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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Barbados Trust Company Ltd v Bank of Zambia & Anor [2007] EWCA Civ 148 (27 February 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2007/148.html Cite as: [2007] EWCA Civ 148, [2007] 1 Lloyd's Rep 495 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM QUEENS BENCH DIVISION
Commercial Court
Mr Justice Langley
2004 FOLIO 65
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
Vice-President of the Court of Appeal, Civil Division
LORD JUSTICE RIX
and
LORD JUSTICE HOOPER
____________________
Barbados Trust Company Ltd (formerly known as CI Trustees (Asia Pacific) Ltd) |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Bank of Zambia and Anr |
Respondents |
____________________
WordWave International Ltd
A Merrill Communications Company
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Richard Handyside (instructed by Lovells, Solicitors for the First Respondent
Benjamin Pilling (instructed by Linklaters, Solicitors) for the Second Respondent
Hearing dates : 6th and 7th December 2006
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Waller :
(1) That the assignment to BoA was invalid – this on the basis that, although BoZ must accept that deemed consent had been given, they not having responded to BoA's request, since the fifteenth day was after the effective date of the assignment, prior consent had not been given; and/or
(2) Even if BoA might have sued (which is not necessarily admitted as we shall see), BT was not entitled to sue as beneficiary under the declaration of trust naming BoA as defendant (i.e. to use the route normally available to a beneficiary where a trustee will not bring a claim in its own name) – this all on the basis that an assignment in their favour could not have been valid (they not being a bank or other financial institution and/or they not having obtained prior written consent).The submission before us ultimately was that this followed from the fact that either (i) the non-assignment clause prevented it or (ii) the terms of the declaration of trust would preclude it or (iii) equity would not allow BT to sue as beneficiary when to allow it to do so would be to side step the effect of the non-assignability clause.
The background and relevant facts
"12.01 (A) Each Bank may at any time and from time to time assign all or any part of its rights and benefits in respect of the Facility to any one or more banks or other financial institutions (an "Assignee"), provided that any such assignment may only be effected if (save in the case where the assignee is a member of the same group as the assignor, no such consent then being required) the prior written consent thereto of the Borrower shall have been obtained (such consent not to be unreasonably withheld and to be deemed to have been given if no reply is received from the Borrower within fifteen days after the giving of a request for consent by a Bank) . . .
(B) If any Bank assigns any part of its rights and benefits in respect of the Facility in consideration of the agreement of the Assignee with such Bank to perform that percentage of such Bank's obligations in respect of the Facility as corresponds with that percentage of its rights and benefits so assigned to the Assignee, then all references in this Agreement to such Bank shall thereafter be construed as references to such Bank and its Assignee to the extent of their respective participations. The Borrower shall thereafter be entitled to look only to the Assignee (to the exclusion of the assignor) in respect of those proportions of the assignor's obligations in respect of the Facility as correspond to the Assignee's participation (and accordingly the assignor's Commitment shall be proportionately reduced and the Assignee shall proportionately assume a Commitment equivalent to such reduction), provided that the Borrower shall not by reason of any such assignment be obliged to make any payment otherwise than to the Agent.
(C) Unless and until an Assignee has agreed with the Agent that it shall be under the same obligations to the Agent, the Manager, the Issuer and the Banks as it would have been under if it had been a party to this Agreement, the Agent, the Manager, the Issuer and the Banks shall be entitled to continue to look to the assignor for the performance of all its obligations in respect of the Facility as if no assignment had taken place and the Agent shall not be obliged to make payment of any sum to which that Assignee may become entitled in respect of the Facility other than to the relevant assignor."
"10. The commercial purpose of these provisions has been the subject of some debate. But I do not think it is hard to fathom. Any covenant against or restrictive of assignment is intended to ensure that the original parties to the contract are not brought into direct contractual relations with third parties save to any extent expressly permitted by the covenant. Any borrower, but particularly a central bank, may be concerned to ensure that its affairs and obligations are known and owed to and only enforceable by established and authorised institutions. Mr Antonio Bueno, QC, for the Claimant, referred the Court to the judgments of David Steel J and Aikens J in The Argo Fund v Essar Steel Limited [2004] EWHC 128 (Comm) and [2005] EWHC 600 (Comm) at paragraphs 19 (Steel J) and 28 and 29 (Aikens J). No doubt, prior to drawdown, a commercial purpose of Article 12.01 was also to ensure that any assignee was able both to provide its share of the funds and to act in co-operation with the other syndicate banks. Article 12.01(A), however, applies both before and after drawdown; is restricted, even in the case of a "Bank", where consent to an assignment could reasonably be refused, and plainly encompasses and so regulates assignments when all that may remain to be performed is payment by Bank of Zambia. I reject Mr Bueno's submission that the Article was not intended to protect Bank of Zambia "from being pursued for what it owes under the Facility" at least in the sense relevant to the issues, namely that any third party could claim payment of the debt directly from Bank of Zambia."
Issue (1)
". . . we request your consent to the foregoing assignment and note that Section 12.01 of the [Facility] states that your consent shall not be unreasonably withheld".
"29. The (applicable) EMTA Terms assist in explaining the paperwork employed for the trade. They provided that "Seller and Buyer shall be considered to have entered into a binding oral agreement regarding an Assignment on the Trade Date". As between Bank of America N.A. and Masstock the Trade Date was 3 November 1999.
30. The EMTA Terms required a Written Confirmation to be sent and returned by the recipient. If the recipient does not agree the terms shown he must notify the sender in writing "in which case the parties shall determine the correct terms and the party sending the Confirmation will send the recipient a corrected Confirmation". That was done by the "Form of Confirmation" sent by Bank of America N.A. to Masstock dated 22 November (paragraph 13). It appears, however, that it was not returned by Masstock.
31. The EMTA Terms provided that:
"When executed and returned by the recipient (or if not objected to by the recipient within two Business days after receipt) a written Confirmation will constitute a binding Agreement between Buyer and Seller."
32. Section 1(c) provided:
"Closing Certificates. On or before the Settlement Date, Buyer and Seller will each execute and deliver a Closing Certificate for such Assignment. A Closing Certificate, when executed by both Buyer and Seller, shall, together with these Standard Terms … constitute a final and binding agreement between Buyer and Seller and shall supersede all prior oral or written agreements or statements by the parties with respect to the related Assignment."
33. Section 1(d)(C) provided that the Seller would send a Request for Consent to the Obligor as soon as practicable "after Buyer notifies Seller of Buyer's agreement to the draft Closing Certificate (but in any event no later than the Effective Date) …."
34. Section 2 provided, in effect, for completion of the sale between Buyer and Seller on the Effective Date or the Settlement Date, as the case might be. Both dates were, in this case, 10 December, 1999.
35. Section 3 addressed "Consents; Substitute Assignments; Unwinds". So far as material, it provided:
"(a) It is not a condition precedent to performance by the parties of their obligations in respect of any Assignment that all Consents be obtained on or before the Effective Date.
(b) Seller and Buyer shall use all reasonable efforts to obtain any Consent required for each Assignment as soon as possible after the Effective Date.
(c) If any such Consent is denied, any party with notice of such denial shall promptly give notice thereof to the other, and Seller and Buyer shall use all reasonable efforts to remedy the cause of such denial within 30 days after each has received notice of such denial (such 30th day being the "Unwind Date")…."
36. In the event consent was denied, the parties could agree on a substitute asset or substitute seller or buyer and if that was not possible they were to agree either that the Buyer was to have a 100% beneficial interest with the Asset "automatically deemed reassigned" subject to that interest to the Seller as of the Effective Date or that the Buyer would pay the Seller the "Unwind Market Price" upon which the Asset "shall be automatically deemed reassigned by Buyer to Seller".
37. Section 5(b)(C) provided (with my emphasis) that the Seller "represents and warrants as of the Trade Date and the Effective Date that"
"on the Effective Date, (i) Buyer will receive marketable title to such Asset free and clear of all Liens and other claims; (ii) Buyer will be the beneficial owner of the Asset; (iii) subject to any consent or eligibility requirement contained in any Debt Agreement, (1) Buyer will be entitled to be the record owner of the Asset …."
"51. The issue is whether or not, granted that when the original Closing Certificate was completed no consent had been obtained and the Notice of Assignment purported to give notice of an assignment effective on December 10 and so also before any consent had been obtained, nonetheless when consent would have been deemed to have been given on 17 December it was effective to complete the acquisition of the Asset by Bank of America N.A. There is an artificiality in treating such a deemed consent as a "prior" consent; but there is, to my mind, a greater artificiality in ignoring the deemed consent when the Assignment plainly addressed the need for it and can, and I think should, be read commercially as providing for it to be effective when given or deemed to be given.
52. In my judgment, the proper construction of the Assignment is that it took effect to complete the transfer of the Asset to Bank of America N.A. upon receipt of actual or deemed consent such that the consent can properly be treated as given "prior" to the assignment."
Issue (2) the Declaration of Trust
"(1)The Trustee was one of a number of banks participating in an Oil Import Facility dated 19th July 1985 ("the Facility") pursuant to which credit was extended to Bank of Zambia by the authorising of the issue of a letter of credit identified in the Schedule ("Letter of Credit"). By means of an Assignor Notice of Assignment and Assignee Agreement to be Bound dated 10 December 1999, The Trustee received an assignment of the rights, title, interest and benefits in respect of Bank of Zambia's obligations under the Facility in respect of the Letter of Credit from Masstock (International) Limited in consequence of which Bank of Zambia became indebted to the Trustee."
(2) By means of an Assignor Notice of Assignment and Assignee Agreement to be Bound dated 10 December 1999 the Trust intended to assign its rights, title, interest and benefits in respect of Bank of Zambia's obligations to it under the Facility in respect of the Letter of Credit to GMO Emerging Country Debt LP. By means of an Assignor Notice of Assignment and Assignee Agreement to be Bound dated 18 October 2003, GMO Emerging Country Debt LP intended to assign such rights, title, interest and benefits to FH International Financial Services Inc.
(3) The Beneficiary is the latest intended assignee of such rights, title, interest and benefits pursuant to an Assignment Agreement dated 26th December 2003 made between FH International Financial Services Inc, as intended assignor, and the Beneficiary as intended.
(4) The validity of the chain of assignments from the Trustee to the Beneficiary has been challenged and the Trustee and the Beneficiary have agreed that for the avoidance of doubt the Trustee shall execute this Declaration of Trust declaring itself the trustee of all such rights, title, interest and benefits.
"(1) The Trustee hereby irrevocably declares that as from the date of this Declaration of Trust it will hold all of its rights, title, interest and benefits (if any) as it may have in respect of Bank of Zambia's obligations to it under the Facility in respect of the Letter of Credit on trust for the Beneficiary absolutely."
(2) The Trustee acknowledges that the Beneficiary shall have the right to take all such lawful steps in its own name as it may consider necessary in any jurisdiction (whether by legal action or otherwise) against Bank of Zambia (or an assignee or successor in title) to recover the outstanding principal amounts (US$405,290.35 and US$404,096.67) due under the Letter of Credit, together with all interest, costs or other expenses payable thereunder in connection with such liabilities.
(3) The Trustee shall forthwith execute all such further documents and do all such other things as the Beneficiary may reasonably required to enable the Beneficiary to secure payment by Bank of Zambia of the aforesaid sums due under the Letter of Credit.
"54. The Claimant was (and is) not a bank or a "financial institution". It was therefore expressly excluded from taking a valid assignment of the Asset and acquiring a right to claim to recover it from Bank of Zambia by Article 12.01(A) of the Facility. As I have said (paragraph 10) this provision restricted the type of institution which would be entitled to enforce the obligations of Bank of Zambia. If it were the case that such a provision could be circumvented by the use of a Declaration of Trust it would be a matter of some concern. If the Claimant is right, the express restriction in Article 12.01(A) would achieve very little. Any Bank could declare itself to be a trustee of the Asset for any third party which could then claim the Asset in, in substance, the same way as if it were an assignee. Contracts outlawing or limiting assignment would have to be drafted so as also to outlaw declarations of trust or at least such declarations giving a direct right of action against the obligor."
"73. As the submissions developed, I think (unsurprisingly) they demonstrated a measure of agreement that the real key to this claim was the construction and effect of Article 12.01(A). I agree. I have stated what I think to be the commercial rationale of that Article (paragraph 10). By its terms, and whatever the status of the Facility, it decrees that, at least absent express consent, a claimant such as the present Claimant shall not be entitled to claim payment from Bank of Zambia as an assignee of the Asset. To permit such a claim to be made as the beneficiary of a declaration of trust of the Asset would in my judgment be to permit the use of the decision in Vandepitte in a commercial context in which it has no place because it would achieve a result which would be inconsistent with the terms of the Facility."
"Mr Sumption further submitted that, where a contract contains a provision prohibiting assignment, a party cannot by a declaration of trust or otherwise make himself the trustee of the benefit of that contract because this would defeat the whole purpose of the non-assignment obligation which is to ensure that the other contracting party alone, and no one else, can enforce the obligations contained in the contract against him; and that if a trust is created and if the trust refuses to enforce an obligation, the beneficiary may sue for enforcement, joining the trustee as a defendant : see Vandepitte v Preferred Accident Insurance Corporation of New York [1933] AC 70, 79.
This contention likewise fails for (amongst others) the following reasons. (1) If one party wishes to protect himself against the other party declaring himself a trustee, and not merely against an assignment, he should expressly so provide. That has not been done in this case. (2) The applicable principles of trust law in this situation are the basic principles and those (and only those) whose rationale have application in this commercial context: see Target Holdings Ltd v Redferns [1996] AC 421, 436. The courts will accordingly be astute to disallow use of the procedural short-cut sanctioned in the Vandepitte case [1933] AC 70 in a commercial context where it has no proper place. A beneficiary cannot be allowed to abrogate the fullest protection that the parties to the contract have secured for themselves under the terms of the contact from intrusion into their contractual relations by third parties. (3) A declaration of trust cannot prejudice the rights of the obligor. If the contract requires any judgment to be exercised whether by the obligor or the obligee an assignment cannot alter who is to exercise it or how that judgment is to be exercised or vest the right to make that judgment in the court. (4) The rule in Saunders v Vautier (1841) Cr. & Ph 240 (which enables the sole beneficiary or beneficiaries to give directions to the trustee) only applies if the beneficiary is entitled to wind up the trust and require the trustee to assign to him the subject matter of the trust. If the trust cannot be determined because the trustee has under the contract held as a trust asset outstanding obligations and has no power to transfer the trust asset to the beneficiary or his order, the rule does not apply: see In re Brockbank [1948] Ch 206. Accordingly in a case where the subject matter of the trust is a non-assignable contract and there are outstanding obligations to be performed by the trustee, the beneficiary under the trust cannot interfere.
Accordingly in principle I can see no objection to a party to contracts involving skill and confidence or containing non-assignment provisions from becoming trustee of the benefit of being the contracting party as well as the benefit of the rights conferred. I can see no reason why the law should limit the parties' freedom of contract to creating trusts of the fruits of such contracts received by the assignor or to creating an accounting relationship between the parties in respect of the fruits. The broader approach which I favour appears to be in accord with the authorities, so far as they go."
"25. I reject the second submission for similar reasons. The question whether, in the terms of s.20 Partnership Act 1890 an asset is "brought into the partnership stock or acquired....on account of the firm...or for the purposes and in the course of the partnership business.." does not depend on whether it is assignable at law. In both Ambler v Bolton (1872) 14 Eq. 427 and Pathirana v Pathirana [1967] AC 233 the asset was inalienable. In both cases the inalienable asset had been acquired by the individual partner in his own name during the subsistence of the partnership but was still treated as acquired on account of the firm. In my view it would make no difference if the asset had been acquired before the commencement of the partnership but the partner in question was required by the terms of the partnership to bring it into the common stock. The reason is quite simply that partnership property within s.20 Partnership Act 1890 includes that to which a partner is entitled and which all the partners expressly or by implication agree should, as between themselves, be treated as partnership property. It is immaterial, as between the partners, whether it can be assigned by the partner in whose name it stands to the partners jointly.
26. Of course, if one partner seeks to avoid the agreement he has made with his partners then questions may arise as to how the interests of the other partners are to be protected. But there are many ways in which that may be done without the need to interfere in the performance of the contract. I agree with the judge that Re Turcan (1888) 40 Ch.D.5 at p. 10 shows clearly that the court will protect the interests of those contractually entitled to have the benefit of an inalienable asset before the fruits of the asset have been realised. In that case, as the House of Lords considered in Linden Gardens Ltd v Lenesta Ltd [1994] 1 AC 85, 106, the court gave effect to the intention of the parties by means of a declaration of trust. But, it is objected, the existence of such a trust would enable one partner to interfere in the management of the personal contract made by a third party with the other partner. I do not agree. The other partner cannot insist on rendering vicarious performance of the personal obligations arising under the contract. Rules and procedures designed to enable a beneficiary to sue in respect of a contract held in trust for him would not be applied so as to jeopardise the trust property. As Lord Browne-Wilkinson observed in Target Holdings Ltd v Redferns [1996] 1 AC 421 at p.435
"In my judgment it is in any event wrong to lift wholesale the detailed rules developed in the context of traditional trusts and then seek to apply them to trusts of quite a different kind. In the modern world the trust has become a valuable device in commercial and financial dealings. The fundamental principles of equity apply as much to such trusts as they do to the traditional trusts in relation to which those principles were originally formulated. But in my judgment it is important, if the trust is not to be rendered commercially useless, to distinguish between the basic principles of trust law and those specialist rules developed in relation to traditional trusts which are applicable only to such trusts and rationale of which has no application to trusts of quite a different kind."
"It was submitted before us that the assignment was effective in equity to transfer the beneficial interest in the company's cause of action, so that it was effective as an equitable but not a legal assignment. I do not accept this. The subcontract expressly prohibits any assignment of the claim, not merely any legal assignment, and in my opinion an equitable assignment is as much within the prohibition as a legal assignment. It is not necessary to consider whether the company could have declared itself a trustee of its claim, for it has not done so. But it could not have assigned the beneficial interest to Mr Flood by contracting to do so, since equity will not enforce the performance of an obligation which constitutes a breach of a prior contract with a third party."
1) First he submitted that Article 12 prevented assignment both before and after default. He submitted that Don King was authority for the proposition that equity would not allow the Vandepitte procedure to be used to enable a beneficiary to gain a benefit which he could not have as an assignee. On that basis alone he submitted the appeal should be dismissed.2) Second he submitted that, on the true construction of the Declaration of Trust, BT was not entitled to force BoA to sue, and thus on that basis the Vandepitte procedure was not available.
3) Third he submitted that Article 12, on its proper construction, prohibited Declarations of Trust, save possibly of the proceeds once received.
4) Fourth he submitted a Declaration of Trust was, in effect, an equitable assignment, and thus was prohibited by the express language of Article 12.
5) Fifth he submitted that ex parte Floods was authority for the proposition that the court would not construe a contract effective as between assignor and assignee but ineffective as a legal assignment, as an equitable assignment, so as to enable the assignee to force the assignor to sue. Thus, he submitted, the court should equally not allow the use of the Vandepitte procedure so as to enable a beneficiary of a Declaration of Trust to sue BoZ, even though the trust may be valid as between the trustee (BoA) and the beneficiary (BT).
"To permit such a claim to be made as the beneficiary of a declaration of trust of the asset would, in my judgment, be to permit the use of [the law on such a trust] in a commercial context in which it has no place, because it would achieve a result which would be inconsistent with the terms of the facility."
"Langley J reasoned that Re Turcan (1888) 40 Ch D 5 and Don King did not dictate a contrary result. He also reasoned – but with respect that seems incorrect – that, in any event, the claimant, even though a beneficiary under the trust, could not itself enforce contractual rights despite the fact that it had joined the trustee as defendant"
"The decision has been well received, particularly by leading academics . . . Others have been neutral or unenthusiastic."
Lord Justice Rix :
(1) Does BoA have good title to the debt (the respondent's notice)?
(2) Does article 12 prohibit an assignment of the fruits of the Facility?
(3) Does article 12 prohibit a declaration of trust in respect of the fruits of the Facility?
(4) Does BoA's declaration of trust entail that BoA is not a claimant?
(5) Does use of the Vandepitte procedure mean that BoA is not to be regarded as a claimant, or is it otherwise ineffective or illegitimate to use that procedure to reduce the debt into possession?
(1) Does BoA have good title to the debt (the respondent's notice)?
"i) The originals of the Closing Certificate constitute the final agreement between Masstock and Bank of America NA. The Certificate provided expressly that the prior written consent of Bank of Zambia was required to assign the Asset.
ii) The requirement of the consent of Bank of Zambia to the Assignment was not a condition precedent to the agreement between Masstock and Bank of America NA which was effective according to its terms on 10 December 1999.
iii) The 15 day period for a deemed consent from Bank of Zambia to the Masstock trade would have expired on 17 December and therefore had not expired on either the Settlement Date or the Effective Date (both 10 December), when the agreement became effective between Masstock and Bank of America NA.
iv) Neither the EMTA Terms nor the Assignment made any express provision for a "deemed" consent but it is not open to any party to contend that consent was "denied" within Section 3 of the EMTA Terms.
v) The EMTA Terms expressly contemplate the conclusion of the trade in advance of obtaining the consent of the debtor/obligor whilst also recognising the need to obtain consent to make an assignment effective between assignee and obligor. They do not, at least with clarity, address an Asset which can only be assigned with prior written consent nor deemed consents. But the EMTA Terms do, in Sections 1(d)(C), 3 and 5(b) (C) plainly contemplate and provide both for the consent to be obtained after completion of the trade and for the consequences if it is refused…"
"50…The Assignment was binding in accordance with its terms on the Trade Date and thereafter in accordance with the Written Confirmation and the Closing Certificate. That was expressly provided for by the EMTA Terms and I see nothing inconsistent with them in the documents themselves. Had the consent of Bank of Zambia been "denied", the "Substitute" and "Unwind" provisions would have been binding and operable. But the EMTA Terms, and the documents, do expressly contemplate the continuing need for consent despite the binding nature of the agreement and, I think, provide that, or at least predicate that, if consent is obtained the Assignment is then to come fully into effect. In particular I think that can be derived from sections 1(d)(C), 3 and 5(b)(C) of the EMTA Terms and the reference to the need for the "prior written consent of Bank of Zambia" in the Closing Certificate. It would be remarkable if, after 17 December, it was open to either Masstock or Bank of America NA to contend that there had not been a valid and fully effective assignment between them."
(2) Does article 12 prohibit an assignment of the fruits of the Facility?
"12. Between February 1992 and December 1999 (and indeed thereafter) a company called Masstock…was acknowledged by both Bank of Zambia and BAIL to be the creditor of record in respect of the Asset. Although it seems that Masstock was not a bank or financial institution within the meaning of Article 12.01(A) it is accepted by Bank of Zambia that Masstock had a valid legal title to the Asset in November and December 1999."
"…although an author who has contracted to write a book for a fee cannot perform the contract by supplying a book written by a third party, if he writes the book himself he can assign the right to the fee – the fruits of performance. He expressly mentions that such right to assign the fruits of performance can be prohibited by the express terms of the contract."
"The reason for including the contractual prohibition viewed from the contractor's point of view must be that the contractor wishes to ensure that he deals, and deals only, with the particular employer with whom he has chosen to enter into a contract. Building contracts are pregnant with disputes: some employers are much more reasonable than others in dealing with such disputes. The disputes frequently arise in the context of the contractor suing for the price and being met by a claim for the abatement of the price…"
"12.02 Assignment by the Borrower
The rights of the Borrower under this Agreement are personal to the Borrower and accordingly the Borrower shall not assign the benefit of this Agreement in whole or in part."
Nevertheless, as the judge pointed out (at para 10):
"Any borrower, but particularly a central bank, may be concerned to ensure that its affairs and obligations are known and owed to and only enforceable by established and authorised institutions."
It is plain that the parties to the chain of assignments of which there has been evidence before the court have all considered that article 12.01(A) applied to established debts.
Issue (3): does article 12 prohibit a Declaration of Trust in respect of the fruits of the Facility?
"As to the authorities, in In re Turcan, 40 Ch.D. 5, a man effected an insurance policy which contained a term that it should not be assignable in any case whatever. He had previously covenanted with trustees to settle after-acquired property. The Court of Appeal held that although he could not assign the benefit of the policy so as to give the trustees the power to recover the money from the insurance company, he could validly make a declaration of trust of the proceeds, which required him to hand over such proceeds to the trustees."
"(2) that the term precludes or invalidates any assignment by A to C (so as to entitle B to pay the debt to A) but not so as to preclude A from agreeing, as between himself and C, that he will account to C for what A receives from B: In re Turcan…"
"a prohibition on assignment normally only invalidates the assignment as against the other party to the contract so as to prevent a transfer of the chose in action: in the absence of the clearest words it cannot operate to invalidate the contract as between the assignor and the assignee and even then it may be ineffective on the grounds of public policy."
Lord Browne-Wilkinson there appears to be contemplating a declaration of trust relating to a chose of action, and not merely proceeds when received.
"(7) A declaration of trust in favour of a third party of the benefit of obligations or the profits obtained from a contract is different in character from an assignment of the benefit of the contract to that third party: see the Devefi case [1993] R.P.C. 493, 505. Whether the contract contains a provision prohibiting such a declaration of trust must be determined as a matter of construction of the contract. Such a limitation upon the freedom of the party is not lightly to be inferred and a clause prohibiting assignments of the benefit of the obligation does not extend to declarations of trust of the benefit: consider Pincott v. Moorstons Ltd. [1937] 1 All E.R. 513, 516."
"Accordingly in principle I can see no objection to a party to contracts involving skill and confidence or containing non-assignment provisions from becoming the trustee of the benefit of being the contracting party as well as the benefit of the rights conferred. I can see no reason why the law should limit the parties' freedom of contract to creating trusts of the fruits of such contracts received by the assignor or to creating an accounting relationship between the parties in respect of the fruits. The broader approach which I favour appears to be in accord with the authorities, so far as they go. The leading authority is In re Turcan…"
"I agree with the judge that In re Turcan, 40 Ch.D. 5, 10 shows clearly that the court will protect the interests of those contractually entitled to have the benefit of an inalienable asset before the fruits of the asset have been realised."
"Would a Court of Equity in the lifetime of the covenantor have enforced the covenant to settle this policy notwithstanding the condition against assignment? I think it would. Before the Act of 1867 (30 & 31 Vict. C. 144) a policy could not be assigned at law, but now it can: and I think the condition was inserted in order to prevent the insured from availing himself of the power to assign the policy and to give the assignee a right to receive the money from the office. But though he could not assign the policy, I think it would be a sufficient compliance with the covenant if he had executed a declaration of trust for the trustees of the settlement, just as he might have done before the passing of the Act of 1867. Then he could not have assigned the policy or given the trustees the power to receive the money, but he might have given them all the benefit of the money when it was received. And I think he could have given them the same benefit in the present case by executing a declaration of trust."
"Therefore the existing authorities establish that an attempted assignment of contractual rights in breach of a contractual prohibition is ineffective to transfer such contractual rights. I regard the law as being satisfactorily settled in that sense. If the law were otherwise, it would defeat the legitimate commercial reason for inserting the contractual prohibition, viz, to ensure that the original parties to the contract are not brought into direct contractual relations with third parties."
Issue (4): Does BoA's declaration of trust entail that BoA cannot be a claimant?
"3. No relief is claimed against Bank of America NA. It was joined as a Defendant because it declined to act as a claimant and to ensure that it was bound by the outcome of the proceedings.
56…It is a feature of the present proceedings that whilst assisting the Claimant, both by agreeing to the Declaration of Trust and in the provision of evidence, Bank of America NA itself has not been willing to bring the claim to the Asset and has recognised that it could not validly assign it to the Claimant."
Issue (5): Does use of the Vandepitte procedure mean that BoA is not to be regarded as a claimant, or is it otherwise ineffective or illegitimate to use that procedure to reduce the debt into possession?
"…a party to a contract can constitute himself a trustee for a third party of a right under the contract and thus confer such rights enforceable in equity on the third party. The trustee then can take steps to enforce performance to the beneficiary by the other contracting party as in the case of other equitable rights. The action should be in the name of the trustee; if, however, he refuses to sue, the beneficiary can sue, joining the trustee as a defendant."
"Except under very special circumstances the ordinary rule should be observed, that the legal owner should be a party to the proceedings…But whatever may be the balance of convenience, the established rules of practice should be adhered to, even in cases, of which I think the present is one, when their observance in all probability will serve no useful purpose. The parties have joined battle on the applicability to the present case of this particular rule of practice, and we must decide according to law, however much we may regret that success in the action should depend on mere technicality which has no relation to the merits of the case."
"The right of a beneficiary in such a case as the present, however, is to enforce the agreement according to its tenor, that is to say in favour of the defendant Armstrong, and not in favour of the plaintiff beneficiaries."
"(1) If one party wishes to protect himself against the other party declaring himself a trustee, and not merely against an assignment, he should expressly so provide. That has not been done in this case. (2) The applicable principles of trust law in this situation are the basic principles and those (and only those) whose rationale have application in this commercial context: see Target Holdings Ltd. v. Redferns [1996] AC 421, 436. The courts will accordingly be astute to disallow use of the procedural short-cut sanctioned in the Vandepitte case [1933] AC 70 in a commercial context where it has no proper place. A beneficiary cannot be allowed to abrogate the fullest protection that the parties to the contract have secured for themselves under the terms of the contract from intrusion into their contractual relations by third parties."
"In that case [In re Turcan], as the House of Lords considered in Linden Gardens Trust Ltd. v. Lenesta Sludge Disposals Ltd. [1994] 1 AC 85, 106, the court gave effect to the intention of the parties by means of a declaration of trust. But, it is objected, the existence of such a trust would enable one partner to interfere in the management of the personal contract made by a third party with the other partner. I do not agree. The other partner cannot insist on rendering vicarious performance of the personal obligations arising under the contract. Rules and procedures designed to enable a beneficiary to sue in respect of a contract held in trust for him would not be applied so as to jeopardise the trust property. As Lord Browne-Wilkinson observed in Target Holdings Ltd. v. Redferns [1996] AC 421, 435:
"in my judgment it is in any event wrong to lift wholesale the detailed rules developed in the context of traditional trusts and then seek to apply them to trusts of quite a different kind. In the modern world the trust has become a valuable device in commercial and financial dealings. The fundamental principles of equity apply as much to such trusts as they do to the traditional trusts in relation to which those principles were originally formulated. But in my judgment it is important, if the trust is not to be rendered commercially useless, to distinguish between the basic principles of trust law and those specialist rules developed in relation to traditional trusts which are applicable only to such trusts and the rationale of which has no application to trusts of quite a different kind.""
"In the Tom Shaw case an actor, B., was engaged by Moss Empires under a contract which prohibited the assignment of his salary. B. assigned 10 per cent of his salary to his agent, Tom Shaw. Tom Shaw sued Moss Empires for 10 per cent of the salary joining B. as second defendant. Moss Empires agreed to pay the 10 per cent of the salary to Tom Shaw or B. as the court might decide i.e. in effect it interpleaded. Darling J. held, at p. 191, that the prohibition on assignment was ineffective: it could "no more operate to invalidate the assignment than it could interfere with the laws of gravitation." He gave judgment for the plaintiffs against both B. and Moss Empires, ordering B. to pay the costs but making no order for costs against Moss Empires.
The case is inadequately reported and it is hard to discover exactly what it decides. Given that both B. and Moss Empires were parties and Moss Empires was in effect interpleading, it may be that the words I have quoted merely indicate that as between the assignor, B., and the assignee Tom Shaw, the prohibition contained in the contract between B. and Moss Empires could not invalidate B.'s liability to account to Tom Shaw for the moneys when received and that, since B. was a party, payment direct to Tom Shaw was ordered. This view is supported by the fact that no order for costs was made against Moss Empires. If this is the right view of the case, it is unexceptionable: a prohibition on assignment normally only invalidates the assignment as against the other party to the contract so as to prevent a transfer of the chose in action: in the absence of the clearest words it cannot operate to invalidate the contract as between the assignor and the assignee and even then it may be ineffective on the ground of public policy. If on the other hand Darling J. purported to hold that the contractual prohibition was ineffective to prevent B.'s contractual rights against Moss Empires being transferred to Tom Shaw, it is inconsistent with authority and was wrongly decided."
I have already cited most of the penultimate sentence of that passage out of its context (at para 31 above).
Lord Justice Hooper :
"Any covenant against or restrictive of assignment is intended to ensure that the original parties to the contract are not brought into direct contractual relations with third parties save to any extent expressly permitted by the covenant. Any borrower, but particularly a central bank, may be concerned to ensure that its affairs and obligations are known and owed to and only enforceable by established and authorised institutions."
"54. The Claimant was (and is) not a bank or a "financial institution". It was therefore expressly excluded from taking a valid assignment of the Asset and acquiring a right to claim to recover it from Bank of Zambia by Article 12.01(A) of the Facility. As I have said (paragraph 10) this provision restricted the type of institution which would be entitled to enforce the obligations of Bank of Zambia. If it were the case that such a provision could be circumvented by the use of a Declaration of Trust it would be a matter of some concern. If the Claimant is right, the express restriction in Article 12.01(A) would achieve very little. Any Bank could declare itself to be a trustee of the Asset for any third party which could then claim the Asset in, in substance, the same way as if it were an assignee. Contracts outlawing or limiting assignment would have to be drafted so as also to outlaw declarations of trust or at least such declarations giving a direct right of action against the obligor."
"73. As the submissions developed, I think (unsurprisingly) they demonstrated a measure of agreement that the real key to this claim was the construction and effect of Article 12.01(A). I agree. I have stated what I think to be the commercial rationale of that Article (paragraph 10). By its terms, and whatever the status of the Facility, it decrees that, at least absent express consent, a claimant such as the present Claimant shall not be entitled to claim payment from Bank of Zambia as an assignee of the Asset. To permit such a claim to be made as the beneficiary of a declaration of trust of the Asset would in my judgment be to permit the use of the decision in Vandepitte in a commercial context in which it has no place because it would achieve a result which would be inconsistent with the terms of the Facility.
CONCLUSION
74. I have concluded that:
...
ii) It was not open to Bank of America N.A. and the Claimant for the former to declare itself trustee for the latter such as to entitle the Claimant to make the claim it does in these proceedings.
iii) The claim therefore fails and must be dismissed." (Emphasis added)
"64. In Linden Gardens Trust Ltd v Lenesta Sludge Disposals Ltd the House of Lords considered the effect of a standard clause in a construction contract which provided that "the employer shall not without written consent of the contractor assign this contract". The House decided that the clause prohibited both the assignment of rights to the future performance of the contract and assignment of the "fruits" of the contract, that is the right to receive payment under it or to enforce accrued rights of action. The consequence was that the claim by the assignee failed. Lord Browne-Wilkinson, at pages 103 to 105, accepted that it was "at least hypothetically possible" that a clause might prohibit one but not the other. Again, I think this authority assists Bank of Zambia rather than the Claimant. Article 12.01(A) is unqualified in its prohibition and cannot in my judgment be construed as permitting an assignment of the "fruits" of the Facility."
"3. No relief is claimed against Bank of America N.A. It was joined as a Defendant because it declined to act as a claimant and to ensure that it was bound by the outcome of the proceedings."