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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 >> Scotland & Anor v British Credit Trust Limited [2014] EWCA Civ 790 (10 June 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2014/790.html Cite as: [2014] WLR(D) 252, [2014] EWCA Civ 790, [2014] Bus LR 1079, [2014] BUS LR 1079 |
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ON APPEAL FROM LEICESTER COUNTY COURT
HHJ HAMPTON
1NN00841
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE KITCHIN
and
LORD JUSTICE UNDERHILL
____________________
(1) Mark Scotland (2) Emma Reast |
Claimants/ Respondents |
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- and - |
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British Credit Trust Limited |
Defendant/ Appellant |
____________________
WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Jonathan Butters (instructed by Michael Lewin) for the Respondents
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Kitchin:
Introduction
The background
The judgment
The appeal
The course of the appeal
i) The scope of s.56(1)(c) of the Act, and the effect of the agency to which s.56(2) gives rise.
ii) The effect (if any) of the decision of this court in the Plevin case.
iii) Whether the agreement for the provision of the PPI was a "related agreement" for the purposes of s.140A and, if so, what implications this has for the appeal.
iv) Whether it was in any event appropriate to take into account the misrepresentation made by Zenith in assessing whether the relationship between the claimants and BCT was unfair.
v) The correct overall approach to be taken to an unfair relationship claim and, specifically, whether any misrepresentation or breach of the ICOB rules should be regarded as determinative.
Sections 140 A to C the unfair relationship
"140A Unfair relationships between creditors and debtors.
(1) The court may make an order under section 140B in connection with a credit agreement if it determines that the relationship between the creditor and the debtor arising out of the agreement (or the agreement taken with any related agreement) is unfair to the debtor because of one or more of the following:
(a) any of the terms of the agreement or of any related agreement;
(b) the way in which the creditor has exercised or enforced any of his rights under the agreement or any related agreement;
(c) any other thing done (or not done) by, or on behalf of, the creditor (either before or after the making of the agreement or any related agreement).
(2) In deciding whether to make a determination under this section the court shall have regard to all matters it thinks relevant (including matters relating to the creditor and matters relating to the debtor).
(3) For the purposes of this section the court shall (except to the extent that it is not appropriate to do so) treat anything done (or not done) by, or on behalf of, or in relation to, an associate or a former associate of the creditor as if done (or not done) by, or on behalf of, or in relation to, the creditor."
"140C Interpretation of ss.140A and 140B.
(4) References in sections 140A and 140B to an agreement related to a credit agreement (the 'main agreement') are references to:
(b) a linked transaction in relation to the main agreement or to a credit agreement within paragraph (a); "
"19 Linked transactions.
(1) A transaction entered into by the debtor or hirer, or a relative of his, with any other person ( "the other party "), except one for the provision of security, is a linked transaction in relation to an actual or prospective regulated agreement (the "principal agreement ") of which it does not form part if
(a) the transaction is entered into in compliance with a term of the principal agreement; or
(b) the principal agreement is a debtor-creditor-supplier agreement and the transaction is financed, or to be financed, by the principal agreement; or
(c) the other party is a person mentioned in subsection (2), and a person so mentioned initiated the transaction by suggesting it to the debtor or hirer, or his relative, who enters into it
(i) to induce the creditor or owner to enter into the principal agreement, or
(ii) for another purpose related to the principal agreement, or
(iii) where the principal agreement is a restricted-use credit agreement, for a purpose related to a transaction financed, or to be financed, by the principal agreement.
Section 56
"56. Antecedent negotiations.
(1) In this Act "antecedent negotiations" means any negotiations with the debtor or hirer -
(a) conducted by the creditor or owner in relation to the making of any regulated agreement, or
(b) conducted by a credit-broker in relation to goods sold or proposed to be sold by the credit-broker before forming the subject-matter of a debtor-creditor-supplier agreement within section 12(a), or
(c) conducted by the supplier in relation to a transaction financed or proposed to be financed by a debtor-creditor-supplier agreement within section 12(b) or (c),
and "negotiator" means the person by whom negotiations are so conducted with the debtor or hirer.
(2) Negotiations with the debtor in a case falling within subsection (1)(b) or (c) shall be deemed to be conducted in the capacity of agent of the creditor as well as in his actual capacity.
(4) For the purposes of this Act, antecedent negotiations shall be taken to begin when the negotiator and the debtor or hirer first enter into communication (including communication by advertisement), and to include any representations made by the negotiator to the debtor or hirer and any other dealings between them."
"12. Debtor-creditor-supplier agreements.
A debtor creditor supplier agreement is a regulated consumer credit agreement being:
(b) a restricted-use credit agreement which falls within section 11(1)(b) and is made by the creditor under pre-existing arrangements, or in contemplation of future arrangements, between himself and the supplier, "
"11. Restricted-use credit and unrestricted-use credit.
(1) A restricted-use credit agreement is a regulated consumer credit agreement
(b) to finance a transaction between the debtor and a person (the "supplier") other than the creditor,
and "restricted-use credit" shall be construed accordingly."
"In my judgment, what s.56(1)(b) means is that there must be goods sold or proposed to be sold by the credit-broker to the creditor, which will form the subject matter of a debtor-creditor-supplier agreement. If that condition is fulfilled, one next inquires whether there were negotiations in relation to those goods. If there were, then all that was said by the credit broker in those negotiations is deemed to have been said on behalf of the creditor.
The next question is then a simple one of fact, were the negotiations in this case all relating to the goods to be sold? The answer in my judgment is that they were, because they were all part of one transaction. If the dealers had been asked by Mrs Ingate, "I no longer want the Fiat Panda, but please take my car and give me £8 and pay off what I owe on it" one can be fairly confident that the answer would be that, "That is not on offer. We have been negotiating about one transaction overall and that is what we have been talking about".
In my judgment the law is plain enough: one simply has to inquire whether all the negotiations form part of one transaction as a matter of fact. The facts are plain enough to lead to that conclusion in this case."
" . should, as a matter of law, the words "negotiations . in relation to" the Fiat Panda be so narrowly construed as to exclude negotiations concerning what the district judge found to be part of the package, namely the Austin Metro? It seems to me that such a narrow interpretation of the words would not only be artificial but would fly in the face of the clear purpose of this Act to protect consumers."
" .in each case the negotiations so defined must relate to the goods sold by the dealer to the finance company, ie the Fiat Panda. These negotiations, for reasons that Staughton LJ and I have sought to explain, plainly did. Therefore, in my judgment, s.56 is to be construed widely. Section 56(1)(b) applies, and the third party are in my judgment liable under s.56(2) for the dealer's promise to discharge Mrs Ingate's debt under the conditional sale agreement."
"In my view these actions do not have as their object tenancies of immovable property. In each action the foundation for the claim against the bank under section 75 (and in the case of the Jarretts under section 56 also) is the debtor-creditor-supplier agreement. The contract has attached to it the personal statutory rights conferred by the Consumer Credit Act 1974 on the debtor. Of course the enforcement of those statutory rights is connected to or linked with the claims of the consumer against the supplier under the timeshare agreements but it is based on the debtor-creditor-supplier agreement not the timeshare agreement."
Plevin v Paragon
"48. For Mrs. Plevin, Mr. Strachan submitted that the phrase "on behalf of" was designed to bring within the purview of the court's consideration any relevant act or omission by a person who, in a non-technical sense, would be viewed by the man on the Clapham omnibus as having played some part in the bringing about of the credit agreement for the creditor. Thus it typically applied to any intermediary paid a commission for introducing the customer to the creditor, or (which may be the same thing) procuring the business represented by the credit agreement (and any related agreement) for the creditor. Thus it applied to the acts and omissions of any intermediary, whether acting as agent for the creditor or as a mere broker without an agency relationship with either party to the credit agreement, at least where the broker received commission from (or via) the creditor.
49. Put shortly, the difference between the rival submissions is that Mr. Elliott submitted that "on behalf of" is designed only to capture conduct (including omissions) for which the creditor can be said to bear or share some responsibility, whereas Mr. Strachan submits that it captures all conduct beneficial to the creditor, in the sense that it played some material part in the bringing about of the transaction giving rise to the allegedly unfair relationship. Proof that the person whose conduct is prayed in aid received a commission from, or via, the creditor brings on board the whole of that person's conduct, within section 140A(1)(c)."
"60. . The first is that the court may conclude that conduct "on behalf of" the creditor by a person who procures a transaction, even if blameworthy, has not in fact rendered the relationship unfair. For example, a complete failure to conduct a demand and needs assessment or to consider suitability may nonetheless be followed by a transaction leading to a relationship which is perfectly fair to the debtor.
61. The second escape route arises from the fact that the court's powers to intervene upon an unfair relationship are plainly discretionary. Section 140A(1) provides that "the Court may make an order if it determines that the relationship between the creditor and the debtor is unfair to the debtor ". There may well be cases where the conduct of some third person, for whom the creditor had no responsibility of any kind, or in respect of whose conduct the creditor conducted diligent monitoring which failed to reveal the relevant misbehaviour, renders the relationship objectively unfair, but in a way which is so divorced from any responsibility of the creditor as to make it inappropriate to grant discretionary relief. This may be, for example, because the debtor knew about the misconduct, but the creditor did not. Another example would be a case where the debtor has a perfectly adequate remedy against the third person, either because that person has some legal liability or enforceable regulatory obligation to the debtor, together with the resources with which to discharge it, such that the court may properly leave the debtor to enforce that remedy, rather than reopen the relationship with the blameless creditor."
Related agreement
Misrepresentation
"75. Liability of creditor for breaches by supplier.
(1) If the debtor under a debtor-creditor-supplier agreement falling within section 12(b) or (c) has, in relation to a transaction financed by the agreement, any claim against the supplier in respect of a misrepresentation or breach of contract, he shall have a like claim against the creditor, who, with the supplier, shall accordingly be jointly and severally liable to the debtor.
(2) Subject to any agreement between them, the creditor shall be entitled to be indemnified by the supplier for loss suffered by the creditor in satisfying his liability under subsection (1), including costs reasonably incurred by him in defending proceedings instituted by the debtor.
(3) Subsection (1) does not apply to a claim
(a) under a non-commercial agreement,
(b) so far as the claim relates to any single item to which the supplier has attached a cash price not exceeding £100 or more than £30,000,
(4) This section applies notwithstanding that the debtor, in entering into the transaction, exceeded the credit limit or otherwise contravened any term of the agreement.
(5) In an action brought against the creditor under subsection (1) he shall be entitled, in accordance with rules of court, to have the supplier made a party to the proceedings."
"I struggle however to spell out of the mere size of the undisclosed commission an unfairness in the relationship between lender and borrower. Moreover the touchstone must in my view be the standard imposed by the regulatory authorities pursuant to their statutory duties, not resort to a visceral instinct that the relevant conduct is beyond the Pale. In that regard it is clear that the ICOB regime after due consultation and consideration does not require the disclosure of the receipt of commission. It would be an anomalous result if a lender was obliged to disclose the receipt of a commission in order to escape a finding of unfairness under section 140A of the Act but yet not obliged to disclose it pursuant to the statutorily imposed regulatory framework under which it operates."
"Again I am not sure that I follow this, but the decision is in any event of little assistance to us in the present enquiry. It is sufficient to note, as Mr Nicholas Elliott QC for Black Horse accepted, that plainly it is not a pre-requisite to a finding of an unfair relationship that there has been in the course thereof a misrepresentation. Indeed, the circumstance that there has been a misrepresentation in the course of a relationship is likely, I should have thought, ordinarily to be irrelevant to the question whether that relationship is unfair. A misrepresentation is likely to generate an entirely different remedy, unavailable in Yates because of the insolvency of the broker. "
"64. It would, however, be an artificial and unsatisfactory exercise if, in determining what is fair to the debtor, the court were permitted to have regard only to matters which occurred in the 12 years before the debtor's application was made and was required to shut its eyes to agreements between the parties and other relevant matters which occurred before that time. Such a partial enquiry into the course of the relationship between the creditor and the debtor would also be contrary to s.140A(2), which provides that the court "shall have regard to all matters it thinks relevant" (my emphasis) impliedly without limitation in time. In my opinion the possibility of such a time-limited assessment does not arise on the proper interpretation of the statutory provisions. As I construe s.140A, the question whether the relationship between the creditor and the debtor is unfair to the debtor, upon the answer to which the power to make an order under s.140B depends, is a single question which admits of a 'yes' or 'no' answer that has to be determined as at a particular point in time. However, in determining whether, at the relevant date, the relationship is or is not unfair, the court is required to have regard to certain matters specified in s.140(A)(1) and to all other matters it thinks relevant, whenever those matters occurred. There is no possibility, therefore, if the court is entitled to make the determination of fairness at all and is not barred by limitation from doing so, of restricting the temporal scope of the enquiry."
Breaches of the ICOB rules
The need to take into account all relevant circumstances
Conclusion
Lord Justice Underhill
Lord Justice Moore-Bick