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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 >> Platform Funding Ltd v Bank of Scotland Plc (Formerly Halifax Plc) [2008] EWCA Civ 930 (31 July 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2008/930.html Cite as: [2008] EWCA Civ 930, [2009] 2 WLR 1016, [2009] QB 426, [2009] 2 All ER 344 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE CENTRAL LONDON COUNTY COURT
HIS HONOUR JUDGE COLLINS CBE
TCC07016
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE RIX
and
LORD JUSTICE MOORE-BICK
____________________
PLATFORM FUNDING LIMITED |
Claimant/ Respondent |
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- and - |
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BANK OF SCOTLAND PLC (formerly HALIFAX PLC) |
Defendant Appellant/ |
____________________
Mr. Clifford Payton and Mr. Ben Hubble (instructed by Glenisters) for the respondent
Hearing dates : 30th June 2008
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Moore-Bick :
"Declaration
This valuation is for the benefit of Platform Funding Limited, its successors, assignees and transferees . . . . . .
I certify that the property offered as security has been inspected by me and that the above valuation is a fair indication of the current open market valuation for mortgage purposes . . . . . . ."
Unfortunately, however, the valuer had not inspected 1 Bakers Yard, which was a plot of land on which stood a house still in the course of construction. He had been misled by Mr. Hewes into inspecting 5 Bakers Yard, a plot close by on which stood a house that had almost been completed.
". . . . . [a valuer] is concerned with valuing a piece of property and the primary obligation of the valuer is to go to the property which he is asked to look at and value it. The scope for reasonable skill and care in the case of the valuer arises when he is performing the valuation. But in my judgment to suggest that the valuer has performed his contract when he values a completely different property to the one he is instructed to value makes a nonsense of the essential obligation which the valuation of property entails."
"When a skilled labourer, artizan, or artist is employed, there is on his part an implied warranty that he is of skill reasonably competent to the task he undertakes, – Spondes peritiam artis. Thus, if an apothecary, a watch-maker or an attorney be employed for reward, they each impliedly undertake to possess and exercise reasonable skill in their several arts. The public profession of an art is a representation and undertaking to all the world that the professor possesses the requisite ability and skill."
The case concerned the employment of an artist as a "panorama and scene-painter" for a period of at least a month. The court held that the employer was entitled to terminate the contract after two days when the artist proved to be incompetent. The court was not concerned, as we are, to enquire whether the artist had assumed an unqualified obligation of any kind, but one cannot help wondering what it would have said if the plaintiff had demonstrated consummate artistic skill in depicting the wrong subject matter.
"Apply this to the employment of a professional man. The law does not usually imply a warranty that he will achieve the desired result, but only a term that he will use reasonable care and skill. The surgeon does not warrant that he will cure the patient. Nor does the solicitor warrant that he will win the case."
". . . when a dentist agrees to make a set of false teeth for a patient, there is an implied warranty that they will fit his gums: see Samuels v Davis [1943] K.B. 526."
"In my judgment the decision in Zwebner should not be given a wide application. To do so would ignore the wider consequences of our decision. If commercial institutions such as banks wish to impose an absolute liability on members of a profession they should do so in clear terms so that the solicitors can appreciate the extent of their obligation which they are accepting. Frequently this sort of task is undertaken by small firms of solicitors who are already finding it difficult to remain viable. This is partly because they are heavily burdened by the costs of insurance. If they are to be liable for very substantial sums of damages as a result of the fraud of the customers of the bank which they cannot prevent, then either they will have to withdraw from providing those services or they will have to charge for their services at a rate which is very different from that which was charged here. Neither result is in the interests of the banks or their customers or the public. The result is not in the interests of the banks' customers as they will not benefit from the explanation of the transaction from a member of the legal profession who is qualified to give that explanation. It is not in the interests of banks as they will have to pay higher fees which they may or may not seek to recover from their customers. It is not in the interest of the public because it is important that legal services are readily available and this will not be the case if small firms are unable to survive. Unless the language used in a retainer clearly has this consequence, the courts should not be ready to impose obligations on solicitors which even the most careful solicitor may not be able to meet."
"The letter was a retainer by the bank of a firm of solicitors to perform professional services of an advisory and ministerial kind for the bank. Professional services provided by the solicitors would not normally involve the guaranteeing of a result by them, such as verifying the identity of Mrs. Dukes, let alone providing the bank with what would amount to an insurance policy against the risk of fraud occurring in a transaction entered into by the bank with its customer, Mr. Dukes; a transaction about which the solicitors were told little by the bank and in which they had no input or influence.
The bank agreed to lend a substantial sum to their customer. That customer was Mr. Dukes. Mrs. Dukes was not a customer of the bank. She was not a client of the solicitors retained by the bank to obtain her signature. It is improbable that the solicitors would agree to provide to the bank more than the exercise of the reasonable care and skill of a competent solicitor in relation to the task to be undertaken. It was part of the bank's case against the solicitors that the retainer was subject to the usual implied duty of care. That implied term also governed the obligation to obtain the signature of Mrs. Dukes. The judge rejected the case of negligence against the solicitors. There is no appeal against that. The bank's case on the appeal rests on the contention that the wording of the retainer was apt to create an absolute obligation which would be breached by the solicitors, no matter what precautions they might have taken and what lengths they might have gone to ensure that the woman who signed the mortgage was Mrs. Dukes. For the reasons stated above and for the reasons stated by the Master of the Rolls, I am unable to accept the contention that this retainer, when construed in the context in which it was given and accepted, was intended to have that far-reaching effect."
Lord Justice Rix:
"The scope for reasonable skill and care in the case of the valuer arises when he is performing the valuation. But in my judgment to suggest that the valuer has performed his contract when he values a completely different property to the one he is instructed to value makes a nonsense of the essential obligation which the valuation of property entails."
"I certify that the property offered as security has been inspected by me and that the above valuation is a fair indication of the current open market valuation for mortgage purposes…"
Moore-Bick LJ's view is that it is a warranty, at any rate when viewed against the background of the true meaning of the underlying retainer. Of course, for the reasons he gives, the two questions are inter-connected. The certificate has to be construed against its background.
Sir Anthony Clarke M.R.:
"The letter was a retainer by the bank of a firm of solicitors to perform professional services of an advisory and ministerial kind for the bank. Professional services provided by the solicitors would not normally involve the guaranteeing of a result by them, such as verifying the identity of Mrs. Dukes, let alone providing the bank with what would amount to an insurance policy against the risk of fraud occurring in a transaction entered into by the bank with its customer, Mr. Dukes; a transaction about which the solicitors were told little by the bank and in which they had no input or influence.
The bank agreed to lend a substantial sum to their customer. That customer was Mr Dukes. Mrs Dukes was not a customer of the bank. She was not a client of the solicitors retained by the bank to obtain her signature. It is improbable that the solicitors would agree to provide to the bank more than the exercise of the reasonable care and skill of a competent solicitor in relation to the task to be undertaken. It was part of the bank's case against the solicitors that the retainer was subject to the usual implied duty of care. That implied term also governed the obligation to obtain the signature of Mrs Dukes. The judge rejected the case of negligence against the solicitors. There is no appeal against that. The bank's case on the appeal rests on the contention that the wording of the retainer was apt to create an absolute obligation which would be breached by the solicitors, no matter what precautions they might have taken and what lengths they might have gone to ensure that the woman who signed the mortgage was Mrs Dukes. For the reasons stated above and for the reasons stated by the Master of the Rolls, I am unable to accept the contention that this retainer, when construed in the context in which it was given and accepted, was intended to have that far-reaching effect."
i) that the default obligation is one limited to the taking and exercise of reasonable care;ii) that it requires special facts or clear language to impose an obligation stricter than that of reasonable care;
iii) that a professional man will not readily be supposed to undertake to achieve a guaranteed result; and
iv) that if he is undertaking with care that which he was retained or instructed to do, he will not readily be found to have nevertheless warranted to be responsible for a misfortune caused by the fraud of another.
I also agree with Rix LJ that it follows from the jurisprudence and from these conclusions to be derived from them that it is not possible to support a blanket approach whereby, even in the absence of an express warranty, a professional's responsibility is nevertheless always limited to the taking of reasonable care. It may be necessary in a particular case to imply such a warranty.