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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> AIB Group (UK) Plc v Mark Redler & Co (A Firm) [2012] EWHC 35 (Ch) (23 January 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2012/35.html Cite as: [2012] EWHC 35 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
BIRMINGHAM DISTRICT REGISTRY
Bull Street, Birmingham B4 6DS |
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B e f o r e :
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AIB Group (UK) Plc |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Mark Redler & Co (a firm) |
Defendant |
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Graeme McPherson QC and Sian Mirchandani (instructed by Mills & Reeve LLP)
for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 1-2 November 2011
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Crown Copyright ©
HHJ David Cooke:
i) Did the defendant act in breach of trust in releasing the Advance Monies in the circumstances pleaded in paragraph 22 of the Amended Particulars of Claim?ii) If so, to what remedy, if any, is the Claimant entitled?
" The release of the Advance Monies in August 2006 was unauthorised. The Defendant was authorised to release the Advance Monies only upon completion of the remortgage which in turn required that there be a first legal charge in favour of the Claimant. The Defendant knew that a charge free from prior mortgages was required. This was provided for in the Certificate. "
"Except as otherwise disclosed to you in writing…we have investigated title to the property, we are not aware of any other financial charges secured on the property which will affect the property after completion of mortgage and, upon completion of the mortgage, but you and the mortgagor … will have a good and marketable title to the property … free from prior mortgages or charges …which title will be registered with absolute title. "
i) The borrowers, Dr Ravindra Sondhi and his wife Dr Salma Sondhi were medical practitioners who also owned, through limited companies, three residential care homes. In 2006 they approached the corporate banking division of the claimant bank for the provision of finance of approximately £20 million to one of their companies with a view to refinancing the existing care homes and funding the acquisition of a further four care homes.ii) In conjunction with that, they applied to the bank's Solihull branch, which dealt with residential mortgages, for a remortgage of their home with a view to raising funds which they would contribute to the financing of their business.
iii) The borrowers completed an application form dated 28 June 2006, seeking an advance of £3.3 million (bundle reference: 2/563) and stating that the value of the property was £4.5 million with outstanding mortgage of £1.5 million. They named the defendant as the solicitors acting for them in the transaction.
iv) The bank sent a formal letter of offer dated 4 July 2006 (2/607) which set out that the bank required by way of security a "First Legal Mortgage in the Bank's standard form over the Property" and amongst other conditions required that "the Applicant's existing home mortgages (if any) must be redeemed on or before the completion of this… facility".
v) The following day the bank sent a letter to the defendant firm (2/614) instructing it to act for the bank in connection with the facility, enclosing a copy of its facility letter. There is thus no doubt that the defendant was aware that the bank required to obtain a first legal mortgage.
vi) On 22 July 2006, Mr Mark Redler, the defendant's senior partner, met the borrowers. He was told by them at that meeting that the property was charged to Barclays and that their debt to Barclays was approximately £1.5 million. They told him that they wished to complete the remortgage by 31 July, and expressed a great deal of urgency about doing so. Mr Redler obtained from his clients a signed mortgage document in the form provided by the bank, to be held pending completion.
vii) On 28 July, a Friday, Mr Redler sent a letter by fax (2/668) to Barclays asking for a redemption statement as at Monday 31 July, stating that it was hoped to complete the remortgage on that day. Barclays' initial response (2/682) sent on the Monday was to return the letter saying that it could not be acted upon unless a correct mortgage account number was quoted. This may have crossed with a further fax from the defendant on the same date (2/683) repeating the request.
viii) Also on Monday 31 July, the defendant sent the certificate of title in the bank's required form by fax to its securities Department, requesting that the amount of the advance be sent by funds transfer to their client account. The funds were received by the defendant at 13.03 on 1 August.
ix) The second letter to Barclays did produce a response, in the form of a faxed letter dated 31 July but apparently received on Tuesday, 1 August 2006 (1/407). That letter referred to two account numbers, and attached two documents entitled "Mortgage Valuation Statement", one for each account. The letter made clear that these were not redemption statements, saying:
" Thank you for your request for a balance in respect of the above accounts. The amount quoted is an indication of the current balance outstanding at the date you have requested. This may not be the figure required to effect full redemption. IMPORTANT INFORMATION THIS IS NOT A REDEMPTION STATEMENTFor a redemption figure to be issued, you must make a request for a Redemption Statement at least three working days before the intended redemption date. Due to the flexible nature of the mortgage and linked accounts, the amount required to redeem is likely to differ from this quotation.Should your clients wish to redeem the mortgage, please contact us on 0845 607 6603 to request a Redemption Statement. You will need to provide your client's mortgage account number when you call. "(Emphasis and capitalisation in the original). The significance of making clear that the documents were not "redemption statements" would be that the bank would not be bound to release its charge on receipt of the sum stated, for example if some error should be found, or further liability incurred to it by additional borrowing on a flexible account.x) Mr Redler's evidence was that he asked an employee, Miss Brown, to telephone Barclays and obtain a redemption figure. Miss Brown gave evidence, exhibiting a telephone note she made (1/485) recording that she had spoken to someone called Vicky at Barclays and noting "figure to redeem is £1,235,785.07" with the details of the bank account to which it should be sent. She was unable to say whether she had given any mortgage account numbers to Vicky in this conversation. If she had seen the fax referring to the two accounts, she obviously did not notice that the figure given could only have related to one of them.
xi) In his oral evidence, Mr Redler said that he could only recall seeing one of the pages from the Barclays fax, being the statement relating to the larger of the two accounts. He said that he had telephoned Dr Ravindra Sondhi because the amount was lower than the £1.5 million he had been expecting, and Dr Sondhi had confirmed that it was correct, or at least not told him that it was too low. He could not say why he would only have seen one page of the fax (which had five pages in all) and accepted that if he had seen the whole fax, or read the covering letter, he could not have failed to notice that the figure quoted was insufficient to discharge both accounts.
xii) In accordance with her instructions from Mr Redler, Miss Brown gave instructions for the amount she had been quoted by Vicky to be sent by telegraphic transfer to Barclays, and for the balance, deducting the firm's costs, to be sent to the borrower, all of which happened on the afternoon of 1 August 2006. The form of mortgage deed was completed with the date 1 August 2006.
xiii) Mr Redler did not seek to excuse his firm's omissions, which are accepted to have been negligent. At the conclusion of the witness evidence Mr Cousins confirmed that he did not seek to pursue any argument that Mr Redler or the defendant had acted otherwise than in good faith.
xiv) The result was that the amount sent to Barclays was insufficient to discharge its secured debt and it subsequently refused to do so. It has not been contended before me that Barclays had given any binding assurance that it would release its security. The defendant was not able to procure the registration of AIB's charge until it was in a position to submit a discharge of Barclays' charge. For some time, Mr Redler did not alert AIB to the difficulty that had arisen. He contacted Dr Sondhi who promised that he would return sufficient funds to enable the outstanding amount due to Barclays to be cleared, but failed to comply with this promise over a period of several months. In the meantime, Mr Redler protected the priority of AIB's charge by continuing to renew his priority search at the land registry.
xv) Eventually, the problem came to light. The evidence before me does not deal in detail with what then happened, though it appears that AIB entered into direct discussions with Barclays. I have no information, for instance, as to whether AIB offered, with or without the assistance of the defendant, to discharge the outstanding sum due to Barclays, or if so why that did not occur. On 28 April 2008, AIB and Barclays entered into a deed of postponement by which Barclays permitted AIB's charge to be registered as a second charge on the property, limiting its priority in respect of its own charge to £273,777.42, plus interest, costs and expenses. That principal amount was somewhat less than the balance outstanding at 1 August 2006 (approximately £309,000) by virtue of repayments that the Sondhi's had made in the meantime. AIB's charge was finally registered on 9 May 2008.
xvi) AIB obtained judgment against the Sondhi's for a total exceeding £3.5 million, and an order for possession of the property, on 14 July 2010. It was subsequently sold for £1.2 million, of which just over £300,000 was paid to Barclays in satisfaction of their first charge, and the balance (after costs) of £867,697.78 to AIB on 14 April 2011. Bankruptcy orders were made against the Sondhi's on 14 June 2011.
The Law
" The collapse in the property market which accompanied the recession at the beginning of the present decade caused mortgage lenders to suffer serious losses. Unable to recover their advances from the borrowers or by the enforcement of their security they have sought to recover them from the valuers or solicitors on whose valuations or advice they have relied. In some cases they have been the victims of a fraud to which the valuers and solicitors have been parties. In other cases, such as the present, they have been unable to accuse their solicitor of anything more serious than negligence. Believing that the common law rules of causation and remoteness of damage might not enable them to recover the whole amount of their loss they have turned to equity and alleged breach of trust or fiduciary duty. We have thus been concerned to decide just what is involved in these concepts. "
"It is common ground that Redferns had implied authority to pay the money to or to the order of Crowngate when the property had been conveyed to Crowngate and Crowngate had executed charges in Target's favour… [but]…In the course of acting as Target's solicitors Redferns had paid away the mortgage money in its client account to a stranger who had no contractual relationship with Crowngate and before completion of the purchase by Crowngate or the mortgage by Crowngate to Target. Such payments out of client account were otherwise than in accordance with Redferns' instructions from Target. It is common ground that the payments constituted a breach of trust by Redferns." (p429)
"Even if the equitable rules developed in relation to traditional trusts were directly applicable to such a case as this, as I have sought to show a beneficiary becoming absolutely entitled to a trust fund has no automatic right to have the fund reconstituted in all circumstances. Thus, even applying the strict rules so developed in relation to traditional trusts, it seems to me very doubtful whether Target is now entitled to have the trust fund reconstituted. But 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.
This case is concerned with a trust which has at all times been a bare trust. Bare trusts arise in a number of different contexts: e.g. by the ultimate vesting of the property under a traditional trust, nominee shareholdings and, as in the present case, as but one incident of a wider commercial transaction involving agency. In the case of moneys paid to a solicitor by a client as part of a conveyancing transaction, the purpose of that transaction is to achieve the commercial objective of the client, be it the acquisition of property or the lending of money on security. The depositing of money with the solicitor is but one aspect of the arrangements between the parties, such arrangements being for the most part contractual. Thus, the circumstances under which the solicitor can part with money from client account are regulated by the instructions given by the client: they are not part of the trusts on which the property is held. I do not intend to cast any doubt on the fact that moneys held by solicitors on client account are trust moneys or that the basic equitable principles apply to any breach of such trust by solicitors. But the basic equitable principle applicable to breach of trust is that the beneficiary is entitled to be compensated for any loss he would not have suffered but for the breach. I have no doubt that, until the underlying commercial transaction has been completed, the solicitor can be required to restore to client account moneys wrongly paid away. But to import into such trust an obligation to restore the trust fund once the transaction has been completed would be entirely artificial. The obligation to reconstitute the trust fund applicable in the case of traditional trusts reflects the fact that no one beneficiary is entitled to the trust property and the need to compensate all beneficiaries for the breach. That rationale has no application to a case such as the present. To impose such an obligation in order to enable the beneficiary solely entitled (i.e. the client) to recover from the solicitor more than the client has in fact lost flies in the face of common sense and is in direct conflict with the basic principles of equitable compensation. In my judgment, once a conveyancing transaction has been completed the client has no right to have the solicitor's client account reconstituted as a "trust fund." "
" [p15G] It is not alleged that the defendant deliberately concealed the arrangements which the purchasers had made with their bank from the society or that he consciously intended to mislead it. Nothing in this judgment is intended to apply to such a case. My observations are confined to the case like the present where the provision of incorrect information by a solicitor to his client must be taken to have been due to an oversight. In such a case his breach of duty is unconscious; he will ex hypothesi be unaware of the fact that he has committed a breach of his instructions; and if this means that his subsequent application of the mortgage money constitutes a breach of trust then it will be a breach of a trust of which he is unaware. I would not willingly treat such conduct as involving a breach of trust or misapplication of trust money unless compelled by authority to do so, and in my judgment neither principle nor authority compels such a conclusion…
[p22D] It is not disputed that from the time of its receipt by the defendant the mortgage money was trust money… The defendant held it in trust for the society but with the society's authority (and instructions) to apply it in the completion of the transaction of purchase and mortgage of the property. Those instructions were revocable but, unless previously revoked, the defendant was entitled and bound to act in accordance with them.
The society's instructions were not revoked before the defendant acted on them, and in my judgment there was no ground upon which the judge could properly conclude that his authority to apply the money in completing the transaction had determined…
[p24] The society's standing instructions did not clearly make the defendant's authority to complete conditional on having complied with his instructions. Whether they did so or not is, of course, a question of construction, and it is possible that the society could adopt instructions which would have this effect. But it would in my judgment require very clear wording to produce so inconvenient and impractical a result. No solicitor could safely accept such instructions, for he could never be certain that he was entitled to complete.
In my judgment the defendant's authority to apply the mortgage money in the completion of the purchase was not conditional on his having first complied with his contractual obligations to the society, was not vitiated by the misrepresentations for which he was responsible but of which he was unaware, and was effective to prevent his payment being a breach of trust. Given his state of knowledge, he had no choice but to complete. "
"[p26F] …it is said that Mr Mothew was in breach of trust because he paid away the trust fund contrary to his instructions. He did indeed hold the £59,000 in trust; it was not his own money… But he did not pay it away contrary to the society's instructions. The cheque reached Mr Mothew with a letter dated 23 August 1988, which in effect instructed him to use it for completion of the proposed purchase. That was what he did."
Otton LJ agreed with both judgments.
"[37] The second ground upon which the defendants sought permission to appeal was that the judge had wrongly concluded that the breach of trust had caused the applicants loss. They submitted upon the basis of the speech of Lord Browne-Wilkinson in Target Holdings Ltd v Redferns [1996] AC 421, that the remedy for the breach of this trust was not reconstitution of the trust fund, but to put the claimants in the position that they would have been in but for the breach. In the present case the breach had been the failure to obtain the assignment. To remedy that breach Linnells needed to compensate the claimants for the loss of that assignment. In the present case that loss was negligible in that the trade mark had proved to be valueless or there was no evidence to prove that it was of substantial value.
[38] I reject that submission for two reasons. First, in the present case the breach was the release of the money. The trust required the money to be held against provision of both the shares and the assignment. As there had been no assignment, the money should not have been paid out. Second, the principle in Target only applies where the underlying transaction covered by the trust had been completed…
[39] In the present case there was a trust fund made up of money supplied by Mr Knight, Mr Hodgkinson, Mr McIntosh and subsequently Mr Keay. The transaction had not been completed. The breach was the payment and the remedy for that breach is reconstitution of the trust fund. The judge was right to reject this submission and there are in my view no grounds for giving permission to appeal. "
" 27 As Mr Aylwin submitted, it is necessary to separate the trust issues from the contractual issues. Any payment away by the Defendant which is not within the terms of its authority to pay away will be a breach of trust. On the other hand, any failure to make proper inquiries concerning the vendor's solicitors may be a breach of contract but not a breach of trust.
28 The position is made plain by the judgment of Millett LJ in Bristol and West Building Society v Mothew …
29 In the present case Miss Sandells' argument is very simple. It is that the Defendant did not have authority to pay away the moneys except to achieve completion and completion was never achieved. Mr Aylwin, on the other hand argues that the authority was to pay away in connection with the purchase of the Property by Mr Davies and this was what the Defendant did.
30 I cannot accept Miss Sandells' construction, particularly when she submits that it means that payment can only be made when completion has been achieved. However, Mr Aylwin's construction would allow payment to be made well in advance of completion provided that the purpose was to further the purchase of the Property. In my view, the proper construction of the instructions is somewhere between these two extremes. The authority entitled the Defendant to pay away on receipt of the documents necessary to register title or, if paying away before that stage, on receipt of a solicitor's undertaking to provide such documents.
31 In the present case the Defendant paid the money without receiving the requisite documents and without receiving a solicitor's undertaking to provide such documents. Accordingly the Defendant was in breach of the trust by paying the money in the circumstances in which the money was paid"
"You are only authorised to release the loan when you hold sufficient funds to complete the purchase of the property and pay all stamp duty land tax and registration fees to perfect the security as a first legal mortgage or, if you do not have them, you accept responsibility to pay them yourself."
This wording is obviously not directly applicable to a remortgage, and is not without ambiguity of language, but it emphasises that the solicitors must hold sufficient funds to procure the first ranking mortgage title sought before the loan is released, and provides for the consequences if the funds held are insufficient, ie that the solicitors will be responsible to make payment themselves.
i) in fact dealt with the funds held in the manner they were authorised to do, orii) instead of making the unauthorised payment that they did, had asked the bank for its instructions at that point, disclosing the reasons why the payment was outside their existing authority.