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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Mahon & Anor v FBN Bank (UK) Ltd [2011] EWHC 1432 (Ch) (06 June 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2011/1432.html Cite as: [2011] EWHC 1432 (Ch), [2011] BPIR 1029 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
BIRMINGHAM DISTRICT REGISTRY
B e f o r e :
(sitting as a judge of the High Court)
____________________
(1) JOHN DOMINICK JAMES MAHON (2) CLAIRE ELIZABETH MAHON |
Appellants |
|
-and- |
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FBN BANK (UK) LIMITED |
Respondent |
____________________
The First Appellant appeared in person, other than on the morning of 4.11.10
Mr S Uddin, solicitor advocate of Hamstead Law Practice, appeared for the
Second Appellant, and for the First Appellant on the morning of 4.11.10
Miss C Johnson, counsel instructed by Goodman Derick LLP, appeared for the
Respondent
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Appeals and applications before the court
(1) JM's and CM's appeals against DJ Crowley's orders refusing to set aside statutory demands;
(2) JM's and CM's appeals against DJ Crowley's orders in relation to, alternatively applications to remove, bankruptcy notices;
(3) JM's and CM's applications in respect of charging orders founded on DJ Crowley's costs orders;
(4) FBN's application to strike out JM's action challenging the guarantees as having been procured by misrepresentation; and,
(5) JM's application for permission to appeal against the order of DDJ Prigg, made on 16.8.10, dismissing an application for pre-action disclosure with costs, summarily assessed in the sum of £6,920.75.
The party's representatives agreed that if the statutory demands are set aside (2), (3) and (4) follow; that if the statutory demand appeals fail, (2) and (3) follow and (4) is to be considered; and, that in either event (5) required separate consideration.
Background
13.3.08 | JM emailed TH asking whether there were any other documents for signature. TH's reply included "… I presume that … you and your good lady have signed the Guarantee"; |
14.3.08 | FBN's solicitors, Goodman Derrick LLP (GD), e-mailed documents for signature including a letter of guarantee from JM and CM to C's solicitors, Pengelly & Rylands (P&R), with a copy to JM and to TH. In the text of the e-mail, GD said "I should emphasise that the personal guarantee must be signed in the presence of a solicitor, who should witness the signatures and provide me with written confirmation of having explained to the signatories the effect and meaning of the guarantee so that the same was clearly understood by the signatories"; |
14.3.08 | JM e-mailed P&R stating that CM could only be at P&R's offices between 13.00 and 13.30 on the following Monday (17.3.08); |
17.3.08 | JM and CM attended at P&R's offices and signed the guarantee; |
18.3.08 | P&R wrote to GD in relation to the documentation and stated, in respect of the guarantee "I confirm that I explained the effect of the Guarantee to [JM] and [CM] when I went through the Guarantee with them yesterday, and witnessed their execution of it". |
Statutory demands and applications to set aside
Loan a/c | £500,000.00 |
Loan interest 4 – 17.9.09 (4%) | £ 767.12 |
Current a/c | £724,681.83 |
Overdraft interest 2-17.9.09 (12.5%) | £ 3,970.86 |
Exit fee | £ 40,000.00. |
(1) Misrepresentation : FBN misrepresented the true position in relation to its banking business and its desire to develop a residential property development based banking relationship with C. JM seeks rescission of the guarantee and/or damages, which are at large, subject to a minimum claim of £14,500 (which I assume was selected by reference to the scale of issue fees);
(2) Undue Influence : (perhaps alternatively expressed as an economic tort) : FBN exerted influence or acted unlawfully by writing to HSBC in January 2008, without JM's / C's permission or knowledge, to tell HSBC that FBN was taking over C's banking, thereby terminating any possibility of a continuing relationship with or further finance from HSBC;
(3) Undue Influence : FBN exerted influence by (a) requiring a guarantee as a term of a facility to be drawn by 22.3.08, but not providing the terms of the guarantee until 14.3.08 and not providing an adequate opportunity to consider the same; and (b) not informing JM that TH was leaving / had left FBN prior to making funds available on or about 3.4.08;
(4) Failure to specify security / Valuation : at the time of the statutory demand, FBN had security which it failed to specify in the statutory demand and/or which equalled or exceeded the value of the debt;
(5) Overcharge of interest by in excess of £100,000 : the calculation of this sum is set out in JM's witness statement dated 7.11.10;
(6) Failure to collect rent in respect of tenanted flats at The Old Flour Mill : JM contends that rent should have been but was not collected as from February 2009 and credit should be given at the rate of £40K pa;
(7) Other grounds : even if none of these matters on its own is sufficient to warrant setting aside the statutory demand, taken in the round, or aggregated, and bearing in mind that the next step, if the demand is not set aside, is a bankruptcy petition, the court should set aside the demand so that these matters may be resolved in an appropriate forum, which is not insolvency proceedings.
(1) Undue Influence : exerted by JM and not counteracted by FBN;
(2) Reliance on JM's grounds.
Principles
(3) On the hearing of the application, the court shall consider the evidence then available to it, and may either summarily determine the application or adjourn it, giving such directions as it thinks appropriate.
(4) The court may grant the application if—
(a) the debtor appears to have a counterclaim, set-off or cross demand which equals or exceeds the amount of the debt or debts specified in the statutory demand; or
(b) the debt is disputed on grounds which appear to the court to be substantial; or
(c) it appears that the creditor holds some security in respect of the debt claimed by the demand, and either Rule 6.1(5) is not complied with in respect of it, or the court is satisfied that the value of the security equals or exceeds the full amount of the debt; or
(d) the court is satisfied, on other grounds, that the demand ought to be set aside.
(5) Where the creditor holds some security in respect of his debt, and Rule 6.1(5) is complied with in respect of it but the court is satisfied that the security is under-valued in the statutory demand, the creditor may be required to amend the demand accordingly (but without prejudice to his right to present a bankruptcy petition by reference to the original demand).
(6) If the court dismisses the application, it shall make an order authorising the creditor to present a bankruptcy petition either as soon as reasonably practicable, or on or after a date specified in the order.
(5) If the creditor holds any security in respect of the debt, the full amount of the debt shall be specified, but—
(a) there shall in the demand be specified the nature of the security, and the value which the creditor puts upon it as at the date of the demand, and
(b) the amount of which payment is claimed by the demand shall be the full amount of the debt, less the amount specified as the value of the security.
(1) a bank must take appropriate steps to bring to the wife's attention the risks of standing as surety;
(2) a bank will satisfy this requirement if it insists that the wife attends a private meeting with a representative of the bank, at which she is told of the extent of her liability as surety, warned of the risk she is running, and urged to take independent legal advice;
(3) in exceptional cases, the bank, to be safe, has to insist that the wife is separately advised;
(4) if so, the solicitor should explain the reason for his involvement (namely, to counter any later allegation of undue influence or failure to understand the transaction and its implications) and obtain the wife's agreement to his so acting for and advising her;
(5) this explanation and, if the wife so agrees, the advice given should be at a face-to-face meeting, in the absence of the husband, and in suitably non-technical language. Before giving advice, the solicitor should obtain from the bank any information needed;
(6) the solicitor need not act only for the wife, as cost and the familiarity of a family solicitor are important factors. The solicitor's legal and professional duties, assumed when accepting instructions to advise the wife, are owed to her alone;
(7) before acting, the solicitor should consider whether there is any conflict of duty or interest and what is in the best interests of the wife. The solicitor is not the bank's agent and in the ordinary case the bank is entitled to proceed on the assumption that the solicitor has done the job properly; and,
(8) the core minimum advice to be given and involvement of the solicitor is :
(a) to explain the nature of the documents and the practical consequences for the wife if she signs them (she could lose her home and she could be made bankrupt);
(b) to explain the seriousness of the risk involved (which involves (i) an explanation of the purpose, amount and principle terms of the new facility, (ii) an explanation that the bank may increase the facility or change its terms or grant a new facility without reference to her, (iii) an explanation of her liability under the guarantee, (iv) discussion of the wife's means, the value of any property being charged, and whether she or her husband have other assets with which to make repayment if the transaction guaranteed fails);
(c) to explain that the wife has a choice and that the choice is hers alone (which involves discussion of the husband's and the wife's present financial circumstances, including present indebtedness and facilities);
(d) to ascertain whether the wife wishes to negotiate with the bank (eg as to the order of call upon securities and/or a specific lower limit for her exposure) and, if so, whether she wishes to do so directly or through the solicitor; and
(e) to check whether the wife wishes to proceed and, if so, to obtain her authority to write to the bank confirm the explanation she has been given.
(1) the question whether the transaction (guarantee) was brought about by the exercise of undue influence is a question of fact where the burden of proof at any trial will rest on the wife (CM) who claims to have been wronged;
(2) at a summary pre-trial hearing (set aside application or appeal therefrom) before disclosure and without the benefit of oral evidence, credible evidence that the wife placed trust and confidence in her husband (JM) in relation to the management of her financial affairs, coupled with a transaction which calls for explanation, will normally suffice to meet the 'arising rebuttable evidential presumption of undue influence' so that the bank may be treated as having been "put on inquiry";
(3) in reaching this point, the court should (a) have in mind that there may be inherent reasons why the transaction is or might well be for the wife's benefit eg supporting the family business, ensuring the family income, raising a loan for joint /her benefit etc, and (b) consider whether the wife does set out or assert a case of real impropriety in relation to the way in which her involvement in the transaction (signature on the guarantee) was procured which has a real prospect of success/ is genuinely triable;
(4) in so doing, the court should consider the extent to which, if at all, this presumption is contradicted or undermined by other available evidence,
(5) when considering whether the allegation of undue influence is contradicted or undermined by the other available evidence, the court should note the general proposition that the bank (FBN) is "put on inquiry" whenever a wife offers to stand surety for her husband's debts;
(6) If the bank is to be treated as "put on inquiry", the court should then consider whether there is evidence that the bank has complied with the guidance given in Etridge;
(7) if so, the court should consider whether that evidence contradicts or undermines any case of undue influence to the extent that (a) there does not appear to be a claim equalling or exceeding the debt or a substantial ground for disputing the debt (IR6.5(4)(a) or (b)) or (b) the court is not satisfied that the demand based on the transaction (guarantee) should be set aside (IR 6.5(4)(d)).
Consideration of and decision on CH/AP/398
Decision on CH/AP/397
(1) does JM raise a dispute as to the debt which appears to fall within any of subparagraphs (a), (b) or (c), and /or, by reference to (d), does JM raise other grounds which satisfy the court that the demand ought to be set aside?
(2) If so, should the court exercise the discretion to set aside?
On an appeal, the additional question may arise that, even if the judge erred in law, should his exercise of the discretion conferred by IR 6.5(4) be overturned as falling outside the permitted exercise of the discretion in the particular circumstances?
(1) In relation to IR 6.5(4)(a), apparent claim exceeding the debt : JM (and CM) had, on the day of the hearing, prepared or issued a claim challenging the enforceability or "seeking the cancellation" of the guarantee and claiming damages. However, no particulars of claim were available, and JM was therefore unable to satisfy the court as to the nature of the claim and its legal basis (his judgment paragraph 22). On the basis of findings made by the court, this claim was rejected as being highly speculative and questionable, not raising a genuinely triable issue or a case with a real prospect of success (his judgment paragraph 24(f)), and therefore not having the appearance of a claim equalling or exceeding the amount of the debt (his judgment paragraph 24(g));
(2) In relation to IR 6.5(4)(b), apparent dispute on substantial grounds : JM had failed to prove that there was a representation, as opposed to "mere extravagant enticement" or a commitment to an ongoing financial package; the actual terms were as documented and JM signed the offer letters of 20.12.07 and 21.2.08 (his judgment paragraph 20 (a) and (b)); although FBN accepted that residential development projects fall outside its usual lending remit, express statements to the contrary were "puff" or "an exaggeration on [TH's] part to secure business", but the terms of the contractual arrangements were as set out in writing and accepted by JM (his judgment paragraph 21). As to undue Influence : pressure was not exerted by FBN to secure signatures on the guarantee; the guarantee was a normal precaution required to address the risk to FBN of increased financial exposure; there was no threat or attempt to dynamically change the working relationship (his judgment paragraph 20(c)). In other words, these circumstances did not give rise to a claim in misrepresentation or undue influence having any real prospect of success;
(3) In relation to IR 6.5(4)(c), apparent security and IR 6.1(5) not complied with or value of debt equalled/exceeded : the demand failed to comply with IR 6.1(5), but JM had failed to establish that he suffered any prejudice (his judgment paragraph 24(c) and (d)); in any event, such failure had not prejudiced JM; JM had failed to discharge the burden which fell on him to prove that the value of the security exceeded the full value of the debt (his judgment paragraph 19); moreover, the debt in fact exceeded the value of the security (his judgment paragraph 24(e));
(4) IR 6.5(4)(d) Satisfactory other grounds : no other basis is put forward (his judgment paragraph 24(j)).
Note 2 [1954] 1 WLR 1489 [Back] Note 3 Etridge Lord Nicholls #44, see also #49; and see Lord Hobhouse #110. [Back] Note 4 Etridge Lord Scott #147 [Back] Note 5 Summarised at paragraph 52(8) above of this judgment [Back]