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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Bank of Scotland Plc v Waugh & Ors [2014] EWHC 2117 (Ch) (21 July 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2014/2117.html Cite as: [2014] EWHC 2117 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
LEEDS DISTRICT REGISTRY
Oxford Row Leeds LS1 3BG |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
BANK OF SCOTLAND PLC |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) JOHN THOMAS WAUGH (2) KATHLEEN WAUGH (3) TIMOTHY ROHAN GRAY (4) IAIN ERNEST WILLIAMS |
Defendants |
____________________
John Waugh appeared in person and on behalf of his wife Kathleen Waugh
Hearing date: 17 June 2014
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Judge Behrens :
1 Abbreviations
Bank of Scotland plc | The Bank |
HM Land Registry | The Registry |
John Thomas Waugh | Mr Waugh |
Kathleen Waugh | Mrs Waugh |
Sintons Law and/or Sinton & Co | Sintons |
The Nelson Trust | The Trust |
Timothy Rohan Gray | Mr Gray |
Iain Ernest Williams | Mr Williams |
Trustees of the Nelson Trust | The Trustees |
Asquorn House 20 – 22 Borough Road, North Shields | Asquorn House |
The Law of Property (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1989 | The 1989 Act |
The Charge dated 8th August 2003 of Asquorn House | The Charge |
2 Introduction
2.1 Asquorn House
2.2 The Facility Letter
3 The facts
3.1 The Trust
3.2 Asquorn House
We will send you the Legal Charge … and any other relevant paperwork. You should arrange for the borrower to execute this and let us have a certified copy immediately.
The Nelson Trust whose registered office is Nelson House, Brimcombe Hill, Brimscombe, Stroud, … and whose company registration number is 03211815.
The letter includes:
It is imperative that we succeed in dealing with completion of this matter tomorrow.
Would you please confirm immediately on receipt of this fax that you will be able to send the funds tomorrow.…
Terms of the charge
You shall take whatever steps and execute whatever documents we may require for:
14.1. The purpose of perfecting and giving effect to the Charge
15.1. You by way of security, irrevocably appoint us and any Receiver and each one severally to be your attorney (with full power to delegate) for you and in your name and as our act and deed:
15.1.1. To execute as a deed and perfect all deeds … which you ought to execute under the obligations and provisions contained in these Conditions …
3.3 The Facility Letter
1. The Trustees are identified as "the Borrower". The first paragraph provides that if the offer is accepted the letter and the Schedules will form the agreement between the parties for the working capital facility of £3,000,000.2. Under clause 1.1 the facility can only be used if the documents referred to in the Schedule have been provided to the Bank. These include a legal charge over a number of properties including Asquorn House.
3. Under clause 2.5 the facility matured on 30th December 2007 ("the Maturity Date") and would be reviewed annually thereafter. It would cease to be available unless an extension was agreed in writing. The amount outstanding under the facility was to be repaid on the Maturity Date. Under clause 4 there was power to demand payment after the repayment date.
4. Clause 9 deal with payments. Under clause 9.5 any determination by the Bank of any amount of principal, interest, commission is in the absence of manifest error conclusive and binding on the Trustees.
3.4 Other Proceedings
The claim is for damages in excess of £2m including "triple damages" for breaches of the Bills of Exchange Act 1882, the HBOS Re-organisation Act 2006 and the Fraud Act 2006… At the heart of his claim is the contention that the Trust's overdraft was discharged when in February 2010 the Claimant tendered to the Bank a promissory note in the amount of £3m. As a result the Claimant argues the Bank was not entitled thereafter to demand repayment of the overdraft or to appoint receivers.
The contention that the agreement between the parties represented by the facility letter is void because it does not comply with [s2 of the 1989 Act] is wrong. The section only applies to contracts for the sale or other disposition of an interest in land. The facility letter is not such a contract.
The fact that security by way of a legal charge over property was required as a condition of drawing down on the facility … does not make it an agreement for the creation of a charge over land.
The bank does not need to substantiate its losses as the appellant says. All it needs to do is to satisfy the Court that the trustees had borrowed the money and not repaid it. As the judge said the very fact that the trustees tendered a promissory note for £3 million is, at the very least, strong evidence that there was a substantial indebtedness outstanding.
4 Claim under the Facility letter.
Failure to serve his wife.
Failure to comply with s 2 the 1989 Act.
Failure to disclose the financial difficulties facing the Bank
The letter dated 7th January 2011
For the avoidance of doubt however we confirm that the Bank accepts that the Trustees are not personally liable for the debt in the name of the Trust.
Mr Waugh's History
Conclusion
5 Claims under the charge of Asquorn House
Points of Law
S 52 of the Law of Property Act 1925
S 1(3) of the 1989 Act
An instrument is validly executed as a deed by an individual if, and only if –
(a) it is signed –
(i) by him in he presence of a witness who attests his signature or
(ii) …
(b) …
S 51 of the Land Registration Act 2002.
On completion of the relevant registration requirements, a charge created by means of a registrable disposition of a registered estate has effect, if it would not otherwise do so, as a charge by deed by way of legal mortgage.
Estoppel
Shah v Shah
"29 I bear in mind the clarity of the language of section 1(2) and (3) and also that the requirement for attestation is integral to the requirement for signature in that the validity of the signature is stipulated to depend on the presence of the attesting witness. I also accept that attestation has a purpose in that it limits the scope for disputes as to whether the document was signed and the circumstances in which it was signed. The beneficial effect of the requirement for attestation of the signature in the manner specified in the statute is not in question. It gives some, but not complete, protection to other parties to the deed who can have more confidence in the genuineness of the signature by reason of the attestation. It gives some, but not complete, protection to a potential signatory who may be under a disability, either permanent or temporary. A person may aver in opposition to his own deed that he was induced to execute it by fraud, misrepresentation or, as was unsuccessfully alleged in the present case, duress and the attestation requirement is a safeguard.
30 I have, however, come to the conclusion that there was no statutory intention to exclude the operation of an estoppel in all circumstances or in circumstances such as the present. The perceived need for formality in the case of a deed requires a signature and a document cannot be a deed in the absence of a signature. I can detect no social policy which requires the person attesting the signature to be present when the document is signed. The attestation is at one stage removed from the imperative out of which the need for formality arises. It is not fundamental to the public interest, which is in the requirement for a signature. Failure to comply with the additional formality of attestation should not in itself prevent a party into whose possession an apparently valid deed has come from alleging that the signatory should not be permitted to rely on the absence of attestation in his presence. It should not permit a person to escape the consequences of an apparently valid deed he has signed, representing that he has done so in the presence of an attesting witness, merely by claiming that in fact the attesting witness was not present at the time of signature. The fact that the requirements are partly for the protection of the signatory makes it less likely that Parliament intended that the need for them could in all circumstances be used to defeat the claim of another party.
31 Having regard to the purposes for which deeds are used and indeed in some cases required, and the long-term obligations which deeds will often create, there are policy reasons for not permitting a party to escape his obligations under the deed by reason of a defect, however minor, in the way his signature was attested. The possible adverse consequences if a signatory could, months or years later, disclaim liability upon a purported deed, which he had signed and delivered, on the mere ground that his signature had not been attested in his presence, are obvious. The lack of proper attestation will be peculiarly within the knowledge of the signatory and, as Sir Christopher Slade observed in the course of argument, will often not be within the knowledge of the other parties.
32 In this case the document was described as a deed and was signed. A witness, to whom the third and fourth defendants were well known, provided a form of attestation shortly afterwards and the only failure was that he did so without being in the presence of the third and fourth defendants when they signed."
Briggs v Gleeds
40. It is evident from Shah v Shah that there are circumstances in which a person can be estopped from denying that a document was executed in accordance with the requirements of section 1 of the 1989 Act. It is also apparent from Pill LJ's judgment that attestation is less crucial than signature. On the other hand, Pill LJ did not decide that estoppel can be used in response to every sort of failure to comply with the 1989 Act. To the contrary, he expressed his conclusion narrowly: he was unable to detect a statutory intention "totally" to exclude the operation of an estoppel in relation to the application of section 1 or to exclude it "in present circumstances". It seems fair, moreover, to infer that Pill LJ would not have considered estoppel applicable if the defendants had not even signed the "deed". In Pill LJ's view, "a document cannot be a deed in the absence of a signature" and the public interest lies in the requirement for a signature.
43. In the end, I have concluded that estoppel cannot be invoked where a document does not even appear to comply with the 1989 Act on its face or, at any rate, cannot be so invoked in the circumstances of the present case. My reasons include these:
i) To state the obvious, Parliament has decided that, for an individual validly to execute a deed, he must sign "in the presence of a witness who attests the signature". That requirement has an evidential purpose: as Pill LJ noted in Shah v Shah, it "limits the scope for disputes as to whether the document was signed and the circumstances in which it was signed" and "gives some, but not complete, protection to other parties to the deed who can have more confidence in the genuineness of the signature by reason of the attestation". As Pill LJ further noted, the requirement also "gives some, but not complete, protection to a potential signatory who may be under a disability, either permanent or temporary". The Law Commission thought, too, that the need for attestation would "emphasise to the person executing the deed the importance of his act" (see paragraph 8.3(i) of the Law Commission's Working Paper No 93: Transfer of Land: Formalities for Deeds and Escrows (1985));ii) Fulfilment of Parliament's and the Law Commission's objectives would be undermined, potentially to a serious extent, if estoppel could be invoked in circumstances such as those in the present case;iii) Shah v Shah shows, of course, that a person can sometimes be estopped from denying due attestation. The document with which the Court was concerned in that case appeared, however, to be valid. Accordingly, Pill LJ said that failure to comply with the formality of attestation should not in itself prevent a party into whose possession "an apparently valid deed" has come from alleging that the signatory should not be permitted to rely on the absence of attestation in his presence. He also spoke of "an apparently valid deed" in the next sentence of his judgment;iv) The "deeds" at issue in the present case are not "apparently valid". It can be seen from each document that it was not executed in accordance with the 1989 Act. This distinction from Shah v Shah is a significant one. If estoppel can be invoked in relation to documents that are not "apparently valid", the documents cannot necessarily be taken at face value. "[A]s far as possible," however, "it should be clear on the face of the document whether or not it has been validly witnessed" (see paragraph 8.3(i) of the Law Commission working paper). That is especially so since the validity of a deed can matter for many years, and those considering "deeds" long after they have been executed may well have no personal knowledge of the circumstances in which they were executed and access to little or no contemporary correspondence;v) If estoppel were available in circumstances such as those in the present case, a party to a "deed" who had not himself executed the document in accordance with section 1 of the 1989 Act could choose whether or not the document should be treated as valid. If it turned out to be in his interests to disavow the document, he could do so. If, on the other hand, the document proved to be advantageous to him, he could invoke estoppel. To take an example close to the facts of the present case, if a "deed" provided for a pension scheme to become money purchase rather than final salary, an employer who had signed without having his signature witnessed could wait and see whether the change was, in the event, beneficial to him;vi) Section 1 of the 1989 Act was in part designed to achieve certainty. It could, however, have the opposite consequence if estoppel were available in circumstances such as those in the present case. The effectiveness of a "deed" that had not, on the face of it, been validly executed could be left in doubt.
Discussion and Conclusion
We have had the mortgage deed executed by the Trustees and are now enclosing a certified copy of it.
6 Claim for an equitable charge
Points of Law
Equitable Mortgage
Section 2 of the 1989 Act
This section provides:
(1) A contract for the sale or other disposition of an interest in land can only be made in writing and only by incorporating all the terms which the parties have expressly agreed in one document or, where contract are exchanged, in each.
(2) The terms may be incorporated in a document either by being set out in it or by reference to some other document.
Discussion
7 Conclusion
1. that there is no realistically arguable defence to the claim for the sums due under the facility letter and the Bank is entitled to summary judgment in respect of the sums claimed.
2. that the Trustees are not estopped from relying on the defects in the execution of the Legal Charge and that Mr Waugh is entitled to a declaration to that effect.
3. that the Legal Charge was, nonetheless, effective as an equitable charge. Whether or not the Bank is entitled to an order compelling the Trustees to execute further documents will be determined at the hearing when the judgment is handed down.
Note 1 This summary is taken verbatim from paragraph 37 of Newey J’s judgment in Briggs. [Back]