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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Centremodel Projects Ltd v Royal Bank Of Scotland [2000] EWCA Civ 206 (4 July 2000)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2000/206.html
Cite as: [2000] EWCA Civ 206

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Case No: QBCMF 1999/0381/A3

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF JUDICATURE
COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
MANCHESTER DISTRICT REGISTRY
Mercantile List
Royal Courts of Justice
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL
Date 4th July 2000

B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE PETER GIBSON
LORD JUSTICE BROOKE
and
LORD JUSTICE ROBERT WALKER
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CENTREMODEL PROJECTS LTD

Appellants/
Claimants


- and -



ROYAL BANK OF SCOTLAND

Respondents/
Defendants


-

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(Transcript of the Handed Down Judgment of
Smith Bernal Reporting Limited, 180 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2HD
Tel No: 0171 421 4040, Fax No: 0171 831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
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Peter Smith QC & Paul Chaisty (instructed by Yates Barnes for the Appellants)
Stephen Phillips (instructed by Hammond Suddards for the Respondents)
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Judgment
As Approved by the Court
Crown Copyright ©


LORD JUSTICE BROOKE:
1. This is an appeal by the claimants Centremodel Projects Ltd ("Centremodel") against an order of Judge Kershaw QC sitting as a high court judge in Manchester on 26th March 1999 when he dismissed their claim against the defendants, the Royal Bank of Scotland ("the Bank"). By a Respondents' Notice the Bank seeks to challenge the judge's findings of fact on a central issue in the case.
2. Centremodel's claim against the Bank is connected with the cost of land reclamation works it carried out at premises at Heapey, in Lancashire. The land was the site of a former bleach and linoleum factory. It was badly contaminated with various forms of toxic waste, but it was perceived as having valuable potential for housebuilding if the contamination could be removed.
3. In the mid-1980s the unregistered freehold title to this land was acquired for about £150,000 by a company called William Ainscough and Sons Ltd ("Ainscough Sons"). This was the parent company of a group of three companies which represented a family business which went back to the early years of this century. The other two companies in the group, which were both trading companies, were called Ainscough Metals Ltd ("Metals"), and Ainscough Building Supplies Ltd. The former carried on business as scrap metal dealers and also undertook demolition work, and the latter carried on business as builders' merchants. From about 1988 Mr Sam Ainscough was in charge of the former company, and his brother Joe Ainscough was in charge of the latter. It was Joe Ainscough who was concerned with the events that form the subject matter of this action, although Metals occupied part of the Heapey land for the purposes of its business, and it appeared as an asset in the accounts of Metals. Mr Ainscough, who gave evidence at the trial, could not explain how this had happened: he said he did what his accountant told him to do. The judge did not accept this evidence, but declined to speculate about the true reason for this treatment of the land in Metals' accounts.
4. The Bank had for many years extended banking facilities to each of the Ainscough companies, supported by charges over their assets and by cross-guarantees. The land at Heapey was charged by Ainscough Sons to the Bank by way of legal mortgage as security for all its liabilities to the Bank of any kind pursuant to Clause 1 of a debenture dated 6th November 1986. Both the trading companies felt the impact of the recession in the late 1980s on their business, and the group's viability was also affected by the amount of money it had invested in the Heapey land. In 1991 it obtained outline planning permission for 150 houses on the land. It learned that Government grants were available towards the cost of decontaminating derelict land, and Metals applied for such a grant in March 1992. It also made some attempt on its own account to carry out reclamation work, but the judge said that it may have done more harm than good in this respect. The group's plans included a plan to relocate their businesses on part of the site.
5. In the early part of 1993 the group's overall indebtedness to the Bank was in the region of £3 million. The Bank then decided to transfer the handling of the group's borrowing to a new Manchester branch of its Specialised Lending Section ("SLS"), where Mrs Hope was one of the managers. This section took on the handling of accounts which did not fulfill the Bank's standard lending criteria because they had a high risk element. Mrs Hope had had 16 years' experience in the Bank's employment, and was the first working member of the new branch when it was created. When the Ainscough file was transferred to her in May 1993, it contained a note that the group's directors should be warned of the dangers of trading when insolvent, but the judge declined to make any finding as to whether any such warning was in fact given.
6. At this time the group's borrowing totalled £3,075,000, and the total written down value of the bank's security was only £1,901,000, leaving a balance of £1,174,000 which was required from land disposals "to leave an ongoing satisfactory position." It was estimated within the Bank that of the existing borrowing about £1 million represented lending which was directly related to expenditure on the Heapey site, while the balance of the borrowing related to the two trading businesses.
7. It was at this point that Centremodel came on the scene. This came about in the following way. Mr Ainscough had been having discussions with a civil engineering company, from whom he had obtained a quotation for the reclamation work, and in this context he had also started talking to the Bank in May 1993 about the possibility of obtaining bridging finance, since he believed that with the aid of the Bank and with dereliction grant aid the project could be taken forward. In particular, there was a sale in prospect of six acres of the land for £1.25 million to a company called Ideal Homes, which led him to tell Mrs Hope that he would only need short-term additional finance from the Bank. Mrs Hope said that she was led to believe that the arrangements for this proposed sale were far advanced.
8. In early June Mr Ainscough was approached out of the blue by Mr Godfrey Crook and Mr Harry Ruttle. Mr Crook had had many years experience in the civil engineering industry. He had heard about the development potential of the site, and he had decided to approach Mr Ruttle to see if they could form a joint venture company to carry out the necessary land reclamation work and then sell the decontaminated land to residential developers at a profit. Mr Ruttle was a director of the Ruttle Group of companies, which had within it the necessary skills and experience to carry out a land reclamation contract of this kind. Mrs Hope said that Mr Crook had had previous dealings with the Bank, and that Mr Ruttle was a well-known businessman in the construction industry in the Chorley area.
9. Mr Crook's idea was that he and Mr Ruttle would form a new joint venture company which would enter into a contract to carry out the work with the relevant Ainscough company and then sub-contract its execution to one of Mr Ruttle's companies. The new joint venture company would take its profit from the difference between the contract price with the Ainscough company and the sub-contract price at which the Ruttle company would carry out the work. Out of this gross profit the joint venture company would have to pay for the work of supervising the removal and disposal of the contaminated material. This task was to be performed by Mr Norman Leek, a quantity surveyor employed within the Ruttle group, who was considered to have the necessary skills and experience. Mr Leek would also act as the administrator of the new company. Mr Ruttle and Mr Crook anticipated that the eventual net profit accruing to the new company would be substantial.
10. They therefore approached Mr Ainscough with a proposition which eventually led to an agreement that the net profits of the new company would be divided as to 25% to Mr Crook, 25% to Mr Ruttle and 50% for the benefit of Mr Ainscough, to be paid to a company he would form. The judge said that he did not know whether Mr Ainscough's motive was to save tax or to hide this money from the bank or both. At all events, the potential benefit which would accrue to him from these arrangements was never revealed to the Bank. They agreed to call the new company Centremodel. Mr Ainscough said he was attracted to them because he considered that the price they quoted was a competitive one.
11. On 22nd June 1993 a meeting took place between Mr Crook, Mr Ruttle, their accountant Mr Johnson, Mr Ainscough and Mrs Hope. Mr Johnson was a partner in the accountants firm of Thornton Harper and Relph. Mr Ainscough's professional advisers may also have been present. Mrs Hope was told at this meeting that the contract price for the land reclamation work would be £2.3 million, subject to measure, and that the work was programmed to take 24 weeks, starting on 28th June. In Mr Johnson's note of this meeting he recorded that the Bank offered no guarantee in support of Metals' liability for the cost of the work. In an exchange of letters which followed this meeting Mrs Hope confirmed to Mr Johnson that the grants would be paid into a stakeholder account, and that the balance of "necessary bank facility" would be provided on a separate account which would only be available to be used to satisfy invoices from the new company when supported by Metals' supervising engineer's certificates and confirmation by Metals that it approved the payment.
12. Mrs Hope said in her evidence that she was keen to ensure that the Heapey project could be brought through to fruition and the site disposed of, so that the two trading businesses would be in a position to trade free from the financial strain of the Heapey site debt. She also said that they had discussed at the meeting the likely shortfall in the funding available for the project based on a contract price of £2.3 million, and she had said that the Bank would consider putting a facility in place to bridge the gap. She did not say that unlimited funds would be made available: it would have been madness to have done so, and no manager or representative of the Bank would have considered committing it in this way. On 24th June 1993 she wrote to Mr Ainscough setting out the Bank's terms for its assistance (which included a monthly fee of £500 for monitoring the Heapey position, a restructuring fee of £20,000 payable once the overall Heapey situation was clarified, and an option representing 10% of the increased value of the Heapey land from an agreed base value once the Ideal Homes contract had been completed). She said the Bank was obviously looking to enable the decontamination work to be undertaken, and in this regard she asked that Mr Ainscough's requirements for the bridging loan should be forwarded to her as soon as possible.
13. Her subsequent discussions with Mr Ainscough crystallised in a facility letter dated 27th August 1993 and a fee agreement dated 6th September 1993. On 6th September Mr Ainscough signed the facility letter on behalf of all three Ainscough companies and the fee agreement on behalf of Ainscough Sons (who were shown to be the owners of the Heapey land) and Metals.
14. The facility letter distinguished between the overdraft of £2,090,000 to Ainscough Sons and its subsidiaries (which would be utilised to fund their working capital requirements), "the Heapey loan" of £1 million to Metals (which would be utilised to repay the existing Heapey loan and other loans outstanding in the name of Metals, the balance being used to reduce Metals' current account borrowing), and "the Heapey Bridge" (which would be utilised to fund the decontamination programme being undertaken on the site at Heapey). One of the preconditions to any drawdown of the Heapey Bridge was the confirmation that Ideal Homes had entered into a contract to purchase six acres of land on the Heapey site for not less than £1.2 million. Another precondition was confirmation that a grant by way of derelict land grant of £867,000 would be made available by Chorley Borough Council. A third precondition was confirmation from the solicitors acting for the Ainscough companies that all legal documentation had been correctly drawn up and signed by all the relevant parties. The facility letter expressly envisaged that the Heapey Bridge would be repaid from monies due under the grant and from the Ideal Homes contract, and that thereafter the Heapey loan would be repaid from sales of the various plots on the Heapey site.
15. In the meantime, on 11th August 1993 Centremodel had entered into a written contract with Metals, backdated to 30th June 1993, whereby it agreed to carry out the reclamation works for £2.145 million, subject to measure. In the event the work cost more than twice this amount. Clause 7.9 of the contract, which was drafted by Mr Leek, was in these terms:
"Progress work shall be measured and valued at monthly intervals. Payments shall be made by the Bank within four weeks after the date of payment certificate and as particularised in the letter from Thornton Harper and Relph dated the 22nd June 1993 to the Bank; the Bank's reply letter dated 23rd June 1993; and Thornton Harper and Relph letter dated 4th August 1993 copy of all letters annexed hereto."
16. The Bank was not a party to this contract, and the judge said of Mr Leek that he regarded himself as possessing legal expertise in the field of engineering contracts which (contrary to his and Mr Ruttle's belief in the matter) he did not in fact possess. Mrs Hope said in her evidence (p 1160) that Metals' solicitor told her that Centremodel wanted the Bank to enter into some warranties in the contract document, and that she had replied that the Bank had not given any warranties and did not intend to do so. In due course, when the statement of claim was originally pleaded by Mr Peter Smith QC, it was alleged that in 1993 the Bank had agreed, pursuant to a collateral contract, to ensure that Metals had sufficient sums to complete the works in accordance with its contract with Centremodel (taking into account the grant) and that it would cause these funds to be paid into an account earmarked solely for the purpose of paying Centremodel in discharge of sums certified as being due under the contract. It was also alleged that any sums received by the Bank on account of grant monies or advanced to it by Metals were impressed with a trust to apply them solely for the purposes of discharging sums due to Centremodel under the contract.
17. Both these allegations were struck out from the pleadings by Jonathan Parker J on 7th October 1997 and they therefore played no part in the trial. They had continuing significance, however, because Judge Kershaw said he had no doubt that Mr Leek, and through him Mr Ruttle, had a genuine belief that the Bank had agreed in 1993 to provide the difference between the cost of the work, as certified by the engineer for the purposes of the contract, and any grants received by Metals. He added that what Mr Ruttle and Mr Leek said and wrote thereafter must be read in the context that this was their genuine belief.
18. Mrs Hope did in fact permit a drawing of about £600,000 on the new Heapey Bridge account on 6th September 1993 before the Ideal Homes contracts had been exchanged. She said she had received a verbal assurance from the Ainscough companies' new London solicitor that the sale was going ahead as planned. She agreed to allow further payments to Centremodel of about £333,000 on 12th November (which increased the net debit balance on the account to about £843,000), £100,000 on 2nd December (which increased it further to £946,000) and a further £100,000 later that month (which took the borrowing up to its permitted limit) even though the Ideal Homes contract had still not been exchanged - and, indeed, on 6th December she was told that the company had withdrawn from the proposed sale. Mrs Hope said that she had seen little point in continuing to take the hard line approach she had adopted between 6th September and 12th November, because she had already allowed part of the facility to be drawn down prematurely and she was still being given to understand in November that the sale to Ideal Homes was to go ahead.
19. She said that the news of Ideal Homes' withdrawal was of obvious concern to the Bank because what had originally been a bridging facility had more or less become an open-ended facility. It also posed an equally large problem for Metals because it meant that the only monies that were coming in to fund the Heapey project were the grant monies. Between September and December 1993 about £700,000 of grant money was paid into the Heapey Bridge account, and between January 1994 and July 1994 a further £1.6 million of grant money was paid into the account.
20. From time to time after the Heapey Bridge borrowing had reached its approved limit of £1 million in December 1993, Mrs Hope refused to sanction any increased borrowing on that account. This meant that the steadily increasing cost of the decontamination works could not all be paid for out of the grant monies which were being received, and by July 1994 Metals' debt to Centremodel on unpaid engineer's certificates had risen to about £1.7 million. Mr Leek maintained from time to time that the Bank was in breach of contract in refusing to fund these certificates. In the end Mrs Hope came to ignore him. Despite this increasing debt, Centremodel never wrote any letter direct to the Bank complaining of any default in its alleged contractual liability.
21. On 7th July 1994 Mrs Hope applied internally within the Bank for approval to increase the facilities for this customer, which were then due for review. The total group borrowing had now risen to £2.3 million and the additional borrowing attributable to the Heapey site (including the Heapey Bridge loan) to £2,334,000. The August 1993 facility had amounted to £4.09 million, so that approval was now being sought for an additional facility of £544,000.
22. The facility request was supported by an explanation in these terms:
"The site is now clean but the cost of doing this has increased to £4.9m exclusive of VAT due to the contamination in one area in which it had been impossible to test by way of bore holes sufficiently deep to appreciate the magnitude of the problem. At a depth of 20ft pits full of noxious waste were encountered and the cost of removing the contaminant and tipping thereof have resulted in the substantial cost overrun. In mitigation of this, the extra work involved has resulted in further grant being made available of £1.8m of which £400k minimum is still due.
The sums now stand as follows:
Contract cost (exclusive of VAT £4,900.000
Other costs (supervision etc) £467,000
Total costs £5,367,000
Grants paid/payable £2,667,000
Owed to contractor £1,700,000
Additional Bank Lending outstanding £1,000,000"
23. It was said that a sale of 8 acres had been agreed to John Maunders plc for £1.89 million, subject to roads and electricity being on site. The cost of undertaking these two items was said to be (i) £350,000, of which the contractor was prepared to fund one third of the cost pending completion and (ii) £104,000 for the electricity which was an upfront non refundable payment before work would be commenced.
24. The two trading businesses were said to be trading profitably, and there had been a recent property revaluation of £1.2 million in relation to the Heapey site. It was said, in summary, that things had not gone according to plan, but the original objective of debt reduction and the extinction of the "environmental risk" would still be achieved. The new money lent to fund the project would be repaid in the short term, plus a proportion of the original debt which related to the Heapey site. In the longer term all Heapey related debt would be repaid plus a substantial part of the remaining balances.
25. This request was approved, and on 28th July 1994 Mrs Hope prepared a draft facility letter reflecting the terms of the Bank's new offer. On this occasion the general overdraft facility for funding the group's working capital requirements was to be £2.3 million and the lending to Metals attributable to the Heapey site was to be consolidated into a new bridging facility of £2,334,000. This was still to be called "the Heapey Bridge". The facility letter, both in its draft and in its final form, stated that the Heapey Bridge had been utilised to fund the decontamination programme being undertaken on the site at Heapey and that it would be used to repay the Heapey loan and to fund the road constructions and sewer and water connections at the Heapey site.
26. Both versions of this facility letter made it an express condition, to be satisfied prior to any further drawdown of the Heapey Bridge, that a solicitor acting on the Bank's behalf had vetted the contracts to be entered into with John Maunders plc and Wimpey Homes Ltd, that he was satisfied with them, and that he confirmed that they had been signed and exchanged. The facility letter also contained the following provision relating to repayment:
"The Facilities will remain subject to usual banking terms and conditions including the right of the bank to require repayment on demand at any time, although it is envisaged that the Heapey Bridge will be repaid as per the attached Schedule."
27. This was a reference to a document entitled "Schedule of Payments Due and How they are to be allocated" which Mrs Hope sent to Mr Ainscough on 28th July 1994. It reads:
"Date Source Amount Payment Allocation Amount
9/94 Maunders £1,890,000 Roads/Sewers £450K Electricity Bank £1,000K Ruttles Contract Debt £440K
9/94 Wimpey £950,000 Bank £500K Ruttles £450K
9/95 say Wimpey £1,000,000 Bank £500K Ruttles £500K
9/96 say Wimpey £1,000,000 Bank £500K Ruttles £200K Fees etc £199K
Remaining land sales/restaurant to come in repayment of other banking facilities/fees agreed. All remaining grants due will be paid to Ruttles which on information given to us should clear the balance of their debt."
28. It will be seen that it was then being envisaged that £2.84 million would be available quite soon, and that a further £2 million would be available from the sale of the Heapey land within about two years. The Bank would receive £2.5 million, which would enable it to extinguish the original Heapey Bridge borrowing of £1 million quite quickly and to extinguish Metals' other borrowing in relation to the site within a two year period.
29. On 18th August 1994 Mrs Hope had a meeting at her office with Joe and Sam Ainscough and Graham Simm, the company secretary of the Ainscough group. The meeting was also attended by Mr Copping, who was at that time an assistant manager at the Bank. Mr Copping made a short file note of the meeting.
30. Mrs Hope was told that the sale of part of the land to Maunders was proceeding, with exchange of contracts imminent. There was talk of earmarking a deposit of £400,000, payable on exchange of contracts, for the building of roads on the north and south side of the site (for which Ruttles had quoted £340,000, whereas Joe Ainscough was confident that the work could be done for less than £300,000) and for the building of a bridge across a stream (at a cost of £35,000). In addition, Mrs Hope said the Bank would fund a payment of £120,000 to North West Water, being the upfront payment required for laying pipes and sewers to the land. She was told that no further progress had been made with the proposed sale to Wimpey. Finally, it was agreed that the Bank would agree to place a cap of £320,000 on the amounts payable under the September 1993 fee agreement.
31. Although the new facility which was being provided for Metals embraced the whole of its borrowings in connection with the Heapey project, both before and after June 1993, the Bank maintained the Heapey Bridge account in its original state, in accordance with the arrangements discussed with its customers and with Centremodel's representatives the previous year. It permitted a payment to North West Water of about £122,000 out of this account on 13th September 1994, thereby increasing the borrowing on the account to just over £1.1 million, and when it authorised a payment to Centremodel of £88,000 on 3rd October 1994 the borrowing remained at that level. It did not, however, increase any further, because contracts had not yet been exchanged with Maunders and Mrs Hope was not willing to repeat what had occurred the previous year in relation to the promised Ideal Homes contract.
32. In her evidence at the trial Mrs Hope described a discussion she had that autumn with Mr Ainscough about the possibility of inviting Mr Ruttle to buy the Bank out of the Heapey project by settling Metals' indebtedness to the Bank and purchasing the Heapey site himself. This led to the production by Centremodel of a draft agreement covering its purchase of the Heapey site which Mrs Hope said she was unable to take seriously because it did not provide the Bank with any security at all.
33. During the autumn of 1994 there was something of an impasse. Contracts had still not been exchanged with Maunders, and Centremodel suspended their work on site because of the scale of Metals' indebtedness, which reached £2.1 million by the end of the year. On 9th December 1994 Mr Ainscough told Mrs Hope that the Maunders contract had finally been exchanged. The events which are at the centre of this litigation took place over the course of the next eight weeks.
34. They had been preceded by a letter from Mr Johnson, on behalf of Centremodel, to Mr Ainscough dated 2nd December 1994. Mr Johnson said that his company was now owed about £2 million (including VAT but without interest) and he asked for proposals to clear the indebtedness which would no doubt reflect "our reasonable expectation of security". He reiterated Centremodel's belief that Metals' bankers had "inextricably warranted the availability and payment of funds against certified liabilities". He sent a copy of this letter to Mrs Hope "who will no doubt have to be involved in your deliberations". This letter included a threat of legal action if a satisfactory proposal was not forthcoming. Mrs Hope could not remember how she reacted to the assertion that the bank had given an open-ended warranty of the type suggested in this letter. She suspects that she filed it on the grounds that it was not worth the energy that would have been required to argue the point with Mr Leek and the others.
35. On 14th December 1994 Mrs Hope made a file note of a telephone conversation with Mr Ainscough. On the positive side the Maunders contract amount was about £1.7 million for 8.52 acres, and he was in negotiation with two other companies, Dorbcrest and Hassell, to sell 1.7 and 4.1 acres for £415,600 and £975,000 respectively. This would leave four plots, totalling 7 acres, unsold. On the negative side Ruttles were owed £1.9 million, and there was still the roads and sewers work to be done, which would cost a further £350,000, together with gas, electricity and the new bridge for a further £30,000. Mr Ainscough explained that the Maunders contract price had been reduced by £150,000 because this was the worst part of the site and additional foundation works had still be to undertaken.
36. On the same day Centremodel, this time through the agency of Mr Leek, wrote a further pressing letter to Mr Ainscough. It appeared from this letter that the Maunders contract was conditional on that company securing planning permission for the location of 63 homes on the site. Once planning permission was forthcoming an enhanced deposit of £400,000 would be available prior to completion for the roads and sewers and the other works needed to upgrade the land to a serviced building area. Mr Leek said that Centremodel would be prepared to carry out this additional work provided that they could be sure that they would be paid for it. Because this formed part of the larger problem his company faced in relation to the outstanding indebtedness he insisted that it should be represented at a meeting with Mr Ainscough's bankers.
37. When Mrs Hope received a copy of this letter she indicated to Mr Ainscough that she did not intend to attend such a meeting. This was because she did not want to become involved in direct negotiations between a customer of the Bank and a third party. A note prepared within the Bank for internal use at this time set out the history of the matter and reflected the Bank's view of the situation as seen by Mrs Hope's section in Manchester. The note ended in these terms:
"The clean up has now been successfully completed and a contract to sell 4.8 acres recently exchanged at £1.8m with John Maunders plc. Various other builders have expressed an ongoing interest. Once all sales completed the two core businesses will be returned to satisfactory with all Heapey-related borrowing repaid and a net debt reduction of £800k giving borrowings which are totally serviceable for trading. SLS should receive fees totalling £350k".
38. Mrs Hope eventually agreed to attend a meeting with Mr Ainscough and Centremodel. She insisted, however, that Mr Leek should not be present. She explained in her evidence that she had seen enough of Mr Leek's correspondence already, and she had no desire to meet him. Her willingness to attend a meeting stemmed from the fact that Metals needed Centremodel's help to carry out the outstanding work that was needed before the sales of part of the land could be completed. This in turn would lead to the beginning of the reduction of Metals' borrowing from the Bank.
39. On 10th January Mr Leek prepared a briefing note for Mr Ruttle. This was prefaced by a summary in which he made the following points:
(1) Under the June 1993 contract the Bank were to fund the difference between the initial contract sum of £2,145,000 and the amount of £636,209 initially available from grants.
(2) In fact the Bank had only paid Centremodel £586,853 (excluding VAT) from its own funds.
(3) An up to date valuation of the work had just been completed. Its gross value was £5,179,260.14 (excluding VAT and interest). Ainscough currently owed Centremodel £2,502,810 (including VAT but excluding interest).
(4) There were other works, including the roads and sewers, that had to be done before Ainscough could receive any monies from prospective buyers of the land. On pages 10 and 11 of this note Mr Leek gave a figure of £320,000 (excluding VAT) for the roads and sewers work and a figure of between £100,000 and £130,000 (excluding VAT) for the other work which would have to be done before the land could be effectively handed over for sale for house construction.
40. Although Mr Leek's account of the Bank's supposed indebtedness departed from the reality, the figures he gave Mr Ruttle at the end of this note would have been those which Mr Ruttle would have been equipped to deploy at the meeting.
41. The critical meeting took place at Mrs Hope's offices on 11th January. Mrs Hope, Mr Copping, Mr Ainscough and Mr Ruttle were present. Mr Copping made a short file note of the main points that were discussed. The note reads:
"JA confirmed that contracts had been exchanged subject to planning permission. Planning permission had been submitted with an unconfirmed meeting set for February.
Hassell Homes was proceeding and is due for exchange in January.
Another 2 acres has been agreed to be sold to Dorbcrest for £475k bringing the total sale to £900k. JA hopes to exchange unconditional contracts in January. A deposit of £90k has been agreed which will assist in the funding of the roads and sewers. JA believes that this deal is the closest to fruition.
HR confirmed that work would commence on the roads and sewers (cost c £300k) on the condition that the first sale proceeds received by Ainscoughs would be used to clear this debt. JA agreed to this deal. MMH would consider this, however, she requested documentation which details the cost for the work.
On the basis that the above is agreed, the first £300k of any proceeds will go to HR. Thereafter, proceeds should come directly to the Bank. However HR requested that the remaining proceeds are split 50/50 with this arrangement continuing until HR's debt has been repaid. MMH rejected the request but offered a 67/33 split in the Bank's favour until £1m of the Bank's debt was repaid. Thereafter, the split would reverse to 33/67 in HR's favour.
HR agreed to provide a revised facility letter detailing the split of sale proceeds."
42. Mrs Hope made three additions to this note. The first was to add the word "Maunders" as the fourth word of the note. The second, which followed the fifth paragraph of the note, reads: "We are to look at the impact of this and revert to HR via JA". The third, at the end of the note, reads: "once assessed".
43. On the following day, 12th January 1995, Mr Leek (for Centremodel) wrote a letter to Mr Ainscough (for Metals), with a copy to Mrs Hope (for the Bank). He had by now been briefed by Mr Ruttle about the events of the previous day. In the first paragraph he said that he would "confirm below matters discussed and deeds and actions agreed upon". In the second paragraph he included a proviso "if the proposals hereafter proposed falters in execution" (sic). In the rest of the letter he reverted to the language of agreement.
44. The gist of Mr Leek's letter was to the effect that Centremodel would now proceed with the roads and sewers works for £320,000, "dependent upon final engineer's details and availability of construction materials". They would be paid for this work from the first monies Ainscough received from land sales (a phrase to include any deposit moneys the relevant buyer agreed to release for this purpose).
45. So far as the balance of Metals' indebtedness was concerned, Centremodel and the Bank would in effect share the proceeds of land sales in the proportion 1:2 until the Bank received £1 million, and thereafter they would share these proceeds in the proportion 2:1 until all Centremodel's debts had been paid. Mr Leek ended his letter in these terms:
"We trust we have illustrated the discussed procedures correctly and hope that this is now a workable format to bring this matter to a conclusion, and that it will not be necessary to revoke the provisions herein referred to at some later date, to return to the current contractual obligations of all parties."
46. When Mrs Hope received a copy of this letter she wrote "No. Up to £1m. Then 50/50" against the passage in which Mr Leek described Centremodel receiving two thirds of the sale proceeds. She also wrote "No" against the penultimate paragraph in the letter in which Mr Leek, who started it with the words "There are two final issues to confirm", dealt with the charging of interest and the treatment of future grant receipts.
47. On 17th January 1995 Mr Leek wrote to Mr Ainscough confirming an agreement he had made with Mr Ruttle four days earlier for a price of £320,000 for the roads and sewers works. He said that the works would be "under the existing contract conditions as the main works", but that payment would be as outlined in his letter of 12th January. Work to the sewers would start on 23rd January. Mr Ainscough appears to have telephoned Mr Ruttle on the same day (17th January) to the effect that Metals was not yet in a position to give any instructions for the work to start. He confirmed this in a letter written to Mr Leek the following day, saying that:
"..agreement for your proposals has not yet been confirmed with our bankers the Royal Bank of Scotland, and we are not yet in a position to instruct on any works as proposed."
48. On 19th January Mr Ainscough furnished Mrs Hope with information she had requested not only about the level of the outstanding debt to Centremodel, but also about the group's overdraft situation more generally. She was told that the likely cost of the outstanding work on the Heapey site, apart from the roads and sewers, would be between £80,000 and £90,000 (as opposed to the £100,000 - £130,000 bracket furnished by Mr Leek to Mr Ruttle on 10th January). She then made some calculations on the basis of these figures. On this occasion she included for the first time the recoupment of the £119,000 the Bank had advanced for the North West Water payment as the second payment (following the £320,000 for the roads and sewers) which was to be made out of the land sale proceeds before the 2:1 split of the next £1.5 million.
49. On 27th January 1995 she wrote formally to Mr Ainscough. The letter is headed "Ainscough Metals Ltd". It makes no mention of Centremodel. It reads:
"I refer to our recent meeting, and subsequent many and numerous telephone conversations.
At your request, the Bank has considered the position regarding the proceeds of sale from Heapey and whether it would be prepared to allow some of these monies to be utilised in payment of other creditors specific to the decontamination of that site.
On the basis of the present position, we would be prepared to allow the first £320,000 of sale proceeds to be utilised in payment of contractors work on roads and sewers. The next £119,000 would come in debt reduction in relation to the additional advance made available by the Bank to allow the North West Water contract to be entered into. The next £1,500,000 of sale proceeds would be split as to 67% to the Bank in debt reduction, 33% in payment of other contractors. The next £1,500,000 of sale proceeds to be split 33% to the Bank in debt reduction, 67% to the relevant contractors on the Heapey job. The balance of sale proceeds to be taken 50% in Bank debt reduction and 50% allowable for payment to relevant contractors subject to a ceiling on funds paid out in this way to contractors of £2,822,810, including works undertaken to roads. Once this figure has been reached then all further sums due would be taken in the normal way by the Bank.
The above figure, ie £2,822,810 will be deemed to reduce when payments from English Partnerships for Grants are received into the Bank account and such funds at your instruction are remitted to the various contractors.
The fee due to the Bank will be paid as and when it falls due on a pro rata basis.
I trust this now clarifies the position between us and look forward to hearing from you."
50. On receipt of this letter Mr Ainscough sent a copy of it to Mr Ruttle, suggesting that he should ring and discuss it. It will be noted that in addition to allowing the first £320,000 of sale proceeds to be utilised in payment of contractors' work on roads and sewers (a matter the possibility of which was mentioned in Mr Copping's note), Mrs Hope was now stipulating that the next £119,000 of sale proceeds must be used in settlement of the additional advance made available by the Bank as an upfront payment on the North West Water contract. This possibility had not been mentioned in Mr Leek's letter of 12th January (nor indeed in Mr Copping's note of 11th January), a fact noted by Mr Leek in his next letter to Mr Ainscough dated 14th February 1995. Mrs Hope's figure of £2,822,810 was calculated by adding £320,000 to the figure of £2,502,810 mentioned in Mr Leek's briefing note to Mr Ruttle (a page of which Mr Ainscough had sent her on 19th January). It takes no account of the further £90,000 - £100,000 mentioned on that page.
51. Mr Ainscough forwarded a copy of Mrs Hope's letter to Mr Ruttle, as Mrs Hope had anticipated, but Mr Leek was away on holiday, and he did not respond to Mr Ainscough until 14th February. Mr Leek did not send a copy of this letter to the Bank. When one strips this letter down to its essentials, he was making the following points:
(1) The Bank was now stipulating that £119,000 should be recovered by it separately before it received its share of the 2:1 split of the first £1.5 million of the land sales. This was not acceptable, and Centremodel proposed that this sum should be included in that share.
(2) Because the provision of the Brook Bridge (for which a price of £35,200 (ex VAT) had been agreed) was integral to the road and sewers work, its cost should be included in the first payment from the initial sales proceeds, in addition to the £320,000 for the roads and sewers.
(3) The engineer's orders in relation to "the probable other works which may be necessary for a full completion" would increase the cost of the works, and whatever the final payment was, Centremodel's "full payment will have to be met when all the land is sold".
(4) Centremodel was willing to share the sale proceeds 50-50 with the bank after the initial payment for the work now being undertaken and the first £3 million had been shared in the agreed proportions.
52. Mrs Hope was not shown a copy of this letter, which she read for the first time at a fairly late stage of these proceedings, when she also saw for the first time a letter Mr Leek wrote to Mr Ainscough on 4th July 1995. Mr Leek was still continuing to assert that the Bank had "warranted payment to us as deemed" by the initial contract. He referred, however, to his letter of 14th February 1995 "in which we made a tacit agreement to receive payments for works done on this project, which were outwith the terms of the Contract Agreement which exists between us".
53. In August 1995 the sales of land to Maunders and Dorbcrest were completed. On 11th August £954,400 was paid into the Heapey Bridge account, and the Bank distributed this money on 14th August in accordance with the terms of its letter of 27th January. On 18th August a further £1,333,650 was paid into the account. On this occasion the Bank delayed distribution until 31st August, and in the meantime Mr Leek wrote a letter of demand to Metals expressed in the following terms:
"The tacit agreement we reached, notwithstanding that this such agreement does not in any matter whatsoever waive any contractual rights, for us to receive payment for work done out of the income you receive from sales of land is as follows:-
1. The Bank would retain £119,000.00 for the water main deposit.
2. We would be paid the Road and Sewer cost, provisional assessed at £340,000.00.
3. After allowance of 1 & 2 above, the next £1.5m received would be 2/3 to the Bank and 1/3 to us.
4. The next £1.5m received would be 2/3 to us and 1/3 the Bank.
5. Thereafter No 1, 2, 3 & 4 all remaining monies will be divided between us and the Bank equally until all debts are paid.
With regard to that herebefore we have produced two schedules. That which pertains to the monies received by you from Maunders and Dorbcrest shows we are entitled to receive £853,124 plus VAT ...
We understand that the Maunders monies have been paid, together with the Dorbcrest monies, therefore your payment of £853,124 plus VAT should be made to us immediately."
54. It will be noted that Mr Leek had now dropped his proposal that the cost of the bridge works should be added to the road and sewer cost in the first tranche of payments. He had acquiesced in the Bank retaining the £119,000 for the water main deposit before the proceeds were shared in the agreed proportions, and he had also acquiesced in the Bank's insistence that after the first £3 million was shared, the Bank and Centremodel should share the sale proceeds equally. He continued to insist, not surprisingly, that this sharing exercise should embrace the whole of the eventual Centremodel debt, and not be restricted to the sum mentioned in Mrs Hope's letter of 27th January.
55. The Bank performed its own calculations, and on 31st August 1995 Mr Copping authorised the transfer of £847,938.09, which was close to the figure suggested by Mr Leek, to Centremodel out of the Heapey Bridge account. He also authorised the payment of VAT on this sum to Centremodel from an Ainscough Sons account.
56. At the beginning of 1995 Mrs Hope had been led to believe that contracts for the sale of a further plot of land to Hassell Homes were about to be exchanged. This exchange of contracts did in fact take place, and on 5th June 1995 the deposit of £96,000 was paid into the Heapey Bridge account. In November 1995, however, the purchasers rescinded the contract, on the ground that the vendors had not carried out work they had agreed to perform, so that the deposit, plus agreed interest, had to be repaid.
57. At about the same time, the liability to pay VAT on the Maunders and Dorbcrest sales fell due (in a net amount of £244,580) and Mr Ainscough came under pressure from Maunders to provide banker's bonds to the local authority as a term of the agreement whereby the local authority undertook to maintain the roads on the estate which had not been completed.
58. When Mr Ainscough raised this demand with Mrs Hope she was initially reluctant to provide the bonds, which would give rise to contingent liabilities for the Bank of just over £250,000. In January 1996, however, she agreed to do so on the basis that the agreement evidenced in her letter of 27th January 1995 was "withdrawn with immediate effect". By a letter dated 5th January 1996 she told Mr Ainscough that as a result, no further payments would be made to contractors, and any future sale proceeds would be used in permanent debt reduction to the Bank. On 6th February, when she was formalising the execution of the bonds, she told Mr Ainscough:
"In view of the recent position regarding the VAT and now this additional liability, any previous correspondence between us in relation to payment of other contractors is rescinded and all funds received will first of all be utilised to clear the Bank borrowings in relation to Heapey. Thereafter, you may utilise any available funds to clear any liabilities that the company, ie Ainscough Metals Limited may have."
59. The remainder of the history can be quickly told. Nobody told Centremodel about the decision Mrs Hope had made. They were still owed over £1 million which they expected to receive from the sale of the remaining land. On 23rd August 1996 Metals sold the remainder of the land (excluding the Heapey House site) to a company called Beazer Homes Ltd for about £2.1m. The sale proceeds were credited to Metals' account at the Bank, and the Bank retained them all, not allowing any payment to Centremodel. On 4th September 1996 Centremodel sued Metals, who went into administration the following month.
60. Centremodel then turned their attention on the Bank, and the writ in this action was issued on 10th February 1997. It is noteworthy that on 27th September 1996 Mr Leek wrote a letter to the Bank in connection with an offer of settlement which Metals had made to Centremodel in which no mention was made of any potential claim his company might have against the Bank.
61. The Statement of Claim was served on 12th February 1997. The plaintiffs relied on an oral agreement made between them and the Bank on 11th January 1995. They alleged that the agreement provided that after payment of £320,000 for roads and sewer works (subject to variation and local authority requirements) the balance of the payments due to them under the contract would be discharged out of sales as follows:
(i) As to the first £1.5 million sale proceeds, 33% (excluding the roads and sewers and water connection charges) would be paid to them and 67% would be receivable by the Bank as against sums due to it under its debenture.
(ii) As to the next £1.5 million sale proceeds the percentages were to be reversed, and they would then receive 67% of land sales and 33% would be receivable by the Bank as against sums due to it under its debenture.
(iii) Thereafter the proceeds of land sales were to be divided equally between them and the Bank towards discharge of their debt.
62. In reliance on this agreement the plaintiffs maintained that when Metals sold the balance of land to Beazer Homes, Metals and the Bank were under an obligation to apply the sale proceeds towards discharge of the plaintiffs' entitlement then amounting to about £1.444 million plus interest "and the sale proceeds thereby received were impressed with a trust to pay the same in accordance with the terms of the agreement made on 11th January 1995". In the course of the trial Mr Smith QC, who appeared for Centremodel, made it clear to the judge that Centremodel was making a proprietary claim for this money: their claim did not lie in debt.
63. The judge structured his judgment in the following way:
Pages 1-4 Summary of the history prior to June 1993
5-7 A description of the meeting on 22.6.93
7-16 Findings in relation to the meeting on 11.1.95
16-17 Findings in relation to breaches of contract
17-23 Findings on issues of law.
64. In other words, the judge did not analyse the unfolding history of the matter, as seen by the parties, in the way I have endeavoured to do in this judgment. He moved more or less straight from June 1993 to January 1995 and appears to have decided the case on the basis of the impression the witnesses (and, in particular Mrs Hope and Mr Ruttle) made on him in the witness-box. It is impossible to gainsay the advantages this opportunity provides to a trial judge which is not available to an appellate court, and we must be careful not to attempt to retry the case on the transcripts. The judge's approach, however, makes it very difficult for this court to know what arguments he took into account and what arguments he did not take into account when assessing the improbability (or otherwise) of Mrs Hope concluding a binding oral agreement with Mr Ruttle at the January 1995 meeting, because he did not refer to the history between June 1993 and January 1995 at all, except for a passing reference to the August 1994 meeting. Nor did he refer to Mr Leek's letters of 14th February 1995 or 4th July 1995, even though Mr Phillips, who appeared for the Bank, submitted that they cast valuable light on the question whether any binding agreement had in fact been made.
65. In the course of his judgment, the judge made a number of adverse findings in relation to Mrs Hope's evidence. On page 3 he said that when the Ainscough file first came to her she accepted that she did not ascertain whether anyone in the bank had previously warned the group's directors of the dangers of trading when insolvent, so that she would be able to give this warning herself if it had not been previously given. The judge said that he regarded this as one indication of what he found, on the evidence as a whole, to have been her perception of her functions - to save the trading companies if at all possible and to safeguard the bank's position - without proper thought for the wider picture, which included not only the responsibilities in law of the directors but also the effect of what she said to others.
66. When the judge described the meeting on 22nd June 1993, he said that unfortunately the word "quotation" had been used at this meeting. He went on to find that Mrs Hope did not have any idea at that time of the possibility of what happened in the event, when the scale of the necessary work increased and the contract price vastly exceeded the figure mentioned at the meeting. He said that she attached to the word "quotation" the connotations which it usually carries, as opposed to the word "estimate", and he thought that her subsequent actions were coloured, perhaps unconsciously, by her dismay at that unexpected and substantial increase.
67. When he turned to consider the meeting on 11th January 1995 the judge said that there was no doubt that at the time of that meeting the general perception was that the contract works were substantially complete both in the contractual sense and according to the ordinary use of language. Another contractor was on the horizon, and nobody at the meeting gave any thought to the possibility that in law Centremodel could not be expelled from the site. The judge found that two considerations were uppermost in Mrs Hope's mind. The first was the need to assuage Centremodel, and in particular the bellicose Mr Leek, so as to prevent proceedings which would have the effect of driving one of her cherished trading companies into insolvent liquidation. The other was a perception that the work was virtually finished, apart from the road works, and that the site would soon be sold with enough proceeds for all to be paid.
68. There was one minor matter which clearly affected the way the judge approached the evidence of the three witnesses (Mrs Hope, Mr Copping and Mr Ainscough) who gave evidence about the 11th January meeting on behalf of the Bank. In their witness statements they had each said that the North-West Water payment of £119,000 was discussed at that meeting. When they gave evidence at the trial they each withdrew that part of their evidence before confirming that the contents of their witness statements were otherwise correct.
69. The judge did not accept that each of these witnesses had independently remembered, since they had signed their statements, that something of which they had been sure when they had signed their statements was not in fact correct, although this was the effect of the evidence they had each given him. He said he had no doubt whatsoever that the corrections, which brought their evidence on that point into line with that of Mr Ruttle, were the result of some orchestration. He also explicitly rejected Mr Ainscough's evidence that his statement had been the product of his own independent thought over a two week period. He accepted a submission by Mr Phillips to the effect that Mr Ainscough may have said this because he had a mistaken belief that there was some impropriety in a potential witness being assisted by a solicitor when he was making his statement. He was therefore not willing to treat Mr Ainscough's evidence about the meeting as of no weight simply for that reason. On the other hand, he did not find counsel's counting of heads (three against one) to be a helpful approach
70. The judge had previously found that Mr Copping was an accurate note-taker and that by January 1995 he was sufficiently aware of the nature of the banking problem to know what was important, while being sufficiently senior and well educated to take a sensible note of what happened. He said that he found Mr Copping's note infinitely more useful than Mr Leek's letter of 12th January in helping him to decide what happened at the meeting, and that the contents of this note broadly corroborated Mr Ruttle's evidence. It was this fact, and the impression which he had gained of Mr Ruttle as a witness (a matter on which he did not otherwise elaborate) which led him "unhesitatingly" to prefer Mr Ruttle's evidence on the central point to that of the witnesses called for the defendants.
71. The judge made an explicit finding that Mr Ruttle, Mr Ainscough and Mrs Hope all used words which reasonably led the others to believe that after their negotiations they had reached a tripartite agreement on everything save that Mrs Hope had not yet agreed, for reasons which the judge explained, to Centremodel's remuneration for doing the road works, if they did them, being paid to them from the proceeds of the first sale.
72. The judge said that when Mrs Hope made her note "We are to look at the impact of this and revert back to HR via JA" the addition of further consideration was misplaced because the only thing not agreed at the meeting was whether Centremodel should be allowed to do the roadworks. On the other hand he saw this note as evidencing the fact that Mrs Hope regarded herself as dealing with Centremodel and not only with Ainscough, albeit that she would communicate with Mr Ruttle via her customer.
73. The judge was not willing to accept Mr Phillips's argument to the effect that if there was an agreement to which Centremodel was a party, that agreement would remain effective only for so long as the Bank's financial exposure did not increase. This argument was based on Mrs Hope's use of the words "on the present position" in her letter of 27th January 1995. The judge said that there was no evidence upon which he could find that this had been agreed expressly. Given the absence of any express agreement he found it impossible to imply such a term because the agreement already had business efficiency without it.
74. I am bound to say that I find the concept of someone in a managerial position at a bank binding the bank conclusively at a meeting of the type that took place on 11th January 1995 an extremely surprising one, and my anxiety about the safety of the judge's findings was increased by the fact that he did not in his judgment conduct any analysis of the way the Bank was handling this transaction, stage by stage from the August 1993 facility letter through the August 1994 facility letter and beyond. The judge, however, had the immense advantage of seeing the witnesses, and he said he made his findings "unhesitatingly". I therefore turned to an examination of the transcripts (even though they are only a poor reflection of the "live" evidence) to see whether they confirmed or allayed my anxieties.
75. Mrs Hope gave evidence for two days at the trial. For most of that time she was being cross-examined by Mr Smith. She had joined the bank as a clerk in August 1977, and she had had three jobs at assistant manager or senior assistant manager level before she got her first managerial job in April 1993 when she joined SLS. At first she had only four clients there, but the numbers gradually built up to 30. She had no authority on her own account to take any decision about additional lending.
76. When Mr Smith cross-examined her about the meaning of the word "insolvency" in the context of Metals' debts to Centremodel in December 1994 (Bundle, pp 1099-1100) her answers were not very convincing. She said a little later that she had had a look at Centremodel's own bank accounts two years previously (because Centremodel was also a customer of the bank) but she could not remember why she had done this (pp 1118-9). She was challenged about the efficiency of her system of filing documents and notes. She said she had received no specific training in this area, and it was very much a matter for her discretion whether she made or kept notes of meetings and other events (pp 1085-6, 1178).
77. She said in her witness statement that she had made it clear from the outset of the January 1995 meeting that she would only make arrangements with her customer and that she recalled stating that she had no duty to any party other than Metals. Under cross-examination she said that she regarded this statement as very important, and that she had made it clear that if she made any agreement it would only be with her customer. She did not know why this important point was not included in Mr Copping's note of the meeting, and she accepted that she did not correct the note in order to include a reference to it. She did not know why it did not appear in the amended note. At one point she said that the reason why Mr Copping had omitted it may have been that he was not experienced in making attendance notes (pp 1219-1221).
78. This was an issue on which the judge had to decide whether he accepted Mrs Hope's evidence (supported by Mr Copping and Mr Ainscough) or whether he accepted Mr Ruttle's evidence. Mr Ruttle's evidence on this matter was very clear. Mr Leek and he had had a very unsatisfactory meeting with Mr Ainscough on 13th December 1994, and he had told Mr Ainscough that he wanted a face to face meeting with Mrs Hope because he wanted the payment situation sorted out once and for all. When Mr Ainscough said he would ask the Bank to meet him, Mr Ruttle said that instead of asking he should tell the Bank that unless he got this money mess sorted out the work would stop, the roads and sewers would stop and he would get all the contaminated rubbish back onto the site.
79. Mr Ruttle denied that Mrs Hope had said at the start of the meeting that she was only going to deal with her customer and that she owed no duty to any other customer. He denied that this was an inconclusive meeting at which nothing definitive was agreed. He said that with the single exception of the need for Mrs Hope to be satisfied about the agreed cost of the roads and sewers contract (which happened soon afterwards) there was a complete agreement, and Centremodel was willing to proceed on the basis of that agreement.
80. Since the judge was satisfied that Mr Ruttle had left the June 1993 meeting in the belief that the Bank had undertaken to pay the new company the difference between the grant monies and the certified cost of the works (whatever the cost) I would have preferred it if the judge had explained why he was so willing to accept that Mr Ruttle had not jumped to an unjustified conclusion on this occasion as well. I would also have preferred it if he had explained why Mrs Hope apparently felt completely free to insert a new term (as to the priority to be given to the £119,000 payment) so soon after a more or less complete agreement had been concluded. Similarly, I would have preferred it if he had explained how he reconciled his findings with the contents of Mr Leek's letters of 14th February and 4th July, and with the absence of any assertion by Centremodel that the Bank had made any such agreement with them until after they had tried but failed to recover the balance of their outstanding debt from Metals.
81. I have considered carefully Mr Phillips's submission that the judge gave so few reasons for his findings that his judgment cannot be allowed to stand. His arguments are very clearly set out in his clients' Respondents' Notice, and I need not repeat them here. In the final resort, however, I have concluded that we should not reverse the judge's findings, however surprising we may find them.
82. My reason is that although there were a lot of powerful arguments pointing away from any concluded agreement between the Bank and Centremodel on 11th January 1995, these arguments were addressed to the judge just as much as they were addressed to us, and he implicitly rejected them. The reason he rejected them was that he saw the witnesses and he unhesitatingly preferred Mr Ruttle's evidence. My perusal of the transcript of Mrs Hope's evidence does not lead me to conclude that this must have been a perverse judgment: far from it. There were a number of features of Mrs Hope's evidence which appear unconvincing or unsatisfactory even to someone who did not see her in the witness-box. There could, in my judgment, be no question of this court substituting its own findings, since we did not see the witnesses. The most we could do would be to order a new trial, as Mr Phillips eventually asked for, on the basis of the decision of this court in Flannery v Halifax Estate Agencies Ltd [2000] 1 WLR 377. I have had the opportunity of reading the judgment of Peter Gibson LJ in draft. Like him, I do not feel I have to reach a conclusion on the issues raised by the Respondents' Notice because of my clear view that the appeal must be dismissed in any event for the reasons to which I now turn.
83. I turn now to the reasons why the judge dismissed Centremodel's claim on the law after finding for them on the facts. As I have said, the land at Heapey was vested in Ainscough Sons, and all the contracts for the sale of parcels of that land were of course vested in that company. As I have also said, the Bank had the benefit of a charge over that land to secure that company's borrowing, and since the company guaranteed the borrowing of the other companies in the group, the charge in effect secured their borrowings as well.
84. The judge reminded himself that Centremodel's case was based not on a simple allegation of breach of contract by the Bank to pay money to them, but on an allegation that by virtue of the January 1995 agreement the Bank agreed to hold some of the proceeds of sale of land over which it held a charge in trust to pay the agreed proceeds of sale to Centremodel. It had never been Centremodel's case that Ainscough Sons was a party to that agreement.
85. The judge held that the only right of the Bank under the charge over the land was to use the proceeds of sale to discharge Ainscough Sons' indebtedness. Unless that company instructed the Bank to pay some of those proceeds to Centremodel and the Bank agreed to do so, none of the proceeds of sale would be held on trust, or on the basis of any other duty, to pay any of them to Centremodel. There was, the judge said, in fact neither evidence nor any suggestion that Ainscough Sons was a party to any agreement which involved the use of the proceeds of sale of its land.
86. He added that if Ainscough Sons guaranteed to the Bank the liability of Metals, the Bank might well have been in a position to create a liability on Ainscough Sons to pay what Metals owed to the Bank. This would have involved a demand on Ainscough Sons under the guarantee and the Bank could then have invoked its charge over the land. On payment by Ainscough Sons the borrowing by Metals would have been discharged and the Bank would then have been in a position to use what would then have been its own money as it wished. The case for Centremodel had, however, not been pleaded or conducted on the basis of an agreement by the Bank that it would pay from its own monies a sum equal to the agreed proportions of sale of the Heapey land.
87. A little earlier the judge had rebuffed an attempt by Mr Smith to add to his clients' case an argument to the effect that the beneficial ownership of the Heapey land was vested in Metals. He said that during the trial he had inquired whether he was going to be asked to determine the ownership of the land (which, as I have said, appeared in Metals' accounts as one of its assets) and Mr Smith had assured him that he was not. In the circumstances the judge said he did not need to speculate what decision he would have made if an application for leave to amend the Statement of Claim had been made at a very late stage of the trial, particularly as no such application was ever made.
88. I did not find it easy to understand the way Mr Smith attacked the judge's findings on the hearing of the appeal. The judge had given good reasons for refusing to embark on an inquiry as to whether Metals were the beneficial owners of the Heapey land. There is no mention of such a plea in the Statement of Claim, and the exchange at the end of Mrs Hope's evidence on the fourth day of the trial, to which the judge referred in his judgment, was in these terms:
"Judge: Just before you go. Mr Smith, does some point arise on ownership of the land? ...
Mr Smith: A point might arise, not necessarily in these proceedings.
Judge: Because it strikes me as a bizarre way to ask, as a basis for asking me to make a finding as to the ownership of land by looking at the documents.
Mr Smith You are not going to be asked to make a finding as to the ownership of the land.
Judge: You are not going to ask me to make a finding?
Mr Smith: Certainly not.
Judge: You are not, are you, Mr Phillips?
Mr Phillips: If my friend sticks by his pleading that the land is owned by William Ainscough and Sons there is nothing between us."
89. Centremodel's claim was, and always had been, that the agreement between the Bank and Centremodel, to which Metals was a party, created a situation in which it had a proprietary right over the proceeds of the sale of the Heapey land. In his interlocutory judgment on 7th October 1997 Jonathan Parker J said at p 18:
"In the course of his submissions Mr Smith made it clear that the primary claim for payment of a sum of money is not a claim in debt as such, in that it is premised upon the supposition that there are funds available to the Bank from grants and sales of the site to enable it to make that payment out of those funds. Essentially, therefore, [Centremodel] is asserting a proprietary claim to payment out of the funds resulting from the receipt by the Bank of grants and sales of parts of the site."
90. The difficulty with Centremodel's case is that after mentioning Ainscough Sons' ownership of the land and its status as part of the Ainscough group in the opening paragraphs of the Statement of Claim, the pleader never mentioned that company at all thereafter and, as the judge pointed out, it was never suggested that it had been a party to the January 1995 agreement. There was never any way in which either the Bank or Metals could create a proprietary right over the proceeds of sale of Ainscough Sons' land without that company's knowledge or consent.
91. I have read and reread the Notice of Appeal and the passage headed "Answer of Centremodel" in Mr Smith's skeleton argument and I have considered carefully the arguments he addressed to us at the hearing, but I remain unable to understand how he hoped to surmount this central difficulty without amendment to his pleaded case, which it was far too late to contemplate. The fact that Centremodel did not know that the land was vested in Ainscough Sons does not assist them. If they had opted not to rely on Mr Leek's supposed legal expertise and had instructed a solicitor to ensure that their interests were effectively secured, that solicitor would no doubt have ascertained the true position quite quickly, but this never happened.
92. Mr Smith attempted to argue in the alternative that the consent of Ainscough Sons was irrelevant, because the Bank had agreed to pay Centremodel and it controlled the proceeds of sale. It only controlled the proceeds of sale, however, by virtue of the charge Ainscough Sons had created in its favour, and it could not unilaterally enlarge or alter the terms of that charge without the chargee's consent.
93. For these reasons I would dismiss this appeal
Lord Justice Robert Walker:
94. I agree.
Lord Justice Peter Gibson:
95. This is a troubling case for several reasons. First, the Judge has decided the factual question whether the Bank committed itself to an unconditional oral agreement on 11 January 1995 with a non-customer, Centremodel, in a way which seems to me to run counter to commercial probabilities, to the documentary evidence and to the manner in which all the parties behaved until some two years later when Centremodel through its solicitors asserted the agreement for the first time shortly before this action commenced. Second, Centremodel chose to assert a proprietary claim based on that agreement rather than a claim for damages for breach of contract, an assertion which appears not only in the pleadings but in what was said to Jonathan Parker J. at the hearing of the applications by the Bank to strike out and by Centremodel for summary judgment, and in what was said to the Judge at the trial; nor is anything different claimed in the Notice of Appeal. Third, although it should have been obvious to Centremodel that its proprietary claim would involve either the commercial absurdity of the Bank choosing to agree to allow to Centremodel large sums out of the money which the Bank took for itself from the proceeds of sale, and so reducing Metals' debt to the Bank correspondingly, or the consent of the owner of the Heapey land, Centremodel expressly pleaded that Ainscough Sons, not Metals, owned the land, and that Metals (attending the meeting on 11 January 1995 in the person of Joe Ainscough), not Ainscough Sons, was a party to the agreement on 11 January 1995, and Centremodel neither pleaded nor proved that Ainscough Sons consented to the agreement. Moreover, although the cross-examination of the Bank's witnesses suggested that Centremodel might want to claim that Metals owned the land, Mr. Smith Q.C. for Centremodel expressly indicated to the Judge that he was not asking the Judge to make a finding on the ownership of the land.
96. I am gravely disquieted by the Judge's finding of fact as to the agreement for the reasons so persuasively and powerfully advanced by Mr. Phillips for the Bank. I am left very uneasy as to whether the Judge made proper use of the advantage which he had of seeing and hearing the witnesses when he appears to have treated the oral evidence relating to the meeting of 11 January 1995 in isolation from the events and documents before and after the crucial meeting. For my part I would prefer not to reach any final conclusion on the cross-appeal by the Bank on this point, and it is not necessary to do so in view of the conclusion to which I have come on Centremodel's appeal.
97. Centremodel's claim is pleaded in para. 24.3 of the Amended Statement of Claim as one whereby the Bank was "under an obligation to apply [the proceeds of sale of the land sold to Beazer on 23 August 1996] towards discharge of [Centremodel's] entitlement then amounting to £1,444,689.40 plus interest," and, the pleading continues, "the sale proceeds thereby received were impressed with a trust to pay the same in accordance with the terms of the agreement made on 11th January 1993." In para. 25.1 it is averred that Centremodel had requested payment of that sum plus VAT, but "wrongfully and in breach of the contract or in breach of trust" the Bank had refused to make any payment. There is no claim of loss or damage resulting from that breach of contract and no damages for breach of contract are claimed. Instead the claim in the Prayer is for the sum of £1,444,689.40 plus VAT, alternatively for a declaration that the Bank received the proceeds of sale upon trust to apply them in discharge of the sums due to Centremodel under the contract. The references to a trust and breach of trust may well be associated with that part of the claim which was struck out by Jonathan Parker J.
98. It would appear from the express reference to the nature of the claim in Jonathan Parker J.'s judgment that he too was concerned to know precisely how Centremodel was putting its case. As a result of what Mr. Smith told him, he said: "Essentially, therefore, [Centremodel] is asserting a proprietary claim to payment out of the funds resulting from the receipt by the Bank of grants and sales of parts of the Site."
99. That way of putting Centremodel's case was not changed before the Judge. As the Judge said at the conclusion of his judgment:
"However the case for [Centremodel] has not been pleaded or conducted on the basis of an agreement by the bank that the bank would pay (i.e. would itself pay from its own monies) a sum equal to the agreed proportions of the proceeds of sale of the Heapey land."
100. That has not been challenged on this appeal, and although Mr. Smith somewhat faintly argued that he would if necessary claim in contract, he did not press that - rightly, in my view, because of the way this matter has been pleaded and has proceeded up till now - and he maintained the way he had put the case below.
101. I own to having insuperable difficulty in understanding how any proprietary claim to a share of the proceeds of sale could succeed. When I asked Mr. Smith whether he was saying that an equitable charge over the proceeds of sale was created, he assented to that until I pointed out that that gave no proprietary right to the proceeds of sale. As I said in Carreras Ltd. v Freeman Matthews Ltd. [1985] Ch. 207 at p. 227:
"Such a charge is created by an appropriation of specific property to the discharge of some debt or other obligation without there being any change in ownership either at law or in equity."
(See also Megarry & Wade: The Law of Real Property, 6th ed. (2000) para 19-040.)
102. On Centremodel's own pleadings Ainscough Sons owned the land. Ainscough Sons would have had to be a party to or to have consented to its proceeds of sale (subject to the charge to the Bank) going to Centremodel, but that was not pleaded or established. The Bank in theory might, after claiming the proceeds under its charge, so as to extinguish Metal's debt to it pro tanto, have chosen to allow Centremodel to take part of the Bank's moneys. But that was never pleaded or asserted and in any event it is commercially highly improbable. Mr. Smith suggested that this court might find that Metals owned the land because of what appeared in the accounts of Metals and Ainscough Sons. That, however, is not open to Centremodel in view of what was said to the Judge about ownership not being a matter to be decided. Nor do we have the material to make such a finding, though I accept that the position is puzzling. But Centremodel has only itself to blame for not putting in issue before the Judge points like this.
103. In the result I am satisfied that the Judge reached the correct conclusion on Centremodel's claim to have a proprietary interest in the sum claimed. I too would dismiss this appeal.

Order: Appeal dismissed. The successful respondent to have half the costs of the appeal (which includes the respondent's notice). Application for permission to appeal to the House of Lords refused.

(Order does not form part of the approved judgment.)


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