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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Henderson v Royal Bank Of Scotland Plc [2006] ScotCS CSOH_164 (18 October 2006)
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Cite as: [2006] ScotCS CSOH_164, [2006] CSOH 164

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OUTER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION

 

[2006] CSOH 164

 

A709/04

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

OPINION OF LADY SMITH

 

in the cause

 

(FIRST) NIGEL HENDERSON and

(SECOND) NORMA HENDERSON

 

Pursuers;

 

against

 

THE ROYAL BANK OF SCOTLAND plc

 

Defenders:

 

 

­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­________________

 

 

 

Pursuers: Anderson, Q.C., Kinnear; Semple Fraser

Defenders: Clarke, Advocate; Brodies, W.S.

 

18 October 2006

 

Introduction

[1] In this action, the pursuers each sue the defenders for £251,000 as damages for the negligent misrepresentation of a named employee. Alternatively, the same sums are sought as damages for the defenders' material breach of contract. The pursuers were hoteliers at the relevant time. The defenders, a bank, are a lending institution and the pursuers were customers of the defenders.

[2] According to their averments, the essence of the pursuers' case is that having each borrowed the sum of £400,000 from the defenders in 1997, for business purposes, an enquiry was made of the defenders' Mr Scanlon in October 1998 as to what the "breakage" costs would be if they repaid the loans at that stage, he advised that they would be £240,000 and the pursuers decided not to go ahead and repay since it would be uneconomic to do so at those breakage costs. The breakage costs would in fact have been much less, about £36,000 in total, a matter on which the parties are agreed. The defenders deny that Mr Scanlon made the representation alleged. The pursuers subsequently defaulted in respect of the payments due in respect of the loans and, on a petition brought by the defenders, they were sequestrated in 2002. They assert that their net worth at that time would have been £502,000 if the loans had been repaid in October 1998.

[3] Separately, the pursuers advance a case that they instructed the defenders' Mr Scoular to repay the second pursuer's loan account from funds held on deposit by letter of 8 November 1999, that he failed to carry out that instruction, that the defenders were in breach of contract by reason of that failure and that had it not been for that breach, they would not have been sequestrated but would have had a net worth of £502,000.

 

The Pursuers' Claim for Damages

[4] It was this part of the pursuers' pleadings that was the main focus of the defenders' attack. Each pursuer concludes for damages of £251,000.

[5] In connection with the pursuer's case based on negligent misrepresentation, it is explained in the pleadings that in October 1998, the pursuers had sufficient funds to repay the loans since they had received the net free proceeds of sale of a hotel and those funds were on deposit with the defenders. In article 8 of Condescendence, they aver:

"Had Mr Scanlon informed the pursuers, as was the case, that the total breakage costs of the loans in October 1998 was £36,000, the pursuers would have repaid the loans then with the net free proceeds from the sale of The Park Hotel. The volume of the trade at the Portree Hotel would in those circumstances have suffered to maintain the solvency of the business operated by the pursuers there and their estates would not have been sequestrated. The pursuers' net worth at the date of their said sequestration would have been £502,000....".

[6] The pursuers thus assert a case based on a scenario in which, had it not been for the negligent misrepresentation they would have repaid both loans in October 1998 and carried on running the Portree Hotel.

[7] In connection with the case based on breach of contract the pursuers explain, in article 5 of Condescendence, that the cost of servicing the loans became burdensome and that, by November 1999, they had had to use sums from their deposit to do so. They enquired again as to breakage costs, received an indication that they would be £21,580.32 per loan and instructed the defenders' Mr Scoular to use their deposit to repay the loan in the name of the second pursuer. There then follow averments to the effect that Mr Scoular did not do so, insisted that the funds on deposit be used firstly to repay the pursuers' business overdraft, then indicated a preference that they should do so and that by that time, 7 December 1999, the deposit was insufficient to clear the overdraft. In article 10, they aver:

"As a result of the defenders' said breach of contract in respect of failing to implement the instructions given by the first- named pursuer to Mr Scoular by the said letter of 8 November 1999, the pursuers have suffered loss and damage. Had the second pursuer's loan been paid off in November 1999, any losses sustained by the operation of the business at the Portree Hotel would have been able to be paid off by the value of the hotel itself, the pursuers would not have been sequestrated, and they would have had a net worth at the date of their said sequestration of £502,000. A total loss of £502,000 has thus been suffered by the pursuers as a result of the breach of contract by the defenders condescended upon."

[8] In respect of their case based on breach of contract, the pursuers accordingly assert a case based on a different scenario, namely one in which only one of the two loans would have been repaid and not in October 1998 but over a year later. The same figure is arrived at as being their loss.

[9] No other or further explanation is given of how the figure of £502,000 is arrived at notwithstanding the fact that on the first scenario both loans would have been repaid and ownership of the Portree Hotel would have been retained but on the second scenario, the picture is a rather different one, of only one of the two loans being repaid, a year later and with the Portree Hotel being sold at some point which is not specified.

 

Procedural History

[10] The action was raised towards the end of 2004 and sisted on the pursuer's motion on 8 December 2004. The sist was recalled on 21 January 2005, defences ordered and defences lodged timeously. The pursuers lodged the Open Record late, on 16 February 2005. On motions of the pursuers, consented to by the defenders, the case was continued four times on the adjustment roll on 14 April 2005, 3 June 2005, 13 July 2005 and 16 September 2005. The Record closed on 26 October 2005. On 27 October 2005, on the pursuers' motion, consented to by the defenders, the case was restored to the adjustment roll. On the pursuers' motion, consented to by the defenders, the case was continued on the adjustment roll on 6 December 2005. The Record closed again on 18 January 2006. On 20 January 2006, the case was once again restored to the adjustment roll, on the pursuers' motion, consented to by the defenders. On the same date, a Minute of Amendment by the pursuers was received into process. On 1 March 2006, the Record closed once again. On 9 March, the pleadings were amended in terms of the pursuers' Minute of Amendment. On 13 April 2006, the pursuers' lodged the Closed Record late and the cause was appointed to the procedure roll on the defenders' first plea in law. The defenders were ordered to lodge a note of argument and they did so, on 10 May 2006, on or about which date it was also intimated to the pursuers.

[11] Thus, by 10 May 2006, the pursuers had had the benefit of a wealth of continuations on and restorations to the adjustment roll and knew the nature of the argument that the defenders' proposed to advance at debate. They had, in short, had a long time in which to get their pleadings in order, if it was possible to do so.

[12] The next step was that the pursuers enrolled to allow a fresh Minute of Amendment to be received and the diet of debate discharged. That motion came before Lord Menzies on 26 September 2006, the day before the diet was due to take place. He refused it.

 


Motion to Discharge Diet of Debate

[13] At the start of the hearing before me, senior counsel for the pursuers moved a motion that the diet should be discharged. He did not move that any Minute of Amendment be received.

[14] The justification advanced in support of the motion was as follows. Mr Anderson frankly conceded that the criticisms of the pursuers' pleading to the effect that their whole averments of loss were irrelevant and lacking in specification were well founded. He explained that there had been difficulties in obtaining a report from the forensic accountant instructed on behalf of the pursuers. In October 2005, a 24 page report which Mr Anderson described as "largely unintelligible" was provided. There had been a consultation in November 2005 and pressure had been put on them to produce another report but they had failed to do so. An effort was made to chase them up in July 2006. After the motion for discharge of the diet had been refused by Lord Menzies a consultation had taken place in the afternoon of the previous day. A further draft report had been considered at that consultation. The figures had been recalculated and could be explained. It was not yet in final form. He indicated that the pursuers should be in a position to produce a Minute of Amendment within a short time. They sought time to do so. No clearer indication of when the report would be finalised and when the Minute of Amendment could be forthcoming was given. He also suggested that the defenders had been sympathetic to the pursuers' position in their agreement to continuations on and restorations to the adjustment roll in the past. This was in the same vein.

[15] The motion was opposed by Mr Clark on behalf of the defenders. Firstly, the defenders sought, at debate, to attack other aspects of the pursuers' pleadings which were quite fundamental in addition to their averments of loss. It was not that the defenders had been sympathetic to the pursuers' position in the past. They had repeatedly been assured that they were going to "put their house in order" but that had not happened. They had had ample time to take account of the arguments that the defenders were proposing to advance at debate, having had the note of argument since early May. Their motion for discharge the previous day had been refused. Their options were to reclaim that interlocutor or to face up to the action being dismissed, in which event, if there was a relevant case which they could make, they could raise a fresh action.

[16] Having retired to consider the motion, I refused it. I was satisfied that I could not competently reverse the view taken by Lord Menzies the previous day as to the appropriateness of discharging the diet of debate. The question for me was whether circumstances had changed since then and if so, did any such change mean that it was now appropriate to grant the discharge.

[17] I noted that no new Minute of Amendment was presented, not even in any attempt to meet the points raised in the defenders' note of argument which did not relate to the averments of loss. Mr Anderson had indicated that he took the view that there was no point in doing so until he could also address the problems with the averments of loss but it seemed to me that that involved a leisurely approach to the litigation in circumstances where the pursuers required to recognise that they had already been extensively indulged so far as being given time to get their pleading in order was concerned.

[18] I noted that there had, since the previous day's motion, been a consultation with the forensic accountant instructed for the pursuers but that was against a background of almost a year having passed since receipt of their unsatisfactory report and nothing had been done about chasing up the accountants until July 2006. That was despite the case having been sent to the procedure roll and the defenders' note of argument having been intimated on 10 May 2006. No explanation was given of why it was that it was only after the failure of the previous day's motion that a further consultation with the accountants had taken place. That, in particular, seemed inexplicable. The pursuers and their advisers knew from their own assessment of the advice that they had received from their forensic accountants and from the terms of the defenders' note of argument, that their pleadings would not do and that, furthermore, that if they remained in their present form dismissal was, if not inevitable, a high risk. They had had months to address the problem and reach a clear view as to where exactly they were going with the litigation, if anywhere at all. Further, although it was indicated that the figures had been reworked, no details were provided and the only indication of the time that the pursuers required to finalise their pleadings was that it could be done "shortly". In the whole circumstances, that was not an indication that could be viewed with any degree of confidence. It was all highly unsatisfactory.

[20] I reached the view that it would have been wrong to exercise the discretion available to me so as to accede to the pursuers' motion. The stage had clearly been reached where the defenders were entitled to take the view that "enough is enough" and that was a view that the court were, in my view, bound to share.

[21] The debate accordingly proceeded.

 


Submissions for the Defenders

Averments of Loss:

[22] A copy of the loan agreement that was said in Article 2 of Condescendence to have been lodged and whose terms were adopted brevitatis causa had not in fact been lodged but I was provided with a copy by the defenders. Clause 6.2 provided:

"6.2 The Borrower may prepay the Loan or part thereof (this part to be £50,000 (FIFTY THOUSAND POUNDS STERLING) (a) at any time (if the prepayment is made during a period in which the Borrower has elected to pay interest at the Base Related Rate) or (b) on the last day of the Initial Period or any subsequent fixed rate period (if the prepayment is made while interest is being charged at a fixed rate), subject to the Borrower making an additional payment to the Bank equivalent to three months' interest on the sum prepaid at the rate then current for the Loan and subject also to notice from the Borrower being received by the Bank at the Branch Office no later than 11 a.m. 5 Business Days before such prepayment."

[23] Clause 6.3 is also relevant. It provided:

"In the event of any repayment or prepayment of the Loan or part thereof being made other than as stated in Clauses 6.1 or 6.2 (including any repayment or prepayment following the occurrence of an Event of Default) the Borrower shall, in addition to making an additional payment as detailed in Clause 6.2, pay to the Bank within 3 days of demand the amount certified by the Bank as sufficient to compensate the Bank for any loss in terms of Clause 4 which the Bank shall sustain or incur as a consequence of the repayment or prepayment."

[24] The terms of clause 4 are also relevant:

"4 BREAKAGE CHARGES

4.1 In terms of Clauses 2.3 and 6.3, any loss will reflect the cost to the Bank of unwinding funding transactions undertaken in connection with the Loan. Costs will be incurred when there has been a reduction in the market level of the appropriate interest rate underlying the Loan. The cost will be equivalent to the loss of interest income (including loss of margin) to the Bank as a result of re-deploying funds at a lower interest rate than that which prevailed when the Loan was booked.

The loss referred to above may be substantial in relation to the Loan."

[25] Mr Clark drew attention to the fact that there was no contractual provision whereby the defenders were required to provide, on enquiry, a figure for breakage charges in advance. It was also evident that those charges would only arise if the pursuers decided to repay the loan other than at its normal termination or in the circumstances set out in clause 6.2. In that event, the pursuers would also have become bound to pay an additional three months interest charges in accordance with the provisions of clauses 6.2 and 6.3. At the relevant time, that would have amounted to almost £13,000 per loan, a matter which was not accounted for in the pursuers' pleadings.

[26] Further, the sum due under clause 4 could, potentially, be a substantial amount and would be the result of relatively complex calculation.

[27] He then reviewed the pursuers' pleadings and noted that there were two central (disputed) questions of fact, namely whether or not Mr Scanlon said that the breakage charges would be £240,000 and whether or not Mr Scoular failed to carry out the first pursuer's instructions to repay one of the loans from the deposit. Against that background, the pursuers made averments of both negligent misrepresentation and failure to take reasonable care regarding Mr Scanlon's alleged failings. However, whichever legal basis they intended to found on, it was evident that they sought damages for erroneous information having been given to them. The principles enunciated in the case of South Australia Asset Management Corporation v York Montague [1997] AC 191 applied. In particular, he referred to passages from the speech of Lord Hoffman at pages 212-214, including the following:

"Rules which make the wrongdoer liable for all the consequences of his wrongful conduct are exceptional and need to be justified by some special policy. Normally the law limits liability to those consequences which are attributable to that which made the act wrongful. In the case of liability in negligence for providing inaccurate information, this would mean liability for the consequences of the information being inaccurate." (p.213C-D)

[28] That meant that the defenders could only be held liable for the foreseeable consequences of the information given about the breakage costs being wrong. The pleadings did not address that issue.

[29] Further, the pursuers advanced a case on two separate grounds; one was that the wrong figure for breakage charges was given and the other was the defenders did not carry out instructions. In respect of both, the figure advanced for loss was wholly lacking in specification. There were no averments to support a case that the loss claimed was a foreseeable consequence of the wrong information about breakage costs being given. The pursuers required to explain why it should have been foreseeable that the giving of the wrong information would result in insolvency and sequestration of the pursuers, particularly where, on their own averments there had also been a decline in trade. Further, the coincidence of the figures as between the two different scenarios advanced called for an explanation that was absent.

 

Averments regarding breach of duty:

[30] Mr Clark submitted that the pursuer's averments as to Mr Scoular's delictual duty were irrelevant in respect that it was averred that it was his duty to "ensure that the information given was true and accurate". At its highest, Mr Scoular had a duty to take reasonable care but the averment went beyond that to the imposition of a duty of insurance which the law of negligence did not require.

[31] Moving on, Mr Clark turned to a section of the averments in article 7 of Condescendence in which it was averred that:

"Had Mr Scanlon exercised reasonable care in inquiring of the defenders' Treasury department as to the breakage cost at that time and in reporting that cost to the pursuers, he could not have informed the first- named pursuer, as he did, that that cost was around £240,000."

Apart from the fact that that was a different duty from the one averred earlier, it was quite unclear what it was that Mr Scanlon failed to do. Was it being said that he failed to make the enquiry at all, that he failed to note or understand what the correct figure was or that he failed in some other way to communicate the correct figure? The pursuers' averments were inferential but there was no basis for them. There was, for instance, no averment that the Treasury department did, as a matter of fact, compute the breakage costs at £36,000 at that time.

[32] Separately, Mr Clark drew attention to the fact that the pursuers had an esto case that the defenders were in breach of an implied term of the contract that they would provide the pursuers with an accurate breakage cost for repaying the loans when they requested such information. There was though no basis for such a term. It was not necessary and if it existed, it would have imposed very onerous obligations on the defenders in a market where those charges could change quickly and quite dramatically. In support of his submissions regarding the irrelevance of the implied term case, he referred to Moyarget Developments Ltd v Mathis & Ors 2006 GWD 651 where Lord Reed accepted that pursuers had not averred a relevant case for the implication of a term where they provided:

"..no basis for the leading of evidence from which the court could conclude that the term contended for (and no other term) went without saying as part of the agreement made ....; that it was an implication arising inevitably to give effect to the intention of the parties; that it was a term which, though tacit, formed part of the contract which parties had made for themselves." (paragraph 40)

[33] Turning to the case based on Mr Scoular's failure to follow instructions, the averments were irrelevant. At the time the alleged instruction was given, the pursuers' business overdraft was substantial; it was averred by the pursuers to have been £213,000 at the relevant time. No contractual term in the parties' banking contract containing an obligation on the part of the defenders to repay one of the term loans out of the deposit before the overdraft was identified by the pursuers.

[34] In summary, Mr Clark submitted that it was evident that there were fundamental problems with the pursuers' case not only in respect of causation and specification of loss but also in respect of their averments of the contractual and delictual duties on which their case was founded.

 

Submissions for the Pursuers

[35] After the close of the defenders' submissions, Mr Anderson sought leave to amend. The pursuers could aver a relevant case of loss and the link between the negligent misrepresentation and loss could be made. The pursuers should be entitled to do so. He was not, he said, in a position to take issue with the defenders' arguments anent causation and specification of loss. He also accepted that the daily figure for breakage costs would fluctuate but the pursuers' submission remained that there was a duty not to give a figure that was eight times too high and whilst he could not defend the case on loss as presently pled, he sought leave to amend to do so. He offered no submissions in respect of the other matters raised as there was, he said, no point seeking to defend them in the light of the fact that he accepted the criticisms of his averments of loss.

[36] In response to the motion for leave to amend, Mr Clark submitted that nothing had changed. The test to be applied was whether the averments were relevant and sufficiently specific, not whether they were capable of being altered. The pursuers had not pled a relevant case in the eighteen months or more that had passed thus far and he did not accept that they would be able to do so.

[37] I refused the motion for leave to amend. It appeared to be no more than a "last ditch" attempt to secure the same effect as would have been have secured by discharge of the diet of debate in circumstances where no indication was being given of what the pursuer would or could say that would cure the defects in their pleadings.

 

Discussion

[38] I was readily satisfied that, for all the reasons advanced on behalf of the defenders the pursuers' case was irrelevant. The submissions made in respect of the averments of causation and loss identified a matter which was of such substance as to make the whole case irrelevant. However, the submissions regarding the cases of negligence and breach of contract were, I also accept, well founded and of similar substance. The pursuers did not seek to challenge the defenders' submissions. In all the circumstances, the case falls to be dismissed and I will pronounce an interlocutor to that effect.

 

 


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