PROPERTY CHAMBER
FIRST-TIER TRIBUNAL
LAND REGISTRATION DIVISION
IN THE MATTER OF A
REFERENCE FROM HM LAND REGISTRY
LAND REGISTRATION
ACT 2002
REF NO 2015/0176
B E T W E E N:
LORD
CHANCELLOR
Applicant
And
SUKPAL
KAUR SANGHERA
Respondent
Property address: 7
Edwin Phillips Drive, West Bromwich B712AZ
Title number: WM736841
Before Judge McAllister
Birmingham Employment Tribunal
16 November 2015
Representation:
Mr Michael Rimer appeared for the Applicant; Mr Tim Jacques appeared for the
Respondent.
DECISION
Introduction
- On 2 December
2014 the Applicant, as statutory successor to the Legal Services
Commission, applied to register a charge against the title of 7
Edwin Phillips Drive, West Bromwich (‘the Property’). The issue in this
case is whether or not the Respondent, Ms Sanghera, ‘preserved or
recovered an interest’ in the Property within the meaning of section 10(7)
of the Access to Justice Act 1999.
- For the
reasons set out below I will order the Chief Land Registrar to enter a
restriction in Form JJ against the above title, to protect the Lord
Chancellor’s charge secured on the property ‘recovered’ by Ms Sanghera in
the proceedings, namely her former husband’s beneficial interest which, on
the evidence before me, I assume to have been 50%.
Background
and evidence
- The facts of
this case are not in dispute. Ms Sanghera is the registered proprietor of
the Property. Prior to the consent order referred to below, the Property
had been registered in the joint names of herself and her husband, Mr Sanghera.
They had bought the Property in 2007. On 15 May 2010 a substantive public
funding certificate was issued to her, through her then solicitors, Messrs
Bachers, to be represented on an application for a non molestation and
occupation order, an application to vary a contact order, and a contact
order.
- In the usual
way, Ms Sanghera signed a declaration on 20 April 2010, to the effect that
she understood that she might have to accept, at the end of the case, that
an interest bearing charge would be registered against her home.
- The
certificate was amended on 12 November 2011 to cover an application for
ancillary relief. This application for ancillary relief was issued on 25
November 2011. Directions were given by the District Judge on 14 May 2012
for the Property to be valued by an independent valuer if the parties
could not agree a valuation.
- On 2 January
2013 a consent order was approved by the District Judge. Upon Ms Sanghera
undertaking to procure the release of her former husband from any liability
under the mortgage secured on the Property, and to pay the sum of £3,500
to a credit card company to release a restriction on the Property, and on
the basis that Mr Sanghera was entitled to certain items from the
Property, he agreed to transfer all his legal and beneficial interest in
the Property to Ms Sanghera. On completion of the transfer, it was further
agreed that all other claims by Ms Sanghera and her former husband would
stand dismissed. The order further recited that for the purposes of the
applicable legal aid regulations, so as to provide security for the
postponement of the legal aid charge, the Property had been preserved or
recovered to provide a home for Ms Sanghera and her children.
- The narrative
of the solicitors’ bill provides further information. At the time of the
transfer the Property was said to be worth £135,000 with a mortgage of
£135,007 (together with a further charge in respect of the £3,500 debt to
the credit card company). It also recited the fact that although Ms
Sanghera’s ex husband had agreed to transfer the Property to her, on the
terms set out above, he refused to sign the consent order until he
attended court on 2 January 2013. The husband’s position was set out in
his Form E and statement of issues: he did not seek a transfer of the
Property into his name, and he stated that, subject to a release of his
obligations under the loans secured on the Property, and the return of his
certain items, he was prepared to agree to the transfer of the Property to
his wife.
- It is also
clear from the solicitors’ narrative in the bill of costs that it was
necessary to instruct a valuer, Paul Jackson, in the summer of 2012. It
should also be noted that in her Form E, Ms Sanghera valued her interest
in the Property at £7,000 odd, and her former husband valued his interest
at some £20,000. Mr Sanghera valued the Property at £180,000.
- Following the
consent order, the bank refused to allow the transfer until the mortgage
was reduced to £120,000. Ms Sanghera borrowed money from her family to do
so. On 11 November 2013 the Legal Aid Agency wrote to Baches in these
terms:’ Thank you for your letter dated 25 October 2013. I confirm that
as your client has not recovered or preserved any money or property in
this matter the statutory charge will not apply.’
- On 9 January
2015 the Legal Aid Agency wrote both to the Land Registy and Ms Sanghera
explaining that, on a review of the original decision, the Agency had come
to the view that the statement in the letter dated 11 November 2013 was
incorrect. The letter to Ms Sanghera said this: ‘ I offer my sincere
apologies that you were not informed immediately when the original
decision of the Legal Aid Agency, where it was decided that the statutory
charge would not arise, had been reviewed and this decision reversed. Your
solicitors were informed of this reversal in a letter dated 2 December
2014. It was decided that the charge will now arise because it was clear
from the information available that the work under the Funding Certificate
has been instrumental in your obtaining a transfer of the property from
joint names to your sole name….I must make it clear that in cases where
the property has a very low level of equity or is in negative equity, the
amount of the statutory charge is the lesser amount of either the equity
in the property at its sale or the amount of the costs paid under Public
Funding. This means if your property is sold and there is no equity then
you will not be required to repay your costs.’
- Mr Rimer
correctly submitted that it is not possible for the Legal Aid Agency to be
estopped from pursuing its remedies, but he accepted that it might be
possible for the Ombudsman to make a compensation order in appropriate
circumstances, where, as here, a letter was written in unequivocal terms
informing the assisted party that no charge had arisen. I was told by Mr
Jacques, who appeared for Ms Sanghera, that she had acted to her detriment
in reliance on this letter. This point was not pursued further in the
course of the hearing, but it may be a relevant fact, if it can be made
out, in any complaint to the Ombudsman.
Applicable law
- Section 10(7)
of the Access to Justice Act 1999 provides as follows:
‘ Except so far as regulations otherwise provide, where services have
been funded by the Commission for an individual as part of the Community Legal
Service-
(a)
the sums expended by the Commission in funding the services
(except to the extent that they are recovered under section 11) and
(b)
any other sums payable by the individual by virtue of regulations
under this section
shall constitute a first charge on any property preserved or recovered
by him (whether for himself or any other person) in any proceedings or in any
compromise or settlement of any dispute in connection with which the services
were provided.’
- The leading
authority is the decision of the House of Lords in Hanlon v the Law
Society [1981] AC 124, which concerned the meaning of a similar
provision in section 9 of the Legal Aid Act 1974. In essence, the House
of Lords held that property is ‘preserved or recovered’ if, as a matter of
fact, its ownership or transfer had been in issue in the proceedings, and
that, on the facts of that case, the transfer of the house to wife’s name
had involved both a recovery (of his share) and a preservation (of her
share). Where the only issue is whether the husband’s share should be
transferred to the wife, and no issue but that she should retain her
share, the charge only attaches to the husband’s half share.
- Lord Simon
said this (page 180): ‘… property has been recovered or preserved if it
has been put in issue in the proceedings – recovered by the claimant if
has been the subject of a successful claim, preserved by the respondent if
the claim fails. In either case it is a question of fact, not theoretical
‘risk’. In property adjustment proceedings, in my view, it is only
property the ownership or transfer of which has been in issue which has
been ‘preserved or recovered’ as to be the subject of a legal aid charge.
What has been in issue is to be collected as a matter of fact from the
pleadings, evidence, judgement and/or order. I can see no reason for
extending the words to items of property the ownership or possession of
which has never been questioned.’
- Lord Scarman
at page 187 made the same point: ‘A person recovers or preserves in
legal proceedings only what is in issue between the parties: and one
discovers what is in issue by looking at the pleadings and the evidence.
Had there been in this case a clear concession or admission that, as a
matter of prior entitlement, that is, before the exercise of the court’s
discretion under section 24 and 25 of the Act of 1973, the husband’s
interest in the house was limited to half a share I would have agreed that
by her proceedings the appellant ‘recovered’ that is to say, got, his half
share, but was not engaged in ‘preserving’ hers, which was not in dispute.
But I am satisfied that no such concession or admission was made by the
husband. The whole house was in issue.’ He also stated that if it
were established that the wife held the entire beneficial interest, and
the husband was ordered to transfer the legal estate, it would be clear
that no property had been preserved or recovered. The charge attaches to
the beneficial interest.
- In the present
case, the Property was registered in both names, and there is nothing, in
my judgment, in this case to displace the starting presumption that the
Property was held by Mr and Mrs Sanghera as joint tenants beneficially. It
is also clear from all the evidence that Mr Sanghera at no stage made any
claim to his wife’s share: the issue, if any, related to his half share
alone. In Hanlon the whole house was in dispute in the matrimonial
proceedings.
- There have
been a number of decisions relating to the Legal Aid statutory charge
since Hanlon. These were considered in McPherson v Legal
Services Commission by Morgan J, on appeal from a decision of Deputy
Adjudicator Rhys (as he then was).
- Mrs McPherson
was a defendant in possession proceedings brought against her and her
husband in relation to mortgage arrears. The proceedings were compromised
on terms that the McPhersons were to pay £265,000 to the mortgagee in
relation to all outstanding claims. The Legal Services Commission (LSC)
applied to register a charge against the property. The entire legal and
beneficial interest was transferred to Mrs McPherson. The matter was
referred to the Adjudicator. Mr Rhys found that the property was preserved
by virtue of the proceedings. The relevant regulations in force at the
time were the Civil Legal Aid (General) Regulations 1989. The relevant act
was the Legal Aid Act 1988 (see section 16).
- A further
argument advanced on behalf of Mrs McPherson was that, as the property was
in negative equity at the date when it was ‘preserved’, the statutory
charge could not bite. At the time, the LSC appeared to adopt the attitude
that if the legally aided party could establish that there was negative
equity, the charge would not apply. This approach was not based on any
decided case law, but on an interpretation of regulation 99 of the
regulations then in force. Mr Rhys held that the terms of section 16 of
the Legal Aid Act 1988 (the relevant provision then in force) were not
limited in any way by reference to ‘the equity’ in the recovered or
preserved property. He held that the property is the legal and beneficial
interest preserved or recovered by the assisted party.
- If he was
wrong about that, he agreed with LSC that the burden is on the legally
assisted person to establish that the property was indeed in negative
equity, and that she had failed to discharge this burden.
- Mrs McPherson
appealed against Mr Rhys’ decision. Morgan J dismissed the appeal. He
found that the McPhersons preserved possession of the property. This
finding disposed of the matter. He also considered the question of value
in this way: if, the property was sold at the time the charge was
registered, and the property was in negative equity, then it would follow
that LSC would not receive any part of the proceeds of sale. If, of course,
the property increased in value, then the position might be different. In
any event, on the facts, Mr Rhys had not been satisfied that the property
was worth less than £265,000 at the time it was preserved.
The parties’ submissions
- On behalf of
Ms Sanghera, Mr Jacques advanced two arguments. First, as the transfer of
Mr Sanghera’s beneficial title was by consent, it could not be said that
any property had been ‘preserved or recovered’. Second, and in any event,
as there was no equity in the Property at the time of the transfer, there
was no beneficial interest to transfer, and accordingly the charge cannot
bite.
- Mr Rimer
countered these submissions by arguing that, looking at the totality of
the events leading up to the consent order, the ownership of the Property
was in issue, and Ms Sanghera ‘recovered’ her husband’s share. As for the
second point, he argues that section 10(7) should not be read as limiting
‘property’ to property where there is an ‘equity’.
- I agree with
Mr Rimer on both these points. The relevant legal aid certificate was
amended to cover an application for ancillary relief; Mr Sanghera was only
prepared to transfer his interest on conditions; the parties could not
agree a valuation; the solicitors had to undertake ‘considerable work’ to
move matters forward, and in the end the parties had to go to court to
ensure that Mr Sanghera signed the consent order. In the circumstances, it
seems to me that the only conclusion to be drawn is that the ownership of Mr
Sanghera’s share in the Property was in issue between the parties in the
proceedings. I do not accept the argument that the only issues between the
parties were the release of Mr Sanghera from the mortgage and secured debt
and the return of his belongings: these matters formed part of the dispute
surrounding the transfer of the ownership of the Property.
- As for the
second argument, I make the following observations. First, Mr Jacques did
not seek to rely on any authority, nor on the relevant regulations. The
current regulations (the Community Legal Service (Financial) Regulations
2000 (as amended) are not in the same terms as the 1989 regulations.
Regulation 43 provides simply that: ‘ where any money or property is
recovered or preserved for a client in a relevant dispute or proceedings,
the amount of the statutory charge shall be the aggregate of the sums
referred to in section 10(7(a) and (b) of the Act.’ Secondly, I can
see no basis for construing ‘property’ in the sense of property contended
for: Mr Sanghera clearly had an interest in the property at the time of
the consent order, even if the value of that interest, at the time, was
less than the mortgage and other debt secured on the property.
- As I
understand Mr Jacques, he conceded that, if property was recovered at the
time of the consent order, and if equity then builds up, the charge can
bite. His argument, put bluntly, is that a share of the beneficial
interest at a time when the value of the debt exceeds the value of that
interest, is not property. The fallacy in that argument is this: there is
a difference between an interest, and the value of the interest. The value
can fluctuate. The underlying interest, putting the matter another way, is
in the equity of redemption.
- That point
aside, there is also the question of what the Property was worth at the
date of the consent order. Mr Sanghera, in his Form E, valued it at
£180,000. I understand that the parties paid £167,000 for the Property in
2007. The fact that a joint valuation was obtained is not, in my judgment,
necessarily conclusive.
Other matters
- The amount of
the charge (which, as I have said, attaches only to Mr Sanghera’s share)
is £15,000. Mr Rimer accepted that no interest will run on this sum
because, as I understand it, regulation 53 (3) of the 2000 regulations, provides
that where the value of the assisted person’s interest in the property at
the time it was recovered (the date of the consent order) is less than the
amount of the statutory charge (as it was), then the interest would attach
to such lower sum as the Commission considers equitable. Where, as here,
there is no value in the interest recovered, then no interest will be
charged. The charge will only be levied if and when the property is sold,
and there is sufficient equity in 50% of the beneficial interest.
- The
application is to register a statutory charge. Mr Rimer, in his skeleton
argument, asked that a restriction be entered. This seems to me to be more
appropriate. The relevant form is Form JJ of Schedule 4 to the Land
Registration Rules 2003. As I have said, the charge can only apply to Mr
Sanghera’s interest alone, as this was the only property ‘preserved or
recovered’ in the proceedings.
- Finally, there
is the question of costs. In principle, the Lord Chancellor, as the
successful party, is entitled to his costs. A schedule in Form N260 or the
like is to be served on Ms Sanghera by 22 December 2015, and Ms Sanghera
may make such objections or representations as she deems appropriate by 4
January 2016.
BY
ORDER OF THE TRIBUNAL
Dated
this 11th day of December 2015