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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 >> McLean & Anor v Trustees of the Bankruptcy Estate of Dent & Ors [2016] EWHC 2650 (Ch) (26 October 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2016/2650.html Cite as: [2017] WLR(D) 157, [2017] Ch 422, [2016] EWHC 2650 (Ch), [2017] 3 WLR 198, [2017] BPIR 164 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
LEEDS DISTRICT REGISTRY
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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(1) JOSEPH PETER McLEAN (2) CHRISTOPHER JOHN PETTS (as Joint Administrators of the above-named Dent Company (a partnership) (in administration)) |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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(1) SUSAN BERRY AND MATTHEW CHADWICK (as Trustees of the Bankruptcy Estate of Thomas Hugh Dent) (2) SUSAN BERRY AND MATTHEW CHADWICK (as Trustees of the Bankruptcy Estate of Thomas Gordon Dent) (3) SUSAN BERRY AND MATTHEW CHADWICK (as Trustees of the Bankruptcy Estate of Christina Heather Dent) (4) LADY LYNNE MORRISON |
Defendants |
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Graham Sellers (instructed by Walker Morris) for the First to Third Respondents (the Trustees in bankruptcy of the individual Partners)
Louis Doyle (instructed under the Direct Access Scheme) for the Fourth Respondent (Lady Morrison)
Hearing dates: 20 and 21 June 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE NORRIS :
"(2.1) The Bank in consideration of the Lender making the Partnership Loan available to the Partnership and agreeing to make the Company Loan available to the Company…agrees that:
(2.1.1) If the Bank takes any action to enforce…any mortgage guarantee or other security which it holds from the Partners or in relation to the business or assets of the Partnership…the Bank will take all steps reasonably requested by the Lender in connection with the Charge and enforcement of the Charge, subject to clause 2.3 below:
(2.1.2) All amounts paid to the Bank pursuant to clause 2.1.1 shall be held by the Bank on trust:
(a) FIRST in payment or satisfaction of the reasonably and properly incurred expenses of the Bank in taking Enforcement Action directly in relation to the Charge:
(b) SECONDLY in payment or satisfaction of the liabilities of the Partnership to the Lender under the Partnership Loan Agreement PROVIDED THAT the amount to be paid to the Lender pursuant to this clause…shall be limited to the Partnership Loan;
(c) THIRDLY in payment or satisfaction of the liabilities of the Partnership to the Bank: and
(d) FOURTHLY as for the balance (if any) in or towards payment of the sums due but not paid under the Partnership Loan Agreement…"
"One consequence of the application of the principle is that if the first mortgagee with more than one security satisfies his debt out of the property over which the second mortgagee has his only security, the second mortgagee is entitled to stand pro tanto in the place of the first mortgagee in relation to the property over which the second mortgagee has no legal security… It is in this sense that we can say that the second mortgagee is in effect subrogated to the rights of the first mortgagee."
He continued in paragraph 18 to explain that
".. the way in which the original principle in its classic form is framed fastens on the conduct and conscience of the doubly secured creditor. It is the fact that he has the choice which fund to resort to and the power at law to disappoint the singly secured creditor which brings the equity into play."
"to secure, by means of the formation of a company and the assistance thereof out of public funds, the making of loans for agricultural purposes on favourable terms, and to facilitate the borrowing of money on the security of farming stock and other assets, and for purposes connected therewith."
Apart from the foundation of the Agricultural Mortgage Corporation (with most of the major quoted banks as subscribing shareholders) the object of the Act was to facilitate the grant of credit to tenant farmers by making it simple to charge farming stock and other agricultural assets.
(a) That an agricultural charge can only be created by "a bank", that Lady Morrison herself could not have created such a security, and that because she could not have created such a security she was not entitled to benefit from it under the principle of marshalling;
(b) That an agricultural charge is a special sort of security where the identity of the party entitled to enforce it (a regulated entity) is of particular importance, so that Lady Morrison should not be treated as if she were able to enforce it.
(a) The equity so arising between the two creditors may be shaped by the terms of any contract between those two creditors (see Highbury (supra) at [18]: p.383A of the report). Here there was a contract between the creditors (in the Priority Agreement) that the Bank would enforce the Agricultural Charge for the benefit of Lady Morrison and would hold the realisations "on trust" to distribute them in a particular way: and the Bank has complied with the latter element of that bargain. The terms of the contract reinforce rather than limit the ordinary operation of the principle of marshalling.
(b) Even in the absence of such a bargain, when considering secured claims the equity requires the first mortgagee to be treated as if he had had recourse to the fund which was unavailable to the singly-secured creditor. So in sorting out the secured claims, as against the unsecured creditors the Bank is to be treated as if it had claimed under the Agricultural Charge. There is no doubt that the Bank could have done so and as regards unsecured creditors it is to be treated as if it had done so. The equity arises between the Bank and Lady Morrison, not between Lady Morrison and the unsecured creditors: and it has never depended upon the ability of the party seeking to marshal to create the security to be marshalled.
"On the dissolution of a partnership every partner is entitled, as against the other partners in the firm, and all persons claiming through them in respect of their interests as partners, to have the property of the partnership applied in payment of the debts and liabilities of the firm, and to have the surplus assets after such payment applied in payment of what may be due to the partners respectively after deducting what may be due from them as partners to the firm".
The trustees in bankruptcy say that this means that the partners also have the right as against non-partners (e.g. creditors of the partnership) to have the property of the partnership applied in payment of the debts and liabilities of the firm in exoneration of their own individual assets.
"If… a partner is a creditor as of the firm, neither he nor his separate creditors (for they are in no better position than himself) can compete with the joint creditors against the joint estate….."
Yet this is precisely the position for which the trustees in bankruptcy argue by their use of the doctrine of subrogation.