H340
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High Court of Ireland Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> High Court of Ireland Decisions >> McCarthy & Ors -v- Bank of Scotland Plc & Anor [2014] IEHC 340 (02 July 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IEHC/2014/H340.html Cite as: [2014] IEHC 340 |
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Judgment Title: McCarthy & Ors -v- Bank of Scotland Plc & Anor Neutral Citation: [2014] IEHC 340 High Court Record Number: 2012 10545 P Date of Delivery: 02/07/2014 Court: High Court Composition of Court: Judgment by: Hogan J. Status of Judgment: Approved |
Neutral Citation: [2014] IEHC 340 THE HIGH COURT [2012 No. 10545 P] BETWEEN/ DARAGH McCARTHY, PATRICK BEVAN AND DAFYYD HUGHES PLAINTIFFS AND
BANK OF SCOTLAND PLC AND MICHAEL COTTER DEFENDANTS JUDGMENT of Mr. Justice Gerard Hogan delivered on 2nd July, 2014 1. In August, 2006 the predecessor in title of the first defendant bank advanced loan facilities in the sum of €2.2m in favour of the three plaintiffs. The object of these loans was to enable the plaintiffs to acquire two commercial properties in Enniscorthy, Co. Wexford. Like many property investments which were made at this particular time, this investment has not proved to be a success. The two properties in question were charged with separate mortgages. The plaintiffs have indeed defaulted on their loans. These loans were called in April, 2012 and a receiver (who is the second defendant) was subsequently appointed on 1st May, 2012. 2. The plaintiffs commenced the present proceedings in October, 2012. They claim damages for goods and property which have been allegedly stolen. They also claim damages for theft, deception, breach of duty, misrepresentation, causation, fraud, deceit, non-performance, breach of contract, breach of promise, attempted damage by perjury, dishonest and insolvent trading and counterfeiting. It is only fair to say that no claims have been against the receiver, Mr. Cotter, save that his appointment is invalid. That claim is really contingent on the quite separate claims as against the Bank, the basis for which can now be examined. 3. While the plaintiffs have filed an affidavit in support of these claims, it has to be said that the nature of the averments are not the easiest to follow. In many respects the plaintiffs - who are litigants in person - have perfected a style of legal writing which can, without any disrespect, be fairly described as a pastiche copy of the high style of the 19th century pleader. Almost any number of the thirty three paragraphs of this supporting affidavit could be cited for this purpose, but the opening paragraph may serve to give a flavour of what was later to come
6. It is, accordingly, not a great surprise that the Bank should move to seek to have the proceedings struck out as unsustainable in law, whether pursuant to O. 19, r. 28 or pursuant to the inherent jurisdiction of this Court. The illegally created currency argument 8. All of this, however, is entirely irrelevant as a matter of law. At one point Mr. McCarthy seemed to argue that a loan could only be valid if something tangible (such as notes or coin) had been exchanged. At other times Mr. McCarthy suggested that he did not receive a loan of money at all, but rather that as the money advanced had been “created” by the bank, the underlying contract of loan was somehow invalid or inoperative. The plaintiffs also allege that by reason of this the Bank is guilty of fraud or, as they put it, fraud in the factum. 9. It is, I think, a measure of the desperate straits in which some litigants have found themselves as a result of the collapse in the property market from 2008 onwards that arguments of this kind have been seriously advanced, not only in this case but in other recent cases of the same kind, both here and in other jurisdictions, most notably Canada. A version of this fanciful theory had been advanced in Dempsey v. Enviston Credit Union [2006] BCSC 750 where it was described in the following terms by Garson J.:
11. In Freeman v. Bank of Scotland Ireland [2013] IEHC 371 Gilligan J. noted, having referred to a decision of Meads v. Meads, a decision of the Alberta Queens Bench, that:
14. The same can just as readily be said of the contention that a loan must be somehow be made by way of coin or notes, since this runs entirely contrary to modern realities. While the plaintiffs invoke the concept of fraud, nothing whatever has been advanced to support this claim. It is accordingly quite impossible to see how any kind of fraud is involved. The simple reality is that, as Birmingham J. put in Kearney, the plaintiffs have drawn down funds, obtained the benefit of these funds and now have an obligation to repay these loans. 15. It is unnecessary for present purposes to examine in any detail the type of case which comes within the rubric of “frivolous or vexatious” within the meaning of O. 19, r. 28. Of course, in some cases and in some contexts, frivolous or vexatious may mean no more than that the claim is doomed to fail or that it has no reasonable prospect of success: see, e.g., the comments of Barron J. in Farley v. Ireland, 1st May, 1997, and those of Birmingham J. in Novak v. Data Protection Commissioner [2012] IEHC 449, [2013] 1 ILRM 207 (where similar words appear in s. 10(1)(b) of the Data Protection Act 1988). To that extent, O. 19, r. 28 overlaps to some degree with the inherent jurisdiction of the court to strike out unsustainable claims. 16. Yet the very wording of O. 19, r. 28 demonstrates that this jurisdiction is also necessarily broader than the inherent jurisdiction to strike out unsustainable claims which was identified by Costello J. in Barry v. Buckley [1981] I.R. 306 and which analysis has been consistently followed in a host of subsequent cases. The concepts of frivolousness and vexatiousness are also broad enough to include those categories of cases where claims which are tenuous, flimsy, entirely lacking in substance, foolish or absurd have been advanced. I regret to say that each of these descriptions are also entirely apt so far as the plaintiffs’ “money for nothing” arguments are concerned. 17. The other arguments advanced by the plaintiffs are equally devoid of merit. It was contended that the Bank was insolvent at the time it made the loans. While that claim has been strenuously denied, it is sufficient to say - as Gilligan J. said in Freeman - that even if this were so, this would not affect the validity of the loans. 18. The same applies to the breach of contract arguments. In the replies to particular the plaintiffs state that the Bank “has wilfully monetized our promissory notes/loans and has possibly securitized our deed or mortgage.” It is clear, incidentally, from the evidence of John Burnet, head of Credit Sanctioning at the Bank that these particular commercial mortgages were not securitized. It is further stated that as a result of the “monetizing” of the promissory notes/loans that the Bank is “not a part of interest in our estate and thus, the first defendant is fraudulent coercing the second defendants to action a defective deed of appointment.” It is not easy to decipher what exactly is meant by this. It seems to be just another version of the argument that the plaintiffs never entered into a valid contract of loan. Again, for the reasons stated, this claim is entirely unmeritorious and lacking in any substance whatever. Conclusions 20. I regret to say, however, that this is the only way in which these claims can be characterised. In these circumstances, I find myself coerced to the conclusion that these proceedings should be struck out pursuant to O. 19, r. 28 on the ground that they are frivolous and vexatious.
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