on the estate and when Dr White
became aware of Mr Robinson’s claim to the
estate. Mr Robinson’s first knowledge that Mrs
Tully had contracted to sell the estate to
someone else came in August 1988. Mrs Tully had
applied for an order dismissing Mr Robinson’s
1987 proceedings on the ground of his delay in
prosecuting them. The application failed but an
affidavit in support of it was sworn by Mr Fraser
on 3 August 1988. In his affidavit Mr Fraser
said that
“… the Defendant [Mrs Tully] has entered into a
contract to sell the land … and the absence of
prosecution of the suit is impeding the said
sale.”
This was nearly two months before Dr White took
possession and it is a reasonable inference that
the contents of the affidavit came to Mr
Robinson’s attention at a time before Dr White
had gone into possession of the estate. The
information that Mrs Tully had entered into a
contract to sell the estate to someone is
probably the reason why the injunction granted by
Gordon J on 11 January 1989 took the form that it
did.
10. There is no evidence that in the period
between August 1988 and January 1989 Mr Robinson
visited the estate. He had no reason to know
that the unknown second purchaser had paid a
substantial part of the purchase price, been
allowed to take possession and begun the
development of the estate as a coffee
plantation. He did, however, visit the estate
towards the end of January 1989 and visited it
again a month or so later. Langrin J recorded in
his judgment (pp 206/207 of the Record) Mr
Robinson’s evidence about these two visits.
“[Mr Robinson] visited the property where he
observed that someone had just begun planting
coffee. He wanted to stop anyone from planting
coffee on the land. He saw one Mr Dillon on the
property whom he asked who was planting the
coffee. Mr Dillon said he did not know. Mr
Robinson testified that he told him what they
were doing is illegal because there was a court
order making him the owner of the land. Mr
Dillon refused to give his employer’s name and Mr
Robinson asked him to give his employers a note.
Robinson wrote a note including his telephone
number and address and requested him to give the
note to his employer. The conversation with Mr
Dillon lasted about half an hour. About one
month later he returned to the property and spoke
to Mr Dillon who said he had delivered the
message to Dr White.”
Mr Dillon was Dr White’s farm manager.
Thereafter Mr Robinson visited the property about
three times a year until 1994. There is no
evidence that he spoke again to Mr Dillon.
11. Mr Dillon was not called to give evidence
at the trial and Dr White, who had been murdered
on 18 June 1993, was not alive to do so.
Evidence was, however, given by Mrs White, Dr
White’s widow. She gave evidence of a telephone
conversation in 1992 between her husband and Mrs
Tully. She had heard Dr White’s end of the
conversation. The relevant passage from the
transcript of her evidence reads as follows :
“He [Dr White] told her he had heard about Mr
Robinson, someone came there saying he had
purchase the land.”
12. This evidence led Langrin J to make the
following findings about Mr Robinson’s January
1989 visit.
“… in January 1989, when the planting of coffee
had commenced Robinson informed Dillon, Dr
White’s farm manager, of his ownership of the
land and sent a note to Dr White informing him of
the situation. This information was related to
Dr White.”
Their Lordships will return to these findings and
their significance but it is convenient to record
here that both in the courts below and before the
Board it was submitted that there was no
admissible evidence that Mr Dillon had given to
Dr White the note given to him (Mr Dillon) by Mr
Robinson. Mr Robinson’s evidence that, on his
second visit, Mr Dillon had said that he had
given the note to Dr White was not evidence that
Mr Dillon had in fact done so. Their Lordships
agree that Mr Robinson’s evidence was not direct
evidence of the truth of Mr Dillon’s statement.
He (Mr Robinson) could not give evidence about
what had passed between Mr Dillon and Dr White.
The judge’s finding that “This information was
related [by Mr Dillon] to Dr White” had to be
based upon inferences open to be drawn by the
judge from other primary evidence.
13. In their Lordships’ opinion there was
ample primary evidence to justify the inference
that, on a balance of probabilities, Mr Dillon
had delivered to Dr White Mr Robinson’s note, and
had done so shortly after Mr Robinson’s visit to
the estate in January 1989. First, Mrs White’s
evidence, referred to above, shows that the note
must have been given to Dr White. No one has
suggested any other way in which Dr White would
have become aware of Mr Robinson’s name and that
Mr Robinson was claiming to be the owner of the
estate. Lord Gifford QC, counsel for Blue Haven,
pointed out that Mrs White was referring to a
telephone conversation in 1992 and suggested that
the note may not have been given to Dr White
until shortly before the conversation took
place. This suggestion seems to their Lordships
highly improbable. The strong probability is
that Mr Dillon would have delivered the note to
Dr White shortly after it had been handed to him
(Mr Dillon). The notion that Mr Dillon might,
three years later, have remedied his omission to
deliver the message promptly is fanciful.
Second, it was Mr Dillon’s duty, as Dr White’s
farm manager, to deliver the note promptly and,
at the same time, to inform his employer of what
Mr Robinson had said. In the absence of any
evidence to the contrary, it is a fair
presumption that Mr Dillon discharged his duty.
And, thirdly, Mr Dillon told Mr Robinson in the
course of the later visit to the estate in
February 1989 that he had given Dr White the
note. The inference that that was so was open to
be drawn and the judge’s finding that “This
information was related to Dr White” cannot, in
their Lordships’ view, be challenged.
14. The factual position, therefore, is that
in or shortly after January 1989 Dr White knew
that a Mr Robinson, whose telephone number had
been included in the note, was claiming to be the
owner of the estate and was objecting to the work
Dr White’s people were carrying out. What did Dr
White do about this? The answer is ‘Nothing’.
He did not contact Mr Robinson at any stage. At
some point he spoke to Mrs Tully about Mr
Robinson. Mrs White’s evidence about Dr White’s
telephone conversation with Mrs Tully in 1992, to
which reference has already been made in
paragraph 11 above, continued as follows :
“A … he [Dr White] wanted to know how that
could be and she told him …
Q He said how could that be?
A Right.
Q Did she respond?
A Yes, she said nonsense.
Q She said nonsense?
A Right. That he wanted to buy the land
and she gave him time and he didn’t come up with
the money and she gave back his money or
something to that effect, and he had no claim on
the land. He was disgruntled, she said he was a
disgruntled person.”
Mrs Tully’s explanation of Mr Robinson’s advent,
referred to in the last passage of the cited
transcript, must have been relayed by Dr White to
Mrs White. If, as Mrs White’s evidence appears
to suggest, Dr White’s request for an explanation
about Mr Robinson and his interest in the estate
was not put to Mrs Tully until the 1992 telephone
conversation, Dr White’s previous disinterest is
very puzzling. A prudent person in Dr White’s
position would surely either have contacted the
individual who had claimed to be the owner of the
estate or the vendor with a request for an
explanation, or, indeed, have done both things.
A possible explanation is that Dr White did
contact Mrs Tully after receiving from Mr Dillon
Mr Robinson’s note and that Mrs White was
recalling an earlier conversation between Mrs
Tully and her husband. In the absence of any
relevant findings of fact, however, this puzzle
must be left unresolved. But what is certain is
that Mr Robinson’s note to Dr White elicited no
response from Dr White to Mr Robinson and that Mr
Robinson’s request to be given Dr White’s name
had been refused by Mr Dillon, Dr White’s farm
manager.
15. In November 1991 Mrs Tully obtained a
registered title to the estate in the names of
herself and another. And an instrument of
transfer of the title to Blue Haven was
prepared. But, of course, the transfer could not
be completed. The injunction granted on 11
January 1989 stood in the way. It seems likely
that Dr White, or his attorneys, complained about
the delay in completion for on 21 September 1992
a letter from Mr Fraser to Dr White’s attorneys
said that
“… we are unable to proceed to complete your sale
at this time, as a prior Purchaser whose contract
we had rescinded has obtained a judgment in his
favour in respect of the purchase of the subject
lands.”
This letter constituted the first formal
notification by Mrs Tully to Dr White of Mr
Robinson’s prior contract. It is a notification
that she or her attorneys ought to have been
given, at latest, promptly after the 11 January
1989 order made by Gordon J.
16. In the meantime, earlier in September
1992, Mr Robinson commenced proceedings against
Mrs Tully for specific performance of the 1985
contract and for possession of the estate. He
applied for summary judgment and on 13 January
1993 was granted the relief sought. On 13 June
1994 the Court of Appeal dismissed Mrs Tully’s
appeal against the specific performance order.
On18 January 1994 a writ of possession was
executed, enabling Mr Robinson to obtain
possession of the estate from Blue Haven. Blue
Haven (or Mrs White) applied for leave to
intervene in the action in order to apply to set
aside the specific performance order, but the
application was dismissed on 27 January 1994. A
registered title to the estate was issued to Mr
Robinson on 21 July 1995.
17. The consequence of all these events is
that Mr Robinson became the owner and in
possession of an established coffee plantation,
with the necessary infrastructure, the cost of
the development having been borne by Dr White, or
Blue Haven, in the mistaken belief that Dr White,
or Blue Haven, would acquire on completion of the
1988 contract a good title to the estate.
The present proceedings
18. Proceedings were accordingly commenced by
Blue Haven against Mrs Tully and Mr Robinson.
The claim against Mrs Tully was a straightforward
claim for damages for breach of contract. The
claim against Mr Robinson was a double-edged
claim. First it was claimed that Blue Haven had
a better entitlement than Mr Robinson to be the
registered owner of the estate. This claim was
advanced before Langrin J and before the Court of
Appeal but was rejected by both. The claim was
advanced before the Board in Blue Haven’s
original printed Case but was abandoned by Lord
Gifford at the outset of his oral submissions to
the Board on Blue Haven’s behalf. He supplied
their Lordships with a supplemental appellant’s
Case which concentrated solely on Blue Haven’s
alternative claim against Mr Robinson, namely, a
monetary claim based on unjust enrichment.
19. It is clear that Mr Robinson has been
enriched. The first question is at whose expense
Mr Robinson has been enriched. He will have been
enriched at Blue Haven’s (or Dr White’s) expense
only to the extent that recovery by Blue Haven
from Mrs Tully is not possible. Evidence was
given at the trial that the value of the estate
in 1993, inclusive of coffee plants and all the
infrastructure, was $19,144,000. Mrs Tully
offered no defence to Blue Haven’s damages claim
and Langrin J made an order against her for
payment to Blue Haven of damages of $20 million.
But their Lordships have been given to understand
that she is worthless and that the damages will
turn out to be irrecoverable. There appears to
be no evidence that that is so but their
Lordships have heard this appeal on the
assumption that it is and that the only recovery
Blue Haven can hope to make is recovery against
Mr Robinson.
Unjust enrichment
20. On the assumption referred to above,
there is no doubt whatever that Mr Robinson has
been enriched at Blue Haven’s (or Dr White’s)
expense. Mr Robinson bought the estate in order
to develop it as a coffee plantation. It was
developed by Dr White. Mr Robinson must have
expected to bear the cost of the development. He
has not had to do so. The critical question is
not whether Mr Robinson has been enriched at Blue
Haven’s expense but whether the circumstances in
which that enrichment came about place Mr
Robinson under an equitable obligation to
compensate Blue Haven accordingly. In order to
answer that question reference must be made to
the legal principles to be applied.
The law
21. Blue Haven’s case was originally argued
as one of proprietary estoppel by acquiescence.
A proprietary remedy is no longer sought but the
principles relied on are the same. It is
contended that Mr Robinson stood by while Dr
White developed the estate under an obvious
misapprehension that he, or Blue Haven, would in
due course on completion of the 1988 contract
become the registered owner of the estate. Mr
Robinson ought, it is said, to have taken
effective steps to correct that misapprehension;
in the event the misapprehension was not
corrected until 1992 when Mrs Tully’s attorney’s
letter of 21 September 1992 was received by Dr
White’s attorneys; Mr Robinson’s efforts to draw
his prior interest to Dr White’s attention were
inadequate. In these circumstances, it is said,
Mr Robinson has an equitable obligation to
compensate Blue Haven.
22. The foundation stones of the principle
espoused by Blue Haven were laid by Ramsden v
Dyson (1866) LR 1 HL 129 and Willmott v Barber
(1880) 15 Ch D 96. Both were cases in which a
claimant sought to establish a proprietary
interest in someone else’s property on the ground
that he (the claimant) had spent money on the
property in the belief that it was his and that
that belief had been encouraged by the true owner
passively standing by without intervening. In
Ramsden v Dyson Lord Cranworth said, at pp 140-
141:
“If a stranger begins to build on my land
supposing it to be his own, and I, perceiving his
mistake, abstain from setting him right, and
leave him to persevere in his error, a court of
equity will not allow me afterwards to assert my
title to the land on which he had expended money
on the supposition that the land was his own. It
considers that, when I saw the mistake into which
he had fallen, it was my duty to be active and to
state my adverse title; and that it would be
dishonest in me to remain wilfully passive on
such an occasion, in order afterwards to profit
by the mistake which I might have prevented.”
And in Willmott v Barber Fry J famously stated
the five so-called probanda that a claimant
should endeavour to establish. He said, at pp
105–106:
“A man is not to be deprived of his legal rights
unless he has acted in such a way at would make
it fraudulent for him to set up those rights.
What then are the elements or requisites
necessary to constitute fraud of that
description? In the first place the plaintiff
must have made a mistake as to his legal rights.
Secondly the plaintiff must have expended some
money or must have done some act (not necessarily
on the defendant’s land) on the faith of his
mistaken belief. Thirdly, the defendant, the
possessor of the legal right, must know of the
existence of his own right which is inconsistent
with the right claimed by the plaintiff. It he
does not know of it he is in the same position as
the plaintiff, and the doctrine of acquiescence
is founded upon conduct with a knowledge of your
legal rights. Fourthly, the defendant, the
possessor of the legal right, must know of the
plaintiff’s mistaken belief of his rights. If he
does not, there is nothing which calls upon him
to assert his own rights. Lastly, the defendant,
the possessor of the legal right, must have
encouraged the plaintiff in his expenditure of
money or in the other acts which he has done,
either directly or by abstaining from asserting
his legal right. Where all these elements exist,
there is fraud of such a nature as will entitle
the court to restrain the possessor of the legal
right from exercising it, but, in my judgment,
nothing short of this will do.”
In both the passage cited from Lord Cranworth’s
speech and the passage cited from Fry J’s
judgment, the necessity for showing the defendant
to be guilty of unconscionable behaviour clearly
appears. Lord Cranworth uses the
word “dishonest”. Fry J speaks of “fraud”.
Subsequent case law has reduced the rigidity of
Fry J’s apparent insistence that each of the five
probanda be established to the letter. In Taylor
Fashions Ltd v Liverpool Victoria Trustees Co Ltd
(Note)[1982] QB 133, 151–152 Oliver J (as he
then was) said,
“the more recent cases indicate, in my judgment,
that the application of the Ramsden v Dyson …
principle – whether you call it proprietary
estoppel, estoppel by acquiescence or estoppel by
encouragement is really immaterial – requires a
much broader approach which is directed at
ascertaining whether, in particular
circumstances, it would be unconscionable for a
party to be permitted to deny that which,
knowingly or unknowingly, he has allowed or
encouraged another to assume to his detriment
than to inquiring whether the circumstances can
be fitted within the confines of some
preconceived formula serving as a universal
yardstick for every form of unconscionable
behaviour.”
23. Oliver J’s concentration on
unconscionable behaviour on the part of the
defendant rather than on the Willmott v Barber
five probanda was implicitly approved by Lord
Templeman in giving the judgment of the Privy
Council in Attorney General of Hong Kong v
Humphrey's Estate (Queen’s Gardens) Ltd [1987]
AC 114, 123 and is referred to in Snell’s Equity,
31st ed (2005), para 10.16 as “the most important
authoritative modern statement of the doctrine”.
Their Lordships are of the same opinion. Fry J’s
five probanda remain a highly convenient and
authoritative yardstick for identifying the
presence, or absence, of unconscionable behaviour
on the part of a defendant sufficient to require
an equitable remedy, but they are not necessarily
determinative.
24. Oliver J’s reference to “proprietary
estoppel, estoppel by acquiescence, estoppel by
encouragement” might appear to suggest that in
every case the claim must be based on some
species of misrepresentation made by the
defendant. But Oliver J’s key that unlocks the
door to the equitable remedy is unconscionable
behaviour and although it might be difficult to
fashion the key without a representation by the
defendant it would not, in principle, necessarily
be impossible to do so. Enrichment of A brought
about by improvements to A’s property made by B
otherwise than pursuant to some representation,
express or implied, by acquiescence or by
encouragement, for which A is responsible would
not usually entitle B to an equitable remedy.
But the reason would be that A’s behaviour in
refusing to pay for improvements that he had not
asked for or encouraged could not, without more,
be described as unconscionable. In the Taylor
Fashions case the first plaintiff, Taylor
Fashions Ltd, lessees of the defendants’
premises, had spent money in installing a lift in
the premises. They had done so in the mistaken
belief, shared by the defendants, that they had a
valid and enforceable option for a new lease.
But the mistaken belief had not been created or
encouraged by the defendants. As Oliver J said,
at pp 155-156:
“So far as acquiescence pure and simple is
concerned the defendants could not lawfully
object to the work and could be under no duty to
Taylors to communicate that which they did not
know themselves, namely that the non-registration
of the option rendered it unenforceable. So far
as encouragement is concerned, it is not in my
judgment possible fairly to say that the mere
presence of the defendants’ representative at a
site meeting ‘encouraged’ Taylors in their belief
that the option was valid.”
Oliver J summed up the situation at p 157:
“Whilst, therefore, it may not seem very
admirable for the defendants to avail themselves
of a technicality which runs counter to the
common assumptions entertained by all the parties
to the transaction, that is what the law permits
them to do; and I cannot find, in the
circumstances of this case, and even given the
flexibility of the equitable principles, that
Taylors have discharged the burden of showing
that it is dishonest or unconscionable for them
to do so.”
So, absent any acquiescence or encouragement or
any other species of representation by the
defendants on to which Taylors could fasten, the
defendants’ behaviour could not be shown to be
unconscionable.
25. Lord Gifford did not attempt to extend
the established jurisprudence. He accepted that
for his client to succeed it was necessary to
show that Mr Robinson had done something, or had
just stood by, in circumstances where his
actions, or inaction, would make it
unconscionable for him to refuse to re-imburse Dr
White for the cost of the development. He
accepted that the circumstance that Mr Robinson
would, if Dr White had not already carried out
the development, have carried out the same
development at his (Mr Robinson’s) expense was
not sufficient. Lord Gifford was, in effect,
accepting that Blue Haven needed to satisfy the
last of Fry J’s probanda and show that Mr
Robinson “encouraged [Dr White] in his
expenditure of money or in the other acts which
he [did], either directly or by abstaining from
asserting his legal right.”
26. In their Lordships’ opinion Blue Haven
cannot clear this hurdle. Mr Robinson did his
best to draw his prior interest to Dr White’s
attention. He gave his name and telephone number
to Mr Dillon, Dr White’s agent on site. He told
Mr Dillon that he was the owner of the estate.
His request to be told the name of Mr Dillon’s
employer was refused. He was told by Mr Dillon
that the note on which he had written his name
and telephone number had been give to Mr Dillon’s
employer. But nobody thereafter communicated
with him. No doubt on his later visits to the
estate Mr Robinson saw the work on the developing
coffee plantation continuing. But, so far as he
was concerned, he had issued an appropriate
warning. If Mr Dillon’s employer, whoever that
might be, wanted to go ahead in spite of the
warning, decided to ignore it, that was not Mr
Robinson’s responsibility or fault. Lord Gifford
suggested that Mr Robinson ought to have
instituted inquiries elsewhere in order to
discover who it was who was in possession of the
coffee plantation, but their Lordships do not
think Mr Robinson was under any obligation to
turn detective.
27. Lord Gifford suggested also that Mr
Robinson, having observed on his later visits to
the estate that work on its development as a
coffee plantation was continuing, should have
made further efforts to draw his interest in the
estate to the attention of the developer. As to
that, remarks made by Sir James Wigram V-C over
150 years ago in The Master or Keeper, Fellows
and Scholars of Clare Hall v Harding (1848) 6
Hare 273 seem to their Lordships very much in
point. The Vice-Chancellor said, at pp 296–297:
“If a party in possession of an estate, knowing
that another claims the property, will, with his
eyes open, spend money upon it, I know of no case
in which it has been held that he can, in the
absence of special circumstances, keep the lawful
owner out of possession, unless he will re-
imburse the party in possession the expenditure
he has made. …… I speak, of course, of those
cases in which the claim of the party out of
possession has been distinctly made. Here Henry
Harding made claim to the entirety of the
property in question from the commencement of the
correspondence I have referred to …. It was
said, indeed, that Henry Harding, seeing the
expenditure going on, ought in fairness to have
reasserted his claim, but that as a question of
law I cannot accede to.”
Similarly, in the present case, their Lordships
do not think that Mr Robinson, who had been told
that his note had been delivered to Dr White,
needed to have reasserted his claim. The fact
that he did not reassert it cannot, in the
circumstances of this case, reasonably be
described as “dishonest” or “unconscionable”.
28. Their Lordships therefore conclude, in
agreement with Langrin J and the majority in the
Court of Appeal, that Mr Robinson cannot be
regarded as having made any representation that
Dr White was entitled to develop the estate as a
coffee plantation. On the contrary, such
representation as Mr Robinson did make, orally to
Mr Dillon, was to the reverse effect and his note
to Mr Dillon’s employer must have been intended
to give him the opportunity to confirm to the
employer personally what he had said to Mr
Dillon. The case built on an alleged
representation by acquiescence was rightly
rejected by Langrin J and the majority in the
Court of Appeal.
29. Accordingly their Lordships will humbly
advise Her Majesty that this appeal should be
dismissed with costs.
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Posted 13:33 No comments | Post a comment |
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Fri, 07 Aug 2009 |
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Dont gasp yet! As I was looking at my situation I
had to pause and think about the rationale of
segregating our society. When I lived in
Poinciana with my parents I was disabled but not
as disabled as I am now. We had to hire a
landscaper to do the lawn and hedge.
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>Our first was Professional
Lawn and Landscapers located in St. Cloud which
is a distance away from Poinciana. Kevin the
owner said because of the distance and we being
his only customers in Poinciana he had to stop
coming to us.
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>Next we had Lawns & Beyond
owned by Rich Anderson and his wife Randy. We
were closer to Rich and his family than to the
other two landscapers we would have had. Randy's
father was a M.D. in Tennessee. Randy used to
say, " If it wasn't for bad luck Rich and I
wouldn't have any luck at all." Then Rich started
doing handiman and all sort of stuff to enhance
his wealth. Since he was so busy busy our lawn
got neglected one summer. My Mom spoke to Greta
our neighbor and she went away on her bike and
came back with Leroy the Dread who was the
landscaper for Grace across the
street.>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>He spoke to my Mom and she
hired him. We were more gratuitous to Rich than
we were to Leroy the Dread. However, when it was
hot my mom would yell for me and say, "ask Leroy
if he wants a cool drink." So I obeyed my Mama.
On my word of honor, I gave the Dread no reason
to believe that I was interested in a romantic
encounter. I like Pilots, CEOs, Doctors,
Attorneys, CPAs, Rocket Scientists etc. When my
mother died I kept the dread on as our landscaper
and paid him sometimes with my check if I had no
cash on hand. Of course in giving him money there
would be extreme small talk. All of a sudden my
name was being scandalized all over Poiiciana as
if I was having an affair with Leroy the Dread.
Subsequently I fired him and hired Edwin Mejias
who worked out pretty well till the house
foreclosed and I
moved.>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>To say I am embarassed to be seen as an
item with Leroy the Dread is a complete
understatement. He is married with children.
Grace my RN neighbor in those days would say
things that made me want to be sucked into the
earth. Hopefully he wasn't telling lies about me.
Where are my friends that know me. On my word of
honor I wouldn't want Grace's husband, Greta's
husband, or any of the other husbands or
eligibles in the area. They really don't have the
pizzaz necessary to attract me. I am ready to
scream. There is a class in society that I never
knew existed. All you had to do was be polite to
them a few times and you wanted them. Please
segregate me from that type. They are exisiting
in a fools paradise. H E L P! |
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Posted 18:51 No comments | Post a comment |
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Wed, 05 Aug 2009 |
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Treaty Establishing the European Community
as Amended by Subsequent Treaties
ROME, 25 March 1957
--------------------------------------------------
------------------------------
Preamble
His Majesty The King of the Belgians, the
President of the Federal Republic of Germany, the
President of the French Republic, the President
of the Italian Republic, Her Royal Highness The
Grand Duchess of Luxembourg, Her Majesty The
Queen of the Netherlands,
Determined to lay the foundations of an ever
closer union among the peoples of Europe,
Resolved to ensure the economic and social
progress of their countries by common action to
eliminate the barriers which divide Europe,
Affirming as the essential objective of their
efforts the constant improvement of the living
and working conditions of their peoples,
Recognising that the removal of existing
obstacles calls for concerted action in order to
guarantee steady expansion, balanced trade and
fair competition,
Anxious to strengthen the unity of their
economies and to ensure their harmonious
development by reducing the differences existing
between the various regions and the backwardness
of the less favoured regions,
Desiring to contribute, by means of a common
commercial policy, to the progressive abolition
of restrictions on international trade,
Intending to confirm the solidarity which binds
Europe and the overseas countries and desiring to
ensure the development of their prosperity, in
accordance with the principles of the Charter of
the United Nations,
Resolved by thus pooling their resources to
preserve and strengthen peace and liberty, and
calling upon the other peoples of Europe who
share their ideal to join in their efforts,
Have decided to create a European Economic
Community and to this end have designated as
their Plenipotentiaries:
His Majesty The King of the Belgians: Mr. Paul-
Henri Spaak, Minister for Foreign Affairs, Baron
J. Ch. Snoy et d'Oppuers, Secretary-General of
the Ministry of Economic Affairs, Head of the
Belgian Delegation to the Intergovernmental
Conference;
The President of the Federal Republic of Germany:
Dr. Konrad Adenauer, Federal Chancellor,
Professor Dr. Walter Hallstein, State Secretary
of the Federal Foreign Office;
The President of the French Republic: Mr.
Christian Pineau, Minister for Foreign Affairs,
Mr. Maurice Faure, Under-Secretary of State for
Foreign Affairs;
The President of the Italian Republic: Mr.
Antonio Segni, President of the Council of
Ministers, Professor Gaetano Martino, Minister
for Foreign Affairs;
Her Royal Highness The Grand Duchess of
Luxembourg: Mr. Joseph Bech, President of the
Government, Minister for Foreign Affairs, Mr.
Lambert Schaus, Ambassador, Head of the
Luxembourg Delegation to the Intergovernmental
Conference;
Her Majesty The Queen of the Netherlands: Mr.
Joseph Luns, Minister for Foreign Affairs, Mr. J.
Linthorst Homan, Head of the Netherlands
Delegation to the Intergovernmental Conference;
Who, having exchanged their full powers, found in
good and due form, Have agreed as follows:
--------------------------------------------------
------------------------------
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Posted 23:08 No comments | Post a comment |
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Wed, 29 Jul 2009 |
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July 27, 2009 >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
You Can Be His Temple!>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
Here is a word for you from the Word.
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
Psalm 29:9; 48:9
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
And in God’s temple everything says, “Glory!” NAS
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
Within your temple, O God, we meditate on your
unfailing love. NIV
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
You see, what sets God’s temple apart from every
other place in the universe is it’s a place where
there is only one theme, and that is God and His
glory. Everything in the temple says, “Glory!”
Not just the persons, not just the angelic
beings, not just the worshipers, but the
furniture of the temple, the very building
itself. All cry out, “Glory to God.”
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<
And then it says, “Within your temple, O God, we
meditate on your unfailing love.” It’s not merely
outward expressions that ascribe glory to God,
but it’s the inward meditation of the true
worshiper. Its meditation is focused on God, on
God’s unfailing love and faithfulness and mercy.
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<
That means that God’s temple can be anywhere
where we meet those conditions. When we meet
those conditions-when our whole being
cries, “Glory to God,” when all our thoughts are
focused and centered on God, when we meditate on
Him, then there, where we are-in may be in an
automobile, it may be in a kitchen-but it becomes
God’s temple because everything is
saying, “Glory!” and every thought and meditation
is centered on the person of the Lord.
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<
So that’s what it’s like to be a temple of the
Lord-and, remember, you and I are supposed to be
God’s temples. - Derek Prince
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<
Derek Prince Ministries
P.O. Box 19501, Charlotte, North Carolina, 28219
www.derekprinceministries.org
©2007 Derek Prince Ministries
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Posted 22:11 No comments | Post a comment |
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Tue, 28 Jul 2009 |
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This document consists of 11 printed pages and 1
blank page.
SP (SLM/SLM) T31570/2
© UCLES 2007 [Turn over
UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE INTERNATIONAL EXAMINATIONS
General Certificate of Education Ordinary Level
READ THESE INSTRUCTIONS FIRST
If you have been given an Answer Booklet, follow
the instructions on the front cover of the
Booklet.
Write your Centre number, candidate number and
name on all the work you hand in.
Write in dark blue or black pen.
You may use a pencil for any diagrams or graphs.
Do not use staples, paper clips, highlighters,
glue or correction fluid.
Section A
Answer all questions.
Section B
Answer any four questions.
Show all your working on the same page as the
rest of the answer.
Omission of essential working will result in loss
of marks.
You are expected to use an electronic calculator
to evaluate explicit numerical expressions. You
may use
mathematical tables as well if necessary.
If the degree of accuracy is not specified in the
question, and if the answer is not exact, give
the answer to
three significant figures. Give answers in
degrees to one decimal place.
For π, use either your calculator value or
3.142,
unless the question requires the answer in terms
of π.
At the end of the examination, fasten all your
work securely together.
The number of marks is given in brackets [ ] at
the end of each question or part question.
The total of the marks for this paper is 100.
* 3 6 6 8 0 8 8 0 2 8 *
MATHEMATICS (SYLLABUS D) 4024/02
Paper 2 October/November 2007
2 hours 30 minutes
Additional Materials: Answer Booklet/Paper Graph
paper (2 sheets)
Electronic calculator Mathematical tables
(optional)
Geometrical instruments
2
© UCLES 2007 4024/02/O/N/07
Section A [52 marks]
Answer all the questions in this section.
1 (a)
A
C 200 B
65
From the top of a vertical tower, AB, an observer
sees a car at C.
AB = 65 m and CB = 200 m.
Calculate CAˆB. [2]
(b)
R
P S
300
N
750
The diagram shows three positions at sea, R, P
and S.
R is due north of P and S is due east of P.
RP = 300 m and RS = 750 m.
(i) A boat sailed at a constant speed of 5 km/h
from R to S.
It was at R at 22 56.
Find the time it reached S. [3]
(ii) Calculate the bearing of S from R. [3]
2 (a) It is given that x = a + a2 + b2 .
(i) Calculate x when a = 0.73 and b = 1.84.
Give your answer correct to 2 decimal places. [2]
(ii) Express b in terms of x and a. [3]
(b) A shopkeeper sells pens and pencils.
Each pen costs $5 and each pencil costs $3.
One day he sold x pens.
On the same day he sold 9 more pens than pencils.
(i) Write down an expression, in terms of x, for
his total income from the sale of these pens and
pencils. [2]
(ii) This total income was less than $300.
Form an inequality in x and solve it. [2]
(iii) Hence write down the maximum number of pens
that he sold. [1]
3
© UCLES 2007 4024/02/O/N/07 [Turn over
3 (a)
L M N
P Q R
124°
x° y°
In the diagram, LMN is parallel to PQR.
Angle PQM = 124° and MQ = MR.
Find
(i) x, [1]
(ii) y. [1]
(b) In a surveying exercise to find the distance
between two points, Y and Z, on opposite banks of
a
river, angles and lengths were measured.
W
X
V
Y
Z
25
40 160
river
WXZ and VXY are straight lines.
WVˆX = ZYˆX = 90°.
(i) Show that triangles VWX and YZX are similar.
[2]
(ii) VW = 25 m, VX = 40 m and XY = 160 m.
Calculate the distance YZ. [2]
4
© UCLES 2007 4024/02/O/N/07
4 (a) In 2005, the cost of posting a letter was
28 cents.
A company posted 1200 letters and was given 4%
discount on the cost.
Calculate the total discount. [1]
(b) In 2006, the cost of posting a letter was
increased from 28 cents to 35 cents.
Calculate the percentage increase in the cost of
posting a letter. [2]
(c) After the price increase to 35 cents, the
cost to the company of posting 1200 letters was
$399.
Calculate the percentage discount that the
company was given in 2006. [2]
(d) In 2006, it cost $4.60 to post a parcel.
This was an increase of 15% on the cost of
posting the parcel in 2005.
Calculate the cost of posting this parcel in
2005. [3]
5
A D
C
B
24 16
20
112°
The points A, B, C and D represent four towns on
a map.
ABC is a straight line.
AB = 24 cm, BD = 16 cm and CD = 20 cm.
Angle ABD = 112°.
(a) Calculate
(i) AD, [4]
(ii) angle BCD, [3]
(iii) the area of triangle ABD. [2]
(b) The scale of the map is 1 : 250 000.
Calculate the actual distance, in kilometres,
from town A to town B. [1]
5
© UCLES 2007 4024/02/O/N/07 [Turn over
6 (a) Diagram I shows a design which consists of
7 congruent circles drawn inside a large circle.
The circles touch at all the points shown.
Diagram I
(i) State the order of rotational symmetry of
this design. [1]
(ii) In Diagram II, two sections of the design
have been shaded.
Each small circle has a radius of 5 cm.
Diagram II
Calculate
(a) the area of the large circle, [2]
(b) the shaded area. [2]
(b) In Diagram III, circles, centres O, A and B,
are shown, together with the same shaded area.
O is also the centre of the large circle.
Diagram III
O
A B
(i) Write down angle AOB. [1]
(ii) Calculate the total perimeter of the shaded
area. [4]
6
© UCLES 2007 4024/02/O/N/07
Section B [48 marks]
Answer four questions in this section.
Each question in this section carries 12 marks.
7 (a) Compost for growing plants consists of 3
parts of soil to 2 parts of sand to 1 part of
peat.
(i) Calculate the number of litres of sand in a
75 litre bag of compost. [2]
(ii) Compost is sold in 5 litre, 25 litre and 75
litre bags costing $2, $8.75 and $27 respectively.
Showing your working clearly, state which bag
represents the best value for money. [2]
(b) [The volume of a cone = 13
× base area × height.]
The diagram shows a plant pot.
The open end of the plant pot is a circle of
radius 10 cm.
The closed end is a circle of radius 5 cm.
The height of the plant pot is 12 cm.
The plant pot is part of a right circular cone of
height 24 cm.
12
12
5
10
(i) Calculate the volume of the plant pot.
Give your answer in litres. [4]
(ii) How many of these plant pots can be
completely filled from a 75 litre bag of compost?
[2]
(iii) A smaller plant pot is geometrically
similar to the original plant pot.
The open end of this plant pot is a circle of
radius 5 cm.
10
5
How many of these plant pots can be completely
filled from a 75 litre bag of compost? [2]
7
© UCLES 2007 4024/02/O/N/07 [Turn over
8 Answer the whole of this question on a sheet of
graph paper.
A stone was thrown from the top of a vertical
cliff. Its position during the flight is
represented by the
equation y = 24 + 10x – x2, where y metres is the
height of the stone above the sea and x metres is
the
horizontal distance from the cliff.
(a) Solve the equation 0 = 24 + 10x – x 2. [2]
(b) The table shows some values of x and the
corresponding values of y.
x 0 2 4 6 8 10
y 24 40 48 48 40 24
(i) Using a scale of 1 cm to represent 1 metre,
draw a horizontal x-axis for 0 x 14.
Using a scale of 2 cm to represent 10 metres,
draw a vertical y-axis for 0 y 50.
On your axes, plot the points from the table and
join them with a smooth curve. [3]
(ii) Use your answer to part (a) to complete the
graph which represents the flight of the stone.
[1]
(iii) Find the height of the stone above the sea
when its horizontal distance from the cliff
was 7 m. [1]
(iv) Use your graph to find how far the stone
travelled horizontally while it was 6 m or more
above the top of the cliff. [2]
(c) It is given that 24 + 10x – x2 = p – (x – 5)2.
(i) Find the value of p. [1]
(ii) Hence find
(a) the greatest height of the stone above the
sea, [1]
(b) the horizontal distance from the cliff when
the stone was at its greatest height. [1]
8
© UCLES 2007 4024/02/O/N/07
9 (a) Given that
→
PQ = –2
3 ,
→
QR = 1
0 and
→
RS = 1
–5 , find
→
PS . [1]
(b)
B
C
F
D
E
A
In the diagram,
→
AB = 2b,
→
AD = 3a and
→
DF = b – a.
E is the midpoint of AB and F is the midpoint of
DC.
(i) Express, as simply as possible, in terms of a
and/or b,
(a) →
EA , [1]
(b) →
DC, [1]
(c) →
EF , [1]
(d) →
BC . [1]
(ii) (a) Give the special name of the
quadrilateral ABCD.
Give your reason. [2]
(b) Find the ratio →
BC : →
EF : →
AD . [1]
9
© UCLES 2007 4024/02/O/N/07 [Turn over
(c)
Circle I
A Circle II
B
C
F
D
E
O 146°
Points A, B, C and D lie on Circle I.
O is the centre of Circle I.
Points A, O, E, C and F lie on Circle II.
AEB and ADF are straight lines.
Angle AOC = 146°.
Giving your reasons, write down
(i) CEˆA, [1]
(ii) CBˆA, [1]
(iii) CFˆA, [1]
(iv) DCˆF. [1]
10
© UCLES 2007 4024/02/O/N/07
10 Answer the whole of this question on a sheet
of graph paper.
Potatoes are sold in sacks.
One sack, picked at random, contained 260
potatoes.
The masses, in grams, of the potatoes in this
sack are summarised in the table below.
Mass
(m grams)
50 < m 100 100 < m 150 150 < m 200 200 < m
250 250 < m 300 300 < m 350
Frequency 4 56 84 76 36 4
(a) (i) Calculate an estimate of the total mass
of the potatoes in this sack. [2]
(ii) Calculate an estimate of the mean mass, in
grams, of a potato. [1]
(b) (i) Copy and complete the cumulative
frequency table given below.
Mass
(m grams) m 50 m 100 m 150 m 200 m 250
m 300 m 350
Cumulative
frequency
0 4 60 260
[1]
(ii) Using a scale of 2 cm to represent 50 grams,
draw a horizontal axis for masses
between 0 and 350 grams.
Using a scale of 2 cm to represent 50 potatoes,
draw a vertical axis for values from 0 to 300.
On your axes, draw a smooth cumulative frequency
curve to illustrate this information. [3]
(iii) Use your curve to find
(a) the median, [1]
(b) the interquartile range. [2]
(c) The organisers of a barbecue expect to sell
500 baked potatoes.
Each potato should have a mass greater than 200 g.
Estimate the number of sacks of potatoes they
will need. [2]
11
© UCLES 2007 4024/02/O/N/07
11 (a) P is the point (2, 9) and Q is the point
(4, 6).
Find
(i) the length of PQ, [2]
(ii) the equation of the line PQ. [2]
(b)
x
y
–2 0 2
–2
2
4
6
–4
–6
–6 –4 4 6
B
C
D
A
The diagram shows triangles A, B, C and D.
(i) Find the matrix representing the
transformation that maps triangle A onto triangle
B. [1]
(ii) Describe fully the single transformation
that maps triangle B onto triangle C. [2]
(iii) Triangle C is mapped onto triangle D by the
translation T.
(a) Write down the column vector that represents
T. [1]
(b) The transformation R that maps triangle A
onto triangle C is
represented by the matrix 0 –1
1 0 .
Show that the transformation R followed by T maps
(h, k) onto (–k –3, h –3). [1]
(c) Find the value of h and the value of k for
which the transformation R followed by T
maps (h, k) onto itself. [2]
(d) The single transformation that is equivalent
to R followed by T is a rotation.
Write down the coordinates of the centre of this
rotation. [1]
12
4024/02/O/N/07
Permission to reproduce items where third-party
owned material protected by copyright is included
has been sought and cleared where possible. Every
reasonable effort has been
made by the publisher (UCLES) to trace copyright
holders, but if any items requiring clearance
have unwittingly been included, the publisher
will be pleased to make amends at
the earliest possible opportunity.
University of Cambridge International
Examinations is part of the Cambridge Assessment
Group. Cambridge Assessment is the brand name of
University of Cambridge Local
Examinations Syndicate (UCLES), which is itself a
department of the University of Cambridge.
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Posted 19:59 No comments | Post a comment |

