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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 >> DNB Mortgages v Bullock & Lees [2000] EWCA Civ 20 (28 January 2000) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2000/20.html Cite as: [2000] EWCA Civ 20 |
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DNB MORTGAGES |
Appellant | |
- and - |
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BULLOCK & LEES |
Respondent |
LORD JUSTICE ROBERT WALKER:
Introductory
The appellant DnB Mortgages Ltd ("DNB") is a mortgage lender. It sued
the respondents Bullock & Lees ("the surveyors"), a firm of chartered
surveyors, for damages for negligence in overvaluing a house for the purposes
of a remortgage effected in 1990. The surveyors pleaded that the action was
statute-barred. A preliminary issue was directed and was heard by Mr Marriott
QC sitting as a deputy judge of the Queen's Bench Division. On 27 April 1999
the deputy judge gave judgment in favour of the surveyors. DNB appeals to this
court with the permission of the deputy judge. The issues on the appeal are
whether the deputy judge misdirected himself as to the test for determining
when DNB's cause of action accrued, and whether he erred in two of his findings
of fact. Mr Derek Wood QC (who did not appear below, but in this court
appeared for DNB with Mr Marc Dight, who did appear below) has sought to raise
a new point which was not argued below and does not appear in the notice of
appeal or in Mr Dight's written skeleton argument.
The facts
Most of the facts are not in dispute. The mortgagors, Mr and Mrs Fitzgerald,
had since 1988 owned a freehold house at 19 Wesley Road, Kingsworthy, a village
near Winchester. The house had been built in 1987 and was part of a new
development. It had been bought with a mortgage loan of about £113,000
from Confederated Life Mortgage Services and in January 1989 Mr and Mrs
Fitzgerald granted a second charge to Homestead Finance to secure a loan of
about £23,000. Mr Fitzgerald was at that time employed as a producer by
Sky Television plc (or one of its subsidiaries) at an annual salary of about
£40,000. Mrs Fitzgerald was not in paid employment.
In August 1989 the Fitzgeralds, acting through mortgage brokers, applied to
DNB, (under its then name of BB Mortgage Trust Ltd), for a remortgage advance
of £136,000 in order to clear both existing charges. The remortgage was
to be effected in conjunction with a low-start endowment policy to be issued by
Scottish Life Assurance. The surveyors were instructed to value the house. In
a written report dated 22 August 1989 they valued it at £170,000. The two
valuation experts who gave evidence before the deputy judge agreed that that
valuation was excessive and that the correct figure would have been
£145,000.
The remortgage was to be a status mortgage, that is a mortgage granted after
DNB had made its own enquiries as to the mortgagor's financial standing. Its
practice at that time was to advance a maximum of 80 per cent of the value of
the security under a status mortgage, as against 65 per cent for a
self-certified (or non-status) mortgage. DNB and Scottish Life between them
put in hand searches and enquiries addressed to the existing chargees and Mr
Fitzgerald's employer. They obtained satisfactory responses.
In October 1989 DNB made a remortgage offer. On 5 December 1989 the
Fitzgeralds' solicitor informed DNB that his clients had decided not to proceed
with the transaction. It is not clear what their reasons were, and by the end
of January 1990 they were again wishing to proceed. But the delay caused by
the status enquiries and the Fitzgeralds' changes of mind can be seen, with
hindsight, as significant, because it is now notorious that by the end of 1989
the housing market had peaked and was going into a steep decline.
At the beginning of February 1990 DNB made a second remortgage offer and the
remortgage for £136,000 was completed on 5 February 1990. No new
valuation was obtained. In addition to the basic advance of £136,000 the
Fitzgeralds' mortgage account was debited with various items such as insurance
premiums with the result that the debit balance at the end of February 1990 was
about £138,500.
In the meantime Mr Fitzgerald had, unknown to DNB, ceased to be employed
within the Sky Television group. There is no clear evidence as to the
circumstances in which his employment came to an end. He had become
self-employed and his new business venture did not prosper (but again, there is
no clear or detailed evidence as to the circumstances in which it failed). On
15 March 1990 the Fitzgeralds granted a second charge to Nationwide. The
Fitzgeralds continued to pay the requisite monthly instalments to DNB until the
end of January 1991, when the first default occurred. About £144,500 was
then due under the mortgage. Some payments were made between January and June
1991, but many direct debits were unpaid and recharged to the account. No
payment was made to DNB after June 1991. On 3 February 1992 Mr Fitzgerald was
adjudicated bankrupt on his own petition. His statement of affairs valued the
house at £140,000 with a shortfall to the secured creditors (DNB
£161,000, Nationwide £12,500) of £33,500. It disclosed other
unsecured creditors (mostly banks and credit card companies) to the extent of
at least £45,000. DNB took possession of the house in October 1992 and
sold it in January 1993 for £100,000.
DNB's writ was not issued until 8 May 1996. By then any claim founded in
contract was clearly statute-barred and the live issue was as to the date of
accrual of a cause of action founded in tort. Since damage is an essential
ingredient of the cause of action in tort, the issue could be restated as
whether DNB had suffered actionable loss before 8 May 1990, six years before
the issue of the writ. At that date the total sum due to DNB under the
mortgage was £140,080. The Fitzgeralds were still making the requisite
monthly payments under the mortgage, but anyone with a full knowledge of their
financial circumstances might have come to the conclusion that they were
getting into serious difficulties. There was evidence on this point from two
experts on credit, Mr Denman on behalf of DNB and Mr Challinor on behalf of the
surveyors.
Although the valuation experts (Mr Gaskell FRICS on behalf of DNB and Mr Clark
ARICS on behalf of the surveyors) agreed that the house should have been valued
at £145,000 in August 1989, they did not agree as to its value on 8 May
1990. They were not asked about its value on 5 February 1990 and the deputy
judge made no finding on that point (which is a serious difficulty in Mr Wood's
way in seeking to raise a new point on appeal). DNB's expert put its value on
8 May 1990 at £140,000. The surveyors' expert put it at £130,000.
The deputy judge preferred the latter figure. He also found on the balance of
probabilities that the value of Mr Fitzgerald's personal covenant, as at 8 May
1990, could not have been as much as £10,000. Those are the findings of
fact which DNB has challenged (and on the second of which the surveyors have
put in a respondent's notice). First, however, it is necessary to address the
questions of legal principle.
The background to Nykredit (No 2)
In this court, as before the deputy judge, counsel's submissions have centred
on the decision of the House of Lords in Nykredit Mortgage Bank v Edward
Erdman Group (No 2) [1997] 1 WLR 1627 ("Nykredit (No 2)"). But
before any detailed consideration of the speeches of Lord Nicholls and Lord
Hoffmann (with which the rest of their lordships agreed) it is necessary to put
that case in context. The dramatic rise and fall of the property market before
and after 1989 led to many claims for professional negligence against valuers,
and drew attention to problems (on which there was some, but not much, earlier
authority) as to the principles on which damages should be assessed in such
cases.
In Hayes v James & Charles Dodd [1990] 2 AER 815 (not a valuation
case, but a case decided in 1988 about solicitors' negligent advice as to a
right of way) Staughton LJ (at pp 818-9) drew a distinction, for the purposes
of assessing damages, between what he termed the `no-transaction' case and the
`successful-transaction' case. That distinction was widely adopted for some
years (see in particular the judgment of this court in the Banque
Bruxelles group of cases, given in February 1995: [1996] QB 375 at pp.404-5
and 409-12; [1995] 2 AER 769 at pp.840-1 and 845-8). But in June 1996 it was
decisively rejected on the appeal to the House of Lords in the same group of
cases, reported as South Australia Asset Management Corporation v York
Montague [1997] AC 191 ("Saamco"). Lord Hoffmann (with whom the
rest of their lordships agreed) said (at p.218),
"Every transaction induced by a negligent valuation is a "no-transaction" case
in the sense that ex hypothesi the transaction which actually happened would
not have happened. A "successful transaction" in the sense in which that
expression is used by the Court of Appeal (meaning a disastrous transaction
which would have been somewhat less disastrous if the lender had known the true
value of the property) is only the most common example of a case in which the
court finds that, on the balance of probability, some other transaction would
have happened instead. The distinction is not based on any principle and
should in my view be abandoned."
The central issue in each of these cases was the extent of the liability of a
negligent valuer in a falling market, and the essence of the decision, as
summarised by Lord Hoffmann in Nykredit (No 2) [1997] 1 WLR 1627, 1638,
is that
"the valuer is responsible only for the consequences of the lender having too
little security."
It will be necessary to return to Saamco but that will serve as a brief
introduction.
Nykredit (No 2)
Nykredit (No 2) was heard by the House of Lords during 1997 because the
issue of interest on damages had been adjourned. The effect of the earlier
decision was that Nykredit, the mortgage lender, was entitled to damages of
£1.4m (being the difference between the negligent valuation of £3.5m
and the true historic value, as agreed by the parties, of £2.1m)
recoverable from Edward Erdman, the valuers. Nykredit had advanced £2.45m
for a commercial development in March 1990, so that its lending was
inadequately secured from the start. The borrower's covenant was worthless.
The House of Lords had no difficulty in concluding that Nykredit's cause of
action arose at the time of the transaction in March 1990, although (for
reasons mentioned in the report at p.1637) interest was awarded only from
December 1990, when the loss reached £1.4m.
So in Nykredit (No 2) the House of Lords was not concerned with any
issue arising on the Limitation Act 1980. But as Lord Nicholls observed (at
p.1630) that is the context in which problems as to the date of accrual of a
cause of action usually arise. Both Lord Nicholls (at pp.1630 and 1633) and
Lord Hoffmann (at p.1638) left no doubt as to their awareness of the
implications of the decision for the purposes of the Limitation Act.
The deputy judge quoted extensively from the speeches of Lord Nicholls and
Lord Hoffmann. Both speeches call for full and careful attention and there is
an obvious danger in selective `soundbites'. But it is right to set out what
Lord Nicholls (at p.1631) termed `the basic comparison':
"Thus, typically in the case of a negligent valuation of an intended loan
security, the basic comparison called for is between (a) the amount of money
lent by the plaintiff, which he would still have had in the absence of the loan
transaction, plus interest at a proper rate, and (b) the value of the rights
acquired, namely the borrower's covenant and the true value of the overvalued
property."
Lord Nicholls also said (at p.1632)
"The basic comparison gives rise to issues of fact. The moment at which the
comparison first reveals a loss will depend on the facts of each case. Such
difficulties as there may be are evidential and practical difficulties, not
difficulties in principle."
After rejecting submissions directed to fixing the date of the first loss at
the realisation of the security, or at the first act of default, Lord Nicholls
added (at p.1633)
"I recognise that in practice the basic comparison may well not reveal a loss
so long as the borrower's covenant is performing satisfactorily. For this
reason there is little risk of a lender finding his action statute-barred
before he needs to resort to the deficient security. But it would be unwise to
elevate this practical consideration into a rigid proposition of law."
Lord Hoffmann said (at pp.1638-9),
"Proof of loss attributable to a breach of the relevant duty of care is an
essential element in a cause of action for the tort of negligence. Given that
there has been negligence, the cause of action will therefore arise when the
plaintiff has suffered loss in respect of which the duty was owed. It follows
that in the present case such loss will be suffered when the lender can show
that he is worse off than he would have been if the security had been worth the
sum advised by the valuer. The comparison is between the lender's actual
position and what it would have been if the valuation had been correct.
There may be cases in which it is possible to demonstrate that such loss is
suffered immediately upon the loan being made. The lender may be able to show
that the rights which he has acquired as lender are worth less in the open
market than they would have been if the security had not been overvalued. But
I think that this would be difficult to prove in a case in which the lender's
personal covenant still appears good and interest payments are being duly made.
On the other hand, loss will easily be demonstrable if the borrower has
defaulted, so that the lender's recovery has become dependent upon the
realisation of his security and that security is inadequate. On the other
hand, I do not accept Mr Berry's submission that no loss can be shown until the
security has actually been realised. Relevant loss is suffered when the lender
is financially worse off by reason of a breach of the duty of care than he
would otherwise have been. This is, I think, in accordance with the decisions
of the Court of Appeal in UBAF Ltd v European American Banking
Corporation [1984] QB 713 and First National Commercial Bank Plc v
Humberts [1995] 2 All E R 673."
The issues on this appeal
The oral arguments presented to this court by Mr Wood have, as already noted,
differed significantly from those relied on below and those outlined in the
notice of appeal and Mr Dight's written skeleton argument. Mr Wood sought to
put forward a new and radical argument based on Saamco; and while not
formally conceding the point, he addressed no oral argument to the contention
that the deputy judge erred in preferring Mr Clark's figure of £130,000 to
Mr Gaskell's figure of £140,000 for the value of the house at 8 May 1990.
Mr Wood did not abandon, but did not vigorously press, the argument that the
deputy judge erred as to the burden of proof of when the cause of action arose.
Mr Wood was right not to press the point as to the valuation of the security
at 8 May 1990. The deputy judge gave convincing reasons for preferring Mr
Clark's figure, both by reference to national and local indices of house prices
and by reference to comparables (which, in the case of a newly-built estate of
similar houses, were likely to be more than usually reliable). There is no
reason to disturb the finding of the deputy judge who saw and heard the two
valuers.
That leaves essentially three issues: the burden of proof, the value of the
mortgagor's personal covenant and (if this court permits it to be taken as a
new point) the Saamco point on the falling market. The most convenient
course is to take those three issues in that order.
The burden of proof
The evidential and practical difficulties thrown up by this case show the
importance of the burden of proof as to the date of accrual of the claimant's
cause of action. As to that, the deputy judge said,
"The authorities are clear that the burden of establishing that the date of
loss falls within the six-year period lies upon the claimants. Once the
claimants have so proved, the burden passes to the defendants to show that the
apparent accrual of a cause of action is misleading, and that in reality the
cause of action accrued at an earlier date"
That rather baffling passage is explained by the authority to which the deputy
judge then referred, Cartledge v Jopling [1963] AC 758. That was a
claim by several steel dressers who were suffering from pneumoconiosis
attributable to defective ventilation in a factory. Many of them had worked in
the factory since the 1930's but in most cases they did not become aware of
their condition until mobile X-ray units came into general use in about 1950.
The writs had been issued on 1 October 1956. That was the context in which
Lord Pearce, after referring to what the Court of Appeal had said about the
burden of proof ([1962] 1 QB 189, 202, 208) said (at p.784)
"I agree that when a defendant raises the Statute of Limitations the initial
onus is on the plaintiff to prove that his cause of action accrued within the
statutory period. When, however, the plaintiff has proved an accrual of damage
within the six years (for instance, the diagnosis by X-ray in 1953 of hitherto
unsuspected pneumoconiosis) the burden passes to the defendants to show that
the apparent accrual of a cause of action is misleading and that in reality the
cause of action accrued at an earlier date."
That principle was followed and applied by this court, in the circumstances of
a claim for negligent overvaluation, in First National Commercial Bank v
Humberts [1995] 2 AER 673, 678.
In the present case the undisputed facts that Mr Fitzgerald obtained a status
mortgage and managed to pay the requisite monthly instalments until January
1991 were sufficient to raise a rebuttable presumption that the mortgagor's
covenant was good until then; in other words, to indicate an apparent accrual
of DNB's cause of action within the limitation period. It was then for the
surveyors to adduce evidence to show that that apparent accrual within the
six-year period was misleading. The deputy judge was therefore wrong to treat
the burden as being, without qualification, on DNB. But he concluded that even
if he were wrong on that point, the surveyors had discharged the burden of
proving loss before 8 May 1990. He reached that conclusion on the basis that
at that date the mortgage debt was £140,080, the house was worth
£130,000, and the value of the covenant (on the balance of probabilities)
could not be as much as £10,000. The value of the covenant is the next
issue which must be addressed.
The value of the covenant
In some areas of financial or commercial activity there is nothing surprising
in the notion that it is possible to assess the worth of a covenant to pay
money. The value of the tenant's covenant is a commonplace in the valuation of
a reversion to property let on a long lease, and credit ratings (as well as
interest rates and redemption yields) influence the market in corporate bonds.
But in these areas the valuer or the investor is normally concerned with a
general appreciation of credit-worthiness rather than any attempt at precise
valuation. The value of a mortgagor's covenant, for the purpose of assessing
damages for negligent overvaluation, seems to have been considered only rarely,
notably by Devlin J in Eagle Star Insurance v Gale & Power (1955)
166 EG 37 and by this court (on very unusual facts) in London and South of
England BS v Stone [1983] 1 WLR 1242 (see especially the dissenting
judgment of Sir Denys Buckley at pp 1259-60).
Nykredit (No 2) makes clear that the `basic comparison' described in
the speech of Lord Nicholls requires (see p.1631) the valuation of
"the rights acquired, namely the borrower's covenant and the true value of the
overvalued property."
But it is not entirely clear how the borrower's covenant is to be valued. It
was unnecessary for the House of Lords to go into the point, since Nykredit's
borrower was a single-asset company and was in default from the inception of
the transaction. In their speeches both Lord Nicholls and Lord Hoffmann show
some inclination to treat the various mortgages as marketable securities to be
valued on an open market basis. Lord Hoffmann referred in terms (at p.1639, in
a passage already cited) to the open market, and Lord Nicholls (at p.1633)
referred with approval to a submission made by counsel about a prospective
buyer inspecting the loan book of a commercial lender. (Mr Denman's evidence
was that a prospective buyer of a loan book would not attempt to evaluate every
covenant and would be concerned only with non-performing loans disclosed in any
sample.)
However Lord Nicholls and Lord Hoffmann both pointed out that no loss may be
apparent so long as a covenant is performing satisfactorily: see at pp.1633 and
1639 respectively, in passages already cited. In Saamco itself Lord
Hoffmann made the same point more vividly ([1997] AC at p.220, in a paraphrase
of leading counsel's argument which Lord Hoffmann was however accepting on this
particular point),
"The court was not obliged to take the borrower to be the prosperous tycoon
which everyone thought him to be at the date of the valuation but could have
regard to the fact that he had afterwards been shown to be a fraudulent
bankrupt."
(It is not of course suggested that Mr Fitzgerald was fraudulent in this case,
although he has been criticised for filling in a MIRAS form on 12 February 1990
indicating that he was still employed in the Sky Television group.)
There is therefore some degree of tension, in Nykredit (No 2), between
the approach of valuing the mortgagor's covenant as part of a bundle of rights
comprised in a marketable security (and to be valued as the market would have
valued it at the time, without hindsight) and the approach of valuing it on
fundamentals (that it, on the objective evidence, available when the case is
heard, of the true state of affairs at the valuation date). In Nykredit (No
2) either approach led to the same result. In this case the two approaches
might lead to different results. So far as they would lead to different
results, I consider that the mortgagor's covenant had to be valued on the
evidence available to the deputy judge, restricted though it was, as to the
true facts. Apart from Mr Denman's passing reference to what a hypothetical
purchaser of DNB's mortgage book might have done, the deputy judge had no
evidence on which to found an `open market' valuation; and the requisite
valuation is of Mr Fitzgerald's covenant on its own, not as a tiny component of
an entire loan book. Moreover an enquiry into the true facts is in line with
the conclusion which the House of Lords reluctantly reached in Cartledge v
Jopling, that the steel dressers' causes of action had accrued when they
were first affected by the insidious disease, even though no one knew about it.
Since then the Latent Damage Act 1986 has redressed that injustice, and (as
Lord Nicholls noted in Nykredit (No 2) at p.1633G) s.14A of the
Limitation Act 1980 would generally be available where the loss on the basic
comparison was revealed only at a late stage. It is also in line with Lord
Nicholls' general observation (at p.1633D) that
"within the bounds of sense and reasonableness the policy of the law should be
to advance, rather than retard, the accrual of a cause of action."
The deputy judge extracted from Nykredit (No 2) the conclusion that
"in practice the basic comparison may well not reveal a loss so long as the
borrower's covenant is performing satisfactorily. It must therefore be a
question of fact in each case at what stage the basic comparison shows a
loss."
Here he was doing his best to follow the guidance given by the House of Lords
and it is reasonably clear, from the way in which he proceeded, that he was
enquiring into the actual facts of the particular case, rather than attempting
an `open market' approach.
The deputy judge had written reports from, and saw and heard, the two experts
as to credit. Their brief agreed statement recorded that
"It was agreed that any assessment of the value of the borrowers' covenant must
be based on available evidence relating to the financial circumstances of the
borrowers.
Based upon the evidence seen, it was not possible to attribute any specific
value to the borrowers' covenant as at the material time.
Not agreed: It was possible to say that the covenant had some unspecific value
at the material time."
The overall effect of this agreed statement is obscure. It seems to reflect
very different approaches in that Mr Denman (called for DNB) was extrapolating
forward from the situation when the remortgage when granted, when DNB was
satisfied as to Mr Fitzgerald's status (and did not know that he had ceased to
be employed in the Sky Television group); whereas Mr Challinor (called for the
surveyors) was extrapolating back from Mr Fitzgerald's statement of affairs
filed after his bankruptcy and showing total unsecured liabilities of over
£87,000 (or over £97,000 if the house were valued not at
£140,000 but at £130,000). Apart from the house Mr Fitzgerald's
other assets appear to have had little value.
The deputy judge said that he agreed with Mr Denman that the personal covenant
must have had some value, since whatever Mr Fitzgerald's financial
circumstances, he continued to pay the monthly instalments for almost a year
after the remortgage. Apart from that the deputy judge did not comment on the
evidence of the credit experts. But he must have had the statement of affairs
in mind, since he had earlier in his judgment referred to the unsecured debts
of £45,000 as at Mr Fitzgerald's bankruptcy. He had also referred to the
second charge which was granted to Nationwide in March 1990. It would have
been helpful if the deputy judge had made plain that it was on that evidence,
together with Mr Fitzgerald's lack of salaried employment after January 1990,
that he based his conclusion that it was most improbable that the value of the
covenant, at 8 May 1990, exceeded £10,000 (which amounted to a finding, on
the balance of probabilities, that it was less than £10,000).
Nevertheless the deputy judge's conclusion was justified by the evidence before
him. In the circumstances it is not necessary to consider whether the judge
should (as the respondent's notice suggests) have gone further and made a
positive finding that the covenant had no value.
The `falling market' point
The new point which Mr Wood sought to raise was that the deputy judge's
approach was inconsistent with the fundamental principle which the House of
Lords had enunciated in Saamco, and recognised in Nykredit (No
2). Mr Wood drew particular attention to what Lord Nicholls said near the
beginning of his speech in Nykredit (No 2) (at p.1630, after a reference
to Forster v Outred & Co [1982] 1 WLR 86, 94)
"... the loss must be relevant loss. To constitute actual damage for the
purpose of constituting a tort, the loss sustained must be loss falling within
the measure of damage applicable to the wrong in question."
Similarly Lord Hoffmann said (at p.1638),
"In order to establish a cause of action in negligence he must show that his
loss is attributable to the overvaluation, that is, that he is worse off than
he would have been if it had been correct."
The point raised by Mr Wood is an important and difficult one, and it is
regrettable that it was not raised sooner. The result has been that this court
has been deprived of any findings and reasoning of the deputy judge on the
point, and neither the court nor Mr Cooper knew that it was to be taken until
the beginning of the oral argument. The difficulty was increased because the
time estimate for the hearing of the appeal was already looking very short.
The principles on which an appellate court should decide an application to
raise a new point have been stated as follows (in relation to an appeal to the
House of Lords, but in terms which also apply to an appeal to this court) by
Lord Watson in Connecticut Five Insurance v Kavanagh [1892] AC 473,
480,
"When a question of law is raised for the first time in a court of last resort,
upon the construction of a document, or upon facts either admitted or proved
beyond controversy, it is not only competent but expedient, in the interests of
justice, to entertain the plea. The expediency of adopting that course may be
doubted, when the plea cannot be disposed of without deciding nice questions of
fact, in considering which the court of ultimate review is placed in a much
less advantageous position than the courts below. But their Lordships have no
hesitation in holding that the course ought not, in any case, to be followed,
unless the court is satisfied that the evidence upon which they are asked to
decide establishes beyond doubt that the facts, if fully investigated, would
have supported the new plea."
In order to explain his new point graphically Mr Wood produced a simple but
striking diagram, with the value of the house (in thousands of pounds) on the
vertical axis and the lapse of time (in years) on the horizontal axis.
Straight lines (one showing a uniformly rising value for the house, and the
other horizontal to indicate a constant value of £145,000) showed two
hypothetical states of affairs, and a third irregular line (dipping fairly
steeply, then flattening out and then rising back to £145,000 after about
4½ years) gave at least a rough indication of the actual market value of
the house during the period after the overvaluation and remortgage. Over these
lines was plotted a dotted line indicating the amount from time to time due
under the remortgage. The diagram was intended to demonstrate that if the
deputy judge had followed the principle enunciated in Saamco and
recognised (in particular, by the reference to relevant loss) in Nykredit
(No 2), DNB would be seen not to have suffered any relevant loss (and so
not to have had a cause of action) until some time in 1992 at the earliest.
The time available at the hearing did not allow a full discussion of this
diagram, but it appears to me to be open to criticism on two grounds, the first
of which must be decisive in the appeal. The first ground of objection is that
it did not take account of the significant lapse of time (about 5½ months)
between the date of the valuation by the surveyors and the date when DNB relied
on the valuation by making the remortgage advance. By that time (as Mr Wood
accepted) the true value of the house was almost certainly less than
£145,000 (and it is rather surprising that the surveyors' defence did not
rely on this point to plead contributory negligence). Had the overvaluation
been more exorbitant (as in Saamco itself, where the security was valued
at £15m, was actually worth £5m, and was sold for £2.5m) the
difference in value might have been insignificant. But in this case the
tolerances are relatively narrow and the absence of any finding as to the true
value of the house on 5 February 1990 becomes significant. On a straight-line
apportionment between £145,000 on 22 August 1989 and £130,000 on 8
May 1990, the value on 5 February 1990 would have been only marginally over
£135,000, and less than the debit balance of about £138,500 due under
the remortgage at the end of February 1990. So this is not a case in which the
court can be satisfied (in Lord Watson's words) that the evidence established
beyond doubt that the facts, if fully investigated, would be found to support
the new point.
On that ground alone I would not allow DNB to raise this new point on appeal.
But I would add, although conscious that the court has not heard full argument,
that Mr Wood's diagram seems open to the further objection that it does not
include any depiction either of the amount of the overvaluation, or of the
value of the mortgagor's covenant. The former is a constant, the latter is a
variable (illustrated by Lord Hoffmann's example of the bankrupt tycoon). The
basic comparison called for by Nykredit (No 2) as the means of
ascertaining relevant loss is therefore more aptly illustrated by two
parallel horizontal lines (representing the original overvaluation and the
original true value) and a third line (which may not be horizontal) depicting
the amount (if any) by which the value of the mortgagor's covenant increases
the value of the security. When it demonstrably fails to fill the gap, the
mortgage lender suffers a loss and has a cause of action, unless there has been
in the meantime either a rise in the true market value of the security,
or a reduction in the amount due under the mortgage, so as to prevent any loss.
That is probably an over-simplification but it seems closer to the general
effect of Saamco and Nykredit (No 2).
For these reasons I would dismiss this appeal.
MR JUSTICE SCOTT BAKER:
I agree.
LORD JUSTICE HENRY:
I also agree.
Order: Appeal dismissed with costs; cross-appeal no order as to costs;
application for permission to appeal to the House of Lords refused.