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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 >> UCB Group Ltd. v Hedworth [2003] EWCA Civ 1717 (04 December 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2003/1717.html Cite as: [2003] EWCA Civ 1717 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM CARLISLE COUNTY COURT
(Mr Recorder Narayan)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE JONATHAN PARKER
and
LORD JUSTICE LONGMORE
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UCB Group Ltd |
Claimant/ Respondent |
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- and - |
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Mrs Gillian Hedworth |
Defendant/ Appellant |
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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)
Mrs Hedworth in person.
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Jonathan Parker :
INTRODUCTION
THE RELEVANT FACTUAL BACKGROUND
"On none of the occasions when I signed documentation at the Whitley Bay branch of Barclays was I given any explanation or advice by anybody from the Bank in connection with the nature, effect or contents of any document that I was asked to sign. I was simply directed to the place on an open page where I was to sign."
"My consent to the sale and Mr Hedworth's retention of the proceeds was only given in consideration of his agreement that all of his property interests and assets whether in his sole name or in our joint names would be transferred to me. I acted in reliance on Mr Hedworth's promise, allowing the items to be sold. .... At the time of the sale of the antiques Mr Hedworth told me that he would execute a Deed of Gift in my favour in respect of all the properties that he owned."
"During the subsequent week or so Mr Hedworth showed to me what I understood to be the transfer document. I was not given a copy and understood it was kept by Mr Hedworth at his office."
"Good security of two office premises and client's substantial second home".
"To restructure bank bridging facility and overdraft."
"To restructure bridging facility and overdraft."
"Please ensure that the terms and conditions of the Legal Charge relating to the property at Hause Farm are fully explained to Mrs Hedworth and that arrangements are made for her to have independent legal advice if she has any doubts as to the effect of this document."
"On the 20th December 1990 the Barclays bridging loan account was repaid in full as were all other accounts with Barclays of Mr Hedworth save for part of a loan account in respect of [Fowler Street]. This occurred when net funds of £428,110.75 were advanced to Mr Hedworth by UCB. .... I signed the mortgage documentation over Hause Farm having been informed by Mr Hedworth that the purpose of the transaction was the provision of funds to replace the Barclays bridging loan for the purchase of the Martindale properties. I was informed neither of the amount being borrowed nor that [Fowler Street and Victoria Road] were also being taken as security by UCB. At that stage I was working on the basis that a Deed of Gift had been executed transferring those properties to my sole name in any event."
"40. [The remortgage] transaction was dealt with by Robert Danby, an unqualified clerk employed by Mr Hedworth at Hedworths solicitors. .... Needless to say it will come as no surprise when I state that at no stage was it explained to me that I was becoming responsible for debts in excess of £430,000 nor did I understand from what was said to me by Mr Danby that it would not be in my best interests to proceed with this transaction. I had no comprehension that the effect of the transaction was that if there were any default in payment that I would end up not only losing this property but become responsible for major indebtedness. I can say categorically that Mr Danby never gave me any information or advice whatsoever as to the effect of the mortgage deed in favour of [UCB]. He told me simply, whilst procuring my execution of the deed, that the property Hause Farm was being remortgaged. I had no idea that this related also to a refinancing of Mr Hedworth's other indebtedness to Barclays and securities in respect of properties which I believed had been transferred to me.
41. If the circumstances of this transaction had been fully explained to me and if I had been afforded the opportunity of obtaining independent legal advice it is inconceivable that I would have executed a deed in favour of UCB. .... I have to state clearly now that if I had been advised by Mr Danby or indeed by anybody else that in executing the deed in relation to Hause Farm that I was assuming liability in respect of a debt [of] £430,000 plus, or indeed any debt greater than the amount which I actually thought at the time was attributable to Hause Farm, I would simply not have executed the charge deed. I would have immediately seen the risk which attached to me and my family.
42. I did not receive independent advice about this transaction. I was provided with no documentation which showed to me the amount which Mr Hedworth was actually borrowing and I did not know that he already had debts in that sum which I was being in effect asked to cover. Mr Danby was either unable or unwilling to advise me about the full extent of the obligations that I was entering into. .... I do not know whether he considered that I was fully acquainted with what was going on, but if that was the assumption that he made it was a very mistaken assumption. ...."
".... the transaction was not on its face to the Second Defendant's financial advantage, the sole benefit of the same being the release of a charge on the premises, which charge could (and in the [event] actually was) voidable by the Second Defendant in any event."
THE JUDGE'S JUDGMENT
"On that first point, as I have said before, I deal with them together – the undue influence and the misrepresentation; as I have said, it is agreed that the burden of proof is on the claimant and it is the civil standard. On her behalf it was submitted that her evidence is unchallenged. It is not suggested she is lying and therefore the transaction took place. No one suggests it did not. I should find in her favour unless she is found to be lying.
Explanations were given as to evidence which has not been adduced. I repeat that this defendant, Gillian Margaret Hedworth, is and has been, and certainly appeared to me to be, an intelligent lady who has and had qualified as a teacher. She had certainly been involved in the farming business – not for very long – but certainly she had some involvement in it. She certainly exercised her independent judgment in relation to the financial affairs of the family as she asserted in her affidavit that only on the basis that all of the first defendant's assets would be transferred to her by way of deed of gift is the basis upon which she allowed him, as it were, to sell her antiques.
She certainly displayed sound and/or lucky judgment, I suppose, in buying antiques. I do not think she said cheaply but certainly over the years she said they were worth, I think, £250,000 when they were sold, she asserts, by Mr Hedworth for £110,000.
In my judgment I find it is not likely that she would have simply gone into the office where Mr Danby apparently had this document opened at the particular page and simply signed it. She had already – upon her evidence – been pre-warned, as it were, about the judgment or lack of judgment of the first defendant, her husband, some months earlier, which had cost her, some would argue, £250,000 and that was money injected into the business.
I find that she would not have acted in the way she asserts she did in respect of Mr Danby and the signing of that document. The result of that is that in my judgment she would inevitably, in the circumstances she found herself in December 1990, with Mr Danby, have asked questions. The document was there to peruse if she wished. She was an intelligent lady who could obviously read and if there were any matters that she was suspicious of, she would have done.
To put it very shortly, in my judgment, rejecting as I do her evidence in respect of that matter, I find that she has not established on the civil burden of proof that there was any undue influence and/or misrepresentation by the first defendant in respect of the deed of December 1990.
It is unwise to continue, as it were, to make findings. I am conscious, however, that this matter has taken some three days and the parties have expended a lot of energy and research on the matter. On the other hand there may be, I know not, other allied actions where other tribunals have to make findings, so that I have to balance trying to assist the parties with not pre-empting any decisions by any other tribunals. On balance it appears to me wiser not to pre-empt any decisions by any other tribunals which may follow in other matters."
THE ISSUES ON THIS APPEAL
Ground 2: That the nature of the remortgage transaction was not such as to put UCB on notice of the risk of undue influence or misrepresentation.
Ground 3: That UCB is entitled to possession of Hause Farm by subrogation to the Barclays Charge.
Ground 4: That UCB is entitled to possession of Hause Farm by subrogation to the Barclays Charge even if Mrs Hedworth has (as she asserted in the Barclays action) a right to rectification of the Barclays Charge so that it secured only the balance from time to time owing on the bridging loan account.
Ground 5: That UCB is entitled to possession of Hause Farm by 'sub-subrogation' to the unpaid vendor's lien of the executors of Mrs Barraclough as vendors of Hause Farm.
THE ARGUMENTS ON THIS APPEAL
"An astute wife would at least have taken independent advice relating to the deed and ensured that it was registered. I consider that her conduct is consistent with a vague concept of desiring some protection for the large sum she had handed over, but that does not necessarily defeat her claim that she was generally influenced by her husband in business matters. She had, after all, reluctantly been persuaded to raise £110,000 by selling her family antiques.
I therefore hold that there is evidence of circumstances giving rise to the presumption of undue influence, which has not been rebutted."
CONCLUSIONS
Ground 2 in the Respondent's Notice
"48. As to the type of transactions where a bank is put on inquiry, the case where a wife becomes surety for her husband's debts is, in this context, a straightforward case. The bank is put on inquiry. On the other side of the line is the case where money is being advanced, or has been advanced, to husband and wife jointly. In such a case the bank is not put on inquiry, unless the bank is aware the loan is being made for the husband's purposes, as distinct from their joint purposes. That was decided in CIBC Mortgages plc. v. Pitt ...."
"What, then, was known to the plaintiff that could put it on inquiry so as to fix it with constructive notice?
So far as the plaintiff was aware, the transaction consisted of a loan to husband and wife to finance the discharge of an existing mortgage on [the matrimonial home], and as to the balance to be applied in buying a holiday home. The loan was advanced to husband and wife jointly. There was nothing to indicate to the plaintiff that this was anything other than a normal advance to husband and wife for their joint benefit."
"I appreciate that counsel for Mrs Hedworth would argue that the fact that a loan by way of mortgage is to be applied for the redemption of prior mortgages does not necessarily establish that the remortgage is to the wife's advantage because .... the mortgages redeemed may themselves have been procured by undue influence. I am not persuaded, however, by this argument. Indeed, it seems to me that it is contrary to the reasoning in Pitt.
The court has to find an equilibrium between the proper protection of the rights of a wife who may be the victim of actual or presumed undue influence on the one hand and on the other hand the furtherance of ordinary business transactions involving mortgages of a matrimonial home in the joint ownership of a husband and wife. The decision in Pitt .... demonstrates that a transaction which involves a remortgage with the application of any surplus funds to a purpose which is to the apparent benefit of the husband and wife would not normally arouse suspicion.
In the present case I think the correct approach is to consider what would have been the position had Scotlife been alerted to the fact that these monies were to be applied (save for a very small fraction) to the redemption of earlier mortgages. On this basis, I consider that Scotlife would have been entitled to treat the transaction as an ordinary business transaction. .... As I see it, Scotlife had no reason to question the validity of these earlier mortgages."
Grounds 3 and 4 in the Respondent's Notice
"It was argued for the vendor that what he contracted to get was a valid legal charge, and that he has not received because the company in default of its obligation under section 95 [of the Companies Act 1948] did not register the charge with the result that it became ineffective on winding up. I do not accept this argument. The charge was effective when made and, although it was the purchaser's duty to register, it was open to the vendor himself to remedy the defect at the purchaser's expense."
Ground 5 in the Respondent's Notice
"It is not open to doubt that where a third party pays off a mortgage he is presumed, unless the contrary appears, to intend that the mortgage shall be kept alive for his own benefit: see Butler v. Rice [1910] Ch 277."
"The principle is best exemplified by the facts of Butler v. Rice. In that case, the wife was the owner of a Bristol property and a Cardiff property subject to a £450 charge in favour of a bank with whom the title deeds had been deposited. The husband asked the plaintiff to lend him £450 to pay off the mortgage. The plaintiff thought that the Bristol property belonged to the husband and did not know of the Cardiff property. He agreed to advance the money on having a legal mortgage for £300 on the Bristol property and a guarantee of £150 by the husband's solicitor who was to hold the deeds for the plaintiff. The wife knew nothing of the transaction. The money was paid, the charge to the bank discharged and the deeds of the Bristol property held by the solicitor as stakeholder. The wife refused to execute a mortgage in favour of the plaintiff. He sued the wife and her husband and the solicitor for a declaration that he was entitled to a charge on the Bristol property [for] £450 and interest.
Warrington J, at p.282, referred to:
'.... the well-known equitable doctrine that if a stranger pays off a mortgage on an estate he presumably does not intend to discharge that mortgage, but to keep it alive for his own benefit.'
He held that it must be presumed that the plaintiff wanted to keep the bank's charge alive in his own favour, that the fact that the wife had not requested the plaintiff to make the payment and did not know of the transaction was immaterial, that the fact that he intended to take a different security did not affect the question, and that he was entitled to a charge on the Bristol property for £450 and interest."
"I do not think it is open to this court to reinterpret the Butler v. Rice line of authorities in the way which [counsel for the wife] would have us do in the light of the approval of the broad principle laid down in such cases and approved in decisions binding on us. I feel it right to add that for my part, given that the court in a case like the present is having to choose between allocating a loss, either to the innocent mortgagor or to the innocent provider of the moneys, I do not regard it as unjust that in accordance with Butler v. Rice the loss should fall on the mortgagor who otherwise takes a windfall benefit. I say that despite the fact that, as [counsel for the wife] rightly stressed, the wife in the present case had no contract with [the claimant], was not the principal debtor, knew nothing of the transaction under which [the claimant] lent money to the husband and has never ratified the discharge of the mortgage on the property.
[Counsel for the wife] also advanced the further argument that it would be an unwarranted extension of the Butler v. Rice principle if [the claimant] were to be held entitled to step into the shoes of Lloyds by what he called sub-subrogation. For my part, I see no conceptual difficulty in this. As the judge held, Barclays was entitled to the Lloyds security by subrogation when Barclays discharged the debt to Lloyds, thinking that it was to obtain an effective security for its own money. When [the claimant] discharged the debt to Barclays, thinking that it was obtaining an effective security for its own money, it became entitled to the same security as Barclays [had]. I would, therefore, hold that by subrogation [the claimant] became entitled to the same security as that held by Barclays, [that] is to say the Lloyds charge."
"The test as to whether the courts will apply the doctrine of subrogation to the facts of any particular case is entirely empirical. It is, I think, impossible to formulate any narrower principle than that the doctrine will be applied only when the courts are satisfied that reason and justice demand that it should be."
RESULT
Lord Justice Longmore:
Lord Justice Kennedy: