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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 >> Ibrahim v Barclays Bank Plc & Anor [2012] EWCA Civ 640 (16 May 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2012/640.html Cite as: [2012] EWCA Civ 640, [2012] 2 Lloyd's Rep 13, [2012] 2 CLC 240, [2013] 1 CH 400, [2012] 2 BCLC 1, [2013] 2 WLR 768, [2012] 4 All ER 160, [2013] Ch 400, [2012] 2 All ER (Comm) 1167 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE CHANCERY DIVISION
Mr Justice Vos
HC10C01527
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE MCFARLANE
and
LORD JUSTICE LEWISON
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IBRAHIM |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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BARCLAYS BANK PLC & ANR |
Respondent |
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MR PATRICK GOODALL & MR RUPERT ALLEN (instructed by Addleshaw Goddard LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing dates : 9 and 10 May 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Lewison:
Introduction and background
i) Barclays agreed to provide further finance up to £2.5 million (although in the event only £1.4 million was drawn down);ii) BERR agreed to guarantee LDV's liability to Barclays for that further finance limited to £2.5 million;
iii) LDV agreed by way of counter-indemnity to pay BERR on demand all sums paid by BERR or demanded by Barclays under the BERR guarantee;
iv) Mr Ibrahim arranged for the letter of credit to be issued by UBS in favour of BERR as the beneficiary;
v) Mr Ibrahim agreed to indemnify UBS;
vi) Barclays and BERR agreed that the first £3.2 million of recoveries in LDV's insolvency would be shared equally between them; and any surplus over £3.2 million would go to BERR until such time as it had been repaid in full for any liability incurred under the BERR guarantee.
The relevant documents
The Berlin term sheet
"Guarantee from a bank satisfactory to HMG (in its sole discretion) sufficient to cover the guarantee provided by HMG, to be arranged by Weststar in favour of HMG, to reimburse any payments under its Guarantee to Barclays plus accrued interest, fees and third party costs of documenting and, if necessary, enforcing the agreement."
The new facility
The BERR facility
The LDV counter-indemnity
The BERR guarantee
The realisation agreement
"In consideration of the issue of the Guarantees by [the Secretary of State][Barclays] has agreed that any Distribution Moneys received by [Barclays] in respect of the Bank Liabilities will be shared between them in accordance with the terms of this Agreement."
"1.1 In this Agreement:
…
"Counter Indemnity": means the counter indemnity entered into by [LDV Group] on or about the date of this Agreement in favour of [the Secretary of State] in respect of its liabilities under the Guarantees.
"Creditors": means each of [Barclays] and [the Secretary of State].
"Distribution Moneys": means any moneys received by [Barclays] or any person acting on behalf of or on the instructions of [Barclays] in respect of the Bank Liabilities or the Guarantor Liabilities, as the case may be, including but not limited to those received from:
(a) the enforcement of the Bank Security or any part thereof;
(b) the proceeds of dissolution and liquidation of [LDV Group] and/or any Related Party or distribution of its assets among its creditors (however such liquidation or distribution may occur)…;
…
"Guarantor Liabilities": means the aggregate of the amounts in various currencies at any time and from time to time owing by [LDV Group] or any Related Party to [the Secretary of State] and unpaid in respect of principal, interest, default interest, commissions, charges, fees, expenses and indemnities.
"Realisation Sharing Amount": means an amount equal to the lesser of:
(a) £3,200,000; and …
…
2. Sharing Arrangements
Turnover of Distribution Moneys
2.1 Unless and until the Guarantor Liabilities have been paid and discharged in full and [the Secretary of State] has no further actual or contingent liability under or in respect of the Guarantee, to the extent that [Barclays] receives any Distribution Moneys for application against the Bank Liabilities or the Guarantor Liabilities as applicable, it shall;
2.1.1 as soon as reasonably practicable following receipt pay to [the Secretary of State] (and pending such payment, hold on trust for the [the Secretary of State]) for application to the Guaranteed Liabilities (or to be held by [the Secretary of State] pending such application) an amount equal to 50% of the Distribution Moneys, to the extent the aggregate Distribution Moneys received do not exceed the Realisation Sharing Amount; and
2.1.2 as soon as reasonably practicable following receipt pay to [the Secretary of State] (and pending such payment, hold on trust for [the Secretary of State]) for application to the Guaranteed Liabilities (or to be held by [the Secretary of State] pending such application) an amount equal to the total amount of the Distribution Moneys, to the extent the aggregate Distribution Moneys received exceed the Realisation Sharing Amount. …
…
4. Term of Agreement
4.1 This Agreement shall continue in force until the date that [the Secretary of State] has no further actual or contingent liability under or in respect of the Guarantee, and the Guarantor Liabilities have been irrevocably discharged in full.
…
9. Successors and Assigns
9.1 This Agreement shall bind and inure to the benefit of the respective successors and assigns of the Creditors, provided, however, that no Creditors shall assign or transfer any interest it has under this Agreement unless the assignee or transferee undertakes to be bound by the provisions of this Agreement.
9.2 Notwithstanding Clause 9.1 above, the rights and obligations of [the Secretary of State] under this Agreement shall be binding on, and enforceable by, any successor in title to [the Secretary of State]."
The standby letter of credit
"A claim under this Standby Letter of Credit must cite this SBLC No. SBLC09032 and must be accompanied by the Beneficiaries' duly signed request for payment certifying that the amount demanded represents and covers the unpaid sums due to yourselves by [LDV]."
The case below
"In the premises, in the events which have occurred, [Mr Ibrahim] became subrogated to the rights of BERR in the following:
(a) The Realisation Agreement.
(b) The Counter Indemnity."
"(i) A declaration that [Mr Ibrahim] is entitled to be subrogated to:
(a) the rights enjoyed by BERR in relation to the Counter Indemnity;
(b) the rights enjoyed by BERR pursuant to the Realisation Agreement.
(ii) A declaration that [Barclays] holds all such monies as it may have received, and as it may receive from LDV pursuant to the terms of the Realisation Agreement.
(iv) An account by [Barclays] of all such sums as it may have received from LDV.
(v) An order upon taking such account for payment to [Mr Ibrahim] of such sums as may be due to him pursuant to the Realisation Agreement…"
i) Subrogation to extinguished rights (which the judge called type 1 subrogation) and
ii) Subrogation to subsisting rights (which the judge called type 2 subrogation).
"Mr Tager submits that Mr Ibrahim is entitled to engage type 1 subrogation (on the basis that the arrangements with UBS were simply a mechanism to ensure that Mr Ibrahim paid the Secretary of State, so that one should look at the substance rather than the form), because the debt due from LDV to the Secretary of State was not discharged by the payment by UBS. He submits that Mr Ibrahim can also engage type 2 subrogation because the agreement or understanding between all the relevant parties was that Mr Ibrahim (again regarding the arrangements with UBS as purely mechanistic) would be entitled to stand in the shoes of the Secretary of State to share in Barclays' recoveries from an administration of LDV if UBS paid up."
"130. Since the answer to the first issue is that UBS's payment did discharge LDV's liability to the Secretary of State, this issue does not arise. This is because, despite some prevarication in submissions, it was ultimately common ground between the parties that, that if LDV Group's debt to the Secretary of State was discharged by UBS's payment, Mr Ibrahim could not make either a type 1 or a type 2 subrogation claim against Barclays.
131. The reason for that concession was simply the unambiguous wording of the distribution provision in clause 2.1 of the RA, which is prefaced by the following condition, namely that distributions are permitted to the Secretary of State: "[u]nless and until the Guarantor Liabilities have been paid and discharged in full and [the Secretary of State] has no further actual or contingent liability under or in respect of the Guarantee". This condition was undoubtedly fulfilled when UBS made its payment to the Secretary of State because by that time:-
i) The Guarantor Liabilities (meaning the aggregate of the amounts owing by LDV Group to the Secretary of State and unpaid in respect of principal, interest, default interest, commissions, charges, fees, expenses and indemnities) had been discharged for the reasons I have given; and
ii) The Secretary of State had no further actual or contingent liability under or in respect of the Guarantee.
132. Accordingly, when UBS paid the Secretary of State, the Secretary of State's right to "Distribution Monies" as defined in the RA ceased. It was at no time suggested that, when this right ceased, any other right of the Secretary of State against Barclays, whether at common law or in equity, could survive. Nor was it suggested that any right of subrogation could survive the termination of the Secretary of State's contractual right to Distribution Monies."
Events since trial
Did payment by UBS to the Secretary of State discharge LDV's obligation?
i) Whether a payment discharges a debt depends primarily on the intention of the creditor and the debtor; in this case LDV and the Secretary of State. Their intention must be derived primarily from the documents they entered into, but it is permissible to look at other evidence to consider what their understandings were: (§ 113);ii) There was no direct evidence of the intention of LDV beyond clause 6 of the counter indemnity: (§ 114);
iii) UBS was party to an autonomous instrument, namely the letter of credit. Its intentions may not be strictly relevant but it was undoubtedly bound by the terms of the letter of credit: (§ 115);
iv) As a matter of interpretation of the letter of credit UBS would only be bound to make a payment that the Secretary of State had certified "represents and covers the unpaid sums" due to the Secretary of State by LDV. The word "cover" in context means "discharge": (§ 128);
v) The Secretary of State secured the payment from UBS on the basis of a representation that it would discharge the LDV debt; and by clause 6 of the counter indemnity LDV had given him the authority to demand the amount of its debt from any other person. Both of them must be taken to have intended that such a payment would discharge LDV's liability to the Secretary of State under the counter indemnity: (§ 128);
vi) Therefore UBS' payment to the Secretary of State did discharge LDV's liability to the Secretary of State under the counter indemnity.
i) LDV did not see the letter of credit and had no involvement in its drafting. They did not procure its issue. They cannot be treated as the principal in a relationship of agency with UBS;ii) The letter of credit was an autonomous transaction. In making payment under the letter of credit UBS was doing no more than complying with its own free-standing obligation to make a payment on presentation of compliant documents. It cannot be regarded as having been in any sense the agent of LDV;
iii) The evidence adduced on behalf of the Secretary of State made it clear that no one within BERR ever thought that payment by UBS would deprive Mr Ibrahim of what they believed were his rights to subrogation under the general law.
"The general rule as to payment or satisfaction by a third person, not himself liable as a co-contractor or otherwise, has been fully considered in the cases of Jones v Broadhurst (9 C B 193), Belshaw v Bush (11 C B 191), and James v Isaacs (22 L J C P 73); and the result appears to be, that it is not sufficient to discharge a debtor unless it is made by the third person, as agent, for and on account of the debtor and with his prior authority or subsequent ratification." (Emphasis added)
"The words in which Buckley J finds the facts are these: "This is not a case in which a stranger comes and offers to the creditor a portion of the debt due, and the creditor accepts it towards satisfaction of the amount due, there being no communication with the debtor in the matter. It was not tendered or accepted in reference to any part of the debt at all, but it was offered and accepted as a voluntary payment made in consideration of the fact that the creditor had incurred losses through the act of a person for whom Bewick, Moreing & Co held themselves to be on some moral ground, at any rate not upon any legal ground, responsible." I think that that conclusion of fact was perfectly right. This, as Buckley J points out, was a payment with which Rowe, the debtor, had nothing to do and of which he was quite ignorant. It did not purport to be made on his behalf. It did not purport to be made on account of either the debt or the debtor. It was a voluntary gift made by Bewick, Moreing & Co for the purpose of mitigating a loss for which they were not liable. I do not think that the parties to this transaction intended, the one the payment to be made, the other the payment to be accepted, for or on account of the debtor or of the debt." (Emphasis added)
"…here was a distress for rent, due from the three defendants; the notice of distress expressed the rent to be due from them all; the money was paid by the plaintiff in satisfaction of a demand on all, and it was paid by compulsion; therefore I am of opinion that this action may be maintained against the three defendants. The justice of the case indeed is, that the one who must ultimately pay this money, should alone be answerable here: but as all the three defendants were liable to the landlord for the rent in the first instance, and as by this payment made by the plaintiff, all the three were released from the demand of the rent, I think that this action may be supported against all of them."
"Where the plaintiff has been compelled by law to pay, or, being compellable by law, has paid money which the defendant was ultimately liable to pay, so that the latter obtains the benefit of the payment by the discharge of his liability; under such circumstances the defendant is held indebted to the plaintiff in the amount." (Emphasis added)
"The payment relieved the importer of his obligation. The plaintiffs were no doubt liable to pay the Customs, but, as between themselves and the defendants, the primary liability rested on the defendants. The liability of the plaintiffs as warehousemen was analogous to that of a surety. It was imposed in order to facilitate the collection of duties in a case like the present, where there might always be a question as to who stood in the position of importer. The defendants as actual importers have obtained the benefit of the payment made by the plaintiffs and they are thus discharged from the duties which otherwise would have been payable by them."
"If a person makes a voluntary payment intending to discharge another's debt, he will only discharge the debt if he acts with that person's authority or the latter subsequently ratifies the payment. Consequently if the payee makes the payment without authority and does not obtain subsequent ratification he normally has no redress against the debtor.
The position where there is a payment under compulsion, however, is different."
"Secondly, it seems to me that the payment discharged BT's liability to ESN. BT could have been sued direct by ESN for the full amount of the charges and would have had no answer to the claim. The claim by ESN, though it would have arisen by virtue of the under-lease and not by virtue of the headlease, would have been for exactly the same amount computed in exactly the same way and in respect of the same services as the amount recoverable by ESN from Thorn."
i) Payment by a third party to a creditor under legal compulsion on account of a debt owed by a debtor will automatically discharge the debtor's debt;ii) That is the case even if the legal compulsion arises out of a contractual obligation voluntarily assumed by the third party.
"A credit by its nature is a separate transaction from the sale or other contract on which it may be based. Banks are in no way concerned with or bound by such contract, even if any reference whatsoever to it is included in the credit. Consequently, the undertaking of a bank to honour, to negotiate or to fulfil any other obligation under a credit is not subject to claims or defences by the applicant resulting from its relationship with the issuing banks or the beneficiary."
"Banks deal with documents and not with goods, services, or performance to which the documents may relate."
"Provided that the stipulated documents are presented to the nominated bank or to the issuing bank and that they constitute a complying presentation, the issuing bank must honour if the credit is available…"
"The banker is not concerned as to whether the documents for which the buyer has stipulated serve any useful purpose or as to why the customer called for a tender of a document of a particular description."
"Through the tendering of commercial documents, a seller can provide a significant measure of proof that it has performed its obligations under a contract. By contracting for payment against documents, as through a collection as discussed in the previous chapter, a buyer gains such protection against the risk of default by its seller. Equally, however, a seller may be desirous of protection against default by the buyer. The focus of this chapter is upon the introduction of a trusted party to assume financial obligations to the seller in respect of the price. Most commonly, the parties contract for payment by "documentary credit" (or "letter of credit"): this still affords the buyer the protection of payment against documents but, in addition, provides the seller with protection against buyer default by substituting one or more banks as the party to which the seller looks-indeed, primarily at least, is required to look-for payment."
"When the issuer of a standby letter of credit duly pays the beneficiary, it is necessarily discharging (at least in part) its customer's obligation – this is the intention of all the parties and the legal effect – but it is also discharging its own obligation which it owes, personally, to the beneficiary."
"The principle of the autonomy of the credit insulates the operation of the credit from any matters extraneous to the credit's own terms. In consequence, first, the credit is independent of disputes arising out of the underlying contract between the applicant and the beneficiary. … Secondly, the credit is also independent of the relationship between the applicant and the issuing bank. Any rights the issuing bank may have against the applicant do not prejudice the rights of the beneficiary under the credit. Thirdly, and conversely, the beneficiary's rights are those specified in the credit as communicated to it: the beneficiary cannot avail itself of the relationships between banks or between the applicant and the issuing bank." (Emphasis added)
"It seems to me that the common or garden usage of the word "cover" in this context is indeed "discharge", rather than "is sufficient to discharge". If there were any extraneous material to suggest that the wording was required for another reason, that might have been significant. But I can only rely on the evidence that is available. And that shows that the Secretary of State was required, in order to make his claim against UBS, and for reasons that have not been explained in the 7 days of the trial, to certify that the amount demanded represented and covered (meaning discharged) the debt due from LDV Group to the Secretary of State."
i) The Secretary of State could have sued LDV for the amount that he had been required to pay to Barclays plus the other amounts that LDV was liable to pay under the counter indemnity;ii) LDV would have had no answer to the claim;
iii) The claim against UBS was for the same amount computed in the same way, and was in respect of the same action on the part of the Secretary of State (i.e. payment to Barclays plus the other amounts recoverable under the counter indemnity).
Lord Justice McFarlane:
Lord Justice Rimer: