BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Rahim v Arch Insurance Co (Europe) Ltd [2016] EWHC 2967 (Comm) (22 November 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2016/2967.html Cite as: [2016] EWHC 2967 (Comm) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
QUEENS BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
B e f o r e :
(sitting as a Judge of the High Court)
____________________
MS SHIRIN RAHIM | Claimant | |
and | ||
ARCH INSURANCE CO. (EUROPE) LIMITED | Defendant |
____________________
Michael Pooles QC (instructed by Reynolds Porter Chamberlain LLP Solicitors) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 24-26 and 31 October 2016
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
INTRODUCTION
"we will not cover The Insured for any Claim or Defence Costs in respect of:5.6 Fraud or dishonesty
any Insured to the extent that any civil liability or related Defence Costs arise from dishonesty or a fraudulent act or omission committed or condoned by The Insured except that:(a) We shall nonetheless cover each other Insured."
(1) Did Ms Rahim herself commit dishonest or fraudulent acts?(2) If so, did she condone dishonest or fraudulent acts from which the Claims arose?
(3) Was Ms Rahim a partner in the firm?
(4) If she was not, did she dishonestly hold herself out or allow herself to be held out as a partner?
(5) If so, was it her apparent status as partner that led to the judgments being entered against her pursuant to the Claims?
(6) If Arch is otherwise liable to indemnify Ms Rahim, can it rely upon the aggregation clause set out at paragraph 4.12 of the policy and paragraph 3 of the Schedule thereto?
BACKGROUND
THE EVIDENCE
DISHONESTY-THE LAW
(1) It is for Arch to prove that Ms Rahim acted dishonestly;(2) While the standard of proof remains the balance of probabilities, strong and cogent evidence is required to discharge it where fraud or dishonesty is involved; that is especially so where the person concerned is a solicitor;
(3) Although a dishonest state of mind is a subjective mental state, the standard by which it is determined whether it is dishonest is objective. If by ordinary standards a defendant's mental state would be characterised as dishonest, it is irrelevant that the defendant judges by different standards - see the opinion of Lord Hoffmann in Barlow Clowes v Eurotrust [2006] 1 WLR 1476 at paragraph 10;
(4) In considering whether Ms Rahim was dishonest, the court has to examine all the circumstances known to her at the time, her personal attributes such as her experience and intelligence and the reasons why she says she acted as she did – see the judgment of Lord Nicholls in Royal Brunei Airlines v Tan [1995] AC 378 at p. 389;
(5) Gross negligence is not the same as dishonesty - see, for example, the judgment of Etherton J (as he then was) Mortgage Express v Newman [2001] 1 Lloyds Rep 669 at paragraph 54.
ISSUE 1-DID MS RAHIM COMMIT DISHONEST OR FRAUDULENT ACTS?
General observations
Ms Rahim's answers in her 2007 and 2009 SRA interviews
Earlier views of Ms Rahim's conduct
The lender as client
(1) Towards the start of her cross examination she in fact admitted that she was aware that the lender was her client and did not at that point suggest that this was something she only discovered after the event;(2) Ms Rahim had highlighted paragraph 7.7.5 of the Textbook dealing with conflict of interest when acting for borrower and lender;
(3) Later in her cross examination Ms Rahim rowed back from her earlier admission and said that she did not actually see the lender as a client at the time of her work at OSL. However, this important piece of evidence did not feature in her witness statement. When confronted with letters from the lender to her instructing her to act on its behalf she said that she understood this now but had not appreciated it at the time and simply made a mistake; that is completely implausible;
(4) In her 2009 interview with the SRA when asked about the Council of Mortgage Lenders ("CML") Handbook ("the Handbook") she accepted she had a duty to lenders to make sure that their interests were protected in the sense that "we acted for them and the client… If there was something of concern to us then we had to tell them…" When this was put to her in cross-examination she said that while she understood that concept in 2009 she had not appreciated it in 2005. She then said that she had become aware of it at some point after beginning at OSL and while working for Mr Islam and certainly before she stopped working there but she could not say exactly when; nor could she say exactly how she became aware. All of this is equally implausible;
(5) There are letters to and from Ms Rahim making clear that she was acting for the lender in the sample transactions. One example from 48 Millfield, albeit bearing the reference "SI", is the same date as the certificate of title signed by her in which she confirmed that she acted for the mortgage applicant and the lender. Another example was a letter to OSL from a lender enclosing the mortgage offer stating that OSL was instructed to act for the lender as well, this being a file dealt with by Ms Rahim. Her explanation that she did not pick this up since she did not read the entire document but was only concerned with the terms of the mortgage offer is not credible. She ultimately accepted that the lender would need solicitors and if not OSL, then some other firm would act for the lender but she never heard from any such other firm;
(6) In fact, at her first substantive SRA interview on 19 June 2007, she said that she would look at the mortgage offer and price, and if she discovered a disparity she would obviously say "what's this" and notify the lender and either they would issue a fresh mortgage offer or they would revalue or do something else. This answer was clearly dealing with her knowledge at the time of working at OSL not subsequently. She was taken to this passage in cross-examination and did not deny she had said it;
(7) Mr Chapman QC submitted that the very fact that she admitted (sometimes) that she had a duty to the lender meant that she was not dishonest because the true fraudster would simply deny it. That is a false point because, in reality, this denial is an impossible position for a solicitor to take. Equally, the fact that her evidence was muddled does not assist. In this context it merely shows that she was unsuccessfully trying to find a way of avoiding having to admit the obvious.
Law Society Guidelines
Green Card
The Textbook
The Handbook
Knowledge of discounts etc
Trusting Mr Islam
Conclusions on general matters and Ms Rahim's knowledge
The Individual Transactions - Introduction
(1) She did not know that she was acting for the lender or owed any duty; and/or(2) She did not know that along with actual reductions or discrepancies in the purchase price, she would have to report the existence of bonuses, discounts or allowances and, for the same reason, directly paid deposits; and/or
(3) She had no idea what she was doing at all and was "really stupid"; and/or
(4) She followed Mr Islam's instructions always to take the price from the mortgage offer when submitting the certificate of title and she trusted him and did it regardless of any evidence to the contrary about the true price; and/or
(5) She saw the certificate of title more as a simple request for funds than a declaration or certificate; and/or
(6) On some of the files she was dealing with she would not or did not see or read certain pieces of correspondence; and/or
(7) In the case of some certificates of title she did not actually have to insert the purchase price because it was already typed in, no doubt electronically inserted from the price stated in the mortgage offer.
(1) As I have already found, she knew that she acted for lenders and that she owed them duties which included informing them of price disparities however caused;(2) She may have been new to conveyancing in practice at the end of 2004 but she is bright and would no doubt have quickly learnt how to do it as her generally careful paperwork showed. She was not at all stupid and had she really been thoroughly at sea, she would not have been able to do the job at all; indeed, though this was no doubt a pressurised environment she appears to have got on with a significant amount of work and performed it entirely to Mr Islam's satisfaction;
(3) It is quite possible that Mr Islam told her to stick to the mortgage offer but I do not accept that she did not know that this would produce misleading information to the lender where there was a discrepancy. The fact that she felt obliged to go along with Mr Islam's dishonesty does not mean that she was not dishonest herself;
(4) She was quite unable to explain to me in any detail how the initial conversation with Mr Islam about following the mortgage offer went and what his explanation was; rather she simply recited it almost as a mantra in most of the examples. What she did not say was that he gave her a justification for misleading the lenders so that she might have thought (however naïvely) that in a particular case her duty did not extend to informing them of the discrepancy;
(5) It is not seriously in dispute that Mr Islam was running in effect a mortgage fraud factory. He could not afford for any of his staff (including Ms Rahim) to be unwilling participants who could be liable to expose him at any time;
(6) Given that almost every certificate of title in the individual transactions was entitled "Certificate of Title" it is absurd to think that any solicitor let alone a highly intelligent one would mistake the nature of the document. It says in terms that it is a certificate of a number of matters to the lender. The fact that this is a necessary adjunct to the request for funds to be provided by solicitors is beside the point. I am quite sure that Ms Rahim knew precisely what it was;
(7) I should add that while this court should be slow to conclude that a solicitor is guilty of fraud, the reality is that mortgage fraud was certainly not rare in the period before the 2008 financial crash. It is not as if this was some complex, sophisticated fraud involving offshore accounts, many parties, financial instruments, money laundering etc.;
(8) The fact that the price might have been pre-printed in some of the certificates of title to be returned is irrelevant; her duty to disclose the true price to the lender did not depend on whether she had to write it in; and moreover as will appear, in at least one case she did manually alter the printed figures;
(9) As discussed below, save in one case, it is clear that Ms Rahim knew all the material facts.
23 Elder Gardens
32 Quantock Gardens
93 Newbury Avenue
38 Dorchester Court
7 Grove Hill House
48 Millfield
4 St John Close
729 Glasshouse
644 Glasshouse
Plot 35 Vanguard House
73 Headcorn Road
Conclusion on the transactions
Conclusions on Issue 1
ISSUE 2: DID MS RAHIM CONDONE DISHONESTY OR FRAUD OUT OF WHICH THE CLAIMS AROSE?
ISSUE 3: WAS MS RAHIM A PARTNER AT THE TIME WHEN SHE WAS HELD OUT TO BE?
ISSUE 4: DID MS RAHIM DISHONESTLY ALLOW HERSELF TO BE HELD OUT AS A PARTNER?
ISSUE 5: IF SO, WAS IT HER APPARENT STATUS AS PARTNER THAT LED TO THE JUDGMENTS BEING ENTERED AGAINST HER PURSUANT TO THE CLAIMS?
ISSUE 6: IF ARCH IS OTHERWISE LIABLE TO INDEMNIFY MS RAHIM, CAN IT RELY UPON THE AGGREGATION CLAUSE?
CONCLUSION