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English and Welsh Courts - Miscellaneous |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> English and Welsh Courts - Miscellaneous >> Agia v Skipton Building Society [2024] EW Misc 14 (CC) (22 January 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/Misc/2024/14.html Cite as: [2024] EW Misc 14 (CC) |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE DECISION OF DJ SKALSKYJ-REYNOLDS
B e f o r e :
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MR TAJUDEEN ADIGUN AGIA |
Claimant/ Appellant |
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- and - |
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SKIPTON BUILDING SOCIETY |
Defendant/ Respondent |
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Ms. Chelsea Carter (instructed by Walker Morris LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 23 November 2023
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Crown Copyright ©
HHJ Malek:
Introduction
Background
The decision of the lower court
"22. It is a specific area of law: bankers and customers. There is case law on this point. The relationship between a banker and a customer is the contractual one of debtor and creditor. Skipton Building Society is the debtor and the claimant is the creditor because Skipton Building Society owed him money in 1990 because of the deposit account that the claimant had with the building society.
23. It is well settled law, going back to the 1800s, that unless the contrary is agreed, a demand by the customer for his money is a condition precedent to repayment. The bank cannot suddenly think, oh, we do not like Mr Agia, we are going to send him his money back. It cannot do that. It cannot say, oh, we do not like Judge Skalsky-Reynolds, she's got a bank account with us, we're going to send her the money back, no.
24. There has to be a demand for payment by the customer either for closure of the account or just for an amount of money. It does not have to be for closure but there has to be a demand. A demand by the customer is a condition precedent to repayment whether the money is on a current or a deposit account. Mr Agia had a deposit account not a current account, but that is not relevant. Accordingly, time runs, limitation runs, from the date of the demand and not from the date when the account was opened or the money was paid in, otherwise banks could be faced with claims that have lain dormant for many years where there is no demand. There has to be a demand for payment.
25. It is agreed in this case that Mr Agia made a demand for payment on or about 17 September 1990 and a cheque was issued. Limitation runs from September 1990. Mr Agia may say, well, where is is the fairness in that? You know, I didn't know they had closed my account. The point is that, once a customer makes a demand for payment, they cannot sit back and think, oh, well, I will wait 30 years, 20 years or whatever, and then I will renew my demand for payment. Once you have made a demand for payment to a bank, time starts to run. You have got six years to follow up that demand for payment. Not six months, six years.
26. The court cannot allow the claimant to say, well, I forgot, I was busy. The witness statement says that the claimant went to America and then went to prison. For the policy reasons that I set out from the beginning, the courts cannot allow claimants to wait for 30 years and then suddenly wake up to the fact that banks owe them money. It was argued by Mr Modha that, however, time does not run from the first demand for payment. It runs from the second demand for payment when Mr Agia suddenly remembered that he was owed nearly £20,000. By then, it would have been over £20,000 because of all the interest.
27. Mr Modha argued it is the second demand for payment that started the limitation period running. But the courts have already dealt with the issue. It is settled law. Repeated demands for payment by a customer do not start time running afresh. Mr Modha did his best, and all credit has to go to him for attempting to distinguish the Bank of Baroda case from this case but I am afraid I was not influenced by his arguments. I did not accept his argument that this case is totally different because the building society issued a separate cheque when they were not asked to do so and closed the account.
28. Essentially, the law remains as stated in Bank of Baroda v Mahomed, which is that the cause of action starts when the customer first demands payment. Mr Modha argued that it did not because the building society issued a cheque, therefore it complied with the first demand and so the first demand fell by the wayside. Therefore, we do not count the first demand because it complied. It is the second demand made in 2021 which is the relevant one, but that is not right because, as Ms Carter pointed out, if the defendant complied with the first request by issuing the cheque, then there is no breach. There is nothing to complain about.
29. If the defendant did not comply with the first request for payment, then there was a breach then and that is the relevant breach and time starts to run then. Basically, the first demand in 1990 was to pay £19,500 odd - that is not the exact figure - and to close the account. Either the defendant complied with that request, in which case there is no claim, or it failed to comply with that request and time starts to run.
30. The claim is pleaded in such a way as to say that the defendant was in breach in 1990 because it closed the account and it should not have done so. The way the claim is pleaded, the breach is the closure of the account in 1990. However it is pleaded, it is not the point. What the point is that, when a customer makes a demand for payment, the limitation period starts to run and he has got six years to chase up that payment."
The law relating to appeals
Grounds of appeal
First ground
"The learned judge erred by failing to properly apply the Limitation Act as it applies to banking in particular the fundamental propositions set out in the case of Joachimson v Swiss Bank Corporation [1921] 3 KB 110 which specifically spelt out when the Limitation period applies. The proposition are as follows:
....4. The limitation period on the debt runs from the time when the customer makes demand and is refused." [emphasis added].
Second ground
"The learned judge erred in law and on the fact when she ruled that limitation period started to run from 17/09/90 as there was no breach in 1990. D honoured the demand from C and consequently, there was no cause of action. Had C brought a claim against D without any further act by D which indicates a breach/refusal, such action would be prima facie failed as there was no ground for such a claim. The learned judge cited the case of Mahomed v Bank of Baroda: CA 10 Dec 1998. However, the circumstance in that case complies with the fundamental proposition as stated above in that the bank refused to honour the customer's demand."
Discussion
"Where a demand in writing for repayment of the debt under a contract of loan to which this section applies is made by or on behalf of the creditor (or, where there are joint creditors, by or on behalf of any one of them) section 5 of this Act shall thereupon apply as if the cause of action to recover the debt had accrued on the date on which the demand was made."
Conclusion and disposition