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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Brighton & Hove City Council v Audus [2009] EWHC 340 (Ch) (26 February 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2009/340.html Cite as: [2009] NPC 31, [2009] EWHC 340 (Ch), [2009] 9 EG 192, [2010] 1 All ER (Comm) 343 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Brighton & Hove City Council |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Peter Audus |
Defendant |
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Clive R Pithers (instructed by Hall Ennion & Young) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 6th & 9th February 2009
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Morgan:
Introduction
The parties' respective positions
The matters arising
(1) What arrangement was made between Mr and Mrs Bull and Mr Audus in 1988?
(2) What is the nature of that arrangement?
(3) Do the various equitable rules, relied upon by the Council in support of its challenge to the second registered charge, apply to the arrangement in this case?
(4) If those equitable rules do not apply to the arrangement in this case, what is the result?
(5) If the mortgage rules do apply to the arrangement in this case, what is the result?
(6) Is there any relevant estoppel binding Mrs Bull?
(7) If there is a relevant estoppel binding Mrs Bull, does that estoppel bind the Council?
(8) Does Mr Audus have rights in relation to the lease under a common intention constructive trust?
(9) What is the effect of the Land Registration Act 2002?
The evidence
"… reached agreement with them that I would provide all the necessary money to allow them to purchase the flat in their joint names on the basis that they would be able to live there rent free for the rest of their lives and when they had both died I would become the legal owner of the flat. It was also agreed that no interest would be payable by my aunt and uncle on the monies which I had provided to fund the purchase. In addition I agreed to pay the legal costs relating to the purchase, the annual service charge and the costs of some storage heaters, new carpets and replacement double glazed windows which were being installed by the council."
"My recollection of the instructions that I was given at the time were that Mr and Mrs Bull had approached their nephew Peter Audus and asked him if he was interested in buying the property. The intention was that they would be allowed to live there rent free during their respective lifetimes and he would have the advantage of any increase in value of the property when they died or the property was voluntarily sold."
"I should explain that the effect of these documents is to give your nephew a Legal Charge over your property in respect of the money which he has advanced to enable the property to be purchased, and also in respect of any increase in value. I can assure you that there is no intention on the part of your nephew to require repayment of any monies, and indeed there is a specific provision in the Legal Charge that no right to any interest shall be implied from the documentation. I can also confirm that I have drawn up a codicil to your nephew's Will whereby the executors cannot enforce the Legal Charge or Supplemental Deed after our client's death, and any interest which our client might have in the property is left to you."
"1. In consideration of the sum of twelve thousand three hundred and seventy-five pounds now paid to the Borrowers by the Lender (the receipt whereof the Borrowers hereby acknowledge) the Borrowers hereby covenant with the Lender that the Borrowers will repay to the Lender the said sum of Twelve Thousand Three Hundred and Seventy-Five Pounds on the…. day of…. One Thousand Nine Hundred and Eighty-Eight No right to interest on the said sum shall be herein implied
2. The Borrowers as Beneficial Owners hereby charge by way of legal mortgage the property described in the Schedule hereto with repayment to the Lender of all monies hereby covenanted to be paid
3. If the Borrowers shall pay to the Lender the said sum of Twelve Thousand Three Hundred and Seventy-Five Pounds in accordance with the covenant hereinbefore contained the Lender will at the request and cost of the Borrowers duly discharge this security
4. On default being made by the Borrowers in the payment of the said sum of Twelve Thousand Three Hundred and Seventy- Five Pounds hereby covenanted to be paid at the time aforesaid or in the payment of any other monies hereby covenanted to be paid or in the observance or performance of the covenants herein expressed or implied or if the Borrowers shall become bankrupt or enter into any composition or arrangement with their creditors generally then and in any such case the whole of the monies hereby secured shall become immediately payable and the Lender may upon giving the Borrowers two month's notice of his intention so to do exercise all statutory powers conferred on mortgagees by the Law of Property Act 1925 or any Act amending the same subject to any order of the Court required for exercise of such powers".
"Upon treaty for the advance of the said sum of Twelve Thousand Three Hundred and Seventy-Five Pounds it was agreed between the parties hereto that the Borrowers should secure to the Lender the benefit of any capital appreciation of the property in manner hereinafter appearing".
"1. The Borrowers hereby covenant with the Lender than (sic) in addition to the monies secured by the principle deed they their executors administrators or assignees will on redemption of the charge thereby effected pay to the Lender any increase in the base value of the property as hereinafter defined between the date hereof and the date of such redemption (hereinafter called "the redemption date")
2. The amount of such increase in value shall be calculated as follows:-
(i) The base value of such increases shall be the said sum of Twelve Thousand Three Hundred and Seventy-Five Pounds plus any expenses incurred by the Lender in respect of the following:-
(a) Legal costs and stamp duties in connection with the purchase of the property and the preparation of the deed and in connection with any sale of the property
(b) Surveyors and estate agents fees in connection with any sale of the property or any valuation of the type hereinafter referred to
(c) Improvements carried out to the property with the prior consent in writing of the Lender (such consent not to be unreasonably withheld)
(ii) The value of the property as at the redemption date shall be:-
(a) The price fixed by any agreement for the sale of the property entered into by the Lender prior to the redemption date or (if no such agreement shall have been entered into)
(b) The fair market value of the property as assessed by an independent surveyor to be appointed by agreement between the parties hereto or in the event of any dispute to be appointed by the President for the time being of the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors or
(c) The fair market value with the benefit of vacant possession of the property at the date of the death of the Borrowers if redemption shall not have taken place during the Borrowers lifetime
3. The Borrowers as beneficial owners hereby charge the property by way of Legal Mortgage with the payment to the Lender of all sums hereinbefore covenanted to be paid in addition to the sum secured by the principle deed."
"When we decided to buy the above flat my dear husband was taken ill and unfortunately passed away – then my nephew took over as I lost my state pension (£63) and was worried I might have to move."
My findings based on the evidence
The legal principles
"…a mortgage is a conveyance of land or an assignment of chattels as a security for the payment of a debt or the discharge of some other obligation for which it is given. This is the idea of a mortgage: and the security is redeemable on the payment or discharge of such debt or obligation, any provision to the contrary notwithstanding".
Most mortgages or charges involve a loan where the relevant obligation on the mortgagor is to repay the loan, rather than perform some other obligation. The function of the mortgage is to give the lender security for the repayment of the loan.
"But whatever else may have been the intention of those judges who laid the foundations of the modern doctrines with which we are concerned in this appeal, they certainly do not appear to have contemplated that their principles should develop consequences which would go far beyond the necessities of the case with which they were dealing and interfere with transactions which were not really of the nature of a mortgage, and which were free from objection on moral grounds. Moreover, the principle on which the Court of Chancery interfered with contracts of the class under consideration was not a rigid one. The equity judges looked, not at what was technically the form, but at what was really the substance of transactions, and confined the application of their rules to cases in which they thought that in its substance the transaction was oppressive. Thus in Howard v Harris Lord Keeper North in 1683 set aside an agreement that a mortgage should be irredeemable after the death of the mortgagor and failure of the heirs of his body, on the ground that such a restriction on the right to redeem was void in equity. But he went on to intimate that if the money had been borrowed by the mortgagor from his brother, and the former had agreed that if he had no issue the land should become irredeemable, equity would not have interfered with what would really have been a family arrangement. The exception thus made to the rule, in cases where the transaction includes a family arrangement as well as a mortgage has been recognised in later authorities." (Emphasis added).
Analysis and conclusions
Other matters
The overall result