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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Cheltenham & Gloucester Plc v Appleyard & Anor [2004] EWCA Civ 291 (15 March 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2004/291.html Cite as: [2004] 13 EG 12, [2004] 13 EG 127, [2004] EWCA Civ 291 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
(CHANCERY DIVISION) (Leeds County Court)
(His Honour Judge McGonigal
B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE KENNEDY
and
LORD JUSTICE NEUBERGER
____________________
CHELTENHAM & GLOUCESTER PLC |
Respondent |
|
- and - |
||
APPLEYARD & ANOTHER |
Appellant |
____________________
Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
(instructed by Messrs Fenwick & Co) for the Appellant
Andrew Sutcliffe Esq, QC & David Gilchrist Esq
(instructed by Messrs Parker Bullen) for the Respondent
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Neuberger:
The facts
i) evidence that the B&B mortgage had been paid in full, and that B&B had executed a Form 53, which, if presented to the Land Registry, would have resulted in their registered charge being removed; and
ii) a letter from BCCI's Leeds bank confirming that a banker's draft for £150,089.83 had in fact been delivered, presented and paid to a BCCI account in July 1991.
The affidavit also exhibited C&G's standard mortgage conditions (1989 edition) to which the C&G mortgage was subject; they included express rights in favour of C&G to obtain possession of, and to sell the mortgaged property, in the event, inter alia, of the mortgagor failing to pay sums due under the mortgage.
" provided [the Appleyards] shall pay to [C&G] the monthly sum of £500 in every calendar month in respect of both the monthly instalments payable under the said mortgage and the arrears thereof, the first such payment to made on 1 March 1993".
"1 That by virtue of its entitlement to be subrogated to the redeemed [B&B] mortgage, [the C&G] mortgage has priority over [the BCCI charge] to the extent of £73,458.61 together with interest
2 To consent to the [C&G] mortgage being registered
3 To consent to an entry being made on the Charges Register stating that [the C&G mortgage] has priority over [the BCCI charge] to the extent of the rights which the court finds were acquired by [C&G] by subrogation.
4 [To] cooperate insofar as is necessary to give effect to this arrangement."
"1. Our clients cannot by private agreement determine that your client is subrogated to the rights enjoyed by [B&B] under the terms of its charge. That is an issue of law to be determined by the court. However, our clients will not dispute your clients' claim to be subrogated to the rights of [B&B] in the sum of £73,458.61 together with interest arising under [the B&B mortgage]
2. Our clients will give their formal consent to [the C&G mortgage] being registered.
3. Our clients will give their consent to an entry stating that your clients' charge should have priority to BCCI's charge to the extent set out in paragraph 1.
4. Our clients will provide cooperation so that the relevant entries can be made at HM Land Registry "
This was subject to certain requirements with regard to costs and the like, not relevant to the issues in these proceedings.
i) to be entitled to be subrogated to the rights of B&B under the B&B mortgage; and
ii) relief under their subrogated rights, including possession of the property.
i) that C&G were subrogated to the rights of B&B under the registered B&B mortgage;
ii) that the subrogated debt amounted to £73,458.31, together with interest;
iii) that the rate of interest applicable was "whichever was the lower of [B&B's] standard variable rate and the rate applicable to the [C&G] mortgage dated 5th July 1991 ;"
iv) that "the subrogated debt amounts to no less that £119,442.58 ".
"Pursuant to an order of the Leeds County Court made on 18 July 2003 and a further order in the same proceedings made on 22 September 2003 this charge has priority over the [BCCI] charge referred to above to the extent therein mentioned."
The issues - subrogation
i) in July 1991 they advanced money, part of which was to be used for the purpose of paying off what was owing to B&B;
ii) B&B had a registered first legal charge over the property to secure what was owing to them;
iii) Repayment of the money advanced by C&G was contractually intended to be secured by a registered first legal charge in favour of C&G over the property; but
iv) C&G did not obtain such a first legal charge as they were unable to register the C&G mortgage owing to BCCI's stance, and an unregistered mortgage of registered land only operates as an equitable charge.
"[W]here A's money is used to pay off the claim of B, who is a secured creditor, A is entitled to be regarded in equity as having had an assignment to him of B's rights as a secured creditor . It finds one of its chief uses in the situation where one person advances money on the understanding that he is to have certain security for the money he has advanced, and for one reason or another, he does not receive the promised security. In such a case he is nevertheless to be subrogated to the rights of any other person who at the relevant time had any security over the same property and whose debts have been discharged in whole or in part by the money so provided by him."
i) C&G are prevented being subrogated to the rights of B&B under the B&B mortgage:
a) by virtue of their having obtained a valid contractual security, in the form of the C&G mortgage, even though that mortgage was not, initially at least, registrable; alternatively,
b) by virtue of the fact that, before the issue of these proceedings, C&G had perfected their security as a result of BCCI's eventual agreement, as contained in the May 2002 letter, and now by registration of the C&G mortgage.
ii) If C&G would otherwise have a valid claim based on subrogation, they have effectively lost the right to raise that claim:
a) by virtue of their failure to bring it forward or rely on it in the 1992 proceedings; alternatively
b) by virtue of the equitable principle of laches.
"An equitable remedy to reverse or prevent unjust enrichment which is not based upon any agreement or common intention of the party enriched and the party deprived."
Any reference hereafter to subrogation should be treated as a reference to this equitable species of subrogation.
i) Parc had a property, subject to a first charge in favour of RTB, a bank, and a second charge in favour of OOL, a member of the same group of companies as Parc ("the group");
ii) Parc approached Banque Financiere de la Citι ("BFC") for a loan for the purpose of refinancing some of their borrowings;
iii) BFC agreed to advance monies to Parc to enable them to pay off some of the monies owing to RTB;
iv) While BFC made it plain that they did not seek any security in the form of a charge over property, they were to get:
a) some shares ("the shares") in the group holding company ("Holdings"); and
b) a letter from Holdings on behalf of all the companies in the group, including OOL ("group creditors"), stating that they would agree to postpone their right to repayment of any sums owing by Parc until BFC was repaid in full ("the letter of postponement");
v) The shares were duly pledged to BFC, the letter was duly executed by Holdings, and the loan was made by BFC to Parc, who used it to pay off, albeit only in part, the loan from RTB.
vi) Unknown to BFC, the letter of postponement was defective because Holdings did not have the authority to sign it on behalf of Parc's creditors with the group ("the group creditors").
vii) Parc became insolvent, and, OOL contended that once the balance of RTB's loan was paid off under their first charge, OOL was entitled, by virtue of their second charge, to look to the property for repayment of what was owing to OOL, thereby obtaining priority over BFC.
At first instance, Robert Walker J held that:
i) BFC's loan was intended to be protected to the extent of the contractual rights given by the letter of postponement, but, because that letter was ineffective, BFC did not obtain all the protection for which it had bargained;
ii) the money BFC loaned was used to pay off, in part, the first chargee, RTB, and consequently it "enriched" OOL because the value of its second charge was increased owing to the reduction of the amount secured by the first charge;
iii) this "enrichment" of OOL would be unjust, because it was only achieved by BFC being persuaded to lend money to Parc in the belief that group creditors, including OOL, would not seek to be repaid unless and until BFC had been repaid in full; the fact that OOL did not know of the letter of postponement did not prevent their enrichment being unjust;
iv) accordingly, BFC was entitled to be subrogated, and the nature of the subrogation was that they were entitled to the benefit of RTB's first charge, save that, RTB had the right to be satisfied in respect of their debt out of the first charge, before BFC could look to that charge.
The Court of Appeal reversed Robert Walker J, holding that there could be no claim for subrogation in these circumstances.
The House of Lords, however, agreed with the conclusion of Robert Walker J, subject to one important point. The order made by the judge would have given BFC better security than BFC would have enjoyed if they had secured all that they had bargained for: with the exception of RTB, they would have had priority against all other creditors of Parc, whereas under the letter of postponement, they would only have had priority as against group creditors. Accordingly, BFC should be treated as subrogated to the first charge only as against group creditors, and in particular OOL, the second chargee. As against any other creditors of Parc, however, BFC were to be treated as unsecured.
i) In the absence of an intention to the contrary, BFC, having discharged part of RTB's debt, would have been subrogated to RTB's first charge, subject to RTB's priority for the balance of their debt.
ii) In the course of negotiations, however, BFC made it plain that they were not seeking to acquire security for their loan in the form of a charge over property valid against all the world. This prevented their becoming subrogated to RTB as against all the world.
iii) BFC intended and believed that their loan would take priority over any claims against Parc by creditors, including OOL.
iv) It would have been unjust for OOL to have been enriched as a result of BFC's discharge of RTB's debt, which ranked before OOL.
v) In these circumstances, the principle of subrogation applied so as to give BFC priority as against OOL.
Overview of this case
The first issue no subrogation after 5th July 1991
"[C]ommonsense suggests that if a vendor takes as a security for the unpaid purchase money a charge over the whole of the property comprised in the contract, he must deliberately be intending to replace his vendor's lien by that security, and that accordingly, either as a result of the doctrine of merger or by presumed intention to waive the unpaid vendor's lien, that lien has gone."
"It does seem to me, however, that this lien must be taken to have been abandoned when the contract was completed, from the happening of that event the vendor [sc the first defendant] obtained all that he had bargained for, namely one-quarter of the purchase money in cash and the balance by way of the stipulated legal charge."
"[Counsel] urged strongly that if the correct test was indeed as propounded by Harman LJ, and as I believe, ie did the vendor obtain all that he bargained for?, then here he did not obtain it, because one of the things for which he bargained was that the defendants would fulfil their statutory duty of registration pursuant to section 95 of the Act of 1948. But this is to confuse substance with formalities. As regards the formality of registration under s26 of the Land Registration Act 1925, nothing can at the end of the day turn upon this because it was duly effected. But even if it had not been, this is a matter wholly within the plaintiff's own power, and therefore it could not be suggested that the failure to register could have any conceivable effect on the plaintiff's obtaining 'all they had bargained for'. As regards registration under s95, once again, this is undeniably, as pointed out by Harman LJ, within the plaintiff's own power, although the primary duty was cast on the defendants. Nevertheless, even without such registration, the charge remained effective against the defendants and still so remains."
"On the execution of the legal charge, however, the equitable charge-by-subrogation will merge in the higher ranking legal charge in favour of the same chargee."
"Clearly, the rights which are transferred to the third party who discharges the mortgage must be those which existed immediately before the charge took place. With the extent to which they may be exercised by the third party thereafter by virtue of subrogation depends also upon the terms upon which the money, which is used to discharge the original mortgage, is advanced to the borrower by the new lender. If he makes an unsecured loan, he cannot claim the benefit of a security which was available to the original mortgagee (Paul v- Speirway ; see also Boscawen ). Similarly, he cannot recover a greater rate of interest that he agreed to accept under the new mortgage (Chetwynd v- Allen [1899] 1 Ch 353; see also Western Trust & Savings Limited v- Rock (unreported, 26th February 1993, CA) per Peter Gibson LJ at 9G."
The second issue the alleged perfection of C&G's security
"One of the effects of this proposal is that your client agrees to be bound by the court's decision as to the precise extent of our client's subrogated rights without being a party to the proposed action."
The third issue the failure to rely on subrogation in the 1992 proceedings
"The bringing of a claim or the raising of a defence in later proceedings may, without more, amount to abuse if the court is satisfied (the onus being on the party alleging abuse) that the claim or defence should have been raised in the earlier proceedings if it was to be raised at all."
However, he went on to say this:
"It is, however, wrong to hold that because a matter could have been raised in earlier proceedings it should have been, so as to render the raising of it in later proceedings necessarily abusive. That is to adopt too dogmatic an approach to what should in my opinion be a broad, merits-based judgment which takes account of the public and private interests involved, and also takes account of all the facts of the case, focusing attention on the crucial question whether, in all the circumstances, a party is misusing or abusing the process of the court by seeking to raise before it the issue which could have been raised before."
"I would add that it would not help mortgagors, mortgagees or the courts if mortgagors had to claim and pursue to judgment all their possible claims at one and the same time. Mortgagees usually only go for a possession initially and pursue other remedies later if they have to, and that practice is entirely sensible and to the advantage of all concerned."
(We think that the second reference to "mortgagors" should be to "mortgagees".)
The fourth issue laches
"Where it would be practically unjust to give a remedy, either because the party has, by his conduct, done that which might fairly be regarded as equivalent to a waiver of it, or whereby his conduct or negligence has, though perhaps not waiving that remedy, yet put the other party in the situation in which it would not be reasonable to place it if the remedy were afterwards to be asserted, in either of these cases, lapse of time and delay are most material."
"Laches essentially consists of a substantial lapse of time coupled with the existence of circumstances which make it inequitable to enforce the claim."
Conclusion