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The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions >> Jamaican Redevelopment Foundation Inc v The Real Estate Board (Jamaica) [2014] UKPC 28 (03 September 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKPC/2014/28.html Cite as: [2014] UKPC 28 |
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[2014] UKPC 28
Privy Council Appeal No 0066 of 2013
Jamaican Redevelopment Foundation Inc (Appellant) v The Real Estate Board (Respondent)
Appellant Sandra Minott-Phillips QC Maurice Manning Esq Tavia Dunn (Instructed by Myers, Fletcher & Gordon Solicitors) |
Respondent Peter Knox QC Dr Lloyd Barnett (Instructed by MA Law (Solicitors) LLP) |
LORD CLARKE:
Introduction
The facts
Sections 26 and 31 of the Act
"26(1) A person shall not enter into a prepayment contract as a vendor in connection with any land which is, or is intended to be, the subject of a development scheme to which section 35 applies unless –
…..
(b) such land is free from any mortgage or charge securing money or money's worth (other than a mortgage or charge in favour of an authorized financial institution referred to in the proviso to subsection (5) of section 31); …
(2) Where a contract is entered into by a vendor in contravention of subsection (1) the purchaser or any person succeeding to the rights of the purchaser under the contract may, within such time as may be reasonable in the circumstances of each case, withdraw therefrom and recover from the vendor any moneys paid to him under the contract together with interest thereon computed from day to day at the prime lending rate of commercial banks in Jamaica for the time being prevailing as certified by the Bank of Jamaica, but without prejudice however to the provisions of section 44(2) (relating to the penalty for contravention of subsection (1) of this section).
31 …
(4) The charge mentioned in paragraph (b) of subsection (3) shall be a charge upon the land on which the building or works in question is being constructed in favour of the Board charging the land with the repayment of all amounts received by the vendor pursuant to the contract which shall become repayable by him upon breach by him of the contract.
(5) Such charge shall rank in priority before all other mortgages or charges on the said land except any charge created by statute thereon in respect of unpaid rates or taxes, and shall be enforceable by the Board by sale of the said land by public auction or private treaty as the Board may consider expedient:
Provided that where a mortgage or charge of the said land has been duly created in favour of an authorized financial institution to secure repayment of amounts advanced by that financial institution in connection with the construction of any buildings or works on the said land the charge created by this section shall rank pari passu in point of security with the mortgage or charge in favour of that authorized financial institution."
The decisions below
The issues
Issue (1) - Are illegal prepayment contracts void?
Issue (2) – Can prepayment contracts entered into in contravention of the Act be subject to a valid charge in favour of the REB?
"Notwithstanding the existence in any other person of any estate or interest, whether derived by grant from the Crown or otherwise, which but for this Act might be held to be paramount or to have priority, the proprietor of land or of any estate or interest in land under the operation of this Act shall, except in case of fraud, hold the same as the same may be described or identified in the certificate of title, subject to any qualification that may be specified in the certificate, and to such incumbrances as may be notified on the folium of the Register Book constituted by his certificate of title, but absolutely free from all other incumbrances whatsoever, except the estate or interest of a proprietor claiming the same land under a prior registered certificate of title, and except as regards any portion of land that may by wrong description of parcels or boundaries be included in the certificate of title or instrument evidencing the title of such proprietor not being a purchaser for valuable consideration or deriving from or through such a purchaser:
Provided always …."
Issue (3): Does the Act have the effect that the charge registered in favour of the REB and registered subsequent to JRF's registered mortgage ranks in priority to that mortgage.
"Where the meaning of the actual words used in a provision of a Jamaican statute is clear and free from ambiguity, the case for reading into it words which are not there and which, if there, would alter the effect of the words actually used can only be based on some assumption as to the policy of the Jamaican legislature to which the statute was intended to give effect. If without the added words, the provision would be clearly inconsistent with other provisions of the statute it falls within the ordinary function of a court of construction to resolve the inconsistency and, if this be necessary, to construe the provision as including by implication the added words. But in the absence of such inconsistency it is a strong thing for a court to hold that the legislature cannot have really intended what it clearly said but must have intended something different. In doing this a court is passing out of the strict field of construction altogether and giving effect to concepts of what is right and what is wrong which it believes to be so generally accepted that the legislature too may be presumed not to have intended to act contrary to them."