BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> NRAM Plc v Evans & Anor [2015] EWHC 1543 (Ch) (29 May 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2015/1543.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 1543 (Ch) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
CHANCERY DIVISION
CARDIFF DISTRICT REGISTRY
Park Street, Cardiff, CF10 1ET |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
NRAM PLC |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
||
PAUL MORGAN EVANS SUSANNAH JANE EVANS |
Defendants |
____________________
The defendants in person
Hearing dates: 28and 29 May 2015
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
HH Judge Jarman QC :
"This mortgage secures further advances. We are not obliged to make further advances."
"(a) all of the money you owe us from time to time under any offer, including any unpaid interest, costs and fees;
(b) if there is only one of you, all other money you owe us from time to time; and
(c) if there is more than one of you, all other money all of you together owe us from time to time, even if we cannot enforce our claim for any of that money against any one of more of you;
Including any costs and fees and any interest under condition 13.7 but excluding any money the mortgage is not security for because of condition 3.4;"
"3.1 The mortgage is security for the mortgage debt.
3.2 The mortgage is a continuing security. This means that we will not release the mortgage until the mortgage debt is paid in full, and until we owe no duty to make further advances that would form part of the mortgage debt.
3.3 Section 93 of the Law of Property Act 1925 does not apply to the mortgage. This means that we will not release any mortgage for the mortgage debt before the mortgage debt is paid in full.
3.4 The mortgage is not security for any money you owe under a regulated agreement within Part V of the Consumer Credit Act 1974, unless you agree otherwise in writing."
"You are reviewing your mortgage arrangements
Secured Loan amount: £213,128.00 which includes the £250 mortgage review fee for closure of you existing product plus £695.00 for fees that will be added to the loan- see Section 8 for details.
Repayment Method: Interest Only
Term: 25 years
You also wish to borrow £22,311.00 as an unsecured loan- see Section 12 for details"
"An unsecured loan of up to £22,311.00 is also available with this mortgage. The interest rate for unsecured borrowing is the same as that charged for the secured mortgage."
"The Offer Debt must be secured by a first legal mortgage or charge….over the Property described in the Offer."
"You understand that the new loan amount detailed in the Offer of Loan, includes any Sum Equivalent to the Early Repayment Charge or Help with Cost clawback, applicable to the terms and conditions of your current mortgage.
You understand by returning this form we will reschedule your loan as stated in your Offer of Loan.
You have applied for a Mortgage Review transfer and have authorised [the bank] to debit your mortgage account with an Administration fee, which will reserve the deal you have chosen."
"In respect of our Mortgage payments, I made a debit card payment for £1100 of the 3rd February 2006, and is the most recent payment to our mortgage account. As my husbands IVA is being concluded, your help in this matter would be appreciated. We understand the mortgage payment to be £1043.28 which includes the insurance premium."
"We are advised that the mortgage, secured on the property, was discharged on the 13 December 2005, yet your registered charge dated 26 November 2004 is still shown as registered in the Charges Register of title number CYM90651.
The attached letter from yourselves states that in fact the loan was redeemed on the 13 December 2005, yet your registered charge dated 26 November 2004 is mistakenly still shown in the Charges Register of title number CYM90561
The paperwork you have provided our client with confirms that the loan has been redeemed, and we would therefore be grateful if you could please provide the appropriate DS1 or End Notification for the entry to be removed from our clients registered title."
"To invoke the equitable jurisdiction to set aside a voluntary disposition for mistake there must be a mistake of sufficient gravity either as to the legal effect of the disposition or as to an existing fact which is basic to the transaction (Pitt v Holt [2011] EWCA Civ 132 at [210]). In my judgment the mistake of BoS satisfied each of these three limbs.
There was a mistake: Bos did not intend to release the only security it held for the July 2004 Loan, but the e-DS1 had this effect…..
Second, it is a mistake as to the legal effect of the release. Its legal effect was to turn BoS from a secured creditor in relation to the July 2004 Loan into an unsecured creditor. That was not the intended effect…
Third, the mistake was clearly of the relevant seriousness. In one sense it was induced by the person who derived the benefit followed the voluntary disposition, namely, the Borrower himself…But in any event the mistake of the BoS was of such a serious character as to render it unjust on the part of the Borrower to retain what has been given to him i.e. the unencumbered freehold of [the property]."
"Forgetfulness, inadvertence or ignorance is not, as such a mistake, but it can lead to a false belief or assumption which the law will recognise as a mistake."
"Some uncontroversial points can be noted briefly. It does not matter if the mistake is due to carelessness on the part of the person making a voluntary disposition, unless the circumstances are such as to show that he deliberately ran the risk, or must be taken to have run the risk, of being wrong…Nor need the mistake be known to (still less induced by) the person or persons taking a benefit under the disposition."
"I would provisionally conclude that the true requirement is simply for there to be a causative mistake of sufficient gravity; and, as additional guidance to judges in finding and evaluating the facts of any particular case, that the test will normally be satisfied only when there is a mistake either as to the legal character or nature of the transaction, or as to some matter of fact or law which is basic to the transaction."
"In my opinion the same is true of the equitable doctrine of mistake. The court cannot decide the issue of what is unconscionable by an elaborate set of rules. It must consider in the round the existence of a distinct mistake (as compared with total ignorance or disappointed expectations) its degree of centrality to the transaction in question and the seriousness of its consequences, and make an evaluative judgment whether it would be unconscionable, or unjust, to leave the mistake uncorrected. The court may and must form a judgment about the justice of the case."
"There are circumstances where the terms "satisfied" or "settled" are not appropriate because they do not adequately reflect the fact that lenders have been left with no choice but to accept significantly less than they were owed under the terms of the original agreement. Examples include the following. Where an IVA, which included the lender, has been successfully completed even if the lender did not recover all the money owed under the terms of the original agreement. Where a lender has received all the money owed under the terms of a bankruptcy order which has been discharged, even though the amount received falls short of the amount owed under the original agreement and, in some case, may not have received any payment at all."