![]() |
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | |
England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Goldsmith Williams Solicitors v E.Surv Ltd [2015] EWCA Civ 1147 (11 November 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2015/1147.html Cite as: [2015] WLR(D) 459, [2015] EWCA Civ 1147, [2016] PNLR 11, [2016] 4 All ER 229, [2016] 4 WLR 44 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Buy ICLR report: [2016] 4 WLR 44] [View ICLR summary: [2015] WLR(D) 459] [Help]
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION
MANCHESTER DISTRICT REGISTRY
HH Judge Stephen Davies (sitting as a Judge of the High Court)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
and
SIR STANLEY BURNTON
____________________
GOLDSMITH WILLIAMS SOLICITORS |
Appellant/ Defendant |
|
- and |
||
E.SURV LIMITED |
Respondent/ Claimant |
____________________
Ben Hubble QC and Shail Patel (instructed by DWF LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 15 October 2015
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Sir Stanley Burton :
Introduction
The facts
10. Mr Davison was employed by the Lender as a national account manager. He was called by the surveyors to give evidence as to the operation of the lender's underwriting team and how they would have responded to being provided by the solicitors with the information about the actual purchase details.
11. Having heard Mr Davison, my conclusion is that whilst he was an honest and reliable witness of fact, he had insufficient knowledge or experience of the particular mortgage underwriting team who dealt with this application to provide me with very much assistance as to how they would have dealt with the application had the solicitors provided the actual purchase details.
(1) The then current edition of the Council of Mortgage Lenders ("CML's") Lenders Handbook;(2) the Lender's Part 2 instructions.
The letter also enclosed a copy of the Lender's mortgage offer to the borrower dated 1 February 2006, and a copy of the valuation report.
"We the conveyancers named above give the certificate of title set out in the Appendix to Rule 6(3) of the Solicitors Practice Rules 1990 as if the same were set out in full, subject to the limitations set out in it."
The parties' contentions
(1) The Solicitors were under a duty to advise the Lender in relation to facts discovered by them in the course of investigating title which a reasonably competent solicitor would realise might have a material bearing on the valuation of the Lender's security or some other ingredient of the lending decision.(2) The discrepancy between the valuation and the purchase price and date of purchase of the property were such facts.
(3) If the Solicitors had so advised the Lender of the discrepancy, the Lender would have referred the discrepancy to the Surveyors, who would have revised their valuation, with the result that the Lender would not have made the loan and would not have incurred its loss. The Solicitors' failure to advise the Lender was therefore a contributory cause of its loss.
(1) They were not under any duty to the Lender to report the facts as to the date and price of the purchase of the property. Before us, they submitted that their duty was confined by the terms of their instruction to investigating and reporting on title, save where there was evidence of fraud. The carefully negotiated and detailed provisions of the CML's Handbook, to which I refer below, is to be read as a comprehensive and exclusive code setting out the duties of a solicitor instructed by both lender and borrower.(2) Even if, contrary to their contentions, they were under the alleged duty, their failure to perform it did not cause any loss. The Lender had decided to make the loan even though it had information as to the date and price of the purchase of the property that should have led it to question the Surveyors' valuation; the facts that it is alleged should have been reported would not have led it to act differently.
(1) Duty: were the Solicitors under the duty alleged by the Surveyors?(2) Causation: if they were under that duty, was their failure to fulfil it a cause of the Lender's loss?
The duty of solicitors acting for both Lender and Borrower: the terms of the retainer
"Those lenders who instruct using the CML Lenders Handbook certify that these instructions have been prepared to comply with the requirements of rule 6(3) of the Solicitors' Practice Rules 1990."
"1.3 The Lenders' Handbook does not affect any responsibilities you have to us under the general law or any practice rule or guidance issued by your professional body from time to time.
1.4 The standard of care which we expect from you is that of a reasonably competent solicitor acting on behalf of a mortgagee."
1.5 The limitations contained in rule 6(3)(c) and (e) of the Solicitors Practice Rules 1990 apply to the instructions contained in the Lenders Handbook "
"4.1.1 Check part 2 to see whether we send you a copy of the valuation report or if you must get it from the borrower. If you are sent, or are required to obtain, a copy of the valuation report:
4.1.1.1 You must take reasonable steps to verify that there are no discrepancies between the description of the property as valued and the title and other documents which a reasonably competent conveyancer should obtain, and, if there are, you must tell us immediately; and
4.1.1.2 You should take reasonable steps to verify that the assumptions stated by the valuer about the title (for example, its tenure, easements, boundaries and restrictions on its use) in the valuation are correct. If they are not, please let us know as soon as possible (see part 2) as it will be necessary for us to check with the valuer whether the valuation needs to be revised. We are not expecting you to assume the role of valuer. We are simply trying to ensure that the valuer has valued the property based on correct information.
4.1.2 We recommend that you should advise the borrower that there may be defects in the property which are not revealed by the inspection carried out by our valuer and there may be omissions or inaccuracies in the report which do not matter to us but which would matter to the borrower. We recommend that, if we send a copy of a valuation report that we have obtained, you should also advise the borrower that the borrower should not rely on the report in deciding whether to proceed with the purchase and that he obtains his own more detailed report on the condition and value of the property, based on a fuller inspection, to enable him to decide whether the property is suitable for his purposes."
"5.1 Surrounding Circumstances
5.1.1 Please report to us (see part 2.) if the owner or registered proprietor has been registered for less than six months or the person selling to the borrower is not the owner or registered proprietor unless the seller is:
5.1.1.1 a personal representative of the registered proprietor, or
5.1.1.2 an institutional mortgagee exercising its power of sale; or
5.1.1.3 a receiver, trustee-In-bankruptcy or liquidator; or
5.1.1.4 developer or builder selling a property acquired under a part-exchange scheme.
5.1.2 If any matter comes to the attention of the fee earner dealing with the transaction which you should reasonably expect us to consider important in deciding whether or not to lend to the borrower (such as whether the borrower has given misleading information to us or the information which you might reasonably expect to have been given to us is no longer true) and you are unable to disclose that information to us because of a conflict of interest, you must cease to act for us and return our Instructions stating that you consider a conflict of interest has arisen.
5.2 Searches and Reports
5.2.1 In carrying out your investigation, you must make all usual and necessary searches and enquiries. We must be named as the applicant in the H M Land Registry search."
"6(3)(c) A solicitor acting for both lender and borrower in a standard mortgage may only accept or act upon instructions from the lender which are limited to the following matters:"
"(i) taking reasonable steps to check the identity of the borrower (and anyone else required to sign the mortgage deed or other document connected with the mortgage) by reference to a document or documents, such as a passport, precisely specified in writing by the lender;
following the guidance in the Law Society's "green card" warning on property fraud and "blue card" warning on money laundering;
checking that the seller's solicitors or licensed conveyancers (if unknown to the solicitor) appear in a current legal directory or hold practising certificates issued by their professional body;
and, in the case of a lender with no branch office within reasonable proximity of the borrower, carrying out the money laundering checks precisely specified in writing by the lender;
(ii) making appropriate searches relating to the property in public registers (for example, local searches, commons registration searches, mining searches), and reporting any results specified by the lender or which the solicitor considers may adversely affect the lender; or effecting search insurance;
(iii) making enquiries on legal matters relating to the property reasonably specified by the lender, and reporting the replies;
(iv) reporting the purchase price stated in the transfer and on how the borrower says that the purchase money (other than the mortgage advance) is to be provided; and reporting if the solicitor will not have control over the payment of all the purchase money (other than a deposit paid to an estate agent or a reservation fee paid to a builder or developer);
(v) reporting if the seller or the borrower (if the property is already owned by the borrower) has not owned or been the registered owner of the property for at least six months;"
"We confirm that we have complied with your instructions in all other respects to the extent that they do not extend beyond the limitations contained in paragraph (3)(c) of rule 6 of the Solicitors Practice Rules 1990."
"Our duties to you are limited to the matters set out in this certificate and we accept no further liability or responsibility whatsoever. The payment by you to us (by whatever means) of the mortgaged advance or any part of it constitutes acceptance of this limitation "
The duty of solicitors acting for both Lender and Borrower: discussion
" if, in the course of investigating title, a solicitor discovers facts which a reasonably competent solicitor would realise might have a material bearing on the valuation of the lender's security or some other ingredient of the lending decision, then it is his duty to point this out."
"It is important at the outset to recognise that it would not have involved [the solicitor] in any breach of duty to his client, if he had communicated the information in question to the plaintiffs. A solicitor who acts both for a purchaser and a mortgage lender faces a potential conflict of duty. A solicitor who acts for more than one party to a transaction owes a duty of confidentiality to each client, but the existence of this duty does not affect his duty to act in the best interests of the other client. All information supplied by a client to his solicitor is confidential and may be disclosed only with the consent, express or implied, of his client. There is, therefore, an obvious potentiality for conflict between the solicitor's duty of confidentiality to the buyer and his duty to act in the best interests of the mortgage lender.
No such conflict, however, arose in the present case. It is the duty of a solicitor acting for a purchaser to investigate the vendor's title on his behalf and to deduce it to the mortgagee's solicitor. He has the implied authority of his client to communicate all documents of title to the mortgagee's solicitor. In the present case, the information in question appeared on the face of the vendor's title, which consisted of his agreement, subject to contract, to purchase the flat for £150,000. Had the plaintiffs instructed other solicitors, Mr Gilroy would have had to provide them with a copy of that agreement. It would then have been for those solicitors to consider whether they ought to inform their client of the price which Mr Arrach was paying for the flat. In the present case Mr Gilroy was instructed to act both for the buyer and the mortgagee and it was his duty to investigate the vendor's title on behalf of each of his clients. He must, therefore, be taken to have been in possession of the documents of title, including Mr Arrach's purchase agreement, not only as solicitor for Mr Hadi but also, with Mr Hadi's implied authority, as solicitor for the plaintiffs. He then came under a duty to the plaintiffs to consider whether he ought to disclose the information which that documentation contained to them.
Mr Gilroy recognised as much. In cross-examination he said: 'If I had had any cause to doubt the valuation, that is something I should have passed on, but I did not doubt the valuation.'
The question which the judge had to ask herself was whether a solicitor of ordinary competence would have regarded the information in question as information which might cause the plaintiffs to doubt the correctness of the valuation which they had obtained."
" there is no general duty on a solicitor to report matters which might be of commercial interest to a lender and nothing in Bowerman justifying the conclusion that there is. On the contrary, as the decision in GCA makes clear, any duty to report arises not because a matter might be of interest to the lender but if and only if it goes to a matter which concerns those of the lender's interests to which the solicitor is engaged to attend."
At 634 he said:
"I accept Mr Davidson's submission, based on his analysis of Bowerman and GCA, that the duty to report, as expounded in the Bowerman case, is confined to matters which are within the scope of the client's interest which the solicitor is engaged to serve. I also accept his submission that whether or not the solicitor is subject to such a duty depends on the terms and limits of his retainer.
I also accept his submission that, in considering whether a solicitor acting for a lender is subject to a Bowerman type duty, the correct approach is to examine the terms of the retainer and then consider what implied obligations, if any, there are to accompany the expressed ones. Having said that, however, I am inclined to think that the Bowerman duty is a species of obligation which the court will ordinarily imply, or find present, where a solicitor acts for a lender in a mortgage transaction except to the extent that where to do so would be inconsistent with the express terms of the engagement or with the surrounding circumstances of the relationship.
I do not accept his submission that the Society's written instructions set out the entirety of what it required its solicitor to do and that, to use Mr Davidson's expression, there was no "spare breadth" to them.
Causation
"Mr Patel invited me to conclude that the lender would undoubtedly have referred this information to the surveyors' PVQ team with a view to seeing whether or not it affected the valuation. Mr Mitchell submitted that based on the information before the court it was simply not possible to reach such a conclusion on the balance of probabilities. He submitted that in the absence of hard evidence, either from the mortgage underwriting guidelines or from a member of the mortgage underwriting team who would actually have been involved in this process, that this is what would have happened there is no basis for so concluding. He submitted that since the contemporaneous evidence shows that no such query was raised even though the purchase details as reported in the mortgage application form were not materially different from the actual purchase details, and even when the evidence shows that at least one if not more of the members of the mortgage underwriting team must have seen and read the mortgage application form, the only safe conclusion which can be drawn is that the lender was indifferent to such details in the context of this particular application made by this particular lender for this particular product, most probably because all that the lender was interested in was the strength of the borrower's personal covenant and the valuation."
"So far as Mr Patel's first point is concerned, I am not satisfied that there is a proper evidential platform for drawing that conclusion. As Mr Mitchell submits, it is reasonably clear from the documentary evidence that at least one of the underwriters must have scrutinised the mortgage application form before the application was approved. This was not an application which went through at some speed. It clearly went through a number of stages. If the mortgage underwriting team's practice, either because of what was in the mortgage underwriting guidelines or because it was settled practice, was to check any discrepancy such as there was in the instant case between the reported purchase price and the valuation with the valuer, then in my judgment it is unlikely that it would not have been done in this case."
"75. Although the solicitors rely on the surveyors' failure to produce the mortgage underwriting guidelines, had the solicitors wanted to adduce a positive case to the effect that it would have been standard practice for an approving underwriter to conduct a thorough check including cross referring all of the information in the mortgage application form against the valuation, it would have been as open to them as to the surveyors (if not more so, given that they were not subject to the terms of the settlement agreement) to seek such information, whether by application for third party disclosure against the lender or subpoena against a relevant witness or otherwise."
This was in effect to reverse the burden of proof. It was for the Surveyors to establish that the Solicitors' breach of duty was a cause of the Lender's loss. It was of course open to the Solicitors to adduce such evidence as they considered appropriate on the issue of causation, but it could not be held against them that they did not do so. It was for the Surveyors to secure the evidence they required, if necessary by the issue of a witness summons against a relevant witness. It also seems to me that the Judge's finding that there was no evidence of a standard practice for an approving underwriter to conduct a thorough check including cross referring all of the information in the mortgage application form against the valuation sits ill at ease with his earlier positive finding that an underwriter had scrutinised the information provided by the Borrower and nonetheless approved the loan in principle.
Lord Justice Patten :