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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Goodinson v PRA Group (UK) Ltd [2021] EWCA Civ 957 (25 June 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2021/957.html Cite as: [2021] WLR 5249, [2021] EWCA Civ 957, [2021] 1 WLR 5249, [2021] WLR(D) 361 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE COUNTY COURT AT OXFORD
(HER HONOUR JUDGE MELISSA CLARKE)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE ELISABETH LAING
and
LORD JUSTICE WARBY
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John Goodinson |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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PRA Group (UK) Limited |
Respondent |
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Richard Jones QC and Philip Mantle (instructed by Howell Jones Solicitors) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 27 May 2021
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Crown Copyright ©
Covid-19 Protocol: This judgment was handed down remotely by circulation to the parties' representatives by email, release to BAILII and publication on the Courts and Tribunals Judiciary website. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 10am on 25 June 2021
Lord Justice Warby:-
The statutory provisions
"87.— Need for default notice.
(1) Service of a notice on the debtor or hirer in accordance with section 88 (a "default notice") is necessary before the creditor or owner can become entitled, by reason of any breach by the debtor or hirer of a regulated agreement,—
(a) to terminate the agreement, or
(b) to demand earlier payment of any sum, …
…
88.— Contents and effect of default notice.
(1) The default notice must be in the prescribed form and specify—
(a) the nature of the alleged breach;
(b) if the breach is capable of remedy, what action is required to remedy it and the date before which that action is to be taken;
(c) if the breach is not capable of remedy, the sum (if any) required to be paid as compensation for the breach, and the date before which it is to be paid.
(2) A date specified under subsection (1) must not be less than 14 days after the date of service of the default notice, and the creditor or owner shall not take action such as is mentioned in section 87(1) before the date so specified or (if no requirement is made under subsection (1)) before those 14 days have elapsed.
…
(4) The default notice must contain information in the prescribed terms about the consequences of failure to comply with it and any other prescribed matters relating to the agreement.
(4A) The default notice must also include a copy of the current default information sheet under section 86A."
"2.–
…
(2) Any notice to be given by a creditor or owner in relation to a regulated agreement to a debtor or hirer under section 87(1) of the Act … shall contain—
(a) a statement that the notice is a default notice served under section 87(1) of the Consumer Credit Act 1974;
(b) the information set out in paragraphs 1 to 3, 6 and 8 of Schedule 2 to these Regulations; and
(c) statements in the form specified in [paragraphs 4, 5, 7, 8A and 9 to 11] of that Schedule.
…
(5) Where any statement is required to be in a form specified in a Schedule to these Regulations and is reproduced in the notice, then apart from any heading to the notice, trade names or names of parties to the agreement—
(a) the lettering in the statement shall be afforded more prominence (whether by capital letters, underlining, large or bold print or otherwise) than any other lettering in the notice; and
(b) where words are both shown in capital letters and underlined in any statement specified in a Schedule to these Regulations, they shall be afforded yet more prominence.
(6) The wording in any such statement shall be reproduced in the notice without any alteration or addition, and in relation to any statement to be contained in the notice the requirements of any note shall be complied with, except that the words "the creditor" may be replaced by the name of the creditor, by the expression by which he is referred to in the agreement or by an appropriate pronoun, and any consequential changes to pronouns and verbs may be used."
The procedural history
"21. Accordingly on 3rd December 2012 MBNA served on the Defendant a Default Notice under s 87 (1) of the Consumer Credit Act 1974 identifying certain breaches of the terms of the agreement including but not limited to non-payment of monthly instalments by way of repayment and demanding these breaches be remedied by 22nd December 2012. The Default Notice made clear that in the absence of remedial action being taken by the Defendant that the Agreement would be terminated and that as a consequence thereof the Defendant would be required to repay the balance outstanding under the Credit Agreement on such termination.
22. A copy of the default notice sent by MBNA to the Defendant is exhibited at Appendix 10 to these Particulars of Claim."
Termination
23. As the Defendant failed to remedy the breached identified within the Default Notice by the date specified in that notice, MBNA terminated the Agreement."
PRA further alleged that the agreement provided that upon termination Mr Goodinson was obliged immediately to pay MBNA the balance outstanding; that he failed to do so; and that PRA was entitled as assignee to recover that sum and interest.
"12. It is denied that the default notice exhibited to the particulars of claim is compliant with S. 88 CCA. The defendant denies receipt of same.
13. In the premises in the absence of a S.88 CCA 1974 compliant notice, predating the acceleration of payment for default, or termination for default, the alleged debt of £18,415.66 was and is unenforceable against the defendant."
The hearing before DDJ Simpson
The appeal to HHJ Melissa Clarke
"17. This is the claimant's claim to prove, and they have to prove it on the balance of probabilities. The question before Deputy District Judge Simpson was, on the balance of probabilities and without any positive evidence of the format and content of the default notice, including the 'boilerplate' provisions and warnings of the notice of default: was it more likely than not that the notice of default complied with the prescribed requirements which were required by the statutory framework at the time? Part of the circumstances include that the reconstituted version … had a number of mistakes in it, of which Deputy District Judge Simpson was well aware (I put to one side the figures, which I find were not a mistake).
18. It seems to me the requirements of the CCA were well known at this stage. The prescribed warnings had been needed for very many years. MBNA were a large credit card provider at the time with many customers and the same prescribed wording would have been required on every default notice. It seems to me that it was open to the Deputy District Judge to draw an inference that the notice of default that was created and sent on 3 December 2012 was on the balance of probabilities otherwise compliant with the Consumer Credit Act, given the evidence before him. It is not an inference that every judge would take, but that is not the test. The test is whether his decision to draw that inference was, in all the circumstances, within the ambit within which reasonable disagreement is possible, and I am satisfied that it was. But it was a decision which he was entitled to make."
Accordingly, the appeal was dismissed.
The appeal to this Court
The best evidence rule
"… the time has now come when it can be said with confidence that the best evidence rule, long on its deathbed, has finally expired. In every case where a party seeks to adduce secondary evidence of the contents of a document, it is a matter for the court to decide, in the light of all the circumstances of the case, what (if any) weight to attach to that evidence."
"… the 'obligation' of a party who has a document to produce the original in evidence is founded not on any rule of law but is simply a reflection of the fact that a party to whom a document is available will by reason of that very fact be unable to account to the satisfaction of the court for his non-production off it when inviting the court to admit secondary evidence of its contents, with the practical consequence that the court will attach no weight to the secondary evidence."
Assessment
Lady Justice Elisabeth Laing:-
Lord Justice Bean:-